logo

Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation - EVENING LOTTERY WINNING NUMBERS - May 25, 2025

Cision Canada26-05-2025

TORONTO, May 25, 2025 /CNW/ -
Sunday 25/05/2025
POKER LOTTO
Winning Hand: 9-D, 5-H, 9-S, 6-C, 10-C.
MEGA DICE LOTTO:
1, 6, 8, 13, 26, 31 Bonus 17.
Pick-2: 1 5
Pick-3: 2 2 5
Pick-4: 8 4 3 4
Encore: 8339399
Daily Keno
1, 5, 6, 23, 25, 26, 34, 37, 43, 47
49, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 62, 64, 65, 70.
POWERBUCKS™ WATCH 'N WIN: 5, 15, 16, 24, 29, 32
MidDay lottery winning numbers
PICK-2: 8 3
PICK-3: 8 2 9
PICK-4: 2 7 6 8
ENCORE: 5860653
DAILY KENO
6, 7, 10, 11, 12, 16, 18, 20, 29, 31
35, 38, 41, 46, 50, 54, 55, 58, 67, 70.
POWERBUCKS™ is a trademark of IGT or its affiliates.
SOURCE OLG Winners

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

2025 Sobey Art Award shortlist revealed Français
2025 Sobey Art Award shortlist revealed Français

Cision Canada

timean hour ago

  • Cision Canada

2025 Sobey Art Award shortlist revealed Français

Six finalists announced for Canada's most established contemporary visual arts prize OTTAWA, ON, June 3, 2025 /CNW/ - Six of Canada's most compelling contemporary visual artists have been shortlisted for the 2025 Sobey Art Award, Canada's most established contemporary visual arts prize since 2002. Today, the National Gallery of Canada (NGC) and the Sobey Art Foundation (SAF) are excited to unveil their names. They are: Tarralik Duffy for the Circumpolar region. A multidisciplinary artist and designer from Salliq, Nunavut, Duffy uses various mediums like drawing, photography, sculpture, textiles, printmaking, and salvaged materials to explore contemporary Inuit culture and pop culture. Tania Willard for the Pacific region. Willard, a mixed Secwépemc and settler artist, uses land-based art to promote Indigenous resurgence through collaborative projects like BUSH Gallery and language revitalization in Secwépemc communities. Chukwudubem Ukaigwe for the Prairies region. Born in Nigeria, Ukaigwe is an artist, curator, and writer influenced by experimental music, literature, history, and futurism. His work aims to create immersive audiovisual environments, examining subject-object divides and fracturing time and relativity. Sandra Brewster for the Ontario region. The child of Guyanese parents, Brewster is a Toronto-based Canadian artist. Her practice reflects a multilayered sense of identity, born of a collision between place and time. Swapnaa Tamhane for the Quebec region. Tamhane's practice is dedicated to materials such as cotton and jute, leading to the making of handmade paper, archival research, and textile installations. She also collaborates closely with artisans in Gujarat, India, in a skill-sharing process. Hangama Amiri for the Atlantic region. Amiri works predominantly in textiles, examining notions of home, and how gender, social norms, and geopolitical conflict affect the daily lives of women in Afghanistan and the diaspora. The figurative tendency in her work reflects her interest in the power of representation, especially through everyday objects such as passports, vases, and celebrity postcards. "On behalf of the Sobey Art Foundation, I extend our warmest congratulations to the six exceptional artists who have been named to this year's Sobey Art Award shortlist. We are incredibly proud to support their remarkable achievements and look forward to celebrating their ongoing contributions to the Canadian contemporary visual arts landscape in the months ahead," said Rob Sobey, Chair, Sobey Art Foundation. "Congratulations to the six outstanding artists shortlisted for the 2025 Sobey Art Award," said Jonathan Shaughnessy, Director, Curatorial Initiatives, National Gallery of Canada; and Chair, 2025 Sobey Award Jury. "Through paintings, drawings, textiles, video, sculpture and multidisciplinary installations, their works capture the vitality of artmaking in this country today while touching on subjects pertinent to contemporary Canadian identity. We're excited to work with each of these artists and bring their