Kamloops This Week, September 13, 2012

Page 1

THURSDAY

K A M L O O P S

ONLINE ALL THE TIME: BREAKING NEWS AND UPDATES AT KAMLOOPSTHISWEEK.COM

THIS WEEK ROYAL INLAND AT 100 Thursday, September 13, 2012 X Volume 25 No. 74 www.kamloopsthisweek.com X 30 cents at Newsstands

Kamloops Museum and Archives photo

Exactly 100 years ago tomorrow, Royal Inland Hospital opened in Kamloops on Columbia Street. In today’s edition of KTW, we look at the history of RIH and how it came to rise at its current location following three decades of tending to the ill where the Kamloops Blazers now play hockey

PAGES A18-A20

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A2 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

INDEX

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

TODAY’S FORECAST Sunny and warm High: 26 C Low: 5 C

Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/KamThisWeek

WEATHER ALMANAC One year ago Hi: 14.6 C Low: 5.4 C Record High: 25.6 C (1957) Record Low: -4.3 C (1992)

Viewpoint/Your Opinion . . . . A8-9 Dyer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A29 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A30 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A31

A3

Community . . . . . . . . . . B1 TODAY’S FLYERS *Selected distribution Cuisine . . . . . . . . . . . . B17 Kamloops Blazers, Cooper’s, Future Shop, Michaels, Real Estate Guide, Nature’s Fare, Rexall, Safeway, Save-On-Foods, Windsor, Cloverdale Paint, Husqvarna, Rogers, Walmart, Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . B25 Visions, Superstore, Shoppers, Sears, Popeye’s*, M&M Meats*, Home Hardware*, Classifieds . . . . . . . . . B29 Highland Valley Foods*, Gord’s Maytag*, Extra Foods*, Canadian Tire*

UPFRONT

KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

Find us on Facebook: facebook.com/ kamloopsthisweek

Council wants no suds sales in stands

ON THE CUP OF HISTORY NIchole Whitaker joins Garet Andrews for a photo with the Grey Cup at Rona’s Mount Paul Way store on Wednesday, Sept. 12. CFL football fans were treated to a breakfast tailgate party organized by the defending Grey Cup champion B.C. Lions and Rona store employees. The Cup is travelling across Canada, stopping in 100 communities as it makes its way east to Toronto, where, on Nov. 25, the 100th Grey Cup game will be played in Rogers Centre. As part of the centennial anniversary of the Grey Cup game, TSN will be airing eight documentaries on the CFL, beginning on Oct. 5. The Cup itself was commissioned in 1909 by then-Governor General Albert Grey, who originally wanted it awarded annually to the Canadian senior men’s hockey champions. Since the Allan Cup had been donated for that purpose, Grey’s Cup was instead directed to Canada’s national football champions — a decision that no doubt delights fans of the three-down league. Dave Eagles/KTW

By Andrea Klassen STAFF REPORTER andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com

Kamloops city council says beerdrinking Kamloops Blazers fans should have to do a bit of work to get a beverage during games. Council has opted to not endorse a liquor-licence application that would allow hawkers to sell beer and wine in the stands at Interior Savings Centre. City parks, recreation and cultural services director Byron McCorkell said the Western Hockey League club asked for the change to bring ISC in line with other WHL venues, many of which already sell beer in the stands. “They feel that hawking is part of the experience of the rink,” McCorkell said. However, several councillors were concerned the hawkers would encourage hockey fans to drink too much and disrupt the family-friendly atmosphere at the rink. “I think to have it so readily available is to give a bad message to our children,” said Tina Lange. “I think for somebody to get up and burn off a few calories is not a bad thing.” Nancy Bepple said she sees the stands at ISC as a public space and believes asking fans to pass cups of beer down the rows to buyers isn’t fair to non-drinkers, who might be uncomfortable doing so. However, Pat Wallace and Ken Christian argued hawking is more efficient, removes some of the between-period pressure on ISC’s concession stands, and is probably less disruptive than fans going up and down to lounges.

“I hate getting up. No criticism of our recreation facilities, but those seats are not wide,” Wallace said. “Inevitably, someone wants to get by to get a beer and they tramp on your feet and you have to stand up or they’re in your lap. “The discussion sort of takes us back to prohibition in some ways,” Christian added. “We already have drinking in the stands. Do you want to have Mr. Spillycups with his box of popcorn trying to walk in front of you or do you want someone with lids on the containers coming to you?” Nelly Dever pointed out similar sales practices in the NBA, NHL and NFL. “I don’t think we’re promoting and saying that you should drink if you come to a game,” she said. “I don’t drink and I’m not going to start to just because it’s right there.” Donovan Cavers countered by saying that, just because hawking goes on in larger venues, doesn’t mean it’s right for Kamloops. “I think we have a very nice, family-friendly arena,” he said. “And, our hockey team is in the WHL, not the NHL. It’s like comparing apples to peaches.” Only Dever, Wallace and Christian voted to endorse the application. Mayor Peter Milobar, who owns a liquor store, recused himself from the debate. Council doesn’t have the power to veto the liquor-licence application. However, its stance on the issue is one of the factors taken into account by the Liquor Control and Licensing Branch.

COUNTDOWN TO THE 2013 B.C. SENIORS GAMES BEGINS TODAY IN KTW ON PAGE A38

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A4 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

City of Kamloops

www.kamloops.ca

City Page

N E W S & N OT E S F R O M C I T Y H A L L

13th Annual Children’s Art Festival Saturday, Sept. 15, 11 am to 4 pm at Riverside Park The Kamloops Children’s Art Festival is a fun-filled, creative day of artistic, musical and theatrical activities for local children ages 2 to 12. The entire day is FREE for children and their parents! This year’s workshops include mask-making, henna art, clayworks, theatre games, rock school, artist trading cards, zentangles, jewellery-making, printmaking, hula hooping, hula dancing, balloon animals, bellydancing and more. Stage performers include Uncle Chris the Clown, Clinton the Magician, WCT Stage One (Charlie & the Chocolate Factory), Master Viani’s Tiger Martial Arts, Claire Carlson-Mitton (Kamloops Idol People’s Choice), and a couple of surprises! Check www.kamloopsarts.ca for the full performance schedule. New this year – The Kamloops Arts Council is producing a short documentary film, shot over the course of four years. 15-year-old filmmaker Kora Vanderlip will track the growth of a group of young artists who attend the Children’s Art Festival. Plus kids can enter to win a chance to Be a Train Conductor for a Day on the 2141! One lucky winner, decked out in custom-made striped overalls and engineer hat, will assist the conductor on the first run of the 2013 season. The winner will be announced at 3pm at the Children’s Art Festival. The Children’s Art Festival is produced annually by the Kamloops Arts Council, with support from the City of Kamloops and the BC Arts Council. Additional supporters include Teck Resources, Make Children First, Budget Truck Rental, Lee’s Music, Tim Hortons, PCT Kamloops, Echo Newspapers, Noran Printing, Western Canada Theatre, and Kamloops Momma.

The Kamloops Arts Council presents the Children’s Art Festival on Sept 15.

Council Calendar

Career Opportunities

Notes

Notes

Social Planning Council Sep 13, 5 pm Public Boardroom, City Hall

Building Official II Competition: 05-16/12 Applications will be reviewed until the position is filled.

Sports Day in Canada Visit the TCC to sample a variety of sport demonstrations. Enjoy free swimming and other water sports from 1 - 4 pm at the Canada Games Pool. There will also be food vendors, free cake, a climbing wall and an inflatable obstacle course.

Admission is by donation. Contact 250-828-3611 for more information.

Community Enforcement Task Force Sep 17, 10 am, Corporate Board Room, City Hall Police Committee Sep 17, 11 am Corporate Board Room, City Hall Arts Commission Sep 17, 4:45 pm Second Floor Boardroom, City Hall Regular Council Meeting Sep 18, 1:30 pm Agriculture Advisory Committee Sep 20, 9 am Development and Engineering Services Boardroom, 105 Seymour St Regular City Council meetings are broadcast on Shaw Cable as follows: Wed and Sat at 11am and Sun at 7pm. Council meetings can also be viewed online at: kamloops.ca/webcast Meeting schedule is available at kamloops.ca/council

Career Opportunities Applications are being accepted for the following union positions: Building Official I Competition: 05-15/12 Applications will be reviewed until the position is filled.

Building Official II - Temporary Competition: 05-20/12 Closing: Sept 13, 2012 Applications are being accepted for the following management positions: Safety Coordinator Competition: 07-05/12 Applications will be reviewed until the position is filled. Assistant Design Engineer - Temp Competition: 05-17/12 Applications will be reviewed until the position is filled. Human Resources: 250-828-3439 kamloops.ca/jobs

Contract Positions Ambassadors - Volunteer Positions Closing: Sept 19, 2012 Please submit your application forms to: Alex de Chantal Phone: 250-828-3828Fax: 250-828-3619 Email: adechantal@kamloops.ca For application form, please visitwww.kamloops.ca/volunteer.

Sat, Sept 29 10 am - 2 pm Tournament Capital Centre Notice to Motorists Lorne Street Closure The City notifies residents that Lorne St will be closed from the Red Bridge to 2nd Ave and 3rd Ave between Lorne and Lansdowne from Wed, Sept 12 to Fri Sept 14. Local, business and Interior Savings Centre access will be maintained, as will access to businesses south of the rail tracks. Uji Way and Heritage House parking lots should be accessed via 1st Ave. The City thanks you for your cooperation and patience. Chamber Music Series The Old Courthouse presents the following events:

Notice to Motorists Grandview Terrace Closure From Aug 13 to Oct 4, Grandview Terrace will be closed from Boundary Rd to Columbia St. Access to and from the area will be available via Battle St and Guerin Creek Way. Access to residences and emergency access will be maintained. Bus traffic will be rerouted for the duration of the closure. The City thanks you for your patience.

Did you know... The Parks Department has h started installing user control push buttons for lighting at outdoor tennis courts? This will reduce the City’s energy use by ensuring the lights are on only when needed by users.

Winds, Strings and Keys Thur, Sept 13 at 7 pm Classic Blend Thur, Oct 18 at 7 pm Fish on Five Thur, Nov 22 at 7 pm All presentations takes place at the Old Courthouse at 7 West Seymour Street.

7 Victoria Street West, Kamloops, BC V2C 1A2 | Phone 250-828-3311 | Fax 250-828-3578 | Emergency only after hours Phone 250-372-1710

www.kamloops.ca


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A5

LOCAL NEWS THE GOOD-LUCK BUG A ladybug enjoys the sunshine during a late summer day. The little creatures are favourites of children and, in many countries and cultures, considered good luck. Allen Douglas/KTW

Cavers says bylaw caters to big box A Kamloops city councillor says new changes to the city’s business-licensing program are a “free pass for mega-box stores.” Coun. Donovan Cavers was the only member of Kamloops council to vote this week against an update to the business-licence bylaw, which updates fees and introduces a new secondary-licence discount for some businesses. Under the change, a business with more than one licence — for example, a grocery store with a gas bar — would get a discount of about $35 on its second licence. The discount would also apply to contractors, who have to pay for separate licences to do commercial and residential work. Cavers said the change seems to give

large stores an advantage over smaller, centrally located businesses. “To me, it seems like a good way to promote big-box stores,” he said. “I’m certainly more of a supporter of small businesses like we find on Victoria Street and within the downtown core.” Don Garrish, city business licence and land co-ordinator, said the change will affect just over 100 of the city’s largest businesses already paying the highest fees on the scale, about $1,200. Other changes to the bylaw are meant to bring fees more in line with the actual cost of operating the licensing program, Garrish said. The update will also allow more businesses to electronically submit their information to the department.

Singh wants an early start to city’s budget talks Budget talks in Kamloops could start earlier than usual this year. Coun. Arjun Singh submitted a notice of motion this week, asking to set up a workshop to brainstorm ways to create a 2013 budget with no property-tax increase. Singh said he likes the idea of having a workshop because it allows council to get ideas on the table — and, yes, that could include cuts to services — without being beholden to any of them. “I don’t want to give anybody any unrealistic expectation that we’ll be able to hit any tax rate number or not,” he said. “It’s just a question of us sitting down and saying, ‘What ideas do we have?’”

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A6 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS Lynda Watt’s house at 356 McGowan Ave. in North Kamloops was damaged by fire in 2008 and subsequently declared uninhabitable by Interior Health inspectors. Watt has until Oct. 11 to have a professional inspection done. Andrea Klassen/KTW DO

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Owner of derelict home gets 30-day extension from council By Andrea Klassen STAFF REPORTER andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com

A woman whose house was declared a nuisance by Kamloops city council in August has a few more weeks to try to complete a city-ordered inspection on her property. Lynda Watt’s house at 356 McGowan Ave. in North Kamloops was damaged by fire in 2008 and subsequently declared uninhabitable by Interior Health inspectors. Since then, the house has been standing vacant and has been the subject of a number of neighbourhood complaints. However, Watt told city council this week that a report on the state of her property delivered to council in August contains outdated information and doesn’t tell her side of the story. “The house was in bad shape. I am a hoarder, as are both of my parents, as was my sister,” Watt told council. But, she said, she’s

been working hard to clean the mess — up to three hours every night — and has thrown out the worst of the material. She said she has a plan to get the house back to a state in which it can be safely occupied and has already paid for new windows and siding. While she agreed with council that her property needs a professional inspection — which would identify any mould issues and determine whether the structure is able to be renovated and reoccupied — she said she won’t be able to pay for one in the original 30-day period allotted by the city, as she is waiting on money from her mother’s estate. While Coun. Marg Spina suggested council give Watt a six-month extension to complete the report, that was eventually whittled down to one month. If Watt doesn’t have the funds to have the inspection done by Oct. 11, the city will have the option of ordering

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A7

Cityof of Kamloops City Kamloops

LOCAL NEWS

Important Information for Kamloops Residents Citizen Survey September 12 to 23, 2012 The City of Kamloops has commissioned Ipsos Reid, a professional public opinion research company, to conduct a random telephone survey of our residents in the next two weeks. The survey explores a wide range of topics including priority issues, quality of life in Kamloops, satisfaction with municipal services, value for taxes, and communication and information needs, among others. This survey is truly an opportunity for you to have your voice heard and to speak out on important community issues. If you are contacted, please take the time to complete the survey. Please be assured that your individual responses will be kept confidential and will be combined with those of other citizens and reported together. Your opinions are important, and Ipsos Reid and the City of Kamloops appreciate your participation in this research. For more information, please contact Tammy Robertson at 250-828-3572. Thank you for your feedback.

HARVESTING INTEREST Passersby at the Kamloops Farmers’ Market on Victoria Street were treated to a choreographed event at the Plaza Hotel promoting Western Canada Theatre’s 2012-2013 season launch. WCT general manager Lori Larchand said it was a fun way to remind everyone the season has started, with Harvest, the first production, opening tonight. For tickets, call 250-374-5483. Dave Eagles/KTW

www.kamloops.ca

Director: Most behind party leader Cummins By Andrea Klassen STAFF REPORTER andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com

Kamloops’ regional director for the B.C. Conservative Party is downplaying reports of infighting within the party and throwing his weight behind leader John Cummins. Al Forseth is one of a halfdozen Conservative directors who have issued a public statement of support for the party leader under the name Friends of John Cummins. The move comes after several prominent party members have called for a review of Cummins’ leadership in advance of next year’s election. A leadership vote is proceeding, with results to be announced at the party’s Sept. 22 annual general meeting in Langley. Cummins must have the support of at least 50 per cent of the party membership to keep his position and Forseth expects him to do quite well in the vote. “There’s a couple of people within the party that, perhaps, are

seeking to have different direction or possibly have different ideas, and there’s nothing wrong with that within a party,” he said. “But, the majority of members are behind John Cummins and we’re moving forward.” Earlier this month, the Province reported on leaked minutes from an in-camera board of directors meeting showing the relationship between Cummins and John van Dongen — the party’s sole MLA, who defected from the B.C. Liberals in March — was deteriorating, with van Dongen feeling “marginalized and ignored.” Party vice-president Ben Besler has also called for a review of Cummins’ leadership, a move that resulted in a vitriolic email from Cummins’ daughter, Carolyn Cummins, who wrote: “A year ago you came across as young, inexperienced and incompetent. I now know my theory to be accurate.” Van Dongen hasn’t publicly spoken for or against Cummins since, but Forseth believes the vet-

eran Abbotsford-South MLA will remain with the party. “As far as I can tell, he’s committed to the B.C. Conservative Party,” Forseth said “He’s indicated, it appears anyway, he wants to stay out of the fray and not influence things in any one direction or the other, and there’s nothing wrong with that.” Forseth said reports of the controversy are “causing a few people to go, ‘Hey, what’s going on?’” in Kamloops. But, he doesn’t see questions about Cummins’ leadership disrupting the nomination process in the city or scaring off potential candidates — of which he said there are at least two for Kamloops-South Thompson and one in the Kamloops-North Thompson riding. The local nomination process is expected to continue through the fall in both ridings. “We’ve got two weeks to our AGM and I’m sure by that point everything will be sorted out and forward we go,” he said.

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A8 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

VIEWPOINT

KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

Publisher: Kelly Hall publisher@kamloopsthisweek.com Editor: Christopher Foulds editor@kamloopsthisweek.com

Big-box stores are not the enemy

PUBLISHER Kelly Hall

EDITOR Christopher Foulds EDITORIAL Dale Bass, Dave Eagles, Tim Petruk, Marty Hastings, Andrea Klassen

ADVERTISING Manager: Jack Bell Ray Jolicoeur, Linda Bolton, Etelka Gillespie, Don Levasseur, Karen Lofgren, Randy Schroeder, Ed Erickson, Brittany Bailey

CIRCULATION Manager: Anne-Marie John Serena Platzer

FRONT OFFICE Manager: Cindi Hamoline Nancy Graham, Lorraine Dickinson, Angela Wilson

PRODUCTION Manager: Darla Gray Fernanda Fisher, Nancy Wahn, Mike Eng, Patricia Hort, Thomas Sandhoff, Sean Graham

CONTACT US Switchboard 250-374-7467 Classifieds 250-371-4949 Classifieds Fax 250-374-1033 e-mailclassifieds@ kamloopsthisweek.com Circulation 250-374-0462

Kamloops This Week is owned by Thompson River Publications Partnership Limited

Kamloops This Week is a politically independent newspaper, published Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1365B Dalhousie Dr. Kamloops, B.C. V2C 5P6 Ph: 250-374-7467 Fax: 250-374-1033 e-mail: editor@kamloopsthisweek.com All material contained in this publication is protected by copyright. Reproduction is expressly prohibited by the rightsholder.

Preaching to the choir with a song of fearmongering, rhetoric

I

HAVEN’T MADE UP MY mind on the proposed Ajax mine. Maybe it’s a good thing — 400-plus jobs is nothing to ignore. Then again, maybe it’s a bad thing because, so far, I haven’t heard anything from the proponent that convinces me the environment is a priority for it. And, so, I’ve been trying to get information, but that’s been a bit difficult. Multiple emails to the Kamloops Area Preservation Association (KAPA) were ignored until, finally, someone replied and told me I can’t go to its meetings because I’m a reporter. I pointed out I also happen to be a person, a mom, a grandmother and a taxpaying member of the Kamloops community but, in this anonymous person’s mind, I’m only a reporter. I asked for the name of the person replying and that just led to no more replies. I’ve read a lot of the documentation available online, researched the company and even looked into that ominous assertion that KGHM has one of the worst records on environmentalism in Europe. I didn’t go to any of the earlier Ajax-sponsored forums because you had to register and that just really didn’t seem right to me. Other gatherings have been held at times that weren’t convenient for me. But, last Sunday, with the only other option for the day being laundry, I went to a forum hosted by Derek Cook, a professor of political science at Thompson Rivers University. Here are some of the things I heard

DALE BASS Street

LEVEL that made me sort of go, “What?”: First, Coun. Donovan Cavers said that, if the city was to hold a referendum on the mine, it will still likely pass because KGHM has lots of money and can win it. Unless KGHM is going to buy those votes, I really don’t see the linkage here. He then said the province’s mining regulations would supersede the city’s bylaws and that those same regulations come from the 1800s. And his point, if that is even true, is what? Cavers even threw out the idea that, if B.C. NDP election candidates Kathy Kendall and Tom Friedman don’t speak out against the mine, he and fellow councillor Tina Lange might run against them as independents or for the Green party. Coun. Arjun Singh, who was also in the audience, told me he was pretty sure Cavers was kidding. I’m not. People asked where the proof is that Kamloops needs a mine. That, frankly, isn’t the point. This isn’t about community need. It’s about

company need and profits. Don Barz, the head of KAPA, walked people through the steps to find information online about the mine and the proponent and then told the audience KGHM is involved in building a nuclear-power plant in Europe — and that those profits from Ajax will go to that plant. Companies can do what they want with their profits. One member of the audience asked, assuming they can’t stop the mine, how Kamloopsians can be assured the jobs won’t go to immigrants. By then, I was shaking my head and wondering when the mob was going to break out. Let me be clear — the intent of many of the people who are hosting these forums is to make sure information is shared. However, fearmongering and hypotheticals don’t accomplish that. I spoke with a member of KAPA earlier this year who explained to me the reason they don’t want reporters at their meetings is that people like me can’t be trusted to write what they want us to write. That’s one of the reasons I’m writing this column. Because, ignoring the fact I’m a reporter, as someone who went there looking for concrete information on why the group thinks the mine is bad, I was dismayed to see there was lots of rhetoric, simple exaggerations and a whole lot of preaching to the choir. dale@kamloopsthisweek.com kamloopsstreetlevel.tumblr.com

Only in the rigid mind of rookie Kamloops Coun. Donovan Cavers could a $35 break to a multi-milliondollar corporation be defined as a “free pass.” Cavers was referring to a city staff plan, which would see businesses with more than one licence — for example, a grocery store with a gas bar — receive a discount of about $35 on its second licence. That would mean companies such as Costco, Safeway and Real Canadian Superstore would get a bit of a break at city hall’s business-licence counter. Thankfully, Cavers was the lone city councillor to oppose this perfectly rational decision. The discount means absolutely little in a practical sense to any of the three stores, or to any other person or company with multiple business licences in Kamloops. What it does do is show existing businesses that city hall has staff that are proactive in doing what they can — however small that may be — to demonstrate Kamloops is cognizant of the cost of doing business. It’s the gesture that matters, to businesses already in Kamloops and to firms contemplating a move here. That is something Cavers does not understand when he takes the “shop local” mantra to annoying extremes. Cavers said the bylaw tweak appeared to him to be a way to “promote big-box stores.” He then reminded one and all that he is a “supporter of small businesses like we find on Victoria Street and within the downtown core.” To patronize independent stores anywhere in Kamloops is laudable, but one can do so without projecting hostility to large corporations that employ untold numbers of Kamloopsians, contribute mightily to this city’s tax base and offer those on the financial edge affordable goods. Cavers needs to be reminded he is a city councillor for all of Kamloops — not just non-corporate Kamloops. Walmart and Costco and Superstore are not evil, despite Cavers’ incessant insistence. They are important cogs in the local economy and can — indeed, do — exist in lockstep with those momand-pop stores our neophyte politician so loves to visit.

OUR

VIEW


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

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A9

YOUROPINION

KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

Still no answer to the query: Why is Ajax mine needed?

Speak up You can comment on any story you read @ kamloopsthisweek.com

A selection of comments on KTW stories, culled online

Re: Story: Senior recounts dog attack: ‘I didn’t do anything to him’: “Some dogs will attack if you look at them. Some dogs will attack when you turn away. “Some dogs will attack if you act big and strong. Some dogs will attack if you act submissive or nonconfrontational. “Some dogs will attack if you reach toward them. Some dogs will attack if you pull away from them. “Some dogs will attack if you run. Some dogs will attack even if you’re standing still. “Anybody want to try to explain all that to an 84-year-old lady who is afraid of dogs? “The responsibility is 100 per cent on the owner of the dog, even if the dog had not attacked previously (which, in this case, it had). “If my dog causes injury to someone who doesn’t deserve it, I am responsible — period.” — posted by Steve Barker

Re: Story: Woman struck by car, suffers life-threatening injuries: “There is no excuse. “Come on, people, pay attention.” — posted by Andrew Harrison

GENERATIONS ENJOY PARK Katara and Talon Manuel enjoyed a day at the B.C. Wildlife Park with grandma Wanda Maundrell on Saturday, Sept. 8, which happened to be Grandparents Day at the park. For more information on what is happening at the popular east Kamloops tourist attraction, go online to bczoo.org. Allen Douglas/KTW

C&C helps through the grief Editor: I wish to offer arms full of roses and a thank you to the counsellors of C&C Resources for Life for their ongoing comfort and support through my grieving the death of my daughter. Initially, they helped through the one-on-one sessions with Mary Widmer, counsellor and owner of C&C Resources for Life, supported by the Kamloops Funeral Home. Mary continues to give me strength and guidance, followed up with group support by counsellors Brenda Tynan, Tennille Thomson and Sharen Michael. These counsellors are professional, with degrees in social work, but, just as important, they are very caring, kind and understanding. I encourage anyone who is dealing with the loss of a loved one to attend the drop-in groups at the Centre for Seniors Information at 25-700 Tranquille Rd. or request a reference through their local funeral home. Contact Mary at 250-682-2931 for more information.

Lynn Tillotson Kamloops

BERT GATIEN 250-319-0227 1.888.374-3022 bgatien@telus.net

chased a large parcel of land (Sugarloaf Ranch), suggesting there is confidence the mine will go ahead in spite of public concerns. Like many others, I am not opposed to mining. I recognize the importance of job creation and economic development. I am also aware many steps can be taken to minimize the environmental impact of openpit mines. I also know — with absolute certainty — that having an open-pit mine that big and that close will, without a doubt, negatively affect the quality of life for all citizens of Kamloops now and for future generations. The fundamental questions are not so much about noise, dust, water, health and jobs. The real question is whether it is right for a few to enjoy economic benefits at the expense of many. If we endorse this way of thinking, when does it end? How great does the cost need to be before we collectively say, “Enough!”? If we say it is not right that a few should benefit at the expense of many, how can this message be communicated clearly before projects like this even get off the starting block? Our elected officials (at every level of government) have failed us miserably in this regard. How was the KGHM-Ajax project even allowed to get this far? Our elected officials must now come out from behind the bafflegab of political correctness and stop the KGHMAjax project from proceeding, regardless of what the environmental review says. I expect those in leadership to do the right thing. Then again, I also expected Norm Thompson to call me.

Editor: In my letter to the editor three months ago, I shared my opinion that the proponents of the KGHM Ajax mine have not adequately explained to the residents of Kamloops why the mine is needed and why it is needed now. I suggested ongoing debates about the advantages and disadvantages of the mine have only drawn attention away from these fundamental questions. Following the publication of my letter, I expected I might receive a call from KGHMAjax public-relations man Norm Thompson. I imagined Thompson would kindly explain to me the importance of proceeding with the project and that he would make some effort to convince me, a citizen, about the need to exploit the minerals as soon as possible. I did not receive a call and the questions I raised remain unanswered. In the spring, I participated in a telephone interview about “mining in B.C”. I found the wording of the questions bothersome because they did not allow me to respond with my true thoughts. I felt I could choose between admitting my ignorance of mining or enthusiastically supporting it. After objecting to the wording of the questions, I asked who had commissioned the survey and was told, at the end of the survey, it was commissioned by KGHM-Ajax. I did not receive any call to follow up and so the questions and concerns I raised remain unanswered. Others have pointed out “public hearings” have been renamed “workshops”. The not-so-subtle message seems to be that anyone with concerns simply needs to become better informed. KGHM-Ajax recently pur-

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Kamloops This Week is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 1-888-687-2213 or go to bcpresscouncil.org.


A10 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

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LOCAL NEWS

Strauss files lawsuit against Daily News, doctor

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A well-known local herbal supplement company is suing the Kamloops Daily News in connection to a column published in the newspaper earlier this year — a column described in court documents as including “false, malicious and defamatory” statements. Strauss Herb Company claims an April 2, 2012, column by Russ Reid, a retired doctor, was meant to make Kamloops Daily News readers think Strauss customers were being duped. A statement of claim filed by Strauss in B.C. Supreme Court states the column left the impression the herbal-supplement

company is “involved in a conspiracy to defraud gullible consumers by conning them into buying Strauss Heart Drops, a worthless health product which, to the knowledge of the plaintiffs [Strauss] has no medical benefit or therapeutic value.” The column was in response to a KTW front-page story nearly a month earlier — in the March 6, 2012 edition — titled Strauss claims victory, describing the fact Strauss Heart Drops had received natural-health designation from Health Canada. In its statement of claim, Strauss took particular issue with one paragraph of Reid’s column — which stated Strauss “has refused to reveal

its formula and put standard specific information about the ingredients on its product label.” Reid went on to compare Strauss to 19th-century snakeoil salesmen and New York Ponzi-scheme con man Bernie Madoff. The court document claims the column was intended to cause “hatred, ridicule and contempt” toward Strauss. The company states the Kamloops Daily News was asked to run a retraction and apology — something it claims was never published. There is no dollar amount included in Strauss’s statement of claim, but the company is seeking general damages, aggravated damages, exemplary

and punitive damages, special damages, interest and costs, in addition to a court order barring the Kamloops Daily News from “any further publication of the defamatory expression complained of.” The Kamloops Daily News responded, in documents filed last week, with a counterclaim against Strauss, alleging false advertising and seeking orders from the court that Strauss stop making exaggerated claims about its products. The newspaper also denied any malice in publishing Reid’s column and claimed it was a matter of public

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interest — specifically citing reader comments under the column when it was published online, including a number of “intemperate remarks” from a user traced back to a Strauss computer. “Strauss Co. has thereby been provided with a voice on the matters of public interest by the defendants and with an opportunity to publicly rebut the facts and comments contained in the column,” the paper’s response reads. It’s not known if or when the matter may go before a judge. None of the claims have been proven in court.

