Kamloops This Week, December 18, 2012

Page 1

TUESDAY

K A M L O O P S

THIS WEEK

Tuesday, December 18, 2012 X Volume 25 No. 100 www.kamloopsthisweek.com X 30 cents at Newsstands

RACHEL WADE, 16 GOAL: ENGINEERING “IB is more about thinking about what things mean and considering how things are related. Before, it was, ‘Learn this, write a test on it and never remember it again.’ I found the normal curriculum quite easy and boring, and I knew that wasn’t what university was going to be like.”

TYLOR VADNAIS, 16 GOAL: MEDICAL SCHOOL “The biggest thing is time management, and everyone’s starting to find that out the hard way. Sometimes, depending on workload, it can be tough. Some of them [the IB assignments] are a blast. It’s frustrating, but it’s amazing.”

IB GETS AN A+ AT NORKAM

HAILEY MANKE, 16 GOAL: UNIVERSITY SOMEWHERE “It’s very different. It’s not so much asking what date did this happen, but why did it happen on that date and not five years earlier or 10 years later? Before, school was easy for me. I didn’t have to make a significant effort to make straight As. The biggest challenge now is making that effort and how I make that effort.”

Lavraj Lidher (left), Hailey Manke and Elizabeth McKenzieCase are among a growing number of NorKam students opting for the International Baccalaureate program now offered at the high school. Dave Eagles/KTW

STORY, PAGES A4/A5

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A2 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

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LOCAL NEWS

Two-week closure for Central Station Pub By Andrea Klassen STAFF REPORTER andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com

Central Station Pub will go quiet for two weeks in the new year after the province’s liquor control and licensing branch (LCLB) slapped the downtown bar with a 14-day licence suspension for serving alcohol to a minor. In a decision released in November, enforcement hearing adjudicator Nerys Poole suspended the pub’s liquor licence

for two weeks starting January 5, 2013. According to the decision, a teenaged male was sitting at a table in the pub with friends — all apparently of age — on the night of April 21 when liquor inspectors watched a server drop off a tray of shots without checking for ID. Inspectors called the RCMP, who learned the teen was 17 years old. In her own submission to the LCLB, the unnamed waitress

said the table already had drinks, so she assumed another Central Station staffer had served — and carded — the table as needed. “It happened in a split second amidst a million other things I was occupied with in performing my duties,” she wrote, adding she regrets the mistake. The pub was also dinged for failing to eject several overly intoxicated patrons the same night. Central Station owner Judy Hill said the pub doesn’t dispute

either of the inspectors’ findings, but she feels the two-week suspension is too much. “We have 17 staff with our DJs and our cleaners and the door people. So, there’s 17 people without any income for 14 days, which is pretty harsh,” she said. Hill said the Central has had one reprimand from the LCLB in its history. That was 10 years ago, when a staffer who no longer works at the pub also served an underage drinker. “I know we should be totally

aware of the liquor laws and we are,” Hill said. “But, it just seems extremely harsh for a first offence.” While the Central’s staff wrote letters asking for a more lenient punishment, Poole wrote that the 14-day suspension — 10 days for serving the teen, four days for having over-served patrons in the pub — is the mandatory minimum penalty for a first offence. The pub could also have faced up to $17,000 in fines. X See CENTRAL PUB A14

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TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

INDEX

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TODAY’S FORECAST Sun, clouds, allegedly High: -2 C Low: -3 C

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A3

Viewpoint/Your Opinion . . . . A8-9 Auto Market . . . . . . . . . B7 TODAY’S FLYERS *Selected distribution

WEATHER ALMANAC

One year ago Hi: 8 C Low: -3.6 C Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A17 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . B14 Liquor Depot, KTW New Homes, Record High: 9.4 C (1966) Community . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B1 Classifieds . . . . . . . . B15 Zimmer Wheaton, Home Depot* Record Low: -27.2 C (1955) Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B5

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UPFRONT

KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

Another Conservative candidate Maria Dobi has stepped up as a second candidate for the nomination of the B.C. Conservative Party in the Kamloops-South Thompson riding. Dobi ran for the party in the 2009 election, which saw her finish fourth behind incumbent MLA Kevin Krueger, NDP candidate Tom Friedman — who will also run again in the 2013 election in the riding — and Bev Markle of the Green Party. Dobi received just more than 1,000 votes. Following the election, she moved to the

MARIA DOBI: Joins Peter Sharp in seeking nomination.

B.C. Heritage party and was elected its president in 2010. In announcing her bid for the nomination, Dobi said she was doing it because she believes

the Conservatives to be “the only party that has a vision, a vision for a healthy balance of small government, which is honest, accountable and transparent, and with providing each of us with an environment to live healthy and productive lives.” The party’s regional director, Alan Forseth expects possibly two more people will seek the nomination, which will be decided in early February. Former city councillor Peter Sharp has already declared his intention to seek the nomination.

LET IT SNOW, LET IT SNOW . . . CHRISTMAS COLLARED AT WESTMOUNT Grade 2 student Broden Lamarche is dressed the part as he sings I Want a Puppy for Christmas during Westmount elementary’s presentation of John Jacobson’s musical Dear Santa during the school’s Christmas concert. Students of the Kamloops-Thompson school district will continue to present concerts this week, the final days of classes before the Christmas break begins. School will resume on Monday, Jan. 7. Dave Eagles/KTW

base as of Sunday. At Sun Peaks Resort, the snow has literally buried vehicles, as can be seen in the above photo. That mound under that snow is a van. Sun Peaks received 40 centimetres of the white stuff on Sunday and 89 centimetres in the past week. The mountain has an alpine depth of 162 centimetres.

Ski-hill operators are welcoming the heavy snowfall that has graced the Kamloops region. Harper Mountain opened for the season on Saturday, Dec. 15, with Lisa Daburger saying it was one of the best opening days ever — and that was before the massive snowfall arrived on Sunday and Monday. Harper had an 80-centimetre

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“The biggest difference is the brain work that it takes. I go home exhausted every day, so I just make sure to make some alone time for myself.”

A

LISHA GOTRO’S DAY starts earlier than that of most high-school students. The 16-year-old is up at 6 a.m. She gets ready and tends to her animals — horses, cats and a dog. Ninety minutes after rolling out of bed, Gotro and her parents pile into the family vehicle and hit the highway, driving 45 minutes — on a nice day — from their home in Barriere to the Tournament Capital. After making a stop in downtown Kamloops to drop her mom at work, Gotro is driven across Overlanders Bridge to NorKam secondary in time for the 8:30 a.m. bell. When school lets out, Gotro heads to her sister’s Kamloops apartment to kill two hours while waiting for her parents to get off work, return to Barriere for the night and wake up to start the whole routine over again. The 11th grader is one of 23 students in the first cohort of NorKam’s International Baccalaureate (IB) program, which is now nearing the end of its first semester of existence.

Gotro said the sacrifices she has had to make to be part of the IB program are well worth it. “In the beginning, it was hard to make it work,” she said. “But, it gives you more responsibility. They’re not babying you.” She is not alone in her praise of the program, even though it’s just months old. Sheryl Lindquist, NorKam principal and headmaster of the school’s IB program, said parents and students are thrilled with the advanced curriculum — governed by the Swiss-based International Baccalaureate organization and widely regarded as one of the most respected preparatory paths for students prior to university studies. Lindquist noted it’s not just highfalutin parents intent on seeing their kids excel academically. “Kids who never did homework — bored, disrupted, but bright — are happily completing two-and-a-half hours a night,” she said. “It’s like, it isn’t a job if you’re enjoying it.” Of the 23 IB students at NorKam, about half are from the school’s geographical catchment area. X See DIVERSE A5

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Motorists sit comfortably and safely with a designated RED NOSE driver and volunteer navigator. The escort vehicle drives the Operation Red Nose team to other clients or back to the headquarters. The service is free and confidential, however, donations are accepted and will go towards amateur sport right here in our own community.

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TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

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A5

Let us Welcome You

COVER PAGE STORY Teacher Scott Simpson commands the attention of his IB-program class, whose students include Darla Beemster (left) and Olivia Strobel-Steinebach. Dave Eagles photos/KTW

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CARSON CHANTZ, 16 GOAL: ENGINEERING “I just glided through normal school — one hour of homework a night. But, it’s a total change now, having to get the mindset to retain the information you’re learning.”

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GREG GOFF, 16 GOAL: VETERINARY SCHOOL “The expectations are a lot higher and the tests are really difficult. It’s kind of weird having so much based on the final.”

SEAN GUY, 16 GOAL: ORTHODONTIST OR VETERINARIAN “The main difference is the expected homework. In IB, you don’t get homework per se, but you’re expected to review your notes. I went to a UBC seminar a couple of weeks ago and I talked to a couple students who said this course prepares you for university.”

The other half, like Gotro, switched to the home of the Saints for the program itself, which is the only IB curriculum in B.C. outside of the Lower Mainland or Victoria. According to Lindquist, the families from which the students come are diverse — ranging from doctors and lawyers to elected officials and lowerincome North Kamloops locals. Next year, when the current crop of NorKam IB students moves on to Grade 12, it will be replaced by a new cohort of 11th graders, making the total program enrolment about 50 students. Lindquist said interest in IB makes her think it’s going to get a lot bigger than that.

“I bet there will be 60 kids in each cohort and we’d have to start turning away kids,” she said, hypothesizing about what it might look like in five years. “I think that, as parents realize this prepares them so well for university, there will be an increase in students.” Last week, 126 people showed up when NorKam hosted an IB information meeting for students in Grade 9 and Grade 10. Most attendees were from the North Shore, but every part of Kamloops was represented, as well as Logan Lake, Merritt and Chase. Lindquist said there were even three students from the privately run St. Ann’s Academy, which is routinely ranked as the top school academically in Kamloops.

The IB program is not cost-prohibitive. Students pay $40 per month, which covers expenses associated with international exams. It also falls under the Kamloops-Thompson school district’s financial-hardship plan, which means anyone who can’t afford the fees can have them waived. Gotro said being in a close-knit group of students who spend the vast majority of the school day in the same room has made the transition — to IB and to NorKam — easier. “It’s really different because Barriere [secondary] has like 175 people,” she said, gesturing down one of NorKam’s busy hallways for perspective. “All of us here have our classes together. We all stick together.”

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SACHIN SUNDHU, 16 GOAL: UNIVERSITY “It’s the content you learn as opposed to regular schooling — it’s not just memorizing. You’re trying to discuss it and learn it as a whole.”

