Winnipeg Free Press
MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Shauna Matthews (left) assistant museum administrator, and Pam McKenzie, administrator, by the propeller turbine outside the Electrical Museum.
Writer Brenda Suderman and photographer Mike Deal continue to explore the attics and corners of the city’s community-run museums this summer. Today they visit the shockingly huge collection at Manitoba Electrical Museum at 680 Harrow St. This 20-year-old museum highlights the history of the electrification of Manitoba, as well as displaying a wide array of electrical appliances and gadgets. The museum is now open 1 to 4 p.m. Tuesday to Saturday. Admission is $3 and free for ages 5 and under. Under public health measures, visitors must be fully vaccinated; unvaccinated children must be accompanied by fully vaccinated members of their household.
Manitoba Electrical Museum s collection tracks the province s current history from past to present winnipegfreepress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from winnipegfreepress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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An exemption will be made for male circumcisions performed in a religious ceremony, said a statement issued by College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba registrar Dr. Anna Ziomek. (Trevor Hagan / Winnipeg Free Press files)
Members of Winnipeg’s Jewish community are relieved the province s medical regulatory body won’t place restrictions on infant male circumcisions done for religious reasons when a new standard of practice is released in the fall.
Members of Winnipeg’s Jewish community are relieved the province s medical regulatory body won’t place restrictions on infant male circumcisions done for religious reasons when a new standard of practice is released in the fall.
Winnipeg Free Press
Low German-speaking Mennonite families fleeing jobs, homes for Mexico, Central America nations By: Brenda Suderman | Posted: 7:00 PM CDT Monday, Jul. 19, 2021 Save to Read Later
Some residents of Winkler and the surrounding municipalities who are opposed to COVID-19 vaccinations have chosen to leave Canada to avoid getting the injection.
Winnipeg Free Press
Some residents of Winkler and the surrounding municipalities who are opposed to COVID-19 vaccinations have chosen to leave Canada to avoid getting the injection.
Prompted both by fears of safety of the vaccines and worries that governments will soon require them to show proof of vaccination to travel, more than 100 Low German-speaking Mennonites from southern Manitoba have left the country in the last three months, with more likely to follow, a Winkler immigration consultant said.