Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 20, 2012

Page 1

TUESDAY

Weddings, Maternity, Newborn, Families and everything in between.

< Reinhart and the Russians

NOVEMBER 20, 2012

Ice player talks of Super Series experience | Page 9

$44,000-plus for CBIRH > Province kicks in for hiring project | Page 3

427-9833

studio by appointment

JODI L’HEUREUX PHOTOGRAPHY

1

$ 10 INCLUDES H.S.T.

Vol. 60, Issue 224

Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951

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COTR support staff to picket today ANNALEE GRANT Townsman Staff

Classes have been cancelled at College of the Rockies today as B.C.’s college support workers take to the picket lines. CUPE BC Colleges Coordinator Ian McLean confirmed Monday that the Local 2773 union would be

participating in job action on Tuesday and Wednesday unless a settlement between the B.C. Post Secondary Employers Association, who bargain on behalf of the B.C. government, and CUPE is reached before then. President and CEO of COTR Dr. Nick Rubidge

said Monday morning that support employees would be participating in labour action, but said parts of the building would remain open so that students could work on homework. “We anticipate having a labour disruption here,” he told the Townsman. Management will be at

the college from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. during the strike action to answer questions and deal with student issues. Picket lines are expected at Cranbrook’s main campus and at campuses in Creston, Golden and Fernie. CUPE has been in a position to strike as of October

22, and had previously notified the college of their intention to take job action anytime after 9 p.m. on November 14 for 72 hours. The union represents 3,000 support workers who have been without a contract for two and a half years.

See COTR , Page 4

BARRY COULTER PHOTO

Banjo virtuoso Alison Brown and her bluegrass/jazz fusion quartet, featuring John R. Burr (piano/keyboards), Garry West (bass) and Kendrick Freeman (drums) appeared at the Key City Theatre Sunday, Nov. 18, taking Bluegrass into new dimensions. Creston’s Elena Yeung and her band Kootenay Special— Karl Sommerfeldt (fiddle), Keith Larsen (guitar) and Steve Jones (bass) opened up the show.

Cranbrook shows flare for solar Council endorses city to become a solar community SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff

Cranbrook has joined 32 other B.C. municipalities in registering as a solar community. The commitment with SolarBC, a program run by the B.C. Sustainable Energy Association and sponsored by the B.C. Government, means Cranbrook has pledged to work towards becoming more solar friendly. On Monday, November 19, city council approved a memorandum of understanding with SolarBC, and start work December 1 on improving opportunities for Cranbrook residents to use solar energy. Under the agreement, the city has pledged to hook up the existing solar collectors at the Canadian Rockies International Airport; add signage to educate the public about the solar hot water system at the airport; provide information to the public about provincial government rebates for solar hot water installations; and tell the public about solar energy at community events and festivals. Already, the city has amended its zoning bylaw to allow the installation of solar energy devices; installed solarpowered street lights and water sprinkler timers in a location where grid power was not available; and signed the B.C. Solar Hot Water Ready Regulation.

See COUNCIL , Page 3

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Page 2 TUEsday, november 20, 2012

Weatoheurtlook Tonight 1

POP 80%

Friday -3

Tomorrow 5 -5

Local NEWS

Thursday -6

POP 80%

Saturday

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Sunday

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daily townsman / daily bulletin

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Almanac Temperatures

High Low Normal ...........................1.9° .................-5.3° Record......................13.2°/2002 ......-22.2°/1996 Yesterday 2.8° 0.5° Precipitation Normal..............................................1.7mm Record...................................17.8mm/1974 Yesterday ......................................10.6 mm This month to date........................1016 mm This year to date........................1419.2 mm Precipitation totals include rain and snow

Courtesy Penny Long

Tomorrows

unrise 8 04 a.m. unset 16 53 p.m. oonset 12 54 a.m. oonrise 1 43 p.m.

Nov 20

ec 6

Nov 28

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Across the Region Tomorro w

A voice workshop, sponsored by the East Kootenays Music Teachers’ Association (EKMTA) was held at Knox Presbyterian Church on Saturday, Oct. 27. Clinician Dr. Joan Thompson (far left), delighted a range of masterclass students, including adolescents and grandparents, with her insightful feedback. Her fun approach in the group workshop had the students warming up their bodies with yoga and their “headvoices” with Halloween hoots and howls, in accompaniment to a spooky story. As well, in her professional development workshop, Dr. Thompson used multi-sensory techniques to demonstrate how knowledge of the inner workings of the human body can aid and improve vocal delivery and well-being. The EKMTA sponsors workshops and festivals throughout the year. For more information, please contact Lorraine Butler at 250-489-2609 or email her at l_butler@shaw.ca.

Prince George -11/-13 Jasper -6/-12

Edmonton -12/-21

Banff 1/-9 Kamloops 6/-2

Revelstoke 4/-1

Kelowna 6/0 Vancouver 8/6

Canada Yellowknife Whitehorse Vancouver Victoria Saskatoon Regina Brandon Winnipeg Thunder Bay S. Ste. Marie Toronto Windsor Ottawa Montreal Quebec City Fredericton

Castlegar 7/0

today

Calgary -5/-14

Cranbrook 5/-5

tomorrow

p.cloudy -18/-24 p.cloudy-18/-22 p.cloudy -16/-23 p.cloudy-20/-22 rain 9/6 rain 8/6 rain 10/7 rain 8/6 p.cloudy 5/-11 ice pellet -3/-12 p.cloudy 5/-5 p.cloudy 2/-11 m.sunny 4/-3 p.cloudy 1/-14 sunny 5/-3 m.sunny 1/-6 m.sunny 6/-3 p.cloudy 7/1 p.cloudy 9/3 p.cloudy 10/4 p.cloudy 10/3 p.cloudy 10/3 showers 11/6 p.cloudy 12/5 p.cloudy 5/-2 m.sunny 7/-2 p.cloudy 5/-1 p.cloudy 7/-2 sunny 4/-1 p.cloudy 6/-3 sunny 6/-2 p.cloudy 5/-2

The World

today

tlanta Buenos ires etroit eneva avana ong ong iev ondon os ngeles Miami Paris Rome Singapore Sydney Tokyo Washington

p.cloudy sunny cloudy sunny p.cloudy rain p.cloudy rain sunny p.cloudy p.sunny p.sunny tstorms cloudy p.cloudy cloudy

tomorrow

19/7 27/20 13/4 7/3 25/15 24/22 2/1 14/12 18/11 26/16 8/7 18/11 30/25 20/15 16/10 13/5

sunny cloudy p.cloudy cloudy sunny tstorms cloudy showers p.cloudy p.cloudy showers p.cloudy p.sunny p.cloudy cloudy sunny

18/5 29/24 13/2 5/4 25/15 25/23 1/-1 11/10 17/11 25/14 7/7 16/9 32/26 24/18 14/9 13/4

The Weather Network 2012

Submitted

Jeannette Oostlander on location at the Maiyuk recreation site behind White Swan Lake.

Oostlander’s 21st solo exhibition this weekend To w n s m a n Sta f f

Jeannette Oostlander has been busy painting for her 21st solo exhibition, and the new paintings will be on display this weekend. The show takes place at the Day’s Inn in Cranbrook, Friday, Nov. 23 (5-9 p.m.), Saturday, Nov. 24 (9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.) and Sunday, Nov. 25, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. A plein-air artist, Jeannette has been painting on location and in the studio getting ready for the show. “I made up for a slow start by taking a trip along the Banff/ Jasper highway,” she said. “I love the scenery along that route and

the paintings came fast and easily. Everywhere you look the views are spectacular. “The difficult part is trying to choose what to paint. And trying not to paint all that gorgeous scenery in one painting was a challenge too.” For local scenes, the fall colour at Moyie and a couple of spectacular local gardens provided joyful colours in early summer, and bright, warm paintings for her show. The public is invited to drop by with family and friends to this year’s work at the Day’s Inn in Cranbrook. Admission is free.


daily townsman

TUEsday, november 20, 2012

Local NEWS

Page 3

Government kicks in $44,079 for hiring project Columbia Basin Institute of Regional History to hire four to help with ‘A Legacy of Learning’

Barry Coulter

The Province of B.C. is investing $44,079 in a local partnership designed to develop skills and provide useful work experience for people in Cranbrook. Money is being provided through the Partnerships and Innovation Fund to support Community and Employer Partnerships. These partnerships are a component of the Employment Program of British Columbia. Funding will target the Columbia Basin Institute of Regional History (CBIRH) in Cranbrook. “This partnership benefits our community in a variety of ways – not only does it provide valuable work experience for the participants involved, but it also makes regional history more accessible for everyone,” said Kootenay East MLA Bill Bennett during a check presentation Friday in front of CBIRH offices in Cranbrook. The funding will serve to help hire four people for fulltime positions for the duration of the 27-week project. In particular, the employees will be working on “A Legacy Of Learning,” which is a CBIRH project in partnership with School District 5. The goal is to research and assemble a series of websites investigating the history of

Barry Coulter photo

Kootenay East MLA Bill Bennett (third from right), presents a cheque for 44,079 to Anne Edwards, President of the Columbia Basin Institute of Regional History. Also pictured are (left to right): CBIRH Director Angus Davis, CBIRH Executive Director Derryl White, CBIRH Director Gerald Hudson, Anne Edwards, Rob Norum of School District 5, Bill Bennett, Ann Jenson, and Chris Johns, Chair of the School District 5 Board of Trustees. education in the East Kootenay. Derryll White, Executive Director of the Columbia Basin Institute of Regional History, said the project is looking at all the communities included historically in School Districts 1 and 2, now merged as School District 5.

Watch these pages for an upcoming major feature on “A Legacy Of Learning.” In the meantime, if you have any memorabilia on school days past, contact Derryl White at dwhite@basininstitute.org, or at 250-489-9150. Eligible participants for

the work experience will be referred by the local WorkBC Employment Services Centre. Other partners on the project include HSBC, Golden & District Museum, Cranbrook Archives Museum and Landmarks Foundation,

School District #5, Solar Etchings, and the Columbia Basin Institute. The goal of Community Employer Partnerships is to increase employment opportunities for unemployed British Columbians through the use of agency and busi-

City warns of kids’ makeshift crossing at Joseph Creek Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff

School children have been crossing the freezing waters of Joseph Creek in Kinsmen Park balanced on a single two-byfour. The city removed the third bridge in Kinsmen Park in mid-October and blocked the path with large concrete barricades. But since then, children have moved orange wooden barricades placed at the site by the city and constructed a makeshift bridge across the creek, said Chris Zettel, corporate communications officer for the City of Cranbrook. “We see this as a very serious issue when it comes to the safety of our kids,” said Zettel. “I strongly encourage parents to explain to your kids the potential dangers of rivers and streams, especially this time of the year. “The water is extremely cold and the potential exists for thin ice to form, which creates many dangers for kids who are unaware. We really want everyone to be safe.” The city has removed the makeshift bridge and says a new bridge should be complete by the end of the year.

ness partnerships, shared information and technology, and innovative processes and practices. The Ministry of Social Development administers funding through the Partnership and Innovation Fund to support these partnerships.