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A6 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

Mayor sees ‘ripple effect’ from Domtar layoffs with Human Resources Development Canada and other agencies to provide services for those workers facing the axe. Domtar also plans to meet with the union to work on an adjustment plan. Matheson said the union expects to meet with Domtar next week, to determine if any of the 125 jobs can be saved and discuss training initiatives for those whose positions will be eliminated. Anita Grover, interim executive director of Venture Kamloops, said the community will feel the impact of the job losses, in part because Domtar workers have been such generous supporters of local charitable causes. “It is a significant size and, unfortunately, it will have an impact on Kamloops,” she said. But, Grover added, there is a possibility those laid off may be able to find work at manufactur-

Pulp mill will lay off 125 workers; 29 per cent of its work force andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com

is more competitive in the global pulp market. Domtar produces about 350,000 metric tons of softwood pulp each year. Matheson said it’s not yet clear who the A-line closure will effect, since workers typically work both lines — sometimes within the same shift. “We, the executive, haven’t been told the breakdown of this yet,” he said, “so we’re unsure of everyone who’s effected. But, obviously, the junior people will be the most effected.” Matheson said emotions are running high at the mill following the announcement, which workers received at about the same time as the general public. “People are devastated,” Matheson said. Skene said the company plans co-ordinate

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Mayor Peter Milobar said Domtar’s decision to shut down one of its pulp machines and lay off 125 workers came as a surprise and a disappointment. “I guess the bright side is it’s not the full mill, but certainly 125 jobs is going to be sorely missed,” he said. In addition to direct jobs, Milobar said the closure would likely have a “ripple effect” to other area businesses, including companies transporting product to and from the pulp mill and sawmills that will now need to find a new place to take their sawdust. Domtar will lay off nearly one-third of its employees by March of next year as it shuts down one of two pulp machines at its Kamloops mill. The company will shuttering its A-line machine, which produces 120,000 metric tons of sawdust pulp per year. Of the company’s 426 workers, 125 will be effected by the shutdown. Of that number, 107 are unionized. Domtar spokeswoman Bonny Skene said the A-line is the smaller of the mill’s two pulp operations, noting sawdust pulp is less competitive than the softwood pulp produced on the B-line. “It’s relatively small so, in a global pulp market, it’s not what we would call a scale operation,” she said. “And, it competes in a market of hardwood pulp, which is produced by many producers in the Southern Hemisphere that have much different cost structures.” The mill was also facing repair costs on the A-line, Skene said, after issues with the machine’s recovery boiler were discovered during a maintenance outage at the end of October. Murray Matheson, president of Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada Local 10-B

said Domtar has raised concerns about the viability of the A-line in the past, noting the union had been aware the boiler was nearing the end of its lifespan for several years. “So, I guess that day came and the company looked at options and chose this one, which is probably the worst possible option,” he said. Skene declined to say what repairs would have cost the company. In 2010, Domtar retrofitted a recovery boiler on its B-line with the help of a federal government grant of $57 million, about half of which went to boiler repairs. The B-line, which produces long-fibre pulp using wood chips rather than sawdust, will continue operations. Skene said the product produced on that machine • T R O L L B E A D S • S E I K O • B U L OVA • C K WA T C H E S •

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A7

LOCAL NEWS

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Mapping out the War of 1812 For students at Sa-Hali secondary, studying the War of 1812 became a matter of walking with the Shawnee and Potawatomi, marching with the British to burn Washington, visiting the Battle of Chippewa and swimming the Great Lakes, next to such vessels bearing the USS and RMS markers. Social-studies students at the Arrowstone Drive school were able to get up close and personal with the war (as long as they removed their shoes) via a massive floor map documenting the threeyear conflict. The map — an aweinspiring, 36-foot-by29-foot creation listing major battles, significant forts and maritime events while illustrating by colour American- and British-held territory — arrived at Sa-Hali on Friday, Dec. 14, as part of a Canada-wide tour. It will return in June. The map is actually one of four com-

Dave Eagles/KTW

missioned by the Royal Canadian Geographical Society, Canadian Geographic and the federal government, all made in Canada and all for less than $10,000 each. The scale of each map is 200 kilometres per foot and each map is accompanied with an intricate teaching kit, including pylons, chains and coloured blocks, all of which can be used to mimick troop movements and territorial shifts. It is, in essence, a lifesized game of Risk with a Canadian bent. Sa-Hali became a destination for the map thanks to teacher Beth Dye, who sits on the board of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society. “It has been interesting,” Dye said as the final social-studies class put on their shoes and left the library, where the map commanded the centre of the room. “I think the kids really enjoyed the interactive nature of it.”

During the final class visit, teacher-librarian Cecile McVittie led the students through a War of 1812-inspired game of Simon Sez. The final question — “Simon Sez stand in the country that won the

war” — saw every student remain north of the border. Every student but one, Levi Cameron, who made sure that he straddles he boundary, a foot in each country. Yes, the war was, in

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fact, a tie, something the Grade 10 student knew. “I just love history,” he said. “I love to study this stuff.” For more information on the map, go online to rcgs.org and search “War of 1812 map”.

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A8 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

VIEWPOINT

KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

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

Talking about tragedy essential

PUBLISHER Kelly Hall

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

ADVERTISING Manager: Jack Bell Ray Jolicoeur, Linda Bolton, Don Levasseur, Randy Schroeder, Ed Erickson, Brittany Bailey, Kimberley McCart

CIRCULATION Manager: Anne-Marie John Serena Platzer

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

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

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

MPs demand transparency — until it reaches their expenses

T

HE CONSERVATIVE government’s decision to plod forward with legislation that will compel unions to reveal to all how and where they spend their money is, naturally, making unions angry. Union officials have argued Bill C-377, which passed the House of Commons and will become law if and when it passes the Senate, is an unnecessary, unconstitutional invasion of privacy that treats union finances differently from other private corporations that benefit from similar tax breaks with respect to tax-deductible donations. The House of Commons finance committee also learned mandating union fiscal transparency won’t come cheap. The Canada Revenue Agency estimates it will cost $2.4 million to administer the bill for the first two years and about a million dollars per year thereafter. Of course, that figure is a very rough estimate, based on fewer than 1,000 submissions, a number even the Parliamentary Budget Office concedes is likely too low. On a scale of 1 to 10 among issues that are of crucial importance in Canada right now, this private member’s bill on the cusp of becoming law sits at about 11. However, on a scale 1 to 10 on the hypocrisy meter, Bill C-377 and its supporters are No. 1 with a bullet. Consider the Conservative MP who created this contentious bill — South Surrey-White Rock-Cloverdale’s Russ Hiebert, who spends your tax dollars with as much frugality as a dipsomaniac at closing time. “I believe there is a genuine public purpose served by requiring financial transparency in all institutions that

CHRISTOPHER FOULDS Newsroom

MUSINGS receive a substantial public benefit,” Hiebert said during the bill’s debate. This is the same politician who was anything but transparent when asked to explain his obscenely high expense tab as an MP in the 2008-2009 fiscal year, when he charged $637,000 to the taxpayer — the highest of any MP in B.C. and second-highest among all MPs across Canada. He claimed the rich figure was related to his decision to fly his family back and forth to Ottawa (a practice that, while allowed, is nonetheless a grotesque waste of public funds), yet the fact much of the spending ($400,000 of the total) came from other areas prompted many on his election district association to resign last year. It’s not only Hiebert being the author of Bill C-377 that makes the process so odious. It extends to Conservative party MPs who voted in favour of this legislation — and only five Conservatives voted alongside opposition parties to oppose it. These would be the same Conservative MPs who in 2010, along with their Liberal and NDP counterparts, vociferously opposed allowing then-auditor general Sheila Fraser to audit their spending habits. Transparency in how unions spend

their money? Absolutely. Transparency in how MPs dish our cash? Are you crazy? The vast majority of MPs reveal superficial information regarding how they spend your money and are still not required to reveal detailed receipts. Take, for example, KamloopsThompson-Cariboo Conservative MP Cathy McLeod, who voted in favoured of Bill C-377, citing the need for transparency in how unions spend their members’ money. However, McLeod remains lessthan-transparent when the issue is expenditures. Two years ago, during the storm surrounding MPs’ resolve to keep their spending details secret, I asked McLeod to break down her $110,000 travel bill, her $25,000 housing tab in Ottawa and other reported expenses. Alas, my request was refused. There are MPs — Liberals Michelle Simson (Scarborough-Southwest) is the most noteworthy — who take that extra step in detailing expenses. Check out her website at michellesimson.ca and see how vastly superior her financial disclosure is, compared to websites of McLeod and others. In the 2011-2012 fiscal year, Canada’s 308 MPs spent a collective $121.3 million, which is a 34 per cent increase from about a decade ago, when 301 MPs spent a collective $90.1 million. The dollars have increased; information linked to those loonies have not. When it comes to union spending, our governing MPs demand the transparency of air; when it comes to how they spend your money, they cling to the transparency of lead. editor@kamloopsthisweek.com

The horror of the mass murder at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., will resonate for some time to come. The fact the killer targeted 20 little boys and girls among his victims only lends more gravity to the incident. The shooting spree was the worst ever committed in an elementary school in the United States and was, as President Barack Obama noted as he spoke in Newtown on Sunday, Dec. 16, the fourth such mass shooting at a school during his four years in the White House. While Americans continue to debate gun control and try to explain why their country alone is plagued with so many repeat incidents, the rest of us are left to determine how to explain such horror to our kids. On Friday, Dec. 15, the Kamloops-Thompson school district created a memo (adapted from New York City Health) for students to take home. The memo, which can be read online at kamloopsthisweek.com, offers advice to parents in talking to their children about such tragedies. In addition to the memo, the school district called the homes of every student with a pre-recorded message from superintendent Terry Sullivan. The advice is good and it comes from experts in the field. We would hope, however, that teachers in classrooms throughout the school district are also talking to their students about Newtown, educating their students about what happened, explaining the best they can and reassuring the kids that such events are extremely rare. Teachers spend an enormous amount of time with students. They are able to see the students as parents often cannot as various situations present themselves. While it may be advisable, as the memo stated, to limit your child’s exposure to social media and news about the Newtown mass murder, we would hope teachers are adopting an open-ear policy for students who wish to talk about the tragedy and ask questions. Yes, it is terrifying, but we can all help place everything in perspective.

