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Price effective at all British Columbia Safeway stores Friday, October 5, 2012. 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.
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October 4 – 10, 2012
WEVancouver.com
WHO
ARE
Publisher Anne Devereaux • 604-742-8684 publisher@wevancouver.com
the week ahead
Oct 4 - 10
Managing Editor Martha Perkins • 604-742-8695 editor@wevancouver.com Editorial staff Kelsey Klassen • 604-742-8699 kelsey@wevancouver.com Contributors Andrew Morrison Kurtis Kolt May Globus Curtis Woloschuk Thor Diakow Jenn Chic Gen Handley Greg Ursic Ulrike Rodrigues
30th Anniversary of Rambo First Blood
Photography Editor Doug Shanks • 604-742-8691 photo@wevancouver.com Advertising Manager Gail Nugent • 604-742-8678 admanager@wevancouver.com Display Advertising sales@wevancouver.com Dave Pagani • 604-742-8683 dave@wevancouver.com Lillian Wei • 604-742-8681 lillian@wevancouver.com Angela Meier • 604-742-8679 angela@wevancouver.com Shawna Kisell • 604-742-8680 shawna@wevancouver.com Classified Advertising 604-575-5555 classifieds@wevancouver.com Creative Services Supervisor Robbin Sheriland 604-742-8671 ads@wevancouver.com Creative Services Staff Tara Rafiq Circulation Miguel Black • 604.742.8676 circulation@wevancouver.com 280-1770 Burrard St., Vancouver, BC, V6J 3G7
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Member of Black Press, B.C. Press Council, Canadian Community Newspapers Association. Published at Vancouver by the MetroValley Newspaper Group a Division of Black Press Group Ltd. Editorial submissions are welcome but unsolicited manuscripts will not be returned. Submissions may be edited for brevity and legality. Opinions in columns are not necessarily shared by the publisher. Copyright and/ or property rights subsist in all display advertising and other material appearing in WE. If, in the publisher’s judgment, an error is made that materially affects the value of the advertisement to the advertiser, a corrected advertisement will be inserted upon demand without further charge. “Make-good” insertions are not granted on minor errors which do not lessen the value of the advertisement. Notice of error required before second insertion.
FEE FI FO FUN Beware rampaging trolls, a fire-breathing dragon and a dismembered Rumplestiltskin when riding the Stanley Park Ghost Train through this year’s Scary Fairy Tales. The train runs nightly from October 5 to 31, 6pm to 10pm Sunday to Thursday, 6pm to 11pm Fridays and Saturdays, and a $5 matinee from 11am to 3pm every Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday. Families can enjoy activities such as face painting, crafts, pumpkin patch and haunted castle in the surrounding courtyard. There are also movie nights at 7pm Sundays (Mirror Mirror) and Thursdays (The Princess Bride). The Ghost Train is fully covered so riders ride the fright line rain or shine. Tickets are $6.25 (for ages two to 18, and seniors) and $9.82 (adults) and there is free parking available. GhostTrain.ca or 604-257-8531
While some moviegoers like to remember the town of Hope as the backdrop for the Colin Firth movie Hope Springs, this weekend the picturesque town is going all out for Rambo. Thirty years ago, Sylvester Stallone looked as rugged as the terrain when he filmed First Blood there. Stallone fans from around the world will congregate in Hope from October 5 to 8 to celebrate the film’s anniversary. The street festival will feature a 40-foot screen right on top of a key filming location, a look-alike contest and a Saturday visit from Vancouver-based actor Stephen Chang, who played the Vietanamese commander who captured and tortured Rambo in First Blood. Did you know that the word Rambo has made it into the Oxford dictionary? It means “an exceptionally tough, aggressive man.” Rambo.TravelTheCanyon.com
Take the Eastside Stride on Thanksgiving Vancouver’s warm, dry weather has shattered a 116-year-old record for August and September. And while September might be on the books, the sun is still expected to stick around for the next seven to 10 days, setting up an unseasonably warm Thanksgiving Day on Oct. 8. If you’re looking for ways to get outdoors and in the community, check out the Eastside Stride, a Homelessness Action Week project available from October 8 to 14 to anyone who wants to know more about the Downtown Eastside, past and present. The two-hour walking tour, developed by Union Gospel Mission in partnership with Mission Possible, Youth Unlimited, and with support from the City of Vancouver and numerous local service providers, not only builds awareness and promotes education within Greater Vancouver; it gives employment to local residents in an empowering and dignified manner. UGM.ca [See page 15 for MEAL details]
Vancouver Art/Book Fair The first annual Vancouver Art/Book Fair presents a series of free events from Oct. 5 to 7. This event, the only of its kind on the West Coast, will feature a curated selection of books, magazines and printed ephemera by more than 70 local, national and international publishers, and conversations and performances by local and international publishers, artists, graphic designers and writers at the Vancouver Art Gallery (750 Hornby). Swing by the reception Friday at 8pm at Project Space (222 E. Georgia) to meet the exhibitors and take in the launch of Wandering Art Metropole Publications and Ephemera Archive: Part 2, featuring a selection of materials from Toronto’s Art Metropole archive, on • 11 kinds of burritos until November 18. • 11 kinds of tacos • House Special: Chiles VancouverArtBookFair. Rellenos com • Daily Specials • Fresh Guacamole • Try our Exotic Drink: Tepache
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When a teenager (Matreya Fedor) gets in trouble with her parents about how much time she spends texting, she takes refuge with her grandmother (Gabrielle Rose) in OMG, which runs Oct. 8 and 9 at VIFF.
Amanda Tapping and Zac Santiago star in Random Acts of Romance. They play a couple who met in college (she was his professor). He wants to re-ignite their marriage; she wants the millionaire next door. It premieres Friday night at VIFF.
OMG! Teen fights with parents!
Random Acts of Romance: how to make love work
By Martha Perkins
A
s a mother, Roslyn Muir knows what it’s like to feel your teenaged daughter is living in a different world. All the lessons she might have learned from her own youth seem quaintly outdated. Too much has changed from one generation to the next, thanks to the words and images glowing enticingly from our computer screens and smart phones. “It’s just a whole new culture and we have to accept that we can’t make them be like our generation,” says the West End screenwriter. Instead of forcing today’s teenagers to make the shift back in time to when Muir’s parents didn’t allow her to wear blue jeans or talk too long on the phone, modern parents have to learn what expectations they have to let go of as their children make their way through this new technological reality. That’s the premise behind OMG, a feature film that Muir wrote and which is making its début at the Vancouver International Film Fest. Directed by Siobhan Devine, the madein-Vancouver production stars Gabrielle Rose as a grandmother who provides emotional and physical refuge to her granddaughter who has a huge blow-out with her parents over how much time she spends texting. It’s a movie that everyone involved could relate to. “I have a deep sentimental attraction to my phone. It goes with me everywhere,” says
14-year-old Matreya Fedor, who transforms herself from her sweet-faced roles in Mr. Young and The Troop into the kohl-eyed emoGoth and cellphone-addicted teen. “I understand how the parents feel,” says Devine. When you’re trying to understand the world teenagers live in, “you feel like you’re catching up all the time.” As much as parents like to feel they’re in control, all too often it’s the parents turning to their children for help with all the technology. The movie makes everyone grapple with that technology’s invasiveness in our lives — and the fact that we’re the ones who open the door and let it in. “We have an addiction to gossip,” says Rose, who, if you were to use the word “veteran” to describe her presence in the Vancouver scene, would make her seem much too old and much less vibrant than she really is. “You want to be in the know all the time. That way you’re not alone with your thoughts.” Muir had her daughter Erika read the script and admits to eavesdropping on Erika to get the teen’s language just right. Erika also wrote some of the texts for the move. WE Vancouver asked Matreya to write the text she’d send to her friends to tell them about the VIFF screenings on Oct. 8 (6:30pm at the Empire Granville) and Oct. 9 (1pm at Pacific Cinematheque.) “Hey! Wanna check out this movie? Its awesome, called OMG. Text me back when u c it. L8r.”
By Martha Perkins
W
hat happens when the lust remains but a couple is no longer in like with one another? When is a marriage worth saving or when do you accept that the relationship is simply gone past its bestbefore date? What if one of you wants to save the marriage and the other wants to walk away? Welcome to Random Acts of Romance. “It explores relationships that are falling apart and the lengths that the couples go to to salvage them,” says director Katrin Bowen (Amazon Falls.) “It’s about everything that’s involved with making love work.” “They love each other but they stop liking each other,” says Amanda Tapping, one of the Vancouver actresses who stars in the movie that premieres this week at the Vancouver International Film Festival. (In this role, “the grand empress of sci-fi” [Stargate, Sanctuary] is definitely playing against type. Tapping has been married for 18 years to a man she also considers her best friend.) “It’s kind of an anti-romantic comedy,”
says Bowen. “Guys will get it.” The movie is about two couples and the three single people “who lead them down a dark path as they try to capture love.” As the website’s synopsis says, “Random Acts of Romance shows us that love is not perfect. It’s sloppy, messy and it’s what makes us human. At the end of the day, you have to laugh at it.” The move explores what happens when “one person in each relationship comes to an understanding of where they are now and the other wants them to stay as they were when they first met,” says Tapping. And as much as the movie is about love, “there is a lot of lust in the movie,” Bowen says with a smile. “They’re really sexy.” But that’s the thing about the sex side of love in a relationship that needs both loving and liking. The love might keep the sex going but “the like is much harder.” “If you don’t like yourself,” says Laura Bertram, one of the other actresses in the film, “you will not be happy with anyone else.” Random Acts of Romance is at the Empire Granville at 6pm on Oct. 5, noon on Oct. 9 and 6pm on Oct. 12. Go to VIFF.org for tickets.
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October 4 – 10, 2012
WEVancouver.com
VIFF: Tragically Hip concert turns Bobcaygeon into a star “It was in Bobcaygeon I saw the constellations reveal themselves one star at a time” — lyrics of “Bobcaygeon” by the Tragically Hip
Gord Downey in Bobcaygeon (the film and town.)