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LOCAL NEWS

Changing chairs in city hall

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A11

CORRECTION NOTICE

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A12 â?– THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

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City of Kamloops

ANNUAL TAX SALE OF LAND The Local Government Act (RSBC 1996) PART 11, SECTION 403 On the 24th DAY of SEPTEMBER 2012, at the Council of Chambers of the City of Kamloops, at the hour of TEN (10) O'CLOCK IN THE FORENOON, the following parcels of REAL PROPERTY SHALL BE OFFERED FOR SALE BY PUBLIC AUCTION unless the delinquent taxes with interest are sooner paid. FOLIO

CIVIC ADDRESS

LEGAL DESCRIPTION

PID

02-00123-000 03-01414-000 03-02683-000 04-03230-000 04-04827-000 05-04099-490 05-04100-320 05-16402-240 05-16402-370 06-00440-452 06-15050-003 06-15050-004 10-04385-078 10-04385-122 11-05384-000 11-05413-000 11-06300-150 11-08792-000 11-08830-004 12-06940-000 12-06948-000 12-07019-004 12-07058-000

737 HEMLOCK ST 612 COLUMBIA ST 1435 COLUMBIA ST 55 LOMA BELLA 365 PEMBERTON TERR 72 1605 SUMMIT DR 33 1570 FRESHFIELD RD 1997 GLADSTONE DR 625 ROBSON DR 1560 VERSATILE DR 103 795 MCGILL RD 104 795 MCGILL RD 6 1121 12TH ST 203 1103 12TH ST 237 SPRUCE AVE 225 ALDER AVE 616 PATRICIA AVE 991 12TH ST 963 13TH ST 417 LINDEN AVE 428 MCGOWAN AVE 356 MCGOWAN AVE 348 MULBERRY AVE

PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL

011-852-780 012-206-946 010-001-182 026-244-951 008-980-969 002-737-493 002-728-753 002-024-977 003-489-744 027-135-411 028-136-144 028-136-152 024-079-031 024-079-251 010-291-440 001-837-346 005-909-112 003-182-681 018-844-880 010-232-443 004-714-547 018-913-105 010-193-294

1060 LT 3 BLK 5 SEC 6 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 557 LT 23 BLK 57 DL 232 KAMLOOPS 7287 LT 16 DL 234 KAP77782 LT A SEC 6 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 14567 LT 8 SEC 6 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 KAS52 LT 49 DL 454 KAMLOOPS KAS68 LT 33 DL 454 KAMLOOPS 32342 LT 25 BLK A DL 410 KAMLOOPS 32342 LT 38 BLK A SEC 31 TWP 19 RGE 17 MER 6 DL 410 KAMLOOPS KAP84376 LT 1 SEC 35 TWP 19 RGE 18 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3761 LT 3 SEC 1 TWP 20 RGE 18 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3761 LT 4 SEC 1 TWP 20 RGE 18 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS2024 LT 39 DL 254 KAMLOOPS KAS2024 LT 61 DL 254 KAMLOOPS 5581 LT 5 DL 255 5460 LT 4 DL 255 24526 LT P DL 257 KAMLOOPS 19508 LT D DL 254 KAP52734 LT B DL 254 KAMLOOPS 6055 LT 2 DL D 6057 LT 3 DL 255 KAMLOOPS KAP53022 LT 2 DL 255 KAMLOOPS 6273 LT 15 DL 255 *** continued on next page

PLEASE NOTE: The City may bid on all or any of the properties listed for sale at up to 75% of the current assessed value as authorized by City Council. BASIC INFORMATION - ANNUAL PROPERTY TAX SALE 1. The Tax Sale will be held on September 24th, 2012 at 10:00 am in City Council Chambers at 7 Victoria Street West. 2. The lowest amount for which parcels may be sold is the "Upset Price". The Upset Price includes: (a) delinquent and arrears taxes plus interest to date of sale; (b) current years taxes plus penalty (c) the sum of 5% of the foregoing amounts; and (d) $95.90 for the Land Title Office fees. 3. The highest bidder at or above the upset price shall be declared the purchaser. If no bids are received, the City will be declared the purchaser. 4. The purchaser has no legal rights to the property until one year has expired from the date of the Sale. 5. The owner has one year in which to redeem the property; paying back the upset price plus interest accrued to the date of redemption. 6. At redemption, the purchaser is paid back their bid plus interest accrued from the date of the Tax Sale to the date of redemption. PURCHASERS MUST PAY BY CERTIFIED CHEQUE, DRAFT, INTERAC OR CASH (1 hour will be given to secure funds) 7. Title to property not redeemed within one year from the date of the tax sale will be transferred to the purchaser on receipt of Land Title Act fee. 8. The purchaser will be responsible to pay the Property Purchase Tax on the fair market value of the property at the time of the transfer of the title. 9. The Property Purchase Tax Act rates are 1% on the first $200,000 of fair market value and 2% on the balance. 10. The City of Kamloops makes no representation express or implied as to the condition or quality of the properties being offered for sale. Prospective purchasers are urged to inspect the properties and make all necessary inquiries to municipal and other government departments, and in the case of strata lots to the strata corporation, to determine the existence of any bylaws, restrictions, charges or other conditions which may affect the value or suitability of the property. M. Worrin, CMA Revenue and Taxation Manager

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ A13

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

City of Kamloops

ANNUAL TAX SALE OF LAND The Local Government Act (RSBC 1996) PART 11, SECTION 403 On the 24th DAY of SEPTEMBER 2012, at the Council of Chambers of the City of Kamloops, at the hour of TEN (10) O'CLOCK IN THE FORENOON, the following parcels of REAL PROPERTY SHALL BE OFFERED FOR SALE BY PUBLIC AUCTION unless the delinquent taxes with interest are sooner paid. FOLIO

CIVIC ADDRESS

LEGAL DESCRIPTION

PID

12-07870-000 12-08126-000 12-08869-000 13-01142-100 13-09166-000 13-09197-000 13-09760-510 13-09761-148 20-00064-426 20-00328-040 20-00595-000 20-02718-000 20-02916-590 20-02950-001 20-03373-000 20-03435-340 20-04192-000 21-01697-060 21-02037-000 21-02349-000 30-00393-040 30-01970-000 30-02044-000 30-25234-054 34-05607-070 34-05612-100 40-00292-316 40-00464-158 40-00701-350 40-02000-646 51-11077-000 52-02149-150 52-11101-152 54-01046-410 54-01050-520 54-01050-558 54-01050-560 54-01050-562 54-01050-566 54-01050-568 54-01050-570 54-01050-572 54-01050-574 54-01050-582 54-01050-584 54-01050-586 54-01050-588 54-01050-590 54-01050-594 54-01050-596 54-01050-598 54-01050-600 54-01052-070 54-01052-560 54-01053-310 54-01084-160 54-01091-370 54-01120-210 54-01122-010 54-01136-090 54-01138-330 54-01139-720 54-01140-010 54-01142-970 54-01143-650 56-10595-220 56-10608-580 59-11262-700 59-11265-420 59-11341-040

220 POPLAR ST 939 KIRKLAND PL 1266 BARRIE DR 1920 WESTSYDE RD 578 COLLINGWOOD DR 569 COLLINGWOOD DR 859 MCQUEEN DR 2134 SADDLEBACK DR 207 1525 TRANQUILLE RD

PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL PL

011-869-925 009-440-631 009-176-543 006-808-581 006-508-561 008-273-057 002-585-839 027-290-191 017-583-152 011-814-454 011-814-829 002-338-548 002-785-897 027-336-018 008-875-685 005-245-389 006-546-510 003-510-425 007-409-893 008-245-649 005-369-916 008-701-261 009-802-240 018-464-122 005-801-338 017-924-651 017-817-048 026-414-091 026-977-214 027-425-517 various 026-598-281 026-839-857 004-387-261 026-027-071 027-595-391 027-595-404 027-595-412 027-595-439 027-595-447 027-595-455 027-595-463 027-595-471 027-595-510 027-595-528 027-595-536 027-595-544 027-595-552 027-595-579 027-595-587 027-595-595 027-595-609 008-749-116 003-354-431 008-896-186 010-005-862 004-700-813 009-755-420 006-731-902 005-502-322 007-919-247 008-048-258 008-382-611 007-662-581 003-423-549 004-661-354 007-210-302 005-306-809 004-959-001 002-825-104

2135 TRANQUILLE RD 1942 FLEETWOOD AVE 60 1900 TRANQUILLE RD 1 835 SOUTHILL ST 930 STARDUST ST 1606 TRANQUILLE RD 1012 NICOLANI DR 813 SHELAN PL 2255 PONDEROSA AVE 2230 BONNIE PL 2509 MARSH RD 1679 VALLEYVIEW DR 1786 KNOLLWOOD CRES 1653 VALLEYVIEW DR 2240 SKEENA DR 1986 SKEENA DR 2265 TURNBERRY PL 1304 SUNSHINE CRT 1410 PACIFIC WAY 1707 FOXTAIL DR 0 ROSE HILL RD 26 5200 DALLAS DR 130 2920 VALLEYVIEW DR 4340 WESTSYDE RD 3820 WESTSYDE RD 10 950 IDA LANE 11 950 IDA LANE 12 950 IDA LANE 14 950 IDA LANE 15 950 IDA LANE 16 950 IDA LANE 17 950 IDA LANE 18 950 IDA LANE 22 950 IDA LANE 23 950 IDA LANE 24 950 IDA LANE 25 950 IDA LANE 26 950 IDA LANE 28 950 IDA LANE 29 950 IDA LANE 30 950 IDA LANE 31 950 IDA LANE 647 HARRINGTON RD 3565 WESTSYDE RD 830 ORCREST DR 766 PORTERFIELD RD 3021 BANK RD 849 MAYNE RD 2837 WESTSYDE RD 845 AGASSIZ RD 761 HUNTINGTON DR 2410 OAK HILLS BLVD 2423 RHONMORE CRES 2520 TUPELA DR 2598 TUPELA DR 6391 BARNHARTVALE RD 1225 HIGHRIDGE DR 4946 PINANTAN PL 4821 BEACHVIEW PL 536 MARRIOTT RD

971 LT 54 DL 255 12291 LT 36 DL 256 13707 LT E DL 254 22573 LT 2 SEC 25 TWP 20 RGE 18 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 23308 LT M DL 257 18214 LT 26 DL 257 KAS215 LT 2 SEC 25 TWP 20 RGE 18 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAP85289 LT 49 SEC 25 TWP 20 RGE 18 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS984 LT 14 BLK 254 KAMLOOPS 1105 LT 10 SEC 9 TWP 108 KAMLOOPS 1105 LT 91 DL 253 KAMLOOPS 13242 LT 17 DL 253 KAS31 LT 60 DL 253 KAMLOOPS KAS3364 LT 1 DL 253 KAMLOOPS 15195 LT I SEC 9 TWP 108 26055 LT 36 SEC 9 TWP 108 23183 LT 12 DL 254 32172 LT 1 DL 252 21556 LT 5 DL 252 18439 LT 7 SEC 22 TWP 20 RGE 18 MER 6 25670 LT F DL 236 16103 LT A DL 235 KAMLOOPS 8712 LT 7 DL 235 KAP50825 LT 3 SEC 4 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 24948 LT 8 SEC 35 TWP 19 RGE 17 MER 6 KAP48130 LT 1 SEC 34 TWP 19 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAP47401 LT 9 SEC 25 TWP 19 RGE 18 MER 6 KAP78968 LT 49 SEC 2 TWP 20 RGE 18 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAP83002 LT 16 SEC 1 TWP 20 RGE 18 MER 6 DL 249 KAMLOOPS KAP85988 LT 24 SEC 35 TWP 19 RGE 18 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 913 LT 6 BLK 9 SEC 33 TWP 19 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS2835 LT 26 SEC 5 TWP 20 RGE 16 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3087 LT 53 SEC 1 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 19812 LT 33 SEC 20 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAP76198 LT 5 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 10 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 11 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 12 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 14 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 15 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 16 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 17 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 18 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 22 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 23 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 24 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 25 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 26 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 28 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 29 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 30 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS KAS3505 LT 31 SEC 18 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 15787 LT 7 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 19582 LT 11 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 14542 LT 2 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 7326 LT 3 SEC 7 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 27773 LT 3 SEC 6 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 8964 LT 21 SEC 6 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 22897 LT 1 SEC 6 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 17534 LT 1 SEC 6 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 20120 LT 17 SEC 31 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 19447 LT 1 SEC 31 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 17621 LT 2 SEC 31 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 20974 LT 6 SEC 31 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 20974 LT 73 SEC 31 TWP 20 RGE 17 MER 6 21837 LT B SEC 33 TWP 19 RGE 16 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 21885 LT 80 SEC 33 TWP 19 RGE 16 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 25901 LT 14 SEC 20 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS 22461 LT 3 SEC 20 TWP 21 RGE 17 MER 6 9251 LT 3 SEC 11 TWP 22 RGE 17 MER 6 KAMLOOPS

www.kamloops.ca


A14 ™ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

Driver blows ďŹ ve times legal blood-alcohol limit A delivery-truck driver will likely face impaired-driving charges after a minor accident at a busy Sahali intersection on Tuesday, Sept. 11 — after which, police say, the man blew five times the legal blood-alcohol limit. Kamloops RCMP Staff Sgt. Grant Learned said police were investigating a possible drunk driver at about 3:45 p.m. in the 800-block of Notre Dame Drive after a witness reported seeing a five-ton delivery truck rolling through a parking lot and an apparently drunk man getting behind the wheel.

POLICE BEAT

While an officer was headed to that report, Learned said, he happened upon an accident at Notre Dame and Summit drives involving the same truck and an Acura Integra. Learned said the 42-year-old truck driver was arrested, with tests later showing he had five times the legal blood-alcohol limit in his system. The driver of the Acura, a 32-year-old woman, complained of stiff muscles following the collision.

Highway 5A wreck It looked catastrophic at first — dozens of smashed-up cars and a semi-trailer tipped onto its side on a windy stretch of Highway 5A south of Kamloops. But, according to Learned, the wreck at about 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 11, turned out to be a fairly minor case of a

speeding trucker losing his load of crushed vehicles. “Some of the initial calls, they thought they were coming up to a major car crash,� Learned said. “The initial calls in to our 911 system were that there was a catastrophic crash.� Learned said the spilled load was blocking the highway, leaving 5A closed for two hours. In the end, the driver — a 32-year-old Abbotsford man — was given a ticket and treated for bumps and bruises. “It appeared that the truck was travelling too fast,� Learned said. “He was also taken to Royal Inland Hospital, where he was reported to have minor injuries.�

sound of an explosion.� Mounties went to the man’s house and

weapons or explosives were found. The man could face

arrested him without incident. Learned said no

away from the bank. His name has not been released.

threats charges, Learned said, or could be placed on court orders to stay

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Bank threat A Kamloops man could face serious charges after allegedly threatening to blow up a bank after having his loan application turned down. Police were called to a North Shore bank on Tuesday, Sept. 11, to investigate a threat made by a disgruntled client. Learned said a 50-year-old man had been denied a loan earlier in the day at a downtown branch of the same bank. Following that, investigators believe, he told an employee he was going to burn his house down. Learned said the man then went to the North Shore branch and was denied the loan again. “At that time, [the suspect] was alleged to have told an employee blood would be shed there,� Learned said. “He then imitated the

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ A15

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

USED CAR SUPERST ORE CHECK US OUT ONLINE AT WWW.ZIMMERWHEATONGM.COM 09 Dodge ½ Ton Crew

12 Chevrolet Malibu LS

12 Chevrolet Impala LT

10 Jeep Commander

12 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT

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• #5552A • PW, PL, air • Tilt, cruise • Alloy wheels • Keyless, CD • 31,508 kms

• #5544A • PW, PL, • Cruise, Tilt • Alloy wheels • Keyless, cruise • CD player • 25,500 kms

• #5528B • PW, PL, air • Tilt, cruise • Alloy wheels • Keyless entry • CD player • 50,740 kms

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10 GMC Terrain AWD

08 Chevrolet Trailblazer

12 GMC Acadia SLE AWD

11 Volkswagen Golf GTI

07 Ford Sport Trac 4x4

• #C226647A • PW, PL, air • Tilt • Cruise • Alloy Wheels • Keyless entry • CD player

• #C222891A • PW, PL, air • Tilt, cruise • Alloy wheels • Keyless entry • CD player • 99,050 kms

• #5574A • 6 cyl, auto • 25,050 kms • Air, tilt, cruise • PW, PL • Alloys • Keyless • CD

• #5537B • PW, PL, air • Tilt, cruise • Alloy wheels • Keyless entry • CD, sunroof • Leather • 45,485 kms

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08 Pontiac Torrent AWD

12 GMC Yukon XL SLE 4x4

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10 Chev Aveo LT

• #C248556A • 8 cyl, auto • 48,163 kms • Air, tilt, cruise • Alloys, keyless • PW, PL • CD

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• #5553A • 8 cyl, auto • 21,793 kms • Air, tilt, cruise • Alloys, keyless • PW, PL • CD

• #B373976A • 8 cyl, auto • 92,323 kms • PW, PL • Sunroof • Air, tilt, cruise • Alloys, keyless • Leather, CD

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11 GMC 1 Ton Ex/Cab SLT 4x4

10 GMC Half Ton Crew SLT

05 GMC 1/2 Ton Ext 4x4

08 GMC 1/2 Ton Crew 6’ All Terrain

05 Chevrolet Malibu LT

• #4197B • 6 cyl Diesel • Auto, 37,637 kms • Air, tilt, cruise • Alloys, keyless • PW, PL • Sunroof • Leather

• #5521A • 4WD • PW, PL, air • Tilt, cruise • Alloy wheels • Keyless entry • CD player • Sunroof • Leather

• #C225235A • Auto • 100,526 kms • Air, tilt, cruise • Alloys, keyless • PW, PL • Leather • CD

• #C225153A • 8 cyl, auto • 44,737 kms • Air, tilt, cruise • Alloys, keyless • PW, PL • Sunroof • Leather, CD

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06 Hummer H3

07 Chevrolet Suburban LT

11 Cadillac EXT

• #C217315B • 4 cyl, FWD • 5 spd. manual • PW, PL, air • Tilt, cruise • Alloys, keyless • CD player • 27,117 kms

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685 Notre Dame Drive, Kamloops 250-374-1135 or Toll Free 1-888-886-0066 *Payments are based on financing on approved credit with stated amount down or equivalent trade and includes taxes. Total paid with $2000 down: #B373976A $46,567.90, #5574A $45,292.34, #C225153A $38,587, #C225235A $23,773, #C248556A $42,457, #5561A $28,343, #5523B $16,359, #C360749B $22,535, #C226647A $31,085, #5521A $40,954, #C223871A $23,226, #5537B $41,512.20, #5528B $30,175.42, #C222891A $26,415.56, #3854 $16,358, #C226185A $21,516.90, #5518B $38,907, #5544A $25,350, #5551A $47,952, #5552A $24,074. Total paid with $5000 down: #5553A $54,440, #4197B $74,337. Total paid with $10,000 down: #5425A $96,982

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A16 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

Digital signs OK — but not too flashy Digital signs with changeable displays will now be allowed in Kamloops, but the city isn’t planning on letting them get too flashy. Under new regulations passed by city council, signs will be able to change display copy once every 10 minutes, or as often as every 10 seconds if they’re on a lot with more than 75 metres of frontage. But animation effects, scrolling letters, colour changes and other types of motion aren’t permitted. City planner Blake Collins said that’s because the movement could distract drivers.

Green light for downtown hotel reno A $4 million renovation of a downtown Kamloops hotel is proceeding. Kamloops city council has agreed to a development permit for the former Canadian Inn at 339 St. Paul

Street that will see the existing five-storey building converted to a DoubleTree Hotel.

KFR is getting a bouncy castle Kamloops firefighters are adding another tool to their arsenal — and this time, it’s bouncy. Members of Kamloops Fire Rescue were at council Sept. 11 to get permission to purchase an inflatable house to teach children about fire safety. The house is similar to a bouncy castle, but with messages about fire safety printed on its walls and inflatable versions of common household hazards inside. It also contains a slide shaped like a fire truck. Both the bouncy house and a trailer to haul it in will be paid with about $30,000 the firefighters have raised from service groups in the city, including the YMCA/YWCA.

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Zevia Soda Asst. 355 mL

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A17

LOCAL NEWS

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The cool evenings of early September are a good indication our hot summer is slowly coming to an end. However, the Kamloops Farmers’ Market in the downtown core will continue to dole out goodness until the end of October. Above left: Daniela Basile gets set to sell all sorts of squash and gourds. Above right: Brittany McDonald sells fruits and vegetables. The market runs Saturdays from 8 a.m. to noon in the 200-block of St. Paul Street and Wednesdays from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the 400block of Victoria Street.

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248 TRANQUILLE RD, NORTH SHORE - KAMLOOPS 376-2714 • OUT OF TOWN CALL 1-800-665-4533 3325 31ST AVE., VERNON 545-9820 • OUT OF TOWN CALL 1-800-663-2887 527 MACKENZIE AVE., WILLIAMS LAKE 392-5362 • OUT OF TOWN CALL 1-800-661-5188


A18 ™ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 STORIES BY TIM PETRUK/KTW

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

ROYAL INLAND AT 100

PHOTOS/INFORMATION, KAMLOOPS MUSEUM

Medicine in early Kamloops Natives had healing rituals and treatments long before Europeans arrived in the Thompson Valley, using tree roots and bark, leaves and berries to treat ailments. When traders and settlers began arriving in the area in the 19th century, though, they brought with them “modern medicine�. An 1877 supply list for Fort Kamloops included a number of medicinal ingredients. Among them were cod liver oil, stick and powdered sulphur, seidlitz powders, chlorodyne, bitter aloes, tartaric acid, powdered rhubarb, copaiba balsam and cherry pectoral — all of which were recognized medicines of the time. Some of the more vague remedies on the list were Black Draught, Blue Pills, Seven Seals, Golden Wonder, Wright’s Sugar-coated Pills, Mustang Liniment, Kennedy’s Medical Discovery, Abolition Oil, Cockles’ Pills and Perry’s Painkiller. All of this was six years before there was even a doctor in the area.

Matron Eleanor Potter outside the original Royal Inland Hospital, a simple wooden structure erected at Lorne Street and Third Avenue, where today Interior Savings Centre stands. Potter holds the distinction of being Royal Inland Hospital’s first female nurse.

Where pucks now y, patients did lie

T

HIS MONTH MARKS THE 100TH anniversary of Royal Inland Hospital on its present site at Third Avenue and Columbia Street, but the institution is actually nearly 30 years older. What would become RIH started at the corner of Third Avenue and Lorne Street — the land occupied today by Interior Savings Centre. The building — the first hospital in B.C.’s Interior — came about only after a series of public meetings in 1884 at Kamloops’ first courthouse, a log building on what is now West Victoria Street. Completed in November 1885 at a cost of $3,900 — more than $1,000 under budget — Kamloops’ original hospital was nothing more than a two-storey wood-frame house with wrap-around balconies on both levels, sitting on one acre of riverfront property. The first medical officer was Dr. Simon J. Tunstall, who had in 1883 been appointed the local Company Doctor by Canadian Pacific Railway. It didn’t hurt that he was, at the time, the only physician in town. Tunstall’s annual salary in the first years of the hospital’s life was $400. He was forced to resign in 1887 after falling ill and choosing to focus on his private practice. He was replaced by Dr. Ed Furrer, who received a yearly salary of $800.

That was also the year the hospital employed its first female nurse, Matron Eleanor Potter. Renovations on the building began in 1891, creating a 15-bed hospital with five wards. In February 1896, Canada’s Parliament passed a bill incorporating the institution as Royal Inland Hospital. In May of that year, work began on a women’s ward — a separate building just west of the main structure. However, 1896 also brought controversy for the newly named RIH. Complaints were common — alleging delays in admissions and early discharge, as well as a lack of a palliative-care facility. Furrer — who had by then become a popular figure in Kamloops society, serving as an alderman and school trustee in addition to his medical duties — died in 1898. He was replaced by Dr. Arthur Procter, who earned a salary of $1,000 per year. Procter became the centre of another hospital controversy himself in 1904, when Kamloops’ three other physicians appealed to the local health board for a “change in systems� to allow them greater access to RIH’s facilities. The doctors felt Procter, as the only practitioner drawing a paycheque from the hospital, had an unfair advantage over other doctors. For two months, the controversy dominated local headlines. The liberal Kamloops Sentinel — under

editor Dr. Mark Wade, one of the city’s other physicians — argued dirty politics on the part of the health board, while the conservative Kamloops Standard took Procter’s side. A ruling after a subsequent provincial investigation gave other local doctors more freedom to use RIH. Procter left Kamloops a short time later to start a clinic in Vancouver and was succeeded by his former assistant, Dr. J.S. Burris. Also in 1904, RIH constructed an isolation ward on Mission Flats, meant to house patients with infectious diseases. The building proved inadequate and would eventually be replaced by a larger brick structure on Columbia Street. The following year, 1905, saw the construction of the Trafalgar Wing — an expansion that doubled the number of beds at RIH. By then, a nurse’s training school was up and running at the hospital. Amy Taylor, the first graduate, received her designation in 1907. But, the old building on Lorne Street, despite two decades of seemingly constant renovations, was in need of a replacement. Prior to 1910, a campaign had begun in Kamloops to erect a new RIH. It was completed at its present-day location in time for the city’s centennial celebrations of 1912.

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com STORIES BY TIM PETRUK/KTW

ROYAL INLAND AT 100

Address from R.A. Bethune, chair of Kamloops hospital board, to the Duke and Duchess of Connaught at the grand opening of RIH, just before handing the Duke a gold key to open the hospital doors (Sept. 17, 1911): “To His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught and Strathearn Knight of the most noble order of the Garter, Knight of the most illustrious order of St. Patrick: May it please Your Royal Highness. We the members of the board of directors of the Royal Inland Hospital desire to convey to Your Royal Highness our sincere appreciation of the great honour you have conferred upon the hospital by your presence at the opening of this building, erected to replace one which has become totally inadequate for the requirements of the district which it serves. We further desire to express a hope that the key now presented to Your Royal Highness may be accepted as a memento of the occasion; that under God’s providence the door which it unlocks may be always open to the afflicted and injured and that hope may enter with all who pass the portal of the house today dedicated by Your Royal Highness to the cause of humanity.”

A19

PHOTOS/INFORMATION, KAMLOOPS MUSEUM

Kamloops’ first doctor On Aug. 28, 1863, Kamloops welcomed its first trained physician — but he didn’t stay long. Dr. Walter Butler Cheadle travelled down the North Thompson with a group of friends one year after the Overlanders made the same journey. Cheadle wrote about the visit in his diary, describing a meeting with Jean Baptiste Lolo St. Paul. The European party was fed, treated to a dance and stayed overnight. The next day, they crossed the South Thompson and stayed in the abandoned Old Fort for 10 days. During that time, Cheadle treated St. Paul — referred to in his diary as “the old boy with a bad leg” — making their interaction, on Sept. 3, 1863, the first between a doctor and patient in Kamloops.

Remedies from the 19th century

Construction (left) and completion of Royal Inland Hospital resulted in Columbia Street and Third Avenue becoming home to a hospital for 100 years — and counting as the Interior Health Authority’s RIH Master Plan has secured $320-million in funding to greatly expand the facility in stages in the coming years.

AN RIH REGAL OPENING It was mid-afternoon on a Tuesday in September when all of the school children in Kamloops gathered outside the awe-inspiring new building atop a hill on Columbia Street. The girls in their white dresses and the boys in their lightcoloured dress shirts sang as the guests of honour stepped out onto a temporary stage. The date was Sept. 17, 1912, and the children had gathered — along with most of Kamloops’ population — to watch the Duke and Duchess of Connaught offi-

cially open Royal Inland Hospital. The royal couple had arrived in Kamloops about an hour earlier, at 3 p.m., aboard a specially outfitted train that came from the Rocky Mountains. They were in Kamloops to open RIH and to help the city celebrate its 100th birthday. Upon arrival at the Canadian Pacific Railway station on Lorne Street, the Duke and Duchess — along with their daughter, Princess Patricia — were met by local politicians, military officials and Tk’emlups

Indian Band Chief Louie. They were then taken on a brief tour of the city by car. “During the ride through the city with military escort, the members of the Royal party expressed surprise at the many evidences of modern improvements in the place, the fine lighting system, concrete sidewalks, and the general prosperous appearance of the whole community,” read a story in the Kamloops Standard.