OUR

VIEW


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A9

YOUROPINION

KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

Palestine did indeed exist Those ‘new’ citizens

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

A selection of comments on KTW stories, culled online

Re: Story: Tentative city tax hike: $83.70 on average: “Every year, it’s the same thing. “We’re told the tax hike would have been higher, but our city councillors cut back on other items to arrive at a modest increase in taxes, sewer, water, garbage, etc. “Every year it seems to be almost twice the rate of inflation. This year, a licence for my dog went up 47 per cent. Yep, 47 per cent. “It’s only a few dollars to us individually, but was is the rational behind an increase like that?” — posted by Doren Quinton

Re: Story: Hockey star convicted of assault causing bodily harm: “Hockey guru or not, let’s not lose sight of the damage that has been caused. “Why should he benefit from holding a position of example to not only fellow students, but younger kids? “I say take his position. He should start at the bottom. “His behaviour is shameful and there has to be a severe enough consequence. “What better way than to strip him of his position on the Thompson Rivers University hockey team?” — posted by Dana-Leigh Tomada

Editor: Wow! That’s the nicest thing I can say in print after reading Hena Schlund’s letter of Dec. 4 (‘Fact is, there is no Israeli occupation of the Gaza Strip’). She is ignoring what is and has been happening to the people of Gaza, formerly the country of Palestine, for the past 60 years. If I were to deny the Holocaust, I would be charged with a crime, yet Schlund denies what has happened to the people of Palestine, who have been living in that area for the past 2,000 years or so. Time to check our history books. Let’s start with maps. Prior to 1945, National Geographic maps clearly show a country called Palestine with a capital city. This changed after the Second World War when England pulled out due to violent actions perpetrated by Jewish terrorists (look up the bombing of the King David Hotel in the 1940s). In 79 A.D. the Roman Empire wiped out Israel. The area then belonged to many other countries, until it became the country of Palestine. The current country of Israel was founded by taking the land from the Palestinians, who could not stand up to the combined might of England and the U.S. at the end of the war. These two countries decided to create a country for the Jewish people due to what happened during the war. I can imagine how those Palestinians felt when they were told their country was not going to be theirs any more. Israel says it is protecting its people from hostile attacks that won’t stop. How about this? Give the land back to those who were there before Israel.

Editor: Re: Dave Shaw’s letter of Dec. 11 (‘Kamloops: Terrible Driver Capital of Canada’): I agree with Shaw that there are a lot of bad drivers in Kamloops. However, I would caution him to be careful about labelling people “newcomers to Canada.” Does he know this for a fact or is it an assumption? As a visible minority myself, I may look like a “newcomer to Canada,” but I don’t think that, after 40 years, I qualify as “new.” I hope Shaw is paying more attention to the road than spending time counting and looking at individual faces to determine their age, sex and ethnicity. Yolande Donas Kamloops

Stop building illegal settlements in land that is not Israel’s. Acknowledge the rights of those who were there before Israel and they may acknowledge Israel’s rights. Israel may not have death camps, but it does force a select ethnic group into a small walled-off area and prevent them from having free will, the ability to travel freely and the ability to call themselves free. Sounds very familiar to anyone who lived in Warsaw during the 1940s. Thousands of Palestinians have died due to this conflict; hundreds of Israelis, too. Both sides are to blame, but one side started it all. It’s time for that side to take the higher road and actually want to make peace. Until then, this is all going to continue. Michael Martin Kamloops

Relax — and enjoy some egg nog Editor: Re: Cindy Rose’s letter of Dec. 6 (‘Enough with the petitions’) in which she stated how tired she was of listening to professional protester Ruth Madsen. I could not agree more. Madsen and her gang have beaten the

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Ajax mine issue to death. The must have become bored because they have now moved on to protesting the housing of Clover the Kermode bear at the B.C. Wildlife Park. Who knows what the next focus of their protest will be? The bear is safe and

the jury is still out on the proposed Ajax mine. Let the experts do their jobs. I am sick of the socalled experts, made up of left-wingers and led by Madsen. Settle down for the holidays and drink some egg nog. Robert Alexander Kamloops

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to hear a young woman complaining about her wait and giving the nurse a hard time. Clearly I couldn’t help but listen. This young woman and her mother were quite upset about having to wait two hours to be seen. I was disappointed in these people when I heard that they had come to the emergency department to get a birth-control shot. The nurses handled this situation with compassion and respect. Good for you, nurses! So, for anybody unhappy about parking, wait times, etc. at RIH, perhaps we need to look at for what our limited heath-care resources are being used. Thank you, Royal Inland Hospital. Jennifer Edgecombe Kamloops

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Royal treatment at Kamloops hospital Editor: I find that I read positive things about Royal Inland Hospital so infrequently that, when something good happens, I must report it. My two-year-old daughter was in respiratory distress from either asthma or pneumonia (who knows with toddlers!). I packed up her and my six-month-old and arrived at the emergency department of RIH at 8:30 a.m. We were immediately seen by a nurse, a respiratory therapist and a physician. We had X-rays and treatment and were released by 11:30 a.m. The volunteers and staff were amazing! Thank you to all you wonderful people at RIH for taking such good care of us. While we were there, I was surprised

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

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A10 ❖ TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

The Precious Gift of Faith May we all share in it as we celebrate this most blessed season

TUESDAY, December 18, 2012 ❖ A11

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

The Precious Gift of Faith

These churches would like to invite you to join them in celebrating the reason for the season

ALL ABOUT ADVENT SEASON

CHRISTMAS EVE DEC 24 CANDLE LIGHT SERVICE 7 PM With:

Calvary Community Church Bridge Baptist Church

WHAT IS ADVENT? Advent is the season that begins the liturgical year. It consists of four Sundays, starting with the Sunday closest to Nov. 30. The word “advent” is derived from the Latin adventus, which means “coming” or “arrival.” In the societies of the Roman Empire, the word “adventus” referred to the arrival of a person of dignity and great power — a king, emperor or even one of the gods. For Christians, Advent is the time when the church patiently prepares for the coming of the King of Kings — Jesus Christ.

Grace Life Church

At: 1205 Rogers Way • 250-374-2888

Kamloops Roman Catholic Parishes Christmas and New Year’s Mass Times Sacred Heart Cathedral 255 Nicola St. - 372-2581 S Christmas Eve 5:00 pm (Mass at St. Ann’s Academy) 8:00 pm and 12:00 Midnight (Both at Cathedral) Christmas Day 8:30 and 11:30 am New Year’s Eve 7:00 pm (as well as Vigil, Adoration & Benediction 11:00 pm – 12:00 am) New Year’s Day 8:30 and 11:30 am

Advent is the first part of a larger liturgical season that includes Christmas and Epiphany and continues until the beginning of Lent. Even though Advent occurs in the month of December and is usually considered to be a prelude to Christmas, it is not simply about waiting for the birth of Christ. Advent is as much about preparing for Christ’s return on Judgment Day. Indeed, the Advent season focuses on Christ’s threefold coming — past, present and future. First, we remember the Lord’s humble first coming in Bethlehem 2,000 years ago. Second, we give thanks for His present and continual coming to us through Word and Sacrament. Finally, we look forward with hope and longing to His second coming in glory to judge the living and the dead on the Last Day.

Our Lady of Perpetual Help 635 Tranquille Rd - 376-5541 Christmas Eve 5:00 pm (Family Mass) and 8:00 pm (Both masses in the Parish Centre) Christmas Day 8:30 and 10:30 am New Year’s Eve 5:00 pm New Year’s Day 8:30 and 10:30 am 2826 Bank Rd - 579-8711 9:00 pm 10:30 am 10:30 am

Sun Peaks - Delta Hotel Christmas Eve 4:00 pm Our Lady of Lourdes - Heffley Creek - 579-8711 Christmas Eve 6:30 pm New Year’s Day 8:30 am St. Joseph’s - 200 Chilcotin 372-2581 Christmas Day 1:00 pm New Year’s Day 1:00 pm Blessed Sacrament - Chase Christmas Eve 7:00 pm at Chase Native Spiritual Centre (across the bridge) Christmas Day 9:00 am (at Blessed Sacrament) New Year’s Day 9:00 am (at Blessed Sacrament)

Kamloops Evangelical Free Church

Light up your World

1132-8th Street • 250-376-9365

Christmas Eve Service December 24th at 6:00pm

CHRISTMAS EVE • 5PM CANDLELIGHT SERVICE

Join us as we celebrate the birth of our Saviour!

SUNDAY SERVICE DEC. 26TH • 10AM www.kamloopsefree.com

Valleyview Bible Church 2386 E. Trans Canada Hwy 250.374.7444 www.valleyviewchurch.ca

11:00am Every Sunday A Warm Welcome Awaits Every Visitor ~ Candlelight & Carols ~ Christmas Eve - 6:30pm

Chirstmas 2011

gateway city church CHRISTMAS EVE SERVICES December 24th @ 5pm & 6:30pm No service December 29th or 30th

Majors Wayne & Sharleen McTaggart

REGULAR SERVICE TIMES

344 Poplar St. 250-554-1611

695 Robson Drive • 250-828-2221 (On the Corner of Summit and Robson)

WHAT IS THE CHURCH’S FOCUS DURING ADVENT?

Holy Family 2797 Sunset Drive - 372-0205 Christmas Eve 7:00 pm and 10:00 pm Christmas Day 10:30 am New Year’s Eve 5:00 pm New Year’s Day 10:30 am

St. John Vianney Christmas Eve Christmas Day New Year’s Day

Monday, December 24th 7:00 pm ~ Family Candlelight Service 11:00 pm ~ Candlelight Communion Service Tuesday, December 25th 11:00 am ~ Christmas Morning Communion Sunday, December 30th 10:30 am ~ Christmas Lessons & Carols

233 Fortune Drive • 250.376.6268 (at the north end of the Overlander Bridge)

Saturday @ 6:30pm & Sundays @ 10am 163 Oriole Rd. Kamloops, BC V2C 4N8 250.374.1050 http://www.gcchurch.ca

WHAT IS THE LITURGICAL COLOR FOR ADVENT? Purple is the traditional colour for the season of Advent. Purple was the most costly dye in ancient times and was therefore used by kings to indicate their royal status. Purple also signifies the repentance of God’s people as they patiently await the arrival of their Lord. In more recent times, some churches have adopted blue as the colour for Advent. Blue represents hope, expectation, and heaven. It is also the colour associated with the Blessed Virgin Mary in art and iconography.

FREE METHODIST CENTENNIAL CHAPEL 975 Windbreak St.

