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‘DOOM’ REBOOT A DANCE OF DEATH IN HONOUR OF YOUR INNER MONSTER
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WAVE RIDER
LOAVES AND FISHES
WOMEN OF EXCELLENCE
Charities hope for smooth switch
Plumtree, Watson honoured for lifetime of work
BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF
BY PAUL COWLEY ADVOCATE STAFF
Red Deer is losing a long-running soup kitchen that’s also a safe place to hang out for people with no other place to go during the day. On Monday, Loaves and Fishes announced its last day of operations is June 30 due to a ongoing funding shortfall, but The Mustard Seed, based in Calgary and Edmonton, will be moving in to fill in the void. Mustard Seed is still determining what programs to offer out of Loaves and Fishes’ facility at 6002 54th Ave. So far it has decided, possibly with a partner, to carry on with Loaves and Fishes’ popular school lunch program that feeds 350 students daily. Loaves and Fishes executive director Halina Jarvis said she is concerned about the gap in food service between the time Loaves and Fishes shuts down and Mustard Seed opens and where people will go during the day. “We’re trying to work something out so people aren’t left out in the cold. We are the only drop-in centre in town right now. There’s nobody so I don’t know what these folks are going to do. We’re going to have to put our heads together.”
When Nellie Watson turned 90 her friends sang the Scottish song “Keep Right on to the End of the Road.” “And that’s what I hope to do,” said Watson to a standing ovation after being honoured along with Red Deer’s Elizabeth Plumtree with Lifetime Achievement Awards at the 9th Annual Women of Excellence Awards Gala on Wednesday night. Watson was recognized for her decades of volunteer work with the Brownies, Olds College, Multiple Sclerosis Society of Central Alberta and 4-H, among others. Her mailing address may say Eckville, she said, but she is a proud resident of the Everts district. About 40 km west of Red Deer, it was once a significant village and the only stopping point between Red Deer and Rocky Mountain House, added Watson, who has been deeply involved in collecting the history of the area in two books. The Everts Ladies Community Club — of which she is a chartered member — is still going strong after 67 years, she said in her speech at the Sheraton Hotel Red Deer.
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Clint Kahl of Ponoka finds his groove on a standing wave in Red Deer Tuesday evening. Three parallel sets of rapids have formed on the Red Deer River just downstream from a temporary bridge installed at Great Chief Park this spring to accommodate riverbank construction on the south side of the river. Kahl and his friends Mila Bozdech and Rob Leier of Red Deer are pretty excited about the fast moving water and being able to kayak in Red Deer. All agree it would be great if, after construction is completed, the rocks could be left where they are to create a permanent set of rapids in the river.
Please see CHARITY on Page A2
Please see WOMEN on Page A2
Residents greeted by mouldy fridges, overgrown lawns BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
FORT MCMURRAY RE-ENTRY
FORT MCMURRAY — Gag-inducing, dirty and tiring work was waiting for the first group of Fort McMurray residents to return to the city Wednesday, a month after a vicious wildfire forced everyone to flee. Many set about right away to scrub down refrigerators fuzzy with mould that grew after the power was cut or mowing overgrown, dandelion-infested lawns.
Full coverage of re-entry to Fort McMurray Fenton Lovell cried as he drove back into his city. His eyes teared up again when he opened his smelly refrigerator. “Fort McMurray strong!” he joked. He was getting the house cleaned and ready so his wife and twin babies
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can return from Newfoundland. After boosting the dead battery in his pickup truck, he grabbed a welcome kit out of his mailbox and put a “natural gas required” sign in his front window. Pilar Ramirez spent the night sleeping in the back of a truck in Anzac,
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BUSINESS D1-D2 COMICS D3 CLASSIFIED D4-D5
Please see RE-ENTRY on Page A2
LOTTERIES
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about 40 minutes southeast of Fort McMurray. She was washing the refrigerator, stove elements and windowsills in a house she shares with co-workers at a concrete company. Her reaction when she first opened the door: “Oh, it’s so disgusting!” “It smelled terrible, the food. Flies everywhere — and big ones. I said, ‘Oh, my God, what happened here?”’
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