“The reception given by the public was warm and cordial and all along the route were cheering crowds while even down in Chinatown the celestial welcome was every bit as hearty.” By the time the royal guests arrived at RIH, the throngs of residents who greeted them with cheers at the train station had made the hike up to Third Avenue and Columbia Street. The crowd gathered around the temporary stage outside the brand

new hospital building — blocking the view of the school children, who were singing Maple Leaf Forever. “Hardly had the first shrill soprano notes been raised when the Duke smilingly motioned aside the plug-hatted gentlemen and the handsomely gowned ladies and he and the Duchess and Princess Patricia walked over to the railing,” the Standard story read.

Have a cold? Hopefully you also have goose grease and turpentine. You’re going to want to mix the two together, rub the concoction on your chest — and you’re healed. For a cough and sore throat, why not try cooking salt pork in hot vinegar? Then, fasten the pork around your neck with a piece of red flannel. All out of salt pork and vinegar? Try wrapping a dirty sock around your neck. Need a painkiller? Try cocaine drops — marketed specifically for teething children in the 1880s — or heroin syrup. In addition to substances now illegal, other medicines of the time included dangerous ingredients like mercury and lead. Has a threshing accident left one of your limbs in rough shape? Don’t worry, the barber can help. In rural areas in the 1800s, before doctors were readily available, barbers routinely performed emergency amputations. The patient would be plied with alcohol, the affected limb sawed off and the veins and arteries cauterized with hot tar. Have a toothache? With no dentists in town until the 1900s, you would have been out of luck. But, don’t fret — barbers, butchers, blacksmiths and even farmers were allowed to advertise their tooth-pulling services, which involved cutting the gums around the tooth and using a tool called a “turnkey.”

Celebrating 100 years of RIH To learn more about the hospital’s history, patients and visitors are invited to peruse archived photos on display in the main hospital lobby. On Friday, Sept. 14, volunteers will serve cake to staff, visitors and patients, while at 7:30 p.m., a time-lapse photo project will be undertaken at the hospital. Call 250-314-2100 (ext. 2230) for information.

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A20 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 STORIES BY TIM PETRUK/KTW

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

ROYAL INLAND AT 100

PHOTOS/INFORMATION, KAMLOOPS MUSEUM

Finally — a state-of-the-art hospital X From A19

“All three graciously acknowledged greeting of the singers and by the kindly and thoughtful act gave the little ones a view of their presence which would have been otherwise denied the children, who were as cosmopolitan as the crowds on the streets, there being Chinese and Japanese, fair-haired Scandinavians and negroes and Indians, representatives of nearly every racial characteristic on the globe, but everyone sang Canada’s national song with a vim that could not be excelled by the most enthusiastic of the native born.” The ceremony got underway with an address from city clerk J.J. Carment, in which the royal couple was welcomed to “the province which holds the

most westerly gate of the Empire.” “We are convinced that the present visit of Your Royal Highness in the most westerly of the provinces in the Dominion will make for increased interest in this outpost of the Empire, and lead to increased knowledge of its immense potentialities and boundless resources,” Carment said. “We desire to assure Your Royal Highness of our unmixed loyalty and devotion to the British crown and His Majesty’s person.” The Duke, in his reply, congratulated Kamloops on its 100th birthday. “I am very pleased that my visit comes at the moment you are celebrating the centenary of your foundation and it is more interesting to see what

has been achieved here since Kamloops was first settled by the fur traders a hundred years ago,” he said. “That you have drawn full profit from the various advantages conferred on you by nature is very evident and I wish you to accept my heartfelt wishes for the success of Kamloops and all its enterprises in the future.” After presentations of a fruit basket and bouquets to the royal visitors, R. A. Bethune, chair of the local hospital board, took to the podium. With a gold key in his hand — “made of British Columbia gold,” according to the Standard — Bethune thanked the Duke and Duchess for attending and expressed hope about the future of health care in Kamloops.

Bethune handed the Duke the key and the ceremony came to an end. “The hospital was formally opened, after which the party inspected the building, which is one of the finest institutions of its kind in the whole West and equal in point of equipment, if not in size, to any similar institution anywhere,” the Standard story stated. The celebrations then moved on to Riverside Park, where the royal guests were treated to a parade and historical pageant before the Duke dropped the ceremonial ball on a lacrosse game. By nightfall, the Duke and Duchess of Connaught and Princess Patricia were back on the rails, headed west. And Kamloops, after its brief royal whirlwind, was finally home to a state-of-the-art hospital.

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

DIANE’S

LOCAL NEWS

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At the rear

Fifteen-month-old Ella Turtle stops to smell the flowers — brown-eyed Susans — during a recent visit to St. Andrews on the Square. Allen Douglas/KTW

The Better Business Bureau is warning the public to be cautious about door-to-door heating contractors who may use misleading sales tactics to convince homeowners to buy a new furnace or hotwater tank. In one recent scenario, a consumer was sold a hot-water tank by a company that stated it was a 2011 model when, in reality, the tank was from 2003. This same contractor is operating around British Columbia, does not have proper safety licensing and is having residents issue cheques with no companycontact information for payments. In the past, the BBB has received reports of con artists who tried to frighten consumers into purchases with warnings their heating system were leaking dangerous gases that could explode or poison those inside the home. Before you choose a heating contractor, consider the following tips: • Start with the BBB. You can find out helpful information by visiting the company’s businessreview section online at mbc.bbb.org. • Hire heating contractors who are licensed with the BC Safety Authority (call 1-866-566-7233, employ certified gas fitter; are bonded and insured for liability and property damage.

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A22 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

Local financial planner to learn sentencing fate By Tim Petruk STAFF REPORTER

tim@kamloopsthisweek.com

A disgraced Kamloops financial planner who admitted to scamming eight former clients out of more than $300,000 is expected to return to

court today (Sept. 13) to learn his fate. The Crown wants Ed Chieduch locked up for two years in a federal prison. The 58-year-old used forged investment documents to swindle clients in a Ponzi scheme during a five-year span dat-

ing back to 2005. At a hearing in June, court heard he told police he’d been suckered into a so-called Nigerian email scam and was covering his own losses with his clients’ cash. In 2010, Chieduch had his licence yanked

by the Insurance Council of B.C. — at about the same time a police investigation into his actions was getting off the ground. Chieduch pleaded guilty in May and was initially supposed to be sentenced on June 7. That hearing

was pushed back first to July and then to September. In addition to the criminal charges, a number of Chieduch’s victims have filed lawsuits against him. He was also sued by the company from which he used to

rent office space in a Victoria Street building. In previous court appearances, Chieduch’s victims have been identified as ranging from a recently divorced single mother to a small-business owner to a deceased woman’s estate.

ED CHIEDUCH: The Crown wants a two-year federal prison term.

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www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A23

LOCAL NEWS

Museum tour highlights crime in Kamloops Who is the most famous Kamloops criminal? Who tried to escape from a Kamloops gaol? Learn the answers to these questions and more during the new Kamloops Museum’s Criminals of Kamloops Guided Walking Tour. The tour will be hosted by Sylvia Gropp, a Kamloops resident with a bachelor of arts degree in archaeology and geology who has participated in digs on First Nations reserves and at the B.C. Wildlife Park. For more than a decade, Gropp has worked with the Kamloops Museum and Archives as a contractor and enjoys teaching history to people of all ages. She is co-writing a book with the museum and the Thompson Rivers History and Heritage Society. Tour dates and times are Saturday, Sept. 15 at 10 a.m. (course 199299), Saturday, Sept. 29 at 10 a.m. (course 199300) and Saturday, Oct. 20 at 1

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A24 ™ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

call for submissions

LOCAL NEWS

I]dbehdc D`VcV\Vc

The Thompson Okanagan Tourism Association is accepting digital photo submissions of the Thompson Okanagan area for the 2013 Travel Experiences Guide. Take advantage of this unique opportunity to showcase your photographic talent. Submissions must be received by 5pm Friday, Sept. 14th, 2012 to garner consideration. Go to totabc.org/photocontest for more details If you would like to know which type of traveler you are, just scan the QR code and take the short quiz. Upon completion, you will be provided with a brief profile of your traveler type.

Grand prize

Submitted photos become the sole property of the Thompson Okanagan Tourism Association for all intent and purpose and may be published in multiple formats.

ONE WEEK VACATION FOR 2 IN THE THOMPSON OKANAGAN!

For specific digital file requirements please email: kirk@pentictonwesternnews.com

TUNES AGAINST TUITION TEES

send us your photos!

Erica McLellan of Kitimat, studying human services, receives a free T-shirt at the Tunes Against Tuition Fees concert on Saturday, Sept. 8, at Thompson Rivers University. Allan Douglas/KTW

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A25

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A26 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Cleaning up our community ...

LOCAL NEWS

ICBC claims centre to be picketed One-day strike set for Tuesday, Sept. 18

SE SA VI PT H SIT EMAL U S B IM A ER A T 15 LL –3 0

The Kamloops location on Battle Street will be among 55 ICBC claims centres expected to be behind picket lines next week. The Canadian Office and Professional Employees (COPE) Union Local 378 has announced that more than 1,500 members throughout B.C. will be taking strike action on Tuesday, Sept. 18. “These are employees who have been without a contract for over two years,” said COPE 378 ICBC president David Black. “Their wages are falling behind, while ICBC executives and business partners got massive salary increases and $1.2 billion of ICBC profits went into government revenues.” “Striking is never an easy decision and we sincerely hoped our strike action on Sept. 5, when we co-ordinated with the BCGEU and the PEA, would help ICBC focus on reaching a fair and reasonable

collective agreement. “But, ICBC’s attitude hasn’t changed.” Black said the newest job action is part of an escalating union strategy aimed at getting ICBC back to the bargaining table. ICBC’s last offer was a two percent wage increase over a fouryear contract. “Our members felt it was very important to take another day of action so they could talk to the public about how the government is mishandling ICBC, not just for the workers but also for drivers that haven’t seen a rate reduction in years,” Black said. Most of the locations that will be on strike on Sept. 18 were not part of last week’s joint strike with the PEA and BCGEU. Essential Service levels will be maintained at all striking locations. COPE 378 represents 4,600 workers at ICBC.

A great big Thank You to everyone who participated in the

Kamloops Kia Community Clean Up Day 2012 What a success! We had members from the Kamloops Storm, Kamloops Broncos, Kamloops Youth Soccer Association, Communities in Bloom, as well as the general public. This year we chose to tackle MacArthur Island Park, and when all the hard work was done, a barbecue was held at the BC Urban Grill for the volunteers. Kia Canada’s Drive Change campaign has had tremendous response since its inception. For more information and Drive Change events, go to www.drivechangewithkia.ca Again, Thank You to all for helping pull together another great event!

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*Rates based on adult pricing. Photo: Kevin Hagell


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A27

LOCAL NEWS

Reconciliation book focus of event at TRU Speaking My Truth will be launched and public invited to free presentation The public is invited to Thompson Rivers University on Monday, Sept. 17, for the launch of the book, Speaking My Truth: Reflections on Reconciliation and Residential Schools. The event takes place at 6 p.m. in the university’s Irving K. Barber Centre British Columbia Centre and features a panel with editors Shelagh Rogers and Mike DeGagné, cultural critic and poet Roy Miki and Secwepemc artist and curator Tania Willard. Rogers, a veteran broadcast journalist and host of The Next Chapter on CBC Radio, and Aboriginal Healing Foundation executive director DeGagné are two of the editors of the volume, and will be in Kamloops to launch the book-club edition of the publication. They will be joined by one of the book’s contributors, SFU professor emeritus and cultural critic Miki, as well as by Secwepemc artist, curator and cultural organizer Willard, who will both discuss their work in the con-

text of the possibilities and problems of reconciliation. Edited by Rogers, DeGagné and Jonathan Dewar, the volume is distilled from the Aboriginal Healing Foundation’s three-volume series Truth and Reconciliation. The texts reflect upon the lived and living experiences and legacies of residential schools and, more

broadly, reconciliation in Canada. Speaking My Truth: Reflections on Reconciliation and Residential Schools is now available. English, French and Inuktitut versions can be ordered directly online at speakingmytruth.com — free of charge. Rogers’ CBC interview with DeGagné, broadcast on June 4 on The

Next Chapter, can be heard online at http:// podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ podcasts/nextchapter_20120604_21838. mp3. Monday’s event at Thompson Rivers University is free and open to the public. It is sponsored by the Aboriginal Healing Foundation, the Centre for Innovation in Culture and the Arts in Canada and the Thompson Rivers University Office of Research and Graduate Studies. The Irving K.

Barber British Columbia Center is adjacent to the Brown

Family House of Learning. Parking in the eve-

ning on the Thompson Rivers University campus is free.

2012.2013 Season Bruce Dunn Music Director

Chamber Music Series

Fine Arts Quartet September 25, 2012

Tuesday 7:30 pm Calvary Community Church FINE ARTS QUARTET

Ralph Evans, Violin Efim Boico, Violin Nicolo Eugelmi, Viola Robert Cohen, Cello Shostakovich String Quartet No. 1, Op. 49 (1938) Debussy String Quartet in G minor, Op. 10 Schubert String Quintet in C Major Op. 163, D956 (with Mr. Eric Wilson, guest cellist)

TICKETS Kamloops Live! Box Office 250-374-5483 or 1-866-374-5483

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A28 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

And the business excellence finalists are . . . The field is narrowing for this year’s Kamloops Chamber of Commerce Business Excellence Awards. The 45 award finalists were revealed on Monday, Sept. 10, at a special event hosted at Kamloops Ford Lincoln on the North Shore. Many businesses were nominated this year for the first time, which chamber executive director Deb McClelland said is a sign Kamloops’ business community is growing. This year’s award winners will be announced at the Business Excellence Awards Gala on Saturday, Oct. 13, at the Kamloops Convention Centre. This year’s finalists: • City of Kamloops Community Service Award: - Abbott Wealth Management - Canadian Western Bank - Radio NL

• Berwick on the Park Service Provider Award 1-10 Staff: - Brain Train International - Rest Assured Home - Summit Gourmet Meats • Kamloops Lincoln Service Provider Award 11+ Staff: - Excel Personnel Inc. - Kamloops Home Hardware Building Centre - Smith Chevrolet Cadillac Ltd. • Venture Kamloops Resource Industry Award: - Highlands Irrigation Ltd. - Plateau Construction Ltd. - River City Fiber Ltd. • BC Hydro Green Award 1-10 Staff: - Dr. Preety Desai - Snug Glee Bumz Diaper Service - Think Green Painting • RBC Green Award 11+ Staff: - Stantec - Best Western Plus

Kamloops Hotel - Thompson Rivers University • KGHM Ajax Mining Inc. Home-Based Business of the Year Award: - Social Fire Consulting - TLC for Pets - ZERO Tolerance DDs Service Ltd.

• Home Hardware First Nations Business of the Year Award: - Heartbeat Consulting - Sun Ridge Equipment Ltd. - 2 Dz Boutique • Aberdeen Mall Retailer Award 1-10 Staff:

- Portfolio Interiors - Designs for You Baskets - Findlay’s Vacuum and Sewing Machine World • Underwriters Insurance Brokers Retailer Award 11+ Staff: - Kamloops Ford Lincoln

- Surplus Herby’s - Wholesale Outfitters • BDC Manufacturer Award: - Northern Trailer - TDC Manufacturing Ltd. - Trout Creek International Homes

• BCLC Technology Innovator Award: - Netshift Media Inc. - ROI Media Works Corp. - Scorpion Technologies Ltd.

Come to our Life Skills Class!

• Tourism and Hospitality Award: - Hotel 540 - Scott’s Inn and Restaurant - South Thompson Inn and Conference Centre - Tree Top Flyers

People In Motion is starting to teach day to day life skills for young adults with disabilities; learning delays, autism etc. Learn about cooking, nutrition, money management, basic computer skills, community safety and lots more.

• Excel Personnel Business Person of the Year Award: - John Hampel, Best Western Plus - Peter McKenna, NRI Distribution Inc. - Todd Stone, iCompass Technologies Inc.

Scotiabank AIDS Walk for Life Saturday September 22, 2012

• Kamloops Business Magazine Young Entrepreneur Award: - Isabelle Hamptonstone, Brain Train International - Krishna Lakkineni, ROI Media Works - Sabrina Sinclair, Fit By Design Consulting

Two days a month.

CONT since 1989

EARN! L O T INUE

Call People In Motion to see if this is the program for you.

Like us on Facebook! Call 250.376.7878 or information@peopleinmotion.org for details.

Learn with your peers and become more independent.

CORRECTION

ON PAGE B24 OF TODAY’S KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK, THE FOOD BANK YELLOW BAG WILL BE IN TUESDAY’S SEPT. 18 KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

ROTARY ZUMBA WARM UP

FREE BBQ! GREAT MUSIC!

The Scotiabank AIDS Walk for Life will be taking place this Saturday September 22th, 2012, and we hope to see you there! Bring the kids and join us for a Zumba warm up, The WALK, amazing silent auction, a free BBQ and great music by DJ Kudos!!! Remember this walk plays a critical role in increasing community awareness and raising the much needed funds for people living with HIV and AIDS. 100% of all proceeds raised from the AIDS Walk will stay in the Kamloops community and assist people living with HIV/AIDS. It is not too late to collect pledges! Download a pledge form from the link below or stop by A.S.K Wellness at 433 Tranquille road and pick one up! Every little bit helps this important cause. If you are not able to make the walk or collect pledges a small donation on our website will make a great difference.

Don’t Just Stand There ~ Pledge • Walk • Donate

DRIVE FOOD SATURDAY, SEPT. 22 Watch for your

“YELLOW BAG OF HELP” in Tuesday’s Sept. 18 KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

Please fill the bag with non-perishable food and leave it on your doorstep for pick up by 9am

Thank you for supporting your Kamloops Food Bank MISSED PICK UP? Drop off your Yellow Bag at your favourite grocery store.

www.aidswalkforlife.ca/kamloops.htm Ê `Ê-Ì ÀiÊ ÀÃÌÊ vÊ


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A29

GLOBAL VIEWS

Blasphemy case sympton of caste system GWYNNE DYER World WATCH

“It’s a caste factor, because [the victims] belong to the poorest and most marginalized people. “Unfortunately, they are Christians and this caste system creates lots of problems.” Islam teaches the equality of all believers, but the caste system is alive and kicking in Pakistan. Go far enough back and almost all Pakistani Muslims are descended from Hindus — and, when communithose Hindu communi Islam, ties converted to Islam they retained their ideas and prejudices about caste. This was particularly disheartening for groups at the bottom of the caste pecking order, who had hoped thatt Islam th I l would ld free f them. When the British Empire arrived in the area, therefore, it was the poorest and most despised section of the population that converted to Christianity. So, everybody knows most Christians are really “untouchables.” The argument that got Bibi in trouble, for example, broke out when some of her Muslim fellow workers refused to drink the water she had fetched because Christians are “unclean.” The Hindu minority is mostly just as low-

This caste system creates lots of problems.

” But,, at least the state iss starting to defy the fanatics. natics. Baill iis not normally ll granted in blasphemy cases but, on Sept. 8, Rimsa was freed on bail and a military helicopter lifted her out of the prison yard and into hiding. And Paul Bhatti, the minister for national harmony — whose brother and predecessor Shahbaz was murdered last year — broke a political taboo by explaining why ordinary Pakistanis are more hostile to the religious minorities in their midst than most Muslims elsewhere. “It is not just a religious problem,” Bhatti said.

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caste as the Christians, and equally vulnerable. Together they are only six million out of 187-million Pakistanis, but they account for the vast majority of blasphemy accusations. In many cases, these accusations are merely a convenient weapon for Muslims engaged in land disputes and other quarrels with members of the minority groups. Maybe the Pakistani government has finally found the nerve to deal

Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries. gwynnedyer.com

Congratulations! Raylen & Owen Back to school with their new lap tops!

“I began selling Student 1st chocolates 6 months ago. The youth program has helped me with better communication, being more confident with people in face to face scenarios. It has also helped me gain a grade point in school because of my new math skills. Since starting I have enjoyed spending money as well as learning to manage money. It felt great buying gifts for my family last Christmas without asking help with cash. Having a new laptop is awesome and I believe it will enhance my learning in school. I am very grateful for the job skills I have aquired selling Student 1st chocolate and I feel that the experience gained here will help me in life. Thanks for the opportunity and I am very gratefull for the awesome new laptop. I think Gary has been a great role model for young people.”

Please support our kids 1-855-(KID WORK) when you see them in the community. Like us on Facebook ‘Student 1st Chocolate’

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with this corrupt law and to protect its victims. The Rimsa Masih case is a hopeful sign — but Pakistan still has a long way to go before all of its citizens are really equal under the law.

STUDENTS OF THE MONTH

The bodyguard was tried for murder and convicted, but he was treated as a hero by many Pakistanis and the judge who sent him to prison had to flee the country. Two months later, the only Christian member of Pakistan’s cabinet, Shahbaz Bhatti, was also shot dead when he spoke out against the blasphemy laws. Since then, almost nobody has dared to criticize them. Bibi remains in prison awaiting execution. Her entire family, including her five children, live in hiding and cannot work or go to school. And, while the higher courts would once have thrown out her conviction — they have overturned hundreds of sentences for blasphemy imposed by lower courts that were too vulnerable to local pressures — she can no longer even be confident of that possibility.

So, the outlook seemed grim for Rimsa when she was arrested last month — but, then, the imam who had called the police, Hafiz Mohammad Khalid Chisti, was arrested for doctoring the evidence. His own deputy had seen him adding pages from the Quran to the young Christian’s bag. “I asked him what he was doing,” the deputy told a television station, “and he said this is the evidence against them [the local Christians] and this is how we can get them out from this area.” Two other witnesses came forward against Chisti and Hafiz Mohammad Ashrafi, the chairman of the All Pakistan Ulema Council, a body of senior Muslim clerics, declared that: “Our heads are bowed with shame for what Chisti did.” Ashrafi added Chisti was acting on behalf of a group that wanted to drive out the Christian minority in the area. “I have known for the last three months that some people in this area wanted the Christian community to leave so they could build a madrasa [on their land].” They have already succeeded: Some 300 Christian families have fled in fear for their lives and they probably won’t be back.

I

T WAS A WELCOME CHANGE FROM THE USUAL STORY: A Christian or a Hindu Pakistani accused of blasphemy on flimsy grounds, tried and sentenced to prison — or found innocent, set free and then murdered by some Muslim fanatic. This time was different. The victim was a 14-year-old Christian girl, Rimsa Masih, who is believed to have Down syndrome. She was stopped by a young Muslim man who found the halfburned remnants of a book in her carrier bag that allegedly included verses from the Quran. He told the local imam, who called the police, and she was arrested. This kind of story usually ends badly in Pakistan. Two years ago, for example, a Christian woman, Asia Bibi, was arrested for insulting the Prophet Mohammad while arguing with fellow farm workers. She was sentenced to death by hanging, but it was such a manifest injustice that the governor of Punjab province, Salman Taseer, publicly called for the repeal of the blasphemy law. He was assassinated by his own bodyguard in January 2011.

Todd Peters

250.828.6767 1.800.599.8274 info@bradfordfinancial.org

Vanessa Cullen


A30 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

JIM CLEMONT 1944-2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

NORMAN ROBERT SYRETT Nov 12, 1923 – Sept 7, 2012 It is with great sadness we announce the passing of our dad, grandpa and great-grandpa, Norm Syrett.

The world lost an amazing man on September 7, 2012 at 4:00 am.

The greatest gift Jim gave to his children and all who knew him ... was himself.

Besides his family, Jim is survived by his 7 grandchildren; Clay, Grace, Katy, Odessa, Nathan, Kayden and Justin, his beloved dog, Dixie, and his darling cat, Annie ‘2’. They are his certainty for a better world. Jim leaves a legacy of a man who lived his life with integrity and an incredible ability to teach others. He lived his life on purpose. He was Uncle Jim to Carol, Eli, Gail, Victoria, Shiela, Brenda, Ken, Terri, Jeanne, Bobbie Marie, Cody. Jim is also survived by 3 sisters; Vernetta,Vivian and Hazel and one brother Mel. Jim has a brother-in-law Mal, married to Norma Jean and a sisterin-law Marlene. No formal services by request. No flowers. The family would be grateful for any donations to the Kamloops Hospice House. A huge thank you from the family to Jim’s medical team, Dr. Baker, Dr. Proctor, Missagh Manshardi and all the nurses who attended Jim at the Royal Inland Hospital. Also the family is extremely grateful for the help and support of the Kamloops Hospice team. Their dedicated care and support made Jim’s final moments bearable. Arrangements have been entrusted to Kamloops Funeral Home 250-554-2577 All condolences can be sent to the family from www.kamloopsfuneralhome.com

Norm was born in Toronto, Ontario. He enjoyed Àshing as a boy with his Dad and delivering hundreds of papers in downtown Toronto. Later, he worked in a government ofÀce and met his future wife, Muriel, while singing in the church choir at Waverly Road Baptist Church. They were married June 23, 1953. Sharon was born Aug 12, 1956 and Heather was adopted 6 years later into the family at 6 months of age. The family moved to Kamloops in 1966 where Norm worked in security at the Navy Depot and later as a BSW at Tranquille until his retirement in 1988. Norm greatly enjoyed Àshing, walking, biking, and playing tennis. He was a quiet man who enjoyed people one or two at a time. He was always appreciative when someone helped him or gave him words of encouragement. A huge thank you to the staff at Pinegrove Care Centre. You were like Dad’s second family. Special thanks to Trish, Angie, Paul, Anne, and John. Thanks to you and the rest of the staff who took such good care of Dad in his later years and a big support to our family.

Condolences may be emailed to the family from www.kamloopsfuneralhome.com

She touched many people and we all enjoyed her visits back to Kamloops.

Don’t cry for me now I’m gone For I am In the land of song There is no pain, there is no fear So dry away that silent tear Don’t think of me in the dark and cold For here I am, no longer old I’m in that place that’s filled with love Known to you all as “UP ABOVE”.

FOREVER LOVED ... Annie, Michael, Randy, Ryan, Mom, Dad, Barb, Dave, Gerry, Derek, Courtney, Jesse, Carter,Tara & Dan

June 26, 1922August 17, 2012

With the love of his life by his side, Pete, went peacefully home to be with his Lord. Peter worked in Kamloops Pulp Mill until retired and lived in the Kamloops area for many years He will be lovingly remembered by his wife, Eula, daughter Val Phelps, son Dennis (Sharon) stepsons Stan, Mark (Sheri) Stray. Brothers: George (Martha), Bernie (Esther) Sisters: Kate Fauteux, and Alma Harter, His eight grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. A celebration of Pete’s life and home going will be held at Christian Life Assembly Church 21277 56th Ave in Langley on Tuesday September 18th at 11:00 A.M.

Pennies From Heaven

A Celebration of Life for

G A RY VA N DY DYKE

Just sit and relax and you will find I’m really still there inside your mind

She is survived by her children DeNica (Nigel), Benjamin (Kate), Ellanor (Jason) and twin grandchildren Casius and Noah.

Arrangements entrusted to Kamloops Funeral Home 250-554-2577

BOB HANES

All the memories that you have of me

In loving memory of our friend Dianne Fairman, passed away August 27, 2012 at 72 years of age after a short courageous battle with cancer.

Her teen years were spent in Kamloops where she attended Nor Kam High School. After her marriage and the birth of her Àrst daughter DeNica, they moved to London England where she resided for the last 45 years.

There will be no funeral by request. Instead, there will be a graveside service at Hillside Cemetery for the family this Saturday, Sept 15th. Pastor Al Hern will ofÀciate.

of our Best Friend, Husband and Dad, Son and Brother

Just close your eyes and you will see

1942 - 2012

Norm was predeceased by his wife, Muriel, in June 2008, and their daughter, Sharon, in January 1972.

In Loving Memory

May 5, 1962 Sept. 13, 2002

(SMYSNUK -MCKENZIE)

PETER SAWATZKY

Norm is survived by his daughter, Heather (Michael) Batchelor, his grandchildren Tanya (Rob) Bijl, Chelsey (Kellen) White and Jenny (Rob) Gauthier. He also leaves his seven great-grandchildren, Austin, Rachel, Nolan, Ryan, Jocelyn, Emily, and Riley.

His name is Jim His name is Husband His name is Dad His name is Papa His name is Friend

His passion was his wife Val, for 47 years. His greatest joy was his family Scotty/Desi, Jordie/Shelly, Yorkie/Nettie, Ronnie/Joan, Mary Ann and all of his Bonaparte Family. His love was his work at BA Blacktop and later Harrison Electric.

DIANNE LOUISE ANNE FAIRMAN

A gathering for family and friends will be held on Sunday, September 23, 2012 at Chase Creek Cattle Co., 938 Shuswap Chase Creek Rd. (5 kms off Hwy 1) Everyone Welcome

I found a penny today, Just laying on the ground But it’s not just a penny, This little coin I’ve found. “Found” pennies come from heaven, That’s what my Grandpa told me He said angels toss them down; Oh, how I loved that story. He said when an angel misses you, They toss a penny down Sometimes just to cheer you ou up, Make a smile out of your frown own So don’t pass by that penny, When you’re feeling blue It may be a penny from heaven That an angel tossed to you.