Smell gas?
By Martha Perkins
Get out, then call:
J
ust south of where the Canadian Shield turns Ontario’s bucolic farmlands into a rugged vastness of rocks and forests, the town of Bobcaygeon is built along the shores of the Trent Severn Waterway. It’s one of those quintessential cottage country tourist towns where people eat ice cream cones while watching the boats go through the waterway’s locks. Up until a few years ago, the town’s second biggest draw was Bigley’s Shoes, a local retail empire that has nearly taken over the main street. But that was before the Tragically Hip became mesmerized by the town’s name. Bob-cay-jun. “Gord Downey loved the word and the sound of it,” says Andy Keen whose film, Bobcaygeon, will make its world premiere at the Vancouver International Film Festival. From that one word a song was born. Listeners can come up with their own interpretations but the band’s video is about a police officer returning to the peaceful refuge of the woman he loves after a riot at a band concert. She lives in... Bobcaygeon. The song became one of the anthems of the Tragically Hip’s fans who always thought, “Wouldn’t it be cool if the Tragically Hip actually sang the song Bobcaygeon at a concert in Bobcaygeon?” A couple of years ago, the Hip decided to do just that and contacted Keen to film it. “They wanted to come at it differently and do something for their fans about their fans,” Keen says, reached at his
FortisBC’s 24-hour Emergency Line at 1-800-663-9911, or 911. Natural gas is used safely in homes across B.C. everyday. FortisBC adds an odourant that smells like rotten eggs or sulphur. If there’s a leak, you’ll smell it.
Horse’s Mouth Media office in Toronto before he flies to Vancouver for the premiere. “But it’s not a Q and A or bio pic. It’s essentially a film about an important concert they play.” As soon as the concert — which included Sam Roberts and The Trews — was announced, the fans and the town went crazy. Bobcaygeon has a permanent population of about 2,500; more than 10 times that number of people bought tickets for the concert in a farmer’s field overlooking a lake. “The concert was magical,” says Keen, who became a hardcore fan during the making of the movie. And what did he discover about the fans themselves? Apart from their devotion, and bewilderment about why the band isn’t bigger in the States, Keen says “these people really feel there’s something about the music that they get and no one else really does.” Bobcaygeon screens on Oct. 8 and 9. For details and tickets go to VIFF.com.
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Fade to black at Denman Cinemas By Greg Ursic
T
he Denman Cinemas opened its doors in 1969 and earned a loyal neighbourhood following thanks to its comfy seats, reasonable prices and decidedly West End vibe, including the long escalator ride into the depths of the mall. The theatre closed briefly in 1989 and reopened as a discount repertory theatre; in 2010 it underwent extensive renovations. While the theatre was doing well, the owners were notified by their landlord that the theatre’s lease was not being renewed and on
After 43 years, Denman Cinemas is no more. Doug Shanks
September 30, the lights went down for the last time. It now joins other independent single-screen theatres such as the Van East (closed in 2010) and The Hollywood (2011) as places that live on only in our collective memory. The only independents left standing are The Dunbar, The Park, Fifth Avenue Cinemas and The Ridge, which will likely fall to the wrecking ball in early 2013. (Pacific Cinematheque and Vancity Theatre are not-for-profits.) With even multiplexes being shuttered — both the Oakridge and Station Square Cinemas closed earlier this month — the future is challeng-
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ing for single-screen venues. Leonard Schein, president of Festival Cinemas (The Park, The Ridge and Fifth Avenue Cinemas), says theatres “have a high square footage, heavy property taxes and landlords who want to find a tenant that will make money. [Landlords] can make even more money if they convert them to condos.” Indeed The Ridge is going condo, as did The Varsity before it and likely The Hollywood as well. So can the independents make a go of it? Ken Charko, the owner of the Dunbar and the director of the Motion Picture Theatre Association of BC says, “Yes. The Dunbar has done quite well and we don’t have a problem getting product.” Schein echoes these sentiments, noting that The Park and Fifth Avenue Cinemas are also doing well, as was The Ridge until Meinhardt’s departure from the shopping centre in December 2010 and rumours that The Ridge would quickly follow suit. Indeed many people don’t realize that the theatre is still operational two years after the fact. Charko feels that the odds are stacked against the independents because of the way distribution deals are structured. Theatres are required to run a film for two or three weeks and can’t show anything else. This makes life “very challenging”, especially for single-screen venues.
The Park and The Dunbar won’t be going anywhere soon, but Schein is a realist: “As Cambie gets more developed, after 10 years [The Park] probably won’t be there anymore.” Charko agrees that The Dunbar is probably looking at a similar time frame. But all the changes may signal a new step in the evolution of the independents. Tom Charity, the programmer for Vancity Theatre, says a growing trend in London might offer some hope. “[There’s] a phenomenon of popup cinemas; cinema events in other venues, such as pubs. There’s even someone opening a new single screen using a place under an old rail line which they’re transforming.” Charity believes that true film fans will always seek out alternatives to blockbusters. “There’s always a hunger for different ways of looking at the world and with the closure of DVD stores, it’s harder to find less mainstream movies. It’s a question of finding the right economic model to make those available to people.” And all hope is not lost for the Denman. DenmanCinemas.com says, “Thank you for making our dream to own a cinema such a wonderful experience. We are actively seeking another opportunity, and we will let you know if we find a new cinema to call home. Until then, take care, be well, and don’t eat too much popcorn.”
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Jordan Eng, vicepresident of the Vancouver Chinatown BIA Society, city councillor Raymond Louie and Brian Roche, president of Panther Constructors, look over the plans for The Flats at the Chinatown lane party on Sept. 27. Martha Perkins photo
Mark Your Calendar
Only 28 feet wide, The Flats turns Chinatown parking lot into condos
I
t’s not often that so many people get excited about a hole in the ground. But in the case of this long, narrow pit off East Georgia, its transformation from a parking lot to a condo building is being heralded as part of Chinatown’s renaissance as a residential neighourhood. “This signifies the confidence in Chinatown,” City of Vancouver councillor Raymond Louie said at Friday’s official launch of a 28-unit condo project called The Flats. “Only a very few places in Vancouver have this vibe and feel and history.” That history is both the area’s strength and weakness. Chinatown used to be a thriving neighbourhood; it was home — as in families lived there — to the city’s Chinese community and also a mecca for people who wanted to buy Chinese products and food. But then other neighbourhoods began springing up and you no longer had to go to Chinatown for your Sunday fix of dim sum. Families moved away and Chinatown became more of a place to visit. “Chinatown had lost its luster and was going through a downturn. You always heard ‘in the old days,” says Jordan Eng, vice-president of the Vancouver Chinatown BIA Society. The BIA responded with a 10-year process of working with community’s cultural leaders and city hall to come up with a redevelopment plan. The key to future prosperity, everyone agreed, was encouraging more people to live in the area. Meanwhile, the city recognized that with so many historic Chinatown buildings to preserve, there wasn’t much room for new residential development. As part of a city-wide strategy to create more affordable housing, zoning rules were changed to allow for laneway developments.
Cutting Costs
Now the challenge fell to Panther Constructors to build a condo building on a lot that was only 28 feet wide. President Brian Roche and his team decided to pay homage to chop houses by putting shutters on each unit’s Juliette balcony. (The doors to the “balcony” open but there’s only a railing, not a space you can step onto.) The metal-clad building is awash in yellow hues in deference to Chinatown official colour. There are 26 one-bedroom units ranging in size between 500 and 665 sq.ft. and in price between $269,000 and $400,000. The top storeys are two penthouses with rooftop gardens, one 1,350 sq.ft. and the other 1,400 sq.ft. Of the 28 units, 23 have already been sold, as has the street level retail space. “We love being around here,” says Roche, who lives and works in the neighbourhood. He wanted to ensure that The Flats’ design could be easily woven into Chinatown’s fabric. For him, that fabric includes a growing array of restaurants. His list of favourites includes Bao Bei, Kent’s Kitchen, Phnom Penh and Harvest, all within easy walking distance of The Flats, which also has ready access to transit, Sky Train and the Union Street bike path. Two fans are Marcia Nozick and Douglas Aason, the CEO and director of recruitment at EMBERS (Eastside Movement for Business and Economic Renewal Society.) It provides work training to people who have graduated from addiction recovery programs. The Flats won’t be the first Panther project to hire EMBERS’ staff, nor will it be the last. “Panther has always been one of our closest companies because Brian really gets it,” says Nozick. Aason adds, “They’re really committed to the community and mean what they say. Brian walks the walk and talks the talk. He’s a great employer.”
Culinary Brunch Celebration Thursday, October 11th, 11:30 am – 1:00 pm We invite all local business leaders to join us for a delicious brunch at our residence. Refreshments will be served and door prizes to be won. Tours of our residence available.
Crofton Manor
Seating is limited. Call to RSVP today!
2803 West 41st Ave Vancouver 604-263-0921 Revera: Canadian owned for 50 years with more than 250 locations.
reveraliving.com
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By Martha Perkins
Revera - Crofton Manor invites you to join us as we host our upcoming Culinary Brunch Series:
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October 4 – 10, 2012
7
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ShopTalk By Kelsey Klassen
From weird to WTF Among the beauty of the runway shows every season, there are always a few beasts. The “winnersâ€? of Spring 2013? Prada’s leather socks (the next ballet flats perhaps?) and CĂŠline’s trompe l’oeil toe shoes (complete with faux pedicure).
hundreds of high-end costumes for sale, to create a mix-and-match concept that leaves every costume complete, right down to accessories and wigs. You can buy online at BooLaLaCostumes.com or make the trip to the North Shore (152 East 2nd, 2nd f loor). 604-986-4880 A good-sized Hallowe’en costume pop-up has opened at the old Esprit location at 1066 Robson. It’s open regular business hours.
