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CENTRAL ALBERTA’S DAILY NEWSPAPER
BREAKING NEWS ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM
FRIDAY, OCT. 26, 2012
Costume is the cat’s meow! HALLOWEEN PARTIES CAN BE THE BIGGEST NIGHT OF THE YEAR AT RED DEER’S BARS, AND ROB BONIN WILL BE READY BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF Halloween is the one night of the year when Rob Bonin can safely party in public in his briefs. Rest assured, the Red Deer property manager will also be sporting a ton of body paint. Through the wonders of artistically-applied makeup, Bonin will be transformed into a wildcat that’s “tamed” by a female companion, who’s accompanying him dressed as a whip-wielding animal trainer. On the Saturday, the final Saturday before Halloween, the city’s bar strips will be crawling with similarly scary monsters and Ziggy Stardust-like super-creeps. The annual celebration of everything uninhibited and un-Earthly will be especially hopping inside Red Deer’s many drinking establishments, where Halloween parties can be the biggest night of the year. In terms of sheer customer numbers, January Barthel, manager of Bellinis Sonic Lounge at Red Deer’s Sheraton Centre, believes that fright night even surpasses New Year’s Eve — although it depends on whether Dec. 31 falls on a weekend. Like other bar managers, Barthel is gearing up for the onslaught of colourfully attired customers by booking her full contingent of 35 bartenders, waiters and security personnel to work Saturday’s night shift. Not only will Bellinis staff be dressing up along this year’s angels and demons theme at the bar, they spent several hours earlier this week hanging fake clouds and hellfire around the establishment that caters to an older crowd. “It’ll be a really fun night,” predicted Barthel, who fondly recalled last year’s softer theme of Disney fairy tales. Most Red Deer bars award big prizes for best costumes. At Bellinis, $500 goes to the first-place winner (last year it was split between members of a Ghostbusters crew), $300 will be awarded for second and $200 for third. Prizes at Wild Bill’s Sports Bar at the Quality Inn North Hill will include big screen TVs and electronic car starters.
Please see HALLOWEEN on Page A2
Contributed photo
Rob Bonin’s costume is purrfect for Halloween. He will be transformed into a wildcat that’s “tamed” by a female companion, who’s accompanying him dressed as a whip-wielding animal trainer.
Couple marry in airplane hanger AFTER PLANS TO MARRY ON SMALL PLANE FALL THROUGH
CLEARVIEW RIDGE
Council, aboriginal community to share reconciliation circle BY CRYSTAL RHYNO ADVOCATE STAFF
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Hannah Rahbek-Ward and her groom, Daniel Nathoo, pose for Kate Ludwig in the hangar at Sky Wings Aviation at the Red Deer Airport on Thursday. Grounded by a mechanical issue, the couple originally were to be wed while flying above Red Deer but settled to hold their ceremony on solid ground instead.
BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF Daniel Nathoo and Hannah Rahbek-Ward wanted to get married on a small plane flying over Red Deer on Thursday afternoon. When a broken propeller put an end to that idea, they decided to do the next best thing. “We had the ceremony in the airplane hangar,” said Rahbek-Ward after the ceremony at Sky Wings Aviation at Red Deer Airport. “I think it was really great. The pictures are fantastic. It was a very intimate ceremony, just close
PLEASE RECYCLE
family.” The couple hoped to take a short flight on another plane after the ceremony but poor weather grounded that plane, too. Rahbek-Ward, 19, of Red Deer, said they wanted to get married in the air because it would be unique and air travel played an important role in their romance. Nathoo, 20, is from Israel and the pair met while attending Lindsay Thurber Comprehensive High School when Nathoo’s family was looking to immigrate to Canada.
Please see WEDDING on Page A2
WEATHER
INDEX
Flurries. High -4. Low -9.
Five sections Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A3 Business. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C3,C4 Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A5-A7 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E1-E5 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D4 Entertainment . . . . . . .D1-D3,D7 Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B1-B7
FORECAST ON A2
City council will sit with members of Red Deer’s aboriginal community in a reconciliation circle to restore lost trust after council rejected the proposal to build affordable housing and a cultural centre site in Clearview Ridge. Scheduled for Thursday, the circle will allow the aboriginal community to share the decision’s impact and a chance for council to explain the reasons and difficulties behind making the decision. Following strong opposition from Clearview Ridge residents who voiced concerns about being left in the dark about the project and fears of increased crime and loss of property value, city council rejected the site on Oct. 16. Tanya Schur, executive director of the Red Deer Native Friendship Society, said the circle will allow the aboriginal community to be heard in its traditional way. “Public hearings and open houses aren’t our way,” said Schur. “Talking circles are our way. . . . If we do that work, the friendship society can come together with the city and talk about options in a good way.” City council directed administration to come back in four weeks with options for other sites in the city. Mayor Morris Flewwelling said there will likely be a progress report at the meeting. He said the project will likely move slowly forward because there has to be healing. “I think there’s a lot of hurt in the aboriginal community,” said Flewwelling. “I think it’s important for us to regroup and get it right.” In June, the Central Alberta aboriginal community bestowed a Cree name on Flewwelling to honour and recognize his long-standing commitment to the community.
Please see CIRCLE on Page A2
ALBERTA
ADVOCATE VIEW
VAN HITS SCHOOL, INJURING THREE
DRIVING US CRAZY
Three students were pinned under a van after it crashed through an outside wall and into a classroom at the Catholic school in St. Paul on Thursday. A3
Andrew Younghusband hosts ‘Canada’s Worst Driver,’ returning Monday on Discovery Canada. XX
A2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Award winning journalist talks politics PERSPECTIVES SPEAKING SERIES BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF Prime Minster Stephen Harper’s soft environmental stance has deepened B.C.’s skepticism over the proposed Alberta oilsands pipeline, said national affairs columnist Chantal Hébert — who doesn’t foresee any shortterm resolution. The Northern Gateway Pipeline that would move oilsands bitumen to the West Coast for shipment to Asian markets “is not going to happen, not in its current shape,” said Hébert, who spoke on Thursday as part of Red Deer College’s Perspectives: Canada in the World series. “That ship has sailed . . . ” She believes that Harper should have taken former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney’s advice: “If you want to sell stuff like that, make yourself green.” Instead, Harper’s weak environment policies have made it harder now to convince British Columbians that Ottawa “has the interest of the environment at heart,” said Hébert. Although the award-winning journalist can’t see Harper pushing the B.C. pipeline through without losing massive voter support in that province, she does see the proposed oilsands pipeline to the U.S. going ahead, no matter who wins the American presidential election next month. Hébert suggested Alberta Premier Alison Redford is likely waiting for B.C.’s spring election before seriously trying again to negotiate. “No one’s going to sign a deal with someone who’s not going to be able to honour it in five months,” she said, referring to the widely held speculation that B. C. Premier Christy Clark’s Liberal government will go down at the polls. The growing rift between Alberta and B.C. is a novelty for Central Canada, which is used to doing the squabbling, said Hébert, to laughter from the crowd. “It’s the flip side of what we’ve had . . . (when) Ontario and Quebec were always fighting with each other.” The political panelist for the CBC and
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Syndicated columnist Chantal Hebert speaks at the Perspectives Canada In The World speaker series at the Red Deer College Arts Centre on Thursday. national affairs writer for the Toronto Star talked about Canada as if it were a political snake shedding its skin by discarding decades-long trends. Among the many “firsts” is Quebec electing a sovereignist government that has no plans to call a referendum on separating from the rest of Canada. While Harper is very unpopular in Quebec, she noted, so is separatism, receiving only 32 per cent support. Another big first having the federal Liberals in third place after the Conservatives and NDP, said Hébert, who doubts that Justin Trudeau could single-handedly save the party if he wins its leadership. The biggest hurdle is the lack of Liberal support in the West, which is currently Canada’s economic engine, she added. Trudeau is young, “has done his
STORIES FROM A1
HALLOWEEN: When adults get to be kids again The bar’s deejayed music (with Ransom from The Kraze radio station acting as MC) will be interspersed with nods to Halloween, likely including Michael Jackson’s Thriller or tunes from The Rocky Horror Picture Show. “It’s one of the most entertaining nights of the year — and one of the safest,” said Wild Bill’s manager Marc Robichaud. “I have been doing this for 20 years, I’ve seen everything” — from cowboys to aliens and beyond. He believes that most people tend to behave at Halloween parties because “they don’t want to mess up their costumes.” “Halloween is when adults get to be kids again,” added Robichaud, who predicted a “fun, excellent night” ahead. Bonin, the tiger man, thinks it would be great to win a costume prize. But that’s not why he’s spending three hours getting expertly body-painted in the same orange and black guise he wore to a Halloween party in Edmonton last weekend. (Bonin’s costume was initially applied by a professional makeup artist, but will be reapplied this weekend from photo references by a friend with an airbrush.) The brief-sporting partier will have to slip on a coat and boots to face the below-zero temperature — at least until he gets indoors. But he maintains
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homework,” has obvious charisma, and might well live up to his potential. But if Justin were to boost his party “just on the basis of a name, he will have me fooled,” said Hébert, who can’t imagine a government ruling Canada without Western support. It would be a backwards step, she added, “like having a prime minister who can’t speak French again.” Ontario-born and raised Hébert, who grew up in a French-speaking family, was back in Red Deer for the first time in 25 years. She told a story about having a telephone conversation overheard by a young motel attendant the last time she was here. She recalled the puzzled girl asking her, “What language was that?” Now not only is French immersion education growing throughout the
it’s all worth it because “Halloween takes you out of your character. . . . You get out of your normal, everyday lives and get to be someone else.” The best thing about hitting Halloween parties at local bars is getting to people watch, added Bonin, who admires how elaborately creative some costumes get — such as the 12-foot grim reaper he saw last weekend that came complete with black cloak, bony hand and synthesized voice. “It’s just entertaining.” lmichelin@reddeeradvocate.com
CIRCLE: About 120 people invited to participate He was named Mountain Eagle, or Asiniw-waci Kihew in Cree. At the time, Flewwelling said it was one of “most important and memorable” days of his life. The naming is one of the most sacred and highest honours by the aboriginal community. About 120 people, including council, city administration and members of the aboriginal community, are invited to participate in the circle. The Native Counselling Services of Alberta will facilitate. Schur said the reconciliation circle will restore a right relationship, where people trust one another and gain a greater understanding of what has occurred between the parties. “I don’t think any one party had all the information,” said Schur. “And that contributed to where we have ended up with everybody losing. Certainly the only people who didn’t lose were the neighbours of Clearview, sadly. Certainly council has lost credibil-
country, but most Canadian premiers are bilingual, said Hébert, She added that having leaders like Redford being able to discuss ideas in French with Quebecers makes a “tremendous” difference in narrowing the cultural divide. “It’s harder to think, they’re like this or like that, because you have the person right there, talking in your own language.” The biggest challenge we face is figuring out how to grow a modern economy that’s not resource based, said Hébert. If Ontario’s large manufacturing sector doesn’t work, it’s bad for all of us, she said. “It’s like saying my heart’s not doing well, but I have strong arms and good lungs. In a good body, you want a good heart too.” lmichelin@reddeeradvocate.com
ity in our community.” The proposed centre is to include 16 units of housing and a gathering space for aboriginal celebrations, meeting space for community and visiting elders, daycare, aboriginal support services, a community garden and other spaces. The city has been in talks with the friendship society for several years to help with their vision. “It may be a long slow process but I have a funding agreement with my funder (provincial government) until March 31,” Schur. “I want to have shovels in the ground by spring before my funder looks at my project stalled again and says why do we keep extending this project when there is such a great need for housing in Alberta?” The friendship society received roughly $2.6 million from the province for its housing project. crhyno@reddeeradvocate.com
WEDDING: Couple moving to Israel His family eventually returned to Israel because Nathoo had to complete his military service. Rahbek-Ward, who has been working as a front desk clerk at Sandman Hotel, will be moving to Israel where Nathoo is a military cook and part-time garbage collector. She advised other couples not to fret when things go wrong at their weddings. “Things don’t always turn out the way you plan so it’s good to have a plan B.” szielinski@reddeeradvocate.com
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WEATHER LOCAL TODAY
TONIGHT
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
135
$
HIGH -4
LOW -9
HIGH -7
HIGH -5
HIGH 0
40% chance of flurries
40% chance of flurries
Cloudy.
Cloudy. Low -9.
Sunny. Low -7
Calgary: today, chance of flurries. High -5. Low -8. Olds, Sundre: today, chance of flurries. High -3. Low -10. Rocky, Nordegg: today, chance of flurries. High -4. Low -9. Banff: today, chance of flurries. High -3. Low -7.
TONIGHT’S HIGHS/LOWS
Lethbridge: today, mainly cloudy. High -4. Low -6.
FORT MCMURRAY
Edmonton: today, chance of flurries. High -2. Low -10. Grande Prairie: today, chance of flurries. High -6. Low -8. Fort McMurray: today, chance of flurries. High -5. Low -11.
-5/-11 GRANDE PRAIRIE
-6/-8
EDMONTON
-2/-10 JASPER
-1/-7
RED DEER
Jasper: today, overcast. High -1. Low -7.
WINDCHILL/SUNLIGHT Sunset tonight: 6:16 p.m. Sunrise Saturday: 8:23 a.m. UV: 1 Low Extreme: 11 or higher Very high: 8 to 10 High: 6 to 7 Moderate: 3 to 5 Low: Less than 2
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Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Van hits school; three hurt BY THE CANADIAN PRESS ST. PAUL — When 14-year-old Simon Chamberland saw several Grade 6 students running down the school hallway, crying and screaming with blood dripping down their faces, he thought a gunman was on the loose. He next heard a panicked secretary at Racette Junior High School announce over the intercom that the building was in lockdown mode. All the teens in his gym class ran for the girls’ change room and hid in the corner of the showers. “I was thinking, ’Oh my gosh, I hope everyone’s all right and everyone’s safe.�’ Only later did Chamberland realize the chaos Thursday morning was caused by a minivan that had crashed through an outside wall and into a classroom. Mounties said three students were pinned under the van at the Catholic school in St. Paul. They were airlifted to a hospital in Edmonton, 200 kilometres to the west, with critical injuries. Health officials said one of the wounded is an 11-year-old girl. Five others were transported by ambulance to the local hospital, but they were released later in the day. Parent Michelle de Moissac said her 13-year-old daughter sent her a text message at about 9:30 a.m., saying there had been a crash and the school was locked down. Confused, de Moissac rushed to the school and saw a giant hole in the side of the building. There were ambulance, police and fire crews and a line up of school buses.
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Rescue workers help an injured child after a minivan crashed into a school in St.Paul, Alta., Thursday. Police say a child was pinned under the minivan after it went through the wall of Racette Junior High School in St. Paul, east of Edmonton. She said a teacher told her the van had been driving erratically. It nearly hit a pedestrian a few blocks away before it went down an alley by the school, veered off the road, smashed through a chain-link fence and then went through the building, she said. The van dove down into the classroom, which sits below ground. There were about 15 students in the Grade 6 French class at the time, de Moissac said. “Everyone was being taken out by ambulance.� RCMP said the van’s driver, a 46-year-old man from St. Paul, received minor injuries and was taken into custody. Photos from the scene show him being led away in handcuffs. Spokeswoman Doris Stapleton said investigators are trying to determine the cause of the crash, which could include impairment by drugs or alcohol, me-
chanical failure, slippery road conditions and the driver’s medical health. “The results of this ongoing investigation will determine when and if charges are applicable.� De Moissac said she quickly found her son and daughter at the school and was relieved they weren’t hurt. But her son is worried about some of his good buddies who were sitting in the classroom that was hit. She’s also concerned for the parents of the injured children. “For about 10 minutes I didn’t know where my son was and I was freaking right out ... It’s nothing compared to what these parents are going through.� Brodziak said counsellors will be made available to “any who are struggling to cope with the accident and its aftermath.�
Katz donation to Tories ‘offside’: critics BY THE CANADIAN PRESS EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Alison Redford says no matter how much money billionaire Edmonton Oilers owner Daryl Katz contributes to her Progressive Conservative party, there will be no direct taxpayer subsidy for a new hockey rink. “There will be no direct provincial government funding to any professional sports arena, and that position has not changed (since I’ve been leader) in the past 18 months,� Redford told the house Thursday. Redford was under attack after Elections Alberta released on Wednesday the breakdowns of campaign spending in the April 23 vote that saw Redford’s Tories win majority government. The documents showed that Katz, his wife, mother, father, his executive team and their related companies donated a total of $300,000 to the Tories during the campaign. That represents about 20 per cent of the total donations to the party. Other media reports cite sources saying the figure is as high as $430,000 and that Katz delivered the money in one six-figure cheque to the Tories in the late stages of the campaign. The maximum any one person or group can contribute to any party is $30,000. It was a day of high-decibel verbal fireworks and desktop-pounding during question period, featuring accusations of law-breaking, coverups, conspiracy theories and references to Katz’s pets. “Given that under this government’s rules, Mr. Katz, his wife, his mother, his father, his company, maybe his dog, his goldfish and the neighbour’s cat seem to have donated to the PC party in this past election,� began NDP critic Rachel Notley. “And given that Mr. Katz stands to receive a 20,000 per cent return on this investment, will the minister admit that in doing nothing to fix these loopholes, Albertans can be forgiven for concluding that Denmark
is not the only place where something is rotten?� she concluded, referring to a line from Shakespeare’s “Hamlet.� It was the highlight shot in an cross-aisle enfilade of insults. “Our local billionaire just bought himself a government!� thundered NDP Leader Brian Mason. “We have seen this government time and time again dodge, hide, obscure, bury and avoid the truth. Some call it a culture of corruption,� Wildrose party Leader Danielle Smith fired at Redford. “We know (the Tories) are not reliable to investigate themselves, so now with another huge ethical scandal brewing, can we be sure that we are going to get the truth this time?� Redford stood and shot back: “It is not the job of the government of Alberta to investigate itself. It is the job of the chief electoral officer. “And frankly, I take exception to the fact that there would be any suggestion in this house that any minister, including myself, would do anything to quash a prosecution. That is offensive and rude.� Perception is reality, charged Wildrose house leader Rob Anderson. “How can this premier assure Albertans her government hasn’t been bought and paid for by the highest bidder?� he demanded. That’s just more fantasy from the “Wild Alliance,� replied Finance Minister Doug Horner. “I love conspiracy theory books myself, but this one takes the cake,� he said. How do Albertans know that Katz, the Rexall pharmacy magnate, isn’t also getting sweetheart treatment on drug issues? challenged Smith. “We’ve moved from offensive to repulsive,� said Health Minister Fred Horne. “No one particular provider receives special treatment,� he said. The Tories ran behind the Wildrose party in polling for much of the spring campaign but won 61 seats
to 17 for the Wildrose on election day. The parties themselves collect donation money, then send receipts and totals to Elections Alberta, said Elections spokesman Drew Westwater. The parties are responsible for making sure that even if multiple donations come in on one cheque, that no single person or group contributed over the $30,000 limit. “We don’t get the cheques,� said Westwater. “We get receipts that are issued for the contributions made to the parties. We have no way of knowing how they received the money, whether it was cash or four cheques or 10 cheques or one cheque. That’s the party’s responsibility.� But he said if Chief Electoral officer Brian Fjeldheim gets a complaint, he can investigate and has the power to compel documentation and issue fines for malfeasance. Both Redford and PC Party spokesman Kelley Charlebois confirmed the party has already contacted Elections Alberta to offer to assist if there are any concerns. Charlebois declined to give specifics on how much Katz or his associates contributed or say how the money came in. But he said the party has the documents to prove that all rules were followed. “We have the audited financial statements that show, as per the law, that donations were made appropriately (and) that we’re able to allocate all donations that we received to tax receipts,� said Charlebois. Katz, who bought the Oilers in 2008, has become a prominent and controversial figure in recent months over his demands to renegotiate a deal with city council to jointly build a $475-million downtown arena for the Oilers. Even with the deal in place and construction set to begin next spring, both sides had still been looking for an extra $100 million from the province. A Katz spokesman declined to comment.
New beef plant president welcomes input BY THE CANADIAN PRESS BROOKS, — The new managers of XL Foods Inc. say they are taking immediate steps to ensure that the troubled southern Alberta meat-packing plant can stay in operation. They are also promising to listen to workers who have concerns about the way the plant will be run. Bill Rupp, CEO of JBS USA’s beef business in North America and Australia, told a news conference Thursday it is important to be accountable to the public. He added that workers shouldn’t be afraid to speak up if they see something wrong. “Nobody ought to have to work for a jerk, and I sit here as a reformed jerk, and I know I have jerk tendencies,� Rupp said with a chuckle. He said he wants to send a message through the organization. “If someone’s doing something wrong, or (something is) not performing to where it needs to be, you don’t have to be a jerk to have that conversation.� XL Foods has been at the centre of a massive recall of tainted beef. The Canadian Food Inspection
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Agency restored the plant’s operating licence this week and also launched a review of the E. coli crisis that made at least 16 people ill. The CFIA has acknowledged that its control over food safety inside the nation’s slaughterhouses has limits and it is up to companies such as XL Foods to honour their own safety plans. Inspectors didn’t detect sanitation, hygiene or reporting deficiencies in the facility until an outbreak of E. coli bacteria last month touched off one of the largest food recalls in Canadian history. “Our job here is not to rehash the past or talk about what occurred there or why it occurred,� said JBS USA Chief Sustainability Officer and Head of Corporate Communications Cameron Bruett. “We will set a bold path forward to get people back to work and to get safe, Canadian beef back on the plate of domestic consumers and consumers
around the world.� Bruett announced a six-point plan to bring the plant up to standard. It includes an independent third-party review of the plant and its food-safety plan by an expert from Texas A&M University, as well as additional training for XL’s 2,200 employees. JBS USA personnel have spent the past week studying the plant. “I sat down with some of my key operations and engineering people who are still here at the plant,� said Rupp. “They’re fired up ... They think there’s no problem with this plant producing safe product. It’s a good, clean facility. We just need to operate it.� The next step will be to decide whether JBS USA will exercise its option to buy the Brooks facility that it is now managing.
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Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Watchdog won’t heel GOVERNMENT REFUSES TO PROVIDE DETAILS ON HOW IT SPENDS OUR MONEY Every so often a story bubbles up in the capital that is so important it demands attention, even if it is too easily dismissed as eye-glazing process. Any yarn that includes the Parliamentary Budget Officer, the Federal Court, spending cuts and deputy ministers admittedly lacks the ingredients of a potboiler. But the case of Kevin Page vs. the federal government is TIM simply too funHARPER damental to the way this place is supposed to operate, and too vital to the tracking of taxpayers’ money, that it can’t be ignored. Page is preparing to take more than 60 government departments and deputy ministers to court in a bid to force them to provide information on government cuts, information to which he is entitled under the mandate given him by the very government which is now forcing him to the courts. It speaks to the culture of fear in the capital, this government’s predilection to demonize its opponents and makes a mockery of what is left of its pledge of accountability and transparency. Most importantly, it goes to the reason we send MPs to Ottawa. The Harper government is asking MPs, including its own backbench, to vote blindly on the spending of your tax money, a key reason these MPs arrive in this town each Monday. Page has extended deadlines for departments to provide the information. He reached out as tactfully as he could, assaulting departments with logic.
INSIGHT
Before the House rose last spring, Page obtained a legal opinion stating that his mandate gave him the right to see the budget details he is seeking. As a deadline approached, he had promises to comply from some 40 departments, but they magically evaporated. It’s no secret in this town that a number of deputy ministers agree with Page that they should be providing details on what will be cut. Page also appeared to win a victory when Wayne Wouters, the clerk of the Privy Council and the country’s most senior public servant, reversed himself and signalled that deputy ministers could decide independently whether they wanted to comply with Page’s request. But the vise tightens with Treasury Board president Tony Clement and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty at the
crank. If the government’s reticence is a matter of principle, it is a contradictory principle. Some smaller departments complied, while the larger departments gave Page the back of its hand. Clement has agreed with a parliamentary committee’s recommendation that there is a need for better transparency and accountability and that MPs should be informed of specific program funding. “Taxpayers and parliamentarians deserve a clear, discernible and traceable line between spending and results,” Clement said in response to the committee report. But that won’t be provided by Page, in Clement’s view. The government rationale in stonewalling Page has been a shifting one. He was originally accused of over-
stepping his mandate — a deliberate misreading of a mandate “to provide independent analysis (to MPs) about the state of the nation’s finances.” Then Clement and Flaherty took to parsing it this way: Page was responsible for studying the money the government spent, not the money it hasn’t spent. Clement and Flaherty have been models of decorum this week with a court date looming, but they have not been shy about spitting their enmity toward Page in the past. Flaherty has been particularly dismissive. The relationship took a sharp turn south in 2010 when Page questioned the government’s spending on its lawand-order agenda, cast doubt on the infrastructure spending and job creation, and challenged Flaherty’s target for balancing the books. Flaherty openly questioned Page’s credibility, but Page kept doing his job. Last winter, when Page said Old Age Security is properly funded and can continue on its current path with a retirement age of 65, Flaherty dismissed Page’s view as “unbelievable, unreliable, incredible.” He has butted heads with the government on the true cost of its troubled F-35 military procurement and its Afghanistan mission. On Tuesday, Keith Beardsley, former deputy chief of staff to Harper, posted a blog, published online by the National Post, remembering the Conservative pledge to create a totally independent budget watchdog. Beardsley wrote that sometimes grand visions of parties in opposition look a little different once they gain power. What his Conservatives promised in Page is not what has been delivered, he said. The Conservatives created this monster, but when the monster proved to have a mind and will of his own, they tried to emasculate him. Kevin Page is not going quietly into the night. He was given a job to do and he’s going to do it, whether the people who created him like it or not. Tim Harper is a syndicated Toronto Star national affairs writer.
Street swallows up another young victim They come from various sources; a home reserve, a home in Anders, or even from some other city or town; it really doesn’t matter from where, it’s just that they land on the street. Some come out of curiosity, some because they were invited, yet others because they were leaving something negative behind like abuse, family discord, or just plain neglect from those they were seeking attention from. However they come, CHRIS they come SALOMONS with various degrees of naivety. Not necessarily innocent, just naive about what they will be facing when they do approach the street. It was with a bit of curiosity that I watched as a new girl arrived on the street with her boyfriend. They had come from Hobbema and were only going to be here for a few days, after which they would go back home. They kept to themselves and did not mingle with the street crowd at first. What struck me about her was that she was chubby of face and very friendly. Her speech was hesitant, but her smile was super infectious. She clung to her boyfriend like there was no tomorrow and everywhere they went, they went together. But there was something about her that I could not and would not be able to understand until some time later. A few days soon became weeks
STREET TALES
CENTRAL ALBERTA’S DAILY NEWSPAPER Published at 2950 Bremner Avenue, Red Deer, Alberta, T4R 1M9 by The Red Deer Advocate Ltd. Canadian Publications Agreement #336602 Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation Fred Gorman Publisher John Stewart Managing editor Richard Smalley Advertising director
and it was not very long before they were enveloped into the patterns and habits of the street. Alcohol and drugs became a time filler and we could see that it would not be long before they would become fully entrenched in that lifestyle. Then she got pregnant; stopped smoking and drinking and cared for herself. I believe that she was almost to term when she lost the baby. The devastation that losing a child causes is almost inconsolable, and this young girl was no different. Her grief was terrible to watch and many times we would see her just sink to the ground in uncontrollable crying. The street “helped” by giving her something to ease the pain: drink and crack. It was during this time that I found out what was so different about her. It turns out that this 22-year-old was actually living with a developmental capacity of a much younger person. She had me fooled until she lost her child and the manner in which she handled the whole affair. She just could not understand what was happening to her. Just watching her was hard and we felt powerless to help. Add to that, her boyfriend left because he could not handle her or her grief. In the year since, she is drunk more often than not and when it gets really bad, the grief resurfaces, and she becomes bitter and angry and we feel at a loss in how to reach her. The street seems to have the answer that she is after today — tomorrow is another question. Suffice to say, she is now a ward of the street. And that, my friends, is how you get to be a ward of the street. Chris Salomons is kitchen co-ordinator for Potter’s Hands ministry in Red Deer. Scott Williamson Pre-press supervisor Mechelle Stewart Business manager Main switchboard 403-343-2400 Delivery/Circulation 403-314-4300 News News tips 403-314-4333 Sports line 403-343-2244 News fax 403-341-6560 E-mail: editorial@reddeeradvocate.com John Stewart, managing editor 403-314-4328 Carolyn Martindale, City editor 403-314-4326 Greg Meachem, Sports editor 403-314-4363 Harley Richards, Business editor
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Don’t wage fluoride battle with outlandish claims Many of us do not favour the City of Red Deer continuing to add fluorides to the public water supply. But it does not help the arguments to make preposterous statements about the dangers of fluorides, as did Craig MacKenzie in the Advocate letters on Oct. 24. I googled the person he quoted, Dr. David Kennedy, and followed up on the ideas that “placing one’s hand in fluoride water” will cause death, and that a “pea-sized” amount of fluoride toothpaste will also lead to one’s demise. These claims are actually misquotes of two people who wrote anonymously to a blog on fluorides, not Kennedy, who is a respected lab researcher at a university. For instance, the “death by pea-sized toothpaste” claim can be seen at http:// 403-314-4337
Website: www.reddeeradvocate.com Advertising Main number: 403-314-4343 Fax: 403-342-4051 E-mail: advertising@reddeeradvocate.com Classified ads: 403-309-3300 Classified e-mail: classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com Alberta Press Council member The Red Deer Advocate is a sponsoring member of the Alberta Press Council, an independent body that promotes and protects the established freedoms of the press and advocates freedom of information. The Alberta Press Council upholds
dentistry.about.com/u/ua/basicdentalcare/ fluorideinpublicwater.01.htm signed by “Guest Idee.” That entry actually reports that some toothpaste containers say if you swallow that quantity of toothpaste, you should call the poison control centre. Given the contents of any kind of toothpaste, fluoride or not (plastic abrasive particles, bleach, sugar, flavourings, preservatives, colourants, binders), the poison control centre will probably be able to advise whether the volume ingested will harm you at all, and what, if anything, to do about it. Mostly they tell you to spit it out in future. Fluoride use has enough actual scientific critics and research, whether one accepts them or not. Let’s stick to facts, and even supportable opinions. Adding outlandish and easily disprovable claims subtracts from the cause of ending fluoride additives. Ken Collier Red Deer
the public’s right to full, fair and accurate news reporting by considering complaints, within 60 days of publication, regarding the publication of news and the accuracy of facts used to support opinion. The council is comprised of public members and representatives of member newspapers. The Alberta Press Council’s address: PO Box 2576, Medicine Hat, AB, T1A 8G8. Phone 403-580-4104. Email: abpress@telus.net. Website: www.albertapresscouncil.ca. Publisher’s notice The Publisher reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy; to omit or discontinue any advertisement. The advertiser agrees that the Publisher shall not be
liable for damages arising out of error in advertisements beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by that portion of the advertisement in which the error occurs. Circulation Circulation 403-314-4300 Single copy prices (Monday to Thursday, and Saturday): $1.05 (GST included). Single copy (Friday): $1.31 (GST included). Home delivery (one month auto renew): $14.50 (GST included). Six months: $88 (GST included). One year: $165 (GST included). Prices outside of Red Deer may vary. For further information, please call 403314-4300.
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Top court rules in favour of Tory Opitz BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper is prepared to look at updating Canada’s election law after a divided Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a Conservative MP legitimately won his seat in 2011 despite numerous procedural irregularities. Harper said he’s “very happy” that the top court, by a slim 4-3 margin, affirmed Ted Opitz’s razor-thin, 26-vote victory in the Toronto riding of Etobicoke Centre over Liberal incumbent Borys Wrzesnewskyj. Nevertheless, he did not dismiss out of hand Liberal calls for an overhaul of the Canada Elections Act to keep pace with technology-driven abuses and what they described as more brazen dirty tricksters. “Obviously, we’ll always take a look at a law — as you know, we promised
to look at some reforms to our election laws,” Harper said on his way out of the House of Commons, accompanied by a smiling Opitz. “But in this case, the important thing is that it was the voters who made the decision and that’s the way a democracy is supposed to work.” Elections Canada had no immediate comment on the ruling, other than to say the watchdog agency would “take time to carefully review” the decision. However, chief electoral officer Marc Mayrand has said in the past that he may recommend changes in the law to better regulate the use of technology, such as automated call centres and the massive voter identification data bases amassed by parties. He’s also said the law needs to be changed to ensure exorbitant legal costs don’t prevent individuals from challenging dubious election results. Wrzesnewskyj reportedly spent as
much as $300,000 in his legal battle to overturn the May 2011 results in Etobicoke Centre. He won an Ontario Superior Court ruling that set aside Opitz’s victory because of procedural irregularities with 79 ballots, most involving missing or improperly filled out forms for voters who were not on the voters’ list or had no identification. Opitz appealed the ruling to the Supreme Court. The high court overturned the lower court ruling because it said 59 of those rejected votes should have been allowed to stand. That means Opitz essentially won his seat by a mere half dozen votes. An election official’s failure to follow a procedural safeguard is not sufficient to invalidate a vote cast by an individual who was otherwise qualified to vote, the court ruled. That approach gives effect to “the underlying Charter right to vote, not
merely the procedures used to facilitate that right,” justices Michael Moldaver and Marshall Rothstein wrote for the majority. “We reject the candidate’s attempt to disenfranchise entitled voters and so undermine public confidence in the electoral process,” they continued — a line that was repeated several times by Conservative MPs later in the day in the House of Commons. The three-justice minority, meanwhile, led by Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, argued that the procedural requirements are “fundamental safeguards for the integrity of the electoral system.” Procedural irregularities other than those that are “merely technical or trivial” should be sufficient to invalidate a vote, they said. In a statement, Opitz thanked the court.
Allowing assisted suicide too risky, demeans life: Ottawa VANCOUVER — Legalizing doctorassisted suicide would demean the value of life and could lead vulnerable people to take drastic steps in “moments of weakness,” the federal government argues in its appeal of a court decision that struck down the ban. Ottawa is defending the law that prohibits assisted suicide as it appeals a decision from a B.C. court, which concluded it is unconstitutional to prevent the sick and dying from asking a doctor to help them end their lives. The government argues in court documents that allowing any form of assisted suicide creates the possibility that people with disabilities, the elderly and the terminally ill could be coerced to end their lives or do so in moments of depression and despair, even if better days may be ahead. “It (the current law’s purpose) is to protect the vulnerable, who might be induced in moments of weakness to commit suicide,” the government says in a 54-page legal argument filed with the B.C. Court of Appeal. “And it is a reflection of the state’s
policy that the inherent value of all human life should not be depreciated by allowing one person to take another’s life . . . . It also discourages everyone, even the terminally ill, from choosing death over life.” The case was launched by several plaintiffs in B.C., including Gloria Taylor, an ALS patient who won an immediate exemption from the law. Taylor died without resorting to assisted suicide. The debate is likely destined for the Supreme Court of Canada, which last examined this country’s assistedsuicide ban in 1993, when it upheld the law in a case involving Sue Rodriguez. Rodriguez died with the help of a doctor the following year. The federal government argues the top court’s ruling in the Rodriguez case was final and says the B.C. Supreme Court had no right to attempt to overrule that decision. In the B.C. case, the judge concluded the law must allow physician-assisted suicide in cases involving patients who are diagnosed with a serious illness or disability and who are experiencing “intolerable” physical or psychological suffering with no chance of improvement.
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Trudeau comes out against PQ language plan BY THE CANADIAN PRESS QUEBEC — Justin Trudeau has pressed one of the hottest issue buttons in Canada, saying there’s no need to toughen Quebec’s language laws. During a visit to Quebec City, the Liberal leadership candidate was asked Thursday by reporters about plans by the new Parti Quebecois provincial government to toughen language laws. The pro-independence PQ calls the matter urgent, following census data that suggests a decline in francophones’ demographic weight. Trudeau’s response: the PQ language policy is unnecessary and counter-productive. While he expressed support for the old Bill 101, pointing out that it has allowed French to thrive in Quebec and keep Canada bilingual, Trudeau said Thursday that adding teeth now to the language law risks needlessly reigniting old battles. “I think we are revisiting old debates,” Trudeau
said in French. “The majority of people in (my Montreal riding of) Papineau, in Quebec City and across Quebec are focused on their jobs, on the economy, on health care and on the education of their children, in order to participate fully in this era of globalization.” His remarks come as a new poll suggested a Trudeau-led Liberal resurgence in Quebec, a province the party once dominated under his father. Justin Trudeau’s opinion on language to a certain extent echoes the position of his father, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, who brought official bilingualism to Canada and criticized the PQ’s French-only policies. The younger Trudeau is more supportive of past PQ language policies than his father was. However, the new PQ government has vowed to strengthen language laws, saying it needs to protect the French language and culture. The PQ campaigned on a promise to extend the law to junior colleges and smaller businesses. It has also proposed applying it to daycare. In the wake of
this week’s census data, the PQ calls the matter especially urgent. But Trudeau isn’t alarmed by new figures suggesting a relative decline of French in Canada and on the island of Montreal, saying it is the result of demographics and a lower birthrate. “My concern about reinforcing Bill 101 is that we will find it punishes Quebec francophones who want their children to develop a capacity in English, the language of international commerce,” he said. “I don’t think this is a good direction.” He pointed out that while older immigrants may speak their native language and English, their children are becoming fluent in French. “If I speak to the parents of people from Bangladesh, Pakistan or India, yes, the parents speak English but when I speak to the children of five, 10 or 15 years old in my riding, they’re speaking French and it’s because Bill 101 works. “I’m not worried. I’m proud of my beautiful French language.”
Catholic schools review HPV policy BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
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CALGARY — Calgary’s Catholic school district will review its policy against allowing students to be vaccinated for the virus that causes cervical and other types of cancers. Four years ago, the district said no to the HPV vaccine, a position that was strongly supported by Calgary Bishop Fred Henry, who opposed the vaccine being given in Catholic schools on moral and religious grounds. The district’s board of trustees now says because of recent medical studies it will consult with parents about offering the vaccine to Grade 5 girls. “At the end of the day, the information will come back to the board and the board will make a decision that will be heavily informed by parental input,” Mary Martin, chairwoman of the board of trustees said Thursday. “It is conceivable that this vaccine will be administered in our schools or, pending the direction of our parents, they may direct us to stay the course.”
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Autopsy results expected soon on head discovered in back alley EDMONTON — Autopsy results are expected to be released Friday on a human head found in an Edmonton alley. City police say the autopsy was delayed Thursday afternoon. A woman found the head while walking in a northeast neighbourhood Wednesday morning. Investigators are trying to determine whether it belongs to the body of a man found in a rural area east of the city on the weekend. Local media say residents of Ranfurly have been talking about how the body was decapitated and found lying in a ditch next to a running pickup truck. An autopsy was performed on that body Monday and the medical examiner ruled the death a homicide.
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RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 A7
Missing women inquiry report delayed another month The former B.C. Appeal Court judge held 94 days of formal hearings to gather evidence, and also collected written submissions and information at public forums throughout the province.
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VANCOUVER â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Even as a report is delayed yet again into the actions of police around serial killer Robert Pickton, there are high expectations from advocates and activists in Vancouverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Downtown Eastside that the report will have life-saving solutions. The province has granted an extra month to the commissioner who oversaw the public inquiry into the Robert Pickton serial murder case to hand in his final report. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Members of the community who could have played a critical role in the inquiry process were not able to participate. That needs to be healed,â&#x20AC;? said Esther Shannon, with the Honouring Truth sex workersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; organizing group. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s no effective way of integrating the community, the recommendations have a very high mountain to climb.â&#x20AC;? Shannon and a couple dozen people participated
in a public reading Thursday aimed at highlighting the sexism and racism they believe was part of the problem that allowed Pickton to continue killing women for so long. About 30 people, including advocates and friends of the serial killerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s victims, took turns reading from a 102-page assessment written by the lawyer appointed to broadly represent the interests of the Downtown Eastside during the inquiry. Some 13 groups, including those representing aboriginal concerns and civil liberties, withdrew from the inquiry before it began to protest the provinceâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s denial of legal funding for them at the inquiry. The report by lawyer Jason Gratl offers its own analysis of why Pickton was able to hunt women in the gritty Vancouver neighbourhood for so long, and puts forward 37 recommendations of its own. Oppalâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s task was to examine why police failed to catch Pickton as he murdered sex workers from Vancouverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Downtown Eastside in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
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30075J26
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A8 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
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96
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8
00
11
ea Maynards 125 count 971703
ea
97
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lean ground beef
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8 249043
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98
1
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TIME
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» SEE MORE ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM WHL ◆ B2 SCOREBOARD ◆ B4 Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Greg Meachem, Sports Editor, 403-314-4363 Sports line 403-343-2244 Fax 403-341-6560 sports@reddeeradvocate.com
A Giant lead SAN FRANCISCO WINS GAME TWO TO TAKE CONTROL OF WORLD SERIES
DAVID STERN
END OF AN ERA NBA Commissioner David Stern will retire on Feb. 1, 2014, 30 years after he took charge of the league. He will be replaced by Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver. The announcement came at an NBA Board of Governors meeting Thursday. Stern told owners during their two days of meetings of his plans, and the board unanimously decided Silver would be his successor. Stern, who turned 70 last month, became commissioner on Feb. 1, 1984. He has been the NBA’s longestserving commissioner, establishing the league’s brand around the world, presiding over team expansion and overseeing the establishment of the WNBA.