One Final Gift Scatter me not to restless winds, Nor toss my ashes to the sea. Remember now those years gone by When loving gifts I gave to thee. Remember now the happy times The family ties we shared. Don’t leave my resting place unmarked As though you never cared. Deny me not one final gift For all who come to see A single lasting proof that says I loved... and you loved me. Author Unknown


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A31

INSIDE X TRU soccer women have skill to spare/A35 KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

SPORTS

Sports: Marty Hastings sports@kamloopsthisweek.com Ph: 374-7467 Ext: 235 Twitter: @MarTheReporter, @KTWonBlazers

WolfPack swimming to arrive within two years By Marty Hastings STAFF REPORTER

sports@kamloopsthisweek.com

The Kamloops Storm will be without the services of their three top scorers from last season, graduated 1991-born forwards Colten DeFrias (left), Chase Edwards and Tyler Jackson. Kamloops opens its season at home against the Spokane Braves at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 14. Allen Douglas/KTW

Storm have big skates to fill By Marty Hastings STAFF REPORTER

sports@kamloopsthisweek.com

R

EPLACING 111 goals and 254 points is no small task. That’s one of the challenges facing Kamloops Storm general manager Barry Dewar and head coach Brad Priestlay this season. Those numbers were produced in the 2011-2012 Kootenay International Junior Hockey League campaign by graduated 1991-born forwards Colten DeFrias, Chase Edwards and Tyler Jackson. “They were three of the top scorers in the

league,” Dewar said. “But, in the long run, it probably works out. You can’t just shut down one line anymore.” Kamloops opens the 2012-2013 regular season against the Spokane Braves at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 14, at McArthur Island Sports Centre. DeFrias and Jackson will suit up for the TRU WolfPack in the fall. The Storm will rely on a few new faces and some returning talent to fill the scoring void. Connor Fortems, a 17-year-old forward from Delta, is expected to inject some offence into the lineup. “We’re really excited

about this kid,” Dewar said. “There were several junior B teams after him. We saw him at camp with the [junior A] Victoria Grizzlies in May. “He’s just a big strong kid that likes to go to the net and I think he’s going to be very, very good. “I hope we keep him for a while.” Taylor Ward, a forward, and Spencer Schoech, a defenceman — both from south of the border — are among the new Storm recruits, along with Langley products Aaron Markin, a forward, and D-man Jason Anderson. Returning to the

fold are forwards Blake Culbert, Briar McNaney, Ryan Skinner and Josh Rasmussen, with Daniel Buchanan expected to provide scoring from the blue line. The Storm will not be without fresh local flavour, with forwards Ian Chrystal, a Kamloops player who featured in only 13 Storm games last season, and Brett Watkinson, from Lillooet, expected to contribute regularly. Kamloops will no doubt benefit from the return of 1992-born netminder Marcus Beesley. The Prince George product posted a 9-3

record and a .937 save percentage last season. Kamloops was beaten by the Sicamous Eagles in Game 7 of the Doug Birks Division final in March. Sicamous fell 4-1 in the Okanagan-Shuswap Conference-deciding series to the Kelowna Chiefs, who were swept 4-0 in the KIJHL championship by the Beaver Valley Nitehawks. Addressing the loss of three key veterans will be key if Kamloops is going to take the next step. “We’ll probably be scoring by committee this season,” Dewar said. “It will be a little different than last year.”

The TRU WolfPack will likely have a varsity swimming program by 2014, says the Kamloops university’s athletic director, Ken Olynyk. “We’re interested in moving swimming, cross-country and soccer to the Canada West,” Olynyk said. “That will be presented in February at [Canada West] winter meetings and at the annual general meeting (AGM) in May.” The Canada West is a member association of Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS). There is a very slim chance the swimming program — run under the WolfPack name in conjunction with the Kamloops Classic Swimming club — could be a Canada West entity by next September, but that’s unlikely. “It would require a 100 per cent approval vote [from every member school at the May AGM] in order to start in September,” Olynyk said. “If one school says ‘No, we want to wait,’ then it’s automatic for the next year.” Olynyk said it’s uncommon to receive a unanimous vote because program administrators need time to adjust travel budgets and “sort out their financial situations.” Classics’ head coach Brad Dalke would take the WolfPack’s reins, with help from the local swim team’s new assistant coach, Patrick Waters. (Read more about Waters in the Tuesday, Sept. 18, edition of KTW.) “For us, a natural

extension of our program is to have this available for all our kids to continue swimming, rather than going from Kamloops to the University of Victoria or Simon Fraser University or the University of Calgary,” Dalke said. There is plenty of number crunching still to be done, but the Classics and WolfPack will each carry a portion of the financial burden. “Prior to this, we didn’t want to run [a varsity program] because we’d be pretty much fully funding it,” Dalke said. “But, [TRU is] coming to the table with enough funding to make it worthwhile.” Recruiting and travel costs will be among the dearest for the new program, coaches are paid and buying more pool time at the Canada Games Aquatic Centre will be on the to-do list. The Classics are coming off arguably their most successful season in club history. Kamloops had 18 swimmers qualify for the Canadian Age Group Championships (for boys 18 and under and girls 17 and under) this summer in Calgary. Many of those swimmers are already posting Canada Westcomparable times — and some of the Classics are recording times that might warrant qualification for the CIS championships. “We’re really starting to see some exciting stuff happen from this region,” Dalke said. “It’s like an avalanche.” Dylana Milobar, 16, of the Classics won rookie of the meet at the national summer swimming championships in Edmonton in July. X See WOLFPACK A33


A32 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS

Injuries a painful part of the process

SHAWN WENGER Fitness For MORTALS time sitting on the sidelines with my notebook. On the plus side, injury serves a purpose. When we can’t do something for a period of time, we cherish it even more when it comes back into our lives. When I can actually get out on the trails again, I will think I’m the luckiest person alive. I will be in awe. It will really help offset the gasping breaths and screaming muscles because it will have been so long since I propelled myself forward on my own two feet. A friend of mine has also been dealing with injury lately. She said it no longer became about doing her events like Ironman and ultra-distance running. It became about wanting to be painfree to play with her daughter and walk to the park. Recently, after months of rehab, she completed another Ironman.

So many people have real issues and would give almost anything to be able to swim, bike and run. Her time became immaterial. Ah, rehab. I have such an amazing physiotherapist and we are spending a lot of time together lately. I have never been great at doing what she tells me, but this time I’m determined. I do my rehab exercises every day. Heel drops are my friend. Jumping and hopping, not so much. I made the mistake of running a few steps to my car the other day and was humbled back to a walk. It will take time and patience, but I admit I did it to myself and now I have to step up and pay the price. Funny how I can wrap my head around riding for three 19-hour days, but three sets of heel drops every day and a few stretches really cramp my style. Time to reboot my brain and take some time to heal and regenerate. Shawn Wenger is a BCRPA-registered personal trainer and weight-training and group-fitness instructor. She runs Fitness For Mortals. E-mail fitnessformortals@gmail.com for information.

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Just when you reach the height of fitness, often you have setbacks. After working up to some ridiculous mileage on my bike this year and feeling like my aerobic engine was pretty much infallible, I am knocked back a few notches. Injury can be frustrating. It can make a person throw up their hands in frustration and stop exercising altogether when they can no longer do their preferred activity. The irony is, with my Achilles injury, the only thing I’m allowed to do is ride my bike. Well, that’s not totally true. I can swim and water-run and walk on flat ground, but what I really had on my list this fall was some lovely trail running, or even some hiking. It’s not that I don’t love my bike. I’m thankful I can still ride under the pain threshold. But, I’m a little pouty when I see all the running events this fall and I can’t do them. The point was driven home at a recent fitness conference when I could not participate in any workshops other than spinning because there was too much jumping around. It hurt my Achilles just to watch. So, I spent a lot of

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS

Throwing clinic at Hillside The Kamloops Track and Field Club is hosting Kamloops ThrowsFest Clinic on Saturday, Sept. 22, and Sunday, Sept. 23, at Hillside Stadium. Athletes highschool aged or older who compete in shot put, javelin, discus or hammer throw are invited to receive instruction from Justin and Megann Rodhe and National Throws Centre coach Anatoliy Bondarchuk. Rodhe competed for Canada at the Olympic Summer Games in London. It costs $35 per athlete to register for the event, which gets underway at 9 a.m. both days. Participants must be current B.C. Athletics members, or members of an equivalent provincial organization to sign up. Day-of-event memberships will be available for those who don’t fall under the requirements. Cheques are payable to Kamloops Track and Field Club.

Sloan fourth Roger Sloan of Merritt tied for fourth at the Great Waterway Classic, a Canadian Professional Golf Tour event that wrapped up in Gananoque, Ont., on Sunday, Sept. 9. Sloan finished at -13, five shots back of tournament winner Eugene Wong of North Vancouver. The Merritt golfer finished 10th on the

TOURNAMENT CAPITAL SPORTS tour’s order of merit. He played in eight events and won $22,261.25. Matt Hill of Sarnia, Ont., was first on the order of merit with just under $50,000 in earnings. Sloan led the tour in birdies this season with 140 in 32 rounds.

Road warriors Kamloops runners Rick Jenkner, Misty Palm and Bruce Butcher won their respective divisions at the final event of the Canadian Tire Road Race Series on Sunday, Sept. 9, in Kelowna. The 18-kilometre race was completed by 98 runners. Jenkner won the male 55- to 59-year old category with a time of 1:21:45, Palm won the female 35- to 39-year-old division with a time of 1:34:49 and Butcher finished in 2:12:57 to win the male 75- to 79-yearold race. Tournament Capital pavement pounders Melvin Doherty (1:36:09), Alan Stephenson (1:39:55), Linda Woodbury (2:08:31) and Kathryne Flannery (2:31:22) also finished the race. Trevor Haaheim was the overall winner, crossing the finish line in 1:05:49, while Cindy Rhodes was the top female,

finishing with a time of 1:18:34. Both Haaheim and Rhodes are from Kelowna.

Peak racers The North Face Dirty Feet Mountain Run was held at Sun Peaks Resort on Saturday, Sept. 8. Winning the men’s 16-kilometre race in 1:11:12 was Calum Neff of Cochrane, Alta., while Kelsey Robson of Vancouver won the women’s 16k with a time of 1:27:00. Jason Ladyman of Kamloops won the

men’s 5k in 21:36 and Chantel Jeffrey of Blind Bay won the women’s 5k in 24:36. The first man and women to reach the top of the 16k track were named king and queen of the race. Yvonne Timewell of Kamloops was named queen and Neff was crowned king.

Colin Gilbert and Megan Dalke were named this week to the Prospects West team, an elite squad for 13and 14-year old swimmers. Dalke said there were about 45 or 50 swimmers from Okanagan and Interior cities at age-group nationals in Calgary.

The Kamloops Blazers are running to raise money for the fight against cancer at the Terry Fox Run on Sunday, Sept. 16. Log on to blazerhockey.com to pledge. The team would like to raise $1,000. The run gets underway at 10 a.m. at the Rotary Bandshell in Riverside Park.

If the WolfPack can start attracting young River City talent — and elite swimmers from surrounding regions — it might not take long for varsity-level success to arrive in the Tournament Capital. “That snowball is at the top of the mountain and it’s started rolling and getting bigger and bigger,” Dalke said.

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Rayleigh Waterworks District Waterline Flushing Program Dear Homeowners of Rayleigh, On September 19, 2012 we will be starting the waterline flushing program. This program is to clean the lines in order to fully appreciate the clean water from the treatment plant and meet the requirements of Interior Health. We would ask that community try to co-operate as fully as possible with us in this endeavor. It is a benefit to all of the residents as we strive to provide the best quality of water possible. Potable water will be available from the Microfiltration Plant at the Petrocan station on a limited basis so we recommend filling water containers prior to the flushing days for your street. There will be no sprinkling allowed during the flushing program. We are mailing each resident a more detailed breakdown of the program this week. There is a complete schedule for the flushing program on our website at www.rwwd.ca.You can look up your street information there. If you do not have access to a computer please feel free to contact the office at 250-578-7100. Thank you for your patience and support in this matter. Board of Trustees and Staff Rayleigh Waterworks District

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A34 ย THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS RAIDING RAYLEIGH Dillon Alexandre (right) and the Kamloops Rugby Club Raiders are hosting B.C. Rugby Union matches on Saturday, Sept. 15, for the first time at their new home on the Tournament Capital Ranch in Rayleigh. On the menโ s side, the Raiders are hosting Langley in Okanagan Spring Brewery first- and second-division showdowns. The first-division clash is slated for 2:30 p.m. Kick off for the second division game is 1 p.m. Kamloops is making the jump to first- and second-division menโ s rugby after winning a third-division provincial championship last season. The Raidersโ women are hosting the Bayside Sharks of South Surrey in a Lower Mainland Senior Women Tier 1 matchup. That tilt gets underway at 11:30 a.m. KTW file photo

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS Kelsey Martin (left) of the TRU WolfPack and a Kwantlen Polytechnic Eagle compete for the ball in Pacific Western Athletic Association play on Sunday, Sept. 9, at Hillside Stadium. TRU won 4-1. Martin was named the PWAA’s female athlete of the week. Allen Douglas photo

A35

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The voice of James Earl Jones and the TRU WolfPack women’s soccer team are similar in depth — baritone deep, then turn the bass up. “I’ve told them from the beginning, ‘You have to practise hard or you won’t play,’” WolfPack head coach Tom McManus said. “Because of our depth alone we are better than last year.” If the Pack are better this season than last — they’re pretty darn good. TRU posted five wins, one loss and five ties in regular-season play before winning the Pacific Western Athletic Association playoffs and finishing fourth at the Canadian Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA) championship. Players, most of them friends, will be in direct competition each week for a place

on the pitch when points are on the line. McManus said there is a danger of competition breeding contempt, but animosity does not seem to be a problem with his current charges. “The girls so far are getting along great, even though they’re out there fighting for jobs,” he said. Laura Smylie and Sarah Gomes, both from Prince George, have been playing soccer with each other since they were about 12. The Duchess Park secondary graduates are friends, but they are also among the players pitted against each other in the struggle for playing time. “Our team is super close, so it’s always going against friends,” Smylie said. “You kind of just have to put your friendship aside. “Nothing gets carried off the field.” X See TRU A37

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A36 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS HOPPING TOWARD REGULAR SEASON The Prince George Cougars will try and ruin Cole Ully (right) and the Kamloops Blazers’ bid for a perfect WHL pre-season at Interior Savings Centre on Friday, Sept. 14. Game time is 7 p.m. Kamloops is 4-0 in pre-season play. Allen Douglas/KTW

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A37

SPORTS

Vikes tarnish Golds TRU perfect after opening weekend X From A35

The Valleyview Vikings used three quarterbacks and two last-minute interceptions to earn a 13-7 victory over the host Salmon Arm Golds on Saturday, Sept, 8. Valleyview scored on its first two drives to open up a 13-0 lead before starting quarterback Lliam Wishart, who rushed for more than 100 yards, and

his backup Morgan Motokado were both lost to lower-body injuries. Kaden Degen played under centre for the second half and turned in a gutsy performance, leading a makeshift backfield on several drives to preserve the lead. Salmon Arm was held scoreless until midway through the

fourth quarter, when Eric Borthistle plunged in from a yard out. The Golds had two possessions in the waning moments, but were intercepted by Mason Harding on both occasions, ending any hope of a go-ahead score. Up next for the Vikes is a date with hometown Rutland on Friday, Sept. 14, at the Apple Bowl.

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The WolfPack opened the 2012 campaign with a pair of wins at Hillside Stadium on the weekend. TRU beat Douglas College 4-0 on Saturday, Sept. 8, and Kwantlen Polytechnic 4-1 on Sunday, Sept. 9. The CCAA’s weekly poll has the Pack ranked fourth in the nation. Bronwyn Crawford, Courtney Daly, Marlie Rittinger, Blair MacKay, Chloe McAuley, Kelsey Martin (2) and Alanna Bekkering scored for

the defending PWAA champions in support of goalkeeper Emily Edmundson. Rittinger, a WolfPack rookie from Ashcroft, is going to make earning game time tough on TRU’s veteran strikers. “Marlie Rittinger in my estimation is one of the best players in the Interior,”

McManus said. “She has experience and she can lead the team even as a rookie.” But, who does she unseat? In addition to the weekend’s goal scorers, Amanda Barrett, Taylor Miller, Katie Sparrow and Jaydene Radu know how to find the old onion bag, and Daly, a rookie, was brought in to do the same. “It’s going to be extremely tough to choose,” McManus said, noting it’s a good problem to have. Next up for TRU are matches with the Quest Kermodes in Squamish

on Saturday, Sept. 15, and Langara College in Vancouver on Sunday, Sept. 16. Last season’s accomplishments, McManus said, are in the rearview mirror, and he asked his team — in typical bench-boss fashion — to take things one game at a time. “Congratulations, but that is history,” he said. “If we come in with big heads, everyone is going to kick our backsides. “We have to prove every time out what we can do.” — with files from TRU

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A38 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

countdown to the . . .

2013 BC SENIORS GAMES

archery By Sarah MacMillan

Kamloops will host the 2013 BC Seniors Games from Aug. 20 to Aug. 24, 2013. The city is expecting about 3,500 athletes, ages 55 and up, to attend the Games, which will feature more than 20 events, ranging from cribbage to ice hockey. KTW begins today a biweekly feature page, with each page focusing on one of the Games’ events.

SPECIAL TO KTW

In the past, it was a means of survival but, today, archery has become a popular recreational sport, one that Tim Kenning, BC Senior Games Zone 8 archery co-ordinator, fell in love with a quarter-century ago. “Twenty-five years ago, I went hunting on a farm in South Africa and the owner of the farm got me to try his bow,” Kenning said. “I shot it and it bit me. I went back to civilization and bought a bow.” Today, Kenning participates in local 3D archery competitions while also sharing his love of the sport with others through the archery shop he owns in Chase.

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Three years ago, Kenning set up archery practice in Chase secondary. Since then, the number of people interested has grown. Though enjoyable, the sport is mentally demanding. “Archery is 90 per cent mental and 10 per cent mental,” Kenning quipped. Within the Games, there are six equipment categories using three different types of bows — compound, recurve and long. “It’s much of a modern thing” Kenning said of the compound bow, an energy-efficient stiff-limbed bow that uses cables and pulleys to bend the limb. The recurve bow is similar to what its name describes.

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“The limbs of the recurve curve back and the ends curve back” Kenning said. The longbow is roughly the same height as the person who uses it. “The longbow is like what Robin Hood used,” Kenning said. With six equipment categories and a half-dozen age brackets, a maximum of 24 men and 24 women are able to compete. The competition will award gold, silver and bronze medals. For more information regarding archery, contact Tim Kenning by phone at 250-679-2304 or by email timsarchery@cablelan.net. Information regarding the B.C. Seniors Games can be found online at at bcseniorsgames.org.

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ A39

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B1

INSIDE X Classifieds/B29 SECTION

KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

COMMUNITY

Community: Christopher Foulds editor@kamloopsthisweek.com Ph: 374-7467 Ext: 222

The other St. Andrew’s celebrates a half-century

Dennis Kujat (foreground) and Rick Senum spruce up the front of St. Andrew’s Lutheran church in preparation for a 50th anniversary celebration at the church on Saturday, Sept. 15, and Sunday, Sept. 16. Andrea Klassen/KTW

By Tim Petruk STAFF REPORTER

tim@kamloopsthisweek.com

When St. Andrew’s Lutheran Church officially opened its North Kamloops doors, the Rolling Stones had just performed their first live show at a London rock club. Nelson Mandela sat in a South African jail cell, having been arrested weeks earlier, a new superhero — Spider-Man — had recently debuted in the pages of Marvel’s Amazing Fantasy No. 15 and the Cuban missile crisis was just taking shape. On Sept. 23, 1962, local Lutherans joined

church dignitaries at the new building on Renfrew Avenue for a special service. Nearly 50 years to the day later, St. Andrew’s Lutheran Church members have another date circled on their calendars. This weekend, the church is celebrating a half-century with two special events — a banquet on Saturday and a service on Sunday. Dennis Kujat, president of the church council, has been attending St. Andrew’s Lutheran since moving to Kamloops in 1975. “This neighbourhood, North Kamloops, was well-established here,”

Kujat told KTW, taking a break from painting the trim around the church’s front door in anticipation of the weekend events. “There was a drive-in theatre across the street, where the mall is now, and we could see the green hills to the south of us [in Sahali]. “There was nothing there, just about.” Kujat said the church congregation is excited about the 50th birthday party — just as they were for the 20th, 25th, 30th and 40th. “Everybody’s been pitching in, so it’s really good,” he said. “It’s almost like the old Prairie homecomings

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St. Andrew’s Lutheran Church is located at 815 Renfrew Ave. in North Kamloops. The Sunday, Sept. 16, anniversary service will begin at 10 a.m. Dave Eagles/KTW

that they have.” Kujat said Saturday’s banquet, at the North Shore Community Centre, 730 Cottonwood Ave., is already sold out — and organizers are expecting upwards of 150 people for Sunday’s service and the Lutheran potluck to follow. “We’ve got three former pastors coming back and we’ve invited all the past members that moved away,” Kujat said. “We have people coming from Arizona, Saskatchewan and all over B.C.”

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B3

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Kamloops Convention Centre 1250 Rogers Way, kamloopsconventioncentre.ca

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Sept. 14: Tribute Trio (music by Motley Crue, Guns N’ Roses and AC/ DC), 19+ show, 7 p.m., $40. Sept. 21: The Gords with Hugh McLennan and the Western Spirit, 7 p.m., all-ages show, $25. Sept. 27: Jonny Lang, 7 p.m., 19+, sold out. Oct. 23: Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, 7 p.m., 19+, $60. Oct. 25: Big Sugar, 7 p.m., 19+, $29.50. Nov. 10 Music Makes Meals 7 fundraiser for the Kamloops Food Bank, Solara, Matt Stanley and the Decoys and the Henry Small Band, 7 p.m., $10 plus three non-perishable food items. Dec. 13: Jesse Cook. April 30: Touring production of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, 7:30 p.m., tickets $57 and $67. Tickets for all shows are subject to taxes and service charges and are available at the Kamloops Live Box Office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca.

Clubhopping in Kamloops

SEND SHOWS, WITH DATES, TIMES, ADMISSION AND WEBSITES FOR PERFORMERS, TO DALE@ KAMLOOPSTHISWEEK.COM.


B4 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

WCT will Harvest laughs as season opens By Dale Bass STAFF REPORTER dale@kamloopsthisweek.com

There’s a line early in Harvest where the dad, telling the audience why he rents out the

family farm, notes that “the boy” would never be interested in it. Ken Cameron knows that line to be true. Not only did he write it but he’s the boy in question — as well

as the playwright of Harvest, based on a true story about the place where he grew up. Becamse, truth be told, Cameron never was interested in being a farmer, he said from

his Calgary office. He would play board games as a child and then try to invent his own. He would read

Mordechai Richler for fuelling that early creative bent when the famed Canadian novelist spoke at Cameron’s high school.

comic books and try to write his own. He would read novels as a student and then try to write stories. Cameron blames

The next thing he knew, the school had a drama teacher and Cameron was an eager student. X See RICHLER B5

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Brian Linds is Alan and Norma Bowen is Charlotte in Harvest, the story of a couple who rents out the family farm only to discover the new tenant has turned it into a marijuana grow-op. The play opens the new season for Western Canada Theatre.

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B5

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Richler, Fraser inspired Audience gets in on the joke farmboy to write plays By Dale Bass

STAFF REPORTER

dale@kamloopsthisweek.com

Seeing a university friend cast in the premier of the Brad Fraser play Unidentified Human Remains and the True Nature of Love made Cameron realize he could be a writer. Harvest, which kicks of Western Canada Theatre’s 2012-2013 season, tells the story of mom and dad who rent out the farm but keep the farmhouse to live in. The young man who buys the land looks acceptable but, in due course, the couple discover the land that once produced fruits and vegetables has been turned into a grow-op. “Yes, that really happened,” Cameron said, noting that, for the most part, the play is “rooted in assorted truths.” For example, there really was a mass murder of drug dealers just 20 minutes from his

farm and there was a convicted biker-drug dealer living just five minutes north of the farm. While the setting for the play is officially Ontario, where Cameron grew up in just between London and Sarnia, directions with the script allow theatre companies producing it to change the location. His only proviso is the locations must be real and must conform to the same distances as the Ontario locations. “This way, the audience feels like it’s their play,” Cameron said. Harvest premieres today (Sept. 13) and continues to Sept. 29 at Pavilion Theatre, 1025 Lorne St. Tickets are at the Kamloops Live box office at the theatre, 250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca.

G TO COMIN OPS! KAMLO

Stuart McLean & the Vinyl Cafe Fall Tour – Live on Stage October 14 • 7:00 PM Sagebrush Theatre, Kamloops For tickets, please call 250-374-5483 or 866-374-5483 www.sagebrushtheatre.ca

When the audience first sees Norma Bowen in Harvest, it’s in her main persona as the wife of the couple who is renting out the family farm to a young man. And, the next time, Bowen is playing a male European immigrant neighbour “which couldn’t be more extreme, so it’s PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT: Offers valid until October 31, 2012. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between Toyota prices, rates and/or other information contained on toyotabc.ca and that contained on toyota.ca, the latter shall prevail. Errors and omissions excepted. 0% finance for 72 months, upon credit approval, available on 2012 Corolla, Matrix, RAV4, and Tundra. Down payment, first monthly payment and security deposit plus HST on first payment and full down payment are due at lease inception. A security deposit is not required on approval of credit. **$8000 Non-stackable Cash Back available on 2012 Tundra Crewmax models. $3000 Non-stackable Cash Back available on 2012 Corolla Sport, LE and XRS models. $3000 Non-stackable Cash Back available on 2012 Matrix AWD and XRS models. $4000 Non-stackable Cash Back available on 2012 RAV4 V6 4WD models. Non-stackable Cash Back offers may not be combined with Toyota Financial Services lease or finance rates. Vehicle must be purchased, registered and delivered by October 31, 2012. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. Informational 72 month APR: Corolla 4.36% / Matrix 5.11% / RAV4 3.88% / Tundra 7.14%. Government regulation provides that the Informational APR includes the cash customer incentive which is only available to customers who do not purchase finance/lease through Toyota Financial Services at a special rate, as a cost of borrowing. If you would like to lease or finance at standard TFS rates (not special rates), then you may be able to take advantage of Cash Customer Incentives. Visit your Toyota BC Dealer or www.toyotabc.ca for more details. Some conditions apply; offers are time limited and may change without notice. Dealer may lease/sell for less.

X From B4

quite obvious what’s going on,” she said of the dozen characters she and actor Brian Linds will portray during the 90-minute play. And, once she knows “the audience is on board, it gives me a freedom to play the parts, knowing that they are in on the joke. “We can all have some fun with it.” The first time Bowen played Charlotte was in January, at the

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Chemanius Festival Theatre, her acting home. Bowen said the play is sweet and funny and she loves the idea of “these two people playing all the roles, telling the story. “Although it feels vulnerable sometimes up there, just the two of us.” This isn’t the first time Bowen’s worked with Western Canada Theatre; she designed

the costumes for The Price in 1984 and The Miracle Worker in 2010 and acted in The Foreigner in 1986 and in Midnight Madness in 1990. Bowen attributes her attraction to acting and costume design a bit to the fact she was adopted and found herself “socially awkward so playing characters was easier.” Brian Linds, who plays Bowen’s husband,

Alan, has been more involved with WCT in the past in The Man Who Shot Chance Delaney, Roger Maris On Stage, Witness For The Prosecution, You’ll Get Used To It, Heat Wave, A Christmas Carol, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Hostage, Crimes of the Heart, Beauty and the Beast and Timestep. He did sound design for No Exit and The Miracle Worker.

