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Providence announces athletics year end award winners
5 minute read 12:00 PM CDTWith the Manitoba College Athletic Conference season at an end, the Providence Pilots recognized their top athletes of the season.
Cole Doell and Faith Larocque were named the male and female athletes of the year respectively.
Larocque is from Niverville, but played AAAA high school basketball with Dakota in Winnipeg. She was named the MCAC women’s basketball player of the year, thriving even as she gets less minutes than other top players thanks to Providence’s system basketball more evenly distributing playing time across the team.
“Faith has demonstrated above average academic success, consistently improving her grades and her game over the past three years,” head women’s basketball coach Kendall Perpall said.
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COLUMN: Carillon Flashback October 28, 1992 – ‘No boundary for Anishinabe’ – Natives make a point during demonstration
3 minute read Preview 8:45 AM CDTNiverville Nighthawks advance to MJHL final in style
1 minute read Preview Yesterday at 11:42 PM CDTSt Pierre Jolys Sugaring Off Festival brings sweet treats to the Southeast
3 minute read Preview Yesterday at 4:39 PM CDTCOLUMN: Village News – Our AGM takes place April 14
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5 minute read Preview Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026COLUMN: Arts and Culture – World-class pianist Valerie Dueck returns home for immersive “From Night to Light” concert
4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026April 11, 2026
7 p.m.
Grace Mennonite Church
$25 Regular, $12.50 Students
World-class pianist Valerie Dueck returns home with From Night to Light, an immersive solo piano concert celebrating Canadian and women composers. The program is enhanced with poetry and striking visual imagery, creating a multi-sensory journey that moves from night, moon, and constellations to light and daydreams of utopia. Audiences will be transported through music that inspires reflection, wonder, and imagination.
This special homecoming performance offers a unique experience for music lovers and artists of all disciplines. Join Valerie for an unforgettable evening of music and storytelling as she brings her global journey full circle, back to the community where it all began.
CARILLON SPORTS SECOND SHOTS: April 1 edition
1 minute read Preview Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026Initiatives for Just Communities incorporating Indigenous teachings into El’Dad programming
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026COLUMN: View from the Legislature – Manitoba needs premier’s full attention
4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026It’s not unusual for provincial leaders to comment or be engaged with issues that go beyond their provincial borders, most often involving other parts of Canada or in some cases other parts of the world. But engagement is different than obsession. And it seems that at a time when there are enough challenges in Manitoba to keep any premier fully occupied seven days a week, Manitoba’s NDP Premier Wab Kinew seems far more interested in commenting on things beyond his borders and well beyond his control.
Last week in question period, the focus of questions was rightfully on the most recent provincial budget which offered little in the way of relief for what is an affordability crisis. There were also questions about the ever-increasing wait times in Manitoba emergency rooms and for surgical procedures. Questions were also asked about the continued rise in violent crime in our province and what resources are being used to try to reduce it. These are all pressing issues facing our province that deserve both serious attention and answers from the provincial government.
Instead, Manitoba’s premier spent much of question period, in addition to press conferences last week and a speech at the federal NDP convention, talking about Donald Trump, the war in Iran and the Epstein files. Now it is true that it is hard many days to have any conversation in which some or all of those topics don’t come up, but what Manitobans expect the leaders of the provincial government to do in their day to day jobs, is work on the problems and opportunities that are within the grasp of their authority. Despite the fact that every day there are stories of soaring prices, people waiting for care and concern over violent crime in our communities, the NDP seem to only want to talk about geopolitical problems of which there are many, but none of which can be solved in Manitoba.
Some have suggested that this is a deliberate strategy. That if the NDP can fill the newspapers and the airwaves with comments about things they cannot control, that Manitobans will be less likely to wonder why they are not fixing the problems that they can do something about. If that is the strategy, it is one that will only result in worse outcomes for Manitobans.
Hanover Fire Department doing detailed review of service delivery model
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Apr. 7, 2026Winkler Royals squeak by Ile des Chenes North Stars to win SEMHL championship
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Apr. 7, 2026LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Addressing internal division
2 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 7, 2026Canada is at a crossroads, not because of external threats, but because of internal division. Increasingly, we are seeing our country split into opposing sides, where political identity matters more than shared values. Conservatives and Liberals are treated as enemies rather than fellow citizens. This is not sustainable, and it is not the Canada we should accept.
From my perspective, this division is not only unproductive, it is harmful. When people stop listening to one another, when disagreement turns into hostility, we lose the ability to solve real problems. Issues like affordability, healthcare, housing, and education do not belong to one side or the other. They affect all Canadians. Treating them as partisan battlegrounds only delays solutions.
There was a time when disagreement did not mean disrespect. Canadians could hold different views while still recognizing a shared responsibility to the country. That mindset has been replaced with constant conflict. Social media, political rhetoric, and news cycles have all contributed to this, but we are still responsible for how we respond.
This is a call to action, not for one side to win, but for both sides to step back and work together. Conservatives bring valuable perspectives on responsibility, stability, and tradition. Liberals bring important ideas about progress, inclusion, and change. Canada needs both. Ignoring one side weakens the whole country.
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