Christmas Sunday Morning Service Dec. 23 at 10:30 am Christmas Eve Candlelight Services 5:30 and 8:00 pm

You’re invited to join us! kamfm.ca

UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP Monday, December 24th ~ 5:00 pm Valleyview Hall, 2288 Park Drive

The Grinch’s Tale

A Christmas Eve service for the whole family 374-5594 • www.uukam.bc.ca

ST. ANDREWS Lutheran Church Christmas Eve Candelight Service @ 7PM Christmas Day Service @ 10:30am 815 Renfrew Ave Rev. David Shumacher 250.376.8323

Come Celebrate Christmas Eve with Us! We have three 55 minute services for you to choose from – 4:30 pm, 6:00 pm, 7:30 pm 1975 Summit Drive 250-828-1333 info@summitdrive.com www.summitdrive.com


A10 ❖ TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

The Precious Gift of Faith May we all share in it as we celebrate this most blessed season

TUESDAY, December 18, 2012 ❖ A11

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

The Precious Gift of Faith

These churches would like to invite you to join them in celebrating the reason for the season

ALL ABOUT ADVENT SEASON

CHRISTMAS EVE DEC 24 CANDLE LIGHT SERVICE 7 PM With:

Calvary Community Church Bridge Baptist Church

WHAT IS ADVENT? Advent is the season that begins the liturgical year. It consists of four Sundays, starting with the Sunday closest to Nov. 30. The word “advent” is derived from the Latin adventus, which means “coming” or “arrival.” In the societies of the Roman Empire, the word “adventus” referred to the arrival of a person of dignity and great power — a king, emperor or even one of the gods. For Christians, Advent is the time when the church patiently prepares for the coming of the King of Kings — Jesus Christ.

Grace Life Church

At: 1205 Rogers Way • 250-374-2888

Kamloops Roman Catholic Parishes Christmas and New Year’s Mass Times Sacred Heart Cathedral 255 Nicola St. - 372-2581 S Christmas Eve 5:00 pm (Mass at St. Ann’s Academy) 8:00 pm and 12:00 Midnight (Both at Cathedral) Christmas Day 8:30 and 11:30 am New Year’s Eve 7:00 pm (as well as Vigil, Adoration & Benediction 11:00 pm – 12:00 am) New Year’s Day 8:30 and 11:30 am

Advent is the first part of a larger liturgical season that includes Christmas and Epiphany and continues until the beginning of Lent. Even though Advent occurs in the month of December and is usually considered to be a prelude to Christmas, it is not simply about waiting for the birth of Christ. Advent is as much about preparing for Christ’s return on Judgment Day. Indeed, the Advent season focuses on Christ’s threefold coming — past, present and future. First, we remember the Lord’s humble first coming in Bethlehem 2,000 years ago. Second, we give thanks for His present and continual coming to us through Word and Sacrament. Finally, we look forward with hope and longing to His second coming in glory to judge the living and the dead on the Last Day.

Our Lady of Perpetual Help 635 Tranquille Rd - 376-5541 Christmas Eve 5:00 pm (Family Mass) and 8:00 pm (Both masses in the Parish Centre) Christmas Day 8:30 and 10:30 am New Year’s Eve 5:00 pm New Year’s Day 8:30 and 10:30 am 2826 Bank Rd - 579-8711 9:00 pm 10:30 am 10:30 am

Sun Peaks - Delta Hotel Christmas Eve 4:00 pm Our Lady of Lourdes - Heffley Creek - 579-8711 Christmas Eve 6:30 pm New Year’s Day 8:30 am St. Joseph’s - 200 Chilcotin 372-2581 Christmas Day 1:00 pm New Year’s Day 1:00 pm Blessed Sacrament - Chase Christmas Eve 7:00 pm at Chase Native Spiritual Centre (across the bridge) Christmas Day 9:00 am (at Blessed Sacrament) New Year’s Day 9:00 am (at Blessed Sacrament)

Kamloops Evangelical Free Church

Light up your World

1132-8th Street • 250-376-9365

Christmas Eve Service December 24th at 6:00pm

CHRISTMAS EVE • 5PM CANDLELIGHT SERVICE

Join us as we celebrate the birth of our Saviour!

SUNDAY SERVICE DEC. 26TH • 10AM www.kamloopsefree.com

Valleyview Bible Church 2386 E. Trans Canada Hwy 250.374.7444 www.valleyviewchurch.ca

11:00am Every Sunday A Warm Welcome Awaits Every Visitor ~ Candlelight & Carols ~ Christmas Eve - 6:30pm

Chirstmas 2011

gateway city church CHRISTMAS EVE SERVICES December 24th @ 5pm & 6:30pm No service December 29th or 30th

Majors Wayne & Sharleen McTaggart

REGULAR SERVICE TIMES

344 Poplar St. 250-554-1611

695 Robson Drive • 250-828-2221 (On the Corner of Summit and Robson)

WHAT IS THE CHURCH’S FOCUS DURING ADVENT?

Holy Family 2797 Sunset Drive - 372-0205 Christmas Eve 7:00 pm and 10:00 pm Christmas Day 10:30 am New Year’s Eve 5:00 pm New Year’s Day 10:30 am

St. John Vianney Christmas Eve Christmas Day New Year’s Day

Monday, December 24th 7:00 pm ~ Family Candlelight Service 11:00 pm ~ Candlelight Communion Service Tuesday, December 25th 11:00 am ~ Christmas Morning Communion Sunday, December 30th 10:30 am ~ Christmas Lessons & Carols

233 Fortune Drive • 250.376.6268 (at the north end of the Overlander Bridge)

Saturday @ 6:30pm & Sundays @ 10am 163 Oriole Rd. Kamloops, BC V2C 4N8 250.374.1050 http://www.gcchurch.ca

WHAT IS THE LITURGICAL COLOR FOR ADVENT? Purple is the traditional colour for the season of Advent. Purple was the most costly dye in ancient times and was therefore used by kings to indicate their royal status. Purple also signifies the repentance of God’s people as they patiently await the arrival of their Lord. In more recent times, some churches have adopted blue as the colour for Advent. Blue represents hope, expectation, and heaven. It is also the colour associated with the Blessed Virgin Mary in art and iconography.

FREE METHODIST CENTENNIAL CHAPEL 975 Windbreak St.

Christmas Sunday Morning Service Dec. 23 at 10:30 am Christmas Eve Candlelight Services 5:30 and 8:00 pm

You’re invited to join us! kamfm.ca

UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP Monday, December 24th ~ 5:00 pm Valleyview Hall, 2288 Park Drive

The Grinch’s Tale

A Christmas Eve service for the whole family 374-5594 • www.uukam.bc.ca

ST. ANDREWS Lutheran Church Christmas Eve Candelight Service @ 7PM Christmas Day Service @ 10:30am 815 Renfrew Ave Rev. David Shumacher 250.376.8323

Come Celebrate Christmas Eve with Us! We have three 55 minute services for you to choose from – 4:30 pm, 6:00 pm, 7:30 pm 1975 Summit Drive 250-828-1333 info@summitdrive.com www.summitdrive.com


A12 ™ TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

In Christmas spirit, suspect gift-wraps herself for Kamloops Mounties Christmas came early for Kamloops Mounties on the weekend when a suspect in a string of recent property crimes gift-wrapped herself for investigators. RCMP Staff Sgt. Grant Learned said police were called to the Sahali Safeway on Saturday, Dec. 15, for a report of a woman

POLICE

short distance away, passed out in the driver’s seat of her car. Because she was intoxicated by drugs, Learned said, she will likely face a charge of impaired driving. She has yet to be charged in relation to the gift-card scams, but police believe she may be responsible for a number of recent incidents of mail theft.

both 59, were arrested and spent the night in jail. Learned described

their behaviour as “childish.� “They weren’t sharing and they were using

their outside voices inside,� he quipped. Another man, 35, found himself in hot

water after smashing a glass fire-extinguisher case. Learned said he

made reimbursement plans with hotel management and was not arrested.

To the community of Kamloops

Party + booze = Grinches

attempting to fraudulently purchase gift cards. Safeway staff told police they thought the same woman had tried pulling a similar scam at the North Shore Safeway. When officers arrived at the grocery store, the suspect was gone — but not far. She was found a

A little too much Christmas cheer landed a Kamloops couple in the drunk tank after a weekend office party got out of control, police say. Learned said Mounties were called to the Kamloops Convention Centre on Friday night (Dec. 14) after a number of drunk revellers at a multioffice party started causing trouble. A man and a woman,

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As 2012 draws to a close, we would like to take the time to thank the Kamloops community for your patience as we prepare our Environmental Assessment Application for submission. Moving into 2013, our work will continue to focus on finalizing the baseline studies that form the foundation of our application; the application which will answer the questions you’ve been asking. We want to assure you that the consultation process is integral and relevant to the outcome of our Environmental Assessment Application. We are mindful of our responsibility to keep you apprised of our ongoing activities and developments and, as such, we feel it is important to inform you that we are planning to conduct drilling and ground surveying throughout the Project area. The information collected will be used as support for our Environmental Assessment Application. We will have staff and equipment working in the area and have notified the affected land-owners of where and how this work will be done. We are also coordinating our efforts with Kinder Morgan to ensure that the integrity of the local pipeline is maintained as we do this work. Drilling and surveying is expected to commence before year end and be completed in the spring of 2013. KGHM International is looking forward to further engaging local residents and other stakeholder groups in order to advance the Ajax Project in a way that will ensure we are making a positive contribution to the City of Kamloops and the Thompson Nicola Regional District. From all of us at KGHM International, we wish you a safe and happy holiday season and a joyful new year. We look forward to talking with you u ssoon. oon. Sincerely, KGHM International Ltd.

/WN 9OUR /WN 0OLICY AND 4AKE #ONTROL #ALL 5S .OW &OR -ORE )NFORMATION 250-374-2138

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TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A13

Dutch Masters Painting

LOCAL NEWS

3

Jim Mann spoke in Kamloops on Thursday, Dec. 13. Mann is urging officials to take a hard look at how dementias are handled. For more information on his campaign, go online to alzheimerbc.org. Tim Petruk/KTW

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. . . to support and provide care for the increasing number of people with Alzheimer’s and other dementias.” There are an estimated 70,000 people in B.C. living with Alzheimer’s or another dementia. According to Mann, that number will balloon to 177,000 in the next three decades. “I’m looking for a document that clearly identifies the way forward,” he said. “Dementia must be a health-care priority in B.C.” Among the issues Mann would like to see addressed are support for family caregivers, policies promoting early diagnosis and advanced training for health-care workers. For more information on Mann’s campaign, go online to alzheimerbc. org.

kitchen countertops! tim@kamloopsthisweek.com

An advocate for Alzheimer’s awareness in B.C. — and himself a sufferer — was in Kamloops last week, urging officials to take a hard look at how dementias are handled. Jim Mann, who was diagnosed with dementia in 2007, called for planning to cope with an anticipated spike in the numbers of Alzheimer’s patients. “I am pushing for a plan and pushing real hard,” he said. “Businesses don’t just happen to make products. They plan how to make them and plan how many they need. “Likewise, B.C. needs a plan

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Gift Cards One gift card, hundreds of choices! Give friends and family the ultimate gift card. One card, so many choices! Gift cards can be purchased at the Sahali Centre Administration office.