Cranbrook to have its day in the sun with solar endorsement Continued from page 1

Under the regulation, all new homes built in Cranbrook must be capable of installing a solar hot water system if the new homeowner desires. That means there must be space on the roof for solar collectors, the roof must be able to bear the weight of the collectors, and the home must meet conduit specifications for the system. The new regulation will mean construction of a new home will increase by between $200 and $500. As a member of SolarBC, Cranbrook could be eligible for future funding programs and pilot projects for solar energy initiatives. For more news from Monday’s city council meeting, see The Townsman’s issues throughout this week.

Protect our earth. Submitted photo

The makeshift bridge that was created by local children out of orange barriers on Joseph Creek. The City of Cranbrook is asking parents to educate their children about the potential dangers of crossing a fast moving creek. The barriers have since been removed by the city.

The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin promote recycling. We use vegetable-based inks, and our newsprint, tin and aluminum waste is recycled.


Page 4 TUEsday, november 20, 2012

daily townsman

Local NEWS

Randall Hopley psychiatric report complete Child abductor’s case put over until January 14

Annalee Grant Townsman Staff

A psychiatric assessment to determine whether admitted child abductor Randall Hopley will be named a dangerous offender is complete but the public will have to wait until the new year to hear its contents. Hopley was taken into the custody of the Forensic Psychiatric Services Commission for 60 days on August 9 for a dangerous offender assessment.

He has previously admitted to abducting threeyear-old Kienan Hebert from his Sparwood home in September, 2011. He eventually returned the boy unharmed to the home and was arrested in Crowsnest Pass, Alta. on Sept 13, 2011 following a manhunt. In BC Supreme Court in Cranbrook on Novem-

ber 19, Justice Heather Holmes was informed that more time was needed to study the new report before the sentencing hearing could proceed. Counsel for Hopley, William Thorne and Crown counsel Lynal Doerksen advised that they had just received the report on the morning of November 19. It

was dated November 4. Justice Holmes told court that she was aware there had been a delay in the report being completed, noting the date on the copy she received. Thorne, who appeared via telephone, said he had seen the report but could not give any instructions without a more thorough examination. All three parties

agreed that the matter should go over to January 14, 2013 to fix a date to continue the sentencing hearing. Thorne said he would need to receive further instruction from his client, and suggested Hopley may direct him to ask for an independent review of the report’s findings. Doerksen said the

Alleged carjacker faces new charges Annalee Grant Townsman Staff

The pair charged in the alleged carjacking incident in early October were brought before Cranbrook Provincial Court on November 19. Nicholas Bullock and an unnamed youth appeared separately Monday, Bullock via video from a correctional institute and the youth through counsel. Judge Grant Sheard advised Bullock that his charges had been changed and nine new charges have been laid against him relating to the incident on October 2. Bullock was previously charged with robbery, possession of stolen property over $5,000, assault with a weapon, possessing a weapon for a dangerous purpose and uttering threats to cause death or bodily harm. Those charges re-

main on the record, but Sheard read out nine new charges Bullock is now facing. They are three counts of robbery, possession of stolen property over $5,000, two counts of assault with a weapon, possessing weapon for dangerous purpose, dangerous operation of a motor vehicle and flight from a peace officer. In addition, Bullock now faces three counts of uttering threats to cause death or bodily harm. Sheard told court that those charges stem from October 6, and October 5, just days after Bullock was taken into custody following a police-involved shooting in Cranbrook city limits. Those 11 charges were on the docket Monday for a first appearance. Finally, Bullock is facing charges in Port Coquitlam from September 13 of possession of a weapon for a dangerous

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purpose, possession of a prohibited weapon without a license, possession of a firearm contrary to order, and breach of a probation order. He is also charged in New Westminster with uttering threats dated December 2011. Those charges were again on the docket in Cranbrook Monday. At his previous court date on November 5, Bullock told court he would like to have all his charges waived to Port Coquitlam. He again reiterated that request at his November 19 date. He was advised by Rick Strahl, who is acting as duty counsel for Bullock but has not

been retained on the matter, that the Crown is unwilling to have the charges sent to the coastal city due to their nature. Lynal Doerksen, the Crown counsel assigned to the matter was not present in court. Bullock told court he had not spoken to his counsel since his last court date on November 5. All of Bullock’s matters were put over to December 3 to allow him time to speak with counsel. The 17-year-old youth charged in connection with the carjacking did not appear in court, but her counsel Greg Sawchuk asked

on her behalf that a Crown application for a warrant be struck. The youth, who cannot be named under Canada’s Youth Criminal Justice Act, is charged with possession of stolen property. Sawchuk said the youth would also like to have the charges waived to Port Coquitlam where she is in the custody of her mother. Sawchuk said he had been advised by the Crown that more charges may be coming against the youth and asked that the matter be put over to December 3 for an arraignment hearing.

What to do in a power outage As winter settles in, BC Hydro is reminding people what to do when the lights go out Sally MacDonald

Townsman Staff Winter often brings stormy weather and the increased chance of power outages. To prepare for the loss of electricity, BC Hydro recommends you follow six steps. First, be aware that smart meters are not yet capable of reporting outages automatically, so you still need to report an outage by dialling 1-888-POWERON or *HYDRO from your mobile phone. Next, make sure you have an emergency kit ready in your home. The kit should include flashlights, a battery operated radio, spare batteries for both, a corded telephone, warm clothing and blankets, a first aid kit, non perishable, ready-to-eat food and a copy of your emergency prepared-

ness plan. Remember to turn off all appliances and electronics that were on at the time of the outage, especially electric heaters. When power is restored, it will rush to anything left on and it can cause the system to overload. Turn off all lights except one inside and one outside. The outside light lets BC Hydro crews know when your power has been restored. If you have a smart phone, you can access BC Hydro’s website for updates on when power will be restored at www.bchydro.com/outages. Finally, if you see a fallen power line, stay well clear of it — at least 10 metres away at all times. You should never touch a fallen line. Report fallen lines including the exact location to BC Hydro.

Crown would not be seeking any more expert testimony for the sentencing hearing that began in July. Justice Holmes asked Thorne if a two-month interruption in the matter could be shortened. Thorne said difficulties arise with the Hopley matter because he must seek permission to visit him at some facilities, prolonging the time it takes to receive instruction from his client.

He also said he expects when Hopley is sentenced that his time in custody will be included as time served, and that he expects an extensive sentence when it is handed down by Justice Holmes. Thorne said that should his client request an independent review of the report’s findings, more time would be needed after the January 14 date to complete a new report.

COTR support staff on strike Continued from page 1 Local 2773 president Pam Catsirelis said on Thursday that the union had decided to allow the B.C. provincial government one more day for a response after serving their employers with 72-hour strike notice. The union had originally been slated to walk out on Monday. On their information page for students, COTR said Local 2773 represents a variety of support service departments such as facilities, IT, finance, admissions, registration, financial aid, residence, library, bookstore and campus life. The action would include all COTR campuses in Fernie, Golden, Invermere, Kimberley and Creston. Catsirelis said the strike would not include faculty, however she said they had indicated they would not cross the picket line. Rubidge said the Gold Creek, Golden and Kimberley campuses will be closed during the job action, but the main facility in Cranbrook would remain open. “We’re working hard at keeping the institution going as well as we

can,” he said. Students will be able to use the library and at least one computer lab, which will allow them to work on homework if they would like to use the faiclity during the job action. “Students will hopefully be able to use the time to catch up,” Rubidge said. Negotiations with CUPE and PSEA have been ongoing since the contract expired in 2010. Bargaining is not done locally in Cranbrook but instead through the CUPE union as a group and the PSEA. The contract for CUPE Local 2773 expired on June 30, 2010 and local bargaining was completed in the spring of 2011 according to Catsirelis. Joining COTR in the strike will be support staff at fellow B.C. institutions Camosun College, Vancouver Island University, College of New Caledonia, Vancouver Community College and North Island College. Information on the job action for students is available at the COTR website, www.cotr.bc. ca/jobaction.


daily townsman

NEWS

Sweatman ‘never backed down,’ inquest told Gr eg Ne ste roff Nelson Star

The coroner’s inquest into the death of Nelson Search and Rescue volunteer Sheilah Sweatman opened Monday with an emotional statement from her mother, who described her “fierce but tender daughter.” Through tears, Teddi Sweatman told the fiveman, two-woman jury that Sheilah was “a strong-willed, dedicated” search and rescue member with “tremendous courage to face any physical or moral challenge.” Sheilah, 29, drowned in the Goat River south of Creston on June 29, 2011 while trying to recover a submerged car. The inquest, before presiding coroner Matt Brown is hearing evidence to determine the circumstances around Sweatman’s death to make recommendations to prevent similar deaths. Testimony is scheduled through Thursday, while Friday has been set aside for jury deliberations. Teddi Sweatman shared pictures of her daughter with the jury — a portrait was placed on an easel near their box — and provided them with a booklet with pictures of her house, garden, and ex-

TUEsday, november 20, 2012

Sheilah Sweatman amples of her artwork. Teddi said it was “extremely important to tell about the vibrant and talented, strongwilled woman she was.” She said Sheilah was filed with “passion and compassion, and full of ideas and desire.” Born in Winnipeg, Sheila was the fourth of five children. An active outdoorswoman, she loved the mountains and came to BC after university, living first at Big White and Vernon before coming to the West Kootenay. She lived in Ymir, worked part-time at Nelson Animal Hospital, and became a member of Nelson Search and Rescue almost as soon as she arrived. It quickly became a big part of her life, her mother said. “She loved a challenge and never back down from anything.” Teddi told the inquest when her husband spoke with Shei-

lah the day before the tragic mission, she didn’t express any reservations about it. They learned of her death when a police officer knocked on their door at 4 a.m. The remainder of the morning heard testimony from WorkSafeBC investigator Nigel Corduff, whose report concluded Sheilah died after he leg became tangled in a steel rigging cable. She was pulled from her raft by the submerged car. The testimony is being led by inquest counsel John Orr. Emergency Management BC, WorkSafeBC, Search and Rescue, and the Sweatman family also have legal representation. A schedule provided by the BC Coroners Service says an RCMP witness will round out today’s testimony. Tuesday’s witnesses include several search and rescue members and RCMP officers, as well as video taken of the incident. A pathologist and toxicologist will testify Wednesday, along with Sheila’s colleague on the raft, and the tow truck driver. Emergency management personnel will take the stand Friday, and then Sheilah’s father Wynn will conclude the testimony.