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Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $10,000 at 0% APR, the monthly payment is $166.67/$ $139/$119.05 for 60/72/84 months. Cost of borrowing is $0, total obligation is $10,000.00. Offer is unconditionally interest-free. Freight ($1,495) included. License, insurance, registration, PPSA, applicable taxes and fees not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Offers apply to qualified retail customers only. Limited time offer which may not be combined with certain other offers. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ††2.49%/1.99%/0.99% Purchase financing for 84 months on 2012 Terrain SLE-1/2012 Acadia FWD/2012 Sierra EXT on approved credit by TD Auto Financing Services/Ally Credit. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $10,000 at 2.49%/1.99%/0.99% for 84 months, the monthly payment is $129.85/$127.63/$123.27 Cost of borrowing is $907.15/$720.94/$354.62, total obligation is $10,907.15/$10,720.94/$10,354.62. Down payment and/or trade may be required. Monthly payments and cost of borrowing will also vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Biweekly payments based on a purchase price of $27,995/$34,595/$23.495 with $0/$2,688/$2,688 down on 2012 Terrain SLE-1/2012 Acadia SLE-1/2012 Sierra EXT, equipped as described. WBased on GM Testing in accordance with approved Transport Canada test methods. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. +The Best Buy seal is a registered trademark of Consumers Digest Communications, LLC, used under license. ^* For more information visit iihs.org/ratings. ^Whichever comes first. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ^^Based on latest competitive data available. ÂĽÂĽ 2012 GMC Terrain FWD equipped with standard 2.4L ECOTECÂŽ I-4 engine. Comparision based on Natural Resources Canada’s 2012 Fuel Consumption Guide and Ward’s Middle Cross/Utility Segment. Excludes other GM models. *†Comparison based on 2012 Wards segmentation: Middle/Cross Utility Vehicle and latest competitive data available, and based on the maximum legroom available. Excludes other GM brands. ** As measured by maximum cargo volume. Comparison based on 2012 Wards segmentation: Large / Cross Utility Vehicles and latest competitive data available. Excludes other GM Brands. †When properly equipped with available Trailering Equipment package. Comparison based on 2012 Wards segmentation: Large/Cross Utility Vehicle and latest competitive data available. Excludes other GM brands. ^5 year/160,000 km (whichever comes first) Powertrain Component warranty. Conditions and limitations apply. Based on most recent published competitive data available for WardsAuto.com 2012 Large Pickup segmentation. See dealer for details. ^^ Whichever comes first. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. X $2,000/$5,100 manufacturer to dealer delivery credit available on the 2012 Terrain/ 2012 Acadia (tax exclusive) and $9,000 manufacturer to dealer delivery cash credit available on the 2012 Sierra EXT, for retail customers only. Other cash credits available on most models. See your GM dealer for details. â—ŠOffer only valid from August 4, 2012 to August 31, 2012 (the “Program Periodâ€?) to retail customers resident in Canada who own or are currently leasing (during the Program Period) a Chevrolet Silverado or GMC Sierra (1500-3500), Chevrolet Avalanche / Colorado / S10; GMC Canyon / Sonoma; or Isuzu Light Duty Series, or any competitive pickup truck with a pickup bed. Qualifying customers will receive a $1,000 credit towards the purchase, lease or factory order of an eligible new 2012 or 2013 Chevrolet Silverado, Avalanche or GMC Sierra or 2012 Chevrolet Colorado or GMC Canyon which must be delivered and/or factory ordered (factory order applies to 2013 MY only) during the Program Period. Only one (1) credit may be applied per eligible vehicle sale. Offer is transferable to a family member living within the same household (proof of address required). This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives available on GM vehicles. The $1,000 credit includes HST/GST/QST/PST as applicable by province. As part of the transaction, dealer will request current vehicle registration and/or insurance to prove ownership. GMCL reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. Void where prohibited by law. Additional conditions and limitations apply. See your GM dealer for details.

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B7

BACK TO SCHOOL

Embrace literacy at home for best results Every day, we send our kids off to school hoping they will learn something — anything — and grow into knowledgeable, successful adults. But, while we deal with the daily details of that thing called life, we sometimes forget to encourage learning at home. Parents are a child’s first teacher. Even after they have started school, it’s important to ensure family learning continues at home every day. Kids look up to their parents and mimic many of their daily routines. Spending just 15 minutes a day with them can go a long way to help children develop a love of learning and improve their literacy skills. “Learning together as a family is vital to a child’s future education,” says Margaret Eaton, president of ABC Life Literacy Canada. “Doing family literacy activities not only helps develop children’s reading, writing and math skills, it also provides an opportunity for parents to learn something new.” Unfortunately, approximately nine-million adult Canadians suffer from low literacy and hundreds of thousands of these people have children. Several of these children end up falling behind in school because they are not given the same opportunity as their peers to read at home and engage in early learning activities. Research shows children raised in literate households are likely to enter Grade 1 with several thousand hours of one-to-one pre-reading

experience behind them, so it’s important to ensure learning takes place in the home and starts at an early age. It’s understandable that parents lead busy lives and may not have time to read a bedtime story to their children. Add to that parents who have low reading confidence and children almost never enjoy a bedtime story. Luckily, there are so many learning opportunities that happen in our day-to-day lives — fun, easy activities that are part of our daily routines and don’t feel like learning. September is Life Literacy Month, a month to celebrate literacy and lifelong learning.

In honour of the month, ABC Life Literacy Canada offers 10 fun and easy ways to make literacy part of your family’s daily life: 1) When making your grocery list, have your child write out the items you need to buy. 2) At the store, ask your child to count out the money to make the purchase. 3) Make it a habit to always read a story together at bedtime. 4) When cooking dinner, involve your children in measuring the ingredients. This helps them understand fractions and measurements. 5) Driving is the perfect opportunity to practise literacy. Read signs, billboards

and licence plates together and show your children the proper way to read a map. 6) While on the Internet, make time to research something new that your family is interested in. Researching skills are important and help with reading and comprehension. 7) In the car, sing along to songs on the radio. Singing encourages learning patterns of words, rhymes and rhythms, and is strongly connected to language skills. 8) When playing a board game, read the instructions aloud to each other or count how many spaces to travel around the board. 9) Involve your kids when you pay bills. This will teach them strong financial skills early on in life. 10) Children follow by example, so ensure learning is part of your daily life, too. For more information on literacy in Canada, go online to abclifeliteracy.ca.

CURLING . . . FRIENDS, FITNESS & FUN! LEARNING IS SIMPLE! Beginner and Improvement Clinics • September 18th - 23rd Weekday NightSessions and Weekend Session available AFFORDABLE FEES AND EQUIPMENT RENTAL AVAILABLE.

THERE IS CURLING FOR ALL AGES... from Juniors right through to Seniors Join as an Individual, a Couple, or with a Group of Friends TIMING IS FLEXIBLE During the day, in the evening, or on weekends SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY! Mixed Curling • Junior Curling • Men’s and Ladies Curling Senior Curling • Corporate Fun Nights • Social League • School Challenge

OLYMPIC WAY A learn to swim program with a competitive edge! For all swimmers. • $120 for 16 lessons. Fall Session 2012 begins Monday, September 24th Monday & Wednesday September 24th - November 21st* *No lesson Thanksgiving Monday All levels • 3:30 or 4:15 pm Tuesday & Thursday September 25th - November 22nd All levels • 3:45, 4:30 or 5:15 pm Winter Session 2013 begins Monday, January 14th Monday & Wednesday January 14th - March 11th All levels • 3:30 or 4:15 pm Tuesday & Thursday January 15th - March 7th All levels • 3:45, 4:30 or 5:15 pm Just need a quick assessment? Come to the Canada Games Pool September 10th-13th-16th • 4:00- 5 :30 pm Regional, Provincial & National Competition. Social events, team trips - FUN! FREE SWIM CAMP See where you should begin your swimming career! Come to the Canada Games Pool September 10th-13th, 2012 • from 5:00 - 5:45 pm

OPEN HOUSE SIGN UP & SOCIAL: Monday, September 10th from 5:30pm - 8:30 pm Deadline for Member registration is September 13th, 2012 CALL CLUB MANAGER AT 250-372-5432

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KAMLOOPS CLASSIC SWIMMING


B8 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

BACK TO SCHOOL

KEEP THEM SAFE THIS SCHOOL YEAR As we near the end of the second week of the school year, here are some suggestions to ensure your child remains safe from September through June.

Elementary students: • Find a safe route to and from school and practise the route with your children. • Discuss traffic safety issues, such as crossing the street and safely boarding the school bus. • Identify safe places along the route, such as a friend’s house or a store your children can go to if they encounter trouble. • Discuss how to safely interact with strangers.

Intermediate/middle school students: • Help your children pack their backpacks and ensure they are no more than 10 to 20 per cent of the child’s bodyweight. • Make sure children always use both shoulder straps. Slinging a backpack over one shoulder can strain muscles and may increase curvature of the spine. • Talk to them about appropriate behaviour at school and what to do if they encounter an instance of bullying behaviour. • Discuss their route to school and note any changes in safe places as friends move to or from

the neighbourhood. • Ensure they always wear a helmet when riding a bicycle or scooter. • Help your kids understand how to safely surf the Internet and how

to protect their privacy.

Secondary students: • Encourage your teenagers to talk to you about issues that are important to them,

including peer pressure, alcohol, drugs and healthy sexual decisionmaking. • Give your teenagers a sense of confidence. This is the best defence

Sabrina

against peer pressure. • Talk about being a safe driver as well as a safe passenger. Let them know it’s OK to say no to getting into a car with someone they feel is unsafe.

• Insist that teenagers wear a helmet when cycling and appropriate protective gear when engaging in other sports or recreational activities such as skateboarding.

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Girl Greatness Starts Here! S K AT I N G - S P O R T F O R L I F E ! The Kamloops River City Racers Club (RCR) offers competitive as well as recreational and learn to skate programs for all ages and abilities. Join us at our FREE public skate on Saturday September 29, 10am at McArthur Arena. Registration and skate fitting available on Tuesday September 18 at McArthur main lobby between 4 - 6:30pm or September 29th during our Free public Skate

1-800-565-8111 girlguides.ca

t Learn with Fun, Sk ate with Power

Children’s Learn to Skate - $70.00 - must be at least 4 years of age. A learn to skate program for the beginner skater. Focus will be on fundamental movement skills on skates, ie balance, skating stride, stopping, starting, corner cross overs and agility. Skills taught through games. Report cards and achievement pins awarded 1X week Ice Box - Tuesdays 5:00 - 5:30pm “I love to skate, and I am happy that I am part of the program” 5 yr old Summer

Skate Fun - for the skater who is past the beginner stage and wants to be further challenged on skating skills. 1X week - Ice Time TBA Skate Skills - for the beginning competitive racer or recreational skater that would like more ice time 2X week - Ice Time TBA Skate Fast - for the competitive racer 3X week - Ice Time TBA Skate Masters - will join in one of the programs above Ice Time TBA Skate Fun, Skills, Fast and Masters Programs will begin the last week of September. Please check our website for updates

'PS NPSF JOGPSNBUJPO QMFBTF DPOUBDU %JBOB BU t t Our sessions are held at McArthur Arena, the Ice box speedskatingkamloops@shaw.ca and in December and January at Owen’s Oval - a large outdoor skating surface. visit our website www.kamloopsspeedskating.com paid advertisment


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ B9

www.kamloopsthisweek.com p

BACK TO SCHOOL

Le français Stay safe on those wheels au CSF, c’est bien plus when cycling to class

qu’une langue !

As students settle back into their routine, the Canadian Automobile Association (CAA) encourages parents to refresh on road safety tips with their kids and to consider incorporating cycling as a way to get to and from school. “Cycling is an active and economical way to get kids to and from school,” said Jeff Walker, the CAA’s vice-president of public affairs. “We encourage parents to talk to their children about proper bike safety, to demonstrate proper habits and to regularly check their cycling equipment.”

Some helpful tips for cyclists: • Ride on the right hand side of the road in single file. • When crossing the road at a crosswalk, remember to dismount your bike and walk it across. • Ride with your head up and be aware of cars, pedestrians, other cyclists and road hazards. • Be alert and don’t ride with ear phones in. • Be familiar with hand signals and always be sure to use them. • Know and obey road signs and, remember, we all have to share the road. • Make sure your bike is a proper fit. • Helmets do have expiration dates. It is important to check the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) sticker on the back for the expiry date. • Mandatory helmet legislation exists in B.C. • Have a bell or horn on your bike. • Regularly check the tires for air. • When at school lock the bike securely in a designated area.

Inscrivez votre enfant dans une des écoles publiques du CSF ! Depuis sa création en 1995, le Conseil scolaire francophone de la Colombie-Britannique offre des programmes et des services éducatifs valorisant le plein épanouissement et l’identité culturelle des apprenantes et apprenants francophones de la province.

École publique Collines-d’or, Kamloops 2450 Partridge Drive 250-579-9223 M-7 collinesdor.csf.bc.ca

We have expanded to include a second location! Come visit us at 749 Victoria St.

Ballet, Breakdance Breakdance, Contemporary, Hip Hop, Jazz, Lyrical, Musical Theatre, The Tap WE NOW OFFER CLASSES CLAS IN VOICE and ACTING BOYS ONLY CLASSES: CLASSES Jazz, Tap, Musical Theatre and Hip Hop

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Transport scolaire Programme d’anglais Activités et échanges culturels Ordinateurs portables

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Akimbo Dance Studios FALL 2012 REGISTRATION

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CLASSES Ballet, Tap p and a Jazz PRESCHOOL CLASSES: Tap ADULT CLASSES: Ballet, Tap, Jazz, Hip Hop SPECIALTY CLASS: Dance for Gymnastss

CLASSES START SEPT. 10TH Sept. 6th 5 - 8 pm: In-Person Registration at the Lansdowne St. Studio

765 Lansdowne St. • 25O.374.54O4 www.akimbodancestudios.com

REGISTER ONLINE! www.kamloopsdance.com Register early as classes fill quickly. Registration by phone throughout September.

Kamloops Kamloops DanceAcademy Academy Dance

VALLEYVIEW SQUARE 7-2121 ETC Highway • 250-828-0499

Visit www.kamloopsdance.com for more information


B10 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

Come enjoy the

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INCOME TAX COURSE

Flexible hours. We’re hiring.

H&R Block knows taxes and how to teach them. Our instructors are experienced and expertly trained H&R Block personnel who make each session an exciting experience. Successful students receive an H&R Block certificate of accomplishment and the opportunity to interview for employment with H&R Block. Curriculum – During the 14-week course, students study the basics of income tax preparation including current laws, theory and application.

653 3 Victoria St. • highcountrystainedglass.com

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The Kamloops Rugby Club (KRC) In its 45th year of operation, KRC is offering the following programs: > Men’s 1st & 2nd Division > Women’s 1st Division > Junior Boys U-19 & U-16 (age qualifying as of Jan 1/12) > Mini program starting September 2012 > KRC is looking for coaches, managers, referees & sponsors

Classes begin mid-September. You may choose between morning, afternoon and evening sessions. Applicants need only be willing to learn about taxes.

Club-wide practices Tuesdays & Thursdays at 6:30pm

The tuition cost covers the complete course, including textbooks, all materials, reference guides and registration.

Depending on interest, coaching & refereeing certification available through the KRC. Old boys & past members welcome. *WE NEED YOU*

Call today for complete details on class locations, starting dates, tuition, etc. It’s time to finally find that work/life balance. Register online at hrblock.ca or call 1-877-32BLOCK (322-5625) for details.

Visit www.kamloopsrugby.com for more details. Contact: Trevor Johnston @ 250-574-1466 or lionservices@shaw.ca Jamie Chretien @ 250-573-1918 or uch@uppercollege.com Erin Connelly-Reed @ 250-574-2834 or red_head105@hotmail.com Club located at the Tournament Capital Ranch in Rayleigh

Enrolment restrictions may apply. Enrolment in, or completion of, the H&R Block Tax Training School is neither an offer nor guarantee of employment. This course is not intended for, nor open to any persons who are either currently employed by or seeking employment with any professional tax preparation company or organization other than H&R Block.


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ B11

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Where the Music Begins

KICK THE CALORIES

Helping H elping C Children hildren D Develop evelop Harmony with Life iin nH armony w ith L ife

WITH THE KAMLOOPS SHOTOKAN KARATE CLUB Traditional karate practiced in Kamloops since 1972

• Experience a unique culture and art • Get in Shape • 3 months for only $100.00 • Tuesdays & Thursdays 7 - 8:30 pm

da Shotok na

an

Ca

1080 Kenora Avenue Kamloops Judo Centre (Behind Norkam Secondary School) For more information call 250.374.9443 during regular business hours.

Providing Excellence In Montessori Education Since 1988 • Kamloops ps Founding & Authentic Montessori Preschool Programs assion for excellence • Character & universal values • A passion • Global Understanding • Service to Humanity • Full day program available • Subsidy accepted

FULL DAY CHILD CARE PROGRAMS PRESCHOOL / KINDERGARTEN PROGRAMS AFTER SCHOOL PROGRAMS HALF AND FULL DAY SUMMER CAMPS

FALL REGISTRATION FOR ALL PROGRAMS AVAILABLE NOW! CALL 250-372-9945 KAMLOOPS MONTESSORI SCHOOL 920 Greystone Crescent 250-372-9945

SAHALI MONTESSORI OPEN HOUSE AUGUST 25 • 10-2 PM in McGowan Park Elementary 2080 Tremerton Drive • 250-374-4264

ABERDEEN HILLS MONTESSORI SCHOOL OPEN HOUSE AUGUST 25 • 10-2 PM 2191 Van Horn Drive, located in Aberdeen Elementary School • 250-372-9940

KAMLOOPS VILLAGE GARDEN MONTESSORI EARLY LEARNING CENTRE

Karate

Register For Music Lessons Today. Piano, Guitar, Bass, Drums, Voice, Violin, Brass, Woodwinds, School Band Prep, Musical Theatre

Why Choose Long & McQuade? Music lessons for all ages, stages and styles. Professional instructors make learning fun. Convenient lesson times for busy families. No Registration Fees. Affordable Instrument Rentals. Yamaha Junior Music Course - Ages 3 and up. Call for a Free Demo!

in the Southwest Baptist Church 700 Hugh Allan Drive • 250-372-9915 * not affiliated with the SWCB church

KAMLOOPSMONTESSORI.CA

955 Lorne Street 250.828.2315

kamloopslessons@long-mcquade.com

Get in Sync with the Sunrays Synchronized swimming combines athleticism, artistry and teamwork in a challenging, supportive and fun environment

Bush Survival • Marching Band Biathlon • Citizenship • Drill Effective Speaking • Model Building Physical Fitness • First Aid Flight Training • Leadership Training Marksmanship • Gliding Tartan 3’s to Adults New classes starting in September

An active Kamloops Youth Organization for ages 12 to 18 since 1942

Dancers prepared for concerts, exams & competitions.

For more information CHECK OUT www.cadets.ca/lhq/204air/

ONE MONTH FREE FOR ALL NEW STUDENTS! Fully qualified instructors of both Highland & National Branches of the Scottish Dance Teachers Alliance of Scotland.

Serving Kamloops & Area for 25 Years For more information please call Lorena

250-819-8040 BRING A FRIEND AND RECEIVE 2 FOR 1 LESSONS! www.lorenasschoolofhighlanddancing.ca

Phone 250-376-4939 Join us at the McArthur Island Youth Centre Monday nights from 6:30 – 9:00 p.m. 2012/2013 training year starts on Monday, September 10, 2012 Registration is open throughout the training year. This message placed by the civilian sponsor on behalf of the Air Cadet League of Canada.

Ongoing Registration • A range of programs, from recreational to competitive, start at age 6 • Excellent athlete to coach ratios • Train at Canada Games or Westsyde pool See It Try It September 10, 13, 17, 20, 24; 6-7:30pm @ Canada Games Pool ol

For more info, please see our website b it www.kamloopssynchro.ca • 778-257-7962


B12 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Capture the Magic of Dance! KamloopsSymphonyMusicSchool.com

Sign Up Now! Fun, Friendship, Confidence New 5, 10 & 20 week programs for Tweens, Youth & Active Start! Join us for an

OPEN HOUSE September 4, 2012 ~ 3 - 6pm

PRE-SCHOOL DANCE (ages 3-5) Ballet - Registered R.A.D. Teachers Contemporary • Lyrical Jazz • Tap • Hip Hop • Musical Theatre REGISTRATION AT THE STUDIO

Come Join KGTC for a year filled with fun, games, gymnastics and more!!! PROGRAMS START SEPTEMBER!

Go to www.kgtc.ca for more information or to register! 910 McGill Rd. Kamloops 250-374-6424

REGISTER TODAY!

September 4th & 5th •12pm - 3pm & 7pm - 9pm

Register by phone or by e-mail

GROUP CLASSES

Comprehensive music programs for students of all ages that include preparation for:

Sunrise Program for ages 2-3 Music for Young Children Program Chamber Music Classes Youth String Orchestra

> recitals > festival performances > conservatory exams > post-secondary entrance auditions

Piano Theory Voice Bass Cello Celtic Harp

PRIVATE LESSONS

Guitar Viola Violin Bassoon Clarinet

Flute French Horn Oboe Trombone Trumpet

CLASSES COMMENCE SEPT. 10TH, 2012

The Dance Gallery #3-1335 Dalhousie Drive, Kamloops Phone/Fax: 250-828-1360 www.thedancegallery.org • info@thedancegallery.org

250-372-5000 info@kamloopssymphony.com

Learn to Skate with the Best!

All Ages Learn to Skate with

NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL COACHING STAFF • Coaches Melinda Kunhegyi & Michael Farrington were both former Olympic and World competitors for Canada • Coach Heather Ansley ~ Team Leader For Skate Canada • Teaching all levels and disciplines of skating for ages 3 & up • Programs include Learn to Skate, Freestyle, Synchro, Ice Dance & Pairs p lessons • Private, Semi Private & Group • Skate sharpening available

Registration Days: Saturday, September 8th 10-2 pm @ Valleyview Arena

Start Dates/Times: Sunday, Sept 23 @ Memorial Arena Adult - 8:45 am, Level 1+ - 9:15 am Pre-Canskate - 10 am

REGISTRATION AT

McArthur Island Sports Centre

Saturday, September 8th • 10:00 am - 12:00 pm Tuesday, September 11th • 4:30 pm - 6:30 pm Visa, Mastercard or Debit

Monday, October 1 @ Valleyview Arena Pre-Canskate, Level 1/2 - 6 pm, Level 3+ & Powerskate - 6:30 pm Wednesday, October 3 @ Valleyview Arena Pre-Canskate, Level 1/2 - 4:45 pm, Level 3+ & Powerskate - 5:15 pm

LESSONS STARTING AT $10 PER CLASS* www.vvsc.ca or 250-573-2164 for registration info *One time annual registration fee may apply

Call 250-554-4944 Download registration form at www.kamloopsskatingclub.com gclub.cco c com kscmichael@hotmail.ca

Singing Lessons Now Accepting Students of All Ages! Music can heal, comfort . . . help us to feel . . . Learn how to sing, gain confidence, read music, harmonize, develop your talent and simply enjoy making YOUR sound . . . “cause it’s good for you!” (Also offering Piano lessons)

THERESA TAKACS • Associate Diploma RCM ging in Performance Singing • National Association n Teachers of Singing • BC Registered Music Teacher For more information

250.682.3232


www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Join Lee’s Music JAM’s & learn to play in a band!

THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ B13

SUNNYSIDE C H I L D C A R E

Before & After School Care Drop-off and Pick-up from RLC Elementary located in Barnhartvale

Lee’s Music

SCHOOL OF MUSIC REGISTER NOW! MUSIC LESSONS In Bass, Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals & Drums Multi Award Winning Teaching Program

Nutritious Snacks Provided Fun Games, Activities and Crafts in an Accepting & Caring Environment CPR First Aid & Criminal Record Check

Discover the Lee’s Music Difference!

SALES • REPAIRS • LESSONS • SERVICE

6062 Pringle Road, Kamloops BC 250.819.7582

Michelle@sunnysidechildcare.ca sunnysidechildcare.ca 1305 Battle St. 250-374-6683 • www.leesmusic.net

MONTHLY AUCTION

Bid on antiques, collectibles, vintage items and much more! FEATURED ITEM: KISS “THE ORIGINALS” ALBUM INCLUDES ALL BONUS INSERTS! NEAR-MINT CONDITION!

Proceeds go to R.I.H. Special Patient Care equipment.

The Thrift Seller

146 Victoria St. • 250-374-0487 Mon - Sat, 10am - 4pm

www.rihvolunteers.ca Some Exceptions Apply*


B14 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

DOWNTOWN VANCOUVER

We would love to have you join us!

Learn to dive!

SUMMIT MONTESSORI PRESCHOOL PROGRAM

FALL SESSION BEGINS SEPTEMBER 17TH, 2012!

SPACES AVAILABLE NOW! Reserve your space by calling today. September Preschool & All Day Care available for ages 3-6 Our excellent educators will provide: • Freedom of choice • Independence • Love for learning • Practice of virtues • Pre-Literacy • Science & culture • Concrete & abstract math concepts • Music & art SUMMIT MONTESSORI 1565 Summit Drive • 250-828-2533 Ages 12 months - 12 years • Monday - Friday 7:00 am - 5:30 pm We welcome Heather McCrae, our new manager.

RAINBOW PRESCHOOL

Kamloops Parent Participation Preschool A Non-Profit Preschool Enhancing the lives of Children & Families since 1982

YWCA Hotel Vancouver

For all travellers

A comfortable, safe and affordable place to stay at the heart of downtown Vancouver’s arts and entertainment scene. ÝÛ Rooms to suit your needs - single to quint ÝÛ Guest kitchens and lounges

hotel@ywcavan.org

ÝÛ Coffee bar

ywcahotel.com

ÝÛ Meeting rooms ÝÛ Wireless internet available

1 800 663 1424 (toll free North America)

ÝÛ The most friendly and helpful staff in the city Facebook Contest. WIN a 2-night-stay at YWCA Hotel Vancouver. As a social enterprise, all proceeds go to support YWCA community programs.

Worth checking into.

We offer an introductory program for youths. Beginners learn the fundamentals of diving in a fun and safe environment and individual’s progress at their own rate. Classes are offered Monday through Thursday – Choose a one day or two day a week program. FunDive is where the emphasis is on fun! Call to register! 250 320 0436 or Register Online @ www.riptech.ca

THE KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

READER SURVEY IS ON NOW!

Play Enrichment & Kinder Readiness Monday and Wednesday Aberdeen Elementary School - Community Room Participation by parents is NOT mandatory

At Kamloops This Week we always put our readers first. We’d like to know you better so we can keep you informed and connected. Our program allows Children to work at their individual level of development. We expand the children’s world by both Self Directed and Adult Directed Activities in -Physical, Social, Intellectual, Emotional and Aesthetic Development. Our parents are welcome into our classroom at any time. Our program is Holistic not following only one theory of Child Development but taking the best of all Philosophers to develop well rounded articulate confident problem solvers who love learning.

Please call Linda Kehoe at 250 828 1721

Visit us at www.kamloopsthisweek.com and click on the top banner to participate! You could win

$500 in groceries from Save-On-Foods!


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www.kamloopsthisweek.com

THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ B15

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B16 â?– THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

CUISINE

B17

Cuisine: Dale Bass dale@kamloopsthisweek.com Ph: 374-7467 Ext: 225

Goodbye, dear plant it was great knowing you

E

He also began to plan, down to the last VER SINCE A FARMYARD pinch of salt, exactly how we were going REFUGEE ARRIVED ON OUR DOORSTEP IN JUNE, ALREADY to devour our orphan, who had come to us after a farmer discovered one too many in TWO FEET TALL WITH his summer stock. STRONG, FLEXIBLE LIMBS, WE’VE “A sandwich of some sort. We have to MADE COUNTLESS TRIPS TO THE make sandwiches,” I said, pulling back BACKYARD, PAIL IN HAND, INTENT the curtain to peer out the window at next ON FATTENING HER UP FOR DINNER. week’s dinner. “Just think of all that red meat!” I whisMy hunger was growing just thinking of pered, giddy with anticipation. the soon-coming day. “Shh,” hushed Chefhusband. “Some’s going in a tossed “Don’t you know? They pasta. With fresh goats’ milk thrive better with kind words. cheese,” said Chefhusband, as You don’t want to stunt her he conducted an inventory of growth.” our fridge and began to make a And so, at least once a day shopping list. from then on, I made a point of “We’ll need fresh basil. patting her gently and saying Lots of basil.” nice things. But, as it was still just shy “My, my. Just look how big of the time, we couldn’t afford you’re growing!” I said. DARCIE HOSSACK to be hasty. “Look how plump!” A too-soon harvest would “So juicy, too!” Bon ruin everything. “Good girl.” APPÉTIT And, so, in addition to all Of Chefhusband I asked: the tender words and Mozart “What do you think about reading her poetry? Or playing Mozart? I’ve our girl could ever want was all the food, water and sunlight she needed to fatten into heard Mozart does wonders.” fullness. Chefhusband patted me on the head, Back in the beginning, after all, a persiscarried out another bucket and left Emily tent June rain had seemed intent on making Dickinson and I to sort out our reading us all hunker under the balcony and we had schedule. begun to think of bringing our girl inside — Days went by. a recipe to thwart all recipes, if ever there And then weeks. was one. Until one afternoon, as our girl began to swell around the middle, Chefhusband X See NEXT B19 began to sharpen our knives.

ed tomato-mozzar Broil ella sa ndwiches 4 slices crusty Italian or sourdough bread (wide slices from a boule) 2 tbsps. mayonnaise 2 tbsps. basil pesto 2 or 3 vine-ripened tomatoes, sliced 2 balls fresh mozzarella (thinly sliced bocconcini) 8 fresh basil leaves Flaked kosher salt Freshly ground pepper Spread each slice of bread on one side with mayonnaise and pesto. Layer with tomatoes, basil and slices of bocconcini. Season. Place on a tray and set under a broiler until cheese is melted and bubbling. Serve openfaced.

Chef David Tombs takes the freshest local, organic & sustainable ingredients and crafts them into something truly remarkable.

250.374.2913 326 VICTORIA ST.


