'Little bit teary-eyed': 25-year-old time capsules opened at Windsor elementary school
Alumni of Windsor's W. J. Langlois Catholic Elementary School returned to the school on Wednesday to look at the contents of time capsules that had been sealed since 1999.
The multi-grade, multi-classroom project involved filling the time capsules with artwork, writing projects, and letters from the students' parents — more than 25 years ago.
One assignment for Grade 7 students was to write autobiographies imagining their lives as adults.
"The only memory I had for some reason was the thing I wrote about Britney Spears and how I wanted to marry her," said Anthony Sunsin, who remembered himself getting in trouble a lot in school and being "not the best student."
"Now reading this really brings me to tears because it's pretty heartwarming … what I wanted to do and … not growing up with a dad and how I wanted to be a good father. I didn't think I'd write that stuff, and having written it, it really hit home."
The contents of the time capsules recall an era when Spears and N'Sync ruled the pop charts, The Matrix and Star Wars: The Phantom Menace were hot movies, and there were fears that computer systems could fail on a global scale when their clocks rolled over to the new millennium.
In fact, the turn of the millennium was the inspiration behind the time capsule, said Robert Ferranti, who was a Grade 7 teacher in 1999.
'It brings back a simpler time'
It was amazing to see so many former students reunited to open it, accompanied in some cases by their children, he said.
And like Sunsin, he said, it was an emotional experience.
"When I finally saw the contents, I was a little bit teary-eyed," he said.
"It brings back a simpler time. We weren't on our devices. I think the internet just started. At the time, nobody had a cell phone. It doesn't feel like 25 years ago. It feels like it went by in a blink of an eye. And part of me thinks it feels like yesterday that we did this."
Former student Michelle Younan Wahalathanthrige, who first met her now-husband in Ferranti's Grade 7 class, said making the time capsule was her fondest memory of that school year.
"It was a very exciting time," she said.
"Year after year, we would always wonder, 'Are we going to come back? Are we going to open up the time capsule?' And it's exciting that we get to do it this year."
Twelve-year-old Younan Wahalathanthrige had made a word search for the capsule featuring all the hit movies of the era.
When she returned Wednesday with her husband and children, she couldn't remember what any of them were, she said.
"Now I had to look back at the article I wrote," she said with a laugh.
Other items in the time capsules included photos of the students, old VHS tapes that needed to be digitized, and a video about a day in the life of the school made by a Grade 2 teacher using an old video camera, said Rachel Chimienti, a special education teacher at W.J. Langlois who also taught Grade 7 in 1999.
Some students had anticipated in their capsule autobiographies that they would be married with children 25 years later — and many of those students turned up at the event with their spouses and children.
But the real emotion came when students received letters from their parents, Chimienti said.
"Some parents have passed since then. [We've] had situations where some students have passed," she told Windsor Morning host Amy Dodge following the event.
"So there was a lot of emotion ... I know a lot of people were not going to open their letters until all of the busy and the fun was over."
People have been asking if the school plans to bury other time capsules, Chimienti said. But she doesn't know if it will happen; she plans to retire in a few years.
Chimienti said that if she were to fill another time capsule for the school, she'd include some of the devices students use now and some sports memorabilia from their house leagues.
"I would want to put [in] some books," she added.
"I just want kids to read some books."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
This 40-foot serpent sculpture in Vancouver is a reclamation of Squamish and Japanese art
Social Sharing James Nexw'Kalus-Xwalacktun Harry, a Squamish artist, and Lauren Brevner of Japanese and Trinidadian heritage, have been collaborating on art pieces for a decade. The pair are partners in life and welcomed their daughter into the world two years ago. They thought of her as they pitched their latest public art project: a 40-foot sculpture of a two-headed snake located at the intersection of Granville Street and West Broadway, in Vancouver's Fairview neighbourhood. The double-headed serpent, Sínulhḵay, is a supernatural being from a Squamish Nation story, and the sculpture was made using Japanese materials. The piece, they say, will allow their daughter to see her cultures represented in the mainstream. "When we were talking about what was important to us, it always came back to her, how we want her to walk in her power and be represented in this world," Brevener said. WATCH | 40-foot sculpture at future SkyTrain station incorporates Coast Salish, Japanese art: 40-foot sculpture at future SkyTrain station incorporates Coast Salish, Japanese art 3 days ago Duration 7:28 Artist James Harry and his collaborator Lauren Brevner worked on the new Sínulhḵay sculpture at the future location of the South Granville station in Vancouver. Harry, who is from the Squamish Nation, said the piece reflects a supernatural story of a double-headed serpent. "We wanted her to know who she is, so we created a body of work around that." The project was selected through a competitive process. Harry and Brevner curated the piece based on the Squamish story and a team of designers and fabricators at Area 58 Innovation Inc. in Langley built it. A warrior and a snake The serpent's two heads represent the good and the bad in life. In the story, a young warrior named Xwechtáal is tasked with killing the double-headed serpent because it is scaring away the animals. Xwechtáal has the option of slaying the serpent's good head or bad head. If he slayed the good head, he could take all the power for himself. If he slayed the bad head, it would bring back all of the animals. The story is