richly diverse material practices together this fall for the always highly anticipated Sobey Award exhibition." A total of $465,000, in prize money will be awarded, including the $100,000 grand prize. Each of the shortlisted artists receives $25,000 and each of the remaining longlisted artists receives $10,000. The winner of the award will be announced at a special celebration on November 8, 2025. An exhibition featuring works by the six shortlisted artists will be held at the Gallery, opening on October 3, 2025, and running until February 8, 2026. The jury This year's independent jury overseeing the longlist selection process and shortlist deliberations is made up of contemporary arts curators and a past winner of the Sobey Art Award, with representation from each of the regions, as well as an international juror. They are: Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory, winner of the 2021 Sobey Art Award, for the Circumpolar region; Zoë Chan, curator, Richmond Art Gallery, Pacific region; Alyssa Fearon, Director/Curator, Dunlop Art Gallery, Prairies; Betty Julian; Senior Curator, McMaster Museum of Art, Ontario; Anne-Marie St-Jean Aubre, Curator of Quebec and Canadian Contemporary Art, Gail and Stephen A. Jarislowsky Chair, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Quebec; Rose Bouthillier, contemporary art curator and writer based in Maberly, Newfoundland and Labrador, Atlantic; and Carla Acevedo-Yates, curator, writer and researcher working across the Americas, international juror. For more information on the 2025 shortlisted and longlisted artists, please visit: About the Sobey Art Award The Sobey Art Award (SAA) is Canada's preeminent prize for Canadian contemporary visual artists. Created in 2002 with funding from the Sobey Art Foundation (SAF), the SAA has helped to propel the careers of artists through financial support and recognition in Canada and beyond. The SAA has been jointly administered by the National Gallery of Canada (NGC) and SAF since 2016. The past SAA winners are: Brian Jungen (2002), Jean-Pierre Gauthier (2004), Annie Pootoogook (2006), Michel de Broin (2007), Tim Lee (2008), David Altmejd (2009), Daniel Barrow (2010), Daniel Young and Christian Giroux (2011), Raphaëlle de Groot (2012), Duane Linklater (2013), Nadia Myre (2014), Abbas Akhavan (2015), Jeremy Shaw (2016), Ursula Johnson (2017), Kapwani Kiwanga (2018), Stephanie Comilang (2019), Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory (2021), Divya Mehra (2022), Kablusiak (2023) and Nico Williams (2024). About the Sobey Art Foundation The Sobey Art Foundation was established in 1981 by the late Frank H. Sobey who was a dedicated collector of Canadian art. The Sobey Art Award was founded in 2002 as privately funded prizes for Canadian contemporary visual artists. The award aims to promote new developments in contemporary visual art and attract national and international attention to Canadian artists. About the National Gallery of Canada Founded in 1880, the National Gallery of Canada is among the world's most respected art institutions. As a national museum, we exist to serve all Canadians, no matter where they live. We do this by sharing our collection, exhibitions and public programming widely. We create dynamic experiences that allow for new ways of seeing ourselves and each other through the visual arts, while centering Indigenous ways of knowing and being. Our mandate is to develop, preserve and present a collection for the learning and enjoyment of all – now and for generations to come. We are home to more than 90,000 works, including one of the finest collections of Indigenous and Canadian art, major works from the 14 th to the 21 st century and extensive library and archival holdings.

/C O R R E C T I O N from Source -- Canadian Public Relations Society - National/ English
/C O R R E C T I O N from Source -- Canadian Public Relations Society - National/ English

Cision Canada

timean hour ago

  • Cision Canada

/C O R R E C T I O N from Source -- Canadian Public Relations Society - National/ English