Just in time for Hallowe’en If you like to think on things for a while, TM Events — a local event and promotion company — is selling off costumes that they have used at events. On Saturday, Oct. 20, from noon to 6pm, hundreds of male and female costumes and accessories will be 50 - 70 per cent off retail. Cash or credit only. DOMUS Party Room, 1055 Homer (access from the back lane between Nelson and Helmcken). Call 604-760-7465 for info.
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I wouldn’t be a good Mennonite girl without feeling a hint of nostalgia at the new pieces from Spanish label D-Due. Inspired by the craftsmanship of the Amish and Mennonites, D-Due’s three winter collections are made from beautiful, organically dye-tinted, natural materials — wool, cotton and silk. Hand-drawn illustrations make each garment unique. The label got some serious buzz when, last month, it popped up (literally) at Kapok, on Hong Kong’s hipstercentral Sun Street. If it’s not your street thing, you could always go as a Mennonite for Hallowe’en, just don’t trick-or-treat out near Yarrow; you’ll blend right in. Available in Canada exclusively at Urbanity, 2412 Granville. Urbanity.ca
Putting rumours to rest
D-Due
Early birds and people with their acts together
Looking for a costume change? Boo La La (formerly Carol’s Costume Corner) in North Vancouver, has been ghouling and glamming the Lower Mainland for more than 25 years. They’ve built their reputation as one of Canada’s most reputable and successful costume stores by combining thousands of designer/vintage costumes for rent with
Old Navy (not an Apple flagship store, nor Japanese retailer Uniqlo, as previously speculated) has signed a lease for a 12,365 square foot store at the corner of Granville and Robson Street. The store will take up part of the ground level, with an escalator taking shoppers to its 10,767 sq. ft. second floor. The building, which used to house Granville Optical, True Value Vintage, Hitz Boutique, and more, is currently under construction and will have the address 720 Robson. The announcement is receiving markedly less fanfare than the “ghost sign� revealed during the demolition, which had been hidden for nine decades, advertising a 1922 movie. Old Navy will be located directly across the street from Vancouver’s new Nordstrom store, set to open in 2015 as previously reported. — From the BC Les Clefs d’Or
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October 4 – 10, 2012
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Best international style city:
SHEREEN JAMIL, 20
Florence, Italy.
Even on my ‘blah’-est day, I won’t leave the house without: A good
What was your first trophy as a kid:
smelling perfume.
Freelance journalist, photographer and student. Front row regular at music gigs around Vancouver. You can’t miss her big smile and her bigger camera.
I got a ballet trophy when I was five.
Where are you from: Vancouver.
Dream splurge item:
Women look their best when: They keep it natural.
Alexander McQueen rings.
Where do you get your style inspiration: From my
People tell you that you look like:
moods and the seasons.
Something that surprises people about you: I love skateboarding.
Describe your style: I can’t! It always changes, but I really like basics and classics. I’ve never been a fan of trends because they fade.
Last time you cried and why: I’m a cry
Proudest accomplishment: Getting my photogra-
How do you unwind: Read or watch
baby.
phy published in a book this summer and at two art galleries, where my prints have been sold. But I think, over all, we have little victories and accomplishments every day in our life.
I-Event.ca Bees honey lip balm.
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Describe your personal power outfit from head to toe: I think a confident outfit for me is leggings, with an oversized V-neck tank, jean jacket and casual wedge boots. I usually don’t do anything to my hair or bother with make up. I like to keep it natural/basic but fashionable.
Where do you shop for everyday staples: Multiple stores on Commercial Drive.
Where do you look for that after-hours ‘wow’ outfit: Urban Outfitters or El Kartel. What fashion event do you look forward to the most every year: I think they differ every year, but I dig a lot of the pop up shows/events at The Waldorf Hotel.
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Fashion pet peeve: Don’t wear leggings as pants. Favourite: • Drink: Chai tea latte • Food: My mom’s homemade, gluten-free muffins • Store/designer: Free People • Perfume: The smell of old and new books • Blog/magazine: Dazed & Confused • Vancouver street: Commercial • Local charity: David Suzuki Foundation • Spot to people watch: It’s a secret
Françoise Hardy [French singer, actress and astrologer]. She was such a 60s babe.
What’s your beauty life saver: Burt’s
What’s in your purse at this very moment:
An antique ring shaped as a wishbone.
If you could have coffee with a fashion icon, who and why:
movies from the 80s.
Black Marc Jacobs satchel — Amethyst crystal, Orange Blossom LUSH perfume, a pen, money, school ID, U-Pass and lip balm.
What is your most sentimental wardrobe item:
No one else in this world.
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Each neighbourhood has its own tastes, says Trevor Kallies, the bar and beverage director for Donnelly Group. Gen Handley photo
Donnelly Group customizes craft beer list for each bar By Gen Handley
W
hen asked to describe the best part of his job, Trevor Kallies does not have a hard time coming up with an answer. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the research,â&#x20AC;? he says with a smile. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the best part â&#x20AC;&#x201D; itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a lot of fun. â&#x20AC;&#x153;But itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also the growing community of beer drinkers and brewers. There are a lot of really nice people in the industry.â&#x20AC;? Kallies is the bar and beverage director for the Donnelly Group, coordinating and choosing what is poured and mixed at the 16 locations around the city. When the Donnelly Group opened up the New Oxford in Yaletown two years ago, the company decided to start looking beyond the ubiquitous mainstream beers for what they poured from their taps. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was a conversation amongst a few of us and we lobbied pretty heavy to move away from what we knew and into something different,â&#x20AC;? Kallies says, sitting against the weathered wood bar at Smileyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Public House. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was all about giving customers more options,â&#x20AC;? he says. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was never about not serving those beers because we donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t like them, it was about focusing on different styles â&#x20AC;&#x201C; trying to get more local, a lot more product-focused.â&#x20AC;? Kallies says the abundance of BC craft beers makes his job both easier and harder. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not just the Lower Mainland, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s all over BC,â&#x20AC;? he says. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have breweries in Fernie, we have breweries in Powell River, which is amazing. Salmon Arm has a brewpub, Barley Station â&#x20AC;&#x201D; I grew up there and there was nothing like that when I was growing up. Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s no shortage of breweries all over and weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re so lucky to be so close to that craft beer boom in the States as well â&#x20AC;&#x201D; in Portland, Seattle, all over Washington State.â&#x20AC;?
Each of the Donnelly pubs has a draught beer lineup customized to its clientele. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s based on neighbourhood. When we talk about the Academic in Kits, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s definitely that college bar with a huge UBC presence so we want to make sure we have the beers theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re going drink at the price point theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re going to drink them. So weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not going be putting on that $320 keg of American craft beer because we canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t sell it for that $3.50-$4.50 special that the UBC kids want. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s definitely more local and little more mainstream,â&#x20AC;? he says, looking over at the row of Smileyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s taps. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re sitting at Smileyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s right now, which is the centre of the financial district and weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve got a bit more of an educated palate that comes in here. These are the same guys that are having power lunches over at Gotham Steak House and they get it â&#x20AC;&#x201D; theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re interested in a little more punch in their beer.â&#x20AC;? Kallies says the goal is to create a balanced beer selection, which can be a challenge. So what does a balanced beer lineup generally look like? â&#x20AC;&#x153;You need your locals because that appeases tourists,â&#x20AC;? he explains. â&#x20AC;&#x153;You want to make sure youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve got a couple beers that are local favourites where theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re going to have heard about them before or be surprised that we have a local craft beer. You need a lager or two that everybody can enjoy. A couple IPAs [India Pale Ales]. If you donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have room for two, maybe pick one that has medium to heavy hop content as opposed to that super punchy, all-hop flavouring â&#x20AC;&#x201D; that might be too much for a balance unless you have room for more than one IPA. A couple of wheat beers. You need that range of beers. If I had 12 taps, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d have a stout, a cider, a wheat, a North American-style lager, a European lager and then play around with the rest with interesting styles like a porters, seasons and stuff like that.â&#x20AC;?
DonnellyGroup.ca
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October 4 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 10, 2012
Is it a coincidence that BC microbreweries have created not one but three bike-inspired beers? By Ulrike Rodrigues Surreyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Central City Brewing Company offers seven beers with its saucy girl-ingarters-on-aglider image. It serves up a variety of ales, lagers, and an Extra Special Bitter. RedRacerBeer. com
A hoppy India pale ale, Switchback offers â&#x20AC;&#x153;citrus, stone fruit and tropical flavoursâ&#x20AC;? balanced by â&#x20AC;&#x153;mediumbodied, fresh malt characters.â&#x20AC;? LighthouseBrewing. com)
Slipstream, a Phillips Brewing Company ale is â&#x20AC;&#x153;mediumbodied and smooth like a pedal strokeâ&#x20AC;? and pairs well with chicken, salmon, and brick cheeses. PhillipsBeer.com
WEVancouver.com
Harvest Community Foods has snagged the culinary talents of Andrea Carlson. Andrew Morrison photo
Japanese ramen comes to Chinatown What’s surprising is who’s making it: Andrea Carlson
OnThePlate By Andrew Morrison
G
ood ramen is almost the exclusive provenance of the West End, specifically the lower blocks of Robson and the 700 block of Denman. Around these parts one can slurp up the addictive Japanese noodle soup at nearly a dozen restaurants. Tiny Motomachi Shokudo is widely considered to be the best among them, its owner Daiji Matsubara being the undisputed local master of the milieu. He also owns the wildly popular (but less attractive) Kintaro, which is only a few doors down the street. The geographical concentration is fine, but I’ve always (selfishly) wanted to see the soups available in other neighbourhoods, particularly my own. Given that I live on the edge of Chinatown, however, the likelihood of a ramen house opening up shop within stumbling distance of my front door has always seemed remote. But then the unlikeliest of things happened a few weeks ago. Ramen — really good ramen — came to Chinatown, specifically (if surprisingly) to a little locavore grocery on Union Street called Harvest Community Foods. My family has been big fans of the place ever since it opened some six months ago. The produce has always been fresh; they make good steamed buns and always interesting vegetable soups. And it is one of the only places in town where we can score the oh-my-god-it’s-so-good salted caramel ice cream from local upstarts Earnest Ice Cream. There was much to love about the wee place, but a couple of months ago owner Michael Leung started casting about for a chef to come in and take the food concept to the next level. Never in my life would I have expected him to get chef Andrea Carlson, one of BC’s top culinary talents, to come in and take the helm. Carlson, who has cheffed such ships of representative state as Denman’s Raincity Grill and at West 4th’s celebrated Bishop’s restaurant, might be punching well below her weight class at Harvest, but that will hardly matter to her new customers. Neither will the fact that her miniscule kitchen is so woefully under-equipped that calling it a kitchen is pretty generous. What matters — as always — is if the food is any good, and since Harvest is now a Carlson joint, quality is a test it doesn’t have to take.