Santa Arrives! December 1st to 23rd

Sahali Centre Mall convinced Santa to make an appearance to attend the Santa Spirit Event at SantaLand inside the Mall. Families are invited to see Santa arrive at 1:30pm and take a professional picture with Santa and get some goodies from the North Pole.

Opening December 1st - 21st Hand-crafted treasures have been created by the Hospice Auxiliary during the last year. come and get one-ofa-kind gifts while they last. Light up the Hospice Tree of Life in memory of someone who is no longer here to share your Christmas. This is a beloved ritual many people revisit every year.

Christmas at Sahali Centre Mall! Mall Hours:

Early Dec Hours: Mon to Thurs 9:30 to 5:30, Fri open until 9pm*; Sat 9:30 to 5:30, Sun 12 noon to 5 PM. From Dec 12th to 22nd, open until 8 PM Mon to Thurs. *Only participating merchants will be open until 9pm, others close at 8pm.


A14 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

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Central Pub staff without pay for 14 days X From A2

Since April, Hill said, the pub has made sure to keep a doorman on duty throughout the weekend, and liquor inspectors have spoken to staff about how to spot underage drinkers. But, Hill said, there’s not much they can do to prepare for the coming shutdown, noting her employees aren’t taking the news well.

“They’re scared, the same way it would be if someone said to you that, through no fault of your own, you’re not going to be able to work for two weeks,” she said. Hill said she would prefer to see a monetary fine for pubs that run afoul of the liquor laws for the first time, with closures being implemented after that. She also believes

Pavilion out of running The folks at Western Canada Theatre will have to look elsewhere for money to upgrade Pavilion Theatre as it didn’t make it into the finals of the Aviva Community Fund competition. The theatre had entered in the $50,000 to $100,000 category of the online competition, looking for money to upgrade the decades-old building on Lorne Street, home to its operations, its youth-education programming and many plays. The insurance company decides on projects to support through an online contest where supporters can vote daily for their preferred projects. The Pavilion entry made it to the semifinals, but a lastminute push by others bumped it from the top 10. Kamloops’ Best Italian Experience

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the door knowing he’s breaking the law. He’s totally aware he’s doing it,” Hill said. “But, he just walks on his way. “The person who happened to make a mistake and serve him — if he looked old enough or they weren’t aware — they’re the one that pays the penalty, as do the other people that weren’t even involved.”

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minors who enter pubs and bars should face stiffer penalties when they are found drinking. In the case of the 17 year-old, Hill said she was told he was an American citizen on his way back to the United States. She is not aware if he received any reprimand. “That teenager, he’s coming through

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TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A15

LOCAL NEWS

No more authorized home marijuana grow-ops The federal government is poised to eliminate licensed medical marijuana grow-ops in homes that have long been criticized over safety concerns and connections to the illegal drug trade. Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq has announced a planned shift to a new system of federally regulated commercial producers of medical pot who will supply authorized users who have a prescription from their doctor. “Under our new rule, only facilities that meet strict security requirements will be able to pro-

duce marijuana for medical purposes,” Aglukkaq told a press conference in Maple Ridge on Sunday, Dec. 16. The new system — which also ends government production of medical pot — is expected to come at a sharply higher price for the nearly 26,000 users authorized to possess medical marijuana. Authorities have argued most medical pot home growers are producing far more plants than they require, suggesting rampant abuse of the program by licensees selling into the illicit market.

“The high value of marijuana on the illicit market increases the risk of home invasions,” Aglukkaq noted. “These production operations can also present fire and toxic mould hazards.” The Fire Chiefs Association of B.C. (FCABC) said the change will improve safety in residential neighbourhoods. “The fire service across Canada has been raising the alarm about the fire and safety risks associated with growing marijuana indoors for many years,” said FCABC president Len Garis, who is also

Surrey’s fire chief. Garis stressed the fire service has never been concerned about the use of marijuana for medical purposes. “Our focus is on how medical marijuana is grown,” he said. “The fact is, medical marijuana has typically been grown in a residential setting, which is not suitable or safe for growing marijuana.” Under previous regu-

lations, medical-marijuana grow operations operated without their local municipal government’s knowledge or approval and were not subject to health, fire, building or plumbing inspections. The federal Ministry of Health said it intends to implement the system by March 31, 2014, at which point all current licences to possess or produce pot would expire.

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A Kamloops woman who claims a legal medicinal-marijuana grow caused government social workers to temporarily remove her family from their Dallas home says she’s launching a human-rights complaint. Angela Ferguson said Ministry of Children and Family Development social workers booted her family — including her eight-month-old son, 15-year-old stepson and medical-marijuana cardholder husband — from their home on Nov. 28. According to Ferguson, social work-

ers showed up alongside RCMP, who were responding to a tip about a grow-op. Ferguson said Mounties checked her Health Canada papers and went on their way, but the social workers did not. The social workers, Ferguson said, ordered her family to leave the home pending a number of tests. Ferguson said she had to come up with more than $4,500 to pay to have the air quality, electrical and ventilation examined. Though her home passed inspection,

Ferguson said there is no means for her to be reimbursed for the tests. Ferguson said her family is filing a complaint against the ministry with the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal.

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A16 ❖ TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

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TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A17

Midget Blazers enter Christmas break on a high It has been a rough season thus far for the Thompson Blazers of the B.C. Major Midget Hockey League. But, the club got a welcome assist from Santa entering the Christmas break, with the Blazers on a four-game undefeated streak. The club is tied with Kootenay for last place in the 11-team league, sporting a 3-19-2 record. However, the club appears to be turning the corner. Its home sweep on the weekend of the Fraser Valley Thunderbirds followed two hard-fought ties the weekend previous in Surrey against the Valley West Hawks. At Interior Savings Centre on the weekend, the Blazers defeated the Thunderbirds by scores of 3-1 and 8-5. Cole McCaskill (2G) and Nick Chyzowski (1G)

Riley Jepson (15) of the Thompson Blazers scores against Fraser Valley Thunderbird goaltender Zach Dyment in the Blazers’ 8-5 victory at Interior Savings Centre on Sunday, Dec. 16. Allen Douglas photo

paced the Blazers in the 3-1 victory, with goaltender Griffin Baillie making 32 saves. In the 8-5 triumph, the Blazers were led by Riley Harder (2G), Dante Caillier, Chyzowski, David Larouche, Dexter Robinson, Riley Jepson and Carson Richards. The Blazers finished the game with 52 shots, while goaltender Kyle Michalovsky turned aside 32 saves to secure the win. Next up for the Tyler Forsythe-coached Blazers is the Richmond International Midget Tournament on Dec. 27. The club returns to league play on Saturday, Jan. 5 (5 p.m. faceoff) and Sunday, Jan. 6 (11 a.m. faceoff) when the fourth-place Vancouver Northeast Chiefs (14-7-3) come to the region for a pair of games at the Art Holding Arena in Chase.

INSIDE X Kamloops Blazers sign another Lipon/A18 KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

SPORTS

Sports: Marty Hastings sports@kamloopsthisweek.com Ph: 374-7467 Ext: 235

THE SPARTAN IS COMING Athletes in Kamloops have a new obstacle to overcome. Sun Peaks Resort will host the Spartan Race — “the world’s leading obstacle-racing event,” according to race organizers said — on Saturday, Sept. 28, and Sunday, Sept. 29, 2013. “The unique obstacle course will demand every ounce of strength, ingenuity and animal instinct you thought you lost three generations ago,” said Joe Desena, Spartan founder. “Who is a Spartan Race competitor? Everyone, really. “Men, women, students and seniors. “Spartan Races are designed for all participants, begin-

ners to hardcore warriors and marathon runners alike, to have fun and cross the finish line.” On the first day, the race will combine 12 miles of trail running with a series of obstacles, which can include jumping over fire, climbing eight-foot walls and crawling through mud. Heats of up to 250 competitors will start every 30 minutes, with the first racers slated to start running at 8 a.m. On Sunday, the Spartan Sprint — a three-mile course — will be held, along with a Spartan Kids Adventure Race at noon.

The day-long events will culminate with a festival featuring competitions, awards, music, a beer garden and an after-party. The Spartan Race was voted Outside Magazine’s best obstacle race in 2012. More than 60 races will be held across the Americas, Europe and Australia in 2013. “This is not an extreme sporting event that will scare people away,” Desena said. “It’s about the fun, getting dirty, getting down in the mud. “Something exciting and new.” Log on to spartanrace.com for more information.


A18 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS

JC Lipon has made Team Canada. The lone Kamloops Blazer invited to the national junior hockey team’s evaluation camp in Calgary survived the second and final set of cuts on Thursday, Dec. 13, and will join his teammates as they head to Ufa, Russia, home of the 2013 World Junior Hockey Championship. Of the 37 players invited to the camp, 23 made the squad. Lipon was alone on the list of previously draft-eligible players at selection camp without an NHL team. After the first scrimmage among prospective world-junior players, TSN analyst and former NHLer Ray Ferraro singled out Lipon’s play, lauding his “feisty” third period. Now that he will wear the Maple Leaf in Russia, Lipon will not be back in the Blazers’ lineup until Jan. 9, when Tri-City visits Interior Savings Centre. Through 34 games this season, the right winger is plus-23 and has 22 goals and 35 assists for 57 points, third in the Western Hockey League behind teammate Colin Smith’s 62 points. Team Canada is now in Finland and will play two exhibition games in

Helsinki before the tournament begins in Russia. Canada’s first game will take place on Dec. 26 when the squad faces Germany in a 1:30 a.m. game. Canada’s other round-robin games include a Dec. 28 tilt against Slovakia (1:30 a.m.); a Dec. 30 match against the U.S. (1:30 a.m.); and a Dec. 31 contest against Russia (6 a.m.). All games will be broadcast on TSN. BLAZER BITS: The club has signed Mitchell Lipon to a standard WHL contract. Mitchell is the 16-yearold brother of JC. Mitchell plays with the Regina Pat Canadians of the Saskatchewan Midget Hockey League. Mitchell and 16-year-old defenceman Connor Clouston will join the club from Dec. 26 to Jan. 4.

