Red Deer Advocate, April 22, 2013

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Red Deer 1913 — 2013 Create Celebrate Commemorate

JAYS’ BATS COME ALIVE

JEPSEN BESTS BIEBER

Toronto doubles up on New York 8-4 B2

Wins Junos for album, single and pop album of the year A5, C5

CENTRAL ALBERTA’S DAILY NEWSPAPER

BREAKING NEWS ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM

MONDAY, APRIL 22, 2013

Korean War vet returning RETRACING HIS STEPS IN SOUTH KOREA WITH HIS SON BY MYLES FISH ADVOCATE STAFF A Red Deer man is heading back to South Korea, where the rhetoric may mirror what he witnessed 60 years ago, but the landscape will not. Donald Holloway, 80, enlisted in the armed forces in his home province of Newfoundland in 1951, one year after the Korean War began. But it was not his desire to take part in the conflict when he signed up for the army. “At the same time they were recruiting to send a brigade to Europe. That’s where I hoped to end up. As it happened, I went from Petawawa to Chilliwack for a mines and demolition course, and while I was there the brigade for Europe moved out,” said Holloway. So, Holloway ended up in another brigade and was sent to Korea. He went with mixed feelings in February 1953, five months before the ceasefire ending the Korean War would be signed. As a corporal in the 59th Field Squadron Engineers, Holloway’s duties mostly involved clearing minefields. Holloway concedes with a laugh that at his age he doesn’t remember much

of the experience, but he recalls some of the hardships he witnessed south of what is today the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas. “The thing that really shook me was the people. They were so poor, they were literally begging, especially the children. Even though I was young and single I had a soft spot for children even back then.” Holloway — along with his son Doug, 35 other veterans and federal Veterans Affairs Minister Steven Blaney — will spend a week in South Korea as part of that country’s Revisit Korea Program. The delegation will participate in remembrance ceremonies in Seoul, Busan, and Gapyeong, visiting grave sites and memorials. This year marks the 60th anniversary of the end of the Korean War, and was deemed the Year of the Korean War Veteran by the federal government. The trip will correspond with the 62nd anniversary of the April 24 and 25 Battle of Kapyong, in which an outnumbered Canadian contingent valiantly defended against a hilltop position against Chinese forces fighting for the North.

Please see KOREA on Page A2

Photo by RANDY FIEDLER/Advocate staff

Donald Holloway holds his service medals as he thinks about his time in the Korean War: he and son Doug fly to the Asian country later this month to retrace his steps.

Allan Cup win icing on the cake for host Generals Sports community honours its own

BY BRENDA KOSSOWAN ADVOCATE STAFF Bentley 3 Clarenville 0 The good old hockey game just doesn’t get any better, say fans and volunteers who gathered for the final game of the 2013 Allan Cup in Red Deer on Saturday. With Stompin’ Tom Connors’s FULL COVERAGE B1 widely-known hockey song playing in the background, fans and crew packed the stands at the Red Deer Arena to watch the Bentley Generals take on the Clarenville Caribous for the final match in a tournament they had won only once in their previous four attempts. Any fears general manager Jeff McInnis and his team’s fans may have had before the first puck was dropped were erased toward the end of the second period, when the Generals finally scored the first goal of the game. They wrapped up with a 3-0 win, icing the cake for their first ever effort at hosting the Cup. McInnis said as his team was warming up that the Generals were underdogs in the final, playing against a very strong team from Newfoundland. However, the 2012-13 Generals had shown in the past that they could rally under pressure, and that’s exactly what they did on Saturday. They played their hearts out, said

PLEASE

BY BRENDA KOSSOWAN ADVOCATE STAFF

Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff

Bentley General Scott Doucet gets past Kenora Thistle Mike Garrow during second period Allan Cup semifinal action Friday night. longtime fan Brian Gyori, a former Bentley-area resident now living in Caroline. The way they played on Saturday, the Generals really could show profes-

WEATHER

INDEX

Sunny. High 7. Low -7.

Four sections Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A3 Business. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C3,C4 Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A5 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D1-D3 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D4 Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C5 Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B1-B6

FORECAST ON A2

RECYCLE

sional hockey teams what the game is all about, Gyori said the day after the game.