WEVancouver.com
But back to the ramen. How good is it? It’s up there with Matsubara’s, and that’s saying something. The noodles are made locally at Toko, the pork is from the Fraser Valley, the mounted greens are from SOLEfood, and the accompanying smoked chili oil is made with chilies from Klippers organic farm in the Similkameen. Matsubara’s finessed soup bases are dizzying in their excellence, but he’s had years to perfect and fiddle. Carlson has been at it for just a couple of weeks, and she’s doing a better job than most. Like most ramen houses, there are two pork (“tonkotsu”) base options: regular or fatty. The latter is cloudy with the promise of unrelenting porkiness. It’s (naturally) much tastier than the thinner format, but both have that distinct, warming, comforting quality that makes ramen so endearingly attractive. There really is nothing quite like it, especially in Fall and Winter, when both body and mind crave heartier supping. Carlson adds fatty slices of pork belly to the noodles. These are marinated in soy, garlic and ginger, and they are leaps and bounds more impactful than the dry slabs that one gets at places like Kintaro and Gyoza King. And as a personal touch, Carlson caps each bowl with a delicious strip of mirin-candied bacon. I’ve had three bowls in two weeks, with each being an improvement on the last. The only thing that could make it better would be a cold bottle of Sapporo beer. (Alas, Harvest doesn’t have a licence to sell alcohol). There are other noodle soups, too. Carlson does an udon in an organic shiitake mushroom broth that comes loaded with smoked Saltspring Island tofu and shiso (in a nod to Japanese umeboshi, it’s finished with unripe, salt and shiso-cured Similkameen plums). There’s also a version with FarmCrest organic chicken from Salmon Arm uniquely marinated in Sake Kasu (the lees left over from sake production at Granville Island Sake Co.) and a spicy Dan Dan-style noodle dish made with hazelnuts instead of peanuts. In addition to the noodle soups, she’s added a Banh Mi-style sandwich made with pork shoulder, pate, pickles and fresh herbs. The steamed buns — regular and gluten-free — are still on the menu, though their innards will rotate through various meaty and vegetarian options. The response to the changes to date, Carlson says, has been “fantastic”. I’ve seen it with my own eyes. Harvest has been noticeably busier since word of her ramen started to trickle out, and though I hope for my sake that I never have to suffer a line-up for it (as one invariably must for good ramen in the West End), I won’t be surprised to be confronted by one soon.
Vote for your favourite places to eat in Vancouver and you might win an iPad! Go to the contest page at WE Vancouver .com
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October 4 – 10, 2012
11
Fresh at the farmers market: Pickling cucumbers By Jenn Chic
C
APPY HOUR! SELECT APPETIZERS
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ucumbers are nothing but cool and refreshing. They add freshness to tzatziki, a zing to a gin cocktail or a welcome crunch to a salad. Made up of 96 per cent water and a good source of potassium, they are a natural electrolyte (and a much more local source than the trendy coconut water.) While we can’t enjoy fresh, local cucumbers all year long, we can enjoy their delightful crunch deep into the winter months with a little bit of pickling. Chef Andrea Carlson, known for her love of local, organic ingredients has been busy this summer making naturally fermented pickles from the abundance of baby pickling cukes at the farmers market. Carlson can often be spotted at one of the Vancouver Farmers Markets, when she’s not to too busy with the planning of her new restaurant, Burdock & Company, opening before Christmas, or making ramen at Harvest (see page 11). In early August she was a guest judge for the annual PNE Preserves & Pickles Competition at Main Street Station Market. More recently she appeared at the monthly Farmers Market Kitchen, at Trout Lake Market, showing crowds how to make a delicious dish with the farmers market’s finest produce. Here she shares her pickling wisdom, “The fresher the cucumbers, the crunchier the pickle — so try to pickle the same day the cukes are harvested, if possible.” Chef Andrea Carlson’s Green Fennel Seed Cucumber Pickles Natural Ferment ½ cup kosher salt
6 large heads green fennel seed 10 cloves fresh garlic, smashed 20 black peppercorns 3.5 litres cold water 1 fresh market chili pepper, cayenne, sliced 2-3 pounds wee pickling cucumbers — freshly picked, washed and blossom removed With mortar and pestle, smash fennel seeds and salt to release fennel fragrance. Mix with garlic and all remaining ingredients in a ceramic crock or large glass jar. Stir to dissolve salt. Add cucumbers and submerge by covering with clean plate. Ensure they have no contact with air (if they do they will rot). Leave in cool place for 2-4 weeks. Skim anything that may rise to surface. Keep checking to ensure cukes stay under the brine. They are ready when lightly sour and effervescent in the mouth. Definitely discard pickle project if it smells bad — you will know…. Jenn Chic is a writer, photographer, baker, cook and the market manager for the Kitsilano and Kerrisdale Farmers Markets. JennChicCooks.com. Chef Andrea Carlson’s recipe for Grilled Swiss Chard Parcels can be found at EatLocal. org.
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GRANVILLE & DRAKE 718 Drake Street 604-605-0045
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GEORGIA & CARDERO 1616 West Georgia Street 604-681-8034
October 4 – 10, 2012
CAMBIE & 13TH 2850 Cambie Street 604-873-1252
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OAKRIDGE CENTRE 41st & Cambie 604-621-2820
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WEVancouver.com
A judge’s toast to BC wine CityCellar
By Kurtis Kolt
W
hat a difference a year makes! Last weekend was my sophomore venture as a judge at the BC Wine Awards, a competition celebrating the best wines in the province occurring in tandem with the Okanagan Fall Wine Festival. The measure by which the bar was raised in just 12 months is testament to not only the rapid evolution of the British Columbian wine industry, but further evidence of increased confidence in our natural, regional character. There were nine judges comprised of media and retail representatives and restaurant buyers hailing from Quebec, Washington State and many points in between. Any winery could enter their wines (with an $89 entry fee to support the Festival,) provided the wines were composed of 100 per cent BC fruit and currently available for sale. We started with 550 wines in all. Sitting in three panels over four days, we were presented flights of anywhere from eight to 12 wines, each within the same category (Merlots, Red Blends, etc.) The tasting was completely blind; the only information given was grape variety and vintage. The goal was to award bronzes and silvers where we deemed appropriate, with possible golds going to a final round where all nine judges would have an ultimate vote of whether finalists should be golds or silvers. There was no minimum or maximum number of awards requested, just a commitment that we’d use our best judgement and give each wine its due diligence. After individual tasting and note-taking, we discussed each wine as a panel, reaching a verdict on an award (or not) that eventually found us giving props to a couple hundred of the entries, mostly bronze, fewer silver and two dozen golds. Those gold awards represent what seem to be working well for BC. Cabernet Francs (Tinhorn Creek, Church & State) burst with bright, red fruit and fresh herbs without being the least bit stemmy or green, while Syrahs (Quinta Ferreira, Black Hills) perfectly combined Old World complexity, earthiness and spice with a New World opulent structure, full of black and purple fruit. Aromatic whites, such as the Stoney Slope Riesling from Wild Goose or Thornhaven’s classic Gewürztraminer, told the story of our mineral-rich soil and expressed lively
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acidity, a combination of cool climate and lake effect. Chardonnays (Quail’s Gate ‘Stewart Family Reserve’ and Cedar Creek’s Platinum edition) glistened with ripe orchard fruit, layers of character and plenty of sunshine, while fellow Burgundian varieties Pinot Noir and Gamay (Meyer Family Vineyards and Robin Ridge, respectively) floated to the top with nuance, prettiness and grace. These varieties, styles and examples are indicative of the quality and strengths of BC wine today. In the year since I last judged this competition, I noted much less oak masking the natural expression of our wines, such a good thing, plus the growing restraint of a winemaker’s hand in favour of simply letting our fruit sing. Cabernet Sauvignon still seems to struggle (our short season makes it difficult to
ripen,) and I remain unconvinced that Viognier and Sauvignon Blanc are the best fit for us. (We all found most examples imbalanced and clumsy.) And then there are the new classics. Road 13’s 2009 Sparkling Chenin Blanc, both a Gold and Best Sparkling winner, has been a cult-favourite for years and was probably my personal Best in Show. Winemaker JM Bouchard’s crafting of the fruit from their 44-year-old vines into a fizzy blend of Asian pear, starfruit and fireweed honey is an absolute gem, perfect for toasting the future of British Columbian wine! For complete results of the 2012 BC Wine Awards, visit OkanaganWineAwards.com. Drop by KurtisKolt.com or follow him on Twitter @KurtisKolt.
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Road 13’s 2009 Sparkling Chenin Blanc was Kurtis Kolt’s personal favourite as a judge at the BC Wine Awards. Photo courtesy Road 13
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a few categories of our Best of Dining results, alongside Bao Bei, Maenam, Araxi, La Quercia, Cioppinio’s, Blue Water Cafe and L’Abbatoir (the restaurants that made the controversial cut). You can vote for your favourite places to eat and drink at WEVancouver.com/contests.
the fresh sheet FOOD & DRINK HAPPENINGS
Ground-breaking beer A broken-down red truck plummeted from crane height last Thursday, in a stunt to celebrate local beer maker Red Truck Brewery breaking ground on the site of its new brewery at 315 E. 1st, in East Vancouver.