Page 5

Environment debate heating up in B.C. Tom Fletcher Black Press

Prominent voices in the environment and petroleum debate are speaking out this week, with a federal by-election in Victoria set for Nov. 26. The seat vacated when MP Denise Savoie retired for health reasons in August has been considered safe NDP territory in recent years. But the Green Party of Canada is making an extra effort to add to its 2011 breakthrough when Green leader Elizabeth May won the party’s firstever federal seat, Saanich North and the Islands. The Green Party arranged a fundraiser Monday night for candidate Donald Galloway, a University of Victoria law professor who has been advising May on policy. The event features broadcaster David Suzuki, UVic climate scientist Andrew Weaver and musician Dan Mangan. The NDP has nominated lawyer Murray Rankin, who has been advising the provincial NDP on opposition to the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline proposal. NDP leader Thomas Mulcair visited Victoria last week, where he declared that

neither the Enbridge pipeline nor the proposed expansion of the Trans Mountain oil pipeline from Alberta to Burnaby should be considered until Ottawa’s environmental approval process is strengthened. The Liberal Party candidate, economist Paul Summerville, stirred up local debate by opposing the Capital Regional District’s proposed land-based sewage treatment. Conservative candidate Dale Gann, president of Vancouver Island Technology Park, initially backed the project that has onethird funding from provincial and federal governments. But Gann changed his position after getting an earful from voters about property tax increases and the need to replace sewage outfalls to the ocean. While the politicians knock on doors, Enbridge vice-president Janet Holder is scheduled to speak to the Canadian Club of Victoria on Tuesday. Enbridge has faced strong opposition as federal environment hearings continue into its proposed heavy oil pipeline to Kitimat. David Suzuki has also endorsed Weaver,

Black Press files

Broadcaster David Suzuki is backing Green Party candidates both federally and provincially. one of Canada’s leading experts in climate change, who is running as a Green Party of B.C. candidate in the provincial election scheduled for May. Weaver and other climate scientists argue

that the destruction caused by Hurricane Sandy in the eastern United States was made worse by greenhouse gas emissions from global fossil fuel extraction, including coal, oil and natural gas.

Mr. Floyde Spencer Physiotherapist I am pleased to announce that Cranbrook Physiotherapy Clinic is celebrating 40 years of service to the East Kootenays.

Conveniently located in downtown Cranbrook opposite the RCMP building. Please call 250-426-7097. In Kimberley I can be found at the Kimberley Health Centre Building. Please call 250-427-7087.

www.cranbrookphysio.com

Interested In Helping Others Learn To Improve Their English?

FrEE TraInIng

Cranbrook Contact: Katherine Hough, CBAL Literacy Coordinator for Volunteer tutors for the khough@cbal.org or 250-417-2896 “Settling In” English as a Kimberley Contact: Kim Roberts, CBAL Literacy Coordinator 250-427-4468 or kroberts@cbal.org

Submitted

Investors Group hosted a fundraising event for the Cranbrook and Kimberley Food Banks on Oct 26. At total of $5,028 in cash and food was raised for the two food banks. Left to right: Jackie Jensen, Cranbrook Food Bank Society; Liana Shaw;Heather Smith, Kimberley Helping Hands Food Bank Society; Chris Franklin; Mary Ann Jenkins; Mike Paugh; Stan Salikin, Kimberley Helping Hands Food Bank Society; Patricia Taylor and Dave Clark.

Second Language Program.

TwO day TraInIng: Available for Cranbrook & Kimberley Residents Fri. Nov. 23, 2012: 6:30 Am - 9:30 Pm. Sat. Nov. 24, 2012 9:00 Am - 4:00 Pm BRINg BAg LuNCH Preregistration required


PAGE 6

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2012

OPINION

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

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Reality check on teen suicide

If

you find Premier Christy Clark’s campaign against teen bullying to be superficial or even self-serving, I’ve got news for you. It’s potentially worse than that. With the greatest respect to the family of Amanda Todd, her tragic case isn’t representative of teen suicide any more than it is typical of highschool bullying. A clearer and more disturbing picture emerges from the latest report of B.C.’s Representative for Children and Youth, Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond. It’s a survey of 89 child protection cases from 2007 to 2010, where 15 kids killed themselves and the rest inflicted serious self-injury, in some cases repeatedly. The word “bully” does not appear in the report. It speaks of domestic violence, physical and sexual abuse, addiction, and runaways targeted by street predators. Three quarters of the kids were removed from their homes to protect them from their parents. More than half are aboriginal. Its key conclusion is that shifting traumatized and mentally ill teens from institutional care to foster homes isn’t working. Earnest but inadequately trained foster parents and social workers can’t cope with kids who need diagnosis, treatment and supervision. Without that, kids shuffled through

foster homes an average of a dozen times in three years, with little attachment to home or school. Some were violent, no surprise given their formative years. I asked Turpel-Lafond about the B.C. government’s recent focus on bullying. She said it’s worthwhile, and there are parallels between Amanda’s case and more common teen suicides. One is isolation at moments of crisis. “Say you’re a middleBC VIEWS class parent with a child who hasn’t come out of Tom their bedroom in six Fletcher months, or you have a boy in foster care who’s in his 14th home,” she said. “They both want to kill themselves, so what do you do?” Ideally, you intervene and get them to a child psychologist. Parents or guardians who can’t afford $150 an hour can wait months for the Ministry of Children and Family Development to arrange it. And in the meantime, our supposedly family-based foster care system sends them to school. “I’m really worried about how [school-based anti-bullying programs] will affect the most vulnerable kids, because you start anonymously reporting someone as being a bully,” Turpel-Lafond said. “Yeah, we know they’re in the youth justice system. We know they’re troubled. By the way, they’ve been sexually and physically abused, jumped through 30 foster homes, and now we

want to label them again?” This is not to suggest that the existing B.C. effort isn’t substantial. The ministry reports that there are 2,221 front-line staff positions, of which 219 are currently vacant. It’s notoriously difficult to recruit, train and keep child protection workers, especially in remote communities. Turpel-Lafond says her latest figures show the child and youth mental health service has 476 staff, with 21 vacancies and a government-wide hiring freeze. And many of those are doing double duty as community service managers. Those managers don’t even have reliable data on case loads, she said. They just know they’re overwhelmed and many of the kids aren’t being reached. This is not about political blame. I can trace this problem back to when Grace McCarthy was children’s minister, and the NDP did no better. I’ve learned a bit about Riverview and Tranquille, asylums that were closed because of a modern belief that they were inhumane. At least they offered safety and medical care to even the most damaged people. Right now our enlightened, progressive society can’t even help most of the kids we know are at high risk.

Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press and BCLocalnews.com tfletcher@blackpress.ca

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Letters to the Editor should be a maximum of 400 words in length. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject any contribution. All letters must include the name and daytime phone number of the writer for verification purposes. The phone number will not be printed. Anonymous letters will not be published. Email letters to barry@dailytownsman.com. Mail to The Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3R9. In Kimberley, email bulletin@cyberlink.bc.ca. Mail to The Daily Bulletin, 335 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 1Y9.


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Opinion/Events Letters to the Editor

The Franchise

Re: Annalee Grant’s Opinion Piece “Democracy? Or hypocrisy?” Oh to be 24 again! Normally, my lament for my 20’s includes the back-packing trip to Europe I never took, the university major I didn’t study, or, even, some days, only once in awhile, wishing I hadn’t gotten married so young (no offense honey). But Annalee’s piece had me yearning for a time, a place, an opportunity that, before now, never seemed so important or urgent. A voter, yes, I’ve always been. But have I always cast an informed, aware, engaged and meaningful vote? I confess, not al-

ways. My vote was primarily inherited from my parents. I know I’m not alone. Today my vote is informed and yes, passionate. Informing my own teenage children of their soon-to-be democratic right and responsibility is a point of primary importance in our family. In a world and an age dominated by mass consumerism and global issues that may not engage young adults politically, I applaud Annalee for her conviction to cast her important vote, and her willingness to stand in line to do so. Is there an opportunity as genuinely meaningful and impactful to people, young and old, as electing those who set

our tax rates and decide how our hard earned money is spent for the public good? And what happens to our democratic society if we simply don’t bother to vote? How long will it take before those in authority decide for us that we needn’t bother with democratic elections anymore? May 14, 2013 is just around the corner. Perhaps there’s a young adult in each of our lives that we can encourage to cast their ballot. Jennifer Osmar Cranbrook

Gaza: Another pre-election war? Gwynne Dyer

L

et’s be fair: there does seem to be some sort of pattern here, but it is not very consistent. Five times in Israel since 1980 a right-wing government has called an election WITHOUT launching a complementary military operation. The right lost two of those elections outright (1992, 1999), more or less tied two others (1984, 1988), and won only one of them decisively (2006). On the other hand, critics of Israel point out, three times since 1980 right-wing Israeli governments have combined an election campaign with a major military operation against some Arab or Palestinian target. And this combination, it has been argued, yields decisive electoral success for the right. Menachem Begin’s government won the 1981 election three weeks after carrying out a dramatic attack on the Osirak research nuclear reactor that France had sold to Iraq. In the view of most outside observers, the reactor, which was closely supervised both by the French and by the International Atomic Energy Agency, was not suited to the largescale production of enriched uranium and posed no threat to Israel, but the attack was popular in Israel. Ehud Olmert’s coalition launched the “Cast Lead” onslaught against the Gaza Strip in December 2008-January 2009. The three-week campaign of massive bombardments and some ground incursions left 1,400 Palestinians and thirteen Israelis dead. The election was held a month later, and Binyamin Netanyahu emerged as the leader of a new right-wing coalition. So here we go again, perhaps? Netanyahu is still the prime minister, and the next

elections are due in January. What better way to ensure success than to go and bash the Palestinians again? A week later, with 86 Palestinians and three Israelis dead, his reelection is assured: Israelis overwhelmingly support the current military operation. That’s the case that is made against Israel. Does it hold water? Well, actually, no, it doesn’t. Begin’s attack on the Osirak reactor in 1981 may well have been an electoral stunt, although he was clearly paranoid about the possibility of a nuclear weapon in Arab hands. But Ehud Olmert, though undoubtedly a man of the right, was not leading a right-wing government in 2008. He was the leader of a new centrist party, Kadima, that had been formed by defectors from both the right-wing Likud Party and left-wing Labour. Moreover, Olmert had already resigned in mid-2008 over a corruption scandal, and was merely acting as interim prime minister by the time the “Cast Lead” operation was launched in December of that year. If it was an electoral ploy despite all that, it didn’t work. It was the right that actually won the election in early 2009, and formed a government led by the Likud Party’s Binyamin Netanyahu. It is equally hard to believe that Netanyahu is seeking electoral gain by attacking Gaza this month. Every opinion poll in Israel for months past has been saying that he is going to win the January election hands down. For him, all the risk of “Operation Pillar of Defence” is on the downside: a major loss of Israeli lives in the campaign, while unlikely, could only work against him. So why is this happening now? Historians traditionally split into two camps: those who see purpose and planning and plots behind every event, and those who think most events are just the random interaction of conflicting strategies, imperfect information and human frailty. This latter

Associated Press

A Palestinian man kisses the hand of a dead relative in the morgue of Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, Sunday, Nov. 18, 2012. approach is known in the historical trade as the “cock-up theory of history,” and it is very attractive as an explanation for the current situation. Netanyahu, cruising home to an easy electoral victory in January, had absolutely no need for a little war with the Palestinians. Indeed, his strategy of continuously shouting “wolf” about Iran and its alleged nuclear weapons programme has succeeded in distracting international attention from the Palestinians, leaving him free to expand Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank unhindered. Similarly, the Hamas leaders who ruled Gaza had no interest in triggering a military conflict with Israel. They had every reason to believe that the sweeping political changes in the Arab world were strengthening their position internationally, and they had no need to remind Arabs of their plight. So how did this idiocy happen? Another cock-up, of course. Hamas has been trying to maintain calm in Gaza and extend a ceasefire agreement with Israel, but it has little con-

trol over various radical jihadi groups who build popular support by making utterly futile rocket attacks on Israel. Even if they kill a few Israelis, so what? How does that serve the cause? Hamas faces the permanent political danger of being outflanked by more extremist rivals, so it cannot crack down too hard on the jihadis. Israel, fed up with their pinprick attacks, was looking for somebody to punish, and since it couldn’t locate all the jihadi leaders it decided to assassinate Ahmed al-Jabari, the head of the military wing of Hamas. Even though that was bound to end the ceasefire. So then Hamas fired a few of its own rockets into Israel, and Israel retaliated massively, and we were off to the races once again. A complete cockup, and a pointless waste of lives. But since the mini-war doesn’t really serve the purposes of any major player, it will probably be shut down again fairly soon. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist based in London

TUEsday, november 20, 2012

Page 7

What’s Up?

KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR

UPCOMING The East Kootenay Railway Pensioners Association Pot Luck Supper at 6:00 pm. Our General Meeting at 7:pm Notice-Election of Officers for 2013, Tuesday Nov.20th, at the Seniors Citizens Centre, 125-17th Ave. S, Cranbrook. All Railway Pensioners and Spouses are welcome. FMI; President Gary Lancaster at 250-426-7478. Federal Superannuates Meeting Nov 20, Reen’s Restaurant, Creston. Lunch 12 Noon. Call Skip Fennessy 426-3679. 2012 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, November 21st, 6:00-7:00 PM is sponsored by Kimberley Health-Care Auxiliary. November 21, 7:00 College of the Rockies Lecture Theatre. Allister and Denise Pederson present their Gorilla Trek and Zambanian Safari. This presentation gets up close and personal with many varieties of birds, butterflies and beasts. Their trip concluded in Zanzibar for tours of the Slave Chambers and spice plantations. Prostate Cancer Awareness and Support Group - PCCN Cranbrook - meets in room 205 at the College of the Rockies at 7 pm on Wednesday, November 21. Suzanne Thompson, Physiotherapist is the guest speaker. More info; Kevin Higgins (250)427-3322 kevbevhiggins@live.com Artists Discussions-Starting November 21 from 7pm to 9pm on the 3rd Wednesday of each month the Cranbrook & District Arts Council will be hosting self-guided sessions to discuss common issues facing artists. Topics to be set by participants at the first meeting on November 21st. Open to artists of all levels. Nov 21 Rwanda & Tanzania Travelogue COTR Theatre 7 PM by donation to GoGo Grannies. The presentation by Allister Pedersen features a Gorilla Trek in Rwanda and Wildlife Safari in Tanzania Artists Discussions - Starting November 21 from 7pm to 9pm on the 3rd Wednesday of each month the Cranbrook & District Arts Council will be hosting self-guided sessions to discuss common issues facing artists. Topics to be set by participants at the first meeting on November 21st. Open to artists of all levels. St Mary’s Parent Support Group invites you to Art Revival! A silent auction of new and previously loved works of art, jewellery, sculptures, musical instruments and pottery. Nov 22, 7:00pm to 9:00pm. St. Mary’s School Gym, 1701 - 5th S. S. Beer, Wine & Cheese event with no host bar. If you would like to donate an item please drop off at school front desk. November 23 6pm Kimberley United Church Annual Fall Fowl Supper. Serving Roast Tom Turkey & all the trimmings & pies for dessert. Tickets: Shopper’s Drug Pharmacy and church office. Doors open at 5 pm. All Saints Anglican Church – Kimberley. Annual Christmas Tea and Bake sale, with craft table and Purdy’s Chocolates order forms. Saturday, November 24th. 1:00 – 3:00 PM. 360 Leadenhall Street. Everyone welcome. Quality Entertainment: A YoungLife Fundraiser at Parkland Middle School, Nov. 25th. Check out local teen talent. Tickets at 250-4898040 or at the door. ONGOING The Cranbrook Senior Floor Curling is looking for new members. Curling is Monday and Wednesday afternoons, upstairs in the Curling Rink. Info: Dave at 250-426-5387. Cranbrook Senior Centre, Branch 11 holding their meetings every third Thursday a month. 1:30pm at the hall. We always welcome new members. Do you have 2 hours every 2 months to give? E.K. Senior Caregivers Network is seeking new members for the policy making Board of our non-profit organization. Call Louise 250-426-2362. Play and Learn Parenting/Literacy Program – 8 week registered program for parents with preschool children with a facilitated play and activity component for children. Kimberley Early Learning Centre Kim 250-427-4468. StrongStart BC - FREE family drop-in program for preschoolaged children accompanied by a parent. Kimberley Early Learning Centre. Activities include circle time, play centers, nutritious snack and active play. Monday 9 - 12, Tuesday 9 - 12, Thursday 9 – 12, Friday 9 - 12. Gina 250-427-5309. Treehouse—Families with children 5 & under are invited to come play. Free drop-in program in gym of Kimberley Early Learning Centre. Transportation avail. Tuesdays, 9:00 - 12:00. Diana 250-427-0716. Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-4268916, drop by our office at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.fightwithus.ca and register as a volunteer. ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868. Tai Chi Moving Meditation every Wednesday 3-4 pm at Centre 64. Starts November 7th. Call Adele 250-427-1939. Place your notice in your “What’s Up?” Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and non-profit organizations to publicize their coming events — provided the following requirements are met: • Notices will be accepted two weeks prior to the event. • All notices must be emailed, faxed or dropped off in person. No telephone calls please. • NOTICES SHOULD NOT EXCEED 30 WORDS. • Only one notice per week from any one club or organization. • All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication • There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.

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Nitros coach Vopat temporarily steps away from team TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

Kimberley Dynamiters head coach Roman Vopat has stepped away from the bench temporarily while the organization addresses some issues, according to president Dave Smith. Smith declined to go into detail about the situation, but stressed that Vopat hasn’t been fired or removed from the head coaching position. “The executive asked Roman to step back from the team for a bit,” said Smith. “He is in no way fired or disassociated from the team— he’s still making all the decisions—he’s just not on the bench or in the dressing room for a couple of days till we get things figured out.” Vopat, a former NHL player, joined the Niitros last year and led the team to the second round of the KIJHL playoffs, where they fell in Game 7 to the Fernie Ghostriders. No reason was given

for the move by the executive on their decision, but Smith hopes everything will be resolved in a few days. “There are some issues that have to be cleared up and it’ll be easier if he was to step away and he agreed to do that,” Smith said. “We’re meeting with players, we’re meeting with coaches and, without getting into specifics, we’re working on some policy changes and then we’ll go from there. “I don’t personally expect any changes in personnel, it’s just a temporary thing.” Vopat stepped away from the team after Friday’s 4-1 home loss to the Nelson Leafs. Assistant coach Jordan Foreman, Todd White and Kris Knoblauch will be around to run practices in the interim, said Smith. Next game action for the Dynamiters is a home tilt against the Castlegar Rebels on Saturday.

MLB boss approves Blue Jays-Marlins’ 12-player trade C ANADIAN PRESS

NEW YORK - Baseball commissioner Bud Selig says he will not stand in the way of the mammoth 12-player deal between the Toronto Blue Jays and Miami Marlins. Selig approved the trade Monday that sees Toronto acquire all-star shortstop Jose Reyes, pitchers Mark Buehrle and Josh Johnson, catcher John Buck and outfielder Emilio Bonifacio for seven relatively lowpriced players. Miami receives infielders Yunel Escobar and Adeiny Hechavarria, pitchers Henderson Alvarez, Anthony DeSclafani and Justin Nicolino, catcher Jeff Mathis and outfielder Jake Marisnick under the deal, which was agreed to last week. The Marlins also are sending Toronto cash.

The players traded by the Marlins have combined guaranteed salaries of US$163.75 million through 2018, including $96 million due Reyes. “It is my conclusion that this transaction, involving established major leaguers and highly regarded young players and prospects, represents the exercise of plausible baseball judgment on the part of both clubs, does not violate any express rule of Major League Baseball and does not otherwise warrant the exercise of any of my powers to prevent its completion,” Selig said it a statement. “It is, of course, up to the clubs involved to make the case to their respective fans that this transaction makes sense and enhances the competitive position of each, now or in the future.”

SPORTS

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Sports News? Call Trevor 250-426-5201, ext. 212 trevor@dailytownsman.com

KOOTENAY ICE

TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO

SIGNATURE SUCCESS: Fans got a chance to chat with members of the Kootenay Ice and get some autographs after Saturday’s 4-0 shutout of the Brandon Wheat Kings at Western Financial Place. Kootenay Ice players signed autographs, posed for pictures and mingled with fans for an hour after the victory. Above, forward Collin Shirley pens his name to a team flag during the session.

Shirley, Philp return from injuries TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

The Kootenay Ice are benefitting from the return of rookies Collin Shirley and Luke Philp, who are back in the lineup after recovering from injuries. Shirley, who’s been back for the last four games, sustained an upper-body injury and missed five games, while Philp had appendicitis and needed surgery. Shirley and Philp each added a goal and an assist to their stats sheets this past weekend during the series with the Brandon Wheat Kings.

Phip is the rookie points leader on the team, with eight, and Shirley is one behind, however, the latter is the Ice’s third-leading goal scorer. Shirley missed his five-game stretch to make sure his injury symptoms went away before making a return to the ice. “It was good to take the time I needed to be 100 per cent to get back,” Shirley said. “I think that’s really important because I feel really good now and it’s good to be back.” He’s been productive and dangerous, spend-

ing some time on first line with Sam Reinhart and Brock Montgomery. Shirley scored in the first period on Friday, and assisted Reinhart’s second goal on Saturday. Philp was a force out on the ice as well, assisting Kyle O’Connor’s goal in the first game, before scoring one of his own in the second. The young 17-yearold was out for three weeks after having his appendix surgically removed. He said he woke up in the middle of the night with bad stomach cramps after playing the Swift Current Broncos

near the end of October. “I couldn’t go back to sleep so I went to the hospital and they said I had appendicitis,” said Philp. “They did surgery that day so it all happened pretty quick.” He missed five games before returning for the weekend series against Brandon. “I’m feeling better every shift, almost, and I felt good,” said Philp, after Saturday’s 4-0 victory. “I had about a week of working out, so I feel good out there.” First period leads were the key to both wins, according to Philp. “Yesterday [Friday]

we didn’t have too great of a third, but our first and second [periods] made up for it,” Philp said. “It’s nice to come out and get a good start because that builds your confidence for the rest of the game. “It’s nicer playing with the lead rather than chasing the whole game.” Though Shirley and Philp have just made it off the injury list, other players have put themselves on it. Brock Montgomery and Spencer Wand will be out of the lineup for a week or two with upper body injures.

Melky Cabrera officially signs with Blue Jays C ANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO - The good news keeps coming for fans of the Toronto Blue Jays. Free agent outfielder Melky Cabrera has signed a two-year deal with the Blue Jays worth US$16 million, the club announced on Monday.