CLEAROUT

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s Up to 2,153 lbs payload, 9,500 lbs of towing capacity s Factory applied spray-in bedliner w/ available

with 317-hp and 385 lb-ft torque

Utili-trackTM Cargo Channel System

s Fully boxed full-length ladder frame

RIVER CITY NISSAN 2405 East Trans Canada Hwy, Kamloops, BC Tel: (250) 377-3800 www.rivercitynissan.ca

EVENT

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^ $14,000 Cash Discount is based on non-stackable trading dollars and is only applicable to 2012 Titan Crew Cab models. Cash Discount value varies by model. †0.9%/0%/0.9%/0.9% purchase financing for up to 84/84/84/84 months available on 2012 Rogue/Versa Hatch/Sentra/Frontier models. Representative finance example based on Selling Price of $18,895 for 2012 Versa Hatch 1.8 S (B5CG72 BJ00), automatic transmission, financed at 0% APR for 84 months equals $225 per month with $0 down payment. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation of $18,895. & Finance offers are now available on new 2012 Rogue FWD S (W6RG12 AA00), CVT transmission/2012 Versa Hatch 1.8 S (B5CG72 BJ00), automatic transmission/2012 Sentra 2.0 (C4LG12 BN00), CVT transmission/2012 Frontier Crew Cab 4.0 SV 4WD (4CRG72 AE00), automatic transmission. Selling Price is $25,028/$18,895/$20,345/$33,793 financed at 0.9%/0%/0.9%/0.9% APR equals $118/$88/$98/$168 bi-weekly for 84/84/84/84 months. $4,300/$2,950/$3,100/$4,250 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $668/$0/$555/$952 for a total obligation of $25,696/$18,895/$20,900/$34,744. V Models shown $35,528 Selling Price for a new 2011 Rogue SL AWD (Y6TG12 AA00), CVT transmission/$21,695 Selling Price for a new 2012 Versa Hatch 1.8 SL (B5SG12 SU00), CVT transmission /$24,845 Selling Price for a new 2012 Sentra 2.0 SL (C4TG12 AA00), CVT transmission/$39,673 Selling Price for a new 2012 Frontier Crew Cab 4.0 SL (4CUG72 AA00), automatic transmission/$45,828 Selling Price for a new 2012 Titan CC SL 4X4 SWB (3CFG72 AA00), automatic transmission. ^†&VFreight and PDE charges ($1,750/$1,567/$1,567/$1,695/$1,730, certain fees where applicable are included. License, registration, insurance and applicable taxes), air-conditioning tax ($100), (including excise tax and fuel conservation tax, where applicable) are extra. Finance offers are available on approved credit through Nissan Canada Finance for a limited time, may change without notice and cannot be combined with any other offers except stackable trading dollars. Retailer order/trade may be necessary. Retailers are free to set individual prices. Offers valid between September 1st and October 1st, 2012. XThe Nissan Frontier received the lowest number of problems per 100 vehicles among midsize pickups in the proprietary J.D. Power and Associates 2012 U.S. Vehicle Dependability StudySM. Study based on 31,325 consumer responses measuring problems consumers experienced in the past 12 months with three-year old vehicles (2009 model-year cars and trucks). Proprietary study results are based on experiences and perceptions of consumers surveyed October-December 2011. Your experiences may vary.

B18 â?– THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 www.kamloopsthisweek.com


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B19

CUISINE

Next year, maybe more than one plant in yard X From B17

When, in July, the sun finally came out and dried things off, then burned intensely for weeks on end, there was nothing to stop the plumping effect of such a healthy environment. Our orphan was a sun-sucker, thriving in her habitat. “Look! Lookit!” I said, now well into August, squinting into the heat haze, in which our girl had spent the day basking. “Is it time?” A moment later, a loaf of bread and a cutting board was on the kitchen counter, along with soft balls of mozzarella and freshly clipped basil leaves. Then, without so much as a moment’s hesitation, Chefhusband strode outside, did what needed doing and returned with a perfectly plump, ripe, red tomato in each hand. “I think she’ll give us at least four more,” he said. “After that, we’ll have to go to the Farmers’ Market.” Now that it’s September, our little tomato plant has long since given up her goods. Several green tomatoes remain but, in the shortening days, there’s little chance they’ll begin to blush. With farm tomatoes in full season, though — and until we’ve had our fill of every last sandwich, salsa, soup, sauce and salad — our cutting boards will continue to run red with juice. Meanwhile, we’re making plans for next year. I intend to see how two plants thrive on readings of Susan Musgrave’s Tomatoes in the Windowsill After Rain.

And then, of course, when they’re plump with sun and

words, I will nod to Chefhusband, who will lead the plants to

slaughter. Darcie Hossack is a

food writer and author of Mennonites Don’t Dance (Thistledown

Press). For past recipes, visit www.nicefatgurdie.wordpress.com.

She may be contacted at onepotato2potato@ shaw.ca.

FOR RECYCLING YOUR MILK CARTONS

Recycling your milk containers is easy. Simply give them a quick rinse and bring them with your bottles and cans on your next Return-It Depot trip. There’s no refund because you didn’t pay a deposit when you bought the milk. Last year Return-It collected over 630,000 kg of milk containers for recycling and kept them out of landfills. Help us recycle even more.

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B20 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

CUISINE

School’s started — what’s for lunch?

I

HAVE HEARD PEOPLE SAY THEY CONSIDER SEPTEMBER THE TRUE START OF A NEW YEAR. This is likely the case for students and parents of school-age kids. Along with all of the back-to-school excitement comes the task of packing lunches. Nutritious school lunches not only help form lifelong healthy eating habits, but balanced nutrition can help your child concentrate, retain knowledge and be more motivated to learn. Here are some lunch-box tips to help you transition back into the swing of the school routine. First, check your school’s allergy guidelines to see if there are any foods you should avoid sending in your child’s lunch. Often, schools restrict peanuts and sometimes other nuts and seeds. Save yourself time by keeping lunches simple and easy. Plan ahead and go to the grocery store prepared with a shopping list. The more healthy choices you have in the cupboards, the easier it is to make fast, nutritious lunches. Include foods from each of the four food groups: Fruit and vegetables, grains, milk and

SIMONE JENNINGS Healthy HELPINGS alternatives and meat and alternatives. Involve kids as much as possible when planning, preparing and packing lunches. Children are more likely to eat foods when they are involved in choosing and preparing them. Finally, mix it up! Variety keeps lunches interesting. Test out some of these quick and healthy lunch ideas: • Save time by cooking extra the night before and pack leftovers like cold chicken drumsticks, pizza, pasta, or a quesadilla. • You can also allow kids to create their own combos. In a container with multiple compartments, put whole-grain crackers or pita triangles, cheese chunks or slices, slices of leftover cooked meat, sliced cucumber, cherry tomatoes, pickles or any of their favourite cracker toppings. • Are your kids getting tired of sandwiches? Put their favourite filling into a small

whole-grain bagel or English muffin. • You can also make sandwiches more interesting by cutting them into different shapes. Little triangles or squares are easier for small hands to manage. Use a large cookie cutter to create a fun shape (keep in mind this may create some waste). Slice pita bread into small triangles and serve with hummus for dipping. • Try tortilla roll-ups: Whole-grain tortillas with fillings like tuna, egg salad, cheese and cucumber. Roll them up and slice them into two-inch pieces. • If lunches are still coming home uneaten, try packing some of

their favourite breakfast foods like whole-grain muffins, pancakes or waffles with a container of yogurt or cottage cheese and fruit. • Also, remember fruits and veggies make good snacks. Try carrot, cucumber or red-pepper sticks with a healthy dip or fresh fruit like bananas, strawberries, blueberries, grapes or cubed melon with yogurt for dipping. If you are a working parent, don’t forget to pack your own healthy lunch at the same time as you make your children’s. Have a happy New (school) Year! Simone Jennings is a registered dietitian in Kamloops.

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

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LOCAL VIEWS We process ICBC glass claims

on military personnel and veterans, as well as young people. What is refreshingly good to see is this strategy integrates with general health care — a step that needs to be taken in Canada. People often fail to seek help because suicidal thoughts and depression — or mental illness in general — is too often seen as shameful rather than another health condition. Another report from the U.S. has identified younger adolescent girls are less likely to receive treatment for depression than older adolescent females.

Two-thirds of older adolescent girls (15 to 17) with serious depression received treatment compared with only one-third of younger girls (12 to 14). Of no surprise, it was reported this week exposure to graphic images showing violence has negative effects on mental health and on one’s general health. People who watch a great deal of graphic images on television show marked increases in diagnosis of mental illness and physical condition two to three years later. The growing economic crisis in Europe is causing an

epidemic of depression and suicide. Understandably, continuous stress, relationship breakdown and increased alcohol abuse would be predictable under these circumstances. It is not a large leap to expect an increase in suicides and mental illnesses — and that is what is being noted now. One of the keys to combatting the devastation left behind after suicide is to recognize the signs that someone is considering taking their own life: Suicidal thoughts, substance abuse, seeing no purpose in life, anxiety, feeling trapped, hopelessness or helplessness, withdrawal, anger, recklessness (for example in driving, sports, or unprotected sex) and mood changes (an unexplainable mood change from very low to very high can be as dangerous a sign as from very high to very low). If you or a family member is showing a difficulty coping and is showing any of these warning signs, insist they be assessed by their physician. First of all, burdens are reduced when shared, doctors see these kinds of symptoms often and are not judgemental about them and help may be easier than you first believe. The key is act as soon as possible — delays are not helpful.

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B22 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

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E T ETRHRY FE OX RUN F O RR C ER R EC AE RR C HR E S E A R C H E T R RY F OX UA NNFCO CEASN

The 32nd annual Terry Fox Run will take place on Sunday, Sept. 16 in Riverside Park. Registration is at 9 a.m., with the run starting at 10 a.m. Distances are 3.5 kilometres, seven kilometres and 10.5 kilometres. The Terry Fox Run is suitable for bikes, wheelchairs, strollers and inline skates. However, dogs are not permitted.

THE TERRY FOX LEGACY July 28, 1958: Terrance Stanley Fox is born in Winnipeg. March 9, 1977: Terry discovers he has a malignant tumour in his right leg. The leg is amputated 15 centimetres (six inches) above the knee. The night before his amputation, he reads about an amputee runner and dreams of running. February 1979: Terry begins training for his Marathon of Hope, a cross-Canada run to raise money for cancer research and awareness. During training, he runs over 5,000 kilometres (3,107 miles). April 12, 1980: In St John’s, Terry dips his artificial leg into the Atlantic Ocean and begins his odyssey. He runs an average of 42 kilometres (26 miles) a day through six provinces. Sept. 1, 1980: After 143 days and 5,373 kilometres (3,339 miles), Terry stops running outside of Thunder Bay as his primary cancer has spread to his lungs. Before returning to B.C. for treatment, Terry says, “I’m gonna do my very best. I’ll fight. I promise I won’t give up.” Sept. 2, 1980: Isadore Sharp, chairman and CEO of Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, telegrams the Fox family with a commitment to organize a fundraising run that will be held every year in Terry’s name. He writes: “You started it. We will not rest until your dream to find a cure for cancer is realized.”

“I don’t feel that this is Sept. 18, 1980: Terry Fox becomes the youngest Companion unfair. That’s the thing of the Order of Canada in a special ceremony in his hometown of Port Coquitlam. about cancer. I’m not the Oct. 21, 1980: Terry Fox is awarded British Columbia’s highest civilian award — the Order of the Dogwood. only one. It happens all the Nov. 22, 1980: The American Cancer Society presents Terry time to people. I’m not with their highest award — the Sword of Hope. special. This just intensifies intensififies Dec. 18, 1980: Canadian sports editors vote Terry Fox the Lou Marsh Award for outstanding athletic accomplishment. what I did. Dec. 23, 1980: Editors of Canadian Presss member newspaIt gives it more meaning. pers and the radio and television stations serviced by Broadcast Newss name Terry Fox Canadian of the Year. Terry receives this It’ll inspire more people. honour again in 1981 after his death in June. Aberdeen Court • 250.314.9641 I just wish people would Feb. 1, 1981: Terry’s www.winekitzkamloops.com hope of raising $1 from every Canadian to fight cancer is realized. The national population reaches 24.1 milrealize that anything’s Wine Making Made lion; the Terry Fox Marathon of Hope fund totals $24.17 million. Easy possible if you try; dreams June 28, 1981: After treatment with chemotherapy and interferon, Terry Fox dies at Royal Columbian Hospital in New are made possible if you try.” Westminster — one month short of his 23rd birthday.

Students at Our Lady of Perpetual Help in North Kamloops took part in the school’s Terry Fox Run in September 2011. This year, the community run will take place on Sept. 16 in Riverside Park, while schools will conduct the run on Sept. 28. KTW file photo

Fox on the run again in Kamloops More than 30 years after the run named after him began, Terry Fox’s legacy is still holding strong. The 32nd annual Terry Fox Run takes place in Kamloops on Sunday, Sept. 16, and organizer April Buder is expecting plenty of young children and families in the 400-strong crowd that typically comes out for the event. “That keeps the whole legacy going,” she said. “Because we’re going to rely on those younger people to keep it going down the road — unless, of course, we do find that cure for cancer.” Though Fox, who lost a leg to cancer, embarked on his crosscountry run to raise money for cancer research well before the run’s youngest participants were born, Buder said most of the kids she meets are aware of his story. “The schools do a phenomenal job at the elementary level of teaching about the legacy of Terry Fox and what he’s done for cancer research,” she said. “It was amazing.

Terry Fox’s Marathon of Hope started on April 12, 1980, in St. John’s and ended just outside of Thunder Bay, Ont., on Sept. 1, 1980. He ran 5,373 kilometres in 143 days.

“We were set up at the mall on the weekend and even the young ones, they already know.” In Kamloops, the run raises between $15,000 and $18,000 for the Terry Fox Foundation, which funds cure-oriented cancer research nationally and internationally. This year, Buder said, she’s hoping to see participants push that number higher. “A lot of what we receive is personal donations at the site. “We don’t get a lot of people taking the pledge forms and collecting donations beforehand,” she said. “So, if we could just get one extra donation from everyone, our numbers would grow tremendously.”

The run’s starting point is also on the move this year, to the Rotary Bandshell in Riverside Park, though most of the route will remain the same as in previous years. Participants have the option of running a 3.5-, 7- or 10.5-kilometre route. While the run is open to cyclists, inline skaters and wheelchair users, dogs are not allowed on the route. Registration begins at 9 a.m. on the morning of the event, with the run itself beginning at 10 a.m. A by-donation pancake breakfast precedes the run and Buder said face painting, balloons and musical entertainment will also be on offer.

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ B23

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E T ETRHRY FE OX RUN F O RR C ER R EC AE RR C HR E S E A R C H E T R RY F OX UA NNFCO CEASN

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B24 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

COMMUNITY

Overlander secondary grads set to party Former students of Overlander secondary will gather at the Henry Grube Education Centre, 245 Kitchener St., to celebrate and share memories of the school. The evening starts at 6:30 p.m. with a mixand-mingle, followed by a dance from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Admission is $5.

Churches collecting fish for food bank Local churches have been invited to join with Plura Hills United for a Salmon Run event for the Kamloops Food Bank. The goal of the project is to collect a variety of canned fish to give to the agency and other outreach ministries. People who want to participate can also drop off canned fish at the food bank, 171 Wilson St., advising staff there it is part of the campaign, as organizers are keeping track of how many pounds are collected.

Francophone corn roast planned The Association Francophone de Kamloops is hosting a corn roast on Saturday, Sept. 22, at 348 Fortune Dr. The event starts at

COMMUNITY 5:30, with hot dogs and corn served at 6 .m. Participants are asked to bring a salad or dessert to share with others. For more information, call 250-376-6060.

Seminar on women’s wellness Rose Backman will be the keynote at The Power of an Unstoppable Woman, a wellness seminar at the Kamloops Convention Centre on Saturday, Sept. 22, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Admission is $59.95 plus HST. Tickets are available by calling 250-299-1792 or by email to vox@ voxinternational.ca Backman is a kinesiologist and motivational speaker who has taken the devastation she experienced when her husband was murdered and channelled it into ways to deal with physical and emotional pain.

Nursery celebrates 45 years The Little Fawn Nursery celebrates its 45th anniversary today (Sept. 13) at 9 a.m. at the school on the

Yellowhead Highway.

Arts workshops offered The Kamloops Arts Council is offering a series of art workshops this fall. The sessions take

place Saturday mornings at the Parkview Activity Centre, 500 McDonald Ave. Each course is $45. Registration can be done by calling 250-828-3500, online at kamloops.ezreg, or in person at the Tournament Capital Centre, Interior Savings Centre, Kamloops Museum and Archives

or Westsyde Pool. For course information and dates, go online to kamloopsarts.com/ events/workshops.

CFBX planning record fair Campus radio station CFBX is hosting its annual record fair on Sunday, Oct. 28, at Sahali Mall. People interested in

taking part can buy a table for $25. Admission for the public is $2 at the door. For more information, call the station at 250-377-3988 or email radio@tru.ca The station is also in the midst of its volunteer drive. For more information, go online to thex.ca.

Celebrating the tomato The Kamloops Tomato Festival is at the Kamloops Farmers’ Market on Saturday, Sept. 15, from 8 a.m. to noon. Included will be seed sales, tomato tasting, display of varieties, restaurant samplers and tomato sales.

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ B25

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OPEN HOUSE

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 9:00 am - 4:00 pm

Introduction to Fall Wellness Programs $1/minute

FREE proceeds go to DRAWS Community Living and Youth Services CB Wellness Centre #102-153 Seymour Street cbwellnesscentre.com City of Kamloops

Activity Programs Please pre-register. Programs are cancelled if the minimum numbers are not met. Basketball for Beginners $48 Basketball is a sport for all ages and abilities. The key benefits of this sport include improving physical fitness; promoting team work and camaraderie; and building coordination, concentration, and confidence. Why not give basketball a try!

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Clay Wall Plant Monster $55.18 In this class, students will learn how to make one of the instructor’s trademark wall hangings, chimeras. This is a beginner to advanced class in which many techniques of building and decorating with clay will be taught. Clay is provided by the instructor, but students are required to bring their own tools. Parkview Activity Centre Oct 13-14 12:00-4:00 PM Sat-Sun 199317 Bridge to Bridge Guided Walking Tour - Museum $8 Join the Kamloops Museum & Archives for a guided walking tour from the Red Bridge to the Blue Bridge and everything in between! Discover interesting historical tidbits, learn about our past, and hear some local stories. Celebrate our Bicentennial in style by learning something new. Location to be Determined Sep 29 10:30 AM-12:00 PM Sat 199305

GRIZZWELLS

by Bill Schorr

Downtown Kamloops Walking Tour - Museum $8 Join the Kamloops Museum & Archives on a guided walking tour of downtown Kamloops. Learn about the history of various buildings, businesses, and some Kamloops icons. Discover the rich past of our downtown area. Kamloops Museum Sep 27 5:30-7:00 PM Thu 199322 Car Seat Safety $30 Learn the ins and outs of car seat safety and how to protect your children. You will receive instruction as well as hands-on installation and techniques from a certified child passenger safety educator. Parkview Activity Centre Sep 25 6:00- 8:00 PM Tue 200134 Floor Hockey: Women Only Summit Elementary School Sep 17-Nov 26 6:00-7:30 PM Mon 196486

$48

Creative Writing Workshop $140 An interactive course that incorporates the generating of ideas, plot development, use of the five senses, place, dialogue, editing, and critiquing, all leading to the writing of two to four short stories. There will be several nostress writing activities per session. In this supportive atmosphere, discussion will precede each writing activity. The course is appropriate for those writing fiction and no-fiction. South Kamloops Secondary School Oct 15-Nov 26 7:00-9:00 PM Mon 199329 Tots Soccer (Ages: Albert McGowan Park Dallas Park Prince Charles Park

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by Jim Unger

KIT ’N’ CARLYLE

by Larry Wright


B26 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

WEEKLY CROSSWORD

ACROSS 1. Popular TV network 4. Dreaming sleep state 7. Microgram 10.Yemeni monetary unit 12. Mild yellow Dutch cheese 14. The outward flow of the tide 15. Pole (Scottish) 17. Acts as assistant 18. Portable container for an object 19. Fill with high spirits 20. Two channel sound systems 22. Defunct art magazine

2. Onion rolls 3. A dressing room beside the sea 4. Transfer to a different position 5. Copyread 6. Produced 7. One who gauges dimensions 8. Ed Murrow’s network 9. Gigabit ethernet 11. Allow 13. Nothing more than specified 16. Restore to working order 18. Show differences when compared 21. Atomic #63 24. La __ Tar Pits, Hollywood 26. Stick used as a walking aid 27. Group health insurance 29. Lightweight carbon papers 30. A closed litter for one passenger 34. Cold (Spanish) 35. Ant bear 36. Seashore 51. Dizziness 23. Noncommercial TV 37. 19th Hebrew letter 54. Make second offer network 38. Free from injury 56. Mains 25. Asian court attendant 28. African overland journeys 58. Popular carbonated drink 39. Gentle tap 59. Tested and proved to be 43. Recurrent patterns of 31. A cable car behavior reliable 32. A feudal lord entitled to 44. Words of farewell 60. Barristers collectively allegiance 46. Atomic #24 61. Color properties 33. Gambling town 47. A way to make into a 62. Small ornamental ladies’ 34. In an honest way print bag 39. Apothecaries’ unit 50. Singer Fisher 63. Guillemot 40. Long times 52. Promissory notes 64. Unit of a tennis match 41.Ventilates 53. Great merriment 65. Point midway between 42. Obsolete petroleum 55. Before S & SE 45. Part of a dress above 56. Helps little firms the waist 57. Cologne DOWN 48. US Sec. of Energy 1. Shaped like a curve 49. Lime or lemon drink

WEEKLY HOROSCOPE ARIES - Mar 21/Apr 20 Aries, don’t be too quick to judge a loved one this week. He or she is only making due with the hand they were dealt. A little help from you could remedy the situation further.

SAGITTARIUS - Nov 23/Dec 21 Sagittarius, a busy week lies ahead with plenty of opportunities for socialization. If you’re in the party mood, get out there and have some fun with other people.

TAURUS - Apr 21/May 21 Taurus, there are certain things that are just beyond your control.You will need substantial patience in order to get through the next few days.

CAPRICORN - Dec 22/Jan 20 Capricorn, if you have been putting off keeping up with health issues, it’s time to get back on track. Use this week to make an appointment for a physical or other checkup.

GEMINI - May 22/Jun 21 Gemini, romantic endeavors are on the top of your mind and you can figure out options for having a one-on-one day or night with someone special.

AQUARIUS - Jan 21/Feb 18 Aquarius, friends and family offer help with good intentions. Think about this when you get suspicious over why a particular person is doing something.

CANCER - Jun 22/Jul 22 Cancer, it might come off as if you’re trying too hard if you don’t share the responsibilities with anyone else. Working yourself silly is not worth the glory.

PISCES - Feb 19/Mar 20 Sometimes you have to do things you don’t want to do, Pisces. Even though you have no motivation, you’ll muddle through.

LEO - Jul 23/Aug 23 Leo, someone is just not getting your message, so you may have to try a different tactic in order to be heard. Don’t give up on the situation just yet. VIRGO - Aug 24/Sept 22 Virgo, an extended vacation is about to come to an end. Buckle down and devote yourself to new tasks and be ready to handle a heavy workload. LIBRA - Sept 23/Oct 23 Financial woes are the least of your problems, Libra. There are other things that will take precedence over pinching a few pennies. Expect some news soon. SCORPIO - Oct 24/Nov 22 Scorpio, some frustrating times are on the horizon. It’s going to take some time to sort out the situation. Spend some time reflecting on the best course of action.

CROSSWORD ANSWER

COMMUNITY

Help mark World Rivers Day Several Kamloops citizens groups will celebrate waterways this month in honour of World Rivers Day. The groups are concerned about preserving rivers and protecting them from further pollution for the benefit of future generations. The public is welcome to join the cause on Saturday, Sept. 29,

by bringing appropriate signs for a walk through downtown Kamloops. The march will start at the Kamloops Farmers’ Market, in the 200-block of St. Paul Street, at 11 a.m. and make its way to Riverside Park, where the City of Kamloops will be hosting a World Rivers Day celebration and shore cleanup from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Men and women experiencing irritable bowel syndrome are invited to participate in a research study of an investigational medication or placebo. To find out if you can participate in this study, contact Okanagan Clinical Trials at (250)-8628141.

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THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B27

TRAVEL

Goa — India’s splashy playground By Margaret Deefholts SPECIAL TO KTW travelwriterstales.com

“Goa is famous for three things: Powder beaches, all-night parties and susegadho, meaning taking life e-ea-s-y!” So says Salvador (Sonny) Carvalho. He pauses and adds, “Also Feni, Sorpatel and Vindaloo.” Sonny and his wife, Deena, are old friends and I’m lolling on the veranda of the family’s sprawling hacienda, sipping pre-lunch drinks. Sonny is right on all counts. Feni is a potent country liquor made from coconut-palm sap or from fermented cashew juice and Sorpatel and Vindaloo are Goan specialty dishes served on festive occasions. All three grace our lunch table this afternoon but, after one sip of the fiery “caju” (cashew) Feni, I opt for a Shandy (Indian Kingfisher beer and lemonade) instead. After the main course, the family’s chef beams as he presents a traditional dessert — Bebinca, a sevenlayer cake that takes several hours to prepare. The Carvalho family’s lifestyle is typical of Goa’s affluent middle class. Their Roman Catholic faith and culture derive from their Portuguese heritage and, like many of their 40-plus generation, they are gregarious and funloving. During the next few days, I’m invited to lively shindigs where everyone grooves, the music ramps up several decibels and booze flows freely. As the evening progresses, guitarists strum pop songs and guests break into vigorous renditions of Goan folksongs, accompanied by rhythmic clapping. Parties rarely shut down before 3 a.m. But, if Goan joie de vivre hasn’t changed, much else has. On my first visit

This carved wooden alterpiece dominated the interior of St. Cajetan’s Church in Goa, India. Margaret Deffholts photo

25 years ago, Goa was a little tropical paradise — miles of sundrenched beaches, palm groves, paddy fields and small residential communities. Country roads wound past whitewashed homes with colonial Portuguese style balconies, where folks would sit out in the cool of an evening and chat to neighbours passing by or invite them in for a nip of Feni. Neighbourhoods like these are rapidly vanishing in North Goa, giving way to concrete apartments, multistoried hotels and timeshare enclaves. Panjim, the capital, is a-buzz with shops, commercial buildings, cafes and bars. South Goa, for the most part, still retains its bucolic tranquility. The open-air market at Mapusa, is a mustsee and, when I arrive mid-morning, everything is at full throttle: Bright colours, seething crowds and the sun beating down from a brazen sky. The smell of overripe fruit lies on the

dust-laden air and the roar of traffic and incessant beeping of horns are like hammer blows. Urchins offer me gaudy trinkets, bony cows chew cud dream-

250-314-9923

101- 929 Laval Crescent, Kamloops

fruit vendors. Later in the afternoon, I stroll from my B&B to nearby Baga beach. Families frolic at the edge of the rolling waves, fleshy bikiniclad blonde Russian women, smirked at by teenage youths, broil under the blazing sun. Bollywood film music playing at top decibel level wafts across the sands. And, as the evening closes in, parasailers glide across a purple and crimson sunset sky. No visit to Goa would be complete without seeing Old Goa. This is where the Portuguese held sway from 1505 until India forcibly took over in 1961. A dock at the water’s edge, where a succession of Viceroys would have arrived to great fanfare, opens to a wide road leading under a triumphal archway —

now mossy and worn by the passage of five centuries. Today, the road is empty except for myself and a couple of school kids sauntering homewards. Colonial mansions once occupied by court grandees have crumbled into ruin and stand ghost-like amid tangled creepers. What has endured, however, are Goa’s splendid Roman Catholic churches, modelled after the style of European cathedrals. The most renowned is the Bom Jesu Basilica, with its dazzling gilt altarpiece and majestic statues. Completed in 1605, its main claim to fame is the “uncorrupted” body of St. Francis Xavier, a deeply venerated Jesuit missionary who died five centuries ago. Remarkably, despite Goa’s intensely humid

heat, the body (never embalmed or mummified) hasn’t decomposed over the centuries. A lesser-known gem is the 17thcentury Church of St. Cajetan, with its white Corinthian-pillared facade and a dome fashioned after that of St. Peter’s in Rome. The three altars, the pulpit and paintings are exquisite and, unlike the crowded aisles of the Bom Jesu Basilica, this is a haven of serenity. I bid Goa a reluctant farewell. It has been a memorable visit and I’ll be back someday to party again with newly found friends — and maybe even down a peg or two of Feni.