Hawksworth named best in Canada Maclean’s Magazine named seven Vancouver restaurants in their Canada’s 50 best restaurants edition, with our very own Hawksworth taking down Restaurant of the Year. Citing the location in the historic Rosewood Hotel Georgia as exceptional, one can only expect the popular lunch and dinner spot, which opened only last year, to appear in
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Cooking with the stars With chefs achieving an almost cult-like following in Vancouver’s booming restaurant scene, it’s no surprise that they’re popping up on celebrity cooking shows alongside the “real” celebrities. Leftcoast TV is launching a new season of its Get Cooking With The Stars series with a party on Saturday, Oct. 20 at the Howe Street Art Gallery (555 Howe). Mingle with Olympian Nikola Girke, Beauty Night’s Caroline MacGillivray, members of the BC Lions and Stargate Universe’s Jennifer Spence while enjoying fine cuisine, cocktails and entertainment. Tickets for the event can be purchased for $40 at LeftCoastTV.com. Partial proceeds (20%) of the ticket sales will be donated to Beauty Night Society, which helps build self-esteem and changes lives for women and youth living in poverty. GCWTS has seen such world-renowned chefs as Hidekazu Tojo (Tojo’s), Chef Parichat (Pink Elephant Thai) and Vikram Vij joining entertainment industry stars. Teasers from next season’s guests and gorgeous locales will be playing throughout the evening. Get Cooking With The Stars airs on NOVUS in Vancouver (check local listings for airtimes).
With much fanfare (and fabulous food), Black Sage Vineyard was unveiled as a wine label at a special launch at the Shangri-La hotel recently. Before, it was a sub-label of Sumac Ridge Estate Winery, but now it’s standing on its own. Guests, including WE Vancouver’s City Cellar columnist Kurtis Kolt, enjoyed a 2010 Cabernet Sauvignon, 2010 Cabernet Franc, 2010 Merlot and 2007 Pipe. Executive chef Wayne Harris grew up in the Okanagan and knew which food pairings would be the perfect fit. Martha Perkins photo
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the fresh sheet continued from pg 14
Exclusive sake tasting Ki Vancouver is hosting a Sake Master Dinner with Koji Kawakami of Yoshi no Gawa Brewery, and Chef Yoshi Tabo. Guests will be introduced to an exclusive lineup of expressive sake from the Yoshi no Gawa portfolio, paired with an original menu of Nigata-inspired dishes created by Chef Yoshi Tabo. The event takes place Thursday, Oct. 11 and starts at 6:30pm for cocktails and 7pm for dinner. Tickets are $150 (taxes and gratuity included). For tickets or inquiries, please contact Chris Irwin at 604-609-0600 or Vancouver@kijapanese.com.
Doormen of Greater Vancouver dinner The 22nd annual Doormen’s Dinner celebrates Sergio and Wendy Cocchia as Honourary Doormen of the Year. The dinner will be held on Oct. 26, 6pm, at the Pinnacle Ballroom, where the Doormen of Greater Vancouver will pay tribute to the Cocchias for their fundraising efforts for organizations such as the CHILD Foundation, and their contributions to the tourism and hospitality industries. Net proceeds from the black-tie gala will benefit the CHILD Foundation, which researches Crohn’s Disease, ulcerative colitis and liver disorders in children. A table of 10 is $1,950, with individual dinner tickets going for $195. Entertainment will be provided by the Dal Richards Orchestra. Call 604-736-0645 or email nancy@child.ca to be assured seating.
Buns and bundt at the Fall Baker’s Market The Fall Baker’s Market is now accepting applications. Over nine Saturdays, from Oct. 6 until Dec. 8, (closed Oct. 27) indoors at the Moberly Arts and Cultural Centre (7646 Prince Albert), budding professional and home bakers will be selling fresh artisanal breads, soft German pretzels, croissants, cupcakes, cookies, hand made chocolates, brownies, waffles, vegan cupcakes, mini bundt cakes, gluten-free baked goods and much more. Cash only. Carb-lovers are encouraged to bring your own containers to cut down on packaging waste. To apply or find out more, head to BakersMarket.com
UBC Apple Festival The name of Canada’s newest apple will be revealed on Oct. 13 at 1pm at the UBC Apple Festival. Info at BotanicalGarden.UBC.ca/apple-festival.
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Thankful for UGM The Union Gospel Mission dining room will be a flurry of activity on Thanksgiving Monday, October 8, as the homeless, addicted and those struggling to make ends meet will be treated to a turkey dinner with all the trimmings. UGM, which has provided food and a family atmosphere for people living in poverty for more than 70 years, expects to serve some 3,000 people throughout the Lower Mainland. Doors open at 10am, with meals served at 10:30am until 4pm at 601 East Hastings and at noon at 33071 Railway Ave, New Westminster. The meal, by the numbers: • 170 turkeys (1,700 kilos) • 1,500 lbs of mashed potatoes
• 900 lbs of vegetables • 900 lbs of stuffing • 80 gallons of gravy • 260 litres of cranberry sauce • 4,000 dinner rolls • 800 pumpkin pies • 400 litres of ice cream Through its eight locations in Metro Vancouver, UGM also provides counseling, education, safe housing, and alcohol and drug recovery to those struggling with poverty, homelessness, and addiction. UGM.ca
Only a working smoke alarm can save your life! FIRE PREVENTION WEEK OCT. 7-14
Smoke alarms save lives “Fall back” to smart home safety As most Canadians turn back the clocks on November 4, here are some timely smoke and carbon monoxide (CO) safety tips: • When you change your clocks, test your smoke arlam. • You have less than three minutes to escape a fire. So when smoke alarms sound, everyone must know what to do and where to go. Having and practising an escape plan is essential. • Install one smoke alarm on every storey and outside bedrooms. Install inside bedrooms if you sleep with doors closed. • Ensure all smoke alarms are fully powered. Never take out batteries or remove an alarm from ceiling due to a false alarm. • If your home has any fuel-burning devices such as a gas furnace, gas water heater, gas appliances, or an attached garage or carport, install at least one CSAapproved carbon monoxide outside all sleeping areas. One per storey is recommended.
• Replace smoke alarms every 10 years, and CO alarms every 7-10 years (depending on manufacturer) whether battery operated or hardwired into your home’s electrical system. Carbon monoxide is colourless, odourless and tasteless. So without a CO alarm, humans cannot detect its presence. Despite the average home having several potential sources of the deadly gas, studies show that nearly 60 per cent of Canadians have not installed a CO alarm. In addition to being impossible to detect, CO also has another nefarious trait. Symptoms of carbon monoxide exposure mimic the flu, without the fever. It is routinely responsible for thousands of clinic and hospital visits each year, and is commonly misdiagnosed. Prolonged or extreme exposure causes nausea, dizziness, confusion, the loss of physical mobility, brain damage and ultimately, death. More home safety resources can be found on the www. safeathome.ca web site.
Analysis was undertaken on almost 50,000 fires that occurred in Alberta, British Columbia, and Ontario over a 5-year period involving 663 fatalities. The findings demonstrated that the death rate per 1,000 fires in the absence of a present, functioning smoke alarm was 74% greater than when a functioning smoke alarm was present.
Thanksgiving turkey fires cause for concern at 9-1-1 centre E -Comm’s fire dispatch team is warning families to be mindful of their turkey cooking during Thanksgiving weekend. “A turkey isn’t something you typically see on a list of household fire hazards, but we get 9-1-1 calls about ovens going up in flames all the time,” says Corey Kelso, E-Comm fire dispatcher. “The result can be devastating if you’re not careful every time you have something cooking for an extended period of time.”
E-Comm has received some odd calls to 9-1-1 before – including someone wanting to know how long to cook a turkey – but a turkey fire is no joke. In fact, it is a leading cause of spikes in 9-1-1 calls over the holidays. “A flame in your oven can start easily and escalate quickly,” says Kelso. “Oil drippings through a thin tinfoil turkey pan or bits of leftover food residue inside your oven are extremely flammable in a high temperature setting.”
Many fatal fires start at night Tradex, in Abbotsford October, 12-14! The event will showcase a diverse range of exhibits, lectures workshops and presentation from across North America and Beyond.
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Investigations into home fire deaths very often find that a smoke alarm did not sound. It may have been disconnected or not in working order. The batteries may have been dead, or someone may have taken them out. Smoke alone won’t necessarily wake you up. In fact, the fumes could put you into an even deeper sleep. Often, victims never wake up. Se-
niors will often need assistance from family members to put safety measures into place. As well, family members are in the best position to reinforce the precautions necessary to help their loved ones prevent or respond to a fire. Focus on these six priorities to help aging family members protect themselves against fire in the home.
■ INSTALL smoke alarms inside every bedroom, outside each sleeping area and on every level of the home, including the basement. ■ Larger homes may need ADDITIONAL smoke alarms to provide enough protection. ■ For the best protection, INTERCONNECT all smoke alarms so when one sounds they all sound. ■ An IONIZATION smoke alarm is generally more responsive to flaming fires and a PHOTOELECTRIC smoke alarm is generally more responsive to smoldering fires. For the best protection, both types of alarms or combination ionization and photoelectric alarms (also known as dual sensor alarms) are recommended. ■ Smoke alarms should be INSTALLED away from the kitchen to prevent false alarms. Generally, they should be at least 10 feet (3 meters) from a cooking appliance. ■ REPLACE all smoke alarms when they are 10 years old.
October 4 – 10, 2012
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MOVIE REVIEWS
Tim Burton returns to form in Frankenweenie FRANKENWEENIE Directed by Tim Burton Starring Martin Short, Catherine O’Hara Do you hear that? It’s the sound of all the Tim Burton fans breathing a collective sigh of relief. After several recent critical misfires including Dark Shadows and Alice in Wonderland, the director returns with a wonderfully nostalgic ode to the creature features of Hollywood’s bygone era and a nice little homage to 1931’s Frankenstein.
