
Saanich 98-year-old's rebellious youth led to meaningful moment during Second World War
When Ronnie Butcher is not playing bingo with a friend, the 98-year-old is telling jokes she declines to repeat.
WITH ADAM SAWATSKY
When Ronnie Butcher is not playing bingo with a friend, the 98-year-old is telling jokes she declines to repeat.
You just might find that although life has unfolded differently than you planned — it’s ended up feeling even better than you could have imagined.
If you ask Jamie-Lynn Frommelt what she wants to be when she grows up, the seven-year-old will answer with a smile.
Alone on a log, an otter seems to be having one of those days. Walking along the beach, Winnie Tse definitely is.
There's a big lesson from a young person about finding the courage to vanquish the Worry Monster in all of us.
When he first arrived at the Canadian War Cemetery near Juno Beach, Brad Palin was overwhelmed seeing more than 2,000 graves.
There is also no doubt Justin Hewitt is grateful for how his father inspired him to fill his heart with song again.
Ever since she was a little girl, Kristin Piche dreamed of diving underwater and being a marine biologist. But Kristin also grew up with increasingly severe hearing loss.
Adam finds out how a 98-year-old’s rebellious past led to a meaningful moment during the Second World War.
Got a story idea for a Swatsky Sign-Off? Contact Adam at signoff@bellmedia.ca.
Leah Rowntree was diagnosed with Stage 3 breast cancer in April, shortly before B.C. announced it would send patients like her to Bellingham, Washington for radiation therapy. On Tuesday, Rowntree had her first radiation treatment. But she chose to pay for it in Houston, Texas, not trusting the B.C. system to get her into treatment in the province—or in Bellingham—in time.
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