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Drumheller veteran shares war story

    Canadians across the nation will soon pay tribute to the valiant men and women who have given their lives in service of our country and freedom.
    Remembrance Day is a day when we remember those who died in service of Canada. However, it is also a time to remember and give our respect to those who survived, for they too gave their lives for freedom.
    Joe Asquin, 82, of Drumheller, is one such veteran.
    Like many in Drumheller at the time, Asquin’s father worked in the coal mines, specifically the Midland Mine. The mines during World War II were busy, owing to the demand for coal across Canada and beyond.
    At the start of World War II, Asquin was a boy of 9. When he joined near the end of the war he was only 15 years old.
    “I joined up after my fifteenth birthday, then they sent me overseas. I only caught three months of it. I had seven brothers and sisters, and they were going into the forces. I didn’t want to be left out. I finished Grade 9, then when the school got burnt down I decided to join the forces,” Asquin said.
    Before joining, however, he tried the life of a miner.
    “I went down below one day and that was enough for me,” said Asquin.
    After enlisting, Asquin was trained in Manitoba and joined the Canadian Provost Corps, otherwise known as the military police. He was shipped off with the First Battalion of the Royal Canadian Regiment.
    When he went overseas to England, there was only several months left in the war. However, he ended up losing part of his right leg.
    “I lost my knee, my leg, and my foot in the last two months of the second world war. I was in the wrong place at the wrong time,” said Asquin.
    Asquin recovered and was given prosthetics to help. After World War II, he stayed in the military and when the call was made for Canada to join the Korean War, Asquin went with his regiment.
    “They went to Korea, so I went too. I looked after the ones who tried to get away,” said Asquin. “I was in Japan most of the time. The people treated us really good. If we needed anything, they’d try to get it for us. The Japanese would give us free meals, because we were looking after their places for them.”
    They came back once their tour was over, but before he could settle into a new life, Asquin was sent back for another tour, because there was a shortage of military police.
    Eventually he would return home, but the homecoming was bittersweet.
    “I lived in Midland and when I got home, our house had been bulldozed over into the river bank and mom and dad were dead,” said Asquin. “They died while I was overseas. You just have to grin and bear it. Take the good with the bad.”
    Afterwards he worked as an auto mechanic in Drumheller and then moved to Calgary to do the same.
    Asquin may have returned home, unlike so many others, but he, like many who survived, gave up so much.
    “You’re not yourself anymore,” said Asquin. “I’m still not myself.”

Joe Asquin (right), a Drumheller native, with his jeep in Korea. Asquin served as a member of the Canadian Provots Corps, the military police. In the closing months of World War II, he lost part of his right leg. He then served in Korea.


Phil Currie to receive National science medal

    Dr. Phillip Currie is to be honoured with a national award.
    Media reports say Currie, who is now a professor at the University of Alberta, will be receiving the Royal Canadian Geographical Society Gold Medal this week in Ottawa. Canadian actor Dan Ackroyd will be presenting it.
    Currie is being recognized for his research into dinosaur group behaviour and migration patterns. Currie believes that, during the late Cretaceous period, North America and Asia were connected via a land bridge and that dinosaurs would migrate between the two continents.
    Fossil assemblages in Alberta and Mongolia share many similarities in the kinds of dinosaurs present.
    Currie was one of the leads in creating the Royal Tyrrell Museum and, when it opened in 1985, became Curator of Dinosaurs. He left the Tyrrell in 2005 to be a professor of Biological Sciences at the University of Alberta and was recently inducted into the Alberta Order of Excellence.
    The Royal Canadian Geographical Society Gold Medal was first awarded in 1972.  The award was established to recognize particular achievement by one or more individuals in the general field of geography for a significant national or international event. Past recipients include astronaut Jerry Linenger and Alex Trebek.

Virtual Wall of Honour response “overwhelming”

Wall to be shown at national Remembrance Day ceremony

    Canadians across the country have been sharing the memories and photos of their loved ones who served Canada for a new Remembrance Day initiative. The response, described by The Royal Canadian Legion Dominion Command, was overwhelming.
    The Virtual Wall of Honour & Remembrance will be shown at the televised Remembrance Day ceremony at the National War Memorial in Ottawa.
    The Virtual Wall will commence at roughly 9:45 a.m. and will last until 10:15 a.m. It will be viewable on The Royal Canadian Legion
website, www.legion.ca.
    Many in Drumheller responded as well, sending their photos and stories to be honoured at the national ceremony.
    The Drumheller Mail also received a strong response. Over thirty local families brought pictures and stories of their loved ones to The Mail offices, where staff assisted in sending them to be honoured in the Virtual Wall.
    “I thought it would be good to submit my brother. I think it’s a great way to recognize my brother, so that’s why I sent his picture in,” said Ada Morrow.
    Morrow’s brother, Private Robert W.R.
Goodfellow, served with the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada during World War II. He was killed in action near Artona, Italy, on January 8, 1944. He was 24 when he died.
    Earlier this fall, Canadians were asked to send photos and stories of those who served for use in a new Virtual Wall of Honour & Remembrance. Prior to the national Remembrance Day service at the National War Memorial in Ottawa, large video screens will display those who were submitted.
    The photos and stories will be “transformed into a dramatic presentation,” described a press release from the Royal Canadian Legion. The presentation will be accompanied by Canadian singer-songwriter Terry Kelly, who will perform “A Pittance of Time” with the Ottawa Children’s choir.
    Services in Drumheller begin at 10:30 a.m. at the Badlands Community Facility on Sunday, November 11. A free bus service will pick residents up starting at 9:30 a.m. from Manor 1, Manor 2, Riverview Terrace, Keystone Estates, and Sunshine Lodge.

Response poured in for The Royal Canadian Legion’s Virtual Wall of Honour & Remembrance over the past month. Many men and women from Drumheller, such as Michael Arthur O’Dwyer, pictured here, were submitted. O’Dwyer was a pilot in the Royal Canadian Air Force during World War II. He enlisted in February 1943, survived the war, and passed away in February of 2001.


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