Friday
● College soccer: ACAC men’s championship at RDC, Lakeland vs, Concordia noon, RDC Kings vs. Grande Prairie, 2:20,p.m.. ● High school football: CAHSFL semifinals, Notre Dame at Stettler, 3:45 p.m.; Sylvan Lake at Hunting Hills, 7:15 p.m. Great Chief Park. ● College basketball: Grant MacEwan at RDC, women at 6 p.m., men to follow. ● WHL: Kelowna at Red Deer, 7:30 p.m., Centrium. ● Midget AAA hockey: UFA at Red Deer, 8 p.m., Arena. ● AJHL: Camrose at Olds, 8 p.m. ● Heritage junior B hockey: Strathmore at Stettler, 8 p.m. ● Chinook senior hockey: Bentley at Sylvan Lake, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday
● College soccer: ACAC men’s championship at RDC semifinals noon and 2:20 p.m. ● Bantam football: Playoffs — Notre Dame at Rocky Mountain House, 11 a.m.; Strathmore at Olds, noon; Hunting Hills at Lindsay Thurber, 3:30 p.m., Great Chief Park; Stettler at Lacombe, 3:30 p.m.
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
San Francisco Giants catcher Buster Posey tags Detroit Tigers’ Prince Fielder out at home during the second inning of Game 2 of baseball’s World Series Thursday, in San Francisco. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Giants 2 Tigers 0 SAN FRANCISCO — A Giant dose of small ball, and suddenly San Francisco finds itself in a most unique position — way ahead in a post-season series. Madison Bumgarner shut down the Detroit Tigers for seven innings, then the Giants took advantage of a bunt that stayed fair to eke out the go-ahead run in a 2-0 win Thursday night for a 2-0 edge in the World Series. Gregor Blanco’s single trickled to a stop inches fair on the infield dirt, setting up Brandon Crawford’s run-scoring doubleplay grounder in the seventh. Hunter Pence added a sacrifice fly in the eighth, and that was plenty for the Giants. Game 3 will be Saturday night in Detroit and for once, the masters of the October comeback aren’t playing from behind. The Giants overcame a 2-0 deficit to beat Cincinnati in the best-of-five division series and escaped a 3-1 hole against St. Louis in the NLCS. The loss certainly left the favoured Ti-
gers wondering what else could go wrong. Prince Fielder was thrown out at the plate by a hair and moments later starting pitcher Doug Fister was struck squarely in the head by a line drive. The 6-foot-8 Fister managed to stay on the mound, and even excelled. Bumgarner more than matched him, however, allowing just two hits before the San Francisco bullpen closed it out before another pulsating crowd. Santiago Casilla pitched a perfect eighth and Sergio Romo worked the ninth for a save in the combined two-hitter, leaving Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera in a huge hole heading back to Comerica Park. Anibal Sanchez will start for the Tigers against Ryan Vogelsong in Detroit. The Tigers looked foggy at the plate, maybe still lost following a five-day layoff after an ALCS sweep of the Yankees. Cabrera hopped up and twisted away after third baseman Pablo Sandoval, who homered three times in the opener, snared his early line drive. Bumgarner had something to do with the Tigers’ troubles, too. Bumped from the NLCS rotation after
two poor post-season starts, he returned with a flourish. The left-hander struck out eight and looked as sharp as he did in the 2010 World Series when, as a 21-year-old rookie, he stopped Texas in Game 4 on the way to a championship. This game was scoreless in the seventh when the Giants went ahead, right after actor Tom Hanks — a former peanut vendor at the nearby Oakland Coliseum — sang “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” on the field. Pence led off with a single and Fister departed, getting lots of hugs in the dugout. Rookie reliever Drew Smyly walked Brandon Belt on a full-count pitch and Blanco’s bunt loaded the bases. The Tigers kept their infield back up the middle, and had no play at the plate on Crawford’s bouncer. Pence added the insurance run the next inning with his flyball off Octavio Dotel. Fielder and the Tigers came up inches short of taking an early lead, the result of yet another alert play by second baseman Marco Scutaro and a dubious decision by third base coach Gene Lamont.
Please see SERIES on Page B3
Queens flat in home loss to NAIT BY DANNY RODE ADVOCATE STAFF Ooks 4 Queens 3 The way the RDC Queens opened their Alberta Colleges Women’s Hockey League meeting with the NAIT Ooks it appeared as if it would be another good night for the home team. Not so. In the end it was the Ooks that dominated the majority of the game and pulled out a 4-3 victory at the Arena Thursday. “We didn’t deserve it . . . the first two periods we weren’t ready to play,” said Queens assistant coach Erik Lodge, who handled the team with head coach Trevor Keeper out with a one-game suspension. “It was a good learning experience. We have to know to show up to the rink, we can’t go through the motions and get a win. We need every player to be going and need to keep each
other accountable.” The Queens jumped into a 1-0 lead at 1:46 of the first period on a outstanding effort by Gillian Altheim, who broke down the left side out of her own zone, shot by the defenceman and rifled a high shot to the short side past Ooks netminder Emma Cooley. The Queens held a 4-2 edge in shots at the time. From then on it was all NAIT as they outshot the Queens 19-3 the rest of the opening period and tied the score at 6:14 when Jillian Mathieson beat Queens netminder Camille Trautman on a shot low to the stick side. While it was a shot that Trautman would love to have back, she was the only reason for a 1-1 tie after 20 minutes. “It was one of those things that happens in hockey,” said Queens veteran forward Laura Salomons, who was an assistant coach with the Queens the last couple of seasons. “The first few
shifts were good then we turned it off. There was no excuse, but we were flat today and as long as we learn from it it’s not a bad thing, especially at the beginning of the year.” The Ooks extended the lead to 3-1 after 40 minutes on goals by Mathieson, on a scramble, and Danielle Brown, on a tipin on the power play. The Ooks outshot RDC 14-4 in the middle stanza and eventually 47-17. The Queens showed some grit in the third period as they charged back to tie it on a screened point shot by Nikki Connor at 5:40 and a redirect of a Jade Petrie pass by Emily Lougheed at 11:05 when she drove the net on a three-on-one. “To do well in a season you have to go through some adversity and this was adversity,” said Lodge. “But I liked the way we responded in the third period. Now we can learn from that, grow from it and get better.” Salomons agreed.
“We showed in the third period how gritty we can be.” But in the end Jody Rammel beat Trautman on another goal she would like back at 15:30 to spell the end for the Queens, who did have a power play to end the game and twice came within a whisker of tying it. Salomons, who is in her fourth season, is the oldest player on the Queens and teams with fifthyear forward Leah Boucher and third-year centre Rachael Hoppins on a line. “We are the oldest line and we have to be able to use our experience in a game like this,” said Salomons. “We have to step up earlier, but we’re still jelling as well.” Salomons is an assistant captain and uses her coaching knowledge when she can. “I should know the plays and I expect myself to read the plays and be better,” she said.
Please see RDC on Page B3
Playoff positions still up for grabs for some GIVE US A CALL The Advocate invites its readers to help cover the sporting news in Central Alberta. We would like to hear from you if you see something worthy of coverage. And we would appreciate hearing from you if you see something inaccurate in our pages. We strive for complete, accurate coverage of Central Alberta and are happy to correct any errors we may commit. Call 403-343-2244 with information and results, or email to sports@ reddeeradvocate.com.
The second last weekend of the season still holds playoff implications because over half of the league’s members are still jockeying for positions in the post-season. However, tonight’s game is the exception to the rule, because the B.C. Lions and Calgary Stampeders have already finalized their reservations in the playoff picture as West final (B.C.) and semi-final (Calgary) playoff hosts. I would assume that the Stamp owners will become huge Rider fans for the balance of the season to ensure a big playoff gate. Tonight’s game will likely be all about experimentation and caution for both teams because they will want to avoid injury in a meaningless game. Look for extra time for the bench-warmers from both teams in
JIM SUTHERLAND
OFFSIDE this game, although they will likely play the firststringers enough to keep them game ready when the real bullets once again fly in the playoffs. The saving grace for the game will be a need for both teams to send a message for the anticipated rematch in the West final, so they will beat each other up for awhile with their
‘A’ teams in this game. This is a chilly exhibition game and I predict a Lion victory. The ‘Desperation Bowl’ pits the Winnipeg Blue Bombers against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats at Ivor Wynne on Saturday morning. The teams have identically horrible 5-11 records and trail the 7-9 Argos and Eskimos for the final playoff spot, yet both are long shots for third or even second in the CFL East. One of them will be expelled for good after the game with a loss and the other will need a little help from their friends to stay alive for a playoff spot. Hamilton lost to Calgary on Andy Fantuz’s last-play field goal bobble, while the Bombers ran over the Argos in their last game. Frankly, neither team has played well enough to even warrant a playoff spot
in 2012, but one of them will live to wait for other game results to find out if they fight another day. That team will be Hamilton because they can still put up a lot of points in a game and their woeful defense should be able to keep the anemic Bomber offense at bay in this game. The afternoon game has the Roughriders hosting the Argos in chilly and presumably windy Regina. This game is important to both teams because the Argonauts still run the risk of missing the playoffs while the Riders need to know whether they play in the East or West semifinal. Lose the final two games and the Roughriders head east if the Eskimos win one of their final two games. The prospect of a semifinal playoff game against an eastern opponent almost
makes the idea a reward for failure for the Riders. The Roughriders will want to win the game, but I believe that the Argos will prevail because they have Ricky Ray and the Riders have Darian Durant. The last of the CFL games is Sunday morning’s Edmonton-Montreal match up. The Eskimos need to win the game to cement a playoff game while Montreal is on auto pilot to the East final. Will desperation force the Eskimos into a better game against the Alouettes? It depends upon how much Anthony Calvillo plays because Eskimo pivot Kerry Joseph is no match for AC. Look for an Eskimo victory if Calvillo takes most of the day off in this one. Jim Sutherland is a Red Deer freelance writer
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Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Inglis gives new meaning to two-way player REBELS FORWARD WORKS HARD ON THE ICE AND HAS BEEN GETTING GREAT REVIEWS FOR WHAT HE IS DOING OFF THE ICE BY GREG MEACHEM ADVOCATE SPORTS EDITOR
WHERE ARE THEY NOW? Red Deer product Michael Stickland played four years in the WHL with the Kootenay Ice and Swift Current Broncos. Now 23, Stickland graduated from the major junior ranks following the 2009-10 season — in which he scored 25 goals and collected 57 points with the Broncos — and currently attends St. Mary’s University in Halifax and is entering his third year with the hockey Huskies.
WHO’S HOT Kamloops Blazers C Colin Smith has recorded at least one point in each of the club’s 13 games this season dating back to Sept. 21. The 19-year-old Edmonton product — a seventhround pick of Colorado in this year’s NHL entry draft — is second in WHL scoring with nine goals and 21 points and is the current WHL player of the week.
WHO’S A CLOSER Seattle Thunderbirds C Luke Lockhart has scored a league-high three insurance goals. The 20-year-old from Burnaby, B.C., has contributed six goals and two assists in 10 games and is coming off a 2011-12 season in which he put up 37 points (16-21) in 72 outings.
THEY SAID IT “Going to Toronto would be pretty special, because he had been a Leaf fan all his life. I’m sure he’d be watching down and enjoying every minute of it. I know he’s going to be watching every minute of draft day and I’m going to be thinking of him every minute.” — Brandon Wheat Kings star D Ryan Pulock, to the Vancouver Province, in regards to possibly being selected in the 2013 NHL entry draft by the Toronto Maple Leafs, the favourite team of his late brother Brock who died in an automobile accident in March of 2010.
Red Deer Rebels overage forward Charles Inglis is literally a two-way performer. The outgoing Inglis has worked overtime as both a sniper and team spokesperson. Since joining the Rebels last December, Inglis has been a contributor both on and off of the ice, attending as many teamsponsored functions as he can manage, which so far has basically been every one. “He’s incredibly eager, he wants to be at every event we do off the ice,” said Rebels radio broadcast director Cam Moon. “He wants to go to every school, make every public appearance. He likes being out there and he’s not afraid to show some personality at those events. “I know we got a great reaction regarding how personable he was at the (recent) Advocate post-game skate (with the Rebels at the Centrium).” Inglis was one of six Rebels players to visit Vancouver’s skid row area this month with members of the RCMP drug squad and will share the experience at Central Alberta schools with drug awareness talks starting next week. In addition . . . “He paired up with a class at Annie L. Gaetz school this week and after he got here last year he attended all the Subway floor hockey events that we did (at various Red Deer and area schools),” said Moon. “Not to mention his regular Thursday morning visit to (radio stations) The Drive and Big 105. He goes on air and talks about whatever.” Moon noted that if the hockey thing doesn’t work out for Inglis, he could be a radio personality. “He could be a morning deejay. He could probably host a show,” Moon insisted. Inglis is just happy to be of service. “I do like getting out in the community. We finally got to go to Annie L. Gaetz school and I got paired up with a great bunch of Grade 1’s for the year,” he said. “There’s the radio thing I go to once a week and I’m setting something up where I can
Photo by Dave Brunner
Charles Inglis has been a steady contributor on the ice for the Rebels this season but his work off the ice has also been getting praise from team brass and around the community. ing the game the right way,” said Wallin. “When he gets away from some of the details in playing a team game, that effects his play and the play of the team. “The last couple of games he’s got back to paying attention to the details. He’s keeping his shifts short, he’s using his linemates and he’s had a real good pace to his game. He’s a guy who when he’s moving he gets to the net, he creates space for himself and his teammates. Just about every goal he scores is from right in the paint. That’s where he has to get to and he has to be moving the puck. When he’s hanging on to it himself he doesn’t get to that area.” Inglis was traded to Prince George after falling out of favour with the Saskatoon Blades.
And he didn’t get through two seasons in Prince George before being sent home to await a trade, all of which meant he arrived in Red Deer with some personal baggage. Since settling here, however, he’s been a model citizen. “He’s been excellent,” said Wallin. “His past is his past and he can’t erase that, but it’s what he does moving forward. Here, we’ve had zero issues with Charles. He’s great in the community, he works hard off the ice doing what he’s asked. “He quite enjoys that part of it. He’s very personable, very likeable and he’s kept his nose clean. If he continues to do that he can be a good player for us.” gmeachem@reddeeradvocate. com
Dumba looking forward to playing in another big event It wouldn’t be a normal hockey season lect the Team WHL lineups which includes for Mathew Dumba if he wasn’t selected to players who could potentially perform in play in a prestigious event above and be- a fourth-line role with the national squad, yond his duties with the Red Deer Rebels. explaining the presence of Oil Kings forThe 18-year-old star defenceman and wards Mitch Moroz and Travis Ewanyk in Minnesota Wild prime prospect both games. was named to the Team WHL Moroz and Ewanyk have 11 roster for a pair of Subway Sepoints (4g,7a) between them in 13 ries games versus Team Russia games this season. on Nov. 14-15 in Vancouver and (See the entire WHL Subway SeVictoria. ries rosters in Scoreboard on Page “It’s awesome and it’s always B 4). a privilege to be able to play in ● Rebels assistant coach Bryce something like the Subway SeThoma will guide his own team ries,” Dumba said on Thursday. next week at Calgary’s Father The Calgary native has apDavid Bauer Arena, the site of peared in numerous national the four-day Western Canada and international events, such Under-16 Challenge Cup starting as the Western Canada UnThursday. GREG der-16 Challenge and the world If he’s feeling any pressure in MEACHEM under-17 and 18 championregards to being the bench boss ships. of two-time defending champion “Ever since I was 15 and 16 Team Alberta, Thoma is doing a I’ve always had some kind of fine job of hiding those feelings. event going on,” he said. “The “I think every year is a new Subway Series is great for the Canadi- year and at the end of the day you can only an Hockey League, teams from all three put so much pressure on yourself or the leagues get to play against the best guys team,” said Thoma. “There are completely from Russia. And, of course, it helps pre- new players every year. We do draw on past pare guys for the world junior camp.” successes and we hope we can enjoy sucDumba was a late cut at last December’s cess again this year.” Canadian junior team selection camp and Thoma will be able to closely monitor has every intention of making the grade the performances of four Rebels prospects this time around. on the Alberta roster, players who have al“For sure, that’s one of my goals this ready signed education contracts with the year and I’m going to be working hard to get WHL team. there,” he insisted. “They are guys we’re familiar with,” said Dumba is one of three rearguards who Thoma, in reference to defenceman Austin will play in both Subway Series games, the Strand and forward Grayson Pawlenchuk, others being Griffin Reinhart of the Ed- Brayden Burke and Mason McCarty. monton Oil Kings and Morgan Rielly of the “Strand is a big defenceman and a pretty Moose Jaw Warriors. physical guy. Pawlenchuk is a good two-way As Dumba noted, the series is part of the forward and little Brayden Burke brings a evaluation process for Team Canada for the very offensive skill set. Mason McCarty is 2013 World Junior Championship. Kevin another very good two-way forward who by Pendergast of Hockey Canada helped se- all accounts has had a very good start to the
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season.” Meanwhile, Thoma will also keep a close eye on three other Rebels 2012 bantam draft picks. Netminder Taz Burman and forward Adam Musil will suit up for Team B.C. and forward Meyer Nell is on the Manitoba roster. “I’ll get to see how these seven guys stack up among the top 80 guys in Western Canada,” said Thoma. Alberta has owned the U16 Challenge Cup since the inception of the tournament in 2009. Rebels defenceman Mathew Dumba was the captain of the 2009 team, which defeated Manitoba in a thrilling final at Blackfalds. On the move: Was Chad Robinson excited at the prospect of joining the Brandon Wheat Kings earlier this week? Is Mitt Romney somewhat eccentric? “I think I can bring some leadership and be a contributor to this team, so I am looking forward to that,” Robinson, a native of nearly Minnedosa, Man., told the Brandon Sun after being dealt to the Wheat Kings by the Red Deer Rebels in return for a conditional seventh-round pick in the 2014 bantam draft. “I’m absolutely thrilled. I couldn’t be more excited to be a Brandon Wheat King and I’m looking forward to playing for the Wheat Kings moving forward here. Growing up watching the Wheat Kings as a younger guy, it will be pretty special.” Robinson, 19, realized he was no longer in the Rebels’ plans and requested a trade. “It was sort of a mutual agreement, I guess you could say. I just wasn’t in the team’s plans for this year and moving forward I thought it would be more beneficial to ask for a trade out of there and move on . . . And absolutely, (Brandon) was at the top of the list.” Robinson was minus-1 in his Wheat Kings debut — a 4-3 loss at Victoria on Tuesday — and picked up an assist and was plus-1 in a 3-2 Brandon win 24 hours later at Vancouver. gmeachem@reddeeradvocate.com
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go to the hospital, visit some kids and just bring some joy to their day. “I really enjoy doing that kind of stuff. It makes me feel good if I can make somebody else happy. It’s really important for me to give back because I can remember when I was just a small kid.” In short, Inglis is enjoying his time in Red Deer. “I love it here, I couldn’t be happier. I really thank Brent (GM Sutter) and Jesse (head coach Wallin) for giving me the opportunity here,” he said. Inglis potted 32 goals with the Prince George Cougars in the 2010-11 season and last season netted 19 in 52 games with the Cougars and Rebels, who acquired him from Prince George in exchange for forward Daulton Siwak and a thirdround bantam draft pick. He’s regained his form this season with 11 goals to date, including a league-leading seven on the power play. Four of the goals have come in the last two games, both Red Deer victories. “Everyone, including myself, is playing more relaxed,” he said. “We’re working harder out there and coming into games with the mindset that we’re just going to go out there and play with a relaxed intensity instead of gripping our sticks too hard. Hockey is a fun game. If we’re not having fun out there we’re not doing it right.” As the Rebels’ leading scorer with 14 points, Inglis gives himself a passing grade to this point in the season. “I’ve had a not-bad start to the season, but there are definitely areas I need to improve,” he said. “I had a little slump there where I was minus-5 over five games. I’m trying to get on the plus side of things and it’s working out. With my new linemates, Tyson Ness and Joel Hamilton, we’re moving the puck real well out there. It’s nice to play with those guys.” Wallin likes what Inglis brings to the table — speed, a good shot, a physical presence and the ability to score — and said the six-foot, 185-pound forward is most effective when he follows the game plan. “The big thing with Charles is just staying focused and play-
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 B3
Martin and Bucs runs over Vikings Buccaneers 36 Vikings 17 MINNEAPOLIS — Travelling to Minnesota to play on a Thursday night was supposed to be tough for Tampa Bay. Rookie Doug Martin ran around the field as if he didn’t want to leave. Martin racked up 214 total yards — including a career-high 135 rushing — and two touchdowns, and the Buccaneers romped to a 36-17 victory to hand the Vikings their first home loss this season. “It was pretty fun. I’m not going to lie,” said Martin, who took a screen pass 64 yards for a score, one of Josh Freeman’s three touchdown passes, to give Tampa Bay (3-4) a 27-10 lead 1:21 into the second half. Then Martin, the first-round draft pick from Boise State, capped a drive of more than 9 minutes with a 1-yard muscle into the end zone midway through the fourth quarter. “It’s hard to come from college to the NFL,” Martin said. “The speed of the game is definitely increased, and this is a feel thing. You’re looking for that rhythm, as a running back, getting comfortable in the offence and having that game-time experience. I’m definitely there, right where I need to be.” Adrian Peterson had a season-long 64-yard run for a score that brought the Vikings (5-3) to 30-17, but his lost fumble in Minnesota territory in the second quarter led directly to a touchdown. “It can get frustrating sometimes, but you can’t show that during the game. You’ve got to stay focused, stay resilient,” Peterson said. “I feel like we did that, but we just weren’t able to continue with it and stay on a roll with it.” The Bucs, the second visiting team to win on a Thursday night in seven games this season, revived
STORIES FROM B1
SERIES: Swipe tag Fielder was hit by a pitch to lead off the second, Delmon Young followed with a double and when the ball rattled around in left field, Lamont waved the burly slugger home. Even with no outs, Lamont sent him. Scutaro, in the middle of every big play for the Giants this month, dashed across the diamond, caught Blanco’s relay and unleashed a strong throw to the plate. All-Star catcher Buster Posey made a swipe tag to Fielder’s backside, just as the Tigers star slid home. Umpire Dan Iassogna had a clear look and made a demonstrative call — out! Fielder immediately popped up from his slide and pleaded his case with two hands. Tigers manager Jim Leyland rushed out and pointed to the plate. At second base, Young yelled, “No!” But even if there was replay review, it wouldn’t have helped the Tigers. Because TV replays showed Iassogna, working his first plate job in a World Series, got it right. There was no dispute that Fister somehow avoided a serious injury moments later. With two outs in the Giants second, Blanco lined a shot up the middle that hit Fister on the right side of the head and deflected on the fly to shallow centre field. Fister showed no visible effect from the blow — in fact, some in the crowd wondered whether the ball perhaps glanced off his glove because Fister stayed on his feet. Only when fans saw replays did groans echo around the
Scouting report Rebels vs. Kelowna Rockets Tonight, 7:30 p.m., Centrium The Rockets are coming off a 4-3 shootout loss on Wednesday at Medicine Hat — where they outshot the Tigers 58-28 — and occupy third place in the B.C. Division and sixth spot in the Western Conference with a 6-5-1-1 record . . . Myles Bell, a defenceman/
their struggling pass rush with three sacks and flustered Christian Ponder with a heavy dose of blitzes. Ponder finished 19 for 35 for 251 yards, one touchdown and a late interception. With a 13-point lead, just trying to keep that clock running as quickly as possible, the Bucs could’ve gone conservative, but they refused to settle for a punt. Starting at their own 13 with 1:12 left in the third quarter, they plowed their way up the field — Freeman completed four third-and-long passes — and finished off the game with Martin’s third-andgoal touchdown run with 7:03 remaining. “Ah, he is definitely an asset to our football team,” cornerback Ronde Barber said. “For a young guy to have that kind of vision, to have that kind of patience as a runner, it’s pretty impressive.” Freeman went 19 for 36 for 262 yards and, most importantly, no turnovers. Mike Williams had one of the touchdowns and 68 yards on six receptions, and the Bucs held the ball for nearly 38 of the 60 minutes. With two games apiece against division rivals Chicago and Green Bay plus road trips to Seattle and Houston in the second half of their schedule, the Vikings have quite the challenge waiting for them and their strong start after Thanksgiving. They faced an important test in this second half, too, after taking the clear advantage they had as the home team in this matchup and handing it over to the Buccaneers. “There are so few opportunities in the NFL to ride that momentum, and we’ve got to take advantage of them,” Ponder said. Their first three possessions were three-and-outs, Ponder started 0 for 5, Jerome Simpson lost a fumble after a short catch near midfield. The Bucs turned that into the second of Connor Barth’s three field goals and took a 13-0 lead. “It’s always good to have a fast start, especially
ballpark. Leyland, pitching coach Jeff Jones and a trainer went to the mound, and Fister insisted on staying in the game. He walked the next batter to load the bases, but retired Bumgarner on a popup, starting a streak of 12 straight hitters set down by Fister. Among those who winced was Oakland pitcher Brandon McCarthy, who sustained a skull fracture and brain contusion after being hit by a line drive last month. “I’m not watching but did just see the replay. Certainly hope he’s ok,” McCarthy tweeted. NOTES: Bumgarner struck out Austin Jackson and Omar Infante to start the game. Two other Giants fanned the first two batters in a Series game: Christy Mathewson (1905) and Carl Hubbell (1933). ... Bumgarner picked off Infante at first base to end the fourth. Infante made a break for second and, like Fielder earlier, came up short with his slide. ... Scutaro was the only Giants hitter to have previously faced Fister. ... Posey has a hit in all seven World Series games in his career.
RDC: Help my teammates “I help my teammates where I can and coach as much as I can on the bench,” Salomons added. It did take Salomons some time to get back into the groove after being on the bench. “It’s certainly puts a different spin on things and it was more the hands than anything coming back. Cement hands and it was a bit frustrating at forward, leads the Rockets scoring parade with nine goals and 21 points in 13 games. LW Colton Sissons, selected by the Nashville Predators in the second round of the 2012 NHL entry draft — 50th overall — has 16 points (6-10), while RW Dylan McKinlay (4-10) and LW Zach Franco (6-7) followed with 14 and 13 points . . . Jordan Cooke is the current CHL goaltender of the week after posting a 2-0-0-0 record, 1.00 goalsagainst average and .967 save percentage for the week ending Oct. 21. Cooke, from Leduc, is in his third season with the Rockets. Injuries: Kelowna — RW J.T. Barnett (lower body, two weeks), D Mitchell Chapman (lower body, one month), LW Carter Rigby (upper body, two-three weeks). Red Deer — D Kayle Doetzel (upper body, indefinite), C Wyatt Johnson (upper body, day-to-day). Special teams: Kelowna — Power play 17 per cent, 18th overall; penalty kill 82.9 per cent, sixth. Red Deer — Power play 22 per cent, 10th overall; penalty kill 84.1 per cent, fourth.
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He received a game misconduct in Edmonton against Grant MacEwan when the wanted to referee to come to the box and explain a call. The referee didn’t and handed him the misconduct. Keeper appealed to the league and they told him the referee made a mistake. “They told me because the paper work had went through I had to sit out a game,” he said shaking his head. The Queens next home game is Thursday against SAIT. drode@reddeeradvocate.com
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the start, but it’s coming.” The Queens will get another shot at the Ooks Saturday at NAIT, “We have to be harder on the puck and more vocal,” said Salomons. “We weren’t helping our D or the wingers, letting them know where they should be putting the puck. It’s something we can work on at practice and be ready for Saturday.” Keeper will also be back on the bench Saturday although he didn’t believe he should have been away Thursday.
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Red Deer College Queen Emily Lougheed, right, and NAIT Ook Jody Rammel collide at the boards during first period action at the Arena in Red Deer on Thursday.
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playing in an environment like this one. I think it makes things a lot easier down the road,” Freeman said. Harvin finally gave the Vikings some life by grabbing a screen pass for a 32-yard gain and then pivoting to haul in sideline pass over his shoulder for an 18-yard touchdown catch. But Peterson, who was having no trouble reaching the Tampa Bay secondary with almost every run through the line, had the ball stripped after a spin move by the veteran Barber. The Bucs got the ball at the Minnesota 37, and Williams made a tricky catch in the corner of the end zone for a 3-yard score and a 20-7 lead. The Buccaneers won only two of new coach Greg Schiano’s first six games, but all four of their losses were by seven points or less. So here was their chance to finally enjoy a comfortable victory, setting up a second half that was just as eventful as the first. Martin caught a screen pass and sped straight through the Vikings, escaping Chad Greenway’s tackle and not stopping until he reached the end zone. The Bucs used a three-and-out by the Vikings to add three more points and stretch the lead to 30-10. Peterson made up for his earlier fumble, though, by matching Martin’s big play with one of his own, sprung by a pancake block from Simpson to reach the end zone and bring the Vikings back in it. But Tampa Bay, after blowing a 21-7 lead in losing to New Orleans last week, finished strong this time. “Guys are getting more comfortable with what we’re doing and with each other,” said Schiano, the former Rutgers coach. “We’re getting better and that’s what you’re supposed to do.” NOTES: Peterson finished with 123 yards on 15 carries. ... The Bucs is 4-13 in their history on the road in prime-time games. ... Harvin had 90 yards on seven catches. ... Tampa Bay has won six in a row in the series, last losing to Minnesota here in 2001.
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Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Hockey
Baseball
WHL EASTERN CONFERENCE East Division GP W LOTLSOL GF Prince Albert 13 8 3 0 2 44 Brandon 14 7 5 2 0 49 Swift Current 15 5 6 3 1 43 Moose Jaw 13 6 5 1 1 42 Regina 14 6 7 1 0 37 Saskatoon 14 5 9 0 0 37
GA 39 54 44 44 44 55
Pt 18 16 14 14 13 10
GF 46 46 41 38 47 29
GA 35 36 49 43 52 41
Pt 18 17 16 13 11 8
WESTERN CONFERENCE B.C Division GP W LOTLSOL GF Kamloops 13 12 0 0 1 61 Victoria 13 9 4 0 0 39 Kelowna 13 6 5 1 1 48 Prince George 14 6 7 1 0 45 Vancouver 11 2 9 0 0 31
GA 30 39 40 54 45
Pt 25 18 14 13 4
GP Calgary 12 Edmonton 13 Red Deer 16 Lethbridge 14 Medicine Hat 14 Kootenay 12
Tri-City Spokane Portland Everett Seattle
Central Division W LOTLSOL 8 2 1 1 7 3 1 2 7 7 1 1 6 7 1 0 5 8 1 0 4 8 0 0
GP 14 13 12 13 10
U.S. Division W LOTLSOL 9 3 1 1 9 4 0 0 8 3 1 0 5 7 0 1 5 5 0 0
GF 45 50 43 34 33
GA 34 38 27 47 38
Notes — a team winning in overtime or shootout is credited with two points and a victory in the W column; the team losing in overtime or shootout receives one point which is registered in the OTL (overtime loss) or SOL (shootout loss). Wednesday’s results Moose Jaw 3 Lethbridge 2 Medicine Hat 4 Kelowna 3 (SO) Regina 3 Kootenay 0 Prince George 4 Spokane 2 Brandon 3 Vancouver 2
Sunday, Oct. 28 Kelowna at Calgary, 4 p.m. Vancouver at Edmonton, 4 p.m. Medicine Hat at Moose Jaw, 6 p.m. Tri-City at Portland, 6 p.m. Kamloops at Seattle, 6:05 p.m.
Friday’s games Moose Jaw at Prince Albert, 7 p.m. Medicine Hat at Calgary, 7 p.m. Regina at Lethbridge, 7 p.m. Swift Current at Kootenay, 7 p.m. Kelowna at Red Deer, 7:30 p.m. Brandon at Kamloops, 8 p.m. Victoria at Vancouver, 8:30 p.m. Spokane at Everett, 8:35 p.m. Tri-City at Seattle, 8:35 p.m.
Canada/Russia Subway Series Team WHL rosters Nov. 14 at Vancouver Goal — Laurent Broissoit, Edmonton; Eric Comrie, Tri-City. Defence — Ryan Pulock, Brandon; Mathew Dumba, Red Deer; Griffin Reinhart, Edmonton, Morgan Rielly, Moose Jaw; Duncan Siemens, Saskatoon; Ryan Murray, Everett. Forwards — Brady Brassart, Calgary; Travis Ewanyk, Curtis Lazar, Mitch Moroz, Michael St. Croix, Edmonton; Colton Sissons, Kelowna; Sam Reinhart, Kootenay; Hunter Shinkaruk, Medicine Hat; Mark McNeill, Prince Albert; Trent Ouellette, Regina; Mitch Holmberg, Spokane, Adam Lowry, Swift Current.
Saturday, Oct. 27 Moose Jaw at Prince Albert, 7 p.m. Kelowna at Edmonton, 7 p.m. Swift Current at Lethbridge, 7 p.m. Regina at Medicine Hat, 7:30 p.m. Calgary at Red Deer 7:30 p.m. Victoria at Kamloops, 8 p.m. Brandon at Prince George, 8 p.m. Seattle at Everett, 8:05 p.m.
Nov. 15 at Victoria Goal — Broissoit; Comrie. Defence — Dumba; Reinhart; Rielly; Keegan Lowe, Edmonton; Derrick Pouliot, Tyler Wotherspoon, Portland. Forwards — Brassart; Ewanyk; Moroz; St. Croix; Lazar; Lowry; JC Lipon, Colin Smith, Kamloops; Sam Fioretti, Moose Jaw; Ty Rattie, Portland; Graham Black, Swift Current; Steven Hodges, Victoria.
Thursday’s games No Games Scheduled.
Pt 20 18 17 11 10
Spokane at Tri-City 8:05 p.m.
Football y-Montreal Toronto Winnipeg Hamilton
GP 16 16 16 16
CFL East Division W L T 10 6 0 7 9 0 5 11 0 5 11 0
West Division GP W L T y-B.C. 16 12 4 0 x-Calgary 16 10 6 0 x-Sask. 16 8 8 0 Edmonton 16 7 9 0 x — Clinched playoff berth. y — Clinched division.
PF 440 371 339 470 PF 441 464 425 370
PA 445 425 492 515 PA 307 382 361 393
Pt 20 14 10 10 Pt 24 20 16 14
Week 18 Friday, Oct. 26 B.C. at Calgary, 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 27 Winnipeg at Hamilton, 11 a.m. Toronto at Saskatchewan, 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 28 Edmonton at Montreal, 11 a.m. Week 19 Thursday, Nov. 1 Hamilton at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 2 Calgary at Edmonton, 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 3 Montreal at Winnipeg, 1 p.m. Saskatchewan at B.C., 8 p.m.
W 6 3 3 1
South L T 1 0 3 0 4 0 5 0
Baltimore Pittsburgh Cincinnati Cleveland
W 5 3 3 1
North L T 2 0 3 0 4 0 6 0
Pct .714 .500 .429 .143
PF 174 140 166 147
PA 161 132 187 180
Denver San Diego Oakland Kansas City
W 3 3 2 1
West L 3 3 4 5
Pct .500 .500 .333 .167
PF 170 148 113 104
PA 138 137 171 183
NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF N.Y. Giants 5 2 0 .714 205 Philadelphia 3 3 0 .500 103 Dallas 3 3 0 .500 113 Washington 3 4 0 .429 201
PA 137 125 133 200
Houston Indianapolis Tennessee Jacksonville
T 0 0 0 0
Pct PF PA .857 216 128 .500 117 158 .429 149 238 .167 88 164
W 6 3 2 1
South L T Pct 0 01.000 4 0 .429 4 0 .333 5 0 .167
PF 171 184 176 106
Chicago Minnesota Green Bay Detroit
W 5 5 4 2
North L T 1 0 3 0 3 0 4 0
PF PA 162 78 184 167 184 155 133 150
San Francisco
W 5
West L T Pct PF PA 2 0 .714 165 100
Atlanta Tampa Bay New Orleans Carolina
PA 113 153 182 144
End of CFL regular season National Football League AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF New England 4 3 0 .571 217 Miami 3 3 0 .500 120 N.Y. Jets 3 4 0 .429 159 Buffalo 3 4 0 .429 171
PA 163 117 170 227
Pct .833 .625 .571 .333
Arizona Seattle St. Louis
4 4 3
3 3 4
0 .571 124 118 0 .571 116 106 0 .429 130 141
Thursday, Oct. 25 Tampa Bay 36 at Minnesota 17 Sunday, Oct. 28 Jacksonville at Green Bay, 11 a.m. Indianapolis at Tennessee, 11 a.m. Carolina at Chicago, 11 a.m. Miami at N.Y. Jets, 11 a.m. San Diego at Cleveland, 11 a.m. Atlanta at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Seattle at Detroit, 11 a.m. Washington at Pittsburgh, 11 a.m. New England vs. St. Louis at London, 11 a.m. Oakland at Kansas City, 2:05 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 2:25 p.m. New Orleans at Denver, 6:20 p.m. Open: Baltimore, Buffalo, Cincinnati, Houston Monday, Oct. 29 San Francisco at Arizona, 6:30 p.m. NFL Odds (Favourites in capital letters; odds supplied by Western Canada Lottery) Spread O/U Thursday Tampa Bay at MINNESOTA 6.5 41.5 Sunday Washington at PITTSBURGH 5.5 47.5 Seattle at DETROIT 2.5 43.5 Carolina at CHICAGO 8.5 43.5 NEW ENGLAND at St. Louis 7.5 46.5 Indianapolis at TENNESSEE 3.5 47.5 Miami at NY JETS 2.5 40.5 SAN DIEGO at Cleveland 2.5 44.5 Jacksonville at Green Bay OFF OFF Atlanta at PHILADELPHIA 1.5 46.5 Oakland at KANSAS CITY 1.5 41.5 NY GIANTS at Dallas 0.5 47.5 New Orleans at DENVER 5.5 54.5 Monday SAN FRANCISCO at Arizona 6.5 37.5
Transactions Thursday’s Sports Transactions BASEBALL CHICAGO CUBS—Assigned INF Adrian Cardenas, RHP Miguel Socolovich and RHP Jason Berken outright to Iowa (PCL). Activated RHP Marcos Mateo from the 60-day DL and sent him outright to Iowa. NEW YORK METS—Claimed C Anthony Recker off waivers from Chicago (NL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Claimed RHP Chad Beck off waivers from Toronto and C Ramon Solis from San Diego. Designated C Eric Fryer and INF Jeff Clement for assignment. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Announced bullpen coach Dyar Miller will not be retained for next season. Midwest League MWL—Granted president George H. Spelius a 26-month extension through Dec. 31, 2014. American Association FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS—Released C Todd Jennings and OF Aharon Eggleston. LINCOLN SALTDOGS—Traded RHP Yohan Gonzalez to Normal (Frontier) for a player to be named. WICHITA WINGNUTS—Released INF Greg Porter. Frontier League WASHINGTON WILD THINGS—Signed C
p.m. x-Wednesday, Oct. 31: Detroit at San Francisco, 6:07 p.m. x-Thursday, Nov. 1: Detroit at San Francisco, 6:07 p.m.
