Wednesday: Winnipeg arrests, India sterilization, manuscript theft, and more...
Part One
Winnipeg arrests
Today, police announced they have arrested two men, who have been charged with attempted murder and sexual assault. The charges stem from the investigation of a sexual assault on Winnipeg teen Rinelle Harper last weekend. She was subsequently thrown in the frigid Assiniboine River, but survived, and is recovering in hospital.
Rosetta probe
We all know how hard it is to put a washing machine on a giant rock here on Earth. But it's exponentially more difficult to put a probe the size of a washing machine on a giant rock that's hurtling through space, hundreds of millions of kilometres away. Today, the European Space Agency did it -- we find out how.
Manuscript theft
Just days before his composition is due to premiere, it's been stolen -- and now Vancouver Symphony Orchestra music director Bramwell Tovey is making frantic notes.
Part Two
India sterilization
Thirteen women, among dozens of women underwent sterilization surgery in central India, are dead. The procedures are part of a government-run mass sterilization campaign.
Veterans' complaints
A group of Canadian veterans say they're being forgotten already -- and that it's time the government provided them with much-needed support.
Part Three
US-China climate deal
There was much rejoicing today when the U.S. and China announced a major deal on emissions. But is it actually a triumph, or are the Chinese and American presidents just blowing smoke?
Jesus married
A new book claims to have found proof that Jesus Christ married Mary Magdalene and fathered two sons; and that early Christians believed the key to human salvation was not death, but matrimonial sex.
Corruption rules
John Manley, President of the Canadian Council of Chief Executives says Ottawa shouldn't punish companies with corrupt pasts. It should encourage them to be less corrupt in the future.