Major League Baseball commissioner Bud Selig approved a major 12-player deal between Toronto and the Miami Marlins just a few hours before Cabrera’s deal was official. The Blue Jays got all-star shortstop Jose Reyes and pitchers Josh Johnson and Mark

Buehrle as part of the deal with the Marlins. The 28-year-old Cabrera was leading the National League in hitting at .346 for the San Francisco Giants when he was suspended Aug. 15 for a positive testosterone text. Cabrera had played 113 games for San

Francisco before his suspension. He had 25 doubles, 10 triples, 11 home runs, 60 runs batted in and 13 stolen bases in that span. The Giants didn’t put Cabrera on their post-season roster on the way to winning the World Series. The six-foot, 200-

pound switch-hitter has appeared in 984 career games with the New York Yankees (2005-09), Atlanta (2010), Kansas City (2011) and San Francisco (2012). He’s posted a .284 average with 69 home runs and 417 RBIs over eight seasons.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

TUEsday, november 20, 2012

Sports

Page 9

Reinhart reflects on Super Series Tre vor Cr awley Sports Editor

Although he only got in one game with Team WHL, it’s safe to say Sam Reinhart’s stock rose even higher in the eyes of Hockey Canada during the Subway Super Series. The young Kootenay Ice sniper was in on one of Team WHL’s best chances against the Russians in regulation, but it was his shootout goal that stood as the winner in Game Five last week in Vancouver. “It was great,” said Reinhart of his experience. “All around, you’re playing with the best players in Western Canada and you’re playing with the top guys in all of junior in Russia, so that’s huge. “I was really happy with my game and the players around made it a lot easier, playing with those top guys.” The Super Series is billed as a precursor to the World Junior Championships, as the event gives Hockey Canada the chance to look at the top players in all three major-junior leagues in the CHL. Reinhart was one of three 1995-born players on the roster who got the chance to lace up the skates as part of the Team WHL leg of the series. As an added treat, he got to play with his older brother Griffin, a rearguard with the Edmonton Oil Kings and the fourth overall selection by the New York Islanders in

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

Team WHL’s Sam Reinhart celebrates after scoring the team’s third goal during a shoot-out against Team Russia in Game 5 of the CHL Subway Super Series in Vancouver, B.C., last Wednesday. the 2012 NHL Draft. “It’s a little frustrating the last couple years having to play against Griffin as I’m used to growing up playing with him all my life in minor hockey, so it was definitely good to be back on his team for a little bit.” Curtis Lazar, 17, and Reinhart were on the same line and nearly put Team WHL ahead in regulation when Russian goaltender Andrey Makarov misplayed the puck behind the net. Reinhart picked up the biscuit at the side boards and fired it on a nearly gaping net with Lazar near the crease for a tip, but no goal resulted. “We’re definitely familiar with each other, going back to U16 a couple years ago,” said Reinhart. “We’ve definitely got a little bit of chemistry but all the

players are so good that you can really fit in with anyone and it’s a treat to play with [them].” Laurent Brossoit was brilliant in the first game, stopping everything from the Russians, and kept them off the board in the shootout. Hunter Shinkaruk and Mark McNeil scored in the shootout, but Team WHL’s third goal—from Reinhart—prevented the Russians from mounting a comeback. The team had done a shootout at the end of their only practice on Tuesday, and Team WHL head coach Don Nachbaur, who leads the Spokane Chiefs, tapped the Kootenay forward for the third spot in front of a hometown crowd. Team WHL defence man Duncan Siemens, who patrols the blue

line in front of Makarov in Saskatoon, warned Reinhart to stay away from the glove side. Reinhart ended up beating Makarov by faking a backhand and stuffing the puck by the post on his forehand. “I was pretty confident with the move I was doing, so I didn’t really second guess myself,” said Reinhart. Reinhart, 17, is on the younger spectrum of prospects for the World Junior Championships, but the Kootenay Ice forward has worn the Maple Leaf before, representing Canada this past summer at the Ivan Hlinka Memorial tournament, where the team won a gold medal. He was also part of Team Canada that captured the bronze medal in the U18 World Championships last April in the Czech Republic.

Buchy rink still in the running at mixed curling championship C anadian Press

MONTREAL - Mike Fournier’s hometown rink remained perfect at the 2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship on Monday with a 9-6 win over B.C. and a 6-5 victory against New Brunswick. Fournier, with teammates Alanna Routledge, Mike Kennedy and Joelle St.-Hilaire, broke their sixth draw game open early with four in the second end against Tom Buchy’s B.C. rink. Fournier followed with two in the fourth and three in the seventh

to take a 9-4 lead. Buchy made a nice double take-out to score one in the eighth and then stole a single in the ninth to make the score respectable. In the seventh draw, Fournier and his rink broke a 5-5 tie with a point in the 10th end to slip past James Grattan’s New Brunswick rink. New Brunswick had scored three in the ninth end to rally and force Fournier’s late heroics. Quebec improved to 5-0, while B.C. and New Brunswick both fell to 2-2.

Also in the seventh draw, Cory Heggestad’s Ontario rink routed Steve Fecteau’s Yukon club 7-2 to move in to a tie for second with a 3-1 record. The Yukon rink dropped to 0-5. Mike Assad’s Northern Ontario rink edged Brent MacDougall’s Nova Scotia club 7-6 with a total of four points in the eighth, ninth and 10th ends. Northern Ontario is 3-1, while Nova Scotia is 3-2. Robert Campbell’s P.E.I. rink topped Alber-

ta’s Kurt Balderston 7-5. P.E.I. is 2-3 and Alberta is 1-3. In the sixth draw, Saskatchewan scored five in the sixth end to break open a close game against Yukon. Nova Scotia fell from the ranks of the unbeaten with a 6-4 loss to Manitoba. Manitoba led 4-1 in the fifth end and held on for the win. Manitoba sits at 2-2. In the final game of Draw 6, P.E.I. earned its first win of the tournament 13-4 over Nunavut’s Nick Saturnino. Saturnino is 0-4.

Submitted photo

ON THE COURT: The fifth annual Fall Squash Classic was held at Western Financial Place this past weekend. With squash leagues in full swing the opportunity for early season bragging rights was at hand. In the men’s open final George Freitag retained the title with a hard fought win over Rob MacDonald. In Division two Carson Damm was triumphant as was Robert Klewchuk in Division 3. Division 2 finalist Dennis Hockley, semi finalist Gerry Dreger and open semi finalist Ken Burrows will all be heading to the Western Canada masters championships in Calgary this weekend. Pictured above: Rob Freitag stands beside his opponent Rob MacDonald, who he met in the Division 1 final.

NHL requests complete proposal from NHLPA Chris Johnston Canadian Press

NEW YORK - The NHL wants to see everything put in writing. With negotiations on a new collective bargaining agreement seemingly at a stalemate, the league met with the NHL Players’ Association on Monday night and requested that the union put all of its desires together into one complete offer. “It’s our position that we’ve made a couple comprehensive proposals in a row,” said deputy commissioner Bill Daly. “We’d like to know where they are on all of the issues. We asked them to think about putting together a comprehensive proposal for us to consider. ... “We’ve never heard a full proposal from them.” The union’s response should dictate if the sides will formally start negotiating their way through the key issues. Donald Fehr, the NHLPA’s executive director, was guarded with his comments coming out of the Monday evening session he

initiated. He indicated the league’s request would be taken into consideration and said “it’s more likely than not” the sides will meet again Tuesday. It was unclear whether he would table a new proposal that covers the split of revenue, player contract rights and how the damage caused by the lockout will be paid for.

“We’ve never heard a full proposal from them.” Bill Daly “I don’t really know what to expect,” said Daly. “We asked, I certainly hope it’s something they’ll consider. I think that’s something they’re deliberating on.” With frustration building and the lockout dragging into its ninth week, the sides have struggled to find a way forward in negotiations. Fehr and commissioner Gary Bettman discussed the possibility of taking a break from talks last week, but Fehr thought it would be best if the sides continued to meet.

However, after requesting Monday’s meeting the union didn’t arrive with a new offer. Instead, Fehr was hoping to engage the league in a discussion on core economics and player contract issues. “We could have taken a couple weeks off, I suppose,” he said. “It’s hard for me to see how you make an agreement if you aren’t talking and so you talk. Sometimes it doesn’t lead anywhere, perhaps very often it doesn’t lead anywhere, but if you aren’t talking it’s 100 per cent sure it doesn’t lead anywhere.” Neither side has demonstrated a willingness to start trading concessions at the bargaining table. While the union maintains the gap on economic issues isn’t very wide, the league isn’t quite so sure. The NHL is asking for a straight 50-50 split of revenues while the NHLPA has proposed seeing the players’ share jump in fixed increments of 1.75 per cent each season starting from the $1.883-billion they took in last year.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 10 TUEsday, november 20, 2012

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ARIES (March 21-April 19) Listen to your instincts with a key partner. You’ll go far, because you are willing to honor your intuition as well as your intellect. You might not want to reveal a lot in a conversation about money. Teamwork allows greater give-and-take. Tonight: Take much-needed personal time. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Listen to your comrades in order to gain some insight as to what to do with someone who might be stopping up the works. This discussion takes you in a new direction, and it allows greater give-and-take. Tonight: You are coming from a more centered perspective. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A boss might be instrumental, but he or she is demanding. Make sure that you can handle this combination. You have strong drive and want to get as much done as possible. A partner could slow you up by wanting to talk. Tonight: Understand what you can and cannot change.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Do not hesitate to reach out to someone at a distance who means a lot to you. You might decide to make plans to see each other in the near future. A dear friend or loved one supports you in promoting a cause or an initiative. Tonight: Where music can fill the air. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Someone else wants to run with the ball, but you might not be sure of this person’s choices. Try to help this person get grounded by having a conversation with wellplaced questions. You might want to rethink a decision involving your health. Tonight: Share ideas. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Defer to someone else, and know full well what the end result will be. You know what to do. Your sixth sense comes through for you, but you might want to discuss the situation with a friend who will be equally impacted. Tonight: The only answer is “yes.” LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Issues involving work or your daily routine come to the forefront. You might want to rethink a situation more openly. Your creativity is

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AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You could be more in touch with someone’s needs right now. Your instincts will come forward, but you also might be dealing with some anger. Pull back and take a walk, especially if you are feeling pushed. Tonight: A parent or older person might be demanding. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) The time has come to share some strong feelings and get feedback. A friend lets you know exactly what he or she is feeling. This person wants you to agree with him or her. Follow your conscience. Tonight: Mood changed? Adjust your plans accordingly. BORN TODAY Actress Bo Derek (1956), musician Mike D (1965), comedian Dick Smothers (1939) *** Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet at www.jacquelinebigar.com. (c) 2012 by King Features Syndicate Inc.

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high, and you know how to bypass a problem. You also have assumed a stern stance on a money matter. Tonight: Include some exercise. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Your more playful personality emerges, which allows greater give-and-take. You see a situation far differently and are able to incorporate others’ ideas. You know when enough is enough, and you might even put strict terms on a sibling or an associate. Tonight: Let the fun begin. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Consider working from home so that you can handle a domestic issue. Communication flourishes, no matter where you are. You might need to screen calls. Your instincts might be off, as you could be drained or slightly depressed. Tonight: At home. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Communication thrives, and it’s unlike anything you’ve ever seen. You might be getting a mixed message from someone and could be unsure as to which way to go. Slow down before taking any action or speaking any words. Tonight: Get into a happening.