Postseason Major League Baseball WORLD SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) San Francisco 2, Detroit 0 Wednesday: San Francisco 8, Detroit 3 Thursday: Detroit 0 at San Francisco 2 Saturday, Oct. 27: San Francisco (Vogelsong 14-9) at Detroit (Sanchez 4-6), 6:07 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 28: San Francisco (Cain 16-5) at Detroit (Scherzer 16-7), 6:15 p.m. x-Monday, Oct. 29: San Francisco at Detroit, 6:07
Thursday’s Major League Linescores Detroit 000 000 000 — 0 2 0 San Fran. 000 000 11x — 2 5 0 Fister, Smyly (7), Dotel (8), Coke (8) and G.Laird; Bumgarner, S.Casilla (8), Romo (9) and Posey. W— Bumgarner 1-0. L—Fister 0-1. Sv—Romo (1).
Basketball National Basketball Association Preseason EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Philadelphia 6 1 .857 — Toronto 4 1 .800 1 Brooklyn 3 3 .500 2 1/2 New York 3 3 .500 2 1/2 Boston 2 4 .333 3 1/2 Southeast Division W L Pct 4 3 .571 3 3 .500 3 4 .429 2 5 .286 1 6 .143
Miami Atlanta Washington Orlando Charlotte
Central Division W L Pct 4 2 .667 4 2 .667 3 4 .429 3 4 .429 2 4 .333
Chicago Indiana Detroit Milwaukee Cleveland
GB — 1/2 1 2 3 GB — — 1 1/2 1 1/2 2
WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB Houston 4 2 .667 — Memphis 3 3 .500 1 New Orleans 3 4 .429 1 1/2 Dallas 2 3 .400 1 1/2 San Antonio 2 3 .400 1 1/2 Northwest Division W L Pct 5 3 .625
Utah
GB —
Denver Minnesota Oklahoma City Portland
Golden State Sacramento L.A. Clippers Phoenix L.A. Lakers
3 3 4 3
2 2 3 4
.600 .600 .571 .429
1/2 1/2 1/2 1 1/2
Pacific Division W L Pct 5 2 .714 4 2 .667 4 3 .571 3 3 .500 0 7 .000
GB — 1/2 1 1 1/2 5
Wednesday’s Games New York 97, Brooklyn 95, OT Memphis 115, Orlando 100 Houston 97, New Orleans 90 Oklahoma City 88, Dallas 76 Minnesota 95, Detroit 76 Washington 101, Miami 94 L.A. Clippers 97, L.A. Lakers 91 Thursday’s Games Milwaukee 100, Charlotte 90 Utah 97, Portland 91 Sacramento vs. L.A. Lakers at San Diego, CA, Late L.A. Clippers at Denver, Late Friday’s Games Houston at Orlando, 5 p.m. Indiana vs. Chicago at South Bend, IN, 5 p.m. Atlanta at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Minnesota vs. Milwaukee at Green Bay, WI, 6 p.m. Toronto at Memphis, 6 p.m. New Orleans at Miami, 6 p.m. Charlotte at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Washington at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Denver at Phoenix, 8:30 p.m.
Soccer MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE GP W L T GF GA y-Kansas City 34 18 7 9 42 27 x-D.C. United 33 17 10 6 52 42 x-Chicago 33 17 11 5 45 40 x-New York 33 15 9 9 54 46 x-Houston 33 14 8 11 48 39 Columbus 33 14 12 7 42 43 Montreal 33 12 15 6 45 50 Philadelphia 33 10 17 6 37 42 New England 33 8 17 8 38 44 Toronto 33 5 20 8 35 60
Pt 63 57 56 54 53 49 42 36 32 23
WESTERN CONFERENCE GP W L T GF GA 33 19 6 8 71 42 33 15 7 11 51 32 33 17 11 5 46 35 33 15 12 6 58 47 33 11 13 9 35 41 33 9 13 11 40 45 33 10 19 4 42 50
Pt 65 56 56 51 42 38 34
y-San Jose x-Seattle x-Real S.L. x-Los Angeles x-Vancouver Dallas Colorado
Portland 33 8 16 9 33 55 Chivas USA 33 7 18 8 22 56 x — clinched playoff berth. y — clinched conference. Note: Three points for a win, one for a tie.
33 29
Wednesday’s result Kansas City 2 Philadelphia 1 Saturday’s games New York at Philadelphia, 11:30 a.m. New England at Montreal, 12 p.m. D.C. United at Chicago, 2 p.m. San Jose at Portland, 4:30 p.m. Vancouver at Real Salt Lake, 7 p.m. Houston at Colorado, 7 p.m. Sunday’s games Toronto at Columbus, 2 p.m. Chivas USA at Dallas, 5 p.m. Seattle at Los Angeles, 7 p.m. End of 2012 MLS Regular Season
Golf David Fanshawe and OF Stewart Ijames. Released RHP Eric Blackwell, OF Robbie Garvey, INF Michael Mooney, and OF Jeriel Waller. BASKETBALL NBA—Announced commissioner David Stern will retire on Feb. 1, 2014 and will be replaced by deputy commissioner Adam Silver. Announced the board of governors unanimously approved the sale of the Memphis Grizzlies to an investor group led by Robert Pera. Announced Peter Holt was elected chairman of the board of governors. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS—Signed G D’Aundray Brown. DALLAS MAVERICKS—Suspended G Delonte West indefinitely for unspecified conduct detrimental to the team. Claimed C Eddy Curry off waivers from San Antonio. DENVER NUGGETS—Waived G Anthony Carter and G Ben Uzoh. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS—Exercised their third-year option on the contract of G Klay Thompson. PHILADELPHIA 76ERS—Exercised the fourthyear option on the contract of G-F Evan Turner. Women’s National Basketball Association NEW YORK LIBERTY—Named Bill Laimbeer general manager and coach.
AIBA—Lifted the three months suspension of USA Boxing that was imposed over its response to several controversial statements by its former president, Hal Adonis. FOOTBALL HOUSTON TEXANS—Placed DE David Hunter on injured reserve. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS—Placed LB Daryl Smith on the injured reserve/return list. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS—Activated DE Da’Quan Bowers from the physically unable to perform list. Waived CB LeQuan Lewis. Canadian Football League B.C. LIONS—Released WR Kierrie Johnson. SASKATCHEWAN ROUGHRIDERS—Released DL Robert Rose. Signed PK Jamie Boreham and WR Limas Sweed to the practice roster. HOCKEY BRIDGEPORT SOUND TIGERS—Recalled G Kenny Reiter from Fort Wayne (ECHL). ECHL UTAH GRIZZLIES—Named Greg McCauley assistant coach. Central Hockey League DENVER CUTTHROATS—Signed F JP Chabot. FORT WORTH BRAHMAS—Waived G Kristofer Westblom. Signed G Larry Sterling.
BOXING
Deadline to save full season passes, no new discussions take place NHL LABOUR TALKS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — The NHL’s deadline for playing a full, 82-game season arrived Thursday with no new discussions between the league and its locked-out players. Without a new collective bargaining agreement that would end the league’s lockout of players on its 40th day, the NHL vowed to cut the season short. An announcement officially taking a full schedule out of play wasn’t immediately planned. Major money-making events such as the upcoming outdoor Winter Classic and the All-Star game could soon be in peril, too. “No contact, and I don’t anticipate any announcements today,” NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly told The Associated Press in an email Thursday. NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman already painted a pessimistic picture on Wednesday, saying at a news conference for the Islanders’ move to Brooklyn that, “Unfortunately, it looks like an 82-game season is not going to be a reality.” The league has already cancelled all 135 scheduled games through Nov. 1, but the thought was those could be rescheduled if a deal was reached by the end of Thursday and play started Nov. 2. In making its most recent offer to the players, the NHL presented a proposal that included a 50-50 split of hockey-related revenues. But that was contingent on the sides making the Thursday deadline and getting the season under way following a week of training camp. The union responded with three counterproposals, all of which would get the sides to a 5050 deal, but the league rejected them quickly because they didn’t work off the NHL’s offer. Talks then broke down, and the NHL turned down the union’s offer to return to the table this week with no preconditions. The union wants anything and everything open to discussion.
The league’s position is if the players’ association isn’t willing to negotiate off the NHL’s offer — which Bettman has called the league’s best — or make a counteroffer using that proposal as a framework, then there is no sense in meeting just to meet. “The fact of the matter is there are just sometimes that you need to take time off because it’s clear that you can’t do anything to move the process forward,” Bettman said. “We’re at one of those points right now because we gave our very best offer. That offer, for better or for worse, was contingent on playing an 82-game season. So I think things actually in some respects may get more difficult.” NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr said Wednesday night that the league’s deadline was bogus. “We are and continue to be ready to meet to discuss how to resolve our remaining differences, with no preconditions. For whatever reason, the owners are not,” he said. “At the same time they are refusing to meet, they are winding the clock down to yet another artificial deadline they created.” There is a major divide between the sides over how to deal with existing player contracts. The union wants to ensure that those are all paid in full without affecting future player contracts. Bettman expressed a willingness to discuss the “make whole” provisions on existing contracts, but only if the economic portions of the league’s offer are accepted first by the union. Bettman refused to say whether the 50-50 split in the proposal would come off the table if a full season isn’t played. “I’m not going to negotiate publicly,” he said. This lockout, the third of Bettman’s tenure as commissioner, began Sept. 16. The 2004-05 season was lost in the last work stoppage.
PGA Tour-CIMB Classic Scores KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Thursday’s results from the first round of the $6.1-million, 6,909 yard, par 71 CIMB Classic at the Mines Resort & Golf Club First Round Michael Putnam 31-31 — 62 Andrew Svoboda 31-31 — 62 Tyrone Van Aswegen 30-32 — 62 Glen Day 32-31 — 63 Jeff Gove 30-33 — 63 Luke Guthrie 32-32 — 64 Sam Saunders 31-33 — 64 Justin Hicks 34-31 — 65 Jon Mills 33-32 — 65 Matt Weibring 32-33 — 65 Dawie van der Walt 33-32 — 65 John Kimbell 34-32 — 66 Brett Wetterich 33-33 — 66 Danny Lee 34-32 — 66 Lee Williams 32-34 — 66 Tag Ridings 33-33 — 66 Steve Wheatcroft 34-32 — 66 Brad Adamonis 36-30 — 66 Sung Kang 33-33 — 66 Ben Kohles 32-34 — 66 James Sacheck 34-33 — 67 Scott Parel 33-34 — 67 Joe Durant 32-35 — 67 Omar Uresti 36-31 — 67 Derek Fathauer 34-33 — 67 Scott Gardiner 35-32 — 67 Christopher DeForest 36-31 — 67 Daniel Chopra 33-34 — 67 Casey Wittenberg 35-32 — 67 Michael Connell 33-34 — 67 Troy Merritt 35-32 — 67 Skip Kendall 35-32 — 67 Jim Renner 34-33 — 67 Richard H. Lee 34-33 — 67 Luke List 34-33 — 67 Jin Park 35-32 — 67 Brice Garnett 33-34 — 67 Fernando Mechereffe 33-34 — 67 Shawn Stefani 34-34 — 68 B.J. Staten 34-34 — 68 Peter Lonard 36-32 — 68 Chris Wilson 34-34 — 68 Ryan Hietala 35-33 — 68 Carl Paulson 37-31 — 68 Jason Gore 34-34 — 68 Steve Allan 33-35 — 68 Steve Friesen 37-31 — 68 Russell Henley 33-35 — 68 Andres Gonzales 35-33 — 68 Travis Hampshire 33-35 — 68 Billy Horschel 34-34 — 68 Aron Price 34-34 — 68 John Chin 32-36 — 68 Alex Coe 34-34 — 68 Tom Hoge 34-34 — 68 Casey Martin 32-36 — 68 Justin Bolli 35-34 — 69 John Riegger 35-34 — 69 Ron Whittaker 35-34 — 69 Matt Jones 34-35 — 69 Jim Herman 36-33 — 69 Steve LeBrun 34-35 — 69 Darron Stiles 34-35 — 69 Steven Bowditch 36-33 — 69 Bryan DeCorso 35-34 — 69 Ben Martin 34-35 — 69 Matt Harmon 35-34 — 69 Kevin Johnson 35-34 — 69 Philip Pettitt, Jr. 35-34 — 69 Brad Fritsch 34-35 — 69 Patrick Sheehan 35-34 — 69 Michael Letzig 36-33 — 69 Jason Allred 39-30 — 69 Bubba Dickerson 34-35 — 69 Steven Alker 36-33 — 69
LOCAL BRIEFS
Legends lose first game PHOENIX, Ariz. — The Red Deer Gary Moe Volkswagen Legends suffered their first loss at the World Amateur Baseball Championships Thursday, falling 8-7 to the San Antonio, Tex., Red Sox in the 65-plus division. Ralph Kachor was the losing pitcher as the Legends fell to 2-1-1 and take on another Texas team — the first-place Austin Express — in their last round-robin game today. Bob Stevenson and Lyle
Charles Warren James Hahn Tim Wilkinson Bronson La’Cassie Patrick Cantlay Tim Petrovic Zack Miller Alexandre Rocha Shane Bertsch Gary Christian Billy Hurley III Camilo Benedetti Fabian Gomez Doug LaBelle II Nicholas Thompson Edward Loar Kevin Foley Tom Anderson Robert Streb Alex Prugh Scott Dunlap Woody Austin Nathan Green Hudson Swafford Matt Davidson Gavin Coles Richard Scott Scott Harrington Tyler Aldridge Craig Bowden Chris Riley Brian Stuard Oscar Serna Aaron Watkins Stephen Gangluff Jeff Klauk Frank Lickliter II Adam Hadwin Wes Roach Bio Kim Joseph Bramlett Nate Smith Scott Smith Joey Snyder III Will MacKenzie Robert Damron J.J. Killeen Andy Bare Cliff Kresge David Mathis D.J. Brigman Josh Broadaway Aaron Goldberg Lee Janzen Jeff Curl Paul Haley II Tommy Biershenk Matt Bettencourt Matt Hendrix Cameron Percy Alistair Presnell Reid Edstrom Jason Kokrak Alex Aragon Paul Claxton Erik Flores Peter Tomasulo Will Wilcox Stuart Anderson Andy Winings Nick Flanagan Scott Gutschewski Preston Otte David Lingmerth Andy Pope Ben Briscoe Ryan Armour Rob Oppenheim Jamie Sadlowski Ben Bryson Andrew Buckle
38-31 35-34 35-34 35-34 36-33 35-35 33-37 36-34 36-34 36-34 36-34 37-33 37-33 35-35 36-34 35-35 36-34 37-33 38-32 38-32 39-31 34-36 37-33 35-35 34-36 32-38 35-35 36-34 34-36 34-37 35-36 38-33 36-35 34-37 37-34 36-35 36-35 39-32 37-34 35-36 37-34 37-34 34-37 34-37 36-35 35-36 37-34 37-34 36-36 39-33 38-34 35-37 36-36 39-33 36-36 37-35 39-33 38-34 35-37 35-37 35-37 38-34 37-36 39-34 36-37 41-32 37-36 37-36 37-36 37-36 39-34 36-37 38-35 37-37 34-40 36-38 39-36 40-35 41-34 41-35 36-42
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Lorenz each had two hits for the Red Deer squad, with Lorenz also swiping four bases. Al West stroked his third triple of the tournament in a losing cause.
Strumpf’s 20 points leads Monstars to win over Bulldogs Monstars got 20 points from Shayne Stumpf and 16 from Eric Dortman in downing the Bulldogs 82-63 in Central Alberta Senior Men’s Basketball Association play. Wayne Savory had 20 points and Kevin Nordin 10 for the Bulldogs.
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 B5
Tate back on field for Stamps against Lions BY THE CANADIAN PRESS CALGARY — The result is meaningless, so the management and performance of certain players is the storyline of Friday’s CFL game between the Calgary Stampeders and B.C. Lions. The Lions (12-4) and Stampeders (10-6) secured first and second respectively in the CFL’s West Division with victories last week. The Stampeders host the division semifinal Nov. 11 with the victor heading to Vancouver on Nov. 18 for the West final. So both clubs made personnel decisions for Friday’s game with the post-season in mind. Stampeder quarterback Drew Tate gets back on the field for the first time since dislocating his left (non-throwing) shoulder in the second game of the regular season. When Tate underwent surgery in July, he wasn’t expected to return before the playoffs. Head coach and general manager John Hufnagel says both Tate and Kevin Glenn will play in Calgary’s final home game of the regular season, which sets up a potential quarterbacking controversy en route to the playoffs. Glenn, 33, led Calgary to a playoff berth during Tate’s absence. “I’m a team guy, so I understand the bigger of picture of things and why they’re playing Drew and why both of us our playing,” Glenn said Thursday. “If you’ve got two good quarterbacks, or quarterbacks who have shown they can win, you’ve got to make sure both of them are ready going into the playoffs.” The Lions are handing Mike Reilly the ball for the second week in a row. Travis Lulay’s shoulder is still sore and there is no urgency for B.C.’s starting quarterback to play this week in what will be a chilly game at McMahon Stadium. “He’s been trying to get loose, and yesterday the plan was to try and give it a go, but it was pretty cool back home and he couldn’t get warm,” Lions coach
Bombers looking to extend to keep playoff hopes alive
Richardson back to all-star form with Alouettes RETRUNING TO 2012 NUMBERS AS INJURIES TO RECIEVERS MOUNT BY THE CANADIAN PRESS MONTREAL — At last, Jamel Richardson is piling up receiving yards like he did in his careerbest 2011 campaign. The Montreal Alouettes slotback, who set a CFL record with 12 games of more than 100 receiving yards last season, got his first two 100-plus performances of the current season in the club’s last two games. “There ain’t no need to get off to a hot start,” Richardson said Thursday. “You need it for the post-season. As people die down, I get stronger.” The 30-year-old broke the ice with 109 yards on three catches, including a 75-yard touchdown, in a 24-12 win in Toronto on Oct. 14. He topped that with eight grabs for 161 yards in a 34-28 victory in Saskatchewan last weekend. He’ll try to make it three in a row when they Alouettes play host to the Edmonton Eskimos on Sunday. His previous best this year was 91 yards on Aug. 1 against Winnipeg. After amassing 1,777 yards on a league-high 112 receptions last season, Richardson mused about topping 2,000 in 2012, but it hasn’t worked out that way. He had knee trouble early in the season and missed three games, and even when healthy found himself in double coverage much of the time. A few uncharacteristic dropped balls didn’t help. And quarterback Anthony Calvillo was finding other receivers open, so balls that used to go to Richardson were now providing career-high yardage for S.J. Green and Brandon London. “We’ve been calling lots of plays for (Richardson) the entire season and it’s just one of those things where I’ve been going to a different guy because of the de-
get it to the six-foot-three veteran when possible. “I felt if I got the ball more I could help,” said Richardson. “Right now, the team’s leaning on me and I’m excited about it. “Football’s fun for me right now. The team’s playing at a very high level. And I’m excited about the bye week we have coming up after clinching the East Division.” The recent flurry left Richardson with 57 catches for 954 yards, only 46 yards short of a fifth straight 1,000-yard campaign. Coach Marc Trestman is glad to see him step up. “He’s been very productive the last two weeks,” Trestman said. “He’s got to continue to be productive and everybody around him has to continue to grow and get better. “We don’t want to be a one dimensional throwing team. We have to continue to improve our offence because we have so many new guys working with AC right now.” The 10-6 Alouettes clinched first place with the win in Toronto and didn’t let up in Saskatchewan. The Eskimos need a win to claim at least a cross-over playoff spot, which would eliminate Winnipeg and Hamilton. Most of the talk this week was about fines levied against middle linebacker Shea Emry for a hit below the belt to Saskatchewan lineman Brendon Labatte, and to rush end John Bowman for publicly criticizing an opponent. Emry, who missed practice Wednesday while his hearing with the CFL was conducted by phone, said he was relieved to escape suspension. The team’s defence already took a hit this week with news that veteran Rod Davis would miss at least the final two regular season games with a foot injury.
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fence,” said Calvillo. “Right now, teams are playing him man-toman. “Toronto bracketed him a bit, but Saskatchewan did not and it created opportunities for him. He did a great job of running routes and being physical like he did last year. You can tell he’s enjoying the moment right now and we have to continue to feed him the ball.” The key for Richardson is that he is getting hot when the rest of the offence is being whacked by injuries. Starting running back Brendon Whitaker and backup his Victor Anderson are both out, along with Green, who is out one more week with a concussion, and London, who is out for the year with a knee injury. Richardson and Brian Bratton are the only two healthy veterans among the receivers, which has forced some adjustments to the game plan and the roster. Bo Bowling, Lavasier Tuinei and Noel Devine have been in at receiver, while Canadian Eric Deslauriers is seeing more action and rookie fullback Patrick Lavoie is being used more out of the backfield. “It’s very demanding because the verbiage we use is different,” added Calvillo. “It’ll be a tough week to make sure I know who is going to line up where. “But our coaches have done a great job of adjusting to the personnel we have with the injuries we’ve had. That creates a different match-up for the (opponent’s) defence because now they have to worry about a three tight-end set with two receivers and all these other things.” Before the Toronto game, Richardson said he wanted more passes to come his way. Calvillo has insisted he won’t force the ball through coverage to him, but will
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hands warm and let the rest worry about itself. As long as you can grip the ball fine and your head and ears are warm so you can think, things will be all right.”’ The Stampeders have won two in a row and can thank their defence for a 34-32 win over the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in wintry conditions last week. Calgary turned the ball over seven times in that game, including four interceptions on Glenn. “My biggest disappointment from that game was bad football by the offence,” Hufnagel said. “I’d like to see improvement by my football team. With Drew, once he gets on the field, (I’d like) to see him being Drew Tate, a comfortable quarterback making plays and executing the game plan.” B.C. has beaten Calgary in their two previous meetings this season — a 27-22 win on Oct. 6 and a 348 thumping back on July 28. Stampeder defensive back Keon Raymond was the hero of last week’s win with a pair of sacks and a 100-yard touchdown interception. He concedes the Lions may have had better quality practices this week because they haven’t had to run around in the cold. “But it all changes once you come out here,” Raymond said. “This is a different element out here. This is the tundra. “They haven’t experienced it yet.” Calgary concludes the regular season against Edmonton next week. The Lions finish up at home against Saskatchewan and then rest the week of the division semifinal. Notes — Calgary’s Jon Cornish is 132 yards from passing Norm Kwong’s record for the most rushing yards in a single season by a Canadian running back. . . Defensive tackle Khalif Mitchell will be back in the Lions’ lineup Friday. He missed three games with injury and was benched last week for a tweet the club deemed inappropriate . . . Lions defensive end Kerwon Williams leads the CFL in sacks (11), followed by Calgary’s Charleston Hughes (10).
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WINNIPEG — The Winnipeg Blue Bombers need to extend one streak and snap another Saturday to keep their slim playoff hopes alive. The Bombers are in Hamilton on Saturday for the final game at Ivor Wynne Stadium. Winnipeg hasn’t lost a regular-season game to the Ticats since Aug. 13, 2010 — a streak of five contests — leaving quarterback Buck Pierce unsure as to why. “I don’t know, I think it’s just one of those things,” he said Thursday. “We have the confidence level when we go in and play against them. “It seems like we execute well and we match up well against them. Their offence is a bigplay offence and that kind of puts the pressure on our offence to stay on the field a little bit longer.” Actually, Winnipeg has won its last six straight against Hamilton, the other victory being a 19-3 decision over the Ticats in last year’s East Division final. But Winnipeg (5-11) hasn’t managed consecutive wins all season and is coming off an impressive 44-32 victory in Toronto last week. The Bombers last recorded back-to-back wins Aug. 26, 2011, the second victory, coincidentally, coming against Hamilton. Pierce is just as puzzled trying to explain that streak as well. “Lack of consistency, lack of focus would be my guesses,” he said. “Maybe too much confidence going in after a win.” Whatever the answer, now would be a good time to find it. Hamilton (5-11) and Winnipeg are scrapping over the same bone — the last playoff spot in the East Division. But also in the mix are the Edmonton Eskimos (7-9), who sit poised to take that bone with just one more win. That would ensure a team from the West Division crossing over and taking the final East Division playoff berth. Edmonton plays Montreal on Sunday and both Hamilton and Winnipeg can only hope the Alouettes, who have already secured first place in the East, will want to play hard regardless. “One of us is going to be out and one of us is going to be in it for at least 24 hours,” said interim Bombers head coach Tim Burke, adding if he could he’d ask Als quarterback Anthony Calvillo play this week and sit out the next one. Winnipeg plays Montreal next week in the fi-
nal regular-season game for both. Burke says the stakes are different for Montreal on Sunday but he’s counting on the Alouettes wanting to keep their momentum going. “Montreal doesn’t have to win, Edmonton does, but . . I know (Als head coach) Marc Trestman real well and I think he’ll have those guys ready to play this week,” Burke said. “He does not want to go into the playoffs with a negative. . . He wants to go in with momentum.” Since Burke was promoted from defensive coordinator at mid-season to replace Paul LaPolice, he has tried to change the atmosphere in the Bomber dressing room. Too much pressure on a team can be counterproductive, he has said. “We brought it up briefly at the beginning of the week, what our situation was,” he said. “My message will still be let’s go out there and play for the love of the game and have fun.” The Bombers have continued to make changes, however, in particular to bolster a defence that Burke feels has been one of the weakest links lately. The move of Johnny Sears to strongside linebacker is the latest. He’s the third player in as many games to fill the slot and the fifth this season, although the change this time is because of injury to Demond Washington.
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Mike Benevides explained. “Obviously we’ve got to get him to play as soon as we can. Certainly next week he’s got to get some snaps for sure so that we gain some of the rhythm back.” Thomas DeMarco will be Reilly’s backup. Also, receiver Geroy Simon comes back into B.C.’s lineup after sitting out three games with a hamstring injury. Friday’s game is a chance for both Tate and Simon to shake off rust in a low-stakes game. “I haven’t played in a number of weeks, so I’m just looking to get back on the field and get some timing with the quarterbacks and get back in the flow of playing,” said Simon, the CFL’s all-time receiving leader. Tate wrestled Calgary’s starting job away from Henry Burris late last season, prompting the trade of Burris to Hamilton in January. The 28-year-old Tate says Hufnagel hasn’t indicated how much he’ll play Friday. “I don’t care how many reps I get. All I care about is the reps I do get,” Tate said. “I know once I get on that field, the only thing that matters is moving the chains and putting the ball in the end zone. I look at it myself as when I get on that field, we’re going to make something happen regardless if I’m the backup, starter or third team.” The Lions are winners of three in a row, including last week’s 39-19 win at home over Edmonton. Reilly was 19-for-28 in passing for 278 yards and a pair of touchdowns in his first CFL start. The Central Washington product spent time on the practice roster of the NFL’s Green Bay Packers during his career and counts Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers among his friends. With scattered flurries and a temperature of -10 C forecasted for Friday’s game, Reilly has queried Rodgers about playing on frigid Lambeau Field. “I talk to him every couple of weeks and just keep in touch,” Reilly said. “I figured if I’m going to ask somebody how to play in the snow, that’s probably the best guy to ask. “He just basically said ’keep your head and your
B6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Woods in the hunt at CIMB Classic BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — It was hot, humid and his putts were lipping out. Tiger Woods felt like he’d been run over halfway through his first round in Malaysia since winning the 1999 World Cup on the same course. Only one way to fix that: The 14-time major winner rolled in five birdies on the back nine on Thursday and finished with a 5-under 66 to trail first-round leader Troy Matteson by three shots. Matteson had eight birdies in his 63 to take a one-stroke lead over fellow Americans Jeff Overton, Brian Harman and Robert Garrigus. Woods, in the last pairing with Australia’s Marcus Fraser, knew the numbers to target early in his round. After birdies at the third and fifth holes, Woods missed two short putts for par at the eighth and ninth and seemed frustrated, frequently wiping his face and neck with a white towel and glaring after the balls that didn’t drop in the cup. Knowing it was going to take a total of something like 20 under to win the tournament on the 6,909-yard Mines Resort and Golf Club course, Woods decided the only way back into contention was to be aggressive. “It’s a different type of mindset,” he said. “Going out there and shooting even par on that front nine, I just felt like I got run over.” He said midway through the round he wasn’t bothered by the stifling humidity and 91 degree, or narrowly missing two birdie attempts before the two putts for par lipped out. “What is frustrating is turning at even par and I’m eight back,” he said. “Three- or four-under par was my number on the back nine — if I could shoot that, I’m still right in the ballgame. I happened to get one more, which was a bonus.” Woods knew he could have shot a score that would have put him higher than tied for seventh — he even missed a birdie putt from about 10 feet on the 18th — but he was happy with how he hit his driver and was generally pleased with his game. “I really started hitting the ball quite well at the end of the front nine. I happened to miss two short putts ... but also the two putts I hit were good putts at 8 and 9.” he said. “Realistically it could have been seven or eight (under). But even at the turn, and to still post five (under), it was a nice little comeback. “It’s going to take 20-plus this week to win the tournament, so I’ve got to be aggressive and we’ve got to go get it.” A lightning and thunderstorm started dumping rain on the course less than an hour after play ended and, with the forecast for more rain on Friday, organizers decided to move tee times ahead by 40 minutes in the second round. Americans held five of the top six spots, with Tom Gilles behind the leading four after a 65. He was tied at 6 under with India’s Gaganjeet Bhullar, who made an eagle on the par-5 17th and had the lowest score among the Asian Tour players. “These are the only few weeks where we get to play with these (PGA Tour) guys,” Bhullar said. “It really motivates us, and I think it is very important for Asian Tour players that somebody should go up and make it interesting. You never know, it could be an Asian Tour player’s week.” The group tied with Woods at 5 under included Malaysian qualifier Danny Chia, Australia’s Greg Chalmers, South African Jbe’ Kruger and Americans J.B Holmes and Ricky Barnes. Matteson had missed the cut in his last two PGA Tour starts and had failed to break par in any of his last four competitive rounds. But he posted his lowest score since a 61 at the John Deere Classic in July,
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tiger Woods of the United States lines up a putt on the first hole during the round one of CIMB Classic golf tournament at the Mines Resort and Golf Club in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Thursday. when he finished second after a playoff in his best result of the season. He had birdies on Nos. 2, 3, 6 and 11 and finished with four straight, closing his round by holing his third shot from the greenside bunker on the par-4 18th. “The pin is really tricky on 18. I knew I’d be doing good if I could leave myself seven or eight feet for par, and it bounced and slam-dunked in the hole,” Matteson said. “That’s the first time all year the ball has managed to hit the pin and stay in the hole.”
Overton, who last year set the tournament record low round with a 62 and finished runner-up here, had a bogey-free 64 that included an eagle on the drivable 292-yard 15th, the shortest par 4 on the course. “All of a sudden I made about a 20-footer for eagle, basically drove the green, and when that went in it was really exciting,” he said. “It was just an allaround fun day.” The co-sanctioned $6.1 million CIMB Classic doesn’t count as an official U.S. PGA tournament this year, but will be added to the schedule in 2013.
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Camdon Construction is looking for the following team members:
- Site Superintendent - Foreman/Assistant Site Superintendent As the successful candidate you have extensive experience in running projects and working with sub-trades, capable of tracking job schedules and accurate budgeting. Diverse construction experience is preferred as is experience with pre-engineered metal buildings. Candidates must be comfortable mentoring Apprentices and Labourers, providing direction and overseeing their work. Complying, maintaining and promoting on-site safety will be the highest priority at all times. Some computer work may also be required. Other skills that will ensure your success in this position include: Professionalism, strong communication and organizational skills, working efficiently on your own. 42580J26
Please note: Travel and out of town work are requirements for these position, which are based out of Red Deer. The successful candidate must possess a valid driver’s license, suitable transportation for this position, and be willing to work throughout Alberta.
No phone calls please. We wish to thank all applicants, however only those under consideration will be contacted.
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Please forward your resume in strict confidence to: Camdon Construction Ltd. 6780 - 76 Street Red Deer, AB T4P 4G6 Fax: (403) 343-2648 | E-mail: hr@camdon.ca
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 B7
Elvis hoping to leave as MFC champion MFC title contender Elvis (The King) Mutapcic can thank his forgetful father for his name. Living in Bosnia at the time, his parents were both Elvis Presley fans but his dad was also a huge Bruce Lee buff. When his second son was on the way, Mr. Mutapcic wanted to name him after Brandon Lee, Bruce’s son. “Which was very uncommon for a Bosnian name,” Elvis explained. “There is no such thing in Bosnia as the name of Brandon.” Which might explain why Mr. Mutapcic could not think of the name when it came time to register it. “The next best thing he could think of was Elvis, so I got named after Elvis Presley,” said his son. Years later — and after having to dig into his pocket many times to produce the ID that proves his name is legit — Elvis Mutapcic wants to add champion to his name. Mutapcic (11-2) faces unbeaten Joseph (Leonidas) Henle on Friday in Edmonton for a Maximum Fighting Championship middleweight crown that has gathered dust in recent years. Amazingly, the last time the 185-pound title was up for grabs was at MFC 9 in March 2006. Patrick (The Predator) Cote defeated Jason (The Athlete) MacDonald but then left the organization to take part in Season 4 of “The Ultimate Fighter” reality show. The championship belt has been without a home since. Henle (8-0-1) was featured on Season 11 of “The Ultimate Fighter,” defeating future UFC fighter Constantinos Philippou before losing to Seth Baczynski. Henle did not stick with the UFC but has won five straight with one draw since leaving the show. “On a skill (level) from one to 10, he’s definitely a high nine,” said Mutapcic. “He’s a well-rounded guy, tough, comes forward. He won’t stop until you shut him off or put him to sleep.” Henle, 29, has never lost. Mutapcic, 26, has never been finished. Mutapcic (pronounced Moo-tap-cheech) believes his experience will make the difference in the five-round bout, having fought and won a title before. “When you’re in those deep waters and you’ve got to dig deep, I’ve been there,” Mutapcic said. “I’ve been in wars. I’ve been in sports where you’ve lost your lockerroom and you don’t remember that fifth round. “I’ve been there. I think that’s an advantage for me.” Mutapcic defeated Mike Van Meer in November 2009 for the Midwest Cage Combat championship. He has gone 6-1 since, defeating future TUF Brazil winner Cezar (Mutante) Ferreira along the way. Mutapcic disposed of the Brazilian with a brutal left, ending the fight in just 25 seconds in August 2011. A knee injury cost him a shot at the Superior Cage Combat title last November. Mutapcic and Henle both made their MFC debuts in August at MFC 34. They each collected first-round wins, with Mutapcic stopping Jacen Flynn via TKO in 1:39 and Henle earning a TKO over submission specialist Luke Harris at 1:57. Mutapcic was 14 when he left Sarajevo with his family in search of a better life. Leaving a ravaged post-war country behind them, they settled in Iowa where an uncle sponsored them. Growing up in Bosnia, his memories are bleak. “Wartime. Hunger. Fear,” he recalled, But there were also plenty of dreams, both long- and short-term. “I remember just wishing that I could
leave the house basement, go outside and play without fear of being shot at,” said Mutapcic, who has an older and
younger brother. “It was definitely a rough experience growing up but it was something I wouldn’t change for the world.”
son, Jon Finnigan, Tanner Howe, Justin Corbett and Colton Weseen scored once each for the Vipers. Brenden Mandrusiak made 18 saves for the win. Cole Levesque had two goals and Nick Keouhan a goal and two assists for Ponoka. Eli Falls and Aaron Swier combined for 46 in the Ponoka goal.
JUNIOR B HOCKEY PONOKA — The Red Deer Vipers spread the offence around as they downed the Ponoka Stampeders 9-3 in Heritage Junior B Hockey League play Wednesday. Cole deGraaf, Colten Brule, Jeff Kohut, Chris Robertson, Adam Fergu-
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THE CANADIAN PRESS
Vipers shoot down Stampeders
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND
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ELIGIBLE MEMBERS RECEIVE
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UP TO
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EXCLUDING F-150 REGULAR CAB XL 4X2 VALUE LEADER
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Vehicle(s) may be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offers. Offers may be cancelled at any time without notice. See your Ford Dealer for complete details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. Dealership operating hours may vary. *Until October 27, 2012, receive 0% APR purchase financing on new [2012]/[2013] Ford [Fusion (excluding Hybrid), F-150 Regular Cab (excluding XL 4x2), F-150 Super Cab and Super Crew (excluding Raptor), F-250 to F-450 (excluding Chassis Cabs)]/[Focus (excluding S), Fiesta (excluding S), Taurus (excluding SE), F-150 Regular Cab (excluding XL 4x2), F-150 Super Cab and Super Crew (excluding Raptor), F-250 to F-450 (excluding Chassis Cabs)] models for a maximum of 72 months to qualified retail customers, on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest interest rate. Example: $30,000 purchase financed at 0% APR for 72 months, monthly payment is $416.67, cost of borrowing is $0 or APR of 0% and total to be repaid is $30,000. Down payment on purchase financing offers may be required based on approved credit from Ford Credit. Taxes payable on full amount of purchase price. **Until October 27, 2012, receive $500/ $1,000/ $1,500/ $3,250/ $4,000/ $4,250/ $5,000 in Manufacturer Rebates with the purchase or lease of a new 2013 F-150 Regular Cab (excluding XL 4x2) 5.0L/ 2012 Fusion (excluding Hybrid), 2013 F-150 Super Cab and Super Crew non-5.0L/ 2013 F-150 Super Cab and Super Crew 5.0L/ 2012 F-150 Regular Cab (excluding XL 4x2) non-5.0L/ 2012 F-150 Regular Cab (excluding 4x2) 5.0L/ 2012 F-150 Super Cab and Super Crew non 5.0L/ 2012 F-150 Super Cab and Super Crew 5.0L- all Raptor and Medium Truck models excluded. This offer can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford of Canada at either the time of factory order or delivery, but not both. Manufacturer Rebates are not combinable with any fleet consumer incentives. ^Offer only valid from September 1, 2012 to October 31, 2012 (the “Offer Period”) to resident Canadians with a Costco membership on or before August 31, 2012. Use this $1,000CDN Costco member offer towards the purchase or lease of a new 2012/2013 Ford/Lincoln vehicle (excluding Fiesta, Focus, Raptor, GT500, Mustang Boss 302, Transit Connect EV & Medium Truck) (each an “Eligible Vehicle”). The Eligible Vehicle must be delivered and/or factory-ordered from your participating Ford/Lincoln dealer within the Offer Period. Offer is only valid at participating dealers, is subject to vehicle availability, and may be cancelled or changed at any time without notice. Only one (1) offer may be applied towards the purchase or lease of one (1) Eligible Vehicle, up to a maximum of two (2) separate Eligible Vehicle sales per Costco Membership Number. Offer is transferable to persons domiciled with an eligible Costco member. This offer can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford Motor Company of Canada at either the time of factory order (if ordered within the Offer Period) or delivery, but not both. Offer is not combinable with any CPA/GPC or Daily Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfit Program or the Commercial Fleet Incentive Program (CFIP). Applicable taxes calculated before $1,000CDN offer is deducted. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offer, see dealer for details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. ^^Receive a winter safety package which includes: four (4) winter tires, four (4) steel rims (2012 Escape receives alloy wheels), and four (4) tire pressure monitoring sensors when you purchase lease any new 2012/2013 Ford Fiesta, Focus (excluding BEV & ST), Fusion (excluding HEV), Escape, Edge (excluding Sport) or Explorer on or before Nov 30/12. This offer is not applicable to any Fleet (other than small fleets with an eligible FIN) or Government customers and not combinable with CPA, GPC, CFIP or Daily Rental Allowances. Some conditions apply. See Dealer for details. Vehicle handling characteristics, tire load index and speed rating may not be the same as factory supplied all-season tires. Winter tires are meant to be operated during winter conditions and may require a higher cold inflation pressure than all-season tires. Consult your Ford of Canada dealer for details including applicable warranty coverage. © 2012 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved. © 2012 Sirius Canada Inc. “SIRIUS”, the SIRIUS dog logo, channel names and logos are trademarks of SIRIUS XM Radio Inc. and are used under license.
B8 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
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LOCAL
BUSINESS ◆ C3,C4
SCIENCE ◆ C5 FASHION ◆ C6 Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Carolyn Martindale, City Editor, 403-314-4326 Fax 403-341-6560 E-mail editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
A fundraising cookie walk and craft sale will be held on Saturday, Nov. 3, by the Women of the Moose. Coffee and tea will also be served from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Moose Lodge, south of Red Deer at the corner of Willow Street and Petrolia Drive (four blocks south of Westerner Park). For more information, call 403-347-1505.
