rosestreetpress.blogspot.com
Rose Street Press: December 2010
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On October 18th, 25 ethnically and culturally diverse journalism students from the University of Regina descended upon the forewarned prairie village of Mortlach. The students' mission was to find big stories is small places. This is one of the news magazines produced from that adventure. Thursday, December 2, 2010. Other J-School Publications on Mortlach. For other publications about Mortlach by our classmates, check out the links below. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Ron and Linda Locke.
the163.blogspot.com
the 163: Haunted history in farmhouse
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Haunted history in farmhouse. 8220;I looked up and I just got cold.”. 8220;Oh my gosh. I was scared.”. When Candis Kirkpatrick moved into an old farmhouse outside of Mortlach, she had no idea what she was getting herself into. Kirkpatrick and her husband moved into the farmhouse in 1969, shortly after the couple got married. That year and for the next four years, Kirkpatrick would experience things that would make most people’s hair stand on end. 8220;Everything started to fall into place,” she said.
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the 163: The Mortlach Jets
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A window into the fall of men's softball. Their proud image is slowly being wiped from the prairie landscape. Each rural Saskatchewan settlement once boasted at least one, but years of neglect and decline are quickly changing them into artifacts of the past. It is no secret that men’s softball teams are slowly slipping away from Saskatchewan towns and villages. 8220;It was a big deal. We’d have a big crowd all day, with ball and beer gardens and hamburgers” laughed Gardner. The team seemed to survive as ...
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the 163: Icons of the past
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Icons of the past. Twenty-three trains pass through Mortlach each day. The old Mortlach train station sits in a cluttered, overgrown yard. Some windows are broken while stacks of Zonolite Ceiling Insulation block the view from another. Ornate arch beams support the roof’s overhang. Christmas decorations and chairs litter the plywood path leading to the doors. Decrepit yet elegant, the building is now owned by Norman Dixon, 86, and it functions as an “antique shop.”. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom).
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the 163: Home
http://the163.blogspot.com/2010/11/frozen-in-time-once-thriving-town.html
Monday, November 29, 2010. A University of Regina School of Journalism publication. Once a thriving town, Keeler now sits empty. By Devin R. Heroux. You can still send mail to Keeler,. But there may not be anyone there to pick it up. Red faded letters can barely be made out. The resemblance of a village sits still, almost frozen in time. Read More. Icons of the past. A window into the fall of men's softball. Their proud image is slowly being wiped from the prairie landscape. Each rural. Farmers worked th...
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the 163: Mortlach Museum: More than antiques
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Mortlach Museum: More than antiques. The Mortlach Museum is housed in the old fire hall. Located just off Rose Street, the Mortlach Museum has been helping its community piece together their history since 1979. 8220;There's so much history there.". For Searle, preserving the legacy these items leave behind is what her job is all about. Even though Kouri was new to the area, the village asked him to be museum president in the summer of 2010. For Kouri, antiques don’t make history, the stories be...In the ...
rosestreetpress.blogspot.com
Rose Street Press: Other J-School Publications on Mortlach
http://rosestreetpress.blogspot.com/2010/12/other-j-school-publications-on-mortlach.html
On October 18th, 25 ethnically and culturally diverse journalism students from the University of Regina descended upon the forewarned prairie village of Mortlach. The students' mission was to find big stories is small places. This is one of the news magazines produced from that adventure. Thursday, December 2, 2010. Other J-School Publications on Mortlach. For other publications about Mortlach by our classmates, check out the links below. Ron and Linda Locke. Finding Love on the Prairies.
the163.blogspot.com
the 163: Artifacts have continental importance
http://the163.blogspot.com/p/artifacts-have-continental-importance_29.html
Artifacts have continental importance. 8220;The whole sequence has been found in the Mortlach area, right from when the people who dropped the (Clovis) points were probably seeing the edge of the glaciers to virtually what we see today,” said Walde. Clovis points, Walde explained, are the first recognised indicative points found extensively across North America. They are tools from the late ice age Clovis culture. Their existence proves that people have been in Canada for a long time. Bernie Forbes, a re...