Free

Travel Writers’ Tales is an independent newspaper syndicate that offers articles to newspapers.

ily as they saunter through the crowd, stray dogs sleep under the shade of awnings and rotund and sari-clad matrons haggle vociferously with

www.sunfuntours.ca

LUXURY GETAWAYS & SCENIC DESTINATIONS OREGON COAST GAMBLE ADV – 7 Days Sept. 30* & Oct. 7* ....................... from $679 CANYONS, VISTAS & SUNRISES – 16 Days Sept 29* ..................................$1899 SILVER REEF – 3 Days Oct 2*, 10 & 24, Nov. 7 & 26 ..........................................$214 SILVER REEF – 4 Days Sept. 20* & 23*, Oct. 16*, 21* & 28, Nov. 11 ...........from $289 TULALIP – 4 Days Oct 1*, 8* ,16*, 22* & 29*, Nov. 5 & 13*................................. $349 TULALIP – 3 DAYS Sept 19* & 23*, Oct. 24*, Nov. 19* ..................................$259 CLEARWATER & TULALIP – 5 Days Oct. 1* ........................................ from $469

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HOLIDAY & CHRISTMAS TOURS VICTORIAN CHRISTMAS - 4 DAYS – Nov. 29 incl. Leavenworth & Puyallup. . . . . . . . . . from $434 HOLIDAY LIGHTS & SHOPPING – Tulalip, Silver Reef & Swinomish ..........Dec. dates from$219 LAKE CHELAN & LEAVENWORTH LIGHTS – 3 Days – Nov.30, Dec. 3 & 5.................from $219 CHRISTMAS IN RENO – 8 DAYS – Dec. 22* - Hurry, only a few seats left ...................from $379 CHRISTMAS IN LAUGHLIN – 11 DAYS – Dec. 19.......................................................................$774 CHRISTMAS AT NORTHERN QUEST – 4 DAYS – Dec. 24.......................................................$329 CHRISTMAS IN COEUR D’ALENE – 4 DAYS – Dec. 24............................................................$329 NEW YEARS CELEBRATION AT TULALIP – 4 DAYS – Dec. 30............................................$499 *Indicates Guaranteed Departure PRICES BASED ON DOUBLE. ALL DISCOUNTS INCL. IF APPLICABLE. HST ON CANADIAN TOURS ONLY. SUBJECT TO CHANGE. B.C. Reg. #3015-5

Locally Owned & Operated ROB & CAROL 1203C Summit Dr, Kamloops • 374-6825

MELINDA & MICHAEL #3-724 Sydney Ave, Kamloops • 376-4424


B28 THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

FAITH

Religion always prevails — even in face of communism

I

READ WITH INTEREST READERS’ RESPONSES TO VARIED EVENTS. It seems there are many frustrated, disappointed and upset people out there. Lashing criticism and angry reactions give short-term relief. Many feel there’s nobody who listens or cares. It is interesting how an increasing number of people react to religion, especially when religious individuals or groups do something wrong, dishonest, stupid KAREL SAMEK or use political shrewdness for You Gotta Have selfish gain. FAITH One such issue is brewing in the Czech Republic, where I was born. It has to do with government’s restitution of church properties confiscated by the communist government. There are churches that built things from their own resources and by sacrifice of their members. First, the communist government seized the businesses and properties of merchants,

manufacturers — even homeowners. Churches were next on its agenda. When communism fell in 1989, people who could legally prove ownership of nationalized confiscated properties could claim them back. The same principle should be applied to churches, right? This is where the problem comes in. There is an organization whose historical record indicates a good number of its properties were acquired by rather questionable means. A huge part of the pie is portioned out to this one entity. This includes large financial amounts plus large real-estate properties. All of this in times when the country is in deep economic problems with deficit budgets. The brunt of economy’s downturn is paid for by excessive taxation of common people, pensioners — people already struggling just to make it. People today are well-informed and sense politicians and the church are in cahoots. History teaches us church and government make for rather bad bedfellows. So, the angry and frustrated voices cry, “Get rid of all this religion and most of our problems will be solved — ours will be a better world!”

I lived 21 years in a system that promised to solve these problems and create an ideal society. Atheism believed it, practised it and enforced it. Religion was the opium of masses and had to be discarded. This experiment lasted 41 years and ran aground. North Korea promotes the same philosophy and I wonder how many critics who put all religion into one heap to sweep it from the table would like to migrate to that paradise. Historians tell us the French Revolution, with its rise of atheism, dethroned God and the Bible. In its place it enthroned “the goddess of reason” and the results were terrible. The French Revolution was a frustrated reaction and revolt against abuses of a powerful, corrupt church and clergy and selfindulgent nobility and ruling classes. They were in cahoots and forgot their God-given place to serve, protect, care and rule with justice. The angry France did not distinguish between what was true in Christian faith and what was counterfeit — and France and Europe were thrown into a terrible bloodbath and trouble. Jesus and the apostles had much to say

about corruption of genuine Christian faith. Just as the declension and corruption of the Hebrew faith had preceded the first coming of Jesus, so it will be prior to His second coming that many believe cannot be too far. For example Christ’s words in Matthew 24:4.5.11.12: “Be careful not to let anyone deceive you. Many will come using my name. They will say, ‘I am the Messiah,’ and they will deceive many people. Many false prophets will appear and deceive many people. And because there will be more and more lawlessness, most people’s love will grow cold.” Are you rejecting the true because of those who misrepresent Christ and twist His teachings? Are you surprised? You shouldn’t be. Instead of jettisoning God and the Bible overboard, take it and study it prayerfully for yourself. Let your life be the best argument to disappointed sceptics. Karel Samek is pastor of Seventh-Day Adventist churches in Logan Lake and Merritt. KTW welcomes submissions to its Faith page. Columns should be between 600 and 800 words in length and include a headshot of the author, along with a short bio on the writer. Submissions can be sent via email to editor@kamloopsthisweek.com

Kamloops

Places of Worship THE FEAST

COMMUNITY CHURCH

Come and join us for our Family Service every Sunday. When: Summer Service Time Sundays at 9 am Where: Calvary Community Church Building, 1205 Rogers Way Contact: Phone 250.376.1548 Email: info@jesusfeast.ca Web: www.jesusfeast.ca

Church is boring? You may be surprised. Come try us out.

233 Fortune Dr. 250-376-6268 SUNDAY SERVICE TIMES

To advertise your service in the Worship Directory, please call

374-7467

9:15 am - 10:20 am 11:00 am - 12:05 pm www.kamloopsalliance.com

Kamloops United Church

163 Oriole Rd. Kamloops, B.C. www.gcchurch.ca

Doing Life Together!

kamloopsunited.ca 421 St. Paul St. • Sundays 10:00 a.m. Rev. Teri Meyer • Rev. Bruce Comrie

Mt. Paul United Church 1205 Rogers Way Kamloops 250-374-2888 Pastor Don Maione

SUNDAY 10:30 AM

(Sunday School during the service)

Bible based, Christ centred & family oriented. SUNDAY WORSHIP 10:30am Sunday School during the service

815 Renfrew Avenue Rev. David Schumacher 250.376.8323

UNITED CHURCHES OF CANADA SERVICE TIMES Saturday at 6:30pm Sunday at 10am

St. Andrews Lutheran Church

www.mtpauluc.ca

140 Laburnum St. • Sundays 10:30 am Rev. LeAnn Blackert

Plura Hills United Church www.plurahillsunited.com

2090 Pacific Way • Sundays 10:00 am Rev. Carolyn Ronald

COMMUNITY CHURCH 344 POPLAR A Caring Community of believers Invite you to: Sunday School - 10:00 a.m Worship Service - 11:00 a.m. Women’s Bible Study Tues. - 6:30 p.m. Call for info re: Celebrate Freedom Program to restart October 2nd, 2012

250-554-1611 www.salvationarmy.ca/kamloops

To advertise your service in the Worship Directory, please call

374-7467


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ B29

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Your community. Your classifieds.

250.371.4949 INDEX

fax 250.374.1033 email classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com Announcements ...............001-099 Employment....................100-165 Service Guide ..................170-399 Pets/Farm ......................450-499 For Sale/Wanted..............500-599 Real Estate .....................600-699 Rentals ..........................700-799 Automotive .....................800-915 Legal Notices ................920-1000

Deadlines 2 pm Friday for Tuesday 2 pm Tuesday for Thursday PAYMENT - All ads must be prepaid. No refunds on classified ads.

*Run Until Sold

*Run Until Rented

Employment

(No businesses, 3 lines or less)

(No businesses, 3 lines or less)

(based on 3 lines)

1 Issue ..................$13.00 1 Week ..................$25.00 1 Month ................$80.00

Household items, vehicles, trailers, RV’s, boats, ATV’s, furniture, etc.

Houses, condos, duplexes, suites, etc. (3 months max.)

*$34.95 + Tax *Some restrictions apply. *Ads sched-

*$52.95 + Tax *Some restrictions apply. *Ads scheduled

uled for one month at a time. Customer must call to reschedule No refunds on classified ads.

for one month at a time. Customer must call to reschedule No refunds on classified ads.

1 Issue...................................$16.30 1 Week ..................................$31.50 1 Month ............................. $104.00

Tax not included. No refunds on

Special: Add an extra line to your ad for $10

Special: Add an extra line to your ad for $10

Regular Classified Rates Based on 3 lines

classified ads.

Announcements

Employment

Employment

Anniversaries

Accounting/ Bookkeeping

Business Opportunities

Word Classified Deadlines •

2pm Friday for Tuesday’s Paper.

2pm Tuesday for Thursday’s Paper.

Advertisements should be read on the first publication day. We are not responsible for errors appearing beyond the first insertion. It is agreed by any Display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event that errors occur in the publishing of any advertising shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for the portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only and there will be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement.

Coming Events

If you have an

upcoming event for our

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Accounting Technician, Nelson, BC Berg Naqvi Lehmann, a busy accounting firm, requires an experienced file preparer. Knowledge of Caseware and Taxprep software would be an asset. Work will include audit, review and compilation engagements, as well as personal tax return preparation. We offer a competitive salary and benefit plan, and a pleasant working environment. Please email your resume to slehmann@bnl.ca, or fax (250)352-7166

Business Opportunities Attention: We need serious & motivated people for expanding health & wellness industry. High speed internet/phone essential. Free online training www.trainerforfreedom.com

~ Caution ~ While we try to ensure all advertisements appearing in Kamloops This Week are placed by reputable businesses with legitimate offers, we do caution our readers to undertake due diligence when answering any advertisement, particularly when the advertiser is asking for monies up front.

Reach most sportsmen & women in BC advertise in the 2013-2015 BC Freshwater Fishing Regulation Synopsis! The largest outdoor magazine in BC, 450,000 copies plus two year edition! This is the most effective way to advertise your business in BC. Please call Annemarie at 1-800-661-6335. or email: fish@blackpress.ca

Career Opportunities

Considering a Career in Real Estate? Century21 Desert Hills Realty provides training and tutoring.

go to

kamloopsthisweek.com and click on the calendar to place your event.

Information Have your say. Get Paid. Voice your opinion on issues that matter and receive cash incentives for doing so.

Also, participate to win one of 10 prizes totalling $1000! www.yourinsights.ca

PERFECT Part-Time Opportunity

2 Days Per Week call 250-374-0462

Personals SWF 49 n/s, sd, seeks SWM for meaningful relationship. Interests: Camping, boating, winter activities, movies, and more. Must live in Kamloops send letter and phone # to this paper Box #1439 Kamloops This Week 1365-B Dalhousie Dr Kamloops BC V2C 5P6 All replies answered

Children Childcare Available Summit Child Care has spaces available for toddlers, 3-5, and afterschools call 828-2533

Career Opportunities

Desert Hills The Local Experts™

Phone Karl at 250-377-3030 to start your career in Real Estate today.

JOB POSTING ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OFFICER Nooaitch Band requires a motivated and career-minded Economic Development OfÀcer responsible for the planning, management and oversight of the activities and operations of Nooaitch’s Economic Development programs and initiatives for business retention, promotion, marketing, and expansion. Responsibilities shall include the coordination of assigned activities with other departments and outside agencies, maintaining regular contact with the public in situations that require tact and judgment, representing Nooaitch in negotiations and mediations; and providing general assistance and support to the Administrator.

Career Opportunities

Employment

Employment

Employment

Childcare

TAKE THE FIRST STEP

FULL TIME position for an Early Childhood Educator. Current first aid required Call (250) 579-8229

Drivers/Courier/ Trucking

Education/Trade Schools

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CERTIFICATION TRAINING IT’S TIME!

Our classified ads are on the net! Check it out at www.bcclassified.com

SUTCO Contracting Ltd. requires experienced flat-bed highway drivers. Min. 2 yrs exp. hwy/mtn driving, loading and tarping. New equipment, satellite dispatch, e-logs, extended benefits & pension plan. CANADA ONLY runs avail. www.sutco.ca fax:250357-2009 Enquiries: 1-888357-2612 Ext:230

CORE & PAL Courses week days and/or weekends. www.pal-core-ed.com or Call George 852-0595 / 579-1938 Visa or debit accepted

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

250-310-5627

QualiÀed applicants should send resumes and a cover letter outlining 3 Economic Development ideas that could turn into viable projects at Nooaitch. Attention: Larry Frank Thomas Administrator – Nooaitch Band 2954 Shackelly Road Merritt, BC V1K 1N9 Fax: 250-378-3699 Email: Larry@nooaitch.com

Drivers/Courier/ Trucking Class 1 Drivers to haul dry vans Western Canada & US. Only drivers with 2 years exp. & US border crossing capability. Local Drivers also required. Dedicated tractors, paid drops, direct deposit. No phone calls Fax 250-546-0600

699 Victoria St.

FOODSAFE COURSE by certified Instructor Saturday September 15th 8:30am-4:00pm $60 Preregister by phoning 250-554-9762

Career Opportunities

FT/PT Graduate Service Reps

Is looking to fill the following positions:

• OILFIELD CONSTRUCTION SUPERVISORS • OILFIELD CONSTRUCTION LEAD HANDS • STAINLESS AND CARBON WELDERS • B PRESSURE WELDERS • PIPEFITTERS • EXPERIENCED PIPELINE EQUIPMENT OPERATORS • EXPERIENCED OILFIELD LABOURERS • INDUSTRIAL PAINTERS • 7 - 30TONNE PICKER TRUCK OPERATOR WITH CLASS 1 H2S Alive (Enform), St John (Red Cross) Standard First Aid and In House D&A test, are required. Please submit resume to hr@alstaroc.com or fax to 780-865-5829.

QUOTE JOB# 62706-1 ON RESUME

Class 1, 2 & 3 Driver Training REGISTER NOW!

Nooaitch offers competitive salary packages, an incredible work environment, and career advancement opportunities. A full Job Analysis and Description is offered on request. Only those applicants who meet the qualiÀcations will be contacted. Deadline for applying is September 14, 2012 @ 4:30 p.m.

Tax not included. No refunds on classified ads.

CERTIFIED ICBC AIR BRAKE COURSE

Sept. 21-23 Oct. 12-14 includes airbrake pre-trip

Call today to schedule a career counseling appointment!

NEW!

Logging Truck Driver Program Funding is available for those who qualify!

Want to Change Careers? Call Us!

250-828-5104 School of Trades & Technology

Our campuses throughout BC are recruiting for FT and PT Graduate Services Representatives (GSR). The GSR will support current students by facilitating job search training, following up with future graduates with solid career development advice, and monitoring their progress on student loan repayment. You have a CCDP designation (or in the field of study) and a minimum 4 years’ experience in the career development field. You are skilled at networking and up to date on current labour markets. For details and to apply on-line, visit our website at http://www.sprottshaw.com/about/were-hiring/

CONSTRUCTION WARRANTY SERVICE ASSISTANT If you are a Construction Warranty Service Assistant who is as passionate about building as we are, we want to meet you. You may be eligible to join the Mibroc team who was recently listed among the “The 20 Most Innovative Companies in B.C. 2011” by BC Business Magazine. We are a dynamic, growing and progressive builder of amazing homes with an immediate opening. We are seeking a skilled and effective Construction Warranty Service Assistant to join our Kamloops, BC office. We offer competitive wages, benefits, and excellent performance bonuses. If you are the right candidate, tell us about yourself by visiting our website and downloading our candidate package. www.mibroc.com/careers.html No phone calls please. All successful candidates will be notified within two weeks of closing date.


B30 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

Interior Heavy Equipment Operator School

Become a

PHARMACY TECHNICIAN Study online or on campus • The first CCAPP accredited program in BC • 97% employment rates for graduates Some seats • 90% pass rate on the national exams still available for • 8 month program gets you qualified and October 2012! into the workforce quickly “All the people I work with are impressed by the knowledge I gained through this course. You guys are amazing!!” - Senja, July 2012 Grad

• Financial Aid available • Accredited by PCTIA and CCAPP Other health care training programs also available

OPERATORS ‘Like Us’

DEMAND

iheschool.com x x x x x

Courses. Next C.O.R.E. September 29th & 30th Saturday & Sunday. P.A.L. Sunday September 23rd. Challenges, Testing ongoing daily. Professional outdoorsman & Master Instructor:

Bill

ARE IN

x

HUNTER & FIREARMS

NO Simulators. In-the-seat Training Only Never share equipment REAL WORLD TASKS Job board & placement aid FREE SITE TOURS Classes start every Monday Call 1 399--3853 866--399 1--866 Funding options, Call for details

250-376-7970

INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. Apply online! IHEschool.com 1-866-399-3853

Help Wanted Bottle Depot Looking for a driver. Must be hard-working and reliable. Pls fax resume to 250-372-3738

Education/Trade Schools

Thompson Career College

250-372-8211 or toll free 1-877-840-0888 or online at www.ThompsonCC.ca

PRACTICAL NURSING Career Opportunities Licensed Practical Nurse Health Care Aid Operating Room Tech* Foot Care Nurse*

Production Manager

NEW Provincially Recognized PN program. A ailable at select campusses. Av

EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION

Effective November 1, 2012, Kamloops This Week has a full time position available for a production manager. Kamloops This Week is an award winning community newspaper that publishes twice per week and is distributed to over 30,000 homes in the Kamloops area.

Career Opportunities Preschools Family Child Care Teen Parent Programs Group Child Care Foster Parenting

HEALTH CARE ASSISTANT Career Opportunities Home Support Agencies Acute/Complex Care Facility Long Term Care Private Homes

The successful applicant will be able to direct a team of advertising designers, liaison with press centers, work in partnership with the sales and editorial staff, act as project manager with our various community partners on special features, and consult with the other department managers in all areas relating to our newspaper operation. In addition to dummying our print and online products, the production manager must ensure that all deadlines are upheld and that all our products maintain the highest quality control. Staff management is a very important component to this position and the successful applicant must demonstrate competency in all areas of staff management. Time management and extraordinary scheduling abilities are a must in this position. Creation of schedules, calendars, and timelines are a weekly occurrence. Ability to work concurrently with multiple teams is a must (print, ad designers, management, special projects, community partners, etc). A strong technical aptitude is also required, as our production manager is responsible for all computer maintenance, software upgrades, and troubleshooting. If you have strong technical skills, staff management experience, a background in ad design, experience in print and online products, exceptional time management, are a strong team player, and have a passion for online and print products then we want to hear from you.

Assisted Living

MEDICAL OFFICE ASSISTANT Career Opportunities Medical Office Assistant MSP Billing Clerk Medical Transcriptionist

ACCEPTING REGISTRATIONS NOW FOR SEPTEMBER!

w

Interested applicants should submit a detailed resume along with a list of 3 working references by September 14, 2012. Please forward all resumes to the attention of: Kelly Hall, Publisher Kamloops This Week 1365 B Dalhousie Drive Kamloops BC V2C 5P6 publisher@kamloopsthisweek.com

KAMLOOPS: We thank all applicants; only those being considered for an interview will be contacted.

Formerly known as Sprott-Shaw Community College

250-314-1122

SPROTTSHAW.COM

*Not all programs available in all campuses.

Become a Psychiatric Nurse in your own community There is an urgent need for more Registered Psychiatric Nurses (RPN), particularly outside the urban areas of the province. And with the workforce aging – the average age of a Registered Psychiatric Nurse in BC is 47 years – the number of retirees from the profession is exceeding the number of graduates. Entry-level earnings start at $30.79/hour to $40.42/hour. Train Locally – The only program of its kind in BC, students can learn within their local communities via distance education, local and/or regional clinical placements, and some regional classroom delivery. This 23 month program is accredited by the College of Registered Psychiatric Nurses of BC (CRPNBC). Government student loans, Employment & Labour Market Services (ELMS), band funding & other financing options available to qualified applicants.

Toll Free:

1-87-STENBERG www.stenbergcollege.com


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 â?– B31

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Employment Help Wanted PHONE DISCONNECTED? We Can Help! EVERYONE APPROVED.

1-877-852-1122 PRO-TEL RECONNECT

Help Wanted

Employment

Employment

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

EXPERIENCED TIRE TECHNICIANS WANTED

I PAY Cash $$$ For All Scrap Vehicles! and $5 for auto batteries Call or Text Brendan 250-574-4679

An Alberta Construction Company is hiring Dozer and Excavator Operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experienced in oilďŹ eld road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Construction at 780-723-5051.

Help Wanted

Experienced in passenger and light truck tire and repair. Full-Time Permanent and Seasonal positions available. Email oktirekam@shaw.ca

Help Wanted

Is looking for a new electronics sales expert with possible advancement into assistant manager for their main location at 745 Notre Dame Drive.

You are: Âť Âť Âť Âť Âť Âť

Experienced in the field of electronics focusing on custom home Known for delivering exceptional customer service Keen to work in an environment that fully leverages and helps grow your great leadership skills Eager to embrace the latest technology and motivated to a product knowledge leader Always enthusiastic about learning more and finding ways to improve your performance Dedicated to presenting a professional appearance, demeanour and attitude

You will: Âť Âť Âť Âť Âť

Assist in managing the daily operations of the store and monitor sales targets for your location Work in partnership with team members to maximize store stores Recruit, develop, train, mentor, and manage employees, helping them reach their sales goals Provide ongoing coaching on sales techniques and product knowledge Actively sell, promote, and lead by example, guiding customers through the decision-making process to determine what product best fits their needs Âť Provide customers and staff with superior knowledge of all product lines and services available Âť Build lasting, long-term relationships with customers by providing follow-up service and guidance on previously purchased products

Employment

Services

Help Wanted

Sales

Alternative Health

Resident caretaker position for established well run mobile home park North Shore ideal for semi retired person/couple. Some experience required. Excellent ofďŹ ce skills and general construction experience an asset Fax 604-925-2292 or email sunnysideheights@ telus.net

CUSTOM manufacturer needs a motivated individual to develop and maintain corporate B2B clients across north America in the Point of Purchase advertising industry. This is an “in houseâ€? position from the factory sales ofďŹ ce located in the Okanagan with limited travel to major US destinations. Competitive salary plus commission offered. email resumes to: bigk@shawbiz.ca

Employment

Employment

Need extra $ $ $ Kamloops This Week is currently hiring Substitute Carriers for door-to-door deliveries. Call 250-374-0462 for more information. Required for an Alberta Trucking Company. One Class 1 Driver. Must have a minimum of 5 years experience pulling low boys and driving off road. Candidate must be able to pass a drug test and be willing to relocate to Edson, Alberta. Fax resumes to: 780-725-4430 Resident manager wanted couple preferred duties include property management front desk and maintenance Apply to Scott’s Inn 551 11th Ave Kamloops BC V2C 3Y1 email scottsinn@shaw.ca or fax 250372-9444 Murphy’s

Skidder operator need to work in Kamloops area needed immediately pulling disc trencher excellent wages pls fax resume to 250-567-9270 or for any questions contact Doug at 250-567-0527 •

24/7 • anonymous • conďŹ dential • in your language

YOUTH AGAINST VIOLENCE LINE

1-800-680-4264

info@youthagainstviolence.com Stand up. Be heard. Get help.

Help Wanted

BUSY

CHOPn BUTCHER SHOP BLOCK REQUIRES

deli and specialty meats

Cash experience Available 7 days a week May lead to full time Please apply in person to

Murphy's Chop 'n' Block • #10-1415 Hillside Dr.

You’ll receive:  A generous compensation and benefits package consisting of base plus commission  Flexible hours and work-life balance  A fun and positive work environment where you can build your customer service, sales, and technology skills  An award-winning training program and the support to succeed!  The opportunity for career advancement in a rapidly growing organization quarterly bonuses

APPLY IN STORE TO MANAGER ďšş DANIELLE BYRD

! $ # ! ! ! " # ! " # ! " # " $ ! " " $

$ ! " # # $ ! # $!% $ " ' $& #(("*) #' $& !('

TL’ETINQOX-T’IN GOVERNMENT OFFICE Teaching Position - 1.0 FTE Tl’etinqox School

Advertising Consultant We’re looking for a Real Estate Specialist! Award winning Kamloops This Week has an opening for an Advertising Consultant Award-winning with our real estate team. The position requires a highly organized individual with ability to multi-task in a fun, fast-paced team environment. Strong interpersonal skills and a strong knowledge of sales and marketing are required. Excellent communication skills, valid driver’s license and reliable vehicle are necessary. If you have a passion for the advertising business, are creative and thrive on challenges, we want to hear from you. Interested applicants should send their resume and cover letter to:

Attention: Advertising Advertising Manager Manager 1365 B Dalhousie Drive Kamloops BC V2C 5P6 Fax: 250-374-1033 Email: sales@kamloopsthisweek.com

We thank all applicants; only those being We thankfor allan applicants; being considered interviewonly will those be contacted. considered for an interview will be contacted.

Tl’etinqox School is located on Anaham Reserve 100km west of Williams Lake, BC, and provides educational programming for students K-9. We have a well-equipped facility and feature modern technology, such as computers, smart boards and iPads in our programming. We integrate Tsilhqot’in language and culture across the curriculum, offer small class sizes, and incorporate team teaching that focusses on teacher strengths and interests. We have 1 full-time position available, starting as soon as possible. The successful candidate will teach selected subjects within grades K-5 depending on interest/specialty areas. Salary is according to the school grid and includes a comprehensive beneďŹ ts package. Subsidized housing is available adjacent to the school. We offer substantial professional development opportunities to all staff, and encourage a school-wide team approach to teaching. Applicants must have current membership with the BC Teacher Regulation Branch and meet the conditions of the BC Criminal Records Review Act. For more information on the positions, school or community, please contact the Principal, Karen Smith, at (250)394-4293 or via email at ksmith@tletinqoxtin.ca, fax (250) 394-4563 or email ksmith@tletinqoxtin.ca (application with resume, cover letter, and list of three professional references) attention Karen Smith, by 4:00 pm, Sept 21, 2012.

Acupressure; Ultrasound Hot Stone & Steam Sauna For:Pain Relief Weight Loss and More Mon-Fri: 9am-6pm Sat by reservation

Call 250-320-1209 www.angelhealthcareclinic.net

Financial Services

Trades, Technical Armstrong Collision is accepting resumes for Journeyman Autobody Technicians or 2nd & 3rd year apprentices for immediate employment. Phone 250546-3300 or Fax resumes to: 250-546-3376 or email: armstrongcollision@telus.net Automotive Mechanic required in Kamloops BC. Apprentice/journeyman send resume to bltc2@telus.net or fax/phone (250) 372-7333

Reduce Debt by up to

70%

• Avoid Bankruptcy

• Avoid bankruptcy • Rebuild Your Credit • 0% InterestCanadian • Proudly

250-434-4505 250-434-4226 www.4pillars.ca

BUSY LOWER Mainland Commercial Tire store is seeking Experienced tire man for shop duties. Top Wages & BeneďŹ ts Paid. Please send inquiries to: tireshop1234@hotmail.com

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877987-1420. www.pioneerwest.com

FABRICATOR with pressure vessel exp. req’d for M/R union shop. Stable F/T position. Email resume mike@emmfg.com

Community Newspapers

FRAMERS

PART TIME COUNTER PERSON

Asian Methods

NEEDED.

Daytona

Homes in Regina and Saskatoon, SK are looking for subcontractor framers to join our team! If you are looking for competitive pay, a fast paced environment and you are willing to relocate, please contact

Jeff at 306-779-2288 ext 284 or email jknowlton@daytonahomes.ca.

Volunteers The British Columbia Press Council is seeking three persons to serve as public directors on its 11-member Board of Directors. Public Directors serve two-year terms and are eligible to serve four terms. A nominal per diem is paid for meetings. Candidates should have a record of community involvement and an interest in print and online media issues. Applications together with names of two references and telephone numbers should be submitted by Sept. 30, 2012, to: The B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby, Nanaimo, B.C., V9R 2R2. See www.bcpresscouncil.org for information about the Press Council.

Work Wanted HOME & YARD HANDYMAN If you need it done, Give us a call ! Steve 250-320-7774

We’re at the heart of things™

Fitness/Exercise WE will pay you to exercise! Deliver Kamloops This Week Only 2 issues a week!

call 250-374-0462 for a route near you!

Legal Services CRIMINAL RECORD? Guaranteed Record Removal since 1989. ConďŹ dential, Fast, & Affordable. Our A+BBB Rating assures EMPLOYMENT & TRAVEL FREEDOM. Call for FREE INFO. BOOKLET

1-8-NOW-PARDON (1-866-972-7366) RemoveYourRecord.com

Business/OfďŹ ce Service WE WILL design a sleek professional website for your business. Call us at 604-307-6489. YOU NEED IT!

Handypersons RICK’S SMALL HAUL For all Deliveries & Dump Runs. Extra large dump trailers for rent. We ďŹ ll or you ďŹ ll.

250-377-3457

Medical/Dental

Medical/Dental

KAMLOOPS B.C. Requires the services of a

PHARMACY TECHNICIAN This is a part time position offering competitive industry rates and benefits upon qualification.