In the news release, CPRS REVEALS AWARDS OF EXCELLENCE WINNERS SHOWCASING THE BEST IN CANADIAN PUBLIC RELATIONS AND COMMUNICATIONS, issued 28-May-2025 by Canadian Public Relations Society - National over CNW, we are advised by the company that the first paragraph should read"The Canadian Public Relations Society (CPRS) is proud to announce sixty-four winners of the 2025 CPRS National Awards of Excellence, celebrating the exceptional work of public relations and communications professionals across the country." rather than "sixty-three winners" as originally issued inadvertently. The complete, corrected release follows: CPRS REVEALS AWARDS OF EXCELLENCE WINNERS SHOWCASING THE BEST IN CANADIAN PUBLIC RELATIONS AND COMMUNICATIONS BANFF, AB, May 28, 2025 /CNW/ - The Canadian Public Relations Society (CPRS) is proud to announce sixty-four winners of the 2025 CPRS National Awards of Excellence, celebrating the exceptional work of public relations and communications professionals across the country. "On behalf of the Board of Directors of CPRS, I extend our heartfelt congratulations to all the recipients of this year's Awards of Excellence," said Claire Ryan, MCM, APR, National President of CPRS. "Each year, we are inspired by the calibre of submissions from across Canada and across sectors, which demonstrates the vital role strategic communications plays in our society. Our winners exemplify professionalism, creativity, and purpose," added Ms. Ryan. "We hope these awards serve not only as recognition of their achievements, but as lasting reminders of the impact that thoughtful, ethical communications can have." Presented during a gala ceremony at the ELEVATE 2025 CPRS National Conference, this year's awards recognize outstanding achievements in strategic communications, innovation, and leadership. "Not all submissions receive an award here at CPRS National Awards of Excellence, so the competition is intense," said Lisa Covens, MA, CAIP, board liaison to the CPRS National Major Awards and the Awards of Excellence Committee. "Presenting so many awards in person at the Awards Gala is a highlight of the conference for me." From bold campaigns which sparked national conversations to behind-the-scenes efforts building lasting trust, this year's winners are setting the pace for the future of public relations and communications in Canada. "Those who submit entries, and those who evaluate them, are helping define the very standards that shape excellence in public relations," said Julien Baudry, APR, MBA, Presiding Officer of the CPRS National Awards Committee. "Our profession has long been focused on managing the reputations of others, and too often we've neglected our own. Yet there is so much talent here, so many storytellers," added Baudry. "Building Trust in a Shifting World" was this year's conference theme, and attendees explored the evolving role of communicators in a time of complexity and change. From AI to activism, misinformation to media relations, ELEVATE 2025 brought together the profession's leading voices to tackle today's toughest communication challenges. The 2025 conference and awards gala were made possible with the generous support of our sponsors and partners: ChangeMakers, Notified, Leger, Cision, McMaster University's Masters of Communications Management Program, Royal Roads University, The Canadian Press and Aspen Films. CPRS National is pleased to announce the full list of winners of the 2025 Awards of Excellence: Best Corporate Social Responsibility Campaign SILVER – Simon Falardeau, Strategic Communications Consultant, "The April 8, 2024 Eclipse: Protect Your Eyes and Enjoy." BRONZE – IKEA Canada with Edelman Canada, "SHT" Best Influencer Campaign GOLD – Paradigm, Edgewell Personal Care, "Mighty o.b. Makes a Comeback with Gen Z" SILVER – McDonald's Canada x Weber Shandwick Canada, "It's a McDonald's Thing" BRONZE – GSK + Porter Novelli, "AsktoBsure" Best Integrated Communications GOLD – Town of Whitby Communications and Creative Services, "Whitby's 'Care Closer to Home' Campaign" SILVER – Proof Strategies & Electrical Safety Authority, "Your EV Deserves Better" BRONZE – University of Toronto, "U of T Communications for celebrating Geoffrey Hinton's Nobel Prize in Physics" Best non-profit/NGO Campaign GOLD – Proof Strategies & Electrical Safety Authority, "Your EV Deserves Better" SILVER – Movember Canada x Weber Shandwick Canada, "Moustache Mission" BRONZE – Lung Health Foundation and Edelman, "Our Lungs Make Our Lives" Best Use of Media Relations – Large Budget (More than $50,000 CAD) GOLD – Rethink PR and Molson, "See My Name" SILVER – IKEA Canada, "SHT" BRONZE – Zeno Group Canada, "Philadelphia Bagel Wholes" Best Use of Media Relations – Medium Budget ($10,000 – $50,000 CAD) GOLD – Mila and TACT, "Pause Giant AI Experiments" BRONZE – Securian Canada and Kaiser & Partners, "Behind the Gig: Securian Canada Insights" Best Use of Media Relations – Small Budget (less than $10,000 CAD) SILVER – CAA & CAA Insurance "Auto-Theft Strategy 2024" Brand Development Campaign of the Year GOLD – Craft Public Relations, "Atypique's Sober Dance Party, Featuring AJ McLean" SILVER – Craft Public Relations & Tim Hortons, "The Last Timbit, A Tim Hortons 60th Anniversary Musical" SILVER – Paradigm, Edgewell Personal Care, "Mighty o.b. Makes a Comeback with Gen Z" Canadian Advocacy and Social Marketing Campaign of the Year SILVER – ChangeMakers & Government of Nunavut, "Escape the Vape" Canadian Digital Communications Campaign of the Year GOLD – Zeno Group Canada, "Love Your Lunch Day" SILVER – Proof Strategies & Electrical Safety Authority, "Your EV Deserves Better" BRONZE – Novartis Canada and Golin Health x Edelman Canada, "My Krew Canada" Canadian Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Campaign of the Year BRONZE – Victoria Police Department, "Women Of VicPD" Canadian Government Relations Campaign of the Year GOLD – Town of Whitby — Communications and Creative Services, "Whitby's 'Care Closer to Home' Campaign" SILVER – Club des petits déjeuners and TACT, "L'explosion des besoins alimentaires dans les écoles du Québec" Canadian Health Care Campaign of the Year GOLD – Lung Health Foundation and Edelman, "Our Lungs Make Our Lives" SILVER – Obesity Canada, Eli Lilly Canada and GCI Canada, "Reshaping the obesity narrative: The cost of inaction and impact of stigma" SILVER – Interior Health Communications & Engagement, "Give your kids their best shot" BRONZE – GSK + Porter Novelli, "AsktoBsure" Canadian Issues / Crisis Management Campaign of the Year SILVER – Munro/Thompson & Yuułuʔiłʔatḥ Government, "Cold Chain Incident Issue Management" BRONZE – The City of Red Deer, "Canada Post Strike" Canadian Marketing Communications Campaign of the Year SILVER – Proof Strategies & Electrical Safety Authority, "Powerline Safety" BRONZE – Craft Public Relations, "Nintendo Switch x Maitreyi Ramakrishnan" Employee Engagement / Internal Communications Campaign of the Year GOLD – Northland Power, "Transforming Internal Communications with The Pulse" SILVER – British Columbia Institute of Technology, "BCIT Don't Get Hooked Campaign" BRONZE – Alberta Blue Cross, "2024 Employee Giving Campaign" External Communications SILVER – Town of Whitby — Communications and Creative Services, "Whitby's 'Care Closer to Home' Campaign" BRONZE – Apostrophe, "Community-Led Collaboration Project" New Product or Service Launch GOLD – Craft Public Relations & Rakuten Kobo, "The Canadian Launch of Kobo Colour eReaders" SILVER – Mondelez x Weber Shandwick Canada, "OREO Space Dunk" BRONZE – Craft Public Relations, DDMG & Tim Hortons, "The Launch of Flatbread Pizza" Best Publication GOLD – Cooke Inc., "Cooke Newsletter - Spring 2024" SILVER – City of Welland, "Wonders of Welland" BRONZE – Town of Okotoks, "Town of Okotoks 2023 Annual Report" BRONZE – University of Toronto, "University of Toronto Magazine" Best Special Events Projects GOLD – Craft Public Relations & Tim Hortons, "Tim Hortons Pet Merch Collection Event" SILVER – Paradigm, Edgewell Personal Care, "Come Alive with Hawaiian Tropic" BRONZE – McDonald's Canada x Weber Shandwick Canada, "Toronto Raptors: Power of 3's" In House Team of the Year GOLD – City of Leduc: Communications and Marketing Services SILVER – Alberta Energy Regulator: Engagement and Communication Branch BRONZE – British Columbia College of Nurses & Midwives: BCCNM Communications Team Agency Team of the Year – Small GOLD – Monogram Communications SILVER – Apostrophe BRONZE – Coldwater Communications Agency Team of the Year – Medium GOLD – Casacom SILVER – Zeno Group Canada BRONZE – Craft Public Relations Agency Team of the Year – Large BRONZE – ChangeMakers BRONZE – Proof Strategies Inc. Best Sustainable Development Initiative Cooke Inc., "Cooke Newsletter - Spring 2024" Best Creativity and Innovation Zeno Group Canada, "Love Your Lunch Day" Best In Show Zeno Group Canada, "Love Your Lunch Day" About CPRS Founded in 1948, the Canadian Public Relations Society is a not-for-profit association of professionals dedicated to the practice, management, and teaching of public relations and communications. Comprising 13 local societies, CPRS' mission is to build a national public relations and communications management community through professional development, accreditation, collaboration with thought leaders, a commitment to ethics and a code of professional standards, advocacy for the profession, and support to members at every stage of their careers.