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TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS

Fulton Cup ready to tip off The 13th annual Fulton Cup begins on Wednesday, Dec. 19, at the Tournament Capital Centre and Thompson Rivers University gymnasium. The tournament decides a city highschool champion. There will be 48 games played featuring 32 teams from NorKam, South Kamloops, St.

Ann’s, Valleyview, Westsyde, Ashcroft, Barriere and Chase secondaries, along with Kamloops Christian School. There are eight teams in each of the four divisions — senior boys, senior girls, junior boys and junior girls. Games start at noon each day and wrap up at 10 p.m.

The event is sponsored by Fulton and Company and the provincial AA tournament committee. Up to 32 bursaries will be awarded by tournament’s end and all-star teams and MVPs will be named in each division. Championship games will be played on Friday, Dec. 21.

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Titans topple all foes in Edmonton The South Kamloops Titans won their second senior girls’ tournament in as many tries as they defeated the Harry Ainley Titans 86-46 in the weekend final of the REB Tournament. Tournament all-star Maya Olynyk scored 27 points and had seven assists. MVP Emma Wolfram grabbed 18 rebounds, scored 17 points and blocked eight shots. Anna Frenkel scored seven points and added 13 rebounds, Kanesha Reeves netted nine points, while Emma Piggin and Mieke Dumont both scored eight points and grabbed eight rebounds.

The Sa-Hali Sabres senior boys’ and girls’ basketball teams opened regular season league play with victories in Merritt against the Panthers. The Sabre boys won 96-53; the Sabre girls prevailed 86-17. The Sa-Hali boys were led by seniors Russell Dolson and Liam Epp, each of whom scored 16 points. Keegan Marchand chipped in with 13 points, while Riley Peterson had nine points and eight rebounds. All 12 Sa-Hali girls registered at least one point in the victory.

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A20 ❖ TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

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100-180 SEYMOUR STREET 250-374-4924


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B1

INSIDE X Classifieds/B15 SECTION

KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

COMMUNITY

Community: Christopher Foulds editor@kamloopsthisweek.com Ph: 250-374-7467 Ext: 222

Kamloops at 200: Your history In June and August, Kamloops This Week published two special editions to mark the 200th anniversary of the founding of our community. Whether you come from a family that

settled here a century ago or if you arrived last month, everyone has some kind of history with Kamloops. As part of KTW’s 200-year special publications, we asked readers for their history with

the city where the rivers meet. Today, we continue Your History, based on submissions we received. Future editions of KTW will include more Your History stories.

Times have changed — but awesome view remains What brought me to Kamloops? Like so many others, it was a job transfer for my husband way back in the late 1950s that brought us here. We were recently married and, at that time, Kamloops would certainly not have been our first choice of places to move. The city was experiencing extreme boom times and it looked for a while like we might be living in a tent but, thanks to some sleuthing by a relative, we luckily found a basement suite on Pine Street. I was working in an office in Salmon Arm prior to our move and a newly formed trucking company made frequent deliveries to our firm. The owner lived in Kamloops, so he kindly offered to move us for $30, thinking, I guess, that, as we had not been married long, we probably wouldn’t have much to move. In those days, apartments did not have appliances supplied so, for starters, we had our Fridgidaire refidgerator, our first major purchase. It was very heavy and, incidentally, its life ended more than 30 years later, chugging away quietly at our summer cabin. Quality and reliability were a given way back then. Wedding gifts and accumulated “stuff” were a lot more than he had anticipated moving but, true to his word, his reasonable quote was honoured. His firm did go on to become a very large trucking company. Jobs were plentiful and I soon found employment with the forest service on Columbia Street, an easy walk from our apartment. Two-car families were rare then and bus

Many aspects of life in Kamloops appealed to Joan Lyons and her family when she moved to the River City but it’s the view — and experiencing four distinct seasons with their own unique weather — that continues to amaze her.

service non-existent, so location was very important. Our love affair with Kamloops was off to a good start Acquiring a house became a priority and we struggled to save money for a down payment. We finally managed to accumulate the

So began the steep learning curve of home ownership skills, which were slowly and sometimes painfully learned. The interest rate on our mortgage was seven per cent. Payments were $75 plus property taxes, about $10 per month.

$1,800 payment required to buy a new twobedroom, no-basement house for $9,800 on the dusty outskirts of North Kamloop. This was before amalgamation of North and South Kamloops. New houses then were not landscaped or painted and lacked many features considered standard today.

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B2 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

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Jesse Cook (rear) and his band head out into the audience at the Kamloops Convention Centre during his show on Thursday, Dec. 13. The Canadian guitarist and composer took his Blue Guitar Tour across Canada. He started in Saint John on Wednesday, Nov. 14, and wrapped it up in Victoria on Sunday, Dec. 16. Allen Douglas/KTW

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S T O R E S

A N D

• • • • • • • • •

Lushwear Mark's Work Wearhouse McGoos Smokes 'N Stuff Mommy & Me Movie Mart North Shore Treatment Northills Dental Centre Northills Lottery Ticket Papa John’s Pizza

S E R V I C E S

F O R

Y O U R

• • • • • • • • •

PCS Wireless Ruth Saunders Optometrist Sandwich Tree Seniors Information Centre Serene Fish & Chips Shaw Cable Shoppers Drug Mart Source By Circuit City Spice of India

S H O P P I N G

• • • • • • • •

Starbucks Suzanne's TD Canada Trust Tower Barber Shop Treasures Twin Phoenix Water On The Run YMCA

C O N V E N I E N C E


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

B3

S E I KO • B U L OVA • T R O L L B E A D S • C K WAT C H E S • CA N A D I A N D I A M O N D S

Nutro

#1 Dog Toy

16 lb. All 6 flavours

THE JOLLY EGG

#1 Dog Treat

CAT GREENIES MAX Cat Food

28

16

.00 $

$

7

$ .00

3

$

.77

SCIENCE DIET

Super Meaty

7

12

9.77

$

NECKLACE Regular Price $79.99

SALE $39.99

Home of the $5 Watch Battery (Taxes & installation included)

Sahali Center Mall 25O.851.977O

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2 bags Nutro Biscuits

Starter Homes

15.74 Value

$ .97

FLUVAL

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CARPETED

28

Cat Food 8lb.

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& UXE L DE

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take place 35 feet from the basket, not from the regular three-point line; • A penalty box, an innovation introduced in the 2011 tour which would see players sent to cool off for any foul; and • Six on five — five Globetrotters play six challengers. To vote, go online to harlemglobetrotters. com. Tickets are $28 plus taxes and charges and are available at the Interior Savings Centre box office (cash only), at the TCC front desk, online at ticketweb.ca or by calling 1-888-2226608.

% STORE

And they’re hoping to find them when they head out on tour in 2013, with a stop in Kamloops on Wednesday, Feb. 13, at the Tournament capital Centre. The You Write the Rules World Tour includes a chance to vote online for what rules should be used in the game. Among the choices to vote on: • Two-ball basketball, which would see the legendary team play the game with a pair of balls; • Double points, which is pretty obvious and could lead to some wild results; • A four-point shot, which would have to

• C K WAT C H E S • CA N A D I A N D I A M O N D S

Globetrotters need some rules

UP TO

CK WATCHES

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

• T R O L L B E A D S • S E I K O • B U L O VA •

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FIND US ONLINE: WWW.PETLANDKAMLOOPS.CA & ON FACEBOOK @PETLANDKAMLOOPS


B4 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

IHA finds gem in new building A new residential-care facility being built in the city will be called the Brocklehurst Gemstone Care Centre. The name was chosen after a request for suggestions by the Interior Heath Authority and the company that will operate the facility at 1955 Tranquille Rd.,

just west of RiverBend Seniors Community. The final name was decided upon by a committee of six community representatives including Kamloops-North Thompson MLA Terry Lake, Coun. Nelly Dever, IHA residential healthservice administrator Deborah Smith, RiverBend Manor

executive director Don Craft, former stratacouncil vice-president Kathy McArthur and Kamloops Centre for Seniors Information executive director Brenda Prevost. The three-story building, which will have 125 publicly funded and five private-pay beds, is expected to open in the spring.

TRU Facebook page hits 100,000 likes The TRU World Facebook page has been engaging its users by regularly posting video, photos, and information about Kamloops and the university. Students share events, news, and stories, as well as ask each other questions and even sell their old textbooks. While many current students, staff and residents of Kamloops are fans of the page, the majority of the 100,000 fans are students overseas who wish to get a glimpse of what is like to study and live in Canada. Top countries on page include Indonesia (16,300 fans), India (16,000), Turkey (11,200), Colombia (11,600) and the Philippines )10,700). “Reaching the 100,000 mark is an exciting achievement. We have worked hard over the past year to develop our social media strategy,” said Mike Henniger, TRU eirector, international marketing, international education. “It is extraordinary we have been able to gather such a large group on Facebook. This is more than just a number though, it is great to see the engagement that is taking place on our Facebook page.” Students have reported they are finding roommates and friends online before coming to Canada. They are asking questions and sharing information with other students. “This is really what social media is about: sharing experiences and information with your peers,” said Henniger. TRU World launched its social-media campaign last November in India in conjunction with the opening of its office in Bangalore and B.C. Premier Christy Clark’s visit.

I LOVE WINTER!

Don Craft (right), Deborah Smith, IHA Residential Health Service Administrator, Coun. Nelly Dever, MLA Terry Lake, Brenda Prevost and Kathy McArthur attend the official naming of a new residential-care building under construction in Brocklehurst. The group comprised the committee that chose the name, Brocklehurst Gemstone Care Centre.