Frankenweenie may also be the filmmaker’s most personal flick in years. The 3D, black and white, stop-motion animated fantasy is actually based on an original 1984 short from Burton. Set in the tiny town of New Holland, young Victor is lamenting the death of his beloved dog Sparky. The boy soon conducts a science experiment to bring his pooch back and, after
SEP 27 - OCT 12, 2012
succeeding, must deal with some rather monstrous consequences. Admittedly, Frankenweenie conjures familiar imagery and story execution, but in a unique way only Burton can deliver. The brisk pace and Thor numerous nods to classic monDiakow ster films will keep the adults delighted but the very young ones may find some of the subject matter a tad terrifying. While the movie is executed with nearly
Do you recognize any of these teenagers? THE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER Starring Logan Lerman, Emma Watson, Ezra Miller Directed by Stephen Chbosky
The Comedy (USA, 94 min.)
Becoming Redwood
Looking for indie sensibility that cuts deep? Rick Alverson’s The Comedy is a must-see. Its finger on the pulse of wearying hipster humour, it’s “transgressively brilliant... an itchy critique of entitlement.”—Village Voice. Tim Heidecker, Eric Wareheim, James Murphy and Gregg Turkington star in this “epic display of the over-privileged, eternally adolescent white American male behaving badly... Alverson is onto something culturally significant.”—Hollywood Reporter
(Canada, 98 min.) In this light-hearted tale set in the 70s, Jesse James Miller (Uganda Rising, VIFF ‘06) introduces us to the tumultuous world of 11-year-old Redwood, who is only one shot away from defeating Jack Nicklaus at the Masters, freeing his father from jail and reuniting his parents forever. Or so he thinks. Thu. Oct 11, 6:15 pm, Granville 7 Fri. Oct 12, 2:45 pm, Granville 7
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perfect technical precision when it comes to sight and sound, it also conveys a surprising amount of depth and emotion. Past Burton collaborators Winona Ryder, Martin Landau, Catherine O’Hara and Martin Short all provide brilliant voice work, with several filling multiple roles. The end result is a refreshing and heartfelt gem that crackles with energy and enthusiasm, even though some of the narrative may feel a bit stitched together from past sources.
Adapting his own novel for the big screen, Stephen Chbosky presents us with a scenario that’s instantly relatable to any former teenaged outsider. You know how it goes: One moment, you’re an emotionally fragile, incredibly skittish 15-year-old; the next you’re hanging out with two older outcasts who possess impeccable taste, lavish you with new suits and vintage typewriters, and give you a starring role in their weekly productions of The Rocky Horror Picture Show. We’ve all been there, right? Right? Anyone? Set in the Pittsburgh suburbs in what appears to be the 80s — when kids were apparently so far ahead of the curve that they were listening to Pavement and Cracker songs from the 90s — Chbosky’s
film introduces us to Charlie (Logan Lerman), a high school freshman who’s still reeling from a recent trauma. Falling in with step-siblings Sam (Emma Watson) and Patrick (Ezra Miller), he’s introduced to the finer points of teenage rebellion at its most smug and insufferable. Just as the film’s cavalcade of power fantasies prove completely implausible, Lerman never once convinces as Charlie. At every turn, he simply registers as a handsome Hollywood actor playing shy. His voiceover informs us that his emotional state is unravelling, but his smirking countenance never betrays any inner tumult. And when his pent-up agony finally erupts, it comes courtesy of a ridiculous scene in which he “hulks out” and pummels three bullies. Indeed, as coming of age tales go, Perks bears about as much resemblance to real life as The Avengers. — Curtis Woloschuk
The beautification of Winnie Mandela WINNIE Starring Jennifer Hudson, Terrence Howard Directed by Darrell Roodt Given that Darrel Roodt long ago established himself as a journeyman director willing to dabble in any genre, it’s not particularly surprising that he fails to put a directorial stamp on this Winnie Man-
dela biopic. Guided only by its sense of self-importance, the film is content to go through the paces, largely retracing recorded history. This is probably for the best, as any deviation from the facts proves a horrendous misstep that steers the proceedings into the realms of risibility. Cranking Laurent Eyquem’s overwrought score for his opening scene, Roodt heralds the arrival of Nomzamo Winfreda Madikizela on this earthly plane. Proving herself a fearless warrior as a child, she abandons rural South Africa for Johannesburg when she reaches adulthood (and is played by Jennifer Hudson). There, she battles against apartheid while succumbing to the advances of activist Nelson Mandela (Terrence Howard). Of course, most viewers will be prepared for their fairytale romance to fall prey to South Africa’s fractious political and social climate. Those familiar with the more contentious details of Winnie’s later life — be it her band of violent bodyguards or eventual divorce from Mandela — will likely find themselves bemused by the facts that Roodt and cowriter Andre Pieterse omit or amend in order to preserve their protagonist’s beatific air. Meanwhile, just about anyone can find unintentional humour in the overly earnest, ill-conceived scenes that are meant to underscore Winnie’s nobility. As we watch her recite Shakespeare to the ants in her prison cell, we’re reminded that there’s nothing quite like the sight of would-be Oscar clips going completely off the rails. — Curtis Woloschuk
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out after dark with
MAY GLOBUS
1 Cliff Ma toasted to a fun evening with the Bacardi Canada team of Antoine Lum, Curtis Gerke and Karissa Cecchin (left to right) at the Disaronno Contemporary Terrace party on September 26 at Reflections at the Rosewood Hotel Georgia. 2 Rosario Ruiz y Laza celebrated the launch of IDSwest with Bocci’s Carolina Ponce de Leon (centre) and Cristina Belmonte (right) on September 27 at Vancouver Convention Centre West. 3 Travel Gay Canada announced that Angus Praught (right), the president of GayVan.com, is the recipient of this year’s TGC’s Tourism Leadership Award. Dean Nelson, a TGC board member, made the announcement September 25 at the Rosewood Hotel Georgia. 4 Bob Rennie, artist representative Maureen Paley and Andrew Grassie celebrated the opening of Grassie’s new exhibit at the Rennie Gallery in Gastown Sept. 29. 5 Barbara Chirinos, VIFF’s gala organizer, saluted Bollywood at the opening party at the Salt building in Olympic Village, following the screening of Midnight’s Children with Deepa Mehta on Sept. 27. 6 CinCin on Alberni hosted the star-studded Canadian Images gala as part of VIFF on Sept. 28. Hitting the red carpet were Gabrielle Miller of Moving Day and Deva Nitins of Charlie Gauvins. 7 Leah Gibson and Adam Beach of Arctic Air at the Canadian Images gala. 8 Friday nights at the Oasis is the Dressing on the Side dinner and show starring Symone with special guests. 9 Jewellery designer Alan Anderson with his gorgeous new collection at his trunk show and cocktail reception, held at Holt Renfrew on September 27.
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Make it yours. Call 604-708-2628 www.plea.bc.ca
CLASS 1 DRIVERS WANTED! Sign bonus $2000 for Owner/op ph: 604-598-3498/fax: 604-598-3497
DRIVERS WANTED: Terrific career opportunity outstanding growth potential to learn how to locate rail defects. No Rail Experience Needed!! Extensive Paid Travel, Meal Allowance, 4 wks. Vacation & Benefits Package. Skills Needed - Ability to travel 3 months at a time Valid License with air brake endorsement. High School Diploma or GED. Apply at www.sperryrail.com under careers, keyword Driver DO NOT FILL IN CITY or STATE
OWNER OPERATORS Signing Bonus Van Kam’s group of companies req. Owner Ops. to be based out of our Surrey Terminal for runs throughout BC & Alberta. Applicants must have winter and mountain driving experience / training. We offer above average rates and an excellent employee benefits package. Call Bev at 604-968-5488 or send a detailed resume and current driver’s abstract, and details of your truck to: careers@vankam.com Fax: 604-587-9889 Van Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility. Thank you for your interest however only those of interest to us will be contacted.
WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
127
173E
182
An Alberta Construction Company is hiring Dozer and Excavator Operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experienced in oilfield 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.
supervisor1@surreyleader.com
GO GREEN JANITOR TRAINING SCHOOL
SERVERS req’d F/T for Senova restaurant. Duties; Greet patrons. Present menus. Answer questions. Take orders. Accept payments. Sal: $11.00/hr. Also, req’d 2 KITCHEN HELPERS. Duties; Wash work tables, cupboards and appliances. Also, required LINE COOKS. Sal:$12.00/hr. Duties; Prepare and cook food. Oversee kitchen operations. Contact Kashmir @ senovarestaurant@yahoo.ca Fax: 604-266-8674 Location: Vancouver,BC
DROWNING IN DEBTS? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. AVOID BANKRUPTCY! Free consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1 877-556-3500 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
REACH ALL advertise across the
learn to turn income tax into
income
GARDENING
WEED FREE Mushroom Manure 13 yards - $180 or Well Rotted 10 yds - $200. 604-856-8877
287
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
10% OFF when you Mention this ad HARDI RENO SVS. *Plumbing *Tile *Drywall*Paint*More! 778-865-4072
Always Done Right With Integrity.
Complete Dry-wall & Renovation services. Textured ceiling specialist. Phone Steve (604)613-4861
Need CA$H Today? Own A Vehicle?