Dream your dream and follow it through, Olympic gold medallist Beckie Scott told athletes, coaches and volunteers gathered for Red Deer’s annual Community Sport Awards on Sunday. Scott’s bronze medal for cross-country skiing in the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics was upgraded to Silver and then to Gold after the two women who finished ahead of her both tested positive for drugs. When Scott told her mother how unfair it was to compete against cheaters, her mother said that she had two choices. She could do something about it or remain silent, in which case she would be part of the problem. Scott bit the bullet and spoke out. “There were a lot of times and moments that I was very nervous and I really had my doubts. But it always came back to these are values, this is what it means to be true to myself and this is worth fighting for. Clean sport, fair sport, fair play.” The campaign against drugs and doping netted the results Scott and her allies were seeking, with the International Olympic Committee recognizing the need to clean up their sport.

Please see CUP on Page A2

Please see AWARDS on Page A2

ALBERTA

WORLD

REDFORD REINVENTS HERSELF

THE FIRST OF MANY?

One year after Alison Redford won her first popular mandate, the Alberta premier remembers no only voting day, but the uneasy feeling just before she dropped the writ. A3

Investigators believe that two brothers suspected in the Boston Marathon bombing were likely planning other attacks based on the cache of weapons uncovered, the city’s police commissioner said Sunday. A6

00 Villages | Action Coalition on Trafficking | Alberta Sports Hall of Fame and Museum | Alix Youth Centre | Alzheimer Society | Arthritis Society | Aspire Special Needs Resource Centre | Association Canadian hone of Alberta | Bethany Care Collegeside | Canadian Blood Services | Canadian Cancer Society | Canadian Diabetes Association | Canadian Paraplegic Association | Canadian Red Cross | Catholic Social Serv ntrefest | Central Alberta African Centre | Central Alberta Aids Network | Central Alberta Brain Injury Society | Central Alberta Community Legal Clinic | Central Alberta Council on Aging | Central Alberta Div iation | Central Alberta Immigrant Women’s Association | Central Alberta Refugee Effort | Central Alberta Special Equestrians | Central Alberta Women’s Emergency Centre | Central Alberta Women’s Outreac ntral Music Fest | Child and Youth Friendly Red Deer | City of Red Deer - Community Development Crisis Centre | CNIB | Crime Stoppers | Dress for Success | Epilepsy Association | Extendicare - Michener Hill | ervices of Central Alberta | FCSS | Golden Circle Resource Centre | Habitat For Humanity | Heart & Stroke Foundation | Kerry Wood Nature Centre | Kidney Foundation of Canada | Learning Disabilities Associa ng Cupboard | Life Long Learning | Loaves and Fishes | Magdalene House Society | Meals on Wheels | MS Society, Central AB | Neighbourhood Place | Neighbourhood Watch | Michener Services | Piper Creek | Red Deer & District SPCA | Red Deer Action Group Society | Red Deer Arts Council | Red Deer City Soccer Association | Red Deer College | Red Deer Community Chaplaincy | Red Deer County | Red Deer Croh tis Foundation | Red Deer Cultural Heritage Society | Red Deer Food Bank | Red Deer Hospice Society | Red Deer Kiwanis Safety City | Red Deer Museum & Art Gallery | Red Deer Native Friendship Society | Re c Library | Red Deer Regional Health Foundation | Red Deer Regional Hospital | Red Deer Rural RCMP Victim Services | Red Deer Search and Rescue | Red Deer Symphony | Red Deer Youth Justice Committee | ict Volunteer Centre | Safe Harbour Society | Salvation Army | Schizophrenia Society | Shalom Counselling Centre | Special Olympics | St. John’s Ambulance | Suicide Information and Education Services | Sun ’s Edge School Division | Sunnybrook Farm | Three Hills Seniors Outreach | United Way - Central Alberta | Volunteer Hanna | Volunteer Red Deer | Westerner Park | Whisker Rescue Society | Youth and Voluntee

National Volunteer Week April 21 - 27

VOLUNTEERS THANK YOU WE COULDN’T DO IT WITHOUT YOU

Get involved, visit volunteerreddeer.ca for a volunteer opportunity that’s right for you!


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