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Expansion to champion: Niverville Nighthawks claim Centennial Cup
4 minute read Updated: 11:13 PM CDTFor just the fourth time in history, the best junior A team in Canada comes from Manitoba. The Niverville Nighthawks joined the Portage Terriers (1973, 2014) and Selkirk Steelers (1974) in lifting the Centennial Cup, defeating the host Summerside Western Capitals 4-1 in the final May 17 in P.E.I.
Niverville began play in the Manitoba Hockey League in 2022, needing just four seasons to go from expansion to national champions.
"Words can't describe the feeling of how proud I am of these young men," head coach Dwight Hirst, who took control of the franchise mid-way through the 2024 season but was involved with the team from the beginning, said after the game.
The Nighthawks took a 2-1 lead into the third period and calmly wound down the clock, with Marlen Edwards nabbing an insurance goal and Tyler Bernier icing the game with an empty netter. Hirst, who is from Lac du Bonnet, said the message to the team after 40 minutes was to break the final period into five minute segments.
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Manitoba declares HIV public health emergency
2 minute read 8:24 AM CDTManitoba officials declared a public health emergency last week due to the rising cases of HIV throughout the province, which now has the highest infection rates in Canada.
Manitoba has seen a steady increase in new HIV cases in 2025, reaching 328 in 2025, more than triple the 90 new cases in 2019, a May 7 news release said.
“In 2024, Manitoba reported 19.5 cases per 100,000 people, over three-and-a-half times the national rate of 5.5 per 100,000 people,” it said.
The Prairie Mountain Health and Northern Health regions had the highest rates, but Winnipeg had the largest number of cases diagnosed.
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COLUMN: Grey Matters – An agenda to finish well with others
4 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026“Remember your Creator in the days of your youth, before the days of trouble come and the years approach when you will say, ‘I find no pleasure in them’—Remember him before the light of the sun, moon, and stars is dim to your old eyes, and rain clouds continually darken your sky. Remember him before your legs—the guards of your house—start to tremble; and before your shoulders—the strong men—stoop. Remember him before your teeth—your few remaining servants—stop grinding…” Ecclesiastes 12:1-3 (NIV/NLT)
This week we look at the power of finishing well with others - a visionary agenda that does more than chart our final steps; it steadies every step on the road. Dr. John Dunlop shaped this simple four part agenda from what he noticed his patients most needed. But first, let’s listen to another wise voice: Solomon.
Ecclesiastes 12 is a thoughtful summons: remember God while life still feels good and manageable. These verses are not written to scare us, but to rouse us. They remind us that time is a gift, strength just a visitor, and that life goes fast. We are, all of us, as fragile as dust and breath. The first verse above urges us to remember the One who gave us breath in the first place. ‘Remember’ means more than a fleeting thought; it is to live with God - not self - at the center. Solomon warns us not to postpone faith and purposeful living as though the good years are guaranteed. When our lives are rooted in God - early and often - we find an anchor that holds through every season, and a path that leads us safely home.
Solomon could have reached for many names for God, yet he chooses this one: ‘Creator.’ This name carries us back to the first sentence of the Bible, to Genesis 1:1: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” He is the Eternal One, the Source behind all that is - stars and soil, and purpose. It is wise to seek the Creator for guidance. In Genesis 1, we also see humankind as the pinnacle of God’s handiwork. He made us in His image (Genesis 1:27), and His purposes for us are not small. Remembering this changes the way we walk; we are meant to journey with Him, not away from Him!
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