BC WILDLIFE Don Craft, neighbour and ExecutivePARK Director for RiverBend Manor; Deborah Smith, Residential

l a v i t s fe

Health Service Administrator, IH West; Kamloops City Councilor Nelly Dever; MLA Kamloops PROUDLY PRESENTS North-Thompson Terry Lake; Brenda Prevost, Executive Director for the Kamloops Centre for Seniors Information; Kathy McArthur, neighbour and former strata council VP for RiverBend

BC WILDLIFE PARK KAMLOOPS

THE 15 TH ANNUAL WILDLIGHTS

• Spectacular Laser Show • Enjoy a hot chocolate by the campfire • Uncle Chris The Clown • Santa Claus

BC WILDLIFE PARK KAMLOOPS

• Ride the Wildlife Express Mini Train • Wagon Ride • Over 600,000 lights on display

Wildlights each evening from

December 14th 2012 to January 6TH 2013 ( Except Christmas Day )

5:00 pm to 9:00 pm Admission: Adults $11 / Seniors (65+) $9 Children (3-17) $7 ( GST not included ) / 2 & under free

arper Mountain

The British Columbia Wildlife Park is located 15 minutes east of Kamloops (exit 390 & 391 on the Trans Canada Highway) For more information please phone 250.573.3242 or visit our website at: www.bczoo.org


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012 ❖ B5

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

FRANK & ERNEST

by Bob Thaves

THE BORN LOSER

by Art & Chip Samsom

Kamloops’ Best Italian Experience

10 ENTREES FOR $10 EACH

INCLUDES VEAL PARMESAN, CHICKEN MARSALA, CALZONE. CALL FOR DETAILS. Coupons, gift certificates and discount cards not permitted on this offer.

1820 Rogers Place (across from Comfort Inn)

CALL FOR RESERVATIONS

250-851-2112

City of Kamloops

Activity Programs Please pre-register. Programs are cancelled if the minimum numbers are not met.

NEW!! Food for Thought ~ Special Museum Presentation

$8

As a high point to support our current exhibit; ‘Tried, Tested & Proved ~ Cookbooks, Family & Tradition’, we’re proud to host guest speaker, Tricia Sellmer. For one night only, she’ll share her keen observations of how the changing landscape and evolution of cook books and recipes have altered social habits and family traditions. After her talk she’ll entertain questions for discussion from the floor. You are encouraged to bring a favourite recipe or story of your family traditions to share and to be included in a compilation. Please pre-register.

BIG NATE

by Lincoln Peirce

Kamloops Museum & Archives Jan 17 6:30-7:30 PM Thu 206182

Sketching in Oil

$51

Introduction to hands-on oil painting - create a masterpiece oil sketch in one session with the alla prima method of painting. Kimberely Eibl is with the 11 Studio West Fine Art Society, and she has studied with Paul Chizik in Vancouver. Parkview Activity Centre Jan 12 9:00 AM-12:00 PM Sat 204025

Highland Dance - Beginners

GRIZZWELLS

by Bill Schorr

$50

An exciting program geared toward boys and girls who have lots of energy and a passion for Celtic music. Learn traditional Scottish steps as well as fun group dances. (Ages: 6+) Westsyde Pool Jan 10-Mar 14 5:00-5:30 PM Thu 204020 (Ages: 3½-5) Westsyde Pool Jan 10-Mar 14 4:30-5:00 PM Thu 204019

Learn to Play Ice Hockey: Co-Ed

$120

This program is an introduction to the basic skills and rules of the game in a fun environment. A focus on individual skill development and the rules of the game provides a unique experience for all players. Learn forward and backward skating, stopping, and t-pushes. Participants must supply their own equipment, including, at minimum, helmet with full face mask, neck guard, stick, skates, and gloves. Memorial Arena Jan 6-Mar 3 Sun

9:00-10:30 PM 204074

Floor Hockey: Family (Ages: 10+) Looking for some action-packed family fun? Children 10 years of age and older are invited to bring their parents for an evening of floor hockey. Please bring your own hockey stick. Nets and balls are provided. Parent participation is mandatory. $35 for one parent and one child. $5 for each additional family member. Summit Elem. School Jan 9-Mar 13 6:00-7:30 PM Wed 204148

To register call 250-828-3500 or visit www.kamloops.ca/ezreg

HERMAN

by Jim Unger

KIT ’N’ CARLYLE

by Larry Wright


B6 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

COMMUNITY

Subtle beauty of surroundings stunning X From B1

My husband’s salary was $325 per month — and I recently found my last paychecque stub from the forest Service for one month of work: $195 before deductions. I had left my job because I was pregnant with our first child. Difficult as it may be to believe today, you could not work in that office if you were vis-

ibly pregnant. I wonder how these figures would compare with today’s housing and job market if inflation was factored in? Three wonderful children later, a successful career for my husband with the city, a new occupation for me teaching preschool, several more new houses to hone our “do it yourself” skills,

wonderful friends and community involvement — and 55 years have slipped by in this wonderful city we call home. I now appreciate the subtle beauty of the ever-changing mountains that surround us. From my present home overlooking our magnificent valley, I enjoy watching the various weather sys-

tems track relentlessly through, featuring rainbows, sunsets, lightning and the ever-changing seasons that make sure our lives are never boring. Knowing what I know now, I would choose to live here for all the above reasons plus many more too numerous to mention.

DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS + 1/2 PRICE APPIES & PIZZAS In the lounge, 7 days/week 2 pm - 4 pm and 8 pm - close

FROM $

99

21.

— Joan Lyons

/person

Aberdeen Mall • 250.374.7174 Gluten free meals available - call for information.

Prices in effect from Saturday, December 15 to Thursday, December 20, 2012

HOT DEALS from this week’s flyer Insight Support Services & the conference Planning Committee would like to thank all of the sponsors who provided support to make the Interior Regional FASD Conference a success.

Conference Sponsors PLATINUM

SILVER

Insight Support Services

Adoption Families Association Of BC

School District No. 73 Kamloops Convention Centre Interior Savings Credit Union

Kamloops Indian Band Thompson Rivers University

GOLD

BRONZE

Community Living British Columbia

Ministry Of Children & Family Development

Q’wemtsin Health Society

Donations (Items, in kind or time)

South Thompson Inn & Guest Ranch Spa Pure Western Canada Theatre Company Frick & Frack Cliff Side Climbing Gym Fun Factor

Kal Tire London Drugs Macarthur Island Golf Course Interior Health Ministry Of Children & Family Development

Mobile 1 Lube Express

Scandia (Golf Land & Games)

Bc Wildlife Park

Lake Breeze Winery

Bookland

Nichol Vineyard

East Side Mario’s

Elephant Island Orchard Winery

The Dunes At Kamloops Revelstoke Mountain Resort

Kettle Valley Winery Pivot Point

Bikini Bills

Westsyder Pub

Canada Games Pool Atlantis Waterslides

Penticton & District Community Resources Society

Rona

Ups Store

VALLEYVIEW SQUARE

Hours: Mon-Sat 8 am - Midnight Sun & Hol. 9 am - Midnight

374-3131

COLUMBIA PLACE SHOPPING CENTRE

NORTHILLS SHOPPING CENTRE

Hours: 8 am - Midnight 7-Days-A-Week

250-374-0477

Hours: Mon - Sun & Holidays, 8 am - 10 pm

376-9010

Watch for your

SHOPPERS DRUG MART Value-Packed Insert every Thursday in KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B7

AUTO KAMLOOPS

THIS WEEK

K A M L O O P S # 1 AU T O B U Y E R S D I R E C T O RY S O U R C E

MARKET

INSIDE X Classifieds/B15 Addvertising Advertising Consultant Con nsultant Brittany Bri ittany Bailey 250-374-7467 250 0-374-7467 ext t. 218 ext.

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437 Mt. Paul Way, Kamloops

Buick enters the compact CUV fray

B

UICK IS CHANGING RIGHT BEFORE OUR EYES. Once seen as the conveyance of the blue-hair set, the average age of Buick buyers is now 57 and falling as it introduces new models appealing to a younger audience. Along with the Verano, its first luxury sedan in the compact segment is the 2013 Encore that marks Buick’s entry into the small crossover arena. Not only does it have traditional Buick design cues like the “waterfall” grille and portholes on the hood, but it has the same new and pleasing touches like stitched leather, blue headlight surrounds and interior ambient “ice blue” lighting as JIM ROBINSON the LaCrosse and Enclave. First Buick says the DRIVE Encore is globally designed, meaning it was styled on one continent and built on another — in this case, Korea. The Encore is based on GM’s Gamma platform, but so are a lot of other products. In this case, it is the Gamma-SUV platform. Thanks to modern computer engineering, it is possible to design three or four different vehicles on one platform in terms of ride, handling and drivetrain — and so it is with Encore.

Under the hood is a 1.4-litre, variablevalve-timing inline turbocharged fourcylinder producing 138 horsepower and 148 pound-feet of torque. That powerplant sits way down in the

engine bay where you might think a bigger four-banger or even a V6 would fit — such is the flexibility of the Gamma architecture. Gamma can accommodate front- or allwheel-drive so the Encore is available as standard with FWD and optional with AWD for $1,950. Only a six-speed automatic transmission is offered. The 18-inch wheels are part of Buick’s “one-tire” strategy, where ride and handling are optimized on an 18-inch wheel/tire combination in this case. When you offer two or three and, in some cases, four wheel sizes, the “unsprung” weight of the tire can have a major effect on handling, especially cornering. In Canada we will be get three trim levels starting at (FWD/AWD) convenience, $26,895/$28,845; leather, $30,190/$32,140; premium package, $32,505/$34,455 not including $1,500 for shipping. Encore comes with all the safely features one now expects such as traction control, ABS, StabiliTrac pitch and yaw control and adds, as standard, 10 air bags and cornering brake control which steps in to add braking if it senses the driver is going a little too quickly into a turn. Optionally available is lane-departure

warning (turned off and on by a button on the dash), forward-collision alert and front/ rear audible parking assist. Also standard is Buick’s first use of the Bose active noise cancellation system. Most makers employ two microphones (one front, one rear), but Buick has three (two front, one rear) that “hear” unwanted noise and then use the Bose sound-system speakers to send out counter-tones. Buick engineers went to great pains not to just deal with external noise but aerodynamics. For instance there are little vertical strakes at the trailing edge of each “C” pillar that cut drag and improve fuel economy. Another notable feature is the standard voice-activated IntelliLink full-colour seveninch display. Move up to the leather package and it adds dual-zone climate control, heated leather front seats, heated steering wheel and remote vehicle start. The premium package builds on the leather with lane-departure warning, rainsensing wipers, premium Bose Audio, XM Satellite Radio, front- and rear-park assist, forward-collision alert and 18-inch chrome wheels. X See BUICK B9


B8 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

AUTO MARKET

A winterizing word to the wise Winterizing your vehicle is a wise idea. An investment of an hour or two to have your vehicle checked is all it takes to have peace of mind and help avoid the cost and hassle of a breakdown during severe weather. Here are some ideas for winterizing your vehicle: • Have the battery and charging system checked for optimum performance. Cold weather is hard on batteries. • Clean, flush and put new antifreeze in

the cooling system. As a general rule of thumb, this should be done every two years. • Make sure heaters, defrosters and wipers work properly. Consider winter wiper blades and use cold weather washer fluid. As a general rule, wiper blades should be replaced every six months. • Check the tire tread depth and tire pressure. If snow and ice are a problem in your area, consider special tires designed to grip

slick roads. During winter, tire pressure should be checked weekly. • Be diligent about changing the oil and filter at recommended intervals. Dirty oil can spell trouble in winter. Consider changing to “winter weight” oil if you live in a cold climate. Have your technician check the fuel, air and transmission filters at the same time. •If you’re due for a tune-up, have it done before winter sets in.