a lesson in dealing with greed, Harry said. The piece took three years to create and will be unveiled to the public in July. "It's an amazing feeling honestly, we couldn't be more proud to be selected for this. For me personally, it feels like an enormous win for Coast Salish art and identity being represented in prominent places in our city," Harry told CBC's On The Coast. Japanese cedar The pair said they took a trip to Japan before they pitched the project, where they drew inspiration for the piece. Red cedar was hand carved and burned inside of the sculpture — a traditional Japanese wood preservation method known as Yakisugi that is used as a fire protectant. It also protects the wood from insects, fungi and mold, and can make it water-resistant — ideal for rainy Vancouver weather. On the outside of the sculpture, metal cladding wraps around the column from the top to bottom, with tapered edges at each end representing the heads of the serpent. 'Rooted in the land' Harry said he grew up hearing stories about the double-headed serpent from his father,Xwalacktun, who is a master carver in the Squamish Nation, and thought that it deserved to be represented in a notable Vancouver space. As part of the story, local nations say the serpent slithered down the Stawamus Chief Mountain, leaving behind a black line that can still be seen today. "We wanted to tell those stories that are rooted in the land and bring them to life," Harry said. He said he isn't a traditional storyteller but wanted to share the details to provide context to those who view the Sínulhḵay sculpture. He hopes it sparks people's curiosity to learn more about Coast Salish culture. "Ultimately, this is about placemaking," Brevner said. "When you go to the big cities around the world, you land there and you know where you are." In Vancouver, she said, visitors don't always know they're on Indigenous territories. "Because of what's happened here, I don't think we're at that point. The more art that goes up from this territory, I hope that people can look at these works and want to learn more about the story of Sínulhḵay," Brevner said. The duo collaborated on a double-headed serpent mural back in 2018 that was well loved on West Broadway, but the building it was on was torn down. Their new sculpture is located in the same area, which they say brings the spirit of the double-headed serpent back to the neighborhood. And because the serpent is known for its underground digging in the Squamish story, the artists say it's fitting that it's located next to the new underground Granville SkyTrain station, set to open in two years.


CBC
3 hours ago
- CBC
P.E.I.'s Lennie Gallant returns with new album, his 1st English recording in 7 years
Social Sharing Acclaimed P.E.I. singer-songwriter Lennie Gallant is back with a new album, and it's one that's been a long time coming. Shelter from the Storms is the 16th album release of Gallant's illustrious career, but it's also his first English-language recording in seven years. Not that he hasn't been productive over that time. Gallant and his partner, Patricia Richard, recorded two albums in French as the duo Sirène et Matelot. Gallant also recorded a Christmas song with the Zimbabwean band Black Umfolosi. "So I was busy, but I didn't realize that seven years had passed since there was a bona fide, regular Lennie Gallant album," he told Mainstreet P.E.I. host Steve Bruce. "It was a bit of a shock when I found that out." No stranger to Canadian audiences in either language, Gallant has won 19 East Coast Music Awards and four Music P.E.I. Awards, and has earned three Juno nominations. He was also made a member of the Order of Canada in 2003. The 14-track Shelter from the Storms was released Friday, and is described on his website as "a powerful reflection on the turbulent times we live in, but also celebrating the enduring human capacity for dealing with these times through connection, love and laughter." Despite his years-long foray into francophone recordings, the Rustico native said he actually feels more at home writing songs in English. "I didn't speak French at all really until I was around 20," he said. "I was hanging around a lot of Acadians and I realized it was a strong part of my heritage. I come from a village that was once a francophone Acadian village, and unfortunately the language got kind of lost — and I decided to use music to regain it." 'We need connection' While Gallant said he has an extensive back-catalog of songs he hasn't recorded yet, most of the new album's music is based on new ideas. The first two singles, the title track and Counting on Angels, are meant to reflect the state of the world as it is now — the existential threat of climate change and the ever-changing political landscape in the United States that has, on occasion, represented a threat to Canada's sovereignty. "I think a lot of people are feeling that the world is… a little shaky right now in a lot of different ways," Gallant said. "A lot of the songs on the album are kind of talking about how to deal with difficult times and how much we need connection, how much we need to care for the planet itself and just care for each other." It's not all doom and gloom, though. Gallant describes the album as "eclectic," with a healthy dose of fun and laughter along the way. Take, for example, the song It Takes a lot of Liquor to Bury a Horse, inspired by a line delivered by friend and fellow musician Dave Gunn. Gunn and a friend had to, well, bury a horse that had died at his farm. He told Gallant about the experience later over the phone. "I guess they needed a lot of libation along the way," Gallant said with a laugh. "I said, 'Dave, that is a line that is just crying for a song.' And so I had to write a song about it." Gallant will launch Shelter from the Storms with a concert Sunday night at Harbourfront Theatre in Summerside. He'll eventually embark on a cross-country tour in support of the album. He said one of the best parts of bringing his show to audiences Canada-wide is having fun on stage with his band and channeling that energy to crowds. "People say after the show, 'You guys look like you're having so much fun up there,' as though we're putting [it] on," he said.