ALBERTA FUNDS EXAMINED The Alberta government hopes the public can help make some sense out of the boundaries for spending, saving and funding infrastructure through a public consultation process called Dollars and Sense. Albertans can participate by visiting www.dollarsandsense. alberta.ca. On the site, people are able to review information and answer questions about the factors that are part of the provincial fiscal ground rules, such as: when the province should save, whether a dedicated account for infrastructure should be created, and what the Alberta Heritage Trust Fund should be used for. The deadline for online submissions is Oct. 31. A summary report from the online survey and expert panels in Edmonton and Calgary in September will be released later in the fall.
COFFEE, TREATS AND FRENCH Enjoy a cup of coffee at a French-inspired cafe at Gateway Christian School (5205 48th Ave. in Red Deer) on Wednesday. Students will serve up coffee and treats from 9:30 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. The students will put their language skills to the test as they place orders, take orders and serve customers while speaking French. All proceeds will go to the Central Alberta Ronald McDonald House and the Make a Wish Foundation. For more information, contact Ger Klootwyk at 403346-5795.
GIVE US A CALL The Advocate invites its readers to help cover news in Central Alberta. We would like to hear from you if you see something worthy of coverage any errors. Call 403-314-4333.
RED DEER PUBLIC SCHOOL BOARD JOINS CONSORTIUM TO BUY WIND-GENERATED POWER BY LAURA TESTER ADVOCATE STAFF A wind power project that would provide electricity to a number of Alberta schools has also been endorsed by Red Deer Public School District. The school board supported on Wednesday the Bull Creek Wind Power project located in East-Central Alberta. The district has been investigating the potential of being part of a consortium of school jurisdictions that would enter into an agreement. The board committed to buy electricity for a 25-year period. Depending on the capacity of the turbine selected, the project will use up to 46 wind turbines to generate clean, renewable power. Board chairman Lawrence Lee said this project near Provost would only be able to
go ahead if it received participation from a number of school districts. The wind power will be provided at a guaranteed rate. “We can’t disclose the rate at this point because they haven’t finalized all the details in terms of how many boards would be participating,” said Lee. “But it would be competitive to the Enmax rate.” Lee said the board doesn’t anticipate electricity will be cheaper in 25 years. Two school boards in Southern Alberta experienced cost-savings when they got involved in a wind power project, Lee added. “So that’s why the school board has supported it — even though no one has a crystal ball to say they know where power is going to be in 25 years,” said Lee. “It’s good to give that consistency and stability to our school jurisdiction.” Lee, along with trustee Diane Macaulay, voted against the motion. Lee said his main concern was around
what could happen in five years and whether there could be alternative technologies. He referred to Hunting Hills High School, which just put up a solar panel. While it will serve just a portion of the power that’s needed, Lee said it’s just one set of panels. “What would it look like if technology came into place and there was a new alternative?” said Lee. “We would still be locked into that contract, but maybe our consumption would be less, so it would still work out.” In other school board news: ● The school district will support the City of Red Deer’s bid to host the 2019 Canada Winter Games. ● The board will request two modular classrooms for Normandeau and West Park elementary schools, but the outcome will depend on all the requests the province receives for the 2013-2014 school year. ltester@reddeeradvocate.com
Wolf Creek drainage plan eyed by county
SWIMMERS ON DECK
BY PAUL COWLEY ADVOCATE STAFF
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Waiting for instruction on the pool deck, Grade 2 and 3 students from Ecole Mountview Elementary in Red Deer watch instructor Morgan Akins as she explains a relay exercise they will be doing at the Recreation Centre on Thursday. It was last of six pool session in the Swim At School Program this fall. The program offers varying levels of instruction, from beginner to more advanced, during school hours.
Fluoride’s fate: will voters or city council decide? Removing or adjusting the amount of fluoride in Red Deer water will come down to a plebiscite or council vote. On Monday, city council will decide which route to go to make a decision. If councillors opt for a plebiscite, they must consider whether it will be in conjunction with the next municipal election in October 2013 or be done as a standalone vote.
A standalone vote would cost between $100,000 and $150,000. Holding a plebiscite as part of the next election would cost $5,000. Should council itself choose to make the decision on fluoride’s fate, the bylaw would have to be addressed at another meeting. The decision will come after public hearings, guest speakers and online information gathering.
Flooding along Wolf Creek has prompted concerns that it may be at capacity and not able to handle the runoff from future developments, Lacombe County council heard on Thursday. To ensure that the creek and Whelp Brook can channel more storm water runoff, Alberta Environment has suggested that a master drainage plan be commissioned by municipalities in the area. The plan would assess environmental concerns, future drainage requirements and flood protection levels. Once the remaining drainage capacity has been established, municipalities would each be assigned a share. The study would also look at what could be done to improve drainage in the creek and brook. Lacombe County commissioner Terry Hager said if the drainage plan isn’t done, future developers would be required to undertake their own storm water studies and their potential to add to flooding problems. Given the amount of work required and the Alberta Environment approval process, new developments could face lengthy one-to-two-year waits to get their water management approvals. Hager said the fear is that future development might be stalled. “The development of a master drainage plan would establish criteria and standards that each development would have to adhere to and streamline the approval process,” says Hager in his report to council. A master drainage plan is expected to cost $150,000 to $200,000 to complete and Lacombe County will be looking to share costs with other municipalities, such as the City of Lacombe and Ponoka County. Council unanimously approved a motion authorizing staff to develop terms of reference and come up with cost estimates for the drainage plan. pcowley@reddeeradvocate.com
Centrium expansion project set back again An additional 1,000 spectator seats in the Centrium will be installed by mid-November, says an official with Westerner Park. John Harms, chief executive officer and general manager, said on Thursday that their September plans were to see those seats in place by the end of October. There was a slight delay in shipping, which means this part of the project has been delayed by a couple of weeks, Harms said. The seats are now at customs in Calgary
after being shipped from China, he added. They will likely be installed after AgriTrade is held from Nov. 7 to 10. “This delay is nothing that we can’t work around,” said Harms. The 1,000 seats will make the complex into a 7,000-seat arena. This is part of a large expansion project that has seen costs rising. It is now pegged at $5.5 million, up from the original $4.5 million. The upgrade also includes 13 more lux-
you’re invited. Join us at our Main Campus or Downtown Campus at the Millennium Centre (4909 – 49 Street).
ury suites and a 40-seat club suite. Those suites will still be finished by mid-December. Harms said that construction timeline is still on target. The project has had other delays since construction began in mid-April. A new kitchen has also been installed on the lower level, an elevator shaft was installed in the lobby, and the new washrooms in the Parkland Pavilion are done. A grand opening is planned for January.
Find your match! SATURDAY November 3, 2012
10:00 AM – 2:00 PM
SIGN UP ONLINE! A personalized package will be ready for you at Open House.
www.rdc.ab.ca/openhouse
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COOKIE, CRAFT FUNDRAISER
Plugged in to wind
C2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 counts of possession of stolen property.
LOCAL
BRIEFS
New ambulance deal approved Lacombe County has approved an agreement to allow Alberta Health Services to use the ambulance station in Eckville. The province took over ambulance service in the Eckville area last month. To accommodate their operations, the province wants to lease the Eckville Emergency Services Facility from the town and Lacombe County. Since a lease must be approved by the minister of Health, which will take some time, an interim use and occupation agreement is needed. Lacombe County and Eckville jointly own the emergency services facility. Council approved the agreement on Thursday. Eckville has already approved the deal.
Festive sleigh rides offered at Heritage Ranch
Movember participants sought for fundraiser Mo bros can get their mojo going for Movember. Central Alberta men can participate in the month-long annual fundraiser for men’s health issues by growing moustaches and other facial hair. The November event to raise awareness of prostate cancer and funds to fight it began in Australia in 2004 and has spread to about 20 other countries, raising nearly $42 million in Canada last year and more than $120 million globally so far. It has grown to also fund programs surrounding men’s mental health issues. Women can get involved through Mo Sistas by raising funds themselves and encouraging men to participate. Men must begin November clean shaven and not connect their moustaches to any other facial hair. Steve Snelgrove and his hockey team the Red Deer Pylons have participated for five years. They’re working on plans for a month-end party at Chillabongs Bar and Grill. “Other people hold their own parties. I’ve heard of them in Sylvan Lake and Blackfalds.” Information on local events and participants, as well as registration and donation details, are available online at http://ca.movember.com.
Water Act case delayed so evidence can be reviewed
Alto Reste Cemetery hit by vandals
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Headstones at the Alto Reste Cemetery east of Red Deer were vandalized recently. Police are asking for help to identify the culprits. viously at $2,500. The Crown consented to reducing that amount to $1,500, Kurata said on Thursday. Represented by Red Deer lawyer Paul Morigeau, Ryan is to enter a plea in Coronation provincial court on Nov. 9.
Two men face charges after drugs, weapons found Two Red Deer area residents were arrested after a stash of illegal drugs, cash, bear spray and a bat were seized from a truck on Red Deer’s south side on Tuesday. Red Deer city RCMP, along with assistance from a specialized unit from Calgary, arrested a man and woman at about 6:30 p.m. The Safer Communities and Neighbourhoods (SCAN) unit alerted RCMP about someone in a pickup truck trafficking drugs in the south end of Red Deer. SCAN first noticed the vehicle while conducting surveillance of a home in Inglewood. Police say that SCAN is a unit that’s part of Calgary ALERT (Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team). RCMP conducted a traffic stop, finding a large quantity of cash, methamphetamine, heroin, cocaine, Oxycodone and marijuana. Bear spray and a bat were also located in the vehicle. The truck’s passenger, Brian Randell Buxton, 31, of Red Deer and pickup truck driver, Summer Brook Kreiser, 29, of Sylvan Lake, were arrested. Buxton was charged with four counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking, possession of property obtained by crime, and possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose. Kreiser was charged with four counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking, three counts of possession of a controlled substance, possession of property obtained by crime, possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose, and failing to comply with an undertaking. Buxton was held in custody and was set to appear in Red Deer provincial court on Thursday. Kreiser was released and ordered to appear in court on Thursday as well. They will both be back in court on Nov. 15. Buxton will be out of custody once he puts up $1,500 cash bail.
SCAN is a unit comprised of Alberta sheriffs whose goal is to observe properties where criminal activity negatively affects the health, safety or security of one or more persons in the community or neighbourhood or interferes with the peaceful enjoyment of one or more properties in the community or neighbourhood.
Legge faces another trial in string of charges
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Bail has been reduced to $1,500 for a man arrested in Consort on charges related to drugs, weapons and assaulting police officers. Dylan Lee Spencer Ryan, 20, appeared briefly in Red Deer provincial court on Thursday via closed-circuit TV from the Red Deer Remand Centre. Ryan was arrested in Consort on Oct. 3 on charges of possession of marijuana exceeding 30 grams, possession of cocaine for trafficking, assaulting a police officer while resisting arrest, assaulting a police officer and possession of a weapon dangerous to public safety. Crown prosecutor Luc Kurata advised court that Ryan can be released on bail, set pre-
Box 939, Blackfalds, AB
Lacombe county reeve returns for another year
Lacombe County Reeve Ken WigYet another trial date has been set more has been re-elected by council for a former Red Deer man arrested in for another one-year term. Hinton on Canada-wide warrants. Wigmore has been reeve since 2010 Trevor Norman John Legge, origiand was re-elected following council’s nally from Grand Falls, Nfld., was arorganizational meeting on Tuesday. rested near Hinton late in August. Coun. Paula Law was re-elected as Legge is facing charges in various deputy reeve for the coming year. jurisdictions, including three sets of charges to be handled in Red Deer. Being held in Edmonton, Legge was brought to Red Deer on Wednesday to answer a variety of charges relating to an incident near Blackfalds, involving a police pursuit of a suspect. Legge, 30, is believed to have been behind the wheel of a pickup truck that police chased through an elk farm early in August, crashing through fences a number of times before the driver escaped on foot. Legge pleaded not guilty on Wednesday to charges laid in relation to the pursuit, including dangerous driving and other motor vehicle offences. He is to be tried in Red Deer on Feb. 27 on those charges. He also has two other trials scheduled. Legge is back in Red Deer on Nov. 21 to be tried for failing to make a court appearance, then returns to court on Feb. Rent The Equipment You Need Today! 20 to answer to a total of 20 charges, including • Compact excavators • Track loaders firearms and weapons • Skid steers • Attachments offences and numerous
Defence for a man accused of illegally diverting water at his body shop at the north side of Red Deer is seeking more time to review a thick stack of information. Harry Veenstra and his company, Auto Body Services Red Deer, face a variety of charges under the Alberta Water Act and the Alberta Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act in relation to construction on the site at 49th Ave. and 78th Street. Provincial officials allege that Veenstra started an activity without approval, operated a works without a licence or proper authorization and permitted release of a substance at a concentration that could have significant adverse affect. Defence counsel Will Willms advised Judge Gordon Deck in Red Deer provincial court on Wednesday that the Crown has provided a large volume of information in relation to the charges and he would like more time to review I mile north of Blackfalds, AB on HWY 2A, 2 miles east on Lakeside Sargent Rd that information with his client. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2012 @ 10 AM Deck agreed to set the 5000 Sq. Ft of Brand-New & Used Food Service Equipment Including Stainless Steel, matter over, with Willms Restaurant, Deli, Meat & Bakery,Refrigeration Equipment & Small Wares to return on Nov. 21 to enter pleas on his cliSee: www.montgomeryauctions.com for more details & pictures ent’s behalf.
Bail reduced for man facing drugs, assault charges
A City of Red Deer cemetery was vandalized less than two weeks before Halloween, and Red Deer RCMP are asking for the public’s assistance in continuing with the investigation. Police said 30 to 40 headstones and monuments were deliberately damaged, with some being kicked over, at the Alto Reste Cemetery, 3.6 km east of Red Deer on Hwy 11. Sometime between Oct. 16 and 23, the monuments were vandalized by more than one individual, police believe. According to an RCMP release, the damage done to the cemetery is believed to be substantial, but the exact estimate of the damage is unknown. Investigators ask that anyone with information regarding this crime contact Red Deer City RCMP at 403-3435575.
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Sleigh rides through trees glowing with lights are coming to Heritage Ranch. The equestrian centre will decorate trees along its sleigh and carriage path to create a winter wonderland for its Winter Lights Sleigh Tours. “We’ll start running the lights this week to do some troubleshooting,” said Chelsea Ready, the ranch’s marketing co-ordinator. Rides will be available daily from 4 p.m. starting on Nov. 15 and running until late February. Horse-drawn sleighs will travel beneath a lit archway created by the Waskasoo Park pathway bridge. They’ll follow a lit pathway of about 30 trees of varying sizes. “The rides will last about 30 minutes,” said Ready, adding carriages will be used should there not be enough snow. Tickets are $29 for adults, $12 for children and $2 for toddlers up to age three. A portion of those prices will be donated to Shalom Counselling, a charity helping individuals, couples and families with emotional and relationship concerns. Bookings are available by calling 403-347-4977 or online at www.heritageranch.ca.
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CHINESE BAFFLED BY CONCERNS OVER NEXEN DEAL THE CANADIAN PRESS EDMONTON — Chinese government officials and business people don’t know what rules Canada is using to evaluate the proposed takeover of an oilsands producer by the state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corporation, says a top oil expert from Beijing. “I think the Chinese government people don’t understand,” said Lianyong Feng, dean of economics at the China Petroleum University and a former executive with the China National Petroleum Corporation. But Feng said that even if the takeover of Nexen (TSX:NXY) doesn’t go through, Chinese interest in Canadian resources and oil companies is unlikely to fade. “Success or fail, I think it will have no impact on Chinese companies in the future to do business with Canadian oilsands,” Feng said. Feng was in Edmonton on Thursday to speak at a conference on the oilsands at Grant MacEwan University. After his presentation, he discussed the controversial $15.1-billion Nexen deal and the scrutiny it has provoked in an interview with The Canadian Press. He said Chinese understand that political decisionmaking takes longer in Canada. “In Canada, there are more stakeholders,” he said with the occasional help of a translator. “Central governments and local people have different opinions and different interests. “I understand the difficulty to make decisions in Canada. You have to wait the time.” What they don’t understand is what the Canadian government is looking for as it decides whether or not the Nexen deal can proceed. “They don’t know very well how (Canadians) evaluate the business deal. Maybe it is a problem but I think we can understand it in the future.”
C3
BUSINESS
Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Harley Richards, Business Editor, 403-314-4337 E-mail editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
New homes getting protection ALBERTA GOVERNMENT INTRODUCES LEGISLATION FOR WARRANTY ON NEW HOMES, COULD BOOST HOUSE PRICES BY HARLEY RICHARDS ADVOCATE BUSINESS EDITOR The Alberta government has introduced legislation that would make warranty protection on new homes mandatory — and likely boost the price of an average house by $1,700 to $2,000. If passed, the New Home Buyer Protection Act would require home builders to guarantee their labour and materials for one year, and two years in the case of problems related to delivery and distribution systems like plumbing and heating. It would also mandate a fiveyear warranty on building envelopes, with extended protection available if home buyers wish to purchase it. Finally, major structural components would require 10 years of coverage. Speaking in front of a newly constructed home in Edmonton on Thursday, Municipal Affairs Minister Doug Griffiths said the legislation would increase the accountability of builders and warranty providers, with clear standards and guidelines. Most builders currently provide one-year warranties on materials and labour, and five years of coverage in the case of major structural components. Griffiths pointed out that this isn’t standardized, and Alberta’s hot economy and skilled labour shortage increases the risk of problems. The minister thinks most buyers will happily pay the resulting increased purchase price for the peace of mind it will give them. “With the average home price being over $300,000, this looks to be a fraction of a percentage of the cost of a new home.” The new act is expected to
Photo by Jeff Stokoe/Advocate Staff
William White, left, and Wayne Foote of Shadow Wolf Construction in Red Deer work on a new bi-level single family home in Timberstone. The provincial government introduced legislation on Thursday that would impose mandatory warranty protection on new homes. come into effect next fall. It would apply to single-detached homes, as well as condominiums, modular homes, mobile homes and dwellings on recreational properties. The warranty requirements would not apply to homes constructed by builders for their own occupancy, unless they sell them during the warranty period. Three other provinces already have mandatory home warranty programs: British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec. But Griffiths thinks Alberta’s
proposed coverage is superior. “We are offering the most comprehensive, strongest protection for people who build new homes.” The government is also seeking to strengthen the enforcement of building codes in Alberta. It wants to increase the limitation period for penalties for non-compliance to three years from six months. The maximum penalty for first-time offenders would jump to $100,000 from $15,000, and for a second offence the top fine would be-
come $500,000, up from $30,000. Dan Ouwehand, past-president of the Canadian Home Builders’ Association — Central Alberta, said earlier this month that his organization supports mandatory new home warranty protection. He pointed out that CHBA members are already required to provide warranty protection, and that the organization provided input to the government while it was preparing the new legislation. hrichards@reddeeradvocate. com
Northwestern hoping to add Committee being formed new routes to deal with clubroot LACOMBE COUNTY
AIRLINE HAS PROPOSAL IN FOR PASSENGER SERVICE FROM RED DEER TO ABBOTSFORD AND FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. BY HARLEY RICHARDS ADVOCATE BUSINESS EDITOR Northwestern Air Lease Ltd. is looking to extend its reach from Red Deer, with proposals for new passenger routes to Abbotsford and Fort St. John, B.C., currently before Transport Canada. Brian Harrold, Northwestern’s general manager, said his company is awaiting approval from the national air traffic regulator. It would like to implement both routes as soon as possible, he said. “In a perfect world, we’d be running now.” The Fort Smith, N.W.T.-based airline currently offers twice-weekly service between the Red Deer Airport and Kelowna, B.C. It also flies from the Central Alberta airport to Fort McMurray and back, twice a week. The latter route was launched on Oct. 1. Northwestern flew between Red Deer and Dawson Creek, B.C., but suspended that service at the beginning of September. It plans to resume those flights and continue them on to Fort St. John, once Transport Canada approval is received, said Harrold. He thinks an Abbotsford connection would appeal to local residents with family or business interests in Vancouver. “It’s close enough that a cab isn’t that horrible to Vancouver, but it’s far enough out that it’s easy for us to get in and out of there with a smaller airplane,” said Harrold. “We’re not fighting with Air Canada and WestJet and everyone else.” Northwestern has been discounting its Red Deer fares during the month of October, with one-way tickets to or from Kelowna selling for $159, and to or from Fort McMurray for $199 — inclusive of all fees and taxes. The regular prices are $270.90 and $343.35 respectively. The airline plans to extend the sale with respect to its Kelowna route, until Dec. 15. However, the discounted price will only be available on four seats per flight. Terry Harrold, Brian’s father and the president of Northwestern, said the response to the sale has been good, particularly in the case of Kelowna travellers. “We’ve had quite a few people travelling in the last two weeks.” Travel to and from Fort McMurray has also picked up, he added. That’s convinced Northwestern to offer direct flights from Fort McMurray to Red Deer, effective Nov. 4. Currently, that route includes a stop in Edmonton, although flights from Red Deer to Fort McMurray are direct. “I think we’re getting enough people now that it will sustain a direct flight,” said Brian Harrold. Northwestern currently flies from the Red Deer Airport to Kelowna and back on Fridays and Sundays. Service between Red Deer and Fort McMurray is available Mondays and Fridays. The airline uses 15-seat Jetstream 32 aircraft. hrichards@reddeeradvocate.com
BY PAUL COWLEY ADVOCATE STAFF
Lacombe County plans to recruit local farmers to help review how the municipality should respond when clubroot is found in canola fields. Acting on a recommendation from its committee of the whole, council on Thursday approved a motion to form an ad hoc committee to review the clubroot policy. The committee would include all of council and, it is hoped, two producers from each of the county’s seven divisions. The county has got off lightly so far with only three fields testing positive for mild infestations of the disease that has been spreading across the province. No fields tested positive this past season. While it has not been a pressing problem yet, the county wants to ensure its clubroot policy reflects the latest scientific data on the disease, which causes the roots of canola plants to mutate and swell, eventually killing the plant. Coun. Dana Kreil said she’s heard from local producers who want to know more about clubroot risks. The county first developed a canola policy in 2008 and updated it in 2011. Under the existing policy, once clubroot is discovered in a field, the farmer must not plant canola there for five years — four years if clubroot-resistant
seed is used. However, not all municipalities handle clubroot the same way and crop rotations can vary. “The issue of seed is a huge issue. Resistant seed is hard to get,” said Coun. Rod McDermand. There is also question about whether an entire quarter section needs to taken out of canola production when clubroot is found. “Scientifically, you don’t have a real good reason to say it should be 160 acres,” said McDermand. There is also some debate about what crop rotation is required. Fencing has proven effective, but not all farmers deal with their infestations the same way. In Lacombe County, one producer fenced off his infested area, but another planted a different crop and continued farming. The committee is expected to come back with an updated clubroot policy by the end of the year. Early next year, information meetings will be organized for area farmers. In Central Alberta, clubroot has also been found in Red Deer, Ponoka, Stettler, Flagstaff and Camrose counties. As of November 2011, clubroot was found in 20 of the province’s 69 counties. The disease was found in four more municipalities this year, including the County of Stettler. pcowley@reddeeradvocate.com
Enbridge transfers $1.16 billion of renewable assets, storage THE CANADIAN PRESS CALGARY — Pipeline giant Enbridge Inc. is transferring $1.16 billion in storage and renewable energy assets to its affiliate. Enbridge Income Fund Holdings (TSX:ENF) is acquiring oil storage facilities in Hardisty, Alta., that can hold about 11 million barrels of crude above and below ground. The fund is also buying The Greenwich Wind Project near Thunder Bay, Ont., and the Amherstburg and Tilbury solar projects near Sarnia, Ont. As a result of the deal, Enbridge Inc.’s economic interest in Enbridge
Income Fund Holdings will decrease from 69.2 per cent to 67.8 per cent. “The prospect of acquiring this portfolio of assets is exciting,” said John Whelen, president of the fund. He said the facilities would be a “great fit” as they are underpinned by long-term fixed-price contracts and are sheltered from commodity price and foreign exchange swings. “If approved by shareholders, the transaction would substantially scale up and further diversify the fund’s sources of low risk cash flow, reinforcing its value to investors seeking a steady and predictable payout of
cash flow from low-risk energy infrastructure assets,” said Whelen. Related to the acquisition, Enbridge Income Fund Holdings plans to raise $222.2 million through a bought-deal financing led by RBC Capital Markets and CIBC World Markets. That will see it sell nearly 9.6 million subscription receipts at a price of $23.15. Those proceeds will be paid to Enbridge Inc. in cash, in addition to $582 million in debt, $305 million in additional Enbridge Commercial Trust units and $55 million in common shares. Shareholders are set to vote on the transaction on December 7.
C4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Shaw says customer service, pricing priorities for 2013
COMPANIES
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
Thursday’s stock prices supplied by RBC Dominion Securities of Red Deer. For information call 341-8883.
Shoppers . . . . . . . . . . . . 40.80 Tim Hortons . . . . . . . . . . 49.49 Wal-Mart . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75.32 WestJet Airlines . . . . . . . 17.29
MARKETS CLOSE TORONTO — The Toronto stock market snapped a four session losing run Thursday, led by gold sector gains in the wake of strong earnings reports from Goldcorp Inc. (TSX:G) and Agnico-Eagle Mines (TSX:AEM). The S&P/TSX composite index closed up 105.2 points at 12,300.23 while traders also took earnings reports from a slew of other companies. “A lot of the numbers that came out of Canada were reasonably in-line and positive and that’s certainly helping things,” said Colin Cieszynski, market analyst at CMC Markets Canada. “So far, so good for Canada.” The TSX Venture Exchange gained 16.8 points to 1,305.54. The Canadian dollar was off early highs but closed up 0.1 of a cent to 100.61 cents US as markets also got a boost from data that showed Britain’s economy emerged from recession in the July-to-September quarter after a nine-month downturn. U.S. indexes had started the session out strong amid a solid earnings report from U.S. multinational consumer products giant Procter & Gamble. But gains faded as a report showed the number of Americans who signed contacts to buy homes rose only slightly last month, suggesting sales may level off in the coming months after solid gains in the past year. The Dow Jones industrials were 26.34 points ahead to 13,103.68 as the National Association of Realtors said that its seasonally adjusted index of sales agreements rose in September to a reading of 99.5. That’s up from August’s reading of 99.2 but below a two-year high of 101.9 reached in July. Contracts are up 14.5 per cent from a year ago. The index can signal where the housing market is headed because a signed contract usually results in a final sale one or two months later. The Nasdaq gained 4.42 points to 2,986.12 and the S&P 500 index up 4.22 points to 1,412.97. Markets had lost ground over the last few days as results from big American multinationals such as McDonald’s, DuPont chemical and conglomerates General Electric and 3M Inc. disappointed and reminded investors about how fragile economic conditions are overseas, particularly in Europe.
Analysts also see traders getting more cautious ahead of the U.S. election on Nov. 6 which is seen as too close to call. Procter & Gamble said quarterly net income fell seven per cent to $2.81 billion, or 96 cents per share, down from $3.02 billion, or $1.03 per share, last year. Adjusted results of $1.06 a share beat expectations by a dime, however, and the world’s largest consumer products maker reiterated its annual guidance, sending its shares up 2.9 per cent to US$70.07. The TSX gold sector rose about three per cent as December bullion gained $11.40 to US$1,713 an ounce and Goldcorp Inc. (TSX:G) posted a thirdquarter profit of US$498 million or 61 cents a share. Adjusted for one-time items, Goldcorp’s earnings were 54 cents per share, six cents better than estimates and its shares rose $2.81 to $43.60. Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd. (TSX:AEM) bounded ahead $4.59 or just under nine per cent to $55.97 as it increased its production guidance for the year and it reported a better than expected third-quarter profit of US$106.3 million. The TSX energy sector was up 0.8 per cent as oil prices firmed up after five days of losses, including a drop of almost $1 on Wednesday in the wake of data showing a much larger increase in crude inventories last week than had been expected. The December contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange gained 32 cents to US$86.05 a barrel. Oil and gas producer Nexen Inc. (TSX:NXY) said its net income fell to $59 million, or 11 cents per share in the third quarter from $200 million, or 38 cents per share a year ago due to lower cash flow and the impact of several non-recurring items. Nexen also said it expected the $15.1-billion deal that would see it acquired by China National Offshore Oil Co. to be completed by the end of this year. Its shares added seven cents to $23.70. Cenovus Energy Inc. (TSX:CVE) says its net income fell by 43 per cent from a year ago to $289 million or 38 cents per share before adjustments, missing analyst estimates by a wide margin. But Cenovus’s cash flow, a more closely watched metric in the energy sector, rose by 41 per cent to $1.12 billion or $1.47 per share, 25 cents better than estimates. Its shares gained
Mining Barrick Gold . . . . . . . . . . 39.25 Cameco Corp. . . . . . . . . 18.84 First Quantum Minerals . 22.55 Goldcorp Inc. . . . . . . . . . 43.60 Hudbay Minerals. . . . . . . . 9.27 Inmet Corp.. . . . . . . . . . . 51.79 Kinross Gold Corp. . . . . . . 9.69 Potash Corp.. . . . . . . . . . 40.17 Sherritt Intl. . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.49 Teck Resources . . . . . . . 31.73 Energy Arc Energy . . . . . . . . . . . 24.25 Badger Daylighting Ltd. . 29.68 Baker Hughes. . . . . . . . . 43.42 Bonavista . . . . . . . . . . . . 17.99 Bonterra Energy . . . . . . . 45.28 Cdn. Nat. Res. . . . . . . . . 29.93 Cdn. Oil Sands Ltd. . . . . 20.67 Canyon Services Group. 11.08 Cenovous Energy Inc. . . 34.40 CWC Well Services . . . . 0.700 Encana Corp. . . . . . . . . . 22.31 Essential Energy. . . . . . . . 2.19 Exxon Mobil . . . . . . . . . . 90.43
Halliburton Co. . . . . . . . . 32.92 High Arctic . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.33 Husky Energy . . . . . . . . . 26.68 Imperial Oil . . . . . . . . . . . 43.95 IROC Services . . . . . . . . . 2.52 Nexen Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . 23.70 Pengrowth Energy . . . . . . 6.08 Penn West Energy . . . . . 13.13 Pinecrest Energy Inc. . . . . 1.83 Precision Drilling Corp . . . 7.48 Suncor Energy . . . . . . . . 33.14 Talisman Energy . . . . . . . 12.20 Trican Ltd.. . . . . . . . . . . . 12.35 Trinidad Energy . . . . . . . . 6.84 Vermilion Energy . . . . . . 47.52 Financials Bank of Montreal . . . . . . 59.55 Bank of N.S. . . . . . . . . . . 53.69 CIBC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78.02 Cdn. Western . . . . . . . . . 29.52 Carefusion . . . . . . . . . . . 26.79 Great West Life. . . . . . . . 22.76 IGM Financial . . . . . . . . . 38.59 Intact Financial Corp. . . . 60.47 Manulife Corp. . . . . . . . . 12.39 National Bank . . . . . . . . . 76.45 Rifco Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.34 Royal Bank . . . . . . . . . . . 56.91 Sun Life Fin. Inc.. . . . . . . 24.95 TD Bank . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81.25 40 cents to $34.40. The metals and mining sector was flat 0.3 per cent as copper gave up an early modest gain and moved down two cents to US$3.55 a pound. Copper closed unchanged Wednesday but prices for the metal, which is viewed as an economic barometer, saw a slide of 18 cents in the previous four sessions. Teck Resources (TSX:TCK.B) climbed 34 cents to $31.73. Elsewhere on the earnings front, Potash Corp. says its thirdquarter profit fell 22 per cent from a year ago to US$645 million or 74 cents per share. Revenue was $2.14 billion, down from $2.32 billion in the third quarter of 2011. The revenue was in line with analyst estimates but profit was below expectations by two to three cents per share, depending on adjustments. Its shares dipped 12 cents to $40.17. Shaw Communications Inc. (TSX:SJR.B) gained 36 cents to $20.85 as it reported quarterly net income from continuing operations of $133 million, or 28 cents per diluted share, for down from $167 million or 37 cents per share in the same period last year. Revenue, however, was up 2.5 per cent to $1.21 billion for the quarter compared to $1.81 billion year over year. ICE FUTURES CANADA WINNIPEG — Closing prices: Canola: Nov.’12 $5.60 lower $617.00; Jan ’13 $5.40 lower $616.70; March ’13 $5.10 lower $614.80; May ’13 $3.50 lower $610.30; July ’13 $3.70 lower $606.70; Nov. ’13 $3.70 lower $554.50; Jan. ’14 $4.50 lower $557.10; March ’14 $4.50 lower $557.40; May ’14 $4.50 lower $557.40; July ’14 $4.50 lower $557.40; Nov. ’14 $4.50 lower $557.40. Barley (Western): Dec. ’12 unchanged $250.00; March ’13 unchanged $253.00; May ’13 unchanged $254.00; July ’13 unchanged $254.50; Oct. ’13 unchanged $254.50; Dec ’13 unchanged $254.50; March ’14 unchanged $254.50; May ’14 unchanged $254.50; July ’14 unchanged $254.50; Oct. ’14 unchanged $254.50. Thursday’s estimated volume of trade: 351,480 tonnes of canola; 0 tonnes of barley (Western Barley) Total: 351,480.
Precision Drilling earnings fall in Q3 THE CANADIAN PRESS CALGARY — Precision Drilling Corp. thirdquarter profits dropped by more than half as customers with Canada’s biggest oil and gas services company tightened their spending. The Calgary-based company (TSX:PD), which operates drilling rigs throughout Canada and the United States, said its net income fell to $39 million or 14 cents per share, down from $83 million or 29 cents per share in the third quarter of 2011. Precision’s revenue fell to $484.8 million from $492.9 million a year earlier. “Customer demand for our services ebbed as our they have drilled deep into the 2012 budgets,” chief executive officer Kevin Neveu told a conference call with analysts Thursday. “Any spending additions that might have been anticipated failed to materialize as global economic concerns, political issues, oil transportation bottlenecks all caused our customers to hesitate when it came to increasing 2012 spending.”
Precision entered 2012 expecting to spend $1.14 billion, but has since reined its capital budget back to $921 million to adjust to the changing industry conditions, said chief financial officer Rob McNally. “During the third
quarter, we, along with the rest of the North American oil service industry fought the headwinds of weak natural gas prices and (natural gas liquids) prices and volatile oil prices, which caused continued softening,” said McNally.
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Diversified and Industrials Agrium Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 105.24 ATCO Ltd.. . . . . . . . . . . . 73.79 BCE Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42.78 Bombardier . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.73 Brookfield . . . . . . . . . . . . 33.85 Cdn. National Railway . . 86.45 Cdn. Pacific Railway. . . . 91.97 Cdn. Satellite . . . . . . . . . . 4.30 Cdn. Utilities . . . . . . . . . . 65.82 Capital Power Corp . . . . 20.98 Cervus Equipment Corp 21.00 Dow Chemical . . . . . . . . 29.66 Enbridge Inc. . . . . . . . . . 39.03 Finning Intl. Inc. . . . . . . . 23.10 Fortis Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 33.40 General Motors Co. . . . . 23.63 Parkland Fuel Corp. . . . . 17.07 Research in Motion. . . . . . 7.66 SNC Lavalin Group. . . . . 38.78 Stantec Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 34.54 Telus Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . 62.42 Transalta Corp.. . . . . . . . 15.22 Transcanada. . . . . . . . . . 44.10 Consumer Brick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.38 Canadian Tire . . . . . . . . . 71.56 Gamehost . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.83 Loblaw Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . 34.06 Maple Leaf Foods. . . . . . 11.07 Rona Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.19
Customer service and careful pricing are priorities across Shaw Communications’ operations in fiscal 2013, CEO Brad Shaw said Thursday after the company reported a 20 per cent drop in quarterly profit. The Calgary cable and media company has added staff to deliver better service and has “dramatically” reduced call waiting times, he said. “We have applied more rigour and discipline to our pricing, customer acquisition strategies and marketing activities,” Brad Shaw said on a conference call. “This strategy was evident in our financial results in the second half of the year and this will continue to be our focus in fiscal 2013,” Brad Shaw said on a conference call. Other cable companies such as Rogers (RCI.B) and Quebecor’s Videotron (TSX:QBR.B) have also put an emphasis on customer service to help prevent customers from going to competitors. Shaw Media operates Global Television and 19 specialty networks including HGTV Canada, Food Network Canada, History Television and Showcase and also offers high-speed Internet among its services. In its 2013 outlook, the company said it anticipates modest growth in consolidated revenue and operating income before amortization. It also plans to continue to enhance its network and launch a new satellite, Anik G. However, Shaw said it expects to reduce capital investments from 2012
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levels and its free cash flow to be in line with the 2012 fiscal year, which ended in August. Meanwhile, Shaw wouldn’t comment on whether it’s interested in buying any of Astral Media’s assets, should they come up for sale. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission recently nixed Bell’s (TSX:BCE) $3.4-billion deal to take over Astral Media, saying it wasn’t in the best interests of Canadians. Bell has asked federal cabinet to intervene but so far it has shown little appetite to do so. “It seemed to be somewhat more of a Bell-focused decision when you look at it, not so much against vertical integration in the industry...,” Brad Shaw said. “It seemed me when you read into it, it seemed to be some of the things that Bell was dealing with more specifically than from an industry point of view.” The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission said if it had allowed the deal, BCE would have controlled almost 45 per cent of the English TV viewership, above its threshold of 35 per cent. Bell disagrees, saying Bell and Astral combined would have an Englishlanguage TV market share of 33.5 per cent. The discrepancy arises because Bell includes U.S. competitors in the calculations, while the CRTC does not. In its financial results, Shaw said its net income from continuing operations fell 20 per cent to $133 million in the fourth quarter ended Aug. 31.
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SCIENCE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Windows, iPads and more as tech companies unveil holiday products NEW YORK — As the holiday-shopping season approaches, Microsoft and Apple have scheduled major events this week to unveil new gadgets and software. The Microsoft event Thursday will focus on Windows 8, a major update to its lucrative operating system. The new software will go on sale Friday, and PC manufacturers have a slew of desktops, laptops and tablet computers designed for it. Apple, meanwhile, is expected to unveil a smaller iPad at an event in San Jose, Calif., on Tuesday. It comes just weeks after the launch of a new iPhone. These are some of the gadgets to expect for the holidays:
APPLE DEVICES Apple has done well selling its full-sized tablet computer, which has a screen that measures nearly 10 inches diagonally. But companies such as Amazon. com Inc. and Google Inc. have made in-roads selling tablets with smaller, 7-inch screens and lower price tags. Apple isn’t commenting on its plans. Tech bloggers and analysts expect that an “iPad Mini” — the name isn’t confirmed — will have a 7.85-inch screen. Estimates on prices vary. Last month, Apple began selling its iPhone 5. The new phone is bigger, but thinner than previous models and works with faster cellular networks known as 4G. Apple also updated its phone software and replaced Google Inc.’s mapping service for its own. Apple’s maps app has been derided for inaccuracies and lack of features, prompting CEO Tim Cook to apologize. Apple’s leading rival, Samsung Electronics Co., came out with a new version of its flagship phone, the Galaxy S III, months ago. But Samsung is known for releasing products throughout the year, each targeted at a different base of consumers. For those who like to work with a stylus, the Galaxy Note II smartphone is coming soon.
TABLET RIVALS
help them along by using a stylus to create stepping stones for the characters or stun enemies. Players can also turn off the TV entirely and play on the GamePad. Nintendo Co. has been trying to drum up excitement for the Wii U, the first major gaming console to launch since 2006. The company also announced new entertainment features for the console.
Westerner Park would like to thank all of our volunteers, staff, shareholders and stakeholders. It is because of each of you that we can proudly say, we are central Alberta’s “Destination for Celebration” and now, a Red Deer Chamber of Commerce Business of the Year winner! Event Line 403.347.4767 Information Line 403.343.7800 westernerpark.ca
CALLING ON WINDOWS Microsoft Corp. will release a new version of the Windows operating system on Friday, one that’s designed to work on both traditional computers and tablet devices. Several PC manufacturers including Lenovo Group Ltd., HewlettPackard Co., Samsung Electronics Co. and Dell Inc. already have announced details about new desktops, laptops and tablet computers. Microsoft plans its own tablet computer, too. It’s new territory for Microsoft, which typically leaves it to others to make devices using its software. Now, it will be competing against its partners. The Surface tablet will come in two versions, both with 10.6-inch screens, slightly larger than the iPad’s. One model will run on the same type of lowerenergy chips used in the iPad. It will start at $499, also like the newest, fullsized iPads. A keyboard cover will cost another $100. That will go on sale Friday. A heavier, more expensive version will run on Intel chips and be capable of running standard Windows applications. Microsoft hasn’t announced the date or price for that yet. A new version of the Windows Phone system is coming out this fall as well. Once-dominant phone maker Nokia Corp. has been struggling in the shadow of Apple and Android, and it’s counting on the new Windows system for a revival. Nokia and Microsoft have unveiled two new devices, but few details are available on when and where they would go on sale.