Garfield

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Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I work in a large organization and know my colleagues quite well. Though I enjoy working with them, a number of them recently have begun borrowing cash from me. These are usually requests for small amounts to cover the cost of lunch or coffee, but over time, they add up. Not a single one of them has ever voluntarily repaid me. When I ask, the person inevitably looks surprised, smacks his or her forehead and says, “Sorry, I forgot,” before handing over the money. It’s not that I don’t want to be helpful and collegial, but I have come to realize that if I don’t pursue those in my debt, I’ll never get the money back and will have to write off those sums. Even if my colleagues aren’t doing this intentionally, I can’t help thinking that in some way, I’m encouraging irresponsible behavior. Is there a professionally appropriate way of saying no the next time I’m asked for cash? -- California Casey Dear California: You have apparently been tagged as an “easy mark” in your office. It’s perfectly OK to say pleasantly and politely, “I’m so sorry, but I can’t loan you the cash today.” You don’t have to give a reason. If you say it often enough, they will assume you don’t carry that much money any longer or that you aren’t willing to part with it. Either way, they will leave you alone. Dear Annie: I would appreciate an objective viewpoint regarding my (just) 16-year-old daughter’s request to have her belly button pierced. “Olivia” is an honor student and allaround wonderful daughter. But I am having trouble being objective about the piercing. I am opposed on several levels. First, it is a waste of money. Second, there is pain and, more importantly, the risk of infection or worse. I also feel she is too young and still growing. She is very slender, but I’ve advised her that her shape is likely to “fill out” in the next several years. Her twin sister, her mom and I enjoy reading your column every morning at breakfast. Am I being overly concerned? -- Worried Papa Dear Worried: Your concerns are perfectly valid, but Olivia could present a counterargument to each. The pain is something she is apparently willing to tolerate, the “waste of money” is a matter of opinion, and the risk of infection (or worse) is lessened if the piercing is done by a reputable professional under hygienic circumstances. As for her shape, her navel is not likely to do all that much growing. The better reason, Dad, is that you object. You are still her father and can say no if this makes you uncomfortable. She always has the option of piercing her navel at a later date. We think you and your wife should have an honest discussion with Olivia about this and see whether you can reach an agreement. Dear Annie: “Thwarted” was right on the money. Women my age are definitely in a “trapped” situation. We did everything the good girls were supposed to do. But men are looking for someone in their 20s who will take care of their every dream. Their trophy wives will inherit the bulk of the assets that women like “Thwarted” enabled their husbands to acquire -- everything from education to taking care of them and their mothers. It sounds lovely and glib to say just go out there and volunteer, get involved in activities and churches, and hopefully meet other women who are in the same place. But what about the men? The majority are looking for a nurse and a purse once their libidos and bodies start to wane. -- 62 Married to a 75-Year-Old with No Reciprocity in Sight 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. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM


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daily townsman / daily bulletin

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How’s this for a highway obstacle? A middle-of-the-road hydro pole C anadian Press

AP Photo/Erin Conway-Smith

Chimpanzees sit in an enclosure at the Chimpanzee Eden rehabilitation center, near Nelspruit, South Africa. A study of chimps and orangutans released on Monday, Nov. 19, 2012, finds the same pattern of changes in happiness through life as many studies find in people.

Study finds ‘midlife crisis’ in chimps, orangutans Malcolm Rit ter Associated Press

NEW YORK — Chimpanzees in a midlife crisis? It sounds like a setup for a joke. But there it is, in the title of a report published Monday in a scientific journal: “Evidence for a midlife crisis in great apes.’’ So what do these apes do? Buy red Ferraris? Leave their mates for some cute young bonobos? Uh, no. “I believe no ape has ever purchased a sports car,’’ said Andrew Oswald, an author of the study. But researchers report that captive chimps and orangutans do show the same low ebb in emotional wellbeing at midlife that some studies find in people. That suggests the human tendency toward midlife discontent may have been passed on through evolution, rather than resulting just from the hassles of modern life, said Oswald, a professor of economics at the University of Warwick in England who presented his work Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. A second study in the journal looks at a younger age group and finds that happiness in youth can lead to higher income a few years down the road. Several studies have concluded that happiness in human adults tends to follow a certain course between ages 20 and 70: It starts high and

declines over the years to reach a low point in the late 40s, then turns around and rises to another peak at 70. On a graph, that’s a U-shaped pattern. Some researchers question whether that trend is real, but to Oswald the mystery is what causes it. “This is one of the great patterns of human life. We’re all going to slide along this U for good or ill,’’ he said. “So what explains it?’’ When he learned that others had been measuring well-being in apes, “it just seemed worth pursuing the hunch that the U might be more general than in humans,’’ he said. He and co-authors assembled data on 508 great apes from zoos and research centres in the U.S., Australia, Canada, Singapore and Japan. Caretakers and other observers had filled out a four-item questionnaire to assess well-being in the apes. The questions asked such things as the degree to which each animal was in a positive or negative mood, how much pleasure it got from social situations, and how successful it was in achieving goals. The raters were even asked how happy they would be if they were the animal for a week. Yes, apes do have social lives, so “it could still be something human-like that we share with our social cousins,’’ he said. “But our result does seem to push away the likelihood that it’s dominantly something

to do with human life.’’ Oswald said it’s not clear what the evolutionary payoff might be from such discontent. Maybe it prods parents to be restless, “to help find new worlds for the next generation to breed,’’ he said. Frans de Waal, an authority in primate behaviour at Emory University, cautioned that when people judge the happiness of apes, there may be a “human bias.’’ But in an email he called the results “intuitively correct’’ and said the notion of biological influence over the human pattern is “an intriguing possibility.’’

COOKSHIRE-EATON, Que. — Alleged corruption-fuelled cost overruns aren’t the only menace upon Quebec’s road network these days. Officials say they are dealing with the puzzling appearance of a utility pole — smack in the middle of a provincial highway east of Montreal. A photo of the pole, which is in the middle of Highway 251 in the Eastern Townships, appeared in a local newspaper today. So how does such an improbable obstacle wind up protruding from a highway, anyway? According to various local media, it’s been there for two months. But provincial transport authorities say that until last week, there were construction crews there and that road stretch had not actually been paved yet. The roadway had been moved to avoid a dangerous curb. Hydro Quebec, the provincial power utility, says it was only advised about the need to move its cables about three weeks ago. A spokesman for Transport Quebec

Jocelyn Riendeau/Canadian Press/ Sherbrooke La Tribune

An electric pole stands in the middle of a road in Johnville, Que. on Monday Nov. 19, 2012. The ministry of Transport fixed a dangerous curve in the road issue this summer, but Quebec’s public utility apparently failed to coordinate its timetable with the roadwork. isn’t blaming the contractor. Gilles Bourque said there were communication problems between the transport authority and the telephone and power utilities that share the line. He called the situation unacceptable. A spokeswoman for Hydro Quebec said a new pole is being installed and the electrical wires and telephone wires should be moved by the end of the week. Ginette Cantin says Hydro Quebec crews were on site to begin the work necessary to move the wires. Crews with

Spielberg, with ‘Lincoln’ in theatres, speaks at ‘Gettysburg Address’ commemoration Associated Press

GETTYSBURG, Pa. — Two-time Academy Award winning director Steven Spielberg expressed a sense of humility Monday as he delivered the keynote address during ceremonies to mark the 149th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s “Gettysburg Address.’’ “I’ve never stood anyplace on earth where it’s easier to be humbled than here,’’ said Spielberg, whose biopic about the 16th president is currently in theatres. His remarks were made at the annual event at the Soldier’s National Cemetery in Gettysburg, near the site where Lincoln gave the famous oration amid the American Civil War in 1863, four months after the battle in which the Union turned back an invasion of the North by Confederate troops under Gen. Robert E. Lee. After spending seven years working his new movie “Lincoln,’’ Spielberg said the president came to feel like one of his oldest and dearest friends, and he sensed he was living in the presence of what he called Lin-

coln’s “eloquent ghost.’’ “Lincoln wanted us to understand that equality was a small ‘D’ democratic essential,’’ Spielberg said, describing Lincoln’s three-minute speech as “his best and truest voice’’ and the single “most perfect prose poem ever penned by an American.’’ As part of the event, 16 newly minted Americans from 11 countries took the oath of allegiance to become U.S. citizens. Spielberg spoke of the interplay between history and memory, and between memory and justice. “It’s the hunger we feel for coherence, it’s the hunger we feel for progress for a better world,’’ he said. “I think justice and memory are inseparable.’’ The 150th year since the battle will be marked in 2013, particularly around the battle’s anniversary in early July. “Lincoln,’’ which stars Daniel DayLewis in the title role, concentrates on the period leading up to the president’s assassination in 1865.

Bell Canada will also move their wires. The provincial minister in charge of the region assured reporters Monday at an event in Sherbrooke that proper precautions would be taken to ensure there was adequate signage in the area. Highway 251 is a

38-kilometre stretch of provincial highway that runs north-south. The pole has not caused any harm, so far. Quebec provincial police said there had been no reports of accidents at the site. Bourque said the problem would be fixed by the end of the month.

Obituaries

Obituaries

Obituary Rita Cimolai

Rita Cimolai was born on July 31, 1931 in Mirano, Venice, Italy and passed away peacefully, with her children and grandchildren by her side, on November 14, 2012 at Kelowna General Hospital. She is survived by her daughter, Lucy; her sons, Roy (Lesley) and Dario; and her grandchildren, Lena and Dante. She is also survived by her sisters, Lina and Maria of Italy; sisters-in-law, Lucina Buttignol and Norma Buttignol of Kimberley, B.C.; and nieces and nephews in Canada, France and Italy. Rita is predeceased by her husband, Livio; her parents, Luigi and Angela Buttignol; her sisters, Giuseppina, Agatha, and Ada; and her brothers, Vladimiro and Umberto. The youngest of 7 children, Rita grew up in Vigonovo, Pordenone, Italy, where she met Livio. They married in 1951 and a few years later they and their young daughter immigrated to Canada, arriving in Kimberley on November 14, 1955. Their 2 sons were born in Kimberley where Rita and Livio enjoyed raising their children and found happiness in their faith, hard work, good friends and neighbours… and always a great garden. Rita treasured her husband, children, grandchildren, relatives and friends, and she was a very kind and generous woman to all who knew her. The family extends its gratitude to East Kootenay Regional Hospital and the Cardiac Care Unit in Kelowna General Hospital for the care and attention they devoted to Rita. They are also very grateful to all of her dear friends who were there for her during difficult times in the past few years of her life. Funeral Services will be held at 11:00 am on Saturday, November 24, 2012 at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Kimberley, B.C. A private interment will take place at a later date. Those wishing to make a memorial donation in honour of Rita may do so to a charity of their choice.


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CAREER OPPORTUNITY: SUN LIFE FINANCIAL, a leader in financial services, is hiring exceptional people to train as financial sales professionals. Please call 250-4264221/ext 2202, fax 250-4268516, or email resume to josee.bergeron@sunlife.com

NOW - NEW 8 week courses covering small engine, snowmobile, quad or marine outboard repair. Take one course or all - fit your interest and your timeline. GPRC Fairview campus. Affordable residences. 1-888-999-7882; www.gprc.ab.ca.