CALLING FOR A NEW CANADIAN SUPERHERO FOR KIDS BY KIDS
CALLING FOR A NEW CANADIAN SUPERHERO FOR KIDS BY KIDS

Cision Canada

timean hour ago

  • Cision Canada

CALLING FOR A NEW CANADIAN SUPERHERO FOR KIDS BY KIDS

OTTAWA, ON, June 3, 2025 /CNW/ - Scouts Canada (the country's leading co-ed youth organization) is nurturing the nations need for a new Canadian Superhero NOW! Canadians are embracing 'elbows up' and need a homegrown superhero now more than ever. a) Calling on our kids to get creative: Scouts is launching a nationwide contest to kids between the ages of 5-15 to create a new quintessentially Canadian superhero complete with a hand drawn picture, a name, special powers and a backstory. The top three (3) drawings/ superhero concepts will be turned into 3D action figures, sent to winning creative kids and will be showcased on the Scouts Canada website (for national bragging rights.) "Canada is currently having a proud 'national moment', and every Canadian is looking for a way to celebrate our country in their own way … so far, kids haven't had a tangible way to join in," said Liam Burns, CEO, Scouts Canada. "We wanted to let kids communicate the values and pride they feel being Canadians while tapping into the incredible creativity of our kids on a national scale." b) Don't we have Canadian superheroes? While we certainly have many real-world heroes like Terry Fox, Rick Hansen and Roberta Bondar, Canada is a little underrepresented in the fictional superhero world. We have Captain Canuck, Captain Canada and (technically) Wolverine, Sabretooth and Deadpool, but not really enough to fill a Canadian Hall of Justice. c) Aurora Paralysis, The Moose Meld, and Timbit Teleportation: To get an idea of the superhero savvy of the average Canadian, Scouts also ran a national survey of 1,000 random Canadians and asked them serious superhero questions like: Rank in order, the top 10 superpowers that a new Canadian superhero should have: Aurora Paralysis: Ability to use the Aurora Borealis to stun and blind foes. Eh+: Ability to make any event a little more fun (and maybe more polite) by tapping into 'Canuckness.' Bilingual Blaster: Speak perfect English and French — at the same time — confusing and charming foes into submission. Beaver Barrage: Ability to launch razor sharp (fully biodegradable) woodchips from front teeth. Maple Manipulation: Ability to shoot maple syrup from wrists to immobilize criminals Timbit Teleportation: Instantly transport between Tim Hortons locations. Moose Meld: Instantly mind meld with a moose anywhere in Canada to carry out dangerous missions. 'Beaver' bites (Ability to chew through wood of any kind) Tactical Tuqueing: Power to turn any random tuque into a helmet harder than a Yukon Snowbank. Zamboni Zapper: Command any Zamboni to (slowly) run over foes. d) No Respect? Are Canadian Superhero's second-class super-beings? Asked if Canadian superhero's get the same respect as American, a combined 73.5% said 'yes' (47.54%) or 'maybe' (25.50%) they don't! A further 73.70% of Canadians think Canadian superheroes are 'not well represented' in the world of superheroes. e) What do you call a collective of Canuck Heroes? Asked what to name an all-Canadian group of superheroes, Canadians said: The Eh' Team The Beaver Battalion The Mounties of Mayhem The Eh' Vengers The Sorry Not Sorry Squad The Timbit Task Force The Loon Platoon The Toque Titans The Lumberjack Legion The Flannel Force The Igloo Avengers The Poutine Posse The Evil Doer Control Board (EDCB) f) Key contest details: Starting Tuesday, June 3 rd, Canadian kids will be asked to upload a hand drawn (not AI) image of their original Canadian superhero along with a 100 word description of their name/super powers/and backstory to the Scouts Canada website HERE Kids can upload their Heroes between June 3 and June 27 th. The winning three (3) 'Hero' creating kids will be announced and showcased on Monday, June 30th and Hero action figures will be created and sent to winners by early August. Images are available HERE About Scouts Canada Kids and young adults in Scouts chart their own path of discovery. Through a variety of fun experiences with friends, outdoor adventures and contributions to their community, Scouts build resilience and skills that set them up for life. Scouts Canada is the country's leading co-ed youth organization, offering programming for children and youth aged 5-26 in multiple languages, reflecting Canada's multicultural landscape and communities. For more information, visit Scouts Canada is a not-for-profit organization (Charitable Registration No.10776 1694 RR0028) and a member of the World Organization of the Scout Movement.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store