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Windspeaker Publication

  • Liz Crompton, Windspeaker Contributor, Yellowknife

Page R7

Two past medal winners in figure skating are returning and will be competing in different categories, Liala Bertolini, from Yellowknife, won two bronze medals in the juvenile women's category two years ago and is now competing in the novice women division.

Natalie O'Sullivan, also from the territorial capital, will be in the novice category as well. She earned two…

  • Liz Crompton, Windspeaker Contributor, Yellowknife

Page R7

Two past medal winners in figure skating are returning and will be competing in different categories, Liala Bertolini, from Yellowknife, won two bronze medals in the juvenile women's category two years ago and is now competing in the novice women division.

Natalie O'Sullivan, also from the territorial capital, will be in the novice category as well. She earned two…

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Whitehorse Yukon

Page R7

On March 4, three Boeing 737s will take off from the capital of this territory loaded with athletes in search of gold.

Quite a switch for Yukoners to leave the land of the Gold Rush. But for the 335 athletes and coaches travelling to the 1994 Arctic Winter Games in Slave Lake, Alberta the lure of winning a gold, silver or bronze ulu medal makes the trip a breeze.

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Whitehorse Yukon

Page R7

On March 4, three Boeing 737s will take off from the capital of this territory loaded with athletes in search of gold.

Quite a switch for Yukoners to leave the land of the Gold Rush. But for the 335 athletes and coaches travelling to the 1994 Arctic Winter Games in Slave Lake, Alberta the lure of winning a gold, silver or bronze ulu medal makes the trip a breeze.

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Whitehorse Yukon

Page R7

On March 4, three Boeing 737s will take off from the capital of this territory loaded with athletes in search of gold.

Quite a switch for Yukoners to leave the land of the Gold Rush. But for the 335 athletes and coaches travelling to the 1994 Arctic Winter Games in Slave Lake, Alberta the lure of winning a gold, silver or bronze ulu medal makes the trip a breeze.

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Whitehorse Yukon

Page R7

On March 4, three Boeing 737s will take off from the capital of this territory loaded with athletes in search of gold.

Quite a switch for Yukoners to leave the land of the Gold Rush. But for the 335 athletes and coaches travelling to the 1994 Arctic Winter Games in Slave Lake, Alberta the lure of winning a gold, silver or bronze ulu medal makes the trip a breeze.

  • Liz Crompton, Windspeaker Contributor, Yellowknife

Page R6

Robin Sproule, sitting in an overstuffed chair in her living room, pours over the pins she has collected in 16 years of attending the Arctic Winter Games.

The pin book - a half dozen fabric pages enclosed in a carrying case - is laden with pins collected throughout her amateur sports career. Several pages are devoted to an assortment gathered during the games over the…

  • Liz Crompton, Windspeaker Contributor, Yellowknife

Page R6

Robin Sproule, sitting in an overstuffed chair in her living room, pours over the pins she has collected in 16 years of attending the Arctic Winter Games.

The pin book - a half dozen fabric pages enclosed in a carrying case - is laden with pins collected throughout her amateur sports career. Several pages are devoted to an assortment gathered during the games over the…

  • Liz Crompton, Windspeaker Contributor, Yellowknife

Page R6

Robin Sproule, sitting in an overstuffed chair in her living room, pours over the pins she has collected in 16 years of attending the Arctic Winter Games.

The pin book - a half dozen fabric pages enclosed in a carrying case - is laden with pins collected throughout her amateur sports career. Several pages are devoted to an assortment gathered during the games over the…

  • Liz Crompton, Windspeaker Contributor, Yellowknife

Page R6

Robin Sproule, sitting in an overstuffed chair in her living room, pours over the pins she has collected in 16 years of attending the Arctic Winter Games.

The pin book - a half dozen fabric pages enclosed in a carrying case - is laden with pins collected throughout her amateur sports career. Several pages are devoted to an assortment gathered during the games over the…

  • Cathy Carnahan, Windspeaker Contributor, Red Bank N.B

Page R5

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Joe Augustine never expected to be in movies, but at 82, Red Bank's oldest male resident is making his debut.

Beaver Creek Pictures of Toronto, Ontario plans to produce two films on his Micmac village of Metepenagiag.

One half-hour episode is for the Sketches of Our Town TV series. The second, extended version, is for international audiences.

  • Cathy Carnahan, Windspeaker Contributor, Red Bank N.B

Page R5

.

Joe Augustine never expected to be in movies, but at 82, Red Bank's oldest male resident is making his debut.

Beaver Creek Pictures of Toronto, Ontario plans to produce two films on his Micmac village of Metepenagiag.

One half-hour episode is for the Sketches of Our Town TV series. The second, extended version, is for international audiences.

  • Cathy Carnahan, Windspeaker Contributor, Red Bank N.B

Page R5

.

Joe Augustine never expected to be in movies, but at 82, Red Bank's oldest male resident is making his debut.

Beaver Creek Pictures of Toronto, Ontario plans to produce two films on his Micmac village of Metepenagiag.

One half-hour episode is for the Sketches of Our Town TV series. The second, extended version, is for international audiences.

  • Cathy Carnahan, Windspeaker Contributor, Red Bank N.B

Page R5

.

Joe Augustine never expected to be in movies, but at 82, Red Bank's oldest male resident is making his debut.

Beaver Creek Pictures of Toronto, Ontario plans to produce two films on his Micmac village of Metepenagiag.

One half-hour episode is for the Sketches of Our Town TV series. The second, extended version, is for international audiences.

  • Karen Levin, Windspeaker Contributor, Kamloops B.C.

Page R4

If it is true that many people tend to consider Nayive arts as being limited to beadwork, totem pole carving, or Norval Morrisseau-type paintings, the seventh annual Native Visual and Performing Arts Show held in Kamloops,. B.C., proved them wrong. The creative works exhibited in the show were as diverse and inspiring as the lives and the stories of the artists themselves.…