135 INCOME OPPORTUNITY EARN EXTRA CASH! - P/T, F/T Immediate Openings For Men & Women. Easy Computer Work, Other Positions Are Available. Can Be Done From Home. No Experience Needed. www.HWC-BC.com
TRADES, TECHNICAL
AUTOMATED TANK MANUFACTURING INC. is looking for Welders. Due to a huge expansion to our plant located in Kitscoty, Alberta, 20km west of Lloydminster. We have openings for 10-3rd Year Apprentices or Journey Person Welders. We offer best wage in industry. 3rd Year Apprentice $28-$30/hour, Journey Person $32-$35/hour, higher with tank experience. Profit sharing bonus plus manufacturing bonus incentive. Full insurance package 100% paid by company. Good working environment. Join a winning team. Call Basil or Blaine at: (office)780-846-2231; (fax)780846-2241 or send resume to blaine@autotanks.ca; production@autotanks.ca. Keep your feet on the ground in a safe welding environment through inhole manufacturing process. No scaffolding or elevated work platform.
115
EDUCATION
281
community papers!
115
SOUTH ROCK is hiring for: Paving Personnel (raker, screed, general labourers); Heavy Equipment Operators. Send resume to: careers@southrock.ca or 403-5681327.
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899
MONEYPROVIDER.COM. $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877776-1660.
lower mainland in the 17 best-read
SUPERINTENDENT, MAINLINE TRACK HOE OP, PIPELAYERS For Underground installation of Sanitary, Water, Storm. Min. 10 yrs. 403-250-8868
Call (778)578-9117
ELECTRICAL
Email: kamal720@hotmail.com or Fax: 604-681-6373.
KAMLOOPS Honda, has an opening for an Journeyman Automotive Technician. We offer top industry level wages and benefits in a great working environment with the latest and best shop tools and equipment. If you’re interested in escaping the rain, the Kamloops area provides the opportunity to live and work in a vibrant community within easy reach of ski resorts, championship golf courses and world class fishing and recreational lakes. Apply in strict confidence to: Jim Oakley General Manager 1308 Josep Way Kamloops, BC V2H 1N6 Email: jobs@kamloopshonda.ca Fax: (250) 374-3656 While we thank everyone for their interest, only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.
or info@gogreencollege.ca
FINANCIAL SERVICES
260
06951 Electrician Lic. Low cost. PANEL CHANGE. Big/small jobs. Residential/ Comm. 604-374-0062
COOKS ~ SERVERS ~ DISHWASHERS: 0889117 BC Ltd. o/a POINT ZERO LOUNGE & RESTAURANT is Hiring F/T (East Indian Cuisine) Tandoori Cooks & Curry Cooks. All $17/hr. Servers ($10.25/hr) and Dishwashers – ($10.25/hr). Send resume by:
160
F/T FORKLIFT OPERATOR NEEDED Min. 32hrs/wk. Must have a valid ticket. Send resume to:
HEALTH PRODUCTS
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES
HELP WANTED
cleaning contracts after certification.
Donald’s Fine Foods is a Richmond based food processing and Distribution Company currently seeking a Production Supervisor. Will be responsible for organizing and managing meat processing and packaging. Previous experience in meat fabrication, processing and packaging is essential. Must be able to organize and lead a production team in a fast paced environment. This opportunity starts Immediately. Donald’s Fine Foods offers a Competitive Wage, Full Medical & Dental Benefits. Please fax your resume: 604.875.6031 or email: careers@donaldsfinefoods.com
PERSONAL SERVICES
OPEN HOUSE - Join this week for only $9.95 a week. Lose weight quickly and safely and keep it off, results guaranteed! Call Herbal Magic today! 1-800-854-5176.
THAI BASIL Restaurant, Van. requires 1 Asst Mgr, 2-3 yrs. exp. $15.80/hr. Email: thaibasil.bc@gmail.com
HAIRCARE PROFESSIONALS
Offers Building Service Worker Training Program. Get Certified Get Better Paying Job. Hospitals, Schools, Care Homes. We offer
PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR
TRADES, TECHNICAL
NOW HIRING!!!
BARBER WANTED in Qualicum Beach. Min. 3 yrs exp. Must do tapered haircut with a straight razor outline. Call Bob 250-752-0618 or Cell 250-7520618.
130
160
10 Customer Service positions available! Up to $20.00/hr paid weekly Must work well with others!!! Call Erica 604 777 2195
134
OWNER RETIRING. Heating Service Business for sale, 3400 clients, $20k inventory. Campbell River, BC. Call Alan at (250)480-6700.
HELP WANTED
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
EDUCATION
H&R Block needs tax professionals. Classes begin September Classes beginmid October 22nd
Borrow Up To $25,000 MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR North Vanc. Oversee 20 tradespeople. Approval of work requests,work order planning, scheduling. Provide training for other team members & lead safety initiatives. REQUIREMENTS: Journeyman Millwright/Electrician (prefer dual/ multiple tickets). 5 Yrs supervisory background; ideally in a union environment.Solid knowledge of CMMS Experience in bulk handling is a definite asset. Strong communication and leadership abilities are a must! This long term, stable opportunity offers a salary of $80K-$100K + bonus, full benefits & pension plan. $1000 REFERRAL BONUS. Lettie Croskery, Manager Select People Solutions lettie.croskery@selectrecruiting.ca or Phone: (403)382-3655 Or apply online: selectrecruiting.ca and refer to job #40NM
No Credit Checks! Cash same day, local office.
www.PitStopLoans.com 604-777-5046
188
587
TOOLS
Email: hoot&owl@telus.net
Gary 604-339-5430 WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com
587
TOOLS
UsedVancouver.com
HOME of Your Dreams!
BUY & SELL USED STUFF ONLINE, FREE!™
Real Estate Section - Class 600’s
FURNITURE
Reno’s/Additions/Kitchens
Growing into, or growing out of?
bcclassified.com
548
CUSTOM TILE WORK or BATHROOMS CUSTOM CARPENTRY
Drywall work/rubbish removal CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
SERVICE ADVISOR - Kamloops Honda, has a career opportunity for an experienced Service Advisor. The successful candidate must be a dynamic, motivated team player with excellent communication & organizational skills dedicated to providing outstanding customer service. If you’re interested in escaping the rain, the Kamloops area provides the opportunity to live and work in a vibrant community within easy reach of ski resorts, championship golf courses and world class fishing and recreational lakes. Apply in strict confidence to: Jim Oakley - General Manager Email: jobs@kamloopshonda.ca Fax: (250) 374-3656 While we thank everyone for their interest, only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. Find the
LEGAL SERVICES
HOOT & OWL
548
FURNITURE
548
FURNITURE
A virtual curb for your unwanted couch
Study with us. Q Choose a class schedule and location convenient to you. Q Receive high quality training. Q Start a rewarding career.* Register online at hrblock.ca or call 1-877-32BLOCK (322-5625) for details. *Enrolment in, or completion of, the course is neither an offer nor guarantee of employment. Some restrictions apply.
UsedVancouver.com BUY & SELL USED STUFF ONLINE, FREE!™
WE Vancouver Thursday, October 4, 2012 HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 287
WEVancouver.com 19
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
PETS 477
PETS
RENTALS 706
APARTMENT/CONDO
All kinds of re-roofing & repairs. Free est. Reasonable rates. (604)961-7505, 278-0375
810
TRANSPORTATION
AUTO FINANCING
NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com
DreamCatcher Auto Loans “0” Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals
REGIST. Bernese Mnt pups 1m 2f left. Free delv. shts. chip. $1200 Sonia 250-998-4697
www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557
1-800-910-6402
FIRST TIME AUTO BUYERS WANTED. Friendly staff will guide you through the process. www.creditdrivers.ca 1-888-593-6095.
SHELTIES SABLE COLOUR full white collars, born June 22, taken out on leash, 1M 1F (604)826-6311
FIVE STAR ROOFING
TRANSPORTATION
YELLOW LAB Puppies - exc stock. No papers. $400: 1-(604)820-2687
GUARANTEED
YORKIE PUPS. P/B no papers. 2nd shots, vet checked, female, born June 20 $700. 604-702-8338 Chwk
Auto
Loans
1-888-229-0744
or
apply
at:
www.
greatcanadianautocredit.com
821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS
845
1996 VW JETTA, 4 door, p/b, p/w, sunroof, a/c, cruise, heated seats, etc. Mech. good, clean inside. Must be seen. $5,499. 604-746-7559
AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673
838
RECREATIONAL/SALE
1996 22’ SLUMBER QUEEN 5th wheel. Interior like new, has to be seen to appreciate. New stereo, back up camera, flat screen TV, new HD antenna, m/w, a/c. Incl. hitch. $7,000. 604-625-7761 Aldergrove
TRANSPORTATION
845
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
The Scrapper
Mainland Roofing Ltd.
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
25 yrs in roofing industry
320
MOVING & STORAGE
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555. ABBA MOVERS & DEL Res/comm 1-4 ton truck, 1 man $35/hr, 2 men from $45. Honest, bsmt clean up. 25yrs Exp. 24hrs/7days 604-506-7576
Family owned & operated. Fully insured. We do Cedar Shakes, conversions, concrete tiles, torchon, fibreglass shingles, restoration & repairs. 20 yr labour warranty. 604-723-2626 www.mainlandroof.com
356
RUBBISH REMOVAL
RECYCLE YOUR JUNK! Rubbish Removal, Caring for the Earth. Professional Quality Service at Great Rates. 604-787-8782
AFFORDABLE MOVING Local & Long Distance
FLEETWOOD WASTE Bin Rentals 10-30 Yards. Call Ken at 604-294-1393
$45/Hr
From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licenced ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos
DISPOSAL BINS
604-537-4140
Residential & Commercial Services
GET the best for your moving 24/7 From $40/hr Licensed & Insured Senior Discount 778-773-3737
SPARTAN Moving Ltd. Fast & Reliable. Insured Competitive rates. Wknd Specials. Call Frank: (604) 435-8240
AWD Interior/Ext Painting. Drywall/Ceiling Repairs. Call Will for a Free Estimate. (778)709-1081
AUTO FINANCING
• Portable Toilets • Fencing • Containers • Waste Management • Storage
We Recycle! GO GREEN!