ACCESSORIES INSTALLER/ Journeyman Technicians. Hanna Chrysler Ltd. (Hanna, Alberta) needs a few more good people. Busy, modern shop. Competitive wages, benefits. Great community. Inquire or send resume. Fax 403-854-2845; Email Chrysler@telusplanet.net

Obituaries

Obituaries

Obituaries

Sympathy & Understanding Kootenay Monument Installations 2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132 1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com

96*20,: 3(> J V Y W V Y H [ P V U >PSSZ ,Z[H[L 7SHUUPUN 7YVIH[L ,Z[H[L (KTPUPZ[YH[PVU

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Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

6379 HIGHWAY 95A TA TA CREEK, B.C. 1-800-477-9996

www.kootenaymonument.ca

End of Life? Bereaved? May We Help?

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250-417-2019

Help Wanted

Summit Community Services Society Early Childhood Educator Little Summit Daycare

AUTO SERVICE Journeyman Technician required immediately at EJ Klassen GM in Port Hardy, Vancouver Island. Above average wages and benefits. Fax resume 250-9497440 email: ejkgm@telus.net

Summit Community Services Society is seeking an Early Childhood Educator for a permanent full time position with Little Summit Daycare. Little Summit Daycare runs an Infant/Toddler program as well as a 3 years to School age program. 4ualiÀed candidates will have an Early Childhood Education CertiÀcate current Àrst aid certiÀcate and a current criminal record check. Possessing an Infant Toddler Diploma would be an asset. Resumes with references can be submitted in person or by mail no later than 1ovember 3 to Little Summit Daycare th Street South Cranbrook %C 9 C 9 Attention: Gillian Snider-Cherepak )a[ - - 33

Obituaries

EXPERIENCED PARTS Person for a progressive auto/industrial supplier. Hired applicant will receive top wages, full benefits and RRSP bonuses plus moving allowances. Our 26,000 sq.ft store is located 2.5 hours N.E. of Edmonton, Alberta. See our community at LacLaBicheRegion.com Send resume to: Sapphire Auto, Box 306, Lac La Biche, AB, T0A 2C0. Email: hr@sapphireinc.net

North Valley Gymnastics Society is seeking • CertiďŹ ed Full or Part-Time Gymnastics Coaches • Full or part-time Manager for our new gym (prefer certified coach). Please email your resume to: petra@nvgym.com FAX it to: 1 250 545 4793 or CALL: 1 250 545 0516

Required for an Alberta Trucking Company. One Class 1 Driver. Must have a minimum of 5 years experience pulling low boys and driving off road. Candidate must be able to pass a drug test and be willing to relocate to Edson, Alberta. Fax resumes to: 780-725-4430

Obituaries ManWoman 1938-2012

He was a prolific painter, sculptor and poet whose dreams were a guiding influence throughout his life and provided a rich source of inspiration for his art and poetry. He followed this influence with dedication (40 years of dream journals) and courage since at times these images and instructions seemed outrageous and controversial. Pursuing his unique creative impulses led ManWoman to become involved with many diverse circles; arts communities in Edmonton, Calgary, Cranbrook, Los Angeles and New York; the Mankind Project/New Warrior Trainings; Friends of the Swastika internet network; tattoo communities, especially those deeply committed to the reclamation of the benevolent spiritual use of the swastika particularly those in Ireland, England, Denmark and Germany; Dances of Universal Peace groups and their associated Sufi circles. He is survived by his wife Astarte/Dale Sellars, brother Harry Kemball, former wife and mother of his four children Mimi Kemball, son Ivan Cat (Marti Livingstone), daughters Serena Kemball (Scott Pflieger), Meenoy Kemball and Yoni Bremner (Cam Bremner) and grandsons Jazz Kemball, Connor Bremner and Sivert Livingstone Cat. “... tell him how I love and respect him, His focused commitments are a source of inspiration to me. His tender heart has deeply touched mine. His unique way of ‘turning the sacred inside out’ through his art and poetry has made me consider in new ways, and laugh once again at old ways.� - Sister Mariam Joan Shea

Lost & Found

LOST: AN EXPENSIVE EX-OFFICIO, white jacket, size medium, taken by mistake at a yoga class on Oct. 24th in the noon to 1:15 class. Please call Shirley at (250)919-6055, so it can be returned. Your white jacket is still hanging there.

Help Wanted

Cranbrook artist, poet and visionary, ManWoman, passed away in his home November 13, 2012.

PUMV'YVJRPLZSH^ JVT c ^^^ YVJRPLZSH^ JVT

FOUND, on our doorstep, white and orange, short hair, male cat, with striped tail. Very friendly, has obviously been someone’s pet. Needs a good home. Call (250)429-3293

Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin office or email your high-resolution jpeg to bulletinprod@cyberlink.ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.

email classifieds@dailytownsman.com

Travel

Page 13 13 PAGE

Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theowerpot@shaw.ca

In times of grief, these caring professionals are here to serve and comfort your family.

A Celebration of Life to be held at 2:00 pm, Saturday, Nov. 24 at the Prestige Inn, 209 Van Horne St., Cranbrook In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to: Cranbrook & District Arts Council 104 - 135 10th Ave. South, Cranbrook 250-426-4223 or East Kootenay Foundation for Health 13 - 24th Ave. North, Cranbrook 250-489-6481


dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN

Page 14 TUEsday, november 20, 201220, 2012 PAGE 14 Tuesday, November

Employment

Merchandise for Sale

Income Opportunity ATTN: COMPUTER Work. Work from anywhere 24/7. Up to $1,500 part time to $7,500/ mo full time. Training provided. highincomesfromhome.com

Medical/Dental CERTIFIED Dental Assistant needed. Experienced CDA needed for full time employment (4 days/wk) Good communication and clinical skills a priority. Call 250-489-4731 or email drjaws2@telus.net to send resume and to schedule an interview.

Rentals

Transportation

Misc. for Sale

Apt/Condo for Rent

Cars - Domestic

ARE YOU MOVING?

1 BEDROOM APT. downtown Cranbrook. $700./mo, DD + hydro. (250)489-1324 2BDRM, 1 1/2 BATH condo unit for rent, in Canal Flats. Great view, 2 parking stalls, F/S, D/W. Walking distance to arena, park and store. $850 + D.D., references required. Available Nov.15/12. Call (250)349-5306 or (250)4898389, leave mess.

BOXES

FOR SALE Only

20 Boxes

10

$

Trades, Technical FLAGSTAFF COUNTY, Sedgewick, Alberta requires a full-time Licensed or 2nd to 4th year Apprentice, Heavy Duty Mechanic. Fax or email resume by 12 p.m., December 10, 2012. Attention: Kevin Kinzer, Fax: 780-384-3635; Email: kkinzer@flagstaff.ab.ca

LIMITED QUANTITY! OFFER ENDS SOON

pick up at

Services

822 Cranbrook St. N.

Ph: 426-5201

Health Products HERBAL MAGIC. With Herbal Magic lose up to 20 pounds by New Year’s Eve and keep it off. Results guaranteed! Start today, call 1-800-854-5176.

Financial Services DROWNING IN debt? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. Avoid bankruptcy! Free consultation. Toll-free 1-877-5563500 www.mydebtsolution.com IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: it’s that simple. Your credit/age/income is not an issue. 1-800-587-2161. LOAN HELP. Consolidate all your credit cards, bank loans, income tax debt and payday loans into one small interestfree monthly payment. Contact us asap toll-free 1-888-5284920. M O N E Y P ROV I D E R . C O M $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877-776-1660.

Need CA$H Today? Own A Vehicle?

Borrow Up To $25,000

No Credit Checks!

Cash same day, local office.

www.PitStopLoans.com 1.800.514.9399

00

3 YRS OLD, 32” wide Moffat stove. Works like new. $130. (250)427-3826

Real Estate Apt/Condos for Sale BEAUTIFUL OCEAN front (Tiara Sands), 3bdrm, 2 bath condo. Large deck, stainless appliances, granite counters. Great opportunity, great price. Mazatlan, Mx. cvertes@telus.net. (604)857-7670

Duplex/4 Plex 2BDRM DUPLEX, $900./mo. plus utilities. No smoking, no pets. Close to bus routes. Prefer mature couple. Available Dec.1. (403)887-1505

Houses For Sale

BUNGALOW

FOR SALE BY OWNER

2 Bdrms, 2 baths, open concept. Windows on all sides makes this home bright. A motivated seller. Call for a viewing.

320,500

CRANBROOK FAMILY HOME ON 5 ACRES

Contractors

Merchandise for Sale Firewood/Fuel FIREWOOD, DRY Pine. $90./half a cord. $160./full cord, delivered. Phone after 6pm (250)427-7180.

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share a 2bdrm basement suite. Newly renovated, nice area close to bus route. Access to big back yard. Available Nov.15/Dec. 1. $425./mo. plus $50./utilities. Please contact Rachel: (250)426-7036

Shared Accommodation ROOMMATE WANTED in 4bdrm house. 2bdrms, private bath, shared kitchen + own fridge, W/D, fully furnished. Available immediately. $600. + 1/2 utilities. (250)344 1120.

Suites, Lower 2BDRM FULLY furnished basement suite. No pets/smoking/parties. $1000./mo. utilities included. Phone (250)417-0059 or (250)426-5706. Near College & Mall.

Transportation Auto Accessories/Parts 4 TOYO WINTER tires. 325/60 x 16. Low mileage. Half price, $250. Phone (250)427-2498

Sedan. 107,000kms, FWD, one owner. All service records, new tires & trailer hitch. Excellent interior, never smoked in, great gas mileage. $7995. (250)427-3704

$

s #ONSTRUCTION s 2ENOVATIONS s 2OOlNG s $RYWALL LARGE OR SMALL s 3IDING s 3UNDECK #ONSTRUCTION s !LUMINUM 2AILINGS 7E WELCOME ANY RESTORATIONAL WORK

Rooms for Rent

Business/Office Service

Business/Office Service

SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!

4 door, hardtop, 283 - V8, 2 spd. automatic. All stock, excellent condition. 84,000 miles, needs seat covers.

Ph. 426-8602

6,000

$

OBO

Recreational/Sale Combination Truck & 5th Wheel RV

To advertise using our “SERVICES GUIDE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202. ALLIANCE

FRIENDSHIP PLACE Daycare Centre & Preschool

is a licensed centre serving the Cranbrook Community. We currently have full and part-time spaces available for children 3 yrs to pre-kindergarten age. daycare@cranbrookalliancechurch.com

(250)489-5426 (Located in the Cranbrook Alliance Church)

BEAR NECESSITIES

2006 GMC Duramax Diesel 2500 HD with Allison Transmission 2008 32.5 ft Quantum 5th Wheel Lots of extra’s added since purchased, Extended Warranty on RV - Combined sale price is

69,000

$

Call: 250-417-4069 or 250-417-1990 to discuss & view the package.

Trucks & Vans 1999 Chevy 2500 4x4

HOME WATCH SERVICE

IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING PROBLEMS?

DUSTAY CONSTRUCTION LTD Canadian Home Builders Association

It’s time for a tune-up! Why unplug everything, send away & wait when SuperDave comes into your home? Specializes in: *Virus/Spyware Removal, *Troubleshooting, *Installations, *PC Purchase Consulting.

