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D 6 TUESDAY, MAY 12, 2020 ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM MY MANITOBA Contest Rules No purchase necessary. Contest deadline is noon on May 29th, 2020. Winner(s) will be contacted by phone or email and must correctly answer a time-limited, skill-testing question to claim their prize. Employees of the Winnipeg Free Press and any participating sponsors are not eligible to win. This information is used only by the Winnipeg Free Press and is not sold, bartered, traded or given to any other parties. GRAND PRIZE: 3 Lucky Winners - Includes: $150 Value Fresh Pork Pack, Copy of the NEW Proudly Pork Recipe book, BBQ Apron and Accessories! SECONDARY PRIZES: 150 Winners – Includes: the NEW Proudly Pork Recipe Book and grocery cart coins. Enter to WIN at winnipegfreepress.com/contests a Manitoba Pork Summer Gri Pack (Value $200) Includes: $150 Value Fresh Pork Pack, Copy of the NEW Proudly Pork Recipe Book, BBQ Apron & fun accessories! Win PORK PROUDLY A GLOBALLY INSPIRED CELEBRATION OF THE WORLD'S FAVOURITE PORK Manitoba Day Giveaway! Chili-Mango Pulled Pork Pork & Udon Noodle Bowl Spanish-Style Pork Kabobs REGISTER NOW. CHANGE LIVES! challengeforlife.ca VIRTUAL ...because you can! You choose your challenge! Move 20kms or do 200 minutes of exercise August 1 - 20 All funds raised stay in Manitoba. Presenting Sponsor OUR MADE-IN-MANITOBA FUNDRAISING EVENT GOES VIRTUAL! CONGRATULATIONS MANITOBA ON OUR 150TH ANNIVERSARY @MBHomebuilders @MBHomebuilders @official_mhba The MHBA and our members are proud to help celebrate Manitoba's 150th Anniversary. Since 1937, our members have been integral in helping shape and build the communities we call home. Manitoba Home Builders' Association www.homebuilders.mb.ca I F you want to celebrate Manitoba's 150th anniversary by wearing a kilt, you can wear your province's col- ours. The Manitoba tartan was officially adopted in The Coat of Arms, Emblems and the Manitoba Tartan Act on March 5, 1962, as a plaid of tartan green and a maroon colour, also known as mur- rey, the colour of mulberries. That year was the 150th anniversary of when the Selkirk Settlers arrived here from Scotland. According to the Manitoba Histor- ical Society, other colours also make up the tartan with the blue stripes repre- senting Lord Selkirk, the red squares the Red River Settlement buildings, the green squares giving a nod to the prov- ince's forests, agricultural land and minerals, azure blue lines for the Red, Assiniboine and other rivers, and gold lines for wheat crops. The tartan was designed in 1962 by Hugh Kirkwood Rankine, a postal car- rier in Winnipeg. He became interest- ed in tartans during the Second World War while recovering in Scotland after being wounded. Rankine, with the help of his wife Dorothy, who was a weaving instructor, designed the tartan in 1956. He died in 1998. As part of the act the tartan was cre- ated by, a cloth sample of it is stored in the Archives of Manitoba while it is registered in the books of the Court of the Lord Lyon, King of Arms, in Scot- land by its official name as the Mani- toban Tartan. The tartan, and the part that people from Scotland played in the creation of the province, is celebrated on Manitoba Tartan Day every April 6. • • • Manitoba's flag is also having a birthday this year, but its birth was part of a protest. The province's flag, which includes in its corner the same Red Ensign used as Canada's national flag until the present Canadian flag was made official in Feb. 1965 — is 55 years old. The Manitoba flag was adopted on May 11, 1965 and was first flown in 1966. It almost seems hard to believe now, but the birth of the Manitoba flag came about because of criticism of Canada's new flag in the Great Canadian Flag Debate. Both Manitoba and Ontario were the two provinces most against the adop- tion of the Maple Leaf as the replace- ment of the Canadian Red Ensign so, shortly after the new Canadian flag was approved, the Legislature here voted to use the former Canadian flag as part of its new flag. Ontario's flag also uses the Union Jack in its corner. The rest of Manitoba's mostly red flag uses the province's shield with a bison standing on a rock underneath the Cross of St. George. kevin.rollason@freepress.mb.ca Celebrate by waving a flag or wearing a storied kilt KEVIN ROLLASON MIK AEL A MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Manitoba's tartan (left) recognizes the province's forests, rivers, wheat and minerals. The provincial flag was born of a protest.

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