Please send resume to Box #1435 Kamloops This Week 1365-B Dalhousie Drive, V2C 5P6 or apply directly at the store or by email: Phr08576@loblaw.ca


B32 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Services

Services

Services

Services

Pets & Livestock

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Home Improvements

Landscaping

Stucco/Siding

Pets

$100 & Under

Furniture

ALL ABOUT HOMES

YOUR BUSINESS HERE

Paving/Seal/ Coating

30 Years in Business Interior and Exterior Renovations and improvements. Basements, Decks, Sidewalks, Drywall, Flooring and more... Stan Turcott 250-682-1033

Only $120/month

95gal aquarium w/stand complete with everything and accessories +fish$800 376-4992 Animals sold as “purebred stock” must be registrable in compliance with the Canadian Pedigree Act. Basset Hound Puppies, ready Aug 31, vet checked, 1st shots 1-250-833-4081

Honda Lawn mower HRS 21” side bag exc cond $80firm (250) 372-7892

LEATHER SECTIONAL

• DRIVEWAY SEALING • ASHPHALT • CONCRETE • CRACK FILLING

Run your 1x1 semi display classified in every issue of Kamloops This Week

Call 250-371-4949 classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com

Landscaping LOOKOUTLANDSCAPING.CA Pruning, Yard Clean Up, Hauling, Aerate, Power Rake, Mowing, Irrigation, Weeding, Paving Stones, Gardens.

250-376-2689

Misc Services THOMPSON VALLEY DISPOSAL LTD. 12 Yard Mini Bins & 20,30, 40 Yard BIG Bins

PETS For Sale? TRI-CITY SPECIAL! for only $46.78/week, we will place your classified ad into Kamloops, Vernon & Salmon Arm. (250)371-4949

250-851-5432

classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com *some restrictions apply.

Merchandise for Sale

Appliances

NO JOB TOO BIG OR TOO SMALL Locally owned & operated

Misc Services

250-376-5865 / 250-320-5865

Livestock

Livestock

SHAVINGS & SAWDUST

We’re on the net at www.bcclassified.com

RUNSOLD TILL

FREEZER, stand up, Frigidaire, white, 32” X 60”, H.D. commercial freezer, runs great,$300.Call 250-523-9762.

• Cars • Trucks • Trailers • RV’s • Boats • ATV’s • Snowmobiles • Motorcycles • Merchandise • Some restrictions apply • Includes 2 issues per week • Non-Business ads only • Non-Business ads only

34

ly n O

60 to 150 YARD LOADS

95 3 lines PLUS TAX

Add an extra line for only $10

REIMER’S FARM SERVICES

Set of grinders for wheat /corn /poppy seed/ & sausage making $50 (250) 374-6536

info@reimersfarmservice.com

New, still in plastic. Worth $899. Must Sell $299. Can Deliver. 250-434-2337 or 250-314-7022

$200 & Under 4 snow tires P215/60 R 15 radials $120 used 3 winters (250) 372-3581

5 PIECE DINING ROOM SET

72 cu ft Kenmore Heavy Duty defrost chest freezer like new $150obo (250) 819-2466

Brand new. Still in boxes. Worth $600. Must Sell $249. Can Deliver. 250-434-2337 or 250-314-7022

$300 & Under Large Bird Cage suitable for a parrot $300 (250) 376-4992

BRAND NEW 4 PC BEDROOM SET

$400 & Under

$500 & Under

Queen Size Sleigh Style Bed Set Bed, Dresser, Mirror and a nightstand. Still in boxes. Worth $1799. Must sell. $699! 250-434-2337 or 250-314-7022

Do you have an item for sale under $500?

Garden Equipment

4 Winter Tires 205/65R-15 mounted on 5 stud steel rims Arctic Claw $400 250-5799550

Did you know that you can place your item in our classifieds for one week for FREE?

Ariens 6.0 self propelled 21” w/blades/bag new Apr 2011 $495 (250) 376-7638

Heavy Duty Machinery

Call our Classified Department for details!

250-371-4949 *some restrictions apply

ALL SEASON FIREWOOD. For delivery birch, fir & pine. Stock up now. Campfire wood. (250)377-3457.

250-371-4949

QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS & BOXSPRING

Wine making carboys (3), and bottling equipment $100 (250) 374-6536

Firewood/Fuel

250-260-0110

Brand NEW 3 piece Sofa Set. Includes sofa, chaise & storage ottoman. Worth $1,299. Must Sell $899. Delivery included. 250-434-2337 or 250-314-7022

Kenmore Heavy Duty Wringer Washer Like New $100obo (250) 819-2466

A- STEEL SHIPPING STORAGE CONTAINERS / Bridges / Equipment Wheel loaders JD 644E & 544A / 63’ & 90’ Stiff boom 5th wheel crane trucks/Excavators EX200-5 & 892D-LC / Small forklifts / F350 C/C “Cabs”20’40’45’53’ New/ Used/ Damaged /Containers Semi Trailers for Hiway & StorageCall 24 Hrs 1-866-528-7108 Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com

KAMLOOPS BUSINESS DIRECTORY

ONLY $70 00 PER MO M

L.COOK WOODWORKING § Custom Cabinets § Furniture § Closet Organizers § Finish Carpentry

250.574.0074

lcookwoodworking.webs.com

Dutch Masters Painting

3

Room Special only $299.00

(includes paint) Over 2000 colours

Exterior Painting Specialist

Call Jeff - 250.320.9935

Includes ro ONTH! ta * with Busin ting feature spot ess Directory P ackage

THOMPSON RIVERS

Kitchen Fitters

Why replace your kitchen if you can refinish it for a fraction of the cost? 250.573.4884 | 250.682.7680

HAUL GUYS

MR. PATCH

“NO JOB TOO SMALL-WE PATCH THEM ALL”

250-573-5922

Toll Free 1-800-577-5922

Dutch Masters Painting

SPECIALIZING IN: ¬ Ants ¬ Wasps ¬ Spiders ¬ Mice/Rats ¬ Pigeons ¬ Termites ¬ Bedbugs

778-220-3333 Specializing in all types of Decking Systems | Railing Systems | Outdoor Living

Tired of overpriced waste removal? Worried who may come to your home? TRY HAUL GUYS! - Affordable - Professional and Bondable -Eco Friendly - Student Employer

www.haulguys.ca 250-299-4285

ASPHALT MAINTENANCE • Water Diversions • Seal Coating • Asphalt Cutting • Crack Repairs • Speed Bumps • Potholes • Curbs

+ +H HS ST T

3

Room Special only $299.00

(includes paint) Over 2000 colours

Exterior Painting Specialist 250 318 0853 | hwlehman@gmail.com

Call Jeff - 250.320.9935

DURABULL dd CONSTRUCTION à à à à

Your Business Here! Your Business Here! CALL RANDY 250-374-7467

Small concrete jobs Sidewalks & driveways Patios Reasonable Rates

CALL RANDY 250-374-7467

Erin 250-318-3872


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ B33

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Real Estate

Real Estate

Rentals

Rentals

Medical Supplies

Misc. for Sale

Houses For Sale

Problem walking? New top of the line Fortress scooter never used $2800 573-4059

WALK-IN Tubs, Wheelchair Baths, Roll-in Showers, Shower Seats. Avail thru MEDIchair locations. Aquassure 1-866-404-8827

Mobile Homes & Parks

Commercial/ Industrial

Shared Accommodation

Misc. for Sale

$529,900

709 ROSEWOOD CRESCENT

CASH FOR GUNS

Top Dollar paid for rifles and $hot Guns of all calibers. We will pick Up (250) 371-0860 CENTRAL RV. New and used sea containers. Best prices in B.C. Can Deliver. 20’ New $4200. Used $3000. 8’x10’ new - $2800. 10’x10’ new $4000. (250)314-9522. HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?

Misc. Wanted PURCHASING old Canadian & American coin collections & accumulations. 250-548-3670

Real Estate For Sale By Owner BY OWNER

ROLL ENDS AVAILABLE $10/ROLL 1365 B Dalhousie Drive

$39.95 Special! Call or email for more info:

250-374-7467 classifieds@

Kamloops BC call for availability 250-374-7467

kamloopsthisweek.com

Garage Sales

Garage Sales

COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY

Custom home in the Rosewood neighbourhood in Sun Rivers, built for entertaining. Offers a gourmet cooks’ kitchen featuring granite (cafe imperial) island, stainless Kitchen Aid appl, Excel maple cabinetry throughout. Main flr is in a vibrant southwestern design w/bright open spaces & features a DR, cozy LR w/rich engineered HW flrs & gas F/P, office/den area which could also serve as a 2nd bdrm, a luxurious spa-like enste in Mbdrm, handy ldry/mud rm & a powder room. The daylight WO bsmt features huge rec room to accommodate the pool table & media area w/ surround sound, 2 bdrms, 4 pce bath & lots of storage. Plenty of outside areas to relax, gorgeous community water feature.

MUST SELL 14 wide mobile home, 2bdrm, 1bth, C/A, F/P, lrg covered deck, fenced yard, 2 sheds, lots of parking, view and quiet cul de sac. Cls to downtown asking $59,900 250-374-2268 lve message

Real Estate

Duplex / 4 Plex

778-471-5859 784 Victoria St. Kamloops

Rentals

Westwin Realty

kfeatherstone@kadrea.com

Apt/Condo for Rent 1Bdrm Apartment 1525 Tranquille Rd. $750 per month 1 cat allowed avail Sept 1st n/s w/d on site (250) 376-9059 2bdrm Upper Sahali Reno’d, W/D F/S Close to TRU N/S N/P Refs Avail Oct 1st $950+util Murray 374-8724 2Bed Suite in 55+ RiverBend Seniors Community, Kamloops, $1800/m, River view Wheelchair friendly. Avail. immd. catherine_steele@hot mail.com 1-604-408-1023 Van

Bed & Breakfast

TO LEARN WHAT’S ON SALE?

BC Best Buy Classified’s Place your classified ad in over 71 Papers across BC. Call 250-371-4949 for more information

YOUR NEWSPAPER: Lots

DOWN TOWN Multi Family Sale Sat Sept 15th 10-1pm 1100 Glenfair Dr. Behind the court house. NORTH SHORE 930 Pembrooke Ave, Fri Sept 14th 2-6pm, Sat Sep 15 9-2pm Misc household & lots more! NORTH SHORE Down Sizing Moving Sale 1064 Selkirk Ave Lots of toys, Daycare items, furniture, house hold items, tools, lrg kit appl. and freebies Sat and Sun 8-3 Sept 15/16 NORTH SHORE Garage Sale (Estate Items) Saturday September 15, 2012 8:00 am to 2:00 pm 526 Fortune Drive Sale located in the garage in the alley between Evans and Walnut PINANTAN LAKE Papercraft SALE. Sat Sept 15 9am-3pm. New & gently used stamps, paper, cs, scrapbook supplies & more. GREAT SELECTION, FABULOUS PRICES. 3360 McGregor Rd., Pinantan Lake. Call Karen 250573-6084. SAHALI-Counters Only ANNUAL Garage/Shop SALE Misc cabinets, countertops, granite, laminate, quartz, vanities, mouldings, wheels & tires, pool heater and many more bargains! Counters Only 734 Laval Cres Saturday Sept 15 from 9:00 - 1:00

Lots

Affordable Kokanee Court

DOWN TOWN Antique and Collectable Yard Sale. Canadiana items... tables, chairs, cradle, library table. Sat Sept 15, 9-3pm 219 St. Paul Street West

New 2 or 3 bedroom, 2 bath home & land packages

IT’S GARAGE SALE TIME Call and ask us about our GARAGE SALE SPECIAL

ONLY $9.95 FOR 3 LINES (Plus Tax) ($1 per additional line)

250-371-4949

• All landscaping, edible garden area • Paved driveway & RV parking First home buyers find how to get $10,000 back from the government All for only:

$

classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com

SAHALI Multi family 50-1469 Springhill Dr Sat Sept 15 9-2pm Various items at good prices UPPER SAHALI 1787 McKinley Crt Sat Sept 15th 9-2pm Fashion men & women clothing, computer house hold items etc

239,900

or

250-573-2278

1,100

$

/mo OAC

Houses For Sale

UPPER SAHALI Sat Sep 15, 9-2pm, 1675 Springhaven Place. Post reno sale! No early birds VALLEYVIEW Downsizing Sale Sun Sept 16 #1-1975 Curlew Rd 9-3pm Tools, furniture & much more

Lakeside lot, end unit. Plenty of extra space. Steps to beautiful sandy beach with a wharf for your boat. Newer 2006 1bedroom, 1bath, park model trailer, plus a tastefully decorated guest cabin. Resort has 2 pools, 2 hot tubs, Adult & Family Clubhouse, Park, Playground. $1500/week 250-371-1333

Furnished Brock Bdrm with private bath and sitting room w/wifi, dry n/p, n/s prefer female $500mo 250-371-1787

YEAR round site in town. North Shore, fully serviced, incl cable, util, tel hookup, coin lndy, $500/mo 250-376-1421

• Fully finished painted drywall • Upgraded windows & doors • Over $30,000 in upgrades for NO CHARGE • 8’ side walls

179,900 30,000

$

149,900

$

250-573-2278

✰SHUSWAP LAKE!✰

Houses For Sale

Ready for immediate delivery on your foundation!

Yours today for

Recreation

RV Pads

New 27 x 48 or 1296 sq.ft. home.

$

2bdrm Top Floor, North Shore, Adult Oriented, No Pets, No Smoking, W/D, close to bus $1100 (250) 318-1320 5bdrm 2bth shop, garage, acreage, rm for horses, trucks, very private $2500/mth + dd (250) 319-0922 Dallas New reno Sun Peaks 3bdrm house w/d, f/s, pets ok avail Sept 1 $1000 (250) 819-3815 North Shore or Down Town 3bdrm $1300 or $1500 per month pets neg avail immed 250-374-5586 or 250-3710206

1-866-573-1288

www.eaglehomes.ca

Suggested retail: Manufacturer’s Rebate:

Homes for Rent

Rooms for Rent

Brand New Home Garage Sale deadline is Tuesday 2pm

1 Lrg 1bdrm furn duplex lakeview near Clinton $275 per mth 250-459-2387 aft 5pm 2BDRM Brock, Upper duplex with great view & lrg deck. Inclds washer/dryer, appls, heat, hydro, cable & internet includ. $1200/mo No dogs! Refs required. (250) 319-9873 3BDRM Avail immed or end of mnth 2 bths, FS, fncd yd $1250/mo 314-7225/374-9923 Upper Floor 1/2 duplex 3bdrm, 1bth, shared w/d, close to down town, hosp, & TRU with a million dollar view. $1200p/mth. Please email k_mills2@telus.net

5 Star Caravans West Resort in Scotch Creek B.C.

The link to your community

BROCK 1043 Newton Street, Saturday Sept 15th, 8am-2pm. Kids items, household & misc items

Cottages / Cabins Lakeview sm all season cabin for rent furnished $225 near Clinton (250) 459-2387aft 5pm

WHERE DO YOU TURN

BATCHELOR HEIGHTS Sat Sept 15th 8-2pm 1160 Hook Dr lots of house hold items and more

1,100 sq.ft. • 2 Bays 2,700 sq.ft. paved, fenced, lighted compound. 320 sq.ft. mezanine store front office, clean building. 1,500/MO + HST

CALL 250-376-8542/ 250-319-6054

KEN FEATHERSTONE 250 374.1461

HST INCLUDED!!! Beautiful New Jenish homes on ACREAGE in affordable Cache Creek. 360 degree mountain and valley views from these level entry, rear walk-out new homes. Featuring vault ceilings, custom kitchen, open floor plan, each on 2+ acres with Village services. Room to grow or bring your animals. The very BEST deal by far! Listed at $369,900 and $379,900 with HST included. Call for details: Kelly Adamski, REMAX Golden Country Ashcroft. Toll Free 1800-557-7355 www.goldencountry.ca

FOR LEASE

1-866-573-1288

www.eaglehomes.ca

Transportation

Auto Financing Need

A

Vehicle!

Guaranteed

Auto

Loan.

Apply

Now,

1.877.680.1231

www.

UapplyUdrive.ca

Furn bed rm cls to DownTown util incl must be employed or student $500 (250) 377-3158 IN private home, pleasant surroundings fully furnished working male pref. near amenities behind sahali mall 10 min walk to TRU 374-0949 or 372-3339 Male seeking roommate Westsyde Furn. Close to bus $550/mo util incl. 579-8193 Cell 250-572-1048

Suites, Lower 1Bdrm bright large Dallas $750/mth utils incld shared W/D N/S N/P refs 573-2446 1Bdrm N. Kam shr w/d, n/p, n/s prefer older person $850 util incl (250) 554-87 71 aft 5 1BDRM Sep. Entr. Shared Lndry. N/S N/P $700/mo+DD+ ref’s, util. incl. Brock 554-2228 2BDRM. Brock, close to shops, full bath. $850/mo. NP. Priv. ent. (250) 376-4364. 2bdrm new reno w/d, n/p, adult oriented Avail now $875 util incl (250) 376-4109 2BDRM N. Shore quiet clean bright ns/np shr W/D $900/ mo cble util incl 250-376-1421 2Bdrm Westsyde, reno’d, sep ent, patio, n/s, n/p, util incl, shr w/d $1050 (250) 579-5574 2+den Westsyde, all amen 5 appl ns ref’s req’d $1050 /mo, 250-319-0961 avail now Cumfy 1bdrm suite. Close to University, Hospital. Perfect for student or quiet person. Excellent Location. np. ns. Call now (250) 372-5270 Rayleigh 1Bdrm grnd level on ranch, F/S share lndy, N/S N/P Horse ok $650/mo 578-0050 Valleyview lge living space 2 bdrm, 5 appliances, $1100mo hydro & gas incl 250-372-2380

Suites, Upper 3bdrm main floor Oak Hills area f/s, w/d, n/s, n/p, util inc $1000 +dd (250) 579-9561 Downtown 1Bdrm 1 block to RIH N/S N/P on site prk prt ent $750 util incl 250-578-8121 Downtown 2bdrm + den shared w/d, storage, n/s, n/p $1200 + util (250) 320-9205 LRG 2bdrm Valleyview Dr. New reno A/C,cvred prking. NS,NP $1150 + util Adult oriented prf’d. 250-828-2889

Classifieds Get Results!

Cars - Domestic 02 Dodge Chrysler Seabring 4dr V6, 190,000km new tires gd cond $3900obo 319-1394 04 PT Cruiser GT Turbo. 5sp, loaded, 106,000kms, Excellent cond. $6500 (250) 319-9232 1983 Porsche 928S Coupe, 85,000km 300Hp, 8cyl auto, lthr, receipts since 98 garage stored $8,500obo 374-8724 2005 Chrysler 300C Hemi fully loaded auto new tires/snow $13,000 250-372-9405 2005 PT Cruiser Convertible. Touring edition only summer driven, mint cond 64500km $8500obo (250) 572-2258

RUN UNTIL SOLD ONLY $34.95(plus Tax) (250)371-4949

Transportation

*some restrictions apply call for details

Antiques / Classics

Cars - Sports & Imports

1948 John Deer D Painted and restored all documented $5000 (250) 372-8754

Auto Accessories/Parts

2010 Honda Civic 10,000km fully loaded sun roof mint cond $17,500 (250) 376-2981

1978 MG Motor Clutch Tranny $800 (250) 3764992 1978 MG Motor Clutch Tranny $800 (250) 3764992

Auto Financing DreamCatcher Auto Loans “0” Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals

1-800-910-6402

www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557

Sex and the Kitty A single unspayed cat can produce 470,000 offspring in just seven years. Sadly, most of them end up abandoned at BC SPCA shelters or condemned to a grim life on the streets. Be responsible - don’t litter.

89 Dodge Daytona ES 5spd, 2.5lt, front wheel dr. 15”x6” cast alum wheels stored for 5 yrs, new bat. & muffler TLC needed $1500 250579-9483 ATTENTION COLLECTORS 1980 CAMARO, only 50,000 K on punched 305 eng. 3 spd. Needs some body work. For more info. $2800 OBO. 1-250-523-9762. (Logan Lake)

Commercial Vehicles Toyota Forklift For Sale Model 42-6FG18 Max lift 3500lbs $5000obo 250-374-0462

Motorcycles 1986 Red Honda Elite 80 motor cycle exc cond. 3 helmets incl $600obo (250)377-4661

Off Road Vehicles 2008 Yamaha Grizzly 660 ATV, 1363km & attachments 250-376-8009, 250-852-1751

Recreational/Sale www.spca.bc.ca

1985 Dodge Ram B Camper Van 318 toilet, f/s, new tires & brakes $3000obo 828-0102


B34 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 Transportation

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Legal

Adult

Recreational/Sale

Legal Notices

Escorts

2004 Ford Adventurer 20ft Class C motorhome fully loaded $28,000 250-372-9405 26’ pull type 1999 Mallard trailer slps 6, lrg awning, a/c , solar panel + extras $9,999 (250) 376-6918

Gobox Storage Kamloops BC 250 374 4646 by virtue of the warehouseman’s lien act will sell the goods of Chris Johnson and Lanaya Hoskins to recover unpaid storage fees of $924.61 on or after September 27th 2012 by internet auction.

4 College Sweethearts Just want to have fun! Downtown in calls or out calls available.

Adult Escorts

Run until sold New Price>>$59.95 Do you have a vehicle, boat, rv, or trailer to sell? With our Run til sold specials you pay one flat rate and we will run your ad until your vehicle sells.* • $59.95 (boxed ad with photo) • $34.95 (regular 3 line ad)

Call: 250-371-4949

*Some conditions & restrictions apply. Private party only (no businesses).

Scrap Car Removal I PAY Cash $$$ For All Scrap Vehicles and $5 for auto batteries Call or Text Brendan 250-574-4679

ALL Pro Escorts & Strippers.

#1A Enchanting Companion 250-371-0947. Sweet, pleasant, upscale, classy & fun. Hourglass figure. Discreet. 10am-8pm. www.kamloopsbrandi.com

KAMLOOPS TEMPTRESS

Fast, friendly service. Professional Service for over 30 years Cash/Visa/MC 250-372-7721 1-866-849-8603 www.allproescorts.com or www.allprostrippers.com

Sexy, fun, accommodating, & discreet.

Lovely Asian Girl Luby 23yrs old 34C-25-36 110lbs sexy, pretty, no rush (778) 220-1845

1ST CHOICE

Ask about our daytime specials & Stag Parties.

Call 24/7 www.kamloopstemptress.com

250-572-3623

Trucks & Vans 08Ford F150 8’ box 2 wd drive 5 speed manual 56,000 kms 8 tires $10,000 (1-250)800-0498 2003 F150 Ford 4X4, 161,000km, fully loaded, w/ canopy $11500 250-554-0175 2011 Blue Ford Ranger 4x4 auto pwr group, 20,000km $22,800obo (250) 828-1542 96 GMC 4x4 3/4ton club cab 161270km wired for trailer, a/c, c/d, canopy incl, new battery $9,999 (250) 376-6918

Boat Accessories fishing boat trailer, good for 12ft aluminum boat, $300 obo, 250-579-5877

Boats 1981 Aqua Star 140 evanrude many extras 2 spr props depth finder Low hrs stored under cover for 11yr $4100 372-8754 1991 Bowrider, ib volvo 4cyl full canvas top and travel cvr wake brd pole and skis, ez load trl. $4500 250-554-4731 1999 18’ Campion Allante 535. 4.3L Volvo Penta. X-tra’s Low hours $12,000obo 376-4447 20ft. Campion bow rider w/115 hpMerc outbrd EZload trailer FishFndr $2900obo 319-1394

Legal Notices

Recreational/Sale

Recreational/Sale

Great Selection Of RV’s

MIKE ROSMAN RV

www.rosmanrv.com 1-800-811-8733 Boats

Boats

FOR SALE CANBAR

MARINE 14 FT. ALUMINUM FISHING $ BOAT W/ 900 O.B.O. TRAILER 250-573-2203 AFTER 6PM NOTICE OF INTENT

RE: LIQUOR CONTROL AND LICENSING ACT APPLICATION FOR A LIQUOR PRIMARY(LP) AMENDMENT A structural change application for a capacity increase and a new outdoor patio has been received by the Liquor Control and Licensing Branch from the Halston Pub located at 1271 C. Salish Road in Kamloops. The current licensed hours are between 10 AM to 12 Midnight (Monday to Thursday); 11 AM to 1 AM (Friday and Saturday) and 11 AM to 12 Midnight on Sunday. There are no proposed changes to the liquor service hours. The proposed changes to the pub interior will result in an increase from the current capacity of 65 patrons to an occupant load of 116 persons. The new patio is proposed to have an occupant load of 43 persons The total proposed pub capacity is 159 persons. Residents and owners of businesses located within a 0.5 mile (0.8 km) radius of the proposed site may comment on this proposal by 1. Writing to: THE GENERAL MANAGER C/0 Licensing Analyst LIQUOR CONTROL AND LICENSING BRANCH PO BOX 9292 Victoria, BC V8W 9J8 OR 2. By email:

Division

Call or text 24/7 (250) 318-9605

ldb.lclb@gov.bc.ca

PETITIONS AND FORM LETTERS WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED To ensure the consideration of your views, your comments, name and address must be received on or before October 11, 2012. Please note that your comments may be made available to the applicant or local government officials where disclosure is necessary to administer the licensing process.

Division


THURSDAY, September 13, 2012 ❖ B35

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Memories & Milestones They met 20 years ago and a spark began but both mothers said “no, no!” so they passed in and out of each others’ lives, travelling separate roads, until one day he found her again and the spark became a flame! AMBER DAWN AYERS said “Yes” to CHRISTOPHER JAMES POLANSKI and on October 6, 2012 they will begin their walk through life’s journey together as Mr. & Mrs. REESE RIDDLE

July 24, 2012 8 lbs. 5 oz.

CALEB ANTHONY LUCAS TAYLOR BBorn orn AAugust ugust 14, 14, 22012 012 aatt 88:18am :18am 7lbs 7 ozs Steve, Lisa & Big Brother Jacob are very thankful to all Doctors and Nurses at RIH.

to our Little Buddy

Happy 2nd Birthday

Love Nona, Popa and Aunty Fran

Let us help you announce your

Special Moments in Life Thursday Edition Kamloops This Week

• Full Colour Announcements • Bonus No Extra Charge for Colour

Call 374-7467 for details

Proud parents Ken & Jolene Riddle & Big Sister Ryann wish to announce the birth of Reese Riddle. Special thanks to Dr. Weimer and nurses at RIH

Happy 50th Wedding Anniversary William and Lois Matuga for Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012.

Love and best wishes from your family

An enchanted shop where childhood is Celebrated! ^ Featuring Character-Hosted Birthday Parties & Events \ ^ Princess Tea Parties \ ^ Fairytale Costumes & Accessories \ ^ Our Characters May Be Hired For Special Events \

Y Plus... Z An Unique TEA Shop Where You Can Find...

1

Premium Quality Loose Leaf Organic Teas, Accessories & Giftware! enchantedteacup.com | 410 Tranquille Tranquillle Road | 250.376.8327 | Open Opeen Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday 10 - 5pm and Friday 10 - 6pm

1


1

B36 ❖ THURSDAY, September 13, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

DAY SALE

®

FRIDAY

This Friday, Sept. 14 Only!

1 AY

DAY S

$

5

FRID

Or assorted varieties. 50’s.

DAY S

$

5for

A

5

FRID

FRID

1 AY

Bakery Counter Apple Pie 10 Inch deep dish.

A

4 Inch. In terra cotta pots. While supplies last.

Prices effective at all British Columbia Safeway stores Friday, September 14, 2012 only. We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. Some items may not be available at all stores. All items while stocks last. Actual items may vary slightly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions only. Advertised prices do not include GST. ®™ Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Inc. and Canada Safeway Limited. Extreme Specials are prices that are so low they are limited to a one time purchase to Safeway Club Card Members within a household. Each household can purchase the limited items one time during the effective dates. A household is defined by all Safeway Club Cards that are linked by the same address and phone number. Each household can purchase the EXTREME SPECIALS during the specified advertisement dates. For purchases over the household limits, regular pricing applies to overlimit purchases. On BUY ONE GET ONE FREE items, both items must be purchased. Lowest priced item is then free. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ.

1 AY

DAY S

$

5

1 AY

A

DAY S

A

99

LE

Phalaenopsis Orchids

FRID

Or Complete Clean Toothpaste or Extra Whitening. 75 or 130 mL. Select varieties.

FREE

FRID

FRID

FRI

D FRID

5

ea.

NE BUY O NE O GET

Bakery Counter Chocolate Chip Cookies

LE

Great Deal!

A

Crest Toothpaste

A

Baked ! Fresh

LE

580 g.

$

DAY S

DAY S

LE

Product of U.S.A. 340 g. HOUSEHOLD LIMIT ONE FREE.

1 AY

LE

Raspberries

5 for $5!

LE

Signature CAFE Homestyle Meatloaf

Great Deal!

DAY SA

Assorted varieties. 2 Litre. LIMIT TEN - Combined varieties. Plus deposit posit it and/or enviro levy where applicable.

From the Deli!

5

ea. steak

LE

Coca-Cola or Pepsi Soft Drinks

$

LE

Cut from 100% Canadian beef. Sold in a package of 2 for only $10.00. LIMIT OF SIX PACKAGES. Whilee 1 DAY SA AY supplies last.

Great Deal!

1 AY

14

R

“New York”” Striploin Steaks

e Packag of 2!

2 Litre!

1 AY

SEPTEMBE

th

9

SEPTEMBER 14 FRI Prices in this ad good on Sept. 14th.


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