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Young vs young at heart pickleball tournament tonight

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    The young and young at heart are going head to head in a pickleball tournament.
    The Young, four staff members from Badlands Community Facility (BCF) and the Young at Heart, a group of seniors are getting together November 12 at the BCF fieldhouse for a pickleball tournament at 7:00 p.m.
    The senior players overheard that the BCF staff were practicing pickleball after hours. The seniors challenged them to  have a tournament.  Bob Friesen, from the senior group, said “We’ll show them how to play.”
    The senior’s group gets together every Tuesday and Thursday morning, around 9:00 a.m. at the BCF fieldhouse. Two years ago it started with four players and they now have over 20 players.    
 Anyone wishing to play this sport, just show up Tuesdays and Thursdays at 9:00 a.m. at the BCF and  a member of the staff will direct you to the courts. Bob Friesen said they will welcome new players and will coach if needed.
    Pickleball is played on a badminton court, with a paddle and a whiffleball. It is a combination of tennis, badminton and pingpong.  It is for all ages wishing to have some fun and exercise.


What would you like to see at the Aquaplex?

Aquaplex shutdown

The Town of Drumheller is preparing to host a very important open house for residents and users of the Aquaplex to provide feedback.
    The open house is November 17th at the Drumheller Aquaplex to hear thoughts and ideas about  the modernization of the Aquaplex.
    The Town of Drumheller recently committed to upgrading the facility with Stantec, our architectural consultants on the project. The public is encouraged to bring their ideas and suggestions to the open house on November 17th from 6pm to 8pm.
    For those unable to attend, a survey link will be posted on the Town website for residents and users to fill out. The Town will also provide paper copies at the front desks of Town Hall,  Aquaplex, and the Badlands Community Facility.

High alert guarding nuclear warheads

PAUL NARRY

    While World War II ended in 1945, the world was on alert for the next generations during the Cold War.  One Drumheller resident witnessed first hand as nuclear warheads were brought into Canada.
    Paul Barry vividly remembers serving as a military Police Officer in 1965 when the US Warheads were brought to CFB Comox. And while the world was under alert, he felt like he was just doing his job.
     Barry began his military career in the Air Force, at just age 17, his mother had to sign a permission form for him to join. For Barry, it was more of a question of economics.
    “I grew up in the Maritimes and there was really no work back then, and the military was one thing to do,” he said. “Back then it was a really depressed there, all you had to do was lumber of fishing.”
    “At the time, it was the men of the Army the gentlemen of the Air Force,” he laughs. He enlisted in 1960.
    He left the City of Stately Elms (Fredericton) to train in St. Jean, Quebec. His aptitudes pointed him towards electronics and computers, and he spent three years training as a radar technician and on computers. This training took him to Biloxi Mississippi.
    While he had the smarts for the job, he didn’t enjoy it. He completed his training, worked in the field for a year and then re-mustered and became an Air Force policeman. Eventually the branch of the forces united their police to form the Military Police in 1966.
    His first placement was in Comox, B.C. in 1963, at the height of the Cold War.
    “I was part of the contingent that brought in the nuclear warheads, the Bomarc missiles,” he said.
    The Bomarcs were a long range anti aircraft missiles. It was a controversial decision to arm these with nuclear warheads, and led to the splinter of John Diefenbaker’s cabinet and eventually the collapse of the government. Originally, Lester Pearson’s government was against nuclear weapons, but did eventually changed their position and they were installed.
    “They brought in an American contingent to look after the missiles, and some American security, who were basically advisers. But we as the Canadian Police actually looked after the security,” he said.
   While there weren’t any immediate threats there were protests.
    “It was more amusing at the time, the “ban the bomb” demonstrations. Usually every four of five months there would be a demonstration, warm weather of course,” he laughs.
   “At the time it was very tense, but looking back it is kind of amusing.”
    Protecting North America during the Cold War wasn’t as exciting as Comox, as he learned when he moved Moosonee, Ontario.
    “I went from nuclear security to absolutely boring,” he said.
    This was an isolated community of 75, military staff and the family. The job was to babysit a radar installation. He was one of five military police.
    “We were in complete isolation. There was a whole line of radar bases across Canada,” he explains.
    The biggest excitement was training exercises about once a year. He was there for four years.
    From Moosonee he was transferred to Edmonton in 1967 and looked after CFB Griesbach at the north end of the city and CFB Namao.
    You were like a city cop really. Griesbach and Namao were like small cities in themselves,” he said.
    He explains in the Criminal Code military police are given about the same power of the RCMP except their jurisdiction is solely on federal property.
    Next, he went to CFB Suffield. Being so close to Medicine Hat and Brooks, and right on the Trans Canada, They were given peace officer status to enforce traffic, and were considered first responders on the highway.
    In 1982, he retired from the military, and came to work at the Drumheller Institution.
    “At the time I was told I was being promoted, transferred to Calgary and then shipped to Cyprus. So I could either do that or retire,” he said
    With his kids just in their teens, he decided it was time to take on a new career.
    He wouldn’t change his service for anything. He said he learned the values of hard work, disciple and he misses the camaraderie.
    ‘If you were to go to a small town, you might know your immediate neighbours, but like in Suffield or in Edmonton, you knew 80 per cent of everyone who was there,” he said.
    He is humble about his service.
    “It was just a job. People could thank you for protecting the country, but it was just something you did,’ he chuckles.


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