Welcome to the Cerebral Palsy Association of ManitobaCPAM is an independent non-profit organization governed by a volunteer Board of Directors. The Association offers information, referral, support, advocacy and use of its library to anyone affected with CP or to those interested in or working with people affected by CP.Challenge yourself and others to step it up this September!Log 10,000 steps a day.This is a unique chance for youto participate in a global health and wellness event.Steptember - Health & Fitness Event to Benefit Cerebral Palsy AssociationsSteptember is the perfect team building activityfor any family, group or companyEveryone can participate regardlessof age and fitness ability.We invite you to take advantage of the many mutual benefits that Steptember will provide.Not only will it promote team work, raise morale, increase physical activity levels andproductivity, participating in Steptember is an opportunity to have fun and raise funds for agreat cause!This year we have more countries on board than ever before
Meet FrankieIt wasn't uncommon for 5 year old Frankie Rumore to have an ear infection. He'd had them before, so when the usual symptoms presented themselves in June of 2013, his parents Nadia and Joe took him to the pediatrician and expected a speedy recovery. However, as the days passed with a continued fever, lethargy and headaches, it became clear that...
Community Financial Counselling Services, Inc. (CFCS) is a non-profit, United Way member agency. We are a credit counselling agency that can help you get a handle on your debt with a plan that works for you.
There are no hidden agendas – we are a publicly-funded, non-profit – that means we don’t need to profit from your debt management plan. We tell you everything you need to know up front in your orientation session or at your first one-on-one meeting with us.
*Our counselling services are free of charge.
It has been an age-old and ongoing challenge for museums to evolve and compete for the attention of visitors and residents alike. Now, perhaps more than ever before, museums must find a way to be relevant in a society focused on technology and entertainment. Museums large and small, urban and rural must actively seek out and work with a broad network of community partners in order to appeal to new audiences and to ensure the long-term sustainability of the collections and stories they preserve. Museums & the Community will help you define your museum's role in the community and give you ideas for finding new partnerships that can make your museum an invaluable community service provider.
PROMOTING THE DEVELOPMENT OF DANCE'Dance Manitoba promotes and encourages ALL disciplines of dance.Dance Manitoba facilitates the exchange of information and ideas on matters affecting dance in Manitoba.Dance Manitoba provides the delivery of programming to benefit the dancers and to increase the general public awareness of all forms of dance in the Province of Manitoba.Dance Manitoba aims to develop and nurture the appreciation of dance in Manitoba through the Manitoba Provincial Dance Festival and workshops / master classes.Dance Manitoba publishes a bi-monthly newsletter,'Footlights', available to all valid members of the organization.Dance Manitoba works collaboratively with other organizations, associations or societies to enhance the education and advancement of dance as an art form.Dance Manitoba delivers programming that will encourage the public awareness of all forms of dance and to facilitate the exchange of information and ideas on matters affecting dance in Manitoba.Dance Manitoba Inc. is governed by a volunteer Board of Directors
The Shrine fez bearing the name Khartum, so familiar to many people in Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario today, was relatively unknown until 1905 when Khartum Temple was introduced, established and chartered in Winnipeg, Manitoba, through the efforts of members of the Masonic Order, Scottish and York Rites and the Shrine of North America. Thus, the name 'Khartum', taken from the chief city in Sudan, became Temple No. 95 in the Shrine of North America and the fifth temple to be chartered in Canada.As membership rapidly grew throughout the Shrine of North America, the Imperial Shrine officers recognized that Shriners had to have a mandate that would keep their membership united in a common purpose. Thus, in 1922, was established the Shriners Hospitals for Children, which to this date is known as the 'World's Greatest Philanthropy'. Its mandate was to set up and maintain a network of hospitals for treating children with orthopaedic or burns injuries. In 1923, Khartum Shriners proudly sent their first three patients to the Twin Cities Shrine Hospital for Children for treatment at no cost to the children or their families