NEW BLACKBERRYS A year ago, Research In Motion Ltd. disclosed that it was working on a next-generation phone system for the BlackBerry, which now looks ancient next to the iPhone and Android devices. It was supposed to be out in time for this year’s holiday season. That won’t happen. In June, RIM pushed the release of BlackBerry 10 devices into early next year, saying it wasn’t ready. That means RIM will not only compete with the new iPhone and Android devices out this fall, but it will also have to contend with the new Windows devices.
PLAYING GAMES Nintendo’s new Wii U game machine will go on sale in the U.S. on Nov. 18. A basic, white model will cost $300. A deluxe black version for another $50 comes with an extra game and more accessories. The GamePad touch-screen controller for it will offer new ways to play. In “New Super Mario Bros. U.,” for example, players holding the old Wii controllers control Mario, Luigi and other characters. The person with the GamePad can
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Notice of Intention to Designate Municipal Historic Resources under the Historical Resources Act,Section 26, R.S.A., 2000, Ch. H-6 Notice is hereby given that Council of The City of Red Deer intends to pass a bylaw to designate the following property as a Municipal Historic Resource under the Historical Resources Act, Section 26, R.S.A., 2000, Ch. H-6, as amended from time to time. The property to be designated as a Municipal Historic Resource is:
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Oriole Park West Neighbourhood Land Use Bylaw Amendment 3357/N-2012 Housekeeping Amendments to Lands Adjacent to Kerry Wood Drive and Immediately South of Oak Drive City Council is considering amending the Land Use Bylaw by clarifying existing land uses through the removal of land designated for future urban development in the Oriole Park West neighbourhood that is not large enough for development to occur. Land Use Bylaw Amendment 3357/N-2012 provides for the rezoning of the A1-Future Urban Development District east of Kerry Wood Drive to A2 Environmental Preservation District, the rezoning of the A1-Future Urban Development District west of Kerry Wood Drive to P1 Parks and Recreation District and the rezoning of the A2-Environmental Preservation District west of Kerry Wood Drive to P1 Parks and Recreation District. Proposed Amendment to Land Use Bylaw 3357/2006
McIntosh House Located Municipally at: 4631 Ross Street Red Deer, AB and legally described as: Lot 38-40, Block A, Plan K8 For additional information contact City of Red Deer Planning Services at 403-406-8700 or by email at planning@reddeer.ca
Development Officer Approvals On October 23, 2012, the Development Officer issued approval for the following applications: Permitted Use Deer Park 1. Beta Surveys Ltd. – a 1.29 metre relaxation to the minimum rear yard to an existing deck located at 43 Dietz Close. Garden Heights 2. G Smith – a 21.72 m2 relaxation to the maximum floor area and a 0.02 metre relaxation to the minimum front yard setback to a proposed single family dwelling and attached garage to be located at 18 Grove Close. 3. R & M Taylor – a 0.52 metre relaxation to the minimum rear yard to the house and a 1.17 metre relaxation to the minimum rear yard to the deck for a proposed single family dwelling and attached garage to be located at 26 Grove Close. Lancaster 4. Beta Surveys Ltd. – a 0.82 metre relaxation to the minimum rear yard to an existing deck located at 83 Lawrence Crescent. Mountview 5. M Wiseman – a 0.3 metre relaxation to the distance from the doors to the lane and a 1.43 metre relaxation to the maximum width to a proposed addition to an existing detached garage located at 3601 42 Avenue. Riverside Light
DR OD WO RY KER
Amazon’s 7-inch Kindle Fire is one of the smaller tablets with decent sales. Last month, it started shipping an updated version with a faster processor, more memory and longer battery life. It also cut the price to $159, from $199, making it far cheaper than the iPad, which starts at $399. Amazon is also releasing higher-end models under the Kindle Fire HD line. A 7-inch one goes for $199 and an 8.9-inch one for $299. There’s also a $499 model that can use the 4G cellular networks that phone companies have been building. A data plan will cost an extra $50 a year. The smaller HD model is already available, while the larger ones will be available Nov. 20. Barnes and Noble Inc. is also updating its Nook tablets. The new Nook HD will come in two sizes, one at 7 inches (starting at $199) and one at 9 inches (starting at $269). They will be out Nov. 1. In addition to the new HD screen and a lighter body, Barnes & Noble is increasing the services the Nook offers. It’s adding a video purchase and rental service, allowing users to maintain different profiles and making
it easier to browse titles in its book and magazine stores. Google has an event in New York next week. All the company is saying is that it has to do with its Android operating system for mobile devices. Google started selling the Nexus 7 over the summer and could use the event to announce an update. Toys R Us, meanwhile, is making a 7-inch tablet aimed at children. The Tabeo went on sale this week for $149.99.
You!
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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
We’re celebrating
6. Parkland Steamers & Sandblasters Ltd. – a 279.6 m2 shop addition to an existing industrial building located at 4648 61 Street. Discretionary Use
Change District from: A1 to A2 A1 to P1 A2 to P1
Bower South
Affected District: A1 - Future Urban Development District A2 - Environmental Preservation District P1 - Parks and Recreation District
Proposed Amendment Map: 13 / 2012 Bylaw: 3357 / N-2012 Date: June 20, 2012
The proposed bylaws may be inspected at Legislative Services, 2nd Floor City Hall during regular office hours or for more details, contact City of Red Deer Planning Services at 403-406-8700. City Council will hear from any person claiming to be affected by the proposed bylaws at the Public Hearings on Tuesday, November 13, 2012 at 6:00 p.m. in Council Chambers, 2nd Floor of City Hall. If you want your letter or petition included on the Council agenda you must submit it to the Manager, Legislative Services by Tuesday, November 6, 2012. Otherwise you can simply tell Council your views at the Public Hearing. Council’s Procedure Bylaw indicates that each presentation is limited to 10 minutes. Any submission will be public information. If you have any questions regarding the use of this information please contact the Manager, Legislative Services at 403-342-8132.
7. Altus Group – a 17 metre monopole telecommunication tower to be located at 1750 49 Avenue. Deer Park 8. Alcatel Lucent. – a 26.2 metre monopole telecommunication tower to be located at 69 Dunlop Street. Vanier Woods East 9. Larkaun Developments Ltd. - a proposed secondary suite in a new single family dwelling with attached garage to be located at 142 Voisin Close. You may appeal Discretionary approvals to the Red Deer Subdivision & Development Appeal Board, Legislative Services, City Hall, prior to 4:30 p.m. on November 9, 2012. You may not appeal a Permitted Use unless it involves a relaxation, variation or misinterpretation of the Land Use Bylaw. Appeal forms (outlining appeal fees) are available at Legislative Services. For further information, please phone 403-342-8399.
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Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Unique prints, bold hues loom large at Toronto Fashion Week BY THE CANADIAN PRESS TORONTO — Homegrown designers continued to crank up the colour at Toronto’s World MasterCard Fashion Week on Wednesday. From sweeping dresses to polished outerwear, Day 3 of spring-summer collections at David Pecaut Square brought with an expanse of lines saturated in vivid colours and unique patterns. Joe Fresh: The affordable apparel brand delivered a 60s twist to its extensive range of minimalist, modern sportswear to wrap up Day 3. Joe Fresh drew inspiration from optical art evocative of the decade melded with futuristic patterns, colours and cuts. The wide-ranging collection boasted clean lines and sleek silhouettes with a palette largely steeped in black and white with infusions of mustard yellow, eggshell and cobalt blues. There were plenty of striking patterns in the mix, including horizontal stripes and geometric and digital prints. Women’s apparel conjured elegance and chic with demure bow blouses, ruffled collared shirts and capes, along with sheath dresses and pleated skirts. The brand took a boldly graphic turn with its menswear as well, which encompassed floral-printed shirts and check-print suited separates among more traditional blazers and pea coats. It was hard to miss the blindingly bright metallics, with silver foil incorporated on everything from windbreakers to skirts and barely there briefs. While the men stepped out in soft white loafers, the footwear offerings were more extensive for women, from chunky-heeled pumps to pointy heels with silvercapped tips or mesh detailing. Mackage: Against a backdrop of a brick wall setpiece, Mackage channelled the 80s and modern street style in its range of slick outerwear looks. Co-creative directors and childhood friends Elisa Dahan and Eran Elfassy incorporated leathers and nylons in the line’s mix of moto jackets and vests, bombers, hooded windbreakers and trenches. There were apparel offerings in the mix, with leggings, pencil skirts, shorts and halter crop tops fashioned from leather. The retro touches reminiscent of 80s style were plentiful, from the pops of neon yellow colouring cuffs to the brassy exposed zippers and buckles. The palette was more muted with sand, light grey and mint hues interspersed among darker shades of black and reddish-brown. Korhani Home: The Canadian home decor brand brought their unique spin on carpet couture to the runway with an eclectic showcase which included live parrots as part of the colourful presentation. Helmed by creative director Kirsten Korhani, all the runway looks are crafted from Korhani Home’s carpets and home accessories. Opening the showcase was a dramatic flared-hem gown featuring criss-cross satin lacing fused with a rich gold-and-burgundy printed carpet. From there, the looks spanned time and locales, from flirty, flapper-inspired style steeped in pale mint and grey shades from the 20s, to sophisticated bustier dresses, coats and capes encompassing vibrant shades of red and pink teamed with black. An extensive array of tropical prints, from birds to bananas, were made from reversible plastic rugs which were crafted into contemporary garments ranging from structured dresses to high-waisted pants and bustiers. Lucian Matis: The Toronto-based designer showcased two sides of the style coin in his MATIS line, contrasting vibrant hues with an expansive range of gunmetal greys. Matis pulled double duty presenting his signature line, Lucian Matis, which followed a similar trajectory to his ready-to-wear collection with its infusion of boldly graphic prints.
Lush, colourful patterns ranging from bird-and-floral designs to kaleidoscopic and abstract prints adorned the feminine creations in the MATIS line, including fluttering, long-sleeved dresses, sheaths and draped-backed tops. Tailored two-button blazers were featured in rich shades like coral and mustard, and Matis put his unique spin on the ever-popular peplum by creating sexy peek-a-boo effects with lace details along sleeves and top fronts. Amid the sea of colour was a rich range of greys, from a snakeskin-printed wrap dress to a succession of separates, including short-sleeved tops, blazers, shorts and pants shimmering in sequins. Within hours, Matis returned to the runway, opening the presentation of his signature collection with richly coloured, intricate Moroccan-tile mosaic prints and kaleidoscopic patterns adorning sleek blazers, slender pencil skirts and fanciful dresses. Day 3 also featured a presentation from Whitney Linen. World MasterCard Fashion Week runs until Friday.
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Models show creations by Joe Fresh while walking the runway during Toronto Fashion Week in Toronto on Wednesday.
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19th Annual Festival of Trees Nov. 17, 21-25, 2012 Westerner Park, Red Deer
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Saturday, November 17, 2012 4:00 pm FESTIVAL LIGHTS THE NIGHT *NEW NAME & DATE City Hall Park, Downtown Red Deer SANTA CLAUS PARADE Parade prize money eligible to top 3 entries and People’s Choice! Thursday, November 22, 2012 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm SENIORS APPRECIATION 4:00 pm - 7:00 pm VOLUNTEER “SNEAKAPEEK” 7:00 pm - 11:00 pm “CIRQUE de NOEL” Friday, November 23, 2012 11:30 am - 1:30 pm “FESTIVAL BUSINESS LUNCH” 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm “TASTE OF RED DEER” 8:00 pm - 11:00 pm “FESTIVAL OF WINES” Saturday, November 24, 2012 11:30 am - 2:30 pm “TIS THE SEASON”
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HEALTH
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Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Aspirin may treat colon cancer STUDY SUGGESTS ASPIRIN MAY WORK AS A GENE-TARGETED DRUG THAT COSTS JUST PENNIES aspirin? It just seems like it was a simple enough thing to take,” she said. “For me the bleeding risk is a very small possible consequence” compared with the risk of cancer coming back, she said.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — Aspirin, one of the world’s oldest and cheapest drugs, has shown remarkable promise in treating colon cancer in people with mutations in Online: a gene that’s thought to play a role in the disease. Medical journal: http://www.nejm.org Among patients with the mutations, those who regularly took aspirin lived longer than those who didn’t, a major study found. Five years after their cancers were diagnosed, 97 per cent of the aspirin users were still alive versus 74 per cent of those not taking the drug. Aspirin seemed to make no difference in patients who did not have the mutations. This sort of study can’t prove that aspirin caused the better survival, and doctors say more research must confirm the findings before aspirin can be recommended more widely. The study wasn’t designed to test aspirin; people were taking it on their own for er, a leading aspirin maker. Pasche has been a paid speaker for two companies that make cancer treatvarious reasons. Still, the results suggest that this simple medicine ments and has two patent applications under review might be the cheapest gene-targeting therapy ever related to cancer treatment. Researchers warn that aspirin may not be responfound for cancer. About one-sixth of all colon cancer For $300 dollar loan for 14 days total cost of borrowing patients have the mutated gene and might be helped sible for the improved survival seen in this study. is $30 dollars. Annual percentage rate is (APR)=260.71%. Differences in how the patients’ cancer was treated by aspirin. And aspirin costs just pennies a day. Limited time offer. “It’s exciting to think that something that’s al- could have played a role. For that reason, they say the next step should be a ready in the medicine cabinet may really have an Downtown Co-op Plaza, Red Deer important effect” beyond relieving pain and helping study where some people with the mutated gene are to prevent heart attacks, said Dr. Andrew Chan of given aspirin and others are not, so their cancer out403-342-6700 Massachusetts General Hospital. He and others from comes can be compared more directly. One colon cancer patient, L. Stewart Keefe, 60, a Harvard Medical School led the study, which appears in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medi- retired interior decorator and painter from Alton, N.H., decided several years ago to try it. cine. 41600J18-K13 “I figured, what have I got to lose by taking some Cancers of the colon or rectum are a leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide. More than 140,000 new cases and 51,000 deaths from them are expected this year in the United States. Several studies suggest that aspirin may help fight cancer, especially colorectal tumors. It is often recommended for people who have colon cancer and others at high risk of developing it. But it’s not advised for wider use, or for cancer prevention, because it can cause serious bleeding in the stomach and gut. What has been lacking, doctors say, is a good way to tell which people might benefit the most, so aspirin’s risks would be justified. Chan’s study suggests a way to do that. It involved 964 people diagnosed with various stages of colon cancer who were among nearly 175,000 participants in two health studies based at Harvard that began in the 1980s. Every two years, they filled out surveys on their health habits, including aspirin use. Most had surgery for their cancer, and many also had chemotherapy. They gave tumour tissue samples that could be tested for gene activity. Researchers focused on one gene, PIK3CA, that is involved in a key pathway that fuels cancer’s growth and spread. Aspirin seems to blunt that pathway, so the scientists looked at its use in relation to the gene. In those whose tumors had a mutation in that gene, regular aspirin use cut the risk of dying of colon cancer by 82 per cent and of dying of any cause by 46 per cent during the study period of about 13 years. Only two of the 62 regular aspirin users whose tumors had the mutated gene died within five years of their cancer diagnosis versus 23 of 90 non-aspirin users with such a mutation. The results are “quite exciting,” said Dr. Boris Pasche, a cancer specialist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham who wrote an editorial that appears with the study in the medical journal. Half a dozen drugs are used to treat colon cancer, but only one meaningfully extends survival in people whose cancers have not widely spread, he said. “Now we may have aspirin. That’s why it’s a big deal,” Pasche said. In the study, the dose When you save with us you’re not only investing in yourself, of aspirin — baby or regular — didn’t seem to you’re investing in your friends, family and neighbours. matter, just whether any aspirin was regularly used. The test for the gene is not expensive and is simple enough that most cancer centres should be servus.ca 187SERVUSCU able to do it, Chan and Pasche said. The National Institutes of Health and several foundations paid for the study. One of the 17 authors consults for Bay-
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Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Boost brain health with tips Access to groceries still a problem from e-cookbook Mindfull post-Katrina BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TORONTO — A team of experts has cooked up a new book that interweaves scientific facts about brain health with some tips on lifestyle choices in an effort to reduce users’ likelihood of developing dementia. The e-book, called Mindfull, was inspired by a belief that scientific information about brain health hasn’t been presented in a way that people can incorporate into their daily lives, said co-author Carol Greenwood, a scientist and professor of nutrition and brain health. Greenwood is with the Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest Health Sciences and the University of Toronto. She collaborated with Daphna Rabinovitch, a recipe developer and food writer, and Joanna Gryfe, a food and media expert, to compile the 300-page book of consumer-friendly information on the science of nutrition and brain health, along with 100 recipes supporting those principles. “It’s a resource that you can use in terms of understanding what we know about brain health both from a diet but also from a lifestyles perspective,” Greenwood said Wednesday in a phone interview. “Developing a resource that would combine the scientific background and then how to transition that into your diet and then using recipes as a scaffold to do that was kind of where this all came together.” Experts predict dementia rates will soar in the coming decades as Canada’s population gets older. According to the Alzheimer Society of Canada, 60 per cent of Alzheimer’s diagnoses are attributed to lifestyle choices. Poor eating habits and a lack of physical and intellectual stimulation are stronger drivers for dementia than genetics alone. “Effectively what we’ve tried to produce was a whole-brain health resource,” said Greenwood, who has been exploring the relationship between diet and brain health for close to 30 years. “We’re trying to stay away from arguing there’s a magic bullet (to prevent dementia), because I don’t believe there is, but talk broadly in terms of giving people optimism that knowing the more that they tend to their lifestyle that they can look forward, perhaps, to having a healthier cognitive retirement.” Skeptics may question whether varying one’s food intake can protect against dementia. Greenwood said people may not realize that other health conditions associated with diet also influence brain health. “The glass-half-empty part of it is that everyone will acknowledge that elevated cholesterol and blood pressure and Type 2 diabetes are diet-related disorders, but I think what they don’t recognize is that those are risk factors for cognitive decline and dementia,” she explained. “So if you don’t eat well for what I (call) south of the neck, then it’s going to compromise north of the neck.” The glass half-full part, she said, is the fact that
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
The cover of the book Mindfull by Carol Greenwood, Daphna Rabinovitch and Joanna Gryfe is shown. A team of experts has cooked up a new book that interweaves scientific facts about brain health with some tips on lifestyle choices in an effort to lower the likelihood of developing dementia. there is an increasing body of evidence from longterm studies that suggest certain behaviours are associated with retaining cognitive function during aging, “and within that context there’s been a lot of exploration about diet.” To give the book a coast-to-coast flavour, the authors asked well-known chefs such as Michael Smith, Mark McEwan and Dale Mackay to contribute recipes. As well, Laureen Harper — wife of Prime Minister Stephen Harper — agreed to provide a recipe they’ve called Parliament Hill Smoothie. The yogurt-based drink with fruit in the book’s breakfast section is one that she, the prime minister and their children often have.
NEW ORLEANS — Dwayne Boudreaux’s memories of the Circle Food Store in New Orleans 7th Ward neighbourhood are so vivid he can walk through its colonnade of arches into the dark and empty shell and give a guided tour of how it was before Hurricane Katrina. He points to where the registers once rang, patrons cashed paychecks, children lined up to buy school uniforms and neighbourhood cooks shopped for dressed wild game, live turtles for soups and abundant fresh produce. “Everybody knew us for the fresh fruits and vegetables,” Boudreaux said. “We were the bell pepper capital of the city.” Seven years after Katrina flood waters inundated most of New Orleans, the store’s barren insides are emblematic of a problem that neighbourhood activists say was exacerbated by the catastrophe: In a city known for its food, fresh produce and affordable groceries are hard to come by in some neighbourhoods. In the hardhit Lower 9th Ward, activists planned to call attention Saturday to the “food desert” with a festival including live music, cooking demonstrations and a “pop up” outdoor grocery. “It will be an actual grocery store, not just a farmer’s market,” said Jenga Mwendo, a community organizer. Mwendo said about 30 per cent of residents in
the Lower 9th Ward lack personal transportation, making a trip to the nearest full-service grocery outlet — a Walmart in the neighbouring city of Chalmette — problematic. Lower 9th resident Gertrude LeBlanc, 76, has her own car. And she needs it to get quality food. There are convenience stores closer to home, but the prices are high. “For a person on a fixed income, with no food stamps, it’s hard,” Leblanc said. The problem with access to food in the neighbourhood stretches back before the storm: Mwendo said there hasn’t been a full-service grocery there in 20 years. And price is not the only problem she sees with convenience stores. “It’s poor-quality food,” she said. City officials are trying to increase access to fresh, high quality food with a program called Fresh Food Retailer Initiative, which includes a low-interest loan program for supermarkets, grocery stores and other fresh food retailers and the use of federal economic development block grants. “One, it improves the health of our citizens. Two, it creates jobs,” said Aimee Quirk, an economic adviser to Mayor Mitch Landrieu. They hope successful grocery stores can play a role in bringing people back to the city. “I get calls from people in other areas ... that still don’t want to come back to the area because they don’t have a grocery store here,” said Boudreaux.
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MYLINCOLN TOUCHTM† combines an 8" LCD touch screen and SYNC® with over 10,000 voice commands, letting you access your phone, music, climate and
Reverse Sensing System with Rear Camera Voice-Activated
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WISE BUYERS READ THE LEGAL COPY: Vehicles may be shown with optional features. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offers. Offers may be cancelled at any time without notice. Dealer order or transfer may be required as inventory may vary by dealer. See your Lincoln Dealer for complete details or call the Lincoln Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-387-9333. ††Lease a new 2013 Lincoln MKX AWD and get 0.99% annual percentage rate (APR) financing for up to 48 months on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest APR payment. Lease a vehicle with a value of $49,350 at 0.99% APR for up to 48 months with $8,239 down or equivalent trade in, monthly payment is $448, total lease obligation is $29,743 and optional buyout is $19,247. Offer includes Manufacturer Rebate of $1,500. Manufacturer Rebates can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford of Canada at either the time of factory order or delivery, but not both. Manufacturer Rebates are not combinable with any fleet consumer incentives. Offer includes freight and air tax of $1,700, but excludes variable charges of license, fuel fill charge, insurance, dealer PDI (if applicable), registration, PPSA, administration fees and charges, any environmental charges or fees, and all applicable taxes. Taxes payable on full amount of lease financing price after any price adjustment is deducted. Additional payments required for PPSA, registration, security deposit, NSF fees (where applicable), excess wear and tear, and late fees. Some conditions and mileage restrictions of 80,000km over 48 months apply. A charge of 16 cents per km over mileage restrictions applies, plus applicable taxes. 1Between October 1, 2012 and October 31, 2012, Security Deposit payment is waived on a lease of a new Lincoln model (Red Carpet leases, on approved credit from Ford Credit). Security Deposit may be required by Ford Credit based on customer credit terms and conditions. ‡‡Offer only valid from September 1, 2012 to October 31, 2012 (the “Offer Period”) to resident Canadians with a Costco membership on or before August 31, 2012. Use this $1,000CDN Costco member offer towards the purchase or lease of a new 2012/2013 Lincoln vehicle (each an “Eligible Vehicle”). The Eligible Vehicle must be delivered and/or factory-ordered from your participating Lincoln dealer within the Offer Period. Offer is only valid at participating dealers, is subject to vehicle availability, and may be cancelled or changed at any time without notice. Only one (1) offer may be applied towards the purchase or lease of one (1) Eligible Vehicle, up to a maximum of two (2) separate Eligible Vehicle sales per Costco Membership Number. Offer is transferable to persons domiciled with an eligible Costco member. This offer can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford Motor Company of Canada at either the time of factory order (if ordered within the Offer Period) or delivery, but not both. Offer is not combinable with any CPA/GPC or Daily Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfit Program or the Commercial Fleet Incentive Program (CFIP). Applicable taxes calculated before $1,000CDN offer is deducted. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offer, see dealer for details or call the Lincoln Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-387-9333. ǻSpecifications based on information available at the time of production. Comparison models are comparably priced base (gas, non-hybrid) models with over 1000 units sold in Canada, based on June 2012YTD vehicle registrations data for the Medium Premium Utility class by R. L. Polk. *Driver Assist features are supplemental and do not replace the driver’s judgment. †Some mobile phones and some digital media players may not be fully compatible with SYNC® - check www.syncmyride.com for a listing of mobile phones, media players, and features supported. Driving while distracted can result in loss of vehicle control, accident and injury. Certain MyLincoln Touch™ functions require compatible mobile devices. Some functions are not available while driving. Only use mobile phones and other devices, even with voice commands, when it is safe to do so. ©2012 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.
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ENTERTAINMENT
COMICS ◆ D4 BOOKS ◆ D6 Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Fax 403-341-6560 editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
The Troubadours share their songs, inspirations BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF Writing a new song inspired by his homesteading grandparents put Red Deer country singer Duane Steele in an acoustic sort of mood. The singer will share Country Folk and other introspective tunes destined for his next unplugged album, Drifts and Dreams, at a songwriter’s circle at Innisfail’s Century Theatre on Thursday. The intimate concert, billed as The Troubadours, will also feature the singing and songwriting talents of Lisa Brokop, Paul Jefferson, Wyatt Easterling and Jake Mathews, who will share the same historic Innisfail stage and take turns performing with Steele. Between them, the five artists have won and/or been nominated for 35 Country Music Awards (CCMA in Canada and CMA in the U.S.), and 18 Juno Awards. “I think it’s going to be fantastic,” predicted Steele, who is friends with all the other singer/songwriters. He even recorded Two Names on an Overpass once as a duet with Brokop and the duo won a CCMA award for their effort. Steele believes their easy camaraderie on stage will be evident. “I think the audience gets more out of this kind of concert because they get to hear the songs, and they get to hear how the songs were inspired.” For instance, Steele might reveal that Country Folk was sparked by some old photos taken of his grandparents
in the Peace River region, where both sides of his family came to farm in the early decades of the last century. “I don’t know the details of their lives — what I know comes from family stories and photographs. But it must have been hard. They had very limited money and had to work to clear a certain number of acres every year. . . . People talk about ‘the good old days,’ but I’m not sure about that,” he added, with a laugh. His new album, slated for 2013 release, will also contain the song Brave, which Steele co-wrote with Sean Hogan. “It’s about how crazy the world is and how having a good family can strengthen you,” he said. On that note, Steele and his wife are raising their soon-to-be four-year-old son, Ryken, who’s started pre-school one day a week. Although the singer raised in Hines Creek has fairly constant concert engagements this fall, he’s planning to be back with his family in Red Deer for Christmas. In the meantime, Steele looks forward to performing with The Troubadours, an interesting mix of Canadian (Brokop, Mathews) and American (Brokop’s husband Jefferson and Easterling) country performers. “Every one of us has a rich catalogue of music, so I hope people come out and have a good time.” Tickets to the 7:30 p.m. concert at 4939 50th St. in Innisfail, are $30 at the door. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. For more information, call 403-227-0044. lmichelin@reddeeradvocate.com
Photos by ADVOCATE news services
The Troubadours are Red Deer country singer Duane Steele (top) and (from left to right) Paul Jefferson, Wyatt Easterling, Jake Mathews and Lisa Brokop.
IN
BRIEF Ballet about Holocaust goes on international tour AUSTIN, Texas — Texas’s Ballet Austin is taking a performance about intolerance and the Holocaust on an international tour, visiting Miami, Washington and Israel over the next year. The original work is called Light/The Holocaust and Humanity Project. Choreographer Stephen Mills said he was inspired by Holocaust survivors, but he wants the abstract ballet to be about all forms of intolerance and bigotry. The music by Steve Reich, Evelyn Glennie, Michael Gordon, Arvo Part, and Philip Glass. Everywhere the ballet is performed, civil rights groups run a month-long educational program beforehand to teach about the dangers of hatred and bullying. Ballet Austin performs the work next month in Miami before travelling to Washington’s Kennedy Center in June and three cities in Israel next September. The Colorado Ballet is performing the work in March.
Victim’s husband recounts crash at trial of Melrose Place actress SOMERVILLE, N.J. — Testimony got emotional at the trial of a Melrose Place actress accused of killing a New Jersey woman in a 2010 motor vehicle. The victim’s husband on Wednesday said it was like getting hit by a bomb when his car was struck by an SUV driven by Amy Locane-Bovenizer. Fred Seeman said the SUV’s headlights were “way, way off” in the distance as he turned into the driveway of his Montgomery Township home. He tearfully told jurors how he heard gurgling noises from his wife. The prosecution and the defence agree Locane-Bovenizer was drunk. But the defence believes the actress was distracted by another driver who was chasing her and Seeman turned in front of her. Locane-Bovenizer appeared on 13 episodes of Melrose Place in the role of Sandy Louise Harling.
Paranormal 4 more of same old spooky stuff FILM TAKES STORY STRANDS FROM THE FIRST THREE MOVIES AND ATTEMPTS TO STITCH THEM INTO SOMETHING RESEMBLING A COHESIVE NARRATIVE Paranormal Activity 4 Two stars (out of four) Rated: 14A Things must be getting a tad frantic down at the McSpooky factory where they bang out Paranormal Activity sequels. Ever since Oren Peli first made bank in 2009 with his found-footage combo of grainy videos, pesky demons and skittish homeowners, the push has been on to have a new chapter of the PETER slowly evolving HOWELL saga out every Halloween. The quality isn’t keeping pace with the production quota, as Paranormal Activity 4 makes as plain as the jump scares it overuses. Directors Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman, back for more after helming the superior PA3, take story strands from the first three movies and try to stitch them into something resembling a cohesive narrative. It’s a stretch, and also not all that scary. PA4 picks up the dangling plot line from PA2 where poltergeist-plagued Californian Katie (Katie Featherston) vanished in 2006 along with her baby nephew Hunter. This is hitched to strange 2011 goings-on in a Nevada household. The expository prequel that was PA3 is all but forgotten until the confusing ending of this film. You follow? It doesn’t really matter, because it’s all faint-by-numbers this time, without even a cool device like the low-tech fan cam from PA3 to interest us or really scare us. The ghostly goings-on have shifted to Henderson, Nev., an affluent sub-
MOVIES
Photo by ADVOCATE news services
Paranormal Activity 4 has plenty of flying furniture, ghostly levitations and dastardly doing, most of it dutifully caught on laptops and pixelated Xbox. urb where never is heard a discouraging word — until the day when weird neighbour kid Robbie (Brady Allen) comes to temporarily stay with a mother and father (Alexondra Lee and Stephen Dunham), their teen daughter Alex (Kathryn Newton, a bright spark) and six-year-old son Wyatt (Aiden Lovekamp). Robbie’s mom, unseen for now, is in the hospital. Robbie’s obviously got issues, but at least he believes in dental hygiene — he brings his toothbrush, along with a fork he claims is 100 years old. Robbie starts wandering the house at night, painting demonic symbols on Wyatt and muttering about a spooky unseen pal. Thus ensues the usual PA drill of flying furniture, ghostly levitations and dastardly doings both mischievous and menacing, most of it dutifully caught
on the laptops and pixelated Xbox that Alex and Robbie have constantly running (this is actually the most believable part of the story). Been there, shrieked that, but there are a couple of laughs. The dad actually switches a light on during one haunting spell, and who ever does that in a horror movie? And Wyatt amusingly recalls The Shining as he tools around the house on his jumbo trike. Things start to get downright silly when PA4 shudders to an abrupt halt and then links back to events of PA3. Are we supposed to believe that zombiemeister George Romero is involved now, too? Paranormal Activity is getting awfully crowded, but there’s no sign of this cash cower going away anytime soon, quality be damned. Peter Howell is a syndicated Toronto Star movie critic.
D2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Bond exhibit features guns, gadgets and gold TORONTO — James Bond’s tuxedos, guns and gadgets — as well as a lifesized replica of Shirley Eaton’s famed nude scene in Goldfinger — are among the highlights of a new display devoted to the debonair superspy. Designing 007: Fifty Years of Bond Style opens today at Toronto’s TIFF Bell Lightbox and is billed as the most comprehensive collection of James Bond memorabilia ever assembled. First staged at the Barbican Centre in London, the exhibition visits Toronto until Jan. 20, 2013 to mark the 50th anniversary of the Bond franchise and coincides with the Nov. 9 release of the latest flick Skyfall. “This exhibition really allows you to explore just what goes into making blockbuster movie magic happen and what it takes to get a film like a Bond movie up on the big screen,” says Jesse Wente, head of film programs for TIFF Bell Lightbox. “It’s just exciting to be a movie fan and see something like this.” Guests enter the exhibit by walking through a gun-barrel tunnel that evokes the trademark opening sequences of the Bond films. From there they see an Ian Fleming room, showcasing the original manuscript for 1962’s Dr. No and first editions of the other Bond novels turned into films. Around the corner is a recreation of the office of M, the head of the secret intelligence service, including the actual office doors seen in The Spy Who Loved Me and Skyfall. Then it’s the gold room, one of the exhibition’s highlights.
“It’s to really celebrate the phenomenon of Goldfinger, which was the fastest grossing motion picture of all-time when it came out,” says guest curator Bronwyn Cosgrave. “Sean Connery’s James Bond became a pop culture phenomenon whose profile was only really rivalled at the time by the Beatles.” The centrepiece of the room is an ode to Bond’s “Golden Girl,” the Jill Masterson character played by Eaton. In Goldfinger, she’s asphyxiated after being covered with gold leaf by Oddjob. For the exhibit, a golden life-sized replica of her lies on a spinning round bed. Other artifacts in the room include Oddjob’s trademark bowler hat and Francisco Scaramanga’s golden gun from The Man with the Golden Gun. Wente’s favourite section of the exhibition is an area devoted to the Q Branch research lab with collections of weaponry and gizmos used by Bond. “As a life-long Bond fan there’s things here I never thought I’d actually get to see in real life,” he says, adding that he was also thrilled to see the metal teeth worn by the villain Jaws. The costumes of other villains and memorable characters are also displayed throughout the exhibition and serve as a reminder of how influential and trend-setting the franchise has been, says Cosgrave. Production designer “Ken Adam classified the look of Bond films back in the day as slightly ahead of contemporary,” she says. “It was very visionary, it offered people a look into the future in some ways. The car he drove would be the aspirational car, his suits would be
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
A life-sized replica of the Jill Masterson character in Goldfinger, one of the highlights of the Designing 007: 50 Years of Bond Style exhibit opening in Toronto today. the kind of suit a man would aspire to wear, and the look was very modern and continued to be modern.”
RON JAMES
SAVINGS GST & DEPOSIT INCLUDED
“gut-bustingly, knee-slappingly funny”
LIV
ZINFANDEL OR CABERNET SAUVIGNON 750 ML.
“high wire act of hilarity” - Edmonton Journal
“devastatingly funny”
$
- Globe & Mail
RED DEER MEMORIAL CENTRE
www.ronjames.ca www.shantero.com
Thurs & Fri, December 13 & 14 - 8:00 pm Black Knight Ticket Centre: 403 755 6626 www.bkticketcentre.ca
BACARDI OAKHEART
SLEDGEHAMMER
- Ottawa Citizen
E!
Tickets for the exhibition are $15, while admission is free to members of the TIFF Bell Lightbox.
750 ML.
$
26.99
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JAGERMEISTER
COYOTE UGLY WHISKEY
750 ML.
750 ML.
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*Limit of 2 sale items per customer.
Please enjoy responsibly.
34.99 Must be 18+
Northeast Corner of 32nd St. and Taylor Dr. Open until 1:00 am Friday & Saturday 403-347-8877
52448J23-31
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
www.ourbesttoyou.ca
SEE CLASSIC FILMS ON THE BIG SCREEN IN DIGITAL
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Find out more at cineplex.com/events
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DRACULA & FRANKENSTEIN OCTOBER 31
Artwork Courtesy of Bernie Brown
Come Out and Play KANANASKIS STYLE!
Unique gifts - handcrafted jewellery, gourmet food, artwork, pottery, ironwork, clothing, woodwork and much more . . .
Shop Canadian Handmade . . . for Christmnas and You!
Parkland & Prairie Pavilions Westerner Park, Red Deer 2,412 vertical feet of winter skiing paradise at Nakiska Complimentary Transportation to Nakiska On-site Outfitters and Equipment Rentals Endless cross country and snowshoeing trails Ice skating and hockey on our outdoor rink Complimentary outdoor parking and no park fees!
• 6 Restaurants and Bars • Family Focused Activities Daily • Spa and Ski packages available!
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• A wide variety of services and treatments at the Summit Spa and Fitness Centre, including: • Indoor/Outdoor whirlpool • Indoor, 17 metre pool • Eucalyptus Steam Room • Fully equipped weight and cardio room • Full spa treatments in 8 private rooms
• • • • • •
Fri. October 26 Sat. October 27 Sun. October 28
• Pet friendly • Baby-sitting services
10 a.m. - 9 p.m. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
ADMISSION Adults $5.00 Seniors/Youths (13-17) $4.00 Children 12 & under FREE
PRICE INCLUDES FREE WEEKEND PASS ON REQUEST
For more information: 1-888-591-6240 or visit www.deltalodgeatkananaskis.com
Clip out this ad and receive $1.00 off admission
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Visit www.deltalodgeatkananaskis.com for packages and special offers.
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 D3
Questions mount over Ex-manager for Spears BBC sex scandal says father BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
punched him BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jimmy Savile: did ex-boss know of his behaviour? current and former employees and contributors. As increasing numbers of BBC executives come under the microscope over what they knew about Savile — and why the posthumous expose about his sexual crimes was shelved — Thompson, 55, the BBC director-general from 2004 until last month, is being quizzed about his role as well. In a letter to Conservative lawmaker Rob Wilson, Thompson said he never met Savile or worked on any of the entertainer’s programs, and had never heard any rumoured stories about Savile’s interest in young girls. “If I had, I would have raised them with senior colleagues and contacted the police,” Thompson said. Thompson said he heard in late December from a BBC journalist at a company cocktail party that the broadcaster’s Newsnight program had been investigating Savile, but said the journalist never “set out what allegations Newsnight were investigating or had been investigating.” Thompson said he followed the matter up with other executives who told him the Newsnight investigation was cancelled for journalistic reasons, suggesting they believed there wasn’t enough evidence.
RED DEER LEGION
EXHIBITS
2810 Bremner Ave. Phone 342-0035
Musical Remembrance
RED DEER GALLERIES
LIVE DATES
● Slumland Theatre hosts Canadian pop band Take Me
To The Pilot on Nov. 2. ● The Hideout presents Ana Egge with folk-rock story-telling style on Nov. 9, and then Jimmy Rankin, Dec. 9. ● The Club presents Madchild on Nov. 15. ● Enmax Centrium will host The Tragically Hip with special guests the Arkells on Jan. 22. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. The show starts at 7:30 p.m. All ages show. Tickets go on sale today from Livenation.com, Ticketmaster, and Rogers Wireless Box Office, and Charge by Phone 1-855-985-5000. ● The Vat presents Bill Bourne on Nov. 7 singing songs of his new album, Songs From A Gypsy Caravan. ● Red Deer College presents Bill Bourne on Dec. 20.
Then on Nov. 18 see Just For Laughs Comedy Tour Relationship Edition. The show starts at 7 p.m. with the ticket sales from Black Knight Inn. Tickets cost $39.50 (taxes included plus applicable charges). To have your establishment’s live bands included in this space, fax a list to Club Dates by 8 a.m. on Wednesday to 403-341-6560 or email editorial@reddeeradvocate. com.
A MUSICAL TRIBUTE
Sunday Nov. 4 TICKETS $10
Red Deer College Arts Centre General Seating Show Starts @ 7:00 PM (Purchase Tickets at The Legion)
The RDC Music Program and RE/MAX central alberta present
RED DEER COLLEGE
Symphonic Winds Back to the Baton
PERFORMING ARTS SEASON
Thursday, November 1 | Mainstage | 7:30 PM Many of Alberta’s prominent retired band directors conduct their favorite concert band compositions featuring the music of Sousa, Offenbach and much more.
TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE PG Coarse Language 1:00, 3:35, 7:00, 9:40
THE WORDS
PG
Coarse Language 1:15, 3:50, 7:10, 9:50
GHOSTBUSTERS (Only showing on Oct. 31)
PG 7:05, 9:40
FINDING NEMO 3D
G
Tickets
The Black Knight Ticket Centre 403.755.6626 1.800.661.8793 bkticketcentre.ca
Website rdc.ab.ca/showtime
1:10, 3:45
WON’T BACK DOWN (Oct. 31 @ 3:30)
THE CAMPAIGN
PG 3:30, 6:55
14A
Crude, Sexual Content, Coarse Language 7:25, 9:55
PARANORMAN 3D
PG
Guest Conductors include: Mike W. Achtymichuk (Red Deer) | Robert Eklund (Calgary) | Ted Isenor (Red Deer) | Lann Lieurance (Lacombe) Harry Pinchin (Edmonton) | Dennis Rusinak (Wetaskiwin) | Larry Schrum (Edmonton) | Barry Valleau (Didsbury) PRESENTING SPONSOR
Not recommended for young Children. Frightening scenes. 3:55, 7:15
PARANORMAN 2D
PG
real estate central alberta
Not recommended for young Children. Frightening scenes. 1:25
LAWLESS
14A
Nudity, Brutal Violence, Coarse Language (Oct. 31 @ 12:55) 12:55, 9:35
ICE AGE 4 3D
G 1:25, 7:20
ICE AGE 4 2D
G 4:00
DARK KNIGHT RISES
14A 6:40, 9:25
EXPENDABLES 2
14A 9:45
BRAVE 2D
G 1:20, 3:55
THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN
G
1:05, 3:40
HOPE SPRINGS
14A
BOURNE LEGACY
14A
7:05 Violence
9:30
TED
18A
Crude content, substance abuse 10:00
www.carnivalcinemas.net 5402-47 St. Red Deer MOVIE LINE 346-1300
GALAXY CINEMAS RED DEER 357-37400 HWY 2, RED DEER COUNTY 403-348-2357
SHOWTIMES FOR FRIDAY OCTOBER 26, 2012 TO THURSDAY NOVEMBER 1, 2012 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA (PG) FRI 3:00; SAT 10:55, 12:40, 3:00; SUN 12:40, 3:00 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 3D (PG) FRI-SUN 5:20, 7:40, 9:50; MON-THURS 6:40, 9:00 HERE COMES THE BOOM (PG) (VIOLENCE) FRI 3:05, 5:40, 8:15, 10:50; SAT-SUN 12:30, 3:05, 5:40, 8:15, 10:50; MON-THURS 7:20, 9:50 FUN SIZE (PG) (NOT REC. FOR YOUNG CHILDREN, CRUDE CONTENT) NO PASSES FRI 3:10, 5:30, 7:50, 10:10; SAT-SUN 12:50, 3:10, 5:30, 7:50, 10:10; MON-THURS 7:10, 9:25 ARGO (14A) FRI 3:55, 6:40, 9:40; SAT-SUN 1:05, 3:55, 6:40, 9:40; MON-THURS 7:05, 10:00 TAKEN 2 (14A) (VIOLENCE) FRI 3:40, 6:00, 8:20, 10:45; SAT 11:00, 1:20, 3:40, 6:00, 8:20, 10:45; SUN 1:20, 3:40, 6:00, 8:20, 10:45; MONTHURS 7:50, 10:15 CHASING MAVERICKS (PG) NO PASSES FRI 5:15, 8:00, 10:45; SAT 1:45, 5:15, 8:00, 10:45; SUN 12:40, 3:20, 8:00, 10:45; MONTHURS 7:00, 9:45 SINISTER (14A) (GORY SCENES, FRIGHTENING SCENES) FRI 4:45, 7:20, 10:10; SAT 11:30, 2:10, 4:45, 7:20, 10:10; SUN 2:10, 4:45, 7:20, 10:10; MON-THURS 6:55, 9:30 PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 (14A) (FRIGHTENING SCENES) FRI 5:25, 7:40, 10:00; SAT 11:20, 1:00, 5:00, 7:40, 10:00; SUN 1:00,
● Red Deer Memorial Centre features Colin James with special guest Liam Titcomb on Nov. 14. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and the show starts at 7:30 p.m. Tickets on sale from Black Knight Inn at 403-755-6626 or 1-800-661-8793, www. blackknightinn.ca, or Livenation.com or Rogers Wireless Box Office. This is an all ages show with reserved seating. Tickets cost $49.50 (plus FMF and service charges).
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● MarkerTopia by Sheldon Rabbit Wheatley exhibit, print and card sales will be featured at The Hub for the month of November. ● Beyond the Looking Glass: Photographs by Roberta Murray will be on display at Kiwanis Gallery from Oct. 17 to Nov. 25. The works explore a place where dreams and nightmares exist together and the distinction between truth and fiction becomes blurred. ● Alberta Art and Drafting Supplies staff exhibit will he shown at the Velvet Olive until Oct. 31. ● Filtered by Paul Boultbee is open at Café Pichilingue for the month of Oct. ● Michener Art Divas show and sale by Michelle Imesan, Alexa Sheperd, and Donna Flasch is featured at The Hub on Ross Gallery during Oct. ● Profit and Ambition: The Canadian Fur Trade, 1779-1821 opens Sept. 29 and continues to Dec. 9. This travelling exhibition produced by the Canadian Museum of Civilization traces the span of the North West Company from its formation in 1779 to the amalgamation with the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1821 through maps, documents and artifacts. Phone 403-309-8405. ● Exaggerated Adventures and Frequented Daydreams — a new ink drawing exhibition by Alysse Bowd — may be viewed at the Corridor Gallery, located in the basement of the Red Deer Recreation Centre, until Oct. 28. To be included in this listing, please email event details to editorial@reddeeradvocate.com, fax to 403-341-6560, or phone 403314-4325.
LOS ANGELES — Britney Spears’ ex-manager described from the witness stand this week a scene of domestic warfare, saying the superstar’s father chased him around a kitchen, punched him and threatened his life. Sam Lutfi, who is suing Spears’ parents for defamation, testified while they watched from across the courtroom. He denied accusations made in a book by Lynne Spears that he was a Svengali who became the gatekeeper of her daughter’s world, locking her parents out of her life. He contends he was a benevolent caretaker who protected Britney Spears during her publicized meltdown. Lutfi told of days leading to Britney’s hospitalization at a psychiatric unit, and jurors saw a video of the star ordering him around outside her home hours before she was taken away. She was demanding that he let her drive her car and told him to get in the passenger seat. The scene outside her home was surreal, with TV lights and paparazzi surrounding her. Lutfi said Britney feared her father Jamie Spears and fled her home when she heard he was coming. Lutfi said the father confronted him twice and punched him on the second visit. “Jamie came barging into the house. He lunged at me and chased me around the kitchen island. He was spitting, yelling, shouting at me, and said I had hurt his daughter and he was going to beat the hell out of me and I’d better get out of the house,” Lutfi testified. After 10 minutes, he said, Jamie Spears was escorted out by security guards. But the next morning, he got into the house again and the battle resumed, Lutfi said.
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LONDON — The New York Times stood by its incoming chief on Wednesday, even as questions about a BBC child sex abuse scandal followed him from one of Britain’s most respected news organizations to one of America’s. But as new CEO Mark Thompson was getting support from his new bosses, the Times ombudsman questioned his fitness for the job. And in Britain, a lawmaker said he had more questions for Thompson. As Thompson prepares to take over as president of The New York Times next month, he has been put on the defensive about his final days as head of the BBC and the broadcaster’s decision to kill what would have been a bombshell investigative story alleging the late Jimmy Savile, one of its biggest stars, had sexually abused up to 200 children. In a letter to a lawmaker and an interview with the Times, Thompson said he never knew of the Savile story before it was spiked and had never met the network’s popular star. New York Times Co. spokesman Bob Christie said that the BBC scandal had “obviously been a topic that we’ve discussed” internally, but the Times was satisfied with Thompson’s answers. “Mark has done an excellent job of explaining the matter,” Christie said. Thompson said he played no role in spiking the BBC investigation and “we’re satisfied with that.” Thompson will start as the organization’s CEO on Nov. 12, Christie said. The BBC scandal has horrified Britain with revelations that Savile, a popular children’s television presenter, cajoled and coerced vulnerable teens into having sex with him in his car, in his camper van, and even in dingy dressing rooms on BBC premises. He is also accused of sexually assaulting disabled children at hospitals that he helped by raising charity funds. Police say there could be more than 200 victims, leading one child protection charity to say that Savile could rank among Britain’s most prolific child sex predators. The BBC said Tuesday it was looking into claims of sexual abuse and harassment against nine other
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D4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
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TODAY IN HISTORY Oct. 26 1992 — Alberta electors vote 39.7 per cent Yes, 68 per cent No in the referendum on Charlottetown Accord. 1990 — Wayne Gretzky of the Los Angeles Kings scores his 2,000 career National Hockey League point with an
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assist against the Jets, in Winnipeg. 1985 — Policewoman Jacinthe Fyfe, age 25, shot to death by robbers. The Montreal Police constable was the first female police officer killed on duty in Canada. 1887 — Peter Lamont opens Saskatchewan’s first telephone exchange in a bookstore in Regina.
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Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Grandparents miss out on relationship with children
ANNIE ANNIE
terone was very low. He was given a prescription, but said it was too expensive. A call to the doctor produced a less expensive prescription, but he didn’t fill that one, either, because it was a “hormone,” and he thinks all hormones are dangerous. We have since split up. No sex drive is one thing, but the accompanying negative personality issues made me want to hide in my own house. — Alone Dear Alone: Low testosterone can also be responsible for depression and other mood disorders. It’s too bad your guy was unwilling to try the prescription. It may have helped him enormously. A discussion with his doctor about hormones would have been useful. Dear Annie: I disagree with your answer to “Home Alone,” whose boyfriend travels on business for months at a time. When he’s home, he spends weekdays with her but wants to spend weekends with his family or friends. You said, “You’ll have to revisit this issue if you marry and have children.” I would hope the issue would be totally resolved before even thinking of getting married. He doesn’t even make good boyfriend. That relationship spells disaster. — Texas Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
up to your standards making you feel hypersensitive. For the time being, spend some time with yourself. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Your Friday, October 26 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS yearning to go out and socialize might DATE: Keith Urban, 45; Dylan McDer- not proceed as planned. In all likelihood, your peers might act mott, 51; Hilary Clinton, 65 a bit too complicated about THOUGHT OF THE their plans or simply, they DAY: Love might be misare disorganized. You could understood today. Our dehave an unusual attraction sires and needs require towards someone considered some compromising due to too unconventional or out of Venus in opposition to the the norm. Moon today. The Moon is GEMINI (May 21-June 20): demanding more compasConsider being extra patient sion and sympathy, while today. Family matters might Venus is asking for practifrustrate you as you are in cality and pure perfection. discordance with a family HAPPY BIRTHDAY: If member. As articulate as you today is your birthday, it is ASTRO can be, voice your side of the hard to hide anything from DOYNA story in order to help you you. You possess so much clear the fog in the air. perceptivity that others beCANCER (June 21-July lieve you have see-through 22): Dissatisfaction with your glasses. You can succeed position in life could be amin both humanitarian activities or in any professional endeavours. What’s in plified now. Matters surrounding your store for you next year? A new chapter vocation or the authority figures come will open itself for you and you will to the forefront. You are hypersensiwelcome it with your arms wide open. tive when it comes to your reputation Do maintain balance within your fi- or the manner in which others view you. nancial and romantic matters. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): There is a ARIES (March 21-April 19): You solicit attention and care from those great balance and unity among your close to you but you come to the real- traditional values, family ties and your ization that you give more than you re- long-term goals. This harmonious enceive. A close someone is not entirely ergy will instill in you a great desire
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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — Most patients getting chemotherapy for incurable lung or colon cancers mistakenly believe that the treatment can cure them rather than just buy them some more time or ease their symptoms, a major study suggests. Researchers say doctors either are not being honest enough with patients or people are in denial that they have a terminal disease. The study highlights the problem of overtreatment at the end of life — futile care that simply prolongs dying. It’s one reason that one quarter of all Medicare spending occurs in the last year of life. For cancers that have spread beyond the lung or colon, chemo can add weeks or months and may ease a patient’s symptoms, but usually is not a cure. This doesn’t mean that patients shouldn’t have it, only that they should understand what it can and cannot do, cancer experts say. Often, they do not. Dr. Jane C. Weeks at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and researchers at several other Boston-area universities and hospitals led a study of nearly 1,200 such patients around the country. All had been diagnosed four months earlier with widely spread cancers and had received chemo. Surveys revealed that 69 per cent of those with lung cancer and 81 per cent of those with colorectal cancer felt their treatment was likely to cure them. Education level and the patient’s role in care decisions made no difference in the likelihood of mistaken beliefs about chemo’s potential. Hispanics and blacks were three times more likely than whites to hold inaccurate beliefs. Federal grants paid for most of the research. In an editorial that appears with the study in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine, two doctors question whether patients are being told clearly when their disease is incurable.
to be connected with them all on a deeper, spiritual level. Someone close to you may ask you for guidance. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You will be pleasantly surprised to discover innovative ways of resolving old problems. You advance speedily and you are feeling mentally active. Utilize this great energy to write or create something. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Impulse purchases should be avoided as money seems to be flowing out of your pockets too easily. Achievement may come from assisting others. Do no start any new relationships at the moment; let the waters settle in until tomorrow. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Since you are feeling more confident now, you need to display your expressive side; you want to be noticed. Manifesting your amorous feelings comes naturally to you except that others might not be as receptive as you are. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Your focus is directed towards the necessities of your home base. Your need space to yourself while figuring out the constitution of your support system
versus the requirements of the world out there. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You are going strong and steady. There’s no stopping to your noticeable determination and ambition. That won’t mean that today you won’t loosen up a bit either. Circulate around; return those phone calls or go for short trips. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emotional security is crucial to. Yet today, your focus is not at its best in terms of judging what you truly value and what you think makes you feel secure. It would be wise to avoid making impulsive material purchases. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): The quiet and dreamy Pisces is in a different kind of mode today. You have this inner desire to burst out of your comfort bubble and do things differently, which might actually shock a few people. If you feel that your life has been stagnating for a while, you’ll definitely want to change it in surprising ways. Why not try something totally new! Astro Doyna — Internationally Syndicated Astrologer/Columnist.
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Dear Annie: Eleven years ago, we es for my in-laws? Is it OK to tell moved halfway across the country in my kids honestly why they never get order to live close to my husband’s invited to their house? Is there any family. way to express myself to my in-laws For years, we heard about all so it will open their eyes about what the things they would do they are missing? So far, with our kids if only we calling my mother-inlived nearer. My parents law on her behavior has were still busy raising my only resulted in a guilt four younger siblings and trip and crocodile tears. weren’t really interested It breaks my heart in being grandparents, so that my children have all these promises soundno relationship with ed wonderful. these grandparents. It didn’t take long afBut more than that, I’m ter we moved to discover having a hard time not that my in-laws were all resenting them for all talk. When we announced the broken promises. — that we were pregnant Fran in Frisco MITCHELL with our fourth child, my Dear Fran: We don’t mother-in-law said, “Well, know why your in-laws & SUGAR don’t expect me to babysit switched gears. Perhaps four kids.” I had to bite being with all those my tongue to keep from children was more efretorting, “Why would fort than they expected. I? You never babysit the three we But don’t badmouth them to your already have.” My mother-in-law kids even if they deserve it. When always sounds like I’m holding a your children ask why they don’t see gun to her head when I ask whether their grandparents, simply say, “It’s she might have some time to see the just the way they are.” And please kids. stop asking your in-laws to spend My children are growing up. They time with the kids. Instead, invite are completely self-sufficient and them to whatever occasions merit well behaved. They clean up after their presence, and let them see for themselves and take care of one an- themselves what they are reaping. other. I’ve always tried to cast my Dear Annie: You’ve mentioned in-laws in the best possible light, that men with low sex drives should even though they spend less time be tested for low testosterone. I’m with my children than my parents curious how many men are willing who live 1,500 miles away. But the to address the problem with medikids are catching on. cation. Should I continue making excusMy guy was tested, and his testos-
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D6
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Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Missing but still pulling strings
GILLER PRIZE WINNER
BOOK REVIEW
BY LOIS ABRAHAM THE CANADIAN PRESS TORONTO — There is a sense that M.G. Vassanji shares an uneasy feeling of dislocation with the main character of his new novel, The Magic of Saida. Set in East Africa, the novel by the two-time Scotiabank Giller Prize winner explores the story of Kamal Punja, a doctor from Edmonton who returns to Tanzania to search for a woman who’d been a special childhood friend in the ancient coastal town of Kilwa. The gifted Kamal has a mixed heritage, with a Swahili mother and absent Indian father. As a child, his mother sends him to be raised by his uncle in Dar es Salaam, where he’s taunted for being a “dark Indian.” He never meets his father or sees his mother again. Not only does Kamal have to deal with a change in environment and difference in class, but he also has difficulty with language and almost drops out of school. But he turns his life around and goes to university during the turbulent 1970s in Uganda. The one constant during his forced relocation to Dar es Salaam is his wish to be reunited with his beloved Saida. He sees her briefly before going to university and then once again before moving to North America. Some 35 years later, Kamal returns to his homeland to try to find her. “That memory of her, of a friend, I think for a child can remain for a long time,” Vassanji said. “I had a young friend as a child. I don’t remember much about her, but I remember playing with her and then when we left Nairobi and went to Dar es Salaam I was carrying that memory of playing with her. “So I think we all carry those childhood memories and we wonder what could have happened to that person.” Kamal spends much of The Magic of Saida (Doubleday Canada) trying to figure out where he fits in. “In a sense he’s more rooted than I am because he has an origin in Africa,” the author of The Assassin’s Song and The Book of Secrets said during an interview at his publisher’s office. Vassanji’s parents were a part of a wave of Indians who immigrated to Africa. He was born in Nairobi, Kenya, in 1950 and raised in Tanzania. He later moved to North America for his education and now lives in Toronto. He makes frequent trips to East Africa and India. “I have friends in India now and when I see them there’s a whole sense of belonging to the place. ... I realize I don’t have that sense of complete belonging that these people have. “It’s a very sad feeling, you know,” he said. “Some people have that complete sense. “But I suppose in North America, especially in Canada, not many people have that. They all come from somewhere. ... We have to acknowledge it and then move on.” The last time Kamal sees Saida he makes a wild promise that he cannot keep. “Saida was trapped by her circumstances, by the old tradition of giving
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M.G. Vassanji (left) has twice won the Giller Prize. His new novel (above) has just been released. away the girl to whoever was available, I suppose. It’s a very traditional kind of thing,” Vassanji said. “She would always remain a mystery in the sense we don’t know what happened to her until the very end, what she’s become. “I guess in a way she stands for the elusive past, but which comes with a shock at the end. “It’s not just something that slipped away. “Kind of the Orpheus story too — get your lover back from the dead — but here she disappears with a vengeance.” Interwoven with Kamal’s story is the tragic tale of two brothers who are poets in Kilwa “which in a way is more profound than the love story itself. “The idea of collaboration versus survival and the idea of poetry tradition,” Vassanji said. He travelled to Kilwa, about 160 km from where he grew up, to capture its spirit. He describes the history of the area and the coming of the modern age. “I think the book basically is that, how we became what we are. In this case Kamal becomes a doctor. “There’s a whole history right from the beginning of the 20th century that contributes to what he is and to what the place is, so then there are many ways of discovering not only the place, the history, the traditions and also the tradition of magic, which I always found fascinating.” Vassanji said he recalled magic in its different forms, such as potions and being prayed over by someone, from his youth and also gleaned knowledge of its practices during his travels around Tanzania. “There was a guy in my mother’s
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family who was supposed to call the dead back. “My father died when I was four, so I would ask my mother why we couldn’t go to the guy and have him revived,” Vassanji said. Another theme in the novel is slavery. Kamal’s grandmother was a slave and Kamal’s son is most disturbed to learn he had an African grandmother. “Ironically I noticed after I’d done it — more or less I was revising — that his mother actually had given him away, almost sold him in a sense. “That bit of irony, I think he’s aware of that “Not that his mother was an evil person. She thought she was doing it for his own good,” Vassanji said. In his first career, Vassanji was a nuclear physicist but said he always had “a need to express myself since childhood. ... But writing itself was not seen as a career. It was always engineering or medicine.” One thing he liked about university was doing research, “asking questions, which in a way is what I’m doing in my novels also. Ask questions and just get obsessed by finding out what’s beneath the surface.” Vassanji was the first person to win the Giller twice, in 1994 for The Book of Secrets and in 2003 for The In-Between World of Vikram Lall. He’s won many other awards for his work, which includes seven novels, two collections of short stories, a travel memoir about India and a biography of Mordecai Richler. He is crafting a travel memoir about Tanzania and “slowly” working on a new novel. He has a draft of it but is keeping details under wraps.
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This is a frightening story, but not in the usual way. There are no vampires, feral bats or any of the scary things that show up in fiction these days. Instead, this is the kind of story that could happen to anyone, a situation with no escape, because no one believes you. The real fear in this story doesn’t hit you until you are more than half PEGGY way through. It’s FREEMAN another story of a couple tied up in infidelity and unemployment; a couple struggling with the daily grind. Nick Dunne, a writer and Amy Elliot, his very beautiful wife live in New York. Amy is the only child of Rand and Marybeth, two child psychologists. Rand and Marybeth have made a very nice living for many years writing a series of children’s books, called Amazing Amy. Amy and her life have been tapped pretty thoroughly, but now the series is losing its popularity. Small wonder, since Amy is almost 30 years old. Nick loses his job in New York, as many magazines go out of business. His parents back in Missouri are old and ailing; it’s time to move home. Margo is Nick’s twin and, as the one who is holding the fort down in Missouri, she’s happy he’s coming home. Margo and Nick borrow money from (relatively) rich Amy and open a bar, very cleverly named The Bar. That’s how cool they are. Now it’s Nick and Amy’s fifth anniversary and something terrible happens. Amy goes missing. Their front door is found standing open, the living room is messed up, there is evidence of blood on the kitchen floor and she’s gone. But this isn’t your average murder story. It is 415 pages, with alternating chapters told by Nick, knowing he didn’t kill her, though he often felt like it, and by Amy somewhere else, but not home. Nick has been unfaithful (a little college girl on the side) and believe me that does not help his defence. Days go by and there is no body found and the clues are piling up badly against Nick. Don’t forget Amy is a very beautiful woman, and her picture is plastered everywhere, thanks to her parents. The media is having a field day and Andi (the little college girl) is putting on pressure or she’ll go public. The police discover a couple of charge cards in Nick’s name with $200,000 in merchandise charged on them. It looks just exactly like he killed her, found a new love and planned a posh escape to somewhere sunny. By now I was sure Nick was toast, in spite of a posh lawyer with lots of tricks up his sleeve. But then we hear from Amy, at least it seems we do, so what’s going on? Missouri has the death penalty and finding Amy’s body may not be necessary if everything else adds up. Amy is playing tricks that might lead to Nick’s death. Peggy Freeman is a local freelance books reviewer.
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Gone Girl By Gillian Flynn $29.95 Crown Publishing
Vassanji’s The Magic of Saida explores rootlessness, love and loss
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 D7
World’s first recorded music, blooper digitized SCHENECTADY, N.Y. — It’s scratchy, lasts only 78 seconds and features the world’s first recorded blooper. The modern masses can now listen to what experts say is the oldest playable recording of an American voice and the first-ever capturing of a musical performance, thanks to digital advances that allowed the sound to be transferred from flimsy tinfoil to computer. The recording was originally made on a Thomas Edison-invented phonograph in St. Louis in 1878. At a time when music lovers can carry thousands of digital songs on a player the size of a pack of gum, Edison’s tinfoil playback seems prehistoric. But that dinosaur opens a key window into the development of recorded sound. “In the history of recorded sound that’s still playable, this is about as far back as we can go,” said John Schneiter, a trustee at the Museum of Innovation and Science, where it will be played Thursday night in the city where Edison helped found the General Electric Co. The recording opens with a 23-second cornet solo of an unidentified song, followed by a man’s voice reciting Mary Had a Little Lamb and Old Mother Hubbard. The man laughs at two spots during the recording, including at the end, when he recites the wrong words in the second nursery rhyme. “Look at me; I don’t know the song,” he says. When the recording is played using modern technology during a presentation Thursday at a nearby theatre, it likely will be the first time it has been played at a public event since it was created during an Edison phonograph demonstration held June 22, 1878, in St. Louis, museum officials said. The recording was made on a sheet of tinfoil, 5 inches wide by 15 inches long, placed on the cylinder of the phonograph Edison invented in 1877 and began selling the following year. A hand crank turned the cylinder under a stylus that would move up and down over the foil, recording the sound waves created by the operator’s voice. The stylus would eventually tear the foil after just a few playbacks, and the person demonstrating the technology would typically tear up the tinfoil and hand the pieces out as souvenirs, according to museum curator Chris Hunter. Popping noises heard on this recording are likely from scars left from where the foil was folded up for more than a century. “Realistically, once you played it a couple of times, the stylus would tear through it and destroy it,” he said. Only a handful of the tinfoil recording sheets are known to known to survive, and of those, only two are playable: the Schenectady museum’s and an 1880 recording owned by The Henry Ford museum in Michigan. Hunter said he was able to determine just this week that the man’s
voice on the museum’s 1878 tinfoil recording is believed to be that of Thomas Mason, a St. Louis newspaper political writer who also went by the pen name I.X. Peck. Edison company records show that one of his newly invented tinfoil phonographs, serial No. 8, was sold to Mason for $95.50 in April 1878, and a search of old newspapers revealed a listing for a public phonograph program being offered by Peck on June 22, 1878, in St. Louis, the curator said. A woman’s voice says the words Old Mother Hubbard, but her identity remains a mystery, he said. Three weeks after making the recording, Mason died of sunstroke, Hunter said. A Connecticut woman donated the tinfoil to the Schenectady museum in 1978 for an exhibit on the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Edison company that later merged with another to form GE. The woman’s father had been an antiques dealer in the Midwest and counted the item among his favourites, Hunter said. In July, Hunter brought the Edison tinfoil recording to California’s Berkeley Lab, where researchers such as Carl Haber have had success in recent years restoring some of the earliest audio recordings. Haber’s projects include recovering a snippet of a folk song recorded a capella in 1860 on paper by EdouardLeon Scott de Martinville, a French printer credited with inventing the earliest known sound recording device. Haber and his team used optical scanning technology to replicate the action of the phonograph’s stylus, reading the grooves in the foil and creating a 3D image, which was then analyzed by a computer program that recovered the original recorded sound. The achievement restores a vital link in the evolution of recorded sound, Haber said. The artifact represents Edison’s first step in his efforts to record sound and have the capability to play it back, even if it was just once or twice, he said. “It really completes a technology story,” Haber said. “He was on the right track from the get-go to record and play it back.”
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chris Hunter, curator at the Museum of Innovation and Science, plays a 1878 tinfoil recording on a computer in Schenectady, N.Y.
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POPPY WREATH CAMPAIGN OCTOBER 17TH TO NOVEMBER 10TH If you wish to purchase a wreath for your business or organization, please drop by the Poppy Campaign Office anytime now thru Nov. 10
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*Vehicles not exactly as illustrated, please see dealer for details. Payments include factory to dealer freight, dealer preparation, block heater, carpet and all-season mats, full tank of gas on delivery. Lease and finance offers through Toyota Financial Services O.A.C. Other terms and payment options available. (1) 2013 Tacoma Model MU4FNA BA Selling Price $34,757. 60 month 20,000 kms/year lease - $5000 down. Buyout at lease end $16,221.45. Amount financed $29,995.10 at 4.9% Cost of borrowing $5,679.00. 72 month finance - $5,000 down. Amount financed $31,494.85 @ 2.9% Cost of borrowing $2,837.63. (2) 2012 Tundra Model UM5F1T BA Selling Price $41,163. 60 month 20,000 kms/year lease - $5,000 down. Buyout at lease end $14,609.45 Amount financed $36,501.10 at 0.9% Cost of borrowing $1,144.80 72 month finance - $5,000 down. Amount financed $38,326.15 @ 0% Cost of borrowing $ ZERO. (3) 2012 Camry Model BF1FLT BA Selling Price $27,987. 60 month 20,000 kms/year lease - $3,000 down. Buyout at lease end $11,104.83 Amount financed $25,229 at 3.9% Cost of borrowing $3,552.60 72 month finance - $3,000 down. Amount financed $26,491.35 @ 1.9% Cost of borrowing $1,548.09. (4) 2012 Matrix Model KU4EEM SA Selling Price $24,922. 60 month 20,000 kms/year lease - $2,000 down PLUS Toyota Canada Incentive of $1,750 Buyout at lease end $7,486.40 Amount financed $21,450.57 at 0.9% Cost of borrowing $647.40 72 month finance - $2,000 down PLUS Toyota Canada Incentive of $1,750 Amount financed $22,523.01 @ 0% Cost of borrowing $ZERO. (5) 2012 RAV4 Model BF4DVP AA Selling Price $29,437. 60 month 20,000 kms/year lease - $3,000 down. Buyout at lease end $12,205.60. Amount financed $26,679.86 at .9% Cost of borrowing $871.20 72 month finance - $3,000 down. Amount financed $28,013.85 @ 0% Cost of borrowing $ ZERO GALAXY
LANTERN ST.
the right choice Download a QR Code APP and scan this ad
www.reddeertoyota.com 403-343-3736
www.reddeerscion.com 1-800-662-7166
RED DEER
GASOLINE ALLEY AUTO MALL
42561J19
NASHVILLE — Jason Aldean leads the list of top country music stars set to perform on the American Country Awards. Country’s leading man of the moment will be joined by lead nominee and good friend Luke Bryan, Lady Antebellum, Dierks Bentley and Little Big Town. Few are hotter than Aldean at the moment. The Georgia native scored the year’s second biggest debut last week, selling 409,000 copies of his fifth album Night Train, and announced a series of stadium appearances on his 2013 tour. Producers also announced Scotty McCreery, LeAnn Rimes, Chris Young, Lee Brice, Jana Kramer and Lauren Alaina will make appearances. Fans can vote for the favourite nominees at the show’s website. Kristin Chenoweth and Trace Adkins return as hosts for the show, aired live Dec. 10 on Fox from the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas.
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Wise customers read the fine print: The All Out Clearout Event offers are limited time offers which apply to retail deliveries of selected new and unused models purchased from participating dealers on or after September 1, 2012. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Offers subject to change and may be extended without notice. See participating dealers for complete details and conditions. Based on Ward’s large pickup segmentation. ∞Based on longevity. R.L. Polk Canada Inc. Canadian vehicles in operation data as of July 1, 2010, for model years 1993 – 2011. TMThe SiriusXM logo is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc.
D8 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
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E1
CLASSIFIEDS Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
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announcements Obituaries
BORLE Sylvianne 1931 - 2012 Sylvianne Borle of Red Deer, Alberta peacefully went to be with her Lord and Saviour on Monday, October 22, 2012 at the age of 81 years. Sylvianne was very special in many ways, and perhaps more in her faith - filled life, which led her like a light in the darkness to seek a meaning in service to others, and firstly to her family. She is lovingly remembered by her children; Andrew (Maggie), Louise (Ray), Mona, Kathie (Perry), Claude (Laurie), Amy (David), Claudette and Andrew (Karen), as well as twenty-eight grandchildren and ten great grandchildren. Sylvianne was predeceased by her husband Walter, her daughter Jo-Ann and her son Philip. A funeral mass will be celebrated at St. Albert Catholic Parish, 7 Street Vital Avenue St. Albert, Alberta on Saturday, October 27, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. Interment will take place at a later date. In Lieu of flowers memorial donations can be made directly to Camp He Ho Ha, Box 182 Seba Beach, Alberta, T0E 2B0. The family of Sylvianne wishes to express a sincere “Thank You” to the entire staff for the wonderful care that she received during her stay at West Park Lodge. Condolences may be sent or viewed at www.parklandfuneralhome.com Arrangements in care of Joelle Valliere, Funeral Director at PARKLAND FUNERAL HOME AND CREMATORIUM, 6287 - 67 A Street (Taylor Drive), Red Deer. 403.340.4040
Obituaries
Obituaries
EVERSON Bruce Richard Nov. 11, 1949 - Oct. 21, 2012 It is with great sadness that we announce the sudden passing of Bruce Everson on October 21, 2012 at the Red Deer Regional Hospital. Bruce was born in Willow Bunch, Saskatchewan on November 11, 1949. He moved from Saskatchewan to Red Deer, Alberta in 1960. While in Red Deer, Bruce worked as an Autobody Mechanic. He then moved to Castor, Alberta in 1977 where he owned and operated Castor Autobody for 19 years. Bruce returned to Red Deer in 2002 where he spent his time with friends and pursuing his hobbies. Bruce had a passion for car racing. He especially loved drag racing his 1979 Pontiac Grand Prix and spent many hours fine tuning his car. Bruce will be deeply missed by his four children: Janell (Craig) Bunbury and their daughter Kaylee, Jody (Stephanie) Everson and their son Reese, Dalen (Danielle) Everson and their son Landon, Reyna Everson (Terrance Olson); and their mother, Patti Everson. He is also survived by his brother Calvin (Carla) Everson and his sister Penny (Evan) McPhedran. Bruce was predeceased by his brother, Sherwyn; father, L a w r e n c e a n d m o t h e r, Marion. A memorial service to celebrate Bruce’s life will be held at Eventide Funeral Chapel on Tuesday, October 30, 2012 at 2:00 p.m. Donations in Bruce’s memory may be made directly to The Arthritis Society (1301-8th St. SW, Suite 300, Calgary, Alberta T2R 1B7). Condolences can be forwarded to the family by visiting www.eventidefuneralchapel.com Arrangements entrusted to Craig Kanngiesser EVENTIDE FUNERAL CHAPEL 4820 - 45th Street, Red Deer Phone (403) 347-2222.
Obituaries
Anniversaries
RICHMAN Leo & Marlene Bouchard† SVARICH George L. The families of Viola Alma May 1928 - 2012 Leo & Marlene Bouchard Oct. 8, 1915 - Oct. 22, 2012 George passed away peacefully invite you to join them in It is with great sadness that surrounded by his family at celebrating their we announce the passing of the Red Deer Regional Hospital 50th Anniversary! our mother, Viola Svarich. on Tuesday, October 23, 2012 Open house on She was predeceased by her at the age of 84 years. He will Saturday, October 27, 2012, husband, Eugene Wilfred be sadly missed but lovingly 2 p.m. - 5 p.m. Svarich (September 4, 1979) remembered by his wife Ann in the County Room at the and her youngest daughter, of Red Deer; one son Dwayne Lacombe Memorial Centre. Louise June Bradburn (April 10, (Cathy) of Saskatoon; seven ~ No gifts please 1985). Viola will be lovingly stepchildren: Jacqueline of remembered by her children, Glendon, Marty of Red Deer, Evelyn (Doug) Mulholland, Bruce of Glendon, Sandra Lorraine (Rod) McDonald (Roger) of Glendon, Kelly and Alan (Barbara) Svarich. (Michael) of Sherwood Park, She also leaves grandchildren, Marylou (Robert) of Calmar David (Carol) Mulholland, and Denise (Rob) of Red Deer; Steven (Christy) Mulholland, twenty eight grandchildren; Michael Mulholland, Ken (Jody) eleven great grandchildren as McDonald, Heather (Michael) well as numerous extended Weiss, Keith (Darcie) McDonald, family and friends. George is Michael (Melissa) McDonald, predeceased by his first wife, Brennan (Jody) Macdonald, Velda, and their son Douglas. Beth (Michael) Hunter, Joanna A Memorial Service will be (Scott) McGhie and Richard held on Saturday, October 27, (Brigitte) Svarich; great- 2012 at 1:30 p.m. at St. Mary’s grandchildren, Maria and Catholic Church, 6 McMillan Sarah McDonald, Liam, Amy Ave, Red Deer. and Cody Weiss, Emilie and Messages of condolence Jackson McDonald, Isabelle may be left for the family at and Gabriel McDonald, www.myalternatives.ca Golden Anniversary† Sophie and Thea Macdonald, The Children Diana Hunter, Madison and and Grandchildren of Lauren McGhie and Samuel Dave and Pat Lightbown Svarich, as well as several would like to invite you nieces and nephews.† Our to celebrate their mother, grandmother and Unit 1, 6828 - 50th Ave., †50th Anniversary great-grandmother will be Red Deer, AB with them missed and long remembered. 403-341-5181 & 888-216-5111 Saturday, November 03, 2012 We would like to thank the at Davenport Place nurses and staff at the Community Centre Sherwood Park Care Centre 2300 Danielle Drive, Red Deer for the excellent care and In Memoriam Open House from 2 to 5 p.m. compassion our mother received in her two plus No Gifts, Please years as a resident in the home and during her last days. As per Viola’s request, no funeral service will be held. Births Cremation has taken place.
Card Of Thanks GARSON Special thanks to Diane Omilon, Josie Heighton, Portia Michelsen, Brenda Schmidt, Bob Jerri Kemp and Rose Jubinville for helping me through the trials and tribulation I was going through the last two years. You understood and helped me understand. You gave me much needed support. Thank you to Father Julian for all the prayers you had for Doug and me and the Panadyda you had for Doug. Some of my non-catholic family and friends were very impressed. Thanks to the Mormon Church for their prayers. Thank you Royal Canadian Legion (Innisfail) for your service, the Bowden Penitentiary Guard of Honour, Bob, Joan, Larane for your tribute. Those who sent flowers, cards, food and donations to St. Vladmir. The UCWL for the beautiful table setting and lunch. To the people who came from near and far. Special thanks to Dr. Tillier for having all the paper work done before your retirement and to Dr. Kruger for your condolences. Thank you to Bethany Care Centre nurses, support staff and pastoral care for your warm and compassionate care you gave Doug. God Bless. Adele Garson, sons Greg (Tamara) Garson, and Brad, grandsons Travis and Crieghton
Graduations CONGRATULATIONS
Paul Rattan on receiving your Law Degree from the U of A and obtaining an Articling position at Warren Sinclair LLP Red Deer. Love and best wishes, Nav, Linda, Ian and Joe
Forever loved. Always remembered. Til we meet again. To send condolences, visit www.parkmemorial.com PARK MEMORIAL Edmonton 780-426-0050 Family Owned Funeral Home, Crematorium, Reception Centre
Rita (Skarra) Sivacoe May 4, 1931 - Oct. 26, 2009
Funeral Directors & Services
1508766 Alberta Ltd.
403•340•4040 KALAWARNY Wayne E. Nov. 9, 1958 - Oct. 21, 2012 With heavy hearts we announce the passing of Wayne. Predeceased by his mother Shirley. He will be lovingly remembered by his father Edward, son Kevin, brothers Terry (Gayle), Kenneth. Also nephews Joey, Cole and many other family and friends.
Funeral Directors & Services
“In Your Time of Need.... We Keep it Simple” #3, 4664 Riverside Dr., Red Deer
403.342.1444
Taylor Dr. ˜ Red Deer “ONLY locally owned & operated Funeral Home in Red Deer” www.parklandfuneralhome.com 36617B3-L28
~Loved and remembered by your husband Arthur, and our children Richard & Marion and family
HOPPUS - EVANS Tanner Hoppus and Braydi Evans are excited to announce the birth of their son Nikolai Edgar William Hoppus on August 31, 2012. Nikolai weighed in at 8 lbs. 6.5 oz and was 23 inches long. Proud Grandparents a r e L a v e r n e a n d Wa n d a H o p p u s a n d Tr e v o r a n d Deneen Evans. Uncle Brett is anxious to put a hockey stick in his hands and Auntie Tori can hardly wait to play Justin Bieber for him.
PAIGE PENNIFOLD † Congratulations on graduating with your Degree in Applied Arts (Visual Communications) with honours. We are so proud of you. † Mom, Dad & Shannon
Card Of Thanks TO the man from Gull Lake who fixed my flat tire on Hwy 2 on Oct 02. Many thanks kindness costs nothing and means so much.
