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Looking Glass Theatre announces 2026/27 season
5 minute read 5:01 PM CDTMarc A. Moir and Laura Kathleen Turner, co-artistic directors of Looking Glass Theatre (LGT), southeast Manitoba’s professional theatre company, announced their 2026/27 season, featuring a tense courtroom drama, a wild new comedy, a fairy tale show for kids, and one of Shakespeare’s masterpieces
The third season of LGT will officially kick off in October with the world premiere of Summation by Marc A. Moir. Two lawyers go head to head in this intense, high stakes he-said she-said defamation and assault trial, and the audience gets to be the jury. Each night, the audience will have the opportunity to weigh the evidence, vote and deliver a verdict on the case.
“What do you do when you have two people who both seem credible telling you two totally different stories, how do we adjudicate that as a society? It’s an idea that’s fascinated me for a long time,” Moir said. “We live in a culture that is so driven by jumping on a media or social media bandwagon that presents ideas or incidents as monolithic and black and white, when in reality so much of life is grey—especially when it comes to people and how we perceive things. It’s a very timely piece and one, I think, audiences will not only love as an intense and entertaining night of great theatre, but also spark many interesting conversations afterwards.”
In December, another world premiere, Couched by Marc A. Moir and Laura Kathleen Turner takes place in Los Angeles. A former actor turned therapist “treats” a notorious A-list actor trying to cope with fame and multiple personalities—one of which may have committed murder. This wild and hilarious new comedy will be made even wilder by the fact the two actors will be switching roles each night.
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COLUMN: Viewpoint – 40 years of column writing
3 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026This year marks my 40th year as a Carillon columnist. In 1986 I sent a letter to the newspaper in response to a regular contributor who had written a critical article about daycares. Editor Peter Dyck liked my letter. He asked if I’d consider having a regular column in the paper. I agreed to give it a try. Here I am 40 years later, still writing my Viewpoint column.
I thought it might be interesting to look back and see what topics I was covering in 1986. Thanks to my mother who cut out and saved my columns in scrapbooks I still have copies of many of my past Viewpoints.
In September of that year I started a teaching assignment in the brand-new elementary school in Mitchell. One of my columns was about the wonderful parents who had helped me unpack boxes of new materials and supplies and set up my classroom. More than half of my students’ parents signed up to come into my class on a regular basis to act as educational helpers. Parents brought baked goods and flowers to the staff room for the teachers, offered to serve on a parent-council and helped set up the library. I was impressed.
In another column I talked about why so many more women than men lived in poverty in Canada. I outlined the ways Mr. Jake Epp, who was my Member of Parliament at the time, and was serving as the Minister of Health and Welfare in the Mulroney cabinet, was trying to address the problem of poverty amongst Canadian women. He was proposing that women who were homemakers should be able to contribute to the Canada Pension Plan and receive benefits from it. He had also instituted a nation-wide task force to study the need for a national daycare system which he said was necessary for women to achieve economic equality.
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COLUMN: The Carillon Flashback June 19, 1991 – Terry Fox legacy lives on
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COLUMN: View from the Legislature – NDP show motion but no movement
3 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026Earlier this week the Manitoba Legislature concluded its spring sitting. As is usually the case for the spring sitting, most of the discussion and debate surrounded the provincial budget. This was particularly true this year as Manitobans face an affordability crisis that is among the worst in the country. While it is not possible for any government to completely alleviate the sharp increase in the cost of food, fuel and housing that has been experienced by Manitobans, there was certainly an expectation that the NDP government would move in a direction that was meaningful in supporting Manitobans impacted by increasing costs. It was a commitment that they made before they unveiled the provincial budget.
Instead, what Manitobans witnessed was a government that gave signs of there being motion but that ultimately resulted in no movement to truly support Manitobans. What the NDP government touted as the key affordability measure in the budget, turned out to be something of a mirage. A pledge to remove the provincial sales tax (PST) off of all grocery items sounded good until Manitobans realized that the PST already isn’t charged on most grocery items. Other than items like snacks, a few prepared meals and slurpees, groceries are already tax free and the few pennies that might be saved off the remaining items will hardly be noticed by Manitobans facing double digit inflation on some food items over the past year.
In response, the Manitoba Progressive Conservative Party put forward a proposal to increase what is known as the Basic Personal Exemption to $30,000. This is the amount of money a person can earn before they start paying taxes. This would have saved the average Manitoban $3,000 and allowed them to use those savings in a way that helps them address the affordability crisis and how it is impacting their individual family.
To give the NDP as much time and opportunity to adopt this suggestion as possible, the Manitoba Legislature sat for 36 straight hours, the longest continuous sitting in decades. During this time, all members of the Manitoba PC Caucus spoke and offered to work with the government to make changes to help struggling families. Not a single NDP member spoke to the issue and, ultimately, they used their majority to pass the budget bill without changes and without significant relief for Manitobans. The NDP were trying to convince Manitobans they were making moves to help them, but in the end, they demonstrated motion, but no actual movement.
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COLUMN: Report from the Legislature – End of session report
5 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026It’s been a busy spring at the Manitoba legislature. After a week of late-night sittings and tense negotiations, the legislature rose for the summer on Monday.
For our PC team, we had a clear message throughout this session: the government needed to take real action on affordability.
Under Wab Kinew and the NDP, the cost of living continues to rise, and too many families are struggling to make ends meet.
The premier talks a good game, but unfortunately much of that talk does not match reality.
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1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Just looking? Jac Banman will sell you a VW
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