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Munson unveils historical marker



    The Village of Munson participated in the 100th anniversary of Canada’s first national internment operations of 1914-1920, the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Foundation (www.ucclf.ca) unveiled 100 plaques on Friday, 22 August 2014, the 100th anniversary of the War Measures Act. All 100 plaques were unveiled at 11 am (local time) in Ukrainian, Croatian, Serbian, German, and Hungarian churches and cultural centres, as well as in local and regional museums and other public venues, creating a “wave” of unveilings, moving from east to west, from coast to coast.
    Dr Lubomyr Luciuk, the CTO project leader, said: “Beginning in 1994, the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association (www.uccla.ca) began placing historical markers to recall the internment operations, hoping to eventually have a plaque at each of the 24 camp sites. We started with Kingston’s own Fort Henry, the location of Canada’s first permanent internment camp. Over the course of some 20 years our volunteers and supporters have made sure each internment camp location has been marked. The CTO project builds on UCCLA’s foundational work. These plaques will hallow the memory of all of the victims of the internment operations and help educate our fellow Canadians about a little-known episode in Canada’s national history. That fulfils the mandate of the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund and of the UCCLF.
    This is the first time in Canadian history that any community has attempted to unveil 100 historical plaques from coast to coast at the same (local) time. This couldn’t happen without the enthusiastic support of hundreds of volunteers in 100 communities across the country, from Amherst, Nova Scotia to Nanaimo, British Columbia, and Grande Prairie, Alberta to Val D’Or, Quebec to name but a few.


Moviemakers say Action on Christian sci-fi thriller

Director Dallas Lammiman works with some actors on the set of Mayflower 2, a futuristic tale of Christian experience.

The family Moviemakers team continues to enjoy the look of the valley and the relationships they have cultivated for their productions.
    They are working on their third feature this week,  and all three they've made have been partially filmed in the valley.
    “We love the look of the place, but for this film we are not using it as much,” said Greg Lammiman of Moviemakers. “ Mostly it is connections, we have done the Passion Play for 11 years, so we have a lot of connections.”
    On Monday they were shooting scenes at the Canadian Badlands Passion Play Site for the feature Mayflower 2.  The movie is not a sequel, but the theme has parallels with some of the first settlers of the Americas.
    “It is a Christian Sci-Fi feature film, and there is not may of them out there. The only other one I remember is the feature we did out here two years ago, called Remember,” said Lammiman.
    The story is set four or five decades into the future.
     “The original Mayflower was the ship that left England to the new world. In this situation, we have a totalitarian government, in which Christianity is not tolerated,” he explained. “It is a story of courage, what you have to do when facing a choice between God or man.  The Mayflower 2 is a ship, but in this case, a space ship that will take them to space.”
    He sees these themes as very real and possible.
    “There is less and less tolerance of God and the biblical message and obedience to him in society in general,” he said. “Just try to say Jesus in a public school if you’re not swearing, or any public arena. It is just not politically correct to speak your faith in public. I am not saying we are at this place, but we are exploring this. There are certainly places on this planet where Christians are dying for their faith.”    
    Moviemakers is very much a family production - Greg did most of the writing of this film and his son Dallas is in the director’s chair.
    “It is certainly a joint share venture in the script and right now he is the director, I am assistant director and producer,” said Lammiman.
    He figures they will be wrapping up shooting this month and then heading into post production.
    Other features he has collaborated on include Remember, and My Grandpa Detective, shot in Drumheller earlier this year.

Inmate barked up the wrong tree

RCMP service dog file photo.

A Drumheller Penitentiary inmate was convicted of obstruction of justice in Drumheller provincial court Friday, August 22, for barking at a corrections officer.
    While Kevin Papequash was serving time in the Drumheller Institution earlier this year, a corrections officer and service dog were conducting a search on another inmate.
    It is reported Mr. Papequash  began yelling and barking to interfere with the work of the corrections officer and dog.
    He was sentenced to ten days, to be served consecutively with his current sentence.
    Papequash has since transferred to an Edmonton penitentiary.


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