Announcements
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A Classified Announcement in our
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SORDAHL Donald Edward 1937 - 2012 Donald Edward Sordahl of Red Deer passed away peacefully into the presence of his Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ on October 17, 2012 at the age of 75 years. Don will be lovingly remembered by his wife, Wendy Sordahl of 32 years; her son, Dale (Josee) Belke and daughter, Valerie (Jake) Warkentin, and nine grandchildren. He is predeceased by his parents, Ivar and Sophia Sordahl, and sister, Ruth Petersen. He is survived b y h i s b r o t h e r, O d d m u n d (Margaret) Sordahl, brotherin-law, Vic Petersen, and their families. Don was owner of Don’s Appliance Repairs for over 30 years. He was a pilot and an avid square dancer. A Memorial Service will be held on Monday, October 29, 2012 at 1:00 p.m. at Living Stones Church, 2020 40 th Avenue, Red Deer. If desired, memorial contributions may be made directly to Loaves and Fishes Benevolent Society, Alberta Cancer Foundation, or a charity of the donor’s choice.
It is three years ago today, you went to Heaven to be in the hands of the Lord. We will always remember your beautiful smile. The things you did for us,†are with us forever in our hearts. Your heart was true and with loving care for us. Also, you lived your life†for those you loved†and those you loved†will remember your kindness forever. It was very emotional and tearful day for us, To say “Goodbye Rita”, as the casket was lowered. May your Heaven be full with beautiful flowers As you are. Song - “Memories”
www.simplycremations.com
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309-3300 Email: classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com
E2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
WHAT’S HAPPENING
CLASSIFICATIONS 50-70
52
Coming Events
EAST 40TH PUB presents
Acoustic Friday’s Various Artists
EAST 40TH PUB
presents DOIN-IT-WITH-DEW Mon. 7 pm -11 pm. Come for comedy and sing along with the oldies but goodies
EAST 40th PUB BLUES JAM Sunday’s 5-9 p.m. Looking for a place to live? Take a tour through the CLASSIFIEDS
FREE FLU SHOTS
Highland Green Value Drug Mart 6315 Horn St. GOOD MUSIC ALL NIGHT, OPEN JAM & DJ MUSIC. TUESDAYS & SATURDAYS @
EAST 40th PUB
54
Lost
$500 REWARD. LOST on Range Rd 10, med. haired dark grey tabby cat w/white face, chest and b e l l y, t a t t o o e d , c a l l 403-396-4387. JACK RUSSELL terrier, 6 yrs old, fully intact, last seen on Twp. Rd 361, between Rge Rd 222 & 221, answers to the name of “Jackie”, very friendly and cuddly, sadly missed, any info call 403-773-2288 LOST black cat in Eastview, tall, long and lean, neutered, 403-392-7746 LOST IPod in Canadian Tire. Address label on back, send COD and we will pay postage to Box 264 Red Deer, AB. T4N 5E8 Call 403-309-0166 REWARD
LOST: Small black leather change purse. Rectangular with silver attached chain & key ring. Lost in front of Extendicare, near the handicap parking. Please call 403-227-2591 OCT. 13, LOST IN Red Deer, a pair of prescription progressive glasses, inside a black Bole case. Phone 403-357-3401 if found.
60
755 Medical
CENTRAL AB FEEDLOT seeking year round F/T employee. General farm work and farm machinery operation. Phone 403-556-9588 fax 403-638-3908 or email dthengs@hotmail.com
770
Janitorial
ARAMARK at (Dow Prentiss Plant) about 20-25 minutes out of Red Deer needs hardworking, reliable, honest person w/drivers license, to work 40/hrs. per week w/some weekends, daytime hrs. Starting wage $13/hr. Fax resume w/ref’s to 403-885-7006 Attn: Val Black
F r i e n d l y, f a s t p a c e d manufactured housing dealership requires immediately an energetic, outgoing, motivated individual for the FUlL TIME POSITION at this Red Deer location. Successful applicant will have a thorough knowledge of computers (incl. Excel) and have worked in a fast paced environment previously. Must be a problem solver. Constructon background helpful but not mandatory. Mon.- Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Competitive hourly rate. Apply with resume by email to: roger@dynamicmodular.ca
Computer Personnel
CCCSI is hiring sanitation workers for the afternoon and evening shifts. Get paid weekly, $14.22/hr. Call 403-348-8440 or fax 403-348-8463
OPHTHALMIC TECHNICIAN req’d for Ophthalmology office. Job training is provided but qualifications and previous experience an asset. Starting wages $14/hr. Please fax resume to 403-342-2024.. Only those considered will be contacted. P/T Professional Medical Secretary needed in Red Deer. Fax: 403-314-0499 Buying or Selling your home? Check out Homes for Sale in Classifieds
Oilfield
800
720
Clerical
REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY
730
FULL TIME IT FIELD SERVICE TECHNICIAN NEEDED in Red Deer, AB We offer competitive and comprehensive compensation with benefit package, vehicle allowance, and salary based on experience. Please submit resume to:
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE CLERK
Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!
740
WA N T E D R D A I I M o n . Thurs. for General dental practice in Rimbey. Previous exp. preferred. Please fax resume to 403-843-2607 Wanted: RDAll, Part-Time Hours.for Oral Maxiollfacial Surgery Facilty. No evening or weekends. Please bring resume to Dr. Hajjaj Al Hajjaj’s office at 215, 5201-43 St Red Deer, AB.
The successful candidate must have:
800
A growing Production Testing company, based out of Sylvan Lake, is currently accepting resumes for the following positions:
Qualified Supervisors, Night Operators & Field Assistants If you are a team player interested in the oil and gas industry, please submit your resume, current driver’s abstract and current safety certificates (1st Aid & H2S are the min. qualifications) to the following: Fax 403-887-4750 lkeshen@1strateenergy.ca Please specify position when replying to this ad. We would like to thank all those candidates who apply, however only qualified personnel will be contacted. CENTRAL AB based rig movers/heavy haulers seeking picker operators, bed truck drivers and winch tractor drivers. Top wages and benefits, Reply to : rigmovers2012 @gmail.com
Start your career! See Help Wanted
We offer: • Full time employment • Competitive salary • Excellent health and benefits plan
LOCAL Oilfield Company seeking exp’d Wireline Toolhand /Salesman. Paid fuel and vehicle allowance. Send resume with expected salary to btopcanada@ hotmail.com
Please email resume in confidence to:
Oilfield
800
Oilfield
800
Oilfield
Landcore Technologies Inc. located in Ponoka is currently seeking energetic, motivated team players for the following positions:
Drillers and Driller Assistants with a Class 1 driver’s license. Apprentice or Journeyman Mechanics Pile Drive Operators Pile Drive Assistants Field Supervisor All candidates must be able to pass a pre-employment drug test. Safety tickets are an asset but we are willing to train the right candidate. We offer exceptional pay, excellent benefit package and a positive work environment. Please email resumes to info@landcore.ca or fax 403-783-2011. The right candidates will be contacted for an interview. Please no phone calls. Looking for a new pet? Check out Classifieds to find the purrfect pet.
SERVICE RIG
Bearspaw Petroleum Ltd is seeking an exp’d FLOORHAND Locally based, home every night!
Qualified applicants must have all necessary valid tickets for the position being applied for. Bearspaw offers a very competitive salary and benefits package along with a steady work schedule. Please submit resumes: Attn: Human Resources Emai: hr@ bearspawpet.com Fax: (403) 258-3197 or Mail to: Suite 5309, 333-96 Ave. NE Calgary, AB T3K 0S3 CELEBRATIONS HAPPEN EVERY DAY IN CLASSIFIEDS Tired of Standing? Find something to sit on in Classifieds
Our Red Deer operation is currently seeking individuals for the following positions: FIELD OPERATIONSQualified individual will be self-motivated and experienced in tank farm rig ups. Responsibilities will include organization and rig up of tank farm/manifold systems, delivery of office trailers and light towers. We are willing to train the right candidates with related oilfield experience. ENVIROBIN TRUCK OPERATORQualified individuals will be self-motivated and responsible for professional delivery and pick up of our envirobins and light towers as well as servicing when returned. This position is also responsible for assisting on tank farm rig ups which requires demanding physical labor. Clean class 5 license is required. Oilfield experience and related tickets would be an asset. Only individuals with clean drivers abstract and 100% commitment to customer service and safe work practices need apply. Please forward resumes and abstracts via the following: Fax: 403-309-5962 Email: careers@ evergreenenergy.ca RATTRAY RECLAMATION is currently seeking exp’d LABORERS with a valid drivers license and BACKHOE OPERATORS with a clean class 1 licence, for lease construction, reclamation and cleanups in Lacombe and surrounding areas. Competitive wages and benefits available. Must have valid H2S Alive, First Aid & Ground Disturbance Level II Certification. Email: drattray@rattrayrec.com Fax 403-934-5235 STEAM TRUCK operator req’d. Must have experience and have clean driver’s abstract, all req’d tickets and reliable transportation. Fax resume 403-348-2918 or email gelliott@telusplanet.net TEAM Snubbing now hiring operators and helpers. Email: janderson@ teamsnubbing.com Something for Everyone Everyday in Classifieds
800
800
64
Helix Coil Services, a division of IROC Energy Services is currently hiring to work with newly built state-of-the-art Coil Units based in Red Deer. We offer higher hourly pay rates and scheduled days off.
RED DEER BINGO Centre 4946-53 Ave. (West of Superstore). Precall 12:00 & 6:00. Check TV Today!!!! Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
t Operators with Class I/Class III Drivers License
jobs CLASSIFICATIONS
Call: 403-358-5001
Caregivers/ Aides
710
Fax Resume: 403-342-1635
Please specify position when replying to this ad. We thank all applicants in advance, however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted. You can sell your guitar for a song... or put it in CLASSIFIEDS and we’ll sell it for you! Allmar, a leader in the architectural openings industry is seeking to fill the position of ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT. Prior work in the construction industry an asset. We offer $17-$20/hr, in-house training, and career advancement opportunities. Applicants please send resume to HR@allmar.com. Only applicants requested for interviews will be contacted.
TOO MUCH STUFF? Let Classifieds help you sell it.
Professionals
810
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Central Alberta Residence Society, a CARF accredited agency has long been recognized for providing “Quality” support services to individuals with developmental disabilities. We are currently seeking to fill a number of positions which are necessary in order to maintain the level of supports we have come to be known for. Successful candidates will be responsible to provide personal support, supervision, and training in accordance with individuals needs and aspirations, within their home and community.
264468J26
Oilfield
800
TO LIST YOUR WEBSITE CALL 403-309-3300 ASSOCIATIONS
HEALTH & FITNESS
www.centralalbertahomebuilders.com Central AB Home Builders 403-346-5321 www.reddeer.cmha.ab.ca Canadian Mental Health Assoc. www.realcamping.ca LOVE camping and outdoors? www.diabetes.ca Canadian Diabetes Assoc. www.mycommunityinformation.com /cawos/index.html www.reddeerchamber.com Chamber of Commerce 403-347-4491
www.antlerhillelkranch.com Peak Performance VA 227-2449 www.liveyourlifebetter.com Lose weight naturally with Z-Trim www.dontforgetyourvitamins.net The greatest vitamins in the world www.matchingbonus123.usana.com the best...just got better!! www.greathealth.org Cancer Diabetes DIET 350-9168
BALLOON RIDES
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
www.air-ristocrat.com Gary 403-302-7167
www.workopolis.com Red Deer Advocate - Job Search
BUILDERS
PET ADOPTION www.reddeerspca.com Many Pets to Choose From
www.fantahomes.com 403-343-1083 or 403-588-9788 www.masonmartinhomes.com Mason Martin Homes 403-342-4544 www.truelinehomes.com True Line Homes 403-341-5933 www.jaradcharles.com BUILDER M.L.S
www.homesreddeer.com Help-U-Sell Real Estate5483
www.laebon.com Laebon Homes 403-346-7273 www.albertanewhomes.com Stevenson Homes. Experience the Dream.
www.lonsdalegreen.com Lonsdale Green Apartments
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES www.ultralife.bulidingonabudjet.com MLM’ers attract new leads for FREE!
CLUBS & GROUPS www.writers-ink.net Club for writers - meets weekly
Supervisors: Nitrogen, Coiled tubing, Cement & Acid, Fracturing
REAL ESTATE RENTALS www.homefinders.ca Phone 403-340-3333
268265J26-28
company correspondence. DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES: The receptionist is accountable for creating a professional first time impression while managing and monitoring the reception area at all times, respond to telephones, email and in person inquiries and refer all inquiries to the appropriate personnel, organize, maintain and assist in compiling data for various reports as requested. Fax 403-887-4750 lkeshen@1strateenergy.ca
SHOPPING www.fhtmca.com/derekwiens Online Mega Mall 403-597-1854
VACATIONS www.radkeoutfitting.com AB Horseback Vacations 403-340-3971
COMPUTER REPAIR
WEB DESIGN
www.albertacomputerhygiene.com
affordablewebsitesolution.ca
AB, Computer Hygiene Ltd. 896-7523
Design/hosting/email $65/mo.
19166TFD28
responsible for administering
Central Alberta’s Largest Car Lot in Classifieds
268195J26-K10
720
1st Rate Energy Services Inc. Located in Sylvan Lake, Alberta is seeking a full time Receptionist for a dynamic and busy office. The receptionist is responsible for a wide variety of clerical office duties in support of company administration. Duties include greeting and screening visitors and answering and referring inbound telephone calls. The receptionist is also
WE are looking for Rig Mangers, Drillers, Derrick and Floor hands for the Red Deer area. Please contact Steve Tiffin at stiffin@galleonrigs.com or to (403) 358-3350
Direct resumes/applications to: C.A.R.S. #101 - 5589 47 St. Red Deer, AB T4N 1S1 Fax: 403-346-8015 Email: markw@carsrd.org
LIVE IN CAREGIVER req’d for 3 kids, 44 hrs. per wk., $9.91 per hr., room and board $336/mo., F/T, willing to work wkdns & shiftwork, must be able to cook, and do housekeeping, Phone 403-343-8588
Clerical
Start your career! See Help Wanted
If this sounds like a place you can see yourself working, contributing to the “Quality” support provided, we would like to hear from you.
Email: helixjobs@iroccorp.com
700-920
Has Opening for all positions! Immediately. All applicants must have current H2S, Class 5 with Q Endorsement, First Aid We offer competitive wages & excellent benefits. Please include 2 work reference names and numbers Please fax resume to : 403-264-6725 Or email to: tannis@treelinewell.com No phone calls please.
What some of our employees say about their work: • Focus is on the individuals served • Everyday is different; everyday is fun • Excellent & supportive coworkers • Respected and valued for the work I do • Opportunity to provide input, have say in service delivery • Making the day meaningful for people • Flexibility
Currently recruiting for:
wegot
800
Applicants should posses prior experience in the human service field, ideally providing community based supports. Experience with dual diagnosis, dementia, unique challenges or personal care are definite assets. Hours of work vary, with shift work and alternating weekends generally required.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS 347-8650
Bingos
Oilfield
TREELINE WELL SERVICES
Plant operator with an ABSA class 4 power engineer ticket to join a growing energy services company in central Alberta. Competitive compensation package including medical benefits and a company vehicle. Email resumes to office@rhinoenterprises.ca.
• Previous accounting experience • Strong computer skills • Professional appearance • Enjoy working in a fast paced team environment
admin@southsidereddeer.com
Oilfield
PRODUCTION TESTING SUPERVISORS & OPERATORS Day & Night Must have tickets. Top paid wages. Based out of Devon, AB. Email resume to: kathy@dragonsbreathpt.ca
For Local Automotive Dealership
info@longhurstconsulting.com
Oilfield
790
APEX OILFIELD SERVICES IS HIRING! Looking to fill the following positions in our Red Deer location: Wellsite Trailer Service Technician, Pump and Tank Technician and Shop Assistant. To apply: email a resume to hr@apexoil.ca or fax 403-314-3285.
WARRANTY COORDINATOR
Dental
Celebrate your life with a Classified ANNOUNCEMENT
Personals
Schnell Hardy Jones LLP Red Deer is seeking a mature, reliable Receptionist with previous experience answering a multi line telephone. This is a permanent, full time position suited to a friendly, hard working and well organized individual. This position includes a wide variety of administrative work but foremost is greeting our clients and directing their phone calls in a professional and pleasant manner. We offer a competitive pay rate and benefits for the right candidate. We thank all applicants in advance, however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted. Please apply by email to: rosanne@schnell-law.com or by fax to 403-340-0520.
Farm Work
268396K1
720
Clerical
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 E3
Professionals
810
Canadian Mental Health Association
requires a Full-Time Tenant Support Worker at their Buffalo Housing First Program. Potential applicants will possess strong knowledge and education in addictions, mental health/recover philosophy, acquired brain injury and complex case management skills. Please forward resume to Sarah McIntosh by email at smcintosh@ reddeer.cmha.ab.ca or by fax to 403-342-5684. Closing date 4 pm. Wed. Oct. 31, 2012
Restaurant/ Hotel
820
PITA PIT RESTAURANT CLEARVIEW MARKET WAY, Red Deer IS NOW HIRING F/T permanent food counter attendant. Starting wage $11- $13/per hr., depending on work experience. Applicants must be willing to work shift rotation. Benefits is avail. Send resume to:res-
Trades
850
Big Horn Electric and Controls Ltd.
Trades
850
Trades
850
Truckers/ Drivers
860
Busy Central Alberta Grain Trucking Company looking for Class 1 Drivers. We offer lots of home time, benefits and a bonus program. Grain and super B exp. an asset but not necessary. If you have a clean commercial drivers abstract and would like to start making good money. fax or email resume and comm.abstract to 403-337-3758 or dtl@telus.net
FUTURE AG, a progressive Case IH Equipment Dealer in Stettler is now accepting applications for a Parts Manager or Lead Counter Parts person. Live the life style of Central Alberta and be home at night. Work for one of the few family owned dealerships where we care about our employees and customers. Successful candidate will be a team player with strong social skills. Counter and Management experience an asset. Computer literacy and knowledge of DIS Parts program a definite asset but not mandatory.
Truckers/ Drivers
860
Misc. Help
880
NEED experienced Class 1 drivers for short and long haul. Runs AB., SASK, Manitoba & BC Please call PROMAX TRANSPORT at 227-2712 or fax resume w/abstract 403-227-2743
Join our team of ADULT or YOUTH professionals! CARRIERS ELECTRICAL and INSTRUMENTATION NEEDED JOURNEYMAN and APPRENTICES SECURITAS CANADA For delivery of We are currently recruiting Flyers, Express and for: Hiring Immediate WANT A JOB WITH Central and Northern FT & Casual Sunday Life in taurantbusiness@hotmail..ca Alberta. WEEKENDS OFF? EMR or EMT Required Safety FULL TIME DRIVER Security Personnel DEERPARK Certificates: REQ’D. for Dispatching Duncan Cres./ H2S Alive / First Aid CENTRAL AB based rig Candidates must have a PST / Fall Protection. Position m o v e r s / h e a v y h a u l e r s clean driving record and be Dennison Cres. area Successful candidates will able to drive a standard seeking picker operators, $129/MO. possess excellent written Securitas Canada is looking b e d t r u c k d r i v e r s a n d transmission vehicle. and verbal for qualified Security Excellent customer service winch tractor drivers. ALSO communication skills. Staff for a Petro-Chemical Top wages and benefits, and communication skills Oilfield experience is an plant outside of Red Deer. Reply to : are required. Applicants Dunning Crsc. Symphony Senior FORREST asset. must be physically fit and rigmovers2012 Depalme St. Living Inglewood SERVICES LTD. Qualified applicants are Minimum Qualification: be able to lift up to 70 lbs. @gmail.com $50/mo. looking for exp’d support invited to fax or email their * Alberta Security License They must be 21 years of We offer: service workers. resumes: Now Hiring to Start *EMR- ACP certified age or older. This is fast in a group home setting Fax: 403-638-3688 Email: Immediately *Class 4 license paced, physically ALSO with adults, having careers@bighornelectric.com • Competitive Wages Full Time Part Time and *Bondable demanding environment. Dunham Close & • A n n u a l W o r k b o o t complex needs. Casual Housekeeping *Good interpersonal skills All candidates are subject reimbursement Dandell Close area Please forward resume to Personnel *Good communication skills to criminal record checks. CUNNINGHAM • RRSP Plan $130/mo. forrestservicesltd Must enjoy working with *Computer knowledge, The Full Time position ELECTRIC LTD. • Benefits Package @gmail.com Seniors, be reliable hard previous emergency Mon.to Fri. 40-50 hrs/wk. • Sick Days req’s res./comm. in Sylvan Lake, Ab. working and be a Team experience, previous starting wage $19/hr. + ROSEDALE • Monthly Bonus Journeyman player and work within a security experience, bonus. All candidates are Something for Everyone Robinson Cres./ structured time frame. client interaction subject to criminal record Electricians Everyday in Classifieds If you are looking for a Reinholt Ave. area Starting wage is 13.69 per experience an asset checks. Apply by online @ to start immed. Competirewarding career with a hour shift diff and weekend Central AB based trucking www.upsjobs.com $173/MO tive wages and benefits. MICROAGE successful and growing premium with Benefits company reqires WHY SECURITAS: or fax resume to: Fax resume to MARKETING/SALES organization, then forward after 3 months. *Extended Health and 403-648-3312 403-342-4022 or drop off OWNER OPERATORS PROFESSIONAL REQ’D your resume to: MICHENER Apply to; welfare plan at #7 7880-48 Ave. email: in AB. Home the odd Our rapidly growing Red West of 40th Ave. L. Meek *Above average wages cunnelec@telusplanet.net night. Weekends off. Late Deer location is looking for Future Ag Inc. Assistant General *Fully Paid uniform North of Ross St. model tractor pref. Business a dynamic & personable Attn: Human Resources Due to substantial growth Manager *All training time paid 403-586-4558 area individual. Must be a self Box 489 and the addition of new Opportunities Symphony Senior Living *Dedicated quality group. starter, who has a Red Deer, AB T4N 5G1 $215.00/mo. manufactured product You can sell your guitar Inglewood *Room to learn and grow. successful track record in Fax 403-342-0396 or email lines, for a song... Good for adult w/a 10 Inglewood Drive implementation & follow to karinw@futureag.ca The A.R. Thomson Group or put it in CLASSIFIEDS E-mail;agmiw@ How to apply: small car through of a marketing is offering the following and we’ll sell it for you! symphonyseniorliving.com Apply on line at: HOME building company . plan. Preference will be opportunities to join our http://www.securitas. looking for f/t employee to given to those candidates DRIVER with clean Class ONLY 4 DAYS A WEEK Manufacturing Team. com/ca/enca/Career/ do misc. construction work. with marketing education 1 or Class 2 motor coach Serious applicants looking On this web site you can Must have good knowl& experience. experience preferred for a stable career opportuclick on “On line Applicaedge of framing. Email to Call Jamie For further details visit Must be availl eves. and nity are encouraged to join tion” and submit it to the donna@levirio.ca or Mail www.microage.cc wknds. Looking for both our team. 403-314-4306 Edmonton Branch. resume to Donna EmpringPlease forward resume to: P/T & F/T Email: ham P.O. Box 25146 Deer for more info jdrummond@microage.cc Fax resume to 347-4999 THE RUSTY PELICAN is 1 POSITION Dillicj@Novachem.com Park Post Office, Red or email to: now accepting resumes for Fax: 403-314-8475 AVAILABLE FOR Deer, AB. T4R 2M2 frontbus@platinum.ca a well experienced Restaurant/ Integrity - Vigilance JOURNEYMAN ADULT F/T SERVER We are growing Helpfulness DRIVERS & SWAMPERS Hotel Apply within: 2079-50 WELDER UPGRADING and because we are for furniture moving Ave. 2-4 pm. Mon.-Fri. Looking for a Journeyman SIDER /helper, wanted for company, class 5 required Alberta Government there is a Bo’s Bar & Grill is looking Fax 403-347-1161 Phone W e l d e r i n t e r e s t e d i n small construction compaFunded Programs (5 tons), local & long for experienced line cooks. calls WILL NOT be accepted. p u r s u i n g “ B ” P r e s s u r e New exciting ny. % pd. on experiecne. Student Funding Available! distance. Competitive Competitive wages, bonus Certification to become a Call Dean @ 302-9210. Franchise wages. Apply in person. system, good work ethic, JOURNEYMAN part of our Stainless Steel NOVEMBER START Opportunity in: 6630 71 St. Bay 7 Sales & TILE SETTER team player needed. Electricians and Hose Production line. Red Deer. 403-347-8841 Req’d immed. Exp’d tile 403-309-2200 attn: Jacquie Distributors Instrument Hands req’d. for RED DEER, AB. • GED Preparation Duties to include fabricainstaller, for very busy work in Central Alberta. tion of custom Stainless • Community Support DRIVERS WANTED LUAU Investments Ltd. Humpty’s Family Central AB company. Also looking for WORLDLYNX WIRELESS Steel Hose Product and Worker Program Aggressive Energy Inc. is (O/A Tim Hortons) Restaurants has a solid Must be neat, clean, apprentices . Oilfield Bell Mobility Store is will include successfully looking for class 1 tank Food Counter Attendant history (since 1986 in professional, friendly and exp. an asset. HIRING in RED DEER! obtaining Morning, Afternoon And truck drivers. We specialF/T shift work (open 24 hrs) works well with others or the Red Deer and area Please forward your Join a “B” Pressure Certification Evening P/T Classes ize in the transportation of Must be avail. weekends alone. Driver’s license resume to jobs@ market) and a great new growing company and be and certification on ABSA Class 8 Corrosive liquids in $11.00 per hour. req’d. Excellent wages, nexsourcepower.com look. part of a successful team! approved production weldthe Fort St. John, Fort 4217 - 50 Ave. Academic Express benefits & great working or fax 403-887-4945 Positions available as ing procedures. Nelson area. We offer top 6721 - 50 Ave. Cash equity required is Adult Education & Training environment. Please email STORE MANAGER and wages, benefits and 7111 - 50 Ave. Local company looking for $125,000 with financing 340-1930 resume to: RETAIL SALES Pre-Employment Drug / monthly guarantees. timhire@telus.net experienced residential available for the tileisit@gmail.com www.academicexpress.ca CONSULTANT for our new Alcohol screening and a Flexible work schedule. and commercial service remainder (O.A.C.) store opening in November background check will be technician with current AlNIGHT OWLS Please fax resume & driver Looking for a place in Red Deer. Please required. abstract to 250-787-0030. You too can be famous! to live? berta gas/plumbing ticket. send your resume to Hours of work are Monday Take a tour through the Benefit package after 3 TIM HORTONS DRIVERS-LONG HAUL. Phone or e-mail careers@ - Friday, 7:30am to 4:00pm months, wages based on CLASSIFIEDS requires F/T Customer $1500 Sign-on! Sergio Terrazas worldlynxwireless.com. (with sporadic overtime experience. Email: inService Night shift and Join an industry leader! ADULT CARRIERS available) Ph: (403) 608-7329 Wabasca Area fo@serviceplumbing.ca or afternoon shift.. US Runs, 5-14 days out. Excellent benefits package Fax: (403) 266-1973 NEEDED fax to (403) 342-2025 5 month term Heyl Truck Lines Premium paid on and RRSP plan are also E-mail: s.terrazas Trades 800-973-9161 Camp Job LOOKING for 1st.- 4th available. night shift. @humptys.com For delivery of www.heyl.net year technicians for serStarted mid-Aug, Please Email Resumes to: Health/Dental benefits, Red Deer Advocate vice department and Quick Borsato.linda@ paid training, free A FULL TIME PAINTER 2012 Established Manufacturing Lane. Training avail. Email arthomson.com uniforms. Apply in person REQUIRED by 6:30 a.m. Company looking for a BIG Horn Electric resume to: craig@ North Hill #7 6721 Gaetz Painting exp. necessary. OR Fax Resumes to: delivery and pick-up Misc. Mon. through Fri. and Controls Ltd. aspenford.ca or call 403-341-4243 Ave. (Across from Must have vehicle. driver. Clean Class 5 & 8:00. .am. on Help ELECTRICAL and 403-742-2506 N. Walmart), Must be task orientated, license required. INSTRUMENTATION Saturday in Fax: 403-314-3212 self motivated & reliable. Deliveries to/from Red LOOKING for apprentice JOURNEYMAN and Phone 403-596-1829 Deer, Calgary, Edmonton, or journeyman mechanic. X-STATIC APPRENTICES Stettler with 3-ton deck Deer Park IS NOW ACCEPTING EXPERIENCED residential Experienced Parts Counter Pipe bending skills would Required Safety truck. Excellent Benefit APPLICATIONS Dempsey St. area HVAC installer required Clerk & Shipper/Receiver be a great asset. Wages Certificates: ADULT package. To apply please depend on exp. Going FOR EXPERIENCED AND immediately. Must have H2S Alive / First Aid $402/mo. TRACTION HEAVY DUTY CARRIER NEEDED email your resume to concern shop. Fax ENERGETIC P/T valid drivers license and PARTS - Red Deer Hit the PST / Fall Protection. ALSO wehaveworkforu@ COCKTAIL SERVERS own hand tools. Call Stan road with us! TRACTION, resume to:403-346-9909 Successful candidates will gmail.com. Davison Dr. area for delivery of possess excellent written Apply in person after 3 pm. @ 403-550-3870 for interview. a division of UAP Inc., is a or drop off at 2410 50 Ave. Phone 403-346-7911 $530/mo. and verbal morning paper Canadian leader in the communication skills. distribution, merchandising 6:30 a.m. LOOKING FOR Restaurant/ Oilfield experience is an and remanufacturing of FULL TIME FRAMER / ALSO 6 days a wk asset. Hotel automotive parts and FRAMERS HELPER Clearview Ridge For Qualified applicants are replacement accessories to work in Sylvan Lake. Timberlands area invited to fax or email their GLENDALE & for cars, trucks and heavy Exp. in reno’s and new resumes: $321 monthly vehicles. We are currently construction. Have inside NORMANDEAU Fax: 403-638-3688 Email: searching for a Shipper/ work for most of winter. EXPERIENCED Call Jamie careers@bighornelectric.com Receiver and an POSITION FILLED Vacuum & Water Please call Joanne experienced Heavy Duty 403-314-4306 Truck operators Parts Person .If you are a req’d. to start immed. Truckers/ for more info at 403-314-4308 customer-focused, team CLASS 1 or 3 WITH Q Drivers player this is an opportuAll oilfield safety tickets nity for you!If you are req’d. Clean drivers BUSY CENTRAL AB interested in working for a Misc. company req’s exp’d. Class abstract. Must comply with company with a dynamic Help drug and alcohol policy. 1 drivers to pull decks. work environment, please References Req’d. Assigned truck, exc. wages forward your resume to Exc. salary & benefits. and benefits pkg. Paid Chelsea Barlow at Fax resume to: extras. Family orientated. MEAT MANAGER cbarlow@uapinc.com, fax 403-742-5376 Resume and abstract fax required immediately. to 780-481-0148 or apply hartwell@telus.net to 403-784-2330 or call Individual must be online at: 1-877-787-2501 highly organized, customer Classifieds...costs so little www.uapinc.com/careers. Mon,. - Fri,. 8 a m to 6 pm oriented, & have retail Saves you so much! FOUNDATION company in meat cutting experience, Red Deer currently seekCompetitive salary, ing experienced benefits. Full and part time Misc. Commercial Foundation Help meat cutting positions Form Workers. Please fax also available. resume to 403-346-5867 Apply in person to Sobeys, Highway 2A, FUTURE AG in Rimbey is Lacombe, or fax resume now accepting applications 403-782-5820. for an Agricultural Trades Technician / Heavy Duty NDT Field Service Mechanic with Ag Technician experience. Live the life style of Central Alberta and Full time position. NDT be home at night. Work for experience an asset but n o t r e q u i r e d . Tr a i n i n g one of the few family owned dealerships where provided. Based in Red Pumps & Pressure Inc. Hydraulic Division Deer. Travel within WestMaintenance Technician we care about our emern Canada and is currently accepting applications for ployees and customers. Mechanical Trades international travel Rahr Malting Canada Ltd, a leading manufacturer of We offer: possible. Driver’s license Brewer’s Malt, is now accepting applications for a full time and passport required. Overtime. Opportunity for Maintenance Technician position. • Competitive Wages advancement. Base rate The position includes trouble shooting, maintenance • A n n u a l w o r k b o o t plus field rate starting at reimbursement Hydraulic experience is an asset however inspections, lubes, PM’s and repairs to all types of equipment • RRSP Plan $17-18/hr. Refer to Job # in order to maintain the safe operation and fulfill production • Benefit Package similar Industrial Experience will be FST003. Send resume to alberta@testex-ndt.com. requirements of Rahr Malting. The position is rated under the • Sick Days considered. Heavy Job classification. • Tuition reimbursement NEED EXPERIENCED program for apprentices ROOFERS / ROOFING Please forward resume to Daryl via: Applicants must have a valid mechanical trade certificate for • Monthly Bonus CREWS for Central AB work. work in Alberta. Fax: 403-340-3646 Call Miles 403-896-9045 If you are looking for a This position will work in coordination with the Operations or Email:d.bais@pumpsandpressure.com P/T SNOW REMOVAL rewarding career with a group and is accountable to the Maintenance Supervisor. OPERATORS successful and growing Experience in manufacturing or factory environment is req’d for the winter organization, then forward season. Experienced your resume to: preferred. skidsteer and loader Application Closing Date: operators are needed for Future Ag Inc. October 31st, 2012. busy commercial snow Attn: Paula Applicants should include a resume and apply in writing to: removal season. Must be Box 140 able to work nights. Please Rimbey, AB T0C 2J0 Rahr Malting Canada Ltd call Travis for details at Fax (403) 843-2790 Attn: Human Resources 403-588-4503 Email paulam@futureag.ca
870
“YOU WILL BE FAMOUS FOR BREAKFAST”
820
830
267660J20-26
850
880
820
KFC requires
DELIVERY DRIVERS
860
880
Daytime Shift
880
268668J26-30
Apply by: Fax: (403) 341-3820 or in person at Downtown KFC 4834-53 St., Red Deer
850
Hydraulic Division
Box 113 Alix, Alberta, TOC OBO Fax: (403) 747-2660 No Phone Calls Please
265859J11-28
268401J24-28
INSIDE SALES/ ORDER DESK
Trades
850 is expanding its facility to double production.
JOURNEYMAN WELDER • Full-Time position in Red Deer • Overtime is available • Competitive wages • Group Benefits plan “NO CONTRACT WELDERS PLEASE” Please fax or email your resume to:
Attn: James Canning jcanning@okdrilling.com Ph: 403-343-8860 Fax: 403 346 7723 **Please Note Drug Test Required** 267657J27
Rahr Malting Canada Ltd., a leading manufacturer of Brewer’s Malt, is now accepting applications for a full time Operator 2 position. The position includes Sanitation duties and some Plant Operations Applicants mush have a minimum Grade 12 diploma and may need to be available for shift work. Experience in manufacturing or factory environment is preferred. Application Closing Date: October 30, 2012. Applicants should include a resume and apply in writing to:
Rahr Malting Canada Ltd. Attn: Human Resources Box 113, Alix, Alberta TOC OBO Fax: (403) 747-2660 No Phone Calls Please
We are currently seeking the following to join our team in Blackfalds for all shifts:
- Concrete Batch Plant Operator - Concrete Finishers - Carpenters/Woodworkers - Steel Reinforcement Labourers - Overhead Crane Operators - General Labourers - Site Supervisor - Quality Control Personnel
Top Wages paid based on experience. Full Benefits and Uniform Package included. Visit our website for more detailed job descriptions at www. eaglebuilders.ca. Applicants are able to apply online or fax resumes to Human Resources 403-885-5516 or e-mail: k.kooiker@eaglebuilders.ca.
265251J30
OK Drilling Services is currently hiring for the following:
Operator 2 Position
E4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
880
Misc. Help
880
Misc. Help
880
Due to substantial growth RED DEER WORKS and the addition of new Build A Resume That manufactured product Works! lines, NEWSPAPER APPLY ONLINE Join our Merry The A.R. Thomson Group www.lokken.com/rdw.html CARRIERS Maids Team is offering the following opCall: 403-348-8561 -Professional House REQUIRED portunities to join our Email inford@lokken.com Cleaning Manufacturing Team. for Career Programs are -Permanent Position 30-36 Serious applicants looking FREE The Town of Olds hr/week for all Albertans -MUST have own vehicle for a stable career opportuNo collecting! -Must be available Mon-Fri nity are encouraged to join Packages come our team. 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM ready for delivery! -Must pass a Criminal 2 POSITIONS Record Check -Paid training starts at AVAILABLE FOR Also $11.00/hr MANUFACTURING for the afternoon & -Benefits after 3 months SHOP TECHNICIANS morning delivery in If interested please contact Duties to include fabricaus at: Fax: 403-314-4811 Town of Penhold! tion prep, hydro-testing, CLASSIFICATIONS Email: merrymds@ general shop maintenance, telus.net 1500-1990 operation of new product Also line manufacturing equip- afternoon delivery in ARIES AIRFLO ment, such as tube mill, Town of HEATING & AIR corrugating equipment and Auctions Springbrook other hose manufacturing CONDITIONING is looking for labourers. equipment and occasional 1 day per wk. Full time work, $16/hr., o n - s i t e w o r k w i t h o u r No collecting!! Bud Haynes & benefits. Must have vehicle mobile hydro-testing trailer Co. Auctioneers to get to work. Call Terry at unit. Certified Appraisers 1966 Please contact 403-342-7870 or email Estates, Antiques, Pre-Employment Drug / resume to : QUITCY Firearms. Alcohol screening and a at 403-314-4316 or email terry@ariesairflo.com Bay 5, 7429-49 Ave. background check will be qmacaulay@ 347-5855 required. reddeeradvocate.com Hours of work are Monday - Friday, 7:30am to 4:00pm Children's (with sporadic overtime P/T PRESSER needed in Items available) drycleaning plant. No Excellent benefits package and RRSP plan are also weekends or evenings. Call C H I L D R E N S ’ p l a s t i c FOR FLYERS, Shannon at 403-550-7440 hangers, approx. 100, all available. for $20, 403-877-6354 RED DEER SUNDAY LIFE Please Email Resumes to: AND EXPRESS Borsato.linda@ VENDORS Wanted. Nov.3rd arthomson.com Holiday Inn 67th Red Deer. ROUTES IN: OR Fax Resumes to: New & gently used 403-341-4243 children’s sale. ANDERS AREA 403-358-8939 www. Warehouse everythingforkidzsale.com
JOHNSTONE PARK Jacobs Close James, Johns St. & Jewell St.
wegot
stuff
NORMANDEAU Nichols Crsc. & Nyberg Ave.
1530
*********** PINES PAYNE & PARSONS CLOSE ********** PINES LODGE & PALLO CLOSE ********** PAGE AVE. & PHELAN CLOSE
1580
CARRIERS NEEDED
Ainsworth Crsc. Asmundsen Ave. Archibald Crsc. Arnold Close/ Amlee Close
ADULT & YOUTH CARRIERS NEEDED for delivery of Flyers Red Deer Express & Red Deer Life Sunday in
BOWER AREA Barrett Dr. Bettenson St. Best Crsc./ Berry Ave.