Award Winning Home Builder Available for your custom home and renovation needs. You dream it, we build it! www.dustayconstruction.com (250)489-6211

SuperDave offers affordable, superior service & most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Saturdays & evenings too!

HANDYMAN

Call SuperDave (250)421-4044

Planning Winter Vacation?

to the senior stars.

~We do: ~Home checks to validate insurance ~Snow removal ~Water Plants ~Cat care and more.

All Indoor and Outdoor Renovation Projects including Painting, Staining & Plumbing.

BONDED & INSURED

Steve (250)421-6830

For Peace of Mind Home Vacancy. Call Melanie (250)464-9900 www.thebearnecessities.ca

GIVE THE GIFT of Music Music teacher

Linda Rothero.

“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”

R.BOCK ELECTRICAL

*Licensed*Bonded*Insured* Residential, Commercial Service Work No Job Too Small! (250)421-0175

TIP TOP CHIMNEY SERVICES

Cranbrook/Kimberley.

For reliable, quality electrical work

www.superdave consulting.ca

Chimney Sweeping Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing Visual Inspections and Installations Gutter Cleaning Available Call for Free Estimate from a W.E.T.T Certified Technician Richard Hedrich (250)919-3643 tiptopchimneys@gmail.com

30 years experience.

Flute, piano & theory. Cranbrook and Kimberley

Call (778)517-1793

2006 HYUNDAI Sonata GL

(250-489-3739)

(*30

Rental Housing Conference, Thurs. & Fri. Nov. 22nd & 23rd Bear Mountain Resort, Victoria. Mini-workshops for Residential Landlords & Managers. • Hoarding • Tenant Selection • Insurance • Financing • Income Tax • Energy-Efficiency • Bedbugs More information visit: romsbc.com/prhc.php. To register, call: 1.888.330.6707

PA R I S I E N N E

Cars - Domestic

Legal Services CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.

Property Management

1966 Pontiac

Business/Office Service

3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths. Has sunken living room with vaulted ceiling. Wood burning fireplace insert. Large country kitchen and dining room. Full basement, hardwood, floors, metal roof. New windows, cabin and greenhouse. Many upgrades. Great views. Must see to appreciate. asking

$

475,000

Please Call

(250) 426-5385

Would you like to swallow 20 pills every day, just to digest your food? If you had cystic fibrosis, you’d have no choice.

Please help us.

1-800-378-CCFF • www.cysticfibrosis.ca

Misc Services

6.5L turbo diesel, ext. cab, short box, 283,400 km, newer auto transmission and tires, new glass, A/C, leather, pwr everything, spray-in liner, canopy, tow pkg w/brake controller and air bags.

OMG! It’s your BFF! And FYI: he’s such a QT!

6,900

$

1-780-756-6789

Misc Services

MARKET PLACE To advertise using our “MARKET PLACE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202. Sonny Nomland, your retired Electrolux Manager, always has a good selection of rebuilt ELECTROLUX vacuums on hand. Like new. Phone (250)489-2733 for more information.

WATKINS PRODUCTS

Watkins Associate Loretta-May (250)426-4632 www.watkinsonline.com/ lorettamaystewart or at Woodland Grocery.

Fetch a Friend from the SPCA today!

Biodegradable Environmentally Friendly Kosher Spices Personal Care Products Ointments/Linaments, etc **Since 1860**

spca.bc.ca


daily townsman / daily bulletin

NEWS

TUEsday, november 20, 2012

Page 15

Horses hurt on ‘Hobbit’ holding farm: wranglers Nick Perry Associated Press

CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz

Customers walk out of Costco in Montreal on Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012. Several major retailers are taking the Quebec government to court over the provincial language watchdog’s insistence they modify their commercial brand names to include some French.

Big businesses heading to court over French signs Sidhartha Baner jee Canadian Press

MONTREAL — Several major retailers are taking the Quebec government to court over the provincial language watchdog’s insistence they modify their commercial brand names to include some French. The retailers include some of the biggest brand names in North America — Walmart, Best Buy and Costco. Their lawyers are expected in Quebec Superior Court on Thursday. Quebec’s language watchdog, The Office Quebecois de la Langue Francaise, wants the retailers to change their signs to either give themselves a generic French name or add a slogan or explanation that reflects what it is they’re selling. For example, Walmart, a household name on the retail scene that doesn’t really have a French equivalent, could change its signs to “Le Magasin Walmart.’’ But retailers say the language

laws have not formally been changed and they will ask the courts to decide whether the language office has the right to make new demands. According to Section 63 of Quebec’s French Language Charter, the name of a business must be in French. But it hasn’t generally been applied to trademarked names. So some companies have taken steps to change their name — like Kentucky Fried Chicken, which is known in Quebec as “Poulet Frit Kentucky.’’ But others, like Walmart and Best Buy, have set up shop under the same name that appears elsewhere in the world. The six companies taking legal action include Walmart, Costco, Best Buy, Gap, Old Navy and Guess. They are represented by two law firms. It’s unclear which of the legislative changes would actually be adopted because the PQ only has a minority in the legislature, and little support from opposi-

tion parties on the issue. But the push for businesses to change their signs started earlier, last year under the then-Liberal government, amid controversies over whether the use of French in Montreal was declining. A year ago, the language watchdog announced it was embarking on an awareness campaign aimed at getting to companies to comply. The plan featured a website that told companies they had a number of choices. They included coming up with a descriptive slogan or line in French to identify themselves. Companies could also opt for a French version of the name or use a French/English version, with the French appearing more predominantly. Some companies have voluntarily changed their signs. After a series of fire-bombings, Second Cup coffee shops added the words “les cafes’’ to their signs. Starbucks in Quebec is known as Cafe Starbucks Coffee.

Hostess Brands given one last hope for Twinkies Associated Press

Twinkies won’t die that easily after all. Hostess Brands Inc. and its second largest union will go into mediation to try and resolve their differences, meaning the Irving, Texas-based company won’t go out of business just

yet. The news came Monday after Hostess moved to liquidate and sell off its assets in bankruptcy court citing a crippling strike last week. The bankruptcy judge hearing the case says that the parties haven’t gone through the critical

step of mediation and asked the lawyer for the bakery’s union to ask his client, who wasn’t present, if he would agree to participate. The case is being heard by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York in White Plains, N.Y.

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Animal wranglers involved in the making of “The Hobbit’’ movie trilogy say the production company is responsible for the deaths of up to 27 animals, largely because they were kept at a farm filled with bluffs, sinkholes and other “death traps.’’ The American Humane Association, which is overseeing animal welfare on the films, says no animals were harmed during the actual filming. But it also says the wranglers’ complaints highlight shortcomings in its oversight system, which monitors film sets but not the facilities where the animals are housed and trained. A spokesman for trilogy director Peter Jackson on Monday acknowledged that horses, goats, chickens and one sheep died at the farm near Wellington where about 150 animals were housed for the movies, but he said some of the deaths were from natural causes. The spokesman, Matt Dravitzki, agreed that the deaths of two horses were avoidable, and said the production company moved quickly to improve conditions after they died. “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,’’ the first movie in the planned $500 million trilogy, is scheduled to launch with a red-carpet premiere Nov. 28 in Wellington and will open at theatres in the U.S. and around the world in December. The animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals says it’s planning protests at the premieres in New Zealand, the U.S. and the U.K. The Associated Press spoke to four wranglers who said the farm near Wellington was unsuitable for horses because it was peppered with bluffs, sinkholes and broken-down fencing. They said they repeatedly raised concerns about the farm with their superiors and the production company, owned by Warner Bros., but it continued to be

AP photo/Nick Perry

People walk by the Embassy Theatre where a giant statue of the character Gandalf from the upcoming movie “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” overlooks the passersby in Wellington, New Zealand, Monday, Nov. 19, 2012. used. They say they want their story aired publicly now to prevent similar deaths in the future. One wrangler said that over time he buried three horses, as well as about six goats, six sheep and a dozen chickens. The wranglers say two more horses suffered severe injuries but survived. Wrangler Chris Langridge said he was hired as a horse trainer in November 2010, overseeing 50 or so horses, but immediately became concerned that the farm was full of “death traps.’’ He said he tried to fill in some of the sinkholes, made by underground streams, and even brought in his own fences to keep the horses away from the most dangerous areas. Ultimately, he said, it was an impossible task. He said horses run at speeds of up to 30 mph and need to be housed on flat land: “It’s just a no-brainer.’’ The first horse to die, he said, was a miniature named Rainbow. “When I arrived at work in the morning, the pony was still alive but his back was broken. He’d come off a bank at speed and crash-landed,’’ Langridge said. “He was in a bad state.’’ Rainbow, who had been slated for use as a

hobbit horse, was euthanized. A week later, a horse named Doofus got caught in some fencing and sliced open its leg. That horse survived, but Langridge said he’d had enough. He and his wife, Lynn, who was also working as a wrangler, said they quit in February 2011. The following month, they wrote an email to Brigitte Yorke, the Hobbit trilogy’s unit production manager, outlining their concerns. Dravitzki, the spokesman for Peter Jackson, said the production company reacted swiftly after the first two horses died, spending hundreds of thousands of dollars upgrading housing and stable facilities in early 2011. The American Humane Association said it investigated the farm at the production company’s request. Dravitzki said the company had already made many of the recommended changes by the time the AHA made them. He said the company no longer leases the farm and has no animals left on the property. He said he didn’t know if animals will be needed for future filming in the trilogy, but added that Jackson himself adopted three of the pigs used.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 16 TUEsday, november 20, 2012

Spend $250 and receive a

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Spend $250 or more before applicable taxes at any Real Canadian Superstore location and receive a free jumbo cooked shrimp platter. Excludes purchase of tobacco, alcohol products, prescriptions, gift cards, phone cards, lottery tickets, all third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners, etc.) and any other products which are provincially regulated. The retail value of $24.98 will be deducted from the total amount of your purchase before sales taxes are applied. Limit one coupon per family and/or customer account. No cash value. No copies. Coupon must be presented to the cashier at time of purchase. Valid from Friday, November 16th until closing Thursday, November 22nd, 2012. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. No substitutions, refunds or exchanges on free item. 338282 10000 02811 7 4

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cooked jumbo shrimp platter

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Gerber Graduates selected varieties, 42-201 g 367698

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©MasterCard & PayPass are registered trademarks of MasterCard International Incorporated. President’s Choice Back a licensee of the marks. President’s Choice Financial MasterCard is provided by President’s Choice Bank. President’s Choice Financial banking services are provided by the direct banking division of CIBC. PC points loyalty program is provided by President’s Choice Services Inc. ©PC, President’s Choice, President’s Choice Financial and Fresh Financial Thinking are registered trademarks of Loblaws Inc. Trademarks use under licence.

ea

Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. NO RAINCHECKS OR SUBSTITUTIONS on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/TM The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this newspaper ad are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 2012 Loblaws Inc. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.

Guaranteed Lowest Prices *Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ print advertisements (i.e. flyer, newspaper). We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s print advertisement. Our major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us and are based on a number of factors which can change from time to time. Identical items are defined as same brand, item type (in the case of produce, meat and bakery), size and attributes and carried at this store location. We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this promise at any time.

We Match Prices! *Look for the symbol in store. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match select items in our major supermarket competitors’ flyers throughout the week. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and for fresh produce, meat and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us).


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