Northstar Painting Ltd.- The Residential Specialists. BIG jobs, Small jobs - We do it all! Interior and Exterior Projects. Master Painters at Students Rates. WCB Safe, Reliable, Efficient & Quality Paint. 778.245.9069
www.EconPro.com 604-882-2733
FUEL
FURNITURE
A New Pillowtop Mattress Set Still in Packaging! Can Deliver! $100 - Call: 604-484-0379 • Twins • Fulls • Queens • Kings 100’s in stock! www.Direct Liquidation.ca (604)294-2331
559
FREE TOWING 7 days/wk. We pay Up To $500 CA$H Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022
MEDICAL SUPPLIES
WALK-IN Tubs, Wheelchair Baths, Roll-in Showers, Seats. Ask how to get a free reno! 1-866-404-8827
560
TOP CA$H PAID TODAY For SCRAP VEHICLES! 2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026
MISC. FOR SALE
STEEL BUILDINGS - CANADIAN MADE! - REDUCED PRICES NOW! 20X22 $4,455. 25X26 $4,995. 30X38 $7,275. 32X50 $9,800. 40X54 $13,995. 47X80 $19,600. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca.
940 ADULT PHONE SERVICE
REAL ESTATE 627
HOMES WANTED
WE BUY HOUSES! Older House • Damaged House Moving • Estate Sale • Just Want Out • Behind on Payments Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-626-9647
But Dead Bodies!!
220.JUNK(5865)
Serving The Lower Mainland Since 1988
778-997-9582 A-TECH Services 604-230-3539
RECYCLE-IT! JUNK REMOVAL Recycled Earth Friendly • Estate Services • Electronics • Appliances • Old Furniture • Construction • Yard Waste • Concrete • Drywall • Junk • Rubbish • Mattresses & More!
PAINT SPECIAL
On Time, As Promised, Service Guaranteed!
3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour
604.587.5865
Running this ad for 8yrs
(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.
www.recycleitcanada.ca
374
818
CARS - DOMESTIC
818
PLUMBING
with the &ODVViÀeG
Sell your vehicle FAST in the highest read community newspapers & largest online sites!
ONLY
Tree removal done RIGHT!
604-787-5915, 604-291-7778 www.treeworksonline.ca treeworkes@yahoo.ca 10% OFF with this AD
PETS 477 PLUMBING, heating and gas services. Design and installation for new construction, home renovations and existing systems as well as emergency on-call service. Call McCallum Mechanical 604-6539514 or email us at mccallummech@shaw.ca
341
PRESSURE WASHING HANDYMAN - 604-518-4778 WCB & Liability Insured. www.lwrestoration.com
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS GL ROOFING. Cedar shakes, Asphalt Shingles, Flat roofs, WCB Clean Gutters. $80. 604-240-5362
LiPiteG Time Offer!
Power Pack…
TREE SERVICES
• Tree & Stump Removal • Certified Arborists • 20 yrs exp. • 60’ Bucket Truck • Crown Reduction • Spiral Pruning • Land Clearing • Selective Logging ~ Fully Insured • Best Rates ~
CARS - DOMESTIC
Sell your Car!
www.paintspecial.com
338
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS
Autos • Trucks • Equipment Removal
Haul Anything... 604.
“ ABOVE THE REST “ Interior & Exterior Unbeatable Prices & Professional Crew. • Free Est. • Written Guarantee • No Hassle • Quick Work • Insured • WCB
Scotty 604-313-1887
MATTRESSES starting at $99
bradsjunkremoval.com MILANO PAINTING & RENOS. Int./Ext. Prof. Painters. Free Est. Bonded & Insured. 604-551-6510
Metal Recycling Ltd. We Pay CA$H For •Auto •Scrap Metals •Batteries •Machinery •Lead
Re: Azim Abdulla formerly of #2202 - 1067 Marinaside Cres, Vancouver BC. Notice is hereby given that creditors and others having claims against the estate of the above deceased are required to send particulars of such claims to the Executor c/o Nazir Abdulla 20842 Lougheed Hwy, Maple Ridge, BC V2X 2R3 on or before October 25, 2012 after which date the estate’s assets will be distributed, having regard only to claims that have been received. Nazir Abdulla, Executor.
1YR Seasoned Alder Birch Maple Clean, Split, DRY & Delivered. Family Operated for 20 yrs. (604)726-3024
548
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?
GET the best for your moving 24/7. From $40/hr. Licensed & Insured. Senior Discount, 778-773-3737
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
545
810
TRANSPORTATION
2010 VENZA: Like new, only 20,000 kms, fully loaded, automatic, 6 cylinder, dvd system. $22,800. 604-575-5555.
3-LINE EXAMPLE
Size not exactly as shown
$
12
Power Pack iQcluGeV
PETS
Airedale pups. P/b, CKC reg., microchipped, health guar, 1(604)8192115. email: lovethem@telus.net BERNESE MOUNTAIN Dog puppies, vet checked, 1st shots. Parents on site. Jen 604-807-3853 or rjkooi@hotmail.com CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866 CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are Spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977 GERMAN Short Hair Pointer pups, exc hunting & family dogs, champion bloodlines, AKC & CKC reg’s parents, CKC reg litter, 3 F & 5 M avail. $650. (604)703-5744
WE PRINT AD: Includes photo and 3-lines for one week. BCClaVViÀeG.com ONLINE AD: BC-wide reach! For one week!
USEDVancouver.com
ONLINE AD: Local reach — until you cancel it!
Call 604.575-5555 M8E:FLM<IÊJ L I98E N<<BCP
940 ADULT PHONE SERVICE
940 ADULT PHONE SERVICE
HAPPY THANKSGIVING 100% BC Owned and Operated Prices Effective October 4 to October 10, 2012. We reserve the right to limit quantities. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.
Grocery Department Country Morning Large Eggs
Meat Department
J.D. Farms Grade A Specialty Turkeys
Liberté Méditerranée Yogurt assorted varieties
WOW!
PRICING
2/5.00
WOW!
500g
PRICING
product of Canada
3.99lb/ 8.80kg product of Canada
reg 4.79
2.69
Produce Department Organic Broccoli
California Grown
WOW!
PRICING
1.48lb/ 3.26kg product of USA
1 dozen • product of Canada
Kicking Horse Organic Fair Trade Coffee
Breyers Double Churned Ice Cream
assorted varieties
assorted varieties
from 10.99
8.99lb/ 19.82kg
6.99
1.66L product of Canada
WOW!
454g • product of Canada
Boneless Leg of Lamb Roasts
PRICING
Organic Table Carrots from Fountainview Farm in Lillooet B.C. Grown
5.98
5lb product of Canada
reg 8.99
Uncle Luke's #1 Medium Maple Syrup
Snack Factory Pretzel Crisps assorted varieties
2/4.00
5.99
375ml product of Canada
170g
product of USA
Deli Department
assorted varieties
assorted varieties
2/6.00
2/4.00
Choices Own’ Cranberry Sauce, Cranberry Stuffing, Specialty Turkey Gravy or Vegan Miso Gravy, Stuffed Specialty Turkey Breast, Garlic Mash Potatoes, Roasted Winter Root Vegetables, Grab & Go Specialty Turkey Meals.
Earth’s Choice Organic Apple Juice
2/8.00
WOW!
PRICING reg 2.99
4/5.00 300-350g product of USA
Health Care Department Bakery Department 8” Pumpkin Pie all butter crust
WOW!
The Funky Gourmet Cranberry Sauce
Alexia Frozen Oven Fries
Orange Brandy or Shiraz
assorted varieties
PRICING
375ml product of Canada
6.99
reg 9.99
from 2/5.00
4.49
340-567g • product of USA
Bulk Department 20% off regular retail price
assorted varieties 1.89L
3lb product of Canada
bins or bags
Stahlbush Island Farms Frozen Vegetables
+deposit +eco fee product of Canada
3.98
Cranberries
220g
product of USA
650g • product of Canada
B.C. Grown
Everything for your Thanksgiving Celebration.
Kettle Brand Potato Chips
Danone Activia Yogurt
Organic Gala Apples from Cawston
Brad King’s Ultimate Vegan Wild Greens
29.99
255g
Ultimate Vegan Wild Greens contains a rare mixture of wild-crafted raw greens and incorporates these highly alkaline foods with a unique mixture of incredible nutrient dense wild weeds and a proprietary blend of organic medicinal mushrooms.
Dr. Bronner’s Pure Castile Classic Soaps Organic Country French White or 60% Wholewheat Bread
3.49
assorted sizes
from 5.99
500-550g
San Pellegrino Sparkling Mineral Water
Tofurky Frozen Vegetarian Feast
3/4.98
16.99
WOW!
PRICING
750ml +deposit +eco fee • product of Italy
product of USA
Kitchen Basics Cooking Stock
Tru Whip Natural Whipped Topping
assorted varieties
2/5.00
1.59kg
2/5.00
946ml • product of USA
reg 33.99
Hugo Products
Rice Bakery
20% off
5” Cranberry Lemon Rice Cheesecake or Cranberry Pumpkin Rice Loaf 300g
2.00 off
772ml
regular retail price
product of USA
regular retail price Hugo Naturals use nature’s most effective ingredients without toxic chemicals. 100% Natural.
WOW!
Seminars & Events: Tuesday, October 23, 6:00-8:00pm.
PRICING
Make Magic with Mushrooms and Wine
Look for our
with Choices’ Chef Antonio Cerullo and Summerhill Pyramid Winery
WOW!
Cost $15. To register call 250-862-4864.
PRICING www.choicesmarkets.com
Kitsilano
Cambie
Kerrisdale
Yaletown
Rice Bakery
South Surrey
2627 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0009
3493 Cambie St. Vancouver 604.875.0099
1888 W. 57th Ave. Vancouver 604.263.4600
1202 Richards St. Vancouver 604.633.2392
2595 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0301
3248 King George Blvd. South Surrey 604.541.3902
Choices at the Crest 8683 10th Ave. Burnaby 604.522.0936
Kelowna 1937 Harvey Ave. Kelowna 250.862.4864