MOUNTVIEW WEST LAKE Call Karen for more info 403-314-4317
NGLEWOOD Ingram Close LANCASTER AREA
ADULT CARRIERS NEEDED for early morning delivery of Red Deer Advocate 6 days per week in
Lancaster Drive Lindsay Ave. Langford Cres. Law Close/ Lewis Close
MOUNTVIEW 83 Advocate $435/mo. $5229/yr 1-1/2 hrs. per day
SUNNYBROOK AREA
Shipper/ Receiver
GAMES DEALER SCHOOL
Cost $200 SCHOOL WILL BE STARTING NOV. 5 Upon successfully completing and passing course, work is available for casual to part time hours to start. Must be able to obtain Security Clearance Check from local RCMP Please telephone and leave a message for April M. 403-346-3339 KEY Towing & Storage Alberta Ltd. req’s an exp’d. dispatcher. Knowledge of Red Deer and area is essential. Experience in the towing industry would be an asset. Requirements are computer skills, able to multi task and have good people skills. Fax resume to 403-346-0295. MOBIL 1 Lube Express Gasoline Alley req’s an Exp. Tech. Fax 403-314-9207
Competitive starting wages plus regular increases. Hours: M-F 7:30am-4:30pm Excellent benefits package. Opportunities to advance. Must be dependable, hardworking and seeking a long-term career. Apply in person, or email to: hartleytj@eecol.com 4747 - 61st Street
Employment Training
offers a variety of
SAFETY COURSES
Call Karen for more info 403-314-4317
ADULT CARRIERS NEEDED for Morning Newspaper delivery in the Town of Stettler Earn $440 or $500/mo. for 1 hr. or less 6 days a week
Viscount Dr./ Violet Place Victor Close Vold Close Call Prodie @ 403- 314-4301 for more info ********************** TO ORDER HOME DELIVERY OF THE ADVOCATE CALL OUR CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT 314-4300
Please contact QUITCY
at 403-314-4316 or email qmacaulay@ reddeeradvocate.com
Peavey Industries Warehouse workers REQUIRED IMMED. Temporary P/T 20 hrs./week, 4 pm. - 8 pm. Mon. - Fri. Please drop off resume to Peavy Industries Ltd. 7740-40 Ave. Red Deer or fax 403-346-3432 Attn: Carolynn
COMMERCIAL LAUNDRY WORKER part-time evenings and weekends Honest, friendly, hardworking only need apply. $11.00/hour. Bring resume to Mustang Laundry, 6830-59 Avenue R E L I A B L E C L E A N I N G or email mustanglaundry@ personnel req’d. for Red Deer area.. $17/hr. email airenet.com. resume to icshine_cleaning DECK TRUCK @hotmail.com OPERATOR POSITION, Phone 780-399-4977 self motivated, mechanically inclined,, exp’d. WANTED Will train right personality. Experienced Glazers Class 5 w/air ticket req’d. Driver Licence is a must. Call City Haul Towing 403-347-9320 403-588-7079
Must have a reliable vehicle Please contact Rick at 403-314-4303
CARRIERS REQUIRED to deliver the Central AB. Life Blackfalds Lacombe Ponoka Stettler
DJ/KARAOKE HOST for Hire, casual position. 403-896-6880
Employment Training
to meet your needs.
Standard First Aid , Confined Space Entry, H2S Alive and Fire Training are courses that we offer on a regular basis. As well, we offer a selection of online Training Courses. For more information check us out online at www.firemaster.ca or call us at 403 342 7500. You also can find us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter @firemasterofs.
NEWSPAPER CARRIERS REQUIRED for Afternoon delivery in Bowden & Innisfail.
900
SAFETY TRAINING CENTRE OILFIELD TICKETS
Industries #1 Choice!
“Low Cost” Quality Training
403.341.4544 24 Hours Toll Free 1.888.533.4544
R H2S Alive (ENFORM) R First Aid/CPR R Confined Space R WHMIS & TDG R Ground Disturbance R (ENFORM) B.O.P. #204, 7819 - 50 Ave.
BED: #1 King. extra thick One on one Training orthopedic pillowtop, brand Complete obedience course new, never used. 15 yr. Harness pull training for sport warr. Cost $1995, sacrifice Skijoring/scooter course @ $545. 403-302-0582. Eric Touche 403-505-1392 emtouche@gmail.com CUSTOM made display unit, wood $130; LP holder SILVER Lab pups P.B. with 2 sliding doors on cas- Parents CKC reg. vet checked, tors $40 403-314-2026 1st shots. 3 F, 3 M. $600 403-843-6564, 785-5772 DBLE. bed c/w mattress and bookcase headboard $50, recliner, exc cond. Sporting $100, solid office desk Goods $25, 403-346-5360
1860
PAIR bdrm. lamps $25; 27” o l d e r w o r k i n g t v, g o o d cond. $30; ladies S motorcycle helmut, $60; 403-340-0675
1630
TRAILERS for sale or rent Job site, office, well site or storage. Skidded or wheeled. Call 347-7721.
2 EXERCISE BIKES $10 each. 403-343-7393
2190
Grain, Feed Hay
1ST & 2ND CUT hay for sale, NO RAIN, Alfalfa Timothy mixed. delivery avail. 403-896-7105
wegot
rentals CLASSIFICATIONS FOR RENT • 3000-3200 WANTED • 3250-3390
3020
Houses/ Duplexes
1870
Collectors' Items
BENTLEY 2008 Model Duplex shows like new 4 bdrm., 3 bath. Garage, fireplace. Appliances. $1500 Avail. now. 403-341-9974 BLACKFALDS. Newly reno’d 3 bdrm., 2.5 bath, dev. bsmt heated garage. N/S, $1675 w/no pets, $1775 w/pets. + utils + s.d. Credit ref’s req’d. Avail. Immed. 403-391-4100 TRAVEL ALBERTA EXECUTIVE HOME REQ’S Alberta offers AN EXECUTIVE FAMILY. SOMETHING Nov. 1st. 4500 sq.ft., 3 bdrm for everyone. + office, att. garage, heated Make your travel floors, room for RV. Option plans now. to purchase avail. N/S, no pets. $3200 + s.d. + utils. Credit ref’s req’d. 403-588-9602 HALF DUPLEX, 3 bdrm., $950 , utils not incl., avail end of Oct. completely reno’d. no pets, Parkvale, 403-877-3323. AGRICULTURAL MICHENER, 4 bdrm., CLASSIFICATIONS single garage, . 2 baths, family room, 5 appls. yard, 2000-2290 no pets, n/s, $1350, 318-0136 SYLVAN, 2 units Nov. 1, 2 Horses bdrm. + hide-a-bed, incl., cable, dishes, bedding, all H O R S E S W A N T E D : utils. $1200 -$1500/mo, broke, un-broke, or un403-880-0210 wanted. 403-783-0303
URGENT - MOVING MUST SELL 7 pce oak dining room suite, $350, COCA Cola Barbies, still in exc. cond., 403-346-5360 boxes; Grease Barbie Sandy $50/ea. URGENT MOVING. Must 403-318-6970 sell: Nordic track treadmill $500; Pallistr 4 pce. bdrm. suite, $500;, Palliser ent,. Travel centre $250, obo Packages 403-343-1460
1900
WANTED
Antiques, furniture and estates. 342-2514
Stereos TV's, VCRs
1730
2 SONY speakers 19” x 11” $25 403-314-0804 RADIO AND RECORD PLAYER, 8 track player cabinet model, in goo cond. to give away GIVEN AWAY
Misc. for Sale
1760
LADIES medium brown full 8x16’ x 11’ high, calf chop s h e l f f e e d e r, w o o d e n length mink coat, exc. cond. Size 12. $200 obo frame, metal roof, $200, 403-556-6473 403-346-6303
EquipmentHeavy
1840
Dogs
CHARCOAL grill $25; elec. motor, new, for furnace $25; Kenmore HD washer $50 ; elec. chain saw $25; new toilet and seat $75 403-755-3470
CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE SOUL books 5 @ $3 each, Company’s Coming books 9 @ $3 each, Umbrella plant 3ft. $14; Tools Asparagus plant, $5, Dieffenbachia plant small $3; , 6” BENCH grinder w/stand, 2 l a r g e t u p p e r w a r e containers 1 square 1 new $70 403-314-0804 round, $4 each, tupperware juice pitcher $2.50, old fruit bowl, $3; old boat Firewood shape fruit bowl large $28; 2 serving bowls, $2.75 & $2.50, 2 old candy dishes, AFFORDABLE 2.50 & $3.50, Homestead Firewood $403-346-2231 Spruce, Pine, Birch Spilt, Dry. 7 days/wk. 403-304-6472 CHRISTMAS fabric, $15; FIREWOOD. Pine, Spruce, handknit socks and mitts, 7 pairs, $35; brown leather Poplar. Can deliver 1-4 cords. 403-844-0227 coat w/fur collar, $100, exc. cond. size 10-12, Now Offering Hotter, Cleaner 403-347-3741 BC Birch. All Types. P.U. / LARGE box of X-mas del. Lyle 403-783-2275 lights all for $10; custom ice pick for ice fishing $50; Health & 26 country western cassettes $26; 2 patchwork Beauty quilts $30/ea.; 2 afghans *NEW!* Asian Relaxation $20/ea, 2 casual mens Massage Downtown RD p a n t s 4 0 / 3 2 b o t h f o r 587-377-1298 Open Mon.- $9 403-314-2026 Fri. daily 12:30 pm - 6:30 pm. NEW tempered glass fish tank and stand $75; brass 5 pce. fireplace set, $50, Household also grate $20, Appliances 403-728-3375
1660
2140
WANTED: all types of horses. Processing locally in Lacombe weekly. 403-651-5912
2170
Manufactured Homes
3040
with Laminate Flooring, new carpet, newly painted
A MUST SEE! Only
20,000with Intro
$
400/month lot Rent incl. Cable
$
Lana (403) 550-8777 www.lansdowne.ca
264155J1-K30
Renter’s Special FREE Cable
1790
2 & 3 bedroom modular/mobile homes
1810
1720
3030
Newly Renovated Mobile Home
1700
APPLS. reconditioned lrg. selection, $150 + up, 6 mo. Piano & warr. Riverside Appliances Organs 403-342-1042 (across from Totem) ELEC. STOVE $25 will YA M A H A o r g a n , w o r k s SAFETY TRAINING d e l i v e r i n R e d D e e r, g o o d , t o g i v e a w a y, **For all your safety needs** 403-347-1776 403-347-1757 leave msg, WEEKLY CLASSES J.H. CONNOR wringer Class 1, Class 3 washing machine, model Pets & Air Brakes 852G asking $25, **Special Rates for Supplies 403-556-6473 Class 1 and Class 3** Other courses available 20 GALLON AQUARIUM Oilfield Hauler GODI Light Household with rot iron stand, light Duty Vehicle Hours of hood, filter & gravel. Furnishings Service TDG/WHMIS $65. 403-343-6785 Cargo Securement 2 MATCHING LOVE Tired of Standing? Chaining Up Fatigue SEATS. $25 for both. Management All Courses Find something to sit on 403-343-7393 are Government Certified in Classifieds Group rates available BED ALL NEW, Possible funding available Queen Orthopedic, dble. WE’RE NOT SATISFIED pillow top, set, 15 yr. warr. UNTIL YOU’RE Cost $1300. Sacrifice $325. Cats CERTIFIED! 302-0582 Free Delivery Call or email to reserve LARGE antique teacher’s 2 FEMALE kittens to give your seats now desk, dble. pedestal $150, away, litter box trained, 403-343-8727 after 6 p.m. 403-877-6354
Condos/ Townhouses
1 BDRM. condo at Whispering Pines, beautiful view of Pine Lake, $800 Ken @ 403-346-7462 SYLVAN, 2 bdrm. condo, SET OF REBUILT BOB- w/den & fireplace, shows SLEIGHS, 403-783-2330 like new, avail. Nov. 1 cell 403-704-9109 $1350. 403-341-9974
Horse/Stock Trailers
1710
in pet friendly park
Starting at
849
$
/month
1830
Lana (403) 550-8777 www.lansdowne.ca
wegotservices
F/T Cashier/Postal Clerk. Apply in person w/resume: Highland Green Value Drug Mart.
Call Rick at 403-314-4303
1720
1640
OILFIELD SERVICES INC.
Sherwood Cres. VANIER AREA
900
1590
Clothing
Household Furnishings
217865
Please call Joanne at 403-314-4308
CLASSIFICATIONS
890
1000-1430
To Advertise Your Business or Service Here
The Salvation Army, Red Deer is in need of volunteers to attend to our Christmas Kettles at various retail locations from November 22 to December 22. If you are able to assist, please call 403-346-2251 ASAP to schedule your time.
Call Classifieds 403-309-3300 267573J20-K6
classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com
All money raised through the Kettle campaign provides year round service for those in need within our community.
Accounting
900
Cleaning
1070
Eavestroughing
1130
WINTER PREP SPECIAL Starting @ $100. 403-391-2169
Escorts
1165
*LEXUS* 403-392-0891 INDEPENDENT
EDEN
587-877-7399 10am- 2am DO YOU need someone to clean your office, reliable EROTICAS PLAYMATES Girls of all ages and good rates, wkndsn www.eroticasplaymates.net only, call Mindy at 403-598-3049 403- 392-8774 SEXY dream girls waiting for you! 403-550-0732 mydiamondgirls.org Contractors
RED DEER ABORIGINAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICES
1100
RDAES offers culturally appropriate support, services and resources that assist Albertans in successfully developing employment, career and educational objectives.
Black Cat Concrete
Applications are now being accepted for the
PROGRAMMING FOR OLDER WORKERS PROGRAM The POW program will commence Feb. 4th, 2013. Get your application in now!
Sidewalks, driveways, garages, patios, bsmts. RV pads. Dean 403-505-2542 BRIAN’S DRYWALL Framing, drywall, taping, textured & t-bar ceilings, 36 yrs exp. Ref’s. 392-1980
COUNTERTOPS
POW is an 17 week program designed to equip mature individuals between 50 to 64 years of age with essential skills that will enhance opportunities for securing a position, remain active, while developing skill sets for employment.
Kitchen renovations Wes Wiebe 403-302-1648
268648K1-
The program will incorporate Aboriginal culture with mainstream training which include: Life skills, computer training, employability skills and academic competency building and workplace training. Funding will be available to those who qualify.
For more information call/drop in: Red Deer Aboriginal Employment Services #202, 4909 48 Street, Red Deer, AB Tel: (403) 358-7734 Fax (403) 358-7735 Toll Free: 1-866-358-7734
1010
INDIVIDUAL & BUSINESS Accounting, 30 yrs. of exp. with oilfield service companies, other small businesses and individuals RW Smith, 346-9351
267706J26-K11
Employment Training
920
Career Planning
Are you tired of not having evening and weekends to do what you love to do?
Adult & Youth Carrier Needed For Delivery of Flyers, Express & Sunday Life in
Volunteers Wanted
Misc. Help
264152J1-K30
880
Misc. Help
Fireplaces
1175
TIM LLOYD. WETT certified. Inspections, installs, chimney sweeps & service 403-340-0513
Handyman Services
1200
DALE’S HOME RENO’S Free estimates for all your reno needs. 403-506-4301
F & J Renovations. We do it all. Good rates and references available so call John at 403-307-3001 jbringleson@shaw.ca
RMD RENOVATIONS Bsmt’s, flooring, decks, etc. Call Roger 403-348-1060
GREYSTONE Handyman Services. Reasonable rates. Ron, 403-396-6089
SIDING, Soffit, Fascia Prefering non- combustible fibre cement, canexel & smart board, Call Dean @ 302-9210.
TIRED of waiting? Call Renovation Rick, Jack of all trades. Handier than 9 men. 587-876-4396 or 587-272-1999
Massage Therapy
1280
* NEW * Executive Touch. Relaxation massage for men. 5003A - Ross St. Mon-Fri 12:30-6:30pm. 348-5650 Gentle Touch Massage 4919 50 St. New rear entry, lots of parking 403-341-4445 MASSAGE ABOVE ALL WALK-INS WELCOME 4709 Gaetz Ave. 346-1161
VII MASSAGE
Feeling overwhelmed? Hard work day? Come in and let us pamper you. Pampering at its best. #7 7464 Gaetz Ave.(rear entrance if necessary) www.viimassage.biz In/Out Calls to Hotels 403-986-6686
Misc. Services
1290
5* JUNK REMOVAL
Property clean up 340-8666 CENTRAL PEST CONTROL LTD. Comm/res. Locally owned. 403-373-6182 cpest@shaw.ca FREE removal of all kinds of unwanted scrap metal. No household appliances 403-396-8629
IRONMAN Scrap Metal Recovery is picking up scrap again! Farm machinery, vehicles and industrial. Serving central Alberta. 403-318-4346
Moving & Storage
1300
BOXES? MOVING? SUPPLIES? 403-986-1315
Painters/ Decorators
1310
LAUREL TRUDGEON Residential Painting and Colour Consultations. 403-342-7801. Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
PAINTING BY DAVE Interior, Exterior, New Construction. Comm/Indust. 2 Journeyman w/over 50 yrs exp. %15 discount for seniors. Free estimates. All work guaranteed. 403-307-4798
Seniors’ Services
1372
ATT’N: SENIORS Are you looking for help on small reno’s or jobs, such as, new bathroom sink, toilets or trimming small trees. Call James 403- 341-0617 HELPING HANDS For Seniors. Cleaning, cooking, companionship in home or in facility. Call 403-346-7777 Better For Cheaper with a Low Price Guarantee. helpinghandshomesupport.com
E5
WORLD
» SEE MORE ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM
Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Sandy whips Bahamas, will soon hit U.S. East coast BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NASSAU, Bahamas — Hurricane Sandy lashed the central Bahamas on Thursday night with violent winds and torrential rains, after raging through the Caribbean where it caused at least 21 deaths and forced postponement of a hearing at the Guantanamo naval base on Cuba. State media in Cuba said Sandy toppled houses, ripped off roofs and killed 11 people in the eastern provinces of Santiago and Guantanamo as it roared over the island as a Category 2 storm early Thursday. Nine deaths were reported in Haiti and one in Jamaica. Meanwhile, forecasters warned that Sandy will likely blend with a winter storm to cause a super storm in the eastern U.S. next week whose effects will be felt along the entire Atlantic Coast from Florida to Maine and inland to Ohio. Some weakening in Sandy was forecast during the next 48 hours, but it was expected to remain a hurricane for a couple of days. By Thursday evening, the hurricane’s centre was about 105 miles (170 kilometres) east of the Bahamas capital of Nassau as it spun between Cat Island and Eleuthera in the central Bahamas. The storm had
Condos/ Townhouses
3030
3060
Suites
KYTE CRES.
1 & 2 BDRM. APTS.
Clean, quiet bldg. Lovely 3 level exec. Call 318-0901. 3 bdrm. townhouse 5 appls, 1 1/2 bath, 1 BDRM. apt. in Penhold, concrete patio, blinds, $740/mo. Avail. immed. front/rear parking, no dogs, Incl. most utils, no pets. n/s, rent $1395 SD $1000 Call 403-886-5288 Avail. Nov. 1. 403-304-7576 or 347-7545 A Great Location SOUTHWOOD PARK Adult Bldg. 1 & 2 Bdrm. 3110-47TH Avenue, 2 & 3 bdrm. townhouses, Units Heat/Water/parking incl’d Call 403-342-2899 generously sized, 1 1/2 baths, fenced yards, BACHELOR SUITE, full bsmts. 403-347-7473, lower floor, for quiet over Sorry no pets. 40 tenant(s). No pets, www.greatapartments.ca n/s, no noise. Heat & water included at 4616-44 St. Riverfront Estates Laundry on site. $575/mo, Deluxe 3 bdrm. 1 1/2 bath, bi-level townhouse, 5 appls, D.D. $550. 403-341-4627 blinds, large balcony, no pets, n/s, $1195 Kids/Pets Okay or $1220 along the river. 2 bdrm. all utils. incl. SD $1000. avail. renos done to apt. bldg. Nov. 1 & 15 $995. 403-304-7576 347-7545 DoylesRentals@gmail.com Text/call 403-358-9999
Manufactured Homes
3040
FREE Shaw Cable + more $899/month Lana 403-550-8777
NOW RENTING 1 BDRM. APT’S. 2936 50th AVE. Red Deer Newer bldg. secure entry w/ onsite manager, 5 4 Plexes/ appls., incl. heat and hot 6 Plexes water, washer/dryer hookup, infloor heating, a/c., 3 BDRM. 4 appls, no pets, car plug ins & balconies. $900/mo. 403-343-6609 Call 403-343-7955
3050
ORIOLE PARK
QUIET LOCATION
3 bdrm., 1-1/2 bath, $975 rent, s.d. $650, incl water sewer and garbage. avail. Dec. 1. Call 403-304-5337
1 & 2 Bdrm Adult building Heat/water/parking incl. Call 403-342-2899
3060
BDRM. in Vanier Woods Private washroom $590/mo. with d.d., 403-588-6268 after 6 pm. ROOM for trustworthy dependable person $500/mo. inclds. everything, Sylvan Lake 403-596-8996 ROOM in Westpark, n/s, no pets. Furnished. TV & utils incl. 403-304-6436
Warehouse Space
RED DEER, heated warehouse for R.V. storage. Contact Jeff 403-506-5646 or Walter 403-887-5893
3160
NEW RV Storage Facility Gravel pad, 6’ security fence, 6 kms. E. of R.D. Call 403-347-4425.
Mobile Lot
3190
LACOMBE new park, animal friendly. Your mobile or ours. 2 or 3 bdrm. Excellent 1st time home buyers. 403-588-8820 MOBILE HOME PAD, in Red Deer Close to Gaetz, 2 car park, Shaw cable incl. Lana 403-550-8777
3200
RV LOT FOR RENT Available Nov-March Desert Shadows RV Resort Cathedral City, CA 403-358-3095
Red Deers newest Apartment Homes
NOW RENTING
wegot
1 & 2 bedroom suites
• Great location • 6 appliances (fridge, stove, dishwasher, washer & dryer, microwave). • Balcony • Window Coverings • Adults only 21+ • No Pets
$
FREE Weekly list of properties for sale w/details, prices, address, owner’s phone #, etc. 342-7355 Help-U-Sell of Red Deer www.homesreddeer.com
Email: info@timberstone.com timberstonevillage.com
268454J26-28
CALL: 403-302-7896 Introducing... roducing...
IMMAC. retirement home in quiet neighborhood, no stairs, walk-in shower, 5 appls. 2 bdrm., murphy bed, sprinkler system, a/c, sunroom, r.v. parking stall in back yard. $285,000. 403-346-7920 for appt. to view
NEW HOMES! 403.342.4544 MasonMartinHomes.com Central Alberta’s Largest Car Lot in Classifieds
OPTION TO PURCHASE AVAILABLE! Executive home req’s an executive family. Nov. 1st. 4500 sq.ft., 3 bdrm + office, att. garage, heated floors, room for RV. N/S, no pets. $3200 + s.d. + utils. Credit ref’s req’d 403-588-9602
Condos/ Townhouses
4040
$10,000 paid to you At Closing 3 bdrm. 2 bath, town house, needs cosmetic interior work, Only $139,640 JustListedInfo.com Text/call 403-358-9999 Residential One Real Estate.
CELEBRATIONS HAPPEN EVERY DAY IN CLASSIFIEDS
Ideal for horses or cattle. Corrals, fenced, heated barn & shop. Open concept custom built bungalow. $465,000. 403-843-6182 (Rimbey) TOO MUCH STUFF? Let Classifieds help you sell it.
Antique & Classic Autos
5020
4090
4310
PROPERTY FOR SALE! Come to the Circle R Builders Ltd. Open House Saturday October 27th 10 AM- 4 PM and Sunday October 28th 12 PM - 4 PM. These excellent properties are located at 59,61,75,77 Ebony Street Elizabeth Park Lacombe. 1739 sq. ft. above grade, priced to sell!
Cars
5030
2011 TOYOTA CAMRY LE 63,000 kms immaculate. $17,900 Senior. Warranty. Private. 403-887-2790
wheels 5000-5300
4 MICHELIN X-ICE tires, 215/70 R15 98T, $200/all , 403-346-5495
2008 CHARGER 3.5L Exc. cond. 84,000 careful kms. Service & fuel economy records avail. Asking $10,750. 403-346-8299 or 403-506-9994 2006 VOLVO S60 AWD 158,000 km $12,900 obo call/text Chris 403-358-1640
SCRAP ATTACK, auto salvage & scrap metal. 403-598-6536, 4845 79 St.
★
If you do not file by the date above, the estate property can lawfully be distributed without regard to any claim you may have. 266560J26
★
5200
A Star Makes Your Ad A Winner! CALL:
309-3300 To Place Your Ad In The Red Deer Advocate Now!
REMOVAL of unwanted cars, may pay cash for complete cars. 304-7585 WANTED FREE REMOVAL of unwanted cars and trucks, also wanted to buy lead batteries, call 403-396-8629
★
5030
NEED A CAR?! ed!
Ev
5 P.M.
★
If you have a claim against this estate, you must file your claim by November 25, 2012 and provide details of your claim with: Sandra L. Manning at Johnston Ming Manning LLP Barristers and Solicitors 4th Floor, 4943 - 50 Street Red Deer, AB. T4N 1Y1
prov p A s ’ e eryon
CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE Each Day For The Next Day’s Paper CALL 309-3300
Estate of Dennis Kershaw who died on July 5, 2012
A1 RED’S AUTO. Free scrap vehicle & metal removal. We travel. AMVIC approved. 403-396-7519
Cars
2006 CADILLAC CTS-V LS2 engine, lteather., nav., 100551 kms., $22888 3488788 Sport & Import
5190
RED’S AUTO. Free Scrap Vehicle & Metal Removal. We travel. May pay cash for vehicle. 403-396-7519
Vehicles Wanted To Buy
wegot
5180
2 BRAND NEW WRAPPED UP P205-65R15 All Season Radial Tires. $60 each. & two 2 ton Hydralic jacks. $15/each. 403-887-4981
Auto Wreckers
2011 CAMARO RS/SS LS3, 2104 kms, $36,888 348FULLY SERVICED res & duplex lots in Lacombe. 8788, Sport & Import Builders terms or owner 2008 HONDA Accord EXL will J.V. with investors or 62,500 kms, inclds. winter subtrades who wish to become tires, $18,400 obo home builders. Great 403-782-4314 returns. Call 403-588-8820
Notice To Creditors And Claimants
2006 PONTIAC Montana All wheel drive SV6 7 passenger, loaded, automatic side door DVD, just like new, only 147,000 km. $7900. 403-348-9746
Tires, Parts Acces.
4160
Open House Out Of Red Deer
5000 km on complete restoration. $9500. 403-340-8407 or 877-2909
Celebrate your life with a Classified ANNOUNCEMENT
CLASSIFICATIONS
6010
1967 CHEVY Pickup
New Executive
Lots For Sale
PUBLIC NOTICES
Public Notices
MUST SELL By Owner $7,000. Lana 403-550-8777 3 bdrm. 2 bath HOME in Red Deer. Immediate possession 10 yr warranty. Own it for $1345/mo. OAC 403-346-3100, 347-5566
5070
Vans Buses
2009 DODGE Caravan, exc. cond., Stow-N-Go, $11,900. 403-638-3499.
Manufactured Homes
Tour These Fine Homes
4020
4050
land, they should get a pretty good beating,” he said. “There are sections of Eleuthera we are concerned about.” The huge Atlantis resort went into lockdown after dozens of tourists left Paradise Island before the airport closed, said George Markantonis, president of Kerzner International, which manages the resort. He said the resort was now less than half full, but all its restaurants, casinos and other facilities were still operating. Sooner Halvorson, a 36-year-old hotel owner from Colorado who recently moved to the Bahamas, said she and her husband, Matt, expected to ride out the storm with their two young children, three cats, two dogs and a goat at their Cat Island resort. “We brought all of our animals inside,” she said, though she added that a horse stayed outside. “She’s a 40-year-old horse from the island. She’s been through tons of hurricanes.” On Great Exuma island, guest house operator Veronica Marshall supplied her only customer with a flashlight and some food before Sandy bore down. The storm-hardened Bahamian said she was confident that she and her business would make it through intact. “I’m 73 years old and I’ve weathered many storms,” she said.
Picturesque Recreational River Hobby Farm.
CLASSIFICATIONS
BLACKFALDS By Owner, New Starter Home. Unique bi-level, walk-out bsmt. FOR SALE OR RENT TO OWN. 403-348-9746, 746-5541
Rents from 800 - 1375
Acreages
Directory
Houses For Sale
$
4020
homes 4000-4190
Be the first tenants to move into our brand new building
Houses For Sale
3140
BRAND new 9900 sq. ft. ready for lease fall 2012 on Golden West Ave 358-3500
Misc. For Rent
Introducing... roducing...
3090
2 ROOM. BSMT, furn., shared bath, sitting rm., laundry, $400 incl. utils. No pets, n/s. 403-352-2833
Storage Space
Newly Reno’d Mobile
Suites
Rooms For Rent
maximum sustained winds of 100 mph (160 kph), down slightly from earlier in the day, and was moving north-northwest at 17 mph (27 kph). Caroline Turnquest, head of the Red Cross in the Bahamas archipelago off Florida’s east coast, said 20 shelters were opened on the main island of New Providence. “Generally people are realizing it is serious,” she said. Power was out on Acklins Island and most roads there were flooded, government administrator Berkeley Williams said. He said his biggest concern was that a boat filled with basic supplies for the island had to cancel its trip until next week. “Supplies were low before, so you can imagine what we are going through now,” Williams said. On Ragged Island in the southern Bahamas, the lone school was flooded. “We have holes in roofs, lost shingles and power lines are down,” said Charlene Bain, local Red Cross president. “But nobody lost a life, that’s the important thing.” Steven Russell, an emergency management official in Nassau, said that docks on the western side of Great Inagua island had been destroyed and that the roof of a government building was partially ripped off. “As the storm passes over Eleuthera and Cat Is-
1998 MUSTANG GT Loaded, many after market add-on’s $6,300 obo 403-783-5506
Call Tracy Today
403-352-7455
1998 HONDA Civic loaded blue, clean. 403-352-6995 1995 CHEV Cavalier $200; car runs but selling for parts, tires and muffler good. 403-872-2777
VIEW ALL OUR PRODUCTS At
Get The Most TRACTION from your Automotive Ad with our
“ WHEEL DEAL”
www.garymoe.com 5 LINE PHOTO AD (1 Line in BOLD print)
Red Deers newest Apartment Homes
has relocated to
NOW RENTING 1 & 2 bedroom suites
• Great location • 6 appliances (fridge, stove, dishwasher, washer & dryer, microwave). • Balcony • Window Coverings • Adults only 21+ • No Pets
216751
Trucks
5050
1 Insertion In These Community Papers: BASHAW, CASTOR, CENTRAL AB LIFE PONOKA, RIMBEY,STETTLER, WEEKENDER, SYLVAN, ECKVILLE
PLUS *WEDNESDAY’S FASTTRACK PHOTO AD and
Be the first tenants to move into our brand new building
2010 DODGE RAM 2500 power wagon 4X4 $28888 348-8788 Sport & Import
1 week on wegotads.ca only
$84.21
Rents from $800 - $1375
Includes GST - additional lines extra charge (REGULAR PRICE $141.14)
CALL: 403-302-7896
CALL 309-3300 266327K30
Email: info@timberstone.com timberstonevillage.com
1 WEEK IN THE RED DEER ADVOCATE &
1997 FORD Ranger Stepside, runs exc., $3300. 403-348-9746
CLASSIFIEDS
classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com wegotads.ca
E6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Oct. 26, 2012
Obama presses Romney over rape remark THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CINCINNATI, Ohio — President Barack Obama seized on a Republican Senate candidate’s remark about rape and pregnancy in an attempt to shore up his support among women, as polls suggest the president is losing his advantage in that key constituency. Obama intensified pressure on challenger Mitt Romney on Thursday to break ties with Richard Mourdock over the Indiana Senate candidate’s comment that if a woman becomes pregnant from rape it is “something God intended.” Obama aides used a web video to highlight Romney’s endorsement of Mourdock and to accuse him of kowtowing to his party’s extreme elements. Mourdock’s remark again brought the divisive issue of abortion to the forefront of the U.S. presidential campaign, distracting from the economic issues Romney has been trying to focus on in the last days before the Nov. 6 election. For the Obama camp, it offered another chance to highlight its differences with the Republican ticket on abortion. The president had long enjoyed an edge among women votes, but a recent AP-GfK poll found Romney erasing the president’s 16-point advantage among female likely voters. Obama advisers insist they’ve lost no ground with women. But their eagerness to highlight Romney’s connections to Mourdock indicated some degree of nervousness within the campaign. The president, who supports abortion rights, also made repeated, though indirect, references to Mourdock’s controversial comment. “We’ve seen again this week, I don’t think any male politicians should
be making health care decisions for women,” Obama told a crowd of about 15,000 in Richmond, Virginia. The candidates are running in a virtual dead heat ahead of the Nov. 6 election and a significant lead among women voters could easily tip the balance. Romney, who appears in a television advertisement declaring his support for Mourdock, brushed aside questions on the emotional controversy from reporters throughout the day. A day earlier, he disavowed Mourdock’s comments, although his campaign said Romney continues to support the Indiana Republican’s Senate candidacy. Romney opposes abortion but unlike Mourdock, supports exceptions in the case of rape. Opinion polls show Obama and Romney tied nationally. A new Associated Press-GfK poll of likely voters had Romney up 47 per cent to 45 per cent, a result within the poll’s margin of sampling error. But because the U.S. presidential race is not decided by popular vote but rather on a state-by-state basis, the election will hinge on nine or so competitive states: Ohio, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Iowa, Wisconsin, Nevada and Colorado. Less than two weeks from Election Day, both candidates feverishly campaigned across the country. Obama, wrapping up a 40-hour battleground state blitz, was heading for his hometown of Chicago to cast his ballot 12 days before Election Day. The stopover was more than a photo opportunity — it was a high-profile attempt to boost turnout in early voting, a centerpiece of Obama’s strategy. “I’m told I’ll be the first sitting president to take advantage of early voting,” Obama said in an email to supporters, urging them to cast their votes before Nov. 6.
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
President Obama holds up his jobs plans booklet while speaking at a campaign stop, Thursday, in Tampa, Fla. Obama advisers have identified at least three viable options. Winning Ohio, Iowa and Wisconsin would put him over the top, as would wins in Ohio, Iowa and Nevada. A five-state combination of Iowa, New Hampshire, Wisconsin, Nevada and Colorado would also seal the deal for the president’s re-election. Romney’s team has yet to publicly
outline any specific pathway to victory. Without a win in Ohio, however, the Republican nominee would have to sweep every other competitive state. That reality was the motivation behind Romney’s daylong swing through three Ohio cities Thursday. Obama was to finish his day in Ohio, too, the final stop on his marathon, two-day drive for votes.
NYC cop arrested for failed plot to kidnap and cook women BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — A city police officer was charged Thursday with leading a ghoulish double life by using a law enforcement database and fetish chat rooms to dream up a plot to torture women and then cook and eat their body parts. Gilberto Valle left a trail of emails, instant messages and computer files detailing the bizarre cannibalism scheme, according to a criminal complaint, which identified two women as Victim 1 and Victim 2. He catalogued at least 100 women on his computer, federal investigators said, but there was no information that anyone was harmed. One document found on his computer was titled “Abducting and Cooking (Victim 1): A Blueprint,” according to the complaint. The file also had the woman’s birth date and other personal information and a list of “materials needed” — a car, chloroform and rope. “I was thinking of tying her body onto some kind of apparatus ... cook her over low heat, keep her alive as long as possible,” Valle allegedly wrote in one exchange in July, the complaint says. In other online conversations, investigators said, Valle talked about the mechanics of fitting the woman’s body into an oven (her legs would have to be bent), said he could make chloroform at home to knock a woman out and discussed how “tasty” one woman looked. “Her days are numbered,” he wrote, according to the complaint. The woman told the FBI she knew Valle and met
him for lunch in July, but that’s as far as it went. The officer’s estranged wife had alerted New York authorities to his chilling online activity, triggering the investigation that led to his arrest by the FBI on Wednesday, a law enforcement official said. The official was not authorized to speak publicly about an ongoing case and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. Valle, 28, was to appear in federal court in Manhattan on Thursday afternoon to face charges of kidnapping conspiracy and unauthorized use of law enforcement records. The name of his attorney was not immediately available, and no one answered the door to his home in a quiet, middle-class Queens neighbourhood. A search of Valle’s computer found he had created records of at least 100 women with their names, addresses and photos, the complaint says. Some of the information came from his unauthorized use of a law enforcement database, authorities said. He claimed, according to the complaint, that he knew many of them. “The allegations in the complaint really need no description from us,” said Mary E. Galligan, acting head of the FBI’s New York office. “They speak for themselves. It would be an understatement merely to say Valle’s own words and actions were shocking.” There was no immediate response to a message left with the NYPD on Thursday. The complaint alleges that in February, Valle negotiated to kidnap another woman — Victim 2 — for someone else, writing, “$5,000 and she’s all yours.” He told the buyer he was aspiring to be a professional kidnapper, authorities said. “I think I would rather not get involved in the
rape,” according to the complaint. “You paid for her. She is all yours, and I don’t want to be tempted the next time I abduct a girl.” It says he added: “I will really get off on knocking her out, tying up her hands and bare feet and gagging her. Then she will be stuffed into a large piece of luggage and wheeled out to my van.” Cellphone data revealed that Valle made calls on the block where the woman lives, the complaint says. An FBI agent interviewed the woman, who told them that she didn’t know him well and was never in her home. Valle had been assigned to a Manhattan precinct before his suspension on Wednesday. His Facebook page cultivated the image of a very different man. Postings were filled with photos of a smiling wife, a baby girl and an English bulldog puppy named Dudley. A Yankees fan, Valle had more than 600 Facebook friends, including dozens of young women. Valle respected his colleagues on the force, took the sergeant’s exam and spoke out against Occupy Wall Street, cop killers and others who broke the law, according to the page. His current photo was a blue line, a sign of mourning for when an officer is killed, and expressed condolences for the family of a Nassau County officer who was shot to death this week. “Keep Nassau County police in your prayers what a brutal week,” he wrote earlier this week. The page was taken down Thursday afternoon. Valle lived in a six-story apartment building with white pillars on a quiet residential street in Queens with a playground on the corner. No one answered his door Thursday.
Two kids stabbed to death in Eight found dead in Mexico City NYC home, nanny wounded THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — A mother returned home to her luxury apartment building near Central Park on Thursday to find two of her small children stabbed to death in a bathtub and their nanny, with self-inflicted stab wounds, lying near them, police said. The nanny, who was found near a knife, was hospitalized in critical condition and was in police custody, and authorities said she is suspected of killing the children, who were pronounced dead at a hospital. The children’s mother entered the dark apartment with her 3-year-old and thought her other two children were out with the 50-year-old nanny, police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said. She went downstairs and asked the doorman at her building, La Rochelle, on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, whether he’d seen them leave. When he said no, she went back upstairs and discovered her 2-year-old son and 6-year-old daughter in the bathroom, Kelly said. It’s unclear how many times the children were stabbed. The nanny was found on the bath-
room floor with stab wounds to her neck, and a kitchen knife was close by, police said. There was no water in the bathtub, they said. Kelly said it’s unclear how long the nanny had worked for the family and the police investigation was ongoing. Music therapist Rima Starr, who lives on the same floor as the family, said she heard screams coming from their apartment at around 5:30 p.m. “There was some kind of screaming about, ’You slit her throat!”’ she said. “It was horrible.” She said she believed the nanny had been hired just recently. “I met her in the elevator, the day before yesterday, and was making small talk,” she said. After police arrived, she said, the mother remained in the building’s lobby, screaming hysterically and clutching her surviving child. The apartment building sits in one of the city’s most idyllic neighbourhoods, a block from Central Park, near the Museum of Natural History and blocks from Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.
ACLU sues U.S. over photos and video restrictions at border crossings THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SAN DIEGO — Attorneys for the American Civil Liberties Union have sued the U.S. Department of Homeland Security over restrictions on taking photos and video footage at ports of entry. The ACLU said Thursday that it filed the fed-
eral lawsuit on behalf of activists who were trying to document California border crossings with Mexico and had their photos deleted by authorities. The lawsuit says the government requires approval for images taken at or near ports of entry. Customs and Border Protection officials had no immediate comment
when asked about the lawsuit and its policy on taking photographs. In its lawsuit filed Wednesday in San Diego, the ACLU says the policy violates constitutional rights to free speech and against illegal search and seizure. It says the policy deters the public from documenting potential misconduct.
MEXICO CITY — Police found the bullet-ridden bodies of eight people Thursday dumped on streets in a suburb of Mexico City. The prosecutor’s office in Mexico State, which adjoins Mexico City, said the victims in the first attack were five men and one woman between the ages of 20 and 25 whose bodies were found without clothes in Ecatepec, north of the capital. Officials in Ecatepec said two people died in a second attack in a nearby neighbourhood, but did not specify the sex of the victims. Authorities said both attacks appeared to be related to organized crime. Mexico City has largely been spared the drug-fueled violence that
has resulted in massacres in other parts of the country, and none of the hand-lettered signs that frequently accompany drug-gang slayings were found at the scene. Mexican court authorities announced that they fired a federal judge accused of improperly dismissing charges or releasing suspects in drug cartel cases. The Federal Judiciary Council said it decided to fire district Judge Efrain Cazares for “serious offences in his judicial duties,” but did not specify what exactly the offences were. The action announced late Wednesday can be appealed to Supreme Court. The judge has no attorney of record. He had been suspended in June from his court duties in the western state of Michoacan.
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