CTV News
3 hours ago
- CTV News
Charlotte Le Bon is focused on directing, but has ideas for a ‘White Lotus' return
Charlotte Le Bon is seen in season 3 of HBO's 'White Lotus' in this handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO - HBO TORONTO — Since her breakout role in season 3 of HBO's hit dramedy 'White Lotus,' acting offers have been pouring in for Charlotte Le Bon. But for now, the Montreal native is just not interested. 'Making films is my main focus more than acting, to be honest,' Le Bon said during a sit-down interview in Toronto Thursday. Le Bon recently returned from the Cannes Film Festival, where she held meetings in search of a financing partner for her sophomore feature — a still-untitled Montreal-shot drama exploring themes of loss. 'It's autobiographique,' says the bilingual actor, reluctant to reveal too much. 'It's a very, very personal movie and I think the goal is to try to make a very light-hearted movie on grief. It's a challenge, but that's what I'm aiming for.' The Montreal-based Le Bon was in town for Bell Media's 2025/26 programming showcase, where Etalk hosts interviewed her during a splashy event for media buyers about the last season of 'The White Lotus,' which streams on Crave. In Mike White's eat-the-rich anthology series she plays Chloe, a socially savvy French-Canadian expat living in Thailand with her much older boyfriend, and the series' main antagonist, Greg, who now goes by 'Gary.' She's seemingly unaware of Greg's history: in Season 2, he pulled off a plot to murder his wife Tanya, played by Jennifer Coolidge, in order to inherit her wealth. Le Bon says she was ready to take a hiatus from acting when she was offered the 'White Lotus' role. Though she'd built a successful career — with roles opposite Joseph Gordon-Levitt in the 2015 biographical drama 'The Walk' and Christian Bale in the 2016 war epic 'The Promise' — her passion had shifted to working behind the camera. Her 2023 horror-romance 'Falcon Lake,' which she directed and co-wrote, premiered at Cannes to strong critical acclaim. 'I was thinking about taking a break from acting because I was like, 'Oh, I don't know if I still like it.' I was just asking myself some questions about it... I sometimes played characters that were not really inspiring for me for some reason,' she says. 'And then 'White Lotus' arrived and I was like, 'There's no way I can not do this. It's just an amazing opportunity'... Between the moment where I sent the self-tape and the moment I was in the plane flying to Thailand, there were probably like 10 days.' Le Bon says the experience of being part of such a pop-culture juggernaut was hard to wrap her head around. 'It's kind of overwhelming when you're taking part in such an important thing in culture. Even when it started to come out, when I started to see memes on it on social media, it was really exciting,' she says. While acting isn't her current focus, Le Bon says she would be down to return for Season 4 — and has some ideas about how it could play out. 'If their relationship is based on true love, which I think it is, then maybe she'll come back with Greg, because Greg has to come back, for sure,' she says. Le Bon muses that Chloe could be Greg's accomplice or even the one who serves him his inevitable comeuppance. 'She could either become Greg's ally and they can be like a duo of villains, or she can maybe be the one who will create the karma for Greg. Maybe she'll give it to him,' she says. 'He has to get it at some point, so we'll see what happens.' While Chloe's relationship with Greg may seem transactional on the surface, Le Bon argues the two share a deeper 'understanding' of one another. 'I think what she likes in this relationship is she thinks she's found a way to be free… just by spending a lot of money and partying and having sex with whoever she wants,' Le Bon says. 'I think they find an agreement by the end of the season where it's clear that's her intention and maybe he can take part in this and have fun with it as well.' If that setup sounds peculiar, Le Bon says that's just the kind of thing that interests her. 'There needs to be a singular aspect to a part that really inspires me in order for me to move my butt and be an actress again,' she says. 'It needs to be weird.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 7, 2025. Alex Nino Gheciu, The Canadian Press