Winter magnifies existing problems such as pings, hard starts, sluggish performance or rough idling. • Have the brakes checked. The braking system is the vehicle’s most important safety item. • Have the exhaust system checked for carbon-monoxide leaks, which can be especially dangerous during coldweather driving when windows are closed. • Check to see that exterior and interior lights work and headlights are properly

aimed. Motorists should also keep the gas tank at least half full at all times to decrease the chances of moisture forming in the gas lines and possibly freezing. Drivers should check the tire pressure of the spare in the trunk and stock an emergency kit with an ice scraper and snowbrush, jumper cables, flashlight, flares, blanket, extra clothes, candles/matches, bottled water, dry food snacks and needed medication.

Understanding the links child abuse, animal abuse and domestic violence

Car and Driver likes Mazda MX-5 The 2013 Mazda MX-5 Miata has been named to U.S. enthusiast magazine Car and Driver’s 10 Best Cars list for the eighth straight year and 14th overall since the vehicle made its global debut in 1989. With a nearly 50:50 weight distribution, the small-in-size MX-5 offers a hefty dose of road-hugging handling and superior driving dynamics, making the roadster a favorite among weekend warriors and daily drivers alike. According to Car and Driver: “What keeps the [MX-5] triumphant is not raw performance but a balanced chassis that communicates every nuance to the driver

The Best Selling Tonneau Cover in North America!

$ through perfectly calibrated controls.” The MX-5 first landed a spot on the 10 Best list in 1990 — its first model year — and has made regular appearances ever since. Powered by an MZR 2.0-litre

engine, which produces up to 167 horsepower, delivers 140 pound-feet of torque and redlines at 7,200 r.p.m., the 2013 MX-5 is available with a soft-top or industry-leading 12-second-operation power retractable hard top.

46900 INSTALLED

Your #1 Source for FACTORY DIRECT CANOPY SALES in Kamloops since 1992!

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Now is the time for 4MATIC All-Wheel Drive. ™

Get ahead of winter with great offers on Mercedes-Benz models.

THE 2013 ML 350 BlueTEC 4MATIC™. TOTAL PRICE1: $62,955** Powerful fuel-efficient V6 engine, featuring BlueTEC Diesel technology Q Class-leading safety features such as ATTENTION ASSIST Q Spacious interior with 2,010L of cargo capacity

FINANCE APR

LEASE APR

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36 MONTHS

3.9 5.9 %*

Q

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LEASE PAYMENT

798

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Taxes extra.

For a complete listing of our Mercedes-Benz Certified vehicles visit www.zimmerautosport.com TM

695C Laval Crescent, 250.374.1103

D#30729

A Daimler Brand

Year End Sale

© 2012 Mercedes-Benz Canada Inc. 2013 ML 550 4MATIC™ shown above, National MSRP $76,500. **Total price of $62,955 and down payment include freight/PDI of $1,995, dealer admin fee of $395, air-conditioning levy of $100, PPSA up to $45.48 and a $20.00 fee covering EHF tires. *Lease and fi nance offers based on the 2013 ML 350 BlueTEC 4MATIC™ available only through Mercedes-Benz Financial Services on approved credit for a limited time. Lease example based on $798 per month for 36 months. Down payment or equivalent trade of $6,185 plus security deposit of $800 and applicable taxes due at lease inception. MSRP starting at $60,400. Lease APR of 5.9% applies. Total obligation is $35,664. 18,000 km/year allowance ($0.25/km for excess kilometres applies). Finance example is based on a 60-month term and a fi nance APR of 3.9% and an MSRP of $60,400. Monthly payment is $999 (excluding taxes) with $8,595 down payment or equivalent trade in. Cost of borrowing is $5,560 for a total obligation of $68,470. Vehicle licence, insurance, and registration are extra. Dealer may lease or fi nance for less. Offers may change without notice and cannot be combined with any other offers. See your authorized Mercedes-Benz dealer for details or call the Mercedes-Benz Customer Relations Centre at 1-800-387-0100. Offer ends December 31, 2012.


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B9

AUTO MARKET

Buick learned lessons well X From B7

Encore’s pixie of a powerplant delivers a lot more power than you would expect, aided significantly by the gear-ratio spread of the automatic that shifts transparently under normal-driving conditions. Going uphill, the trans kicks down quickly when the gas pedal is prodded. Buick has a patented noise abatement system called QuietTuning that sees thick acoustic glass, triple door seals and battens of insulation used to quell noise. Coupled with the Bose noise-cancelling system, you don’t hear much coming in from the outside — to a point. The Verano sedan that uses the same QuietTuning system

was quieter, in my opinion, than the Encore. I think it is because the Encore interior volume is far greater and thus more like a drum on the inside. Suspension is MacStruts and coil springs at the front and a compound crank-style torsion beam at the back with coils. Buick’s test route for the Encore was on the wonderfully kept roads to the south of Atlanta, perfect for the kind of driving most of these CUVs will see. We were three aboard in the FWD and AWD models so had the added weight of three people plus the travel luggage of two. That would be pretty well at the upper end of the total mass. In all cases, the 1.4-

litre never felt strained. We did not do any two-lane highway passing because there were so few vehicles, so I can’t say how well the Encore responds to full passing power. I rode in the back of the FWD for part of the way and did not have a knee-room problem so, while three in the back 60/40 split/fold seat might be cozy, for two only it is fine. Cargo volume behind the rear seats is 532.4 litres and 1,379 litres folded. Towing is not recommended. As mentioned, the Encore has all the luxury look and feel a Buick buyer expects. You won’t find the cheap stuff in an Encore, compared to a higher line LaCrosse. That used to be the case back in the day and a lesson Buick has learned and taken to heart. For instance, there are three interior trim combinations, one being a two-tone coffee and cocoa brown you might expect to find on a competitor costing twice as much. That is one of the

reasons Buick is changing in front of our eyes. The name is the same, but Buick now gets it and that’s why they are seeing a sharp increase in buyers coming over from the imports. Along with LaCrosse, Regal, Enclave, Verano and now Encore, Buick finally has products people want.

Buick Encore 2013 at a glance Body style: Compact luxury CUV. Drive method: Front-engine, front- all-wheeldrive. Engine: 1.4-litre, DOHC inline turbocharged four-cylinder (138 hp, 148 lb/ft). Fuel economy: FWD, 8.2/6.0/7.2L/100 km (34/47/36 mpg) city/highway/combined; AWD, 8.9/6.7/7/5L/100 km (32/42/36 mpg) city/highway/combined. CargoO: 532.4 litres (18.2 cu ft) behind second row seats, 1,379 litres (48.4 cu ft) folded. Towing capacity: Not recommended. Pricing: FWD/AWD) convenience package, $26,895/$28,845; leather package, $30,190/$32,140; premium package, $32,505/$34,455 not including $1,500 for shipping. Website: buick.gm.ca/Encore.

Bob Chandra Sales

NEW 2013 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN

19,995

$

CALL BOB FOR MORE DETAILS.

1-866-374-4477 2525 E. TRANS CANADA HWY - KAMLOOPS B.C.

FINANCE OR LEASE 0 DOWN WHY FINANCE 6 MONTHS THE TAX? TRY LEASING NO PAYMENTS! INSTEAD! Stock #2574

12 Chev Suburban LT 4x4 BC SUV, auto, nicely equipped, leather, OnStar, remote start, backup sensors, CD

1 OWNER

4x4, Supercab, BC truck, nicely equipped, CD

$

$

44,800

163

96 mo. weekly

Stock #2588

11 GMC Sierra Quad Cab 4x4 BC Truck, auto, nicely equipped, tow package

1 OWNER

23,800

85

84 mo. weekly

Stock #2537

Only 73,000 kms! 08 Pontiac Wave 1 OWNER

$

8,800

38

72 mo. weekly

Stock #2568

Only 36,000 kms! 08 Volkswagen Golf 1 OWNER

$

14,400

255

lease payment

Stock #2586

12 Chev Impala LT

1 OWNER

$

$

16,800

228

lease payment

Stock #2577

11 Ford Mustang Convertible

1 OWNER

$

$

21,800

299

lease payment

Stock #2584

12 Fiat 500 Lounge Convertible Auto, nicely equipped, leather, BC Car, CD, satellite radio, aluminum wheels

BC Car, 2.0L, nicely equipped, air, CD, keyless entry

$

$

17,800

Auto, steering wheel audio controls, nicely equipped, CD, keyless

BC Car, nicely equipped, CD. REDUCED! Was $9,600! $

1 OWNER $

BC car, remote start, nicely equipped, dual zone climate control, CD, OnStar, keyless entry

$

$

Stock #2559

Only 48,505 kms! 09 Ford Ranger Sport

59

72 mo. weekly

1 OWNER

$

$

19,800

261

lease payment

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B10 ❖ TUESDAY, December 18, 2012 www.kamloopsthisweek.com


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B11

AUTO MARKET

All-electric Nissan Leaf kept driver on his toes

M

Y WEEK WITH THE NISSAN Leaf was as much an adventure as it was a road test. Which meant my time behind the wheel of this all-electric vehicle was anything but dull. Not that the Leaf delivered a heart-pounding thrill ride — although it certainly wasn’t sluggish. Rather, more like occasional bouts of anxiety, NEIL MOORE wondering if I’d First be pushing this DRIVE 3,394-pound compact hatchback home or back to the office. Another spin would be to say this vehicle transformed motoring from something I took for granted into a task required careful planning — and steady monitoring. Indeed, the Nissan Leaf can’t be approached like any other car, despite the fact you steer, brake and accelerate as you normally would. Its lack of a gas tank is both a strength and a weakness. I like the idea of a zero-emissions car you can run all week on only a few bucks

worth of electricity. Not just because I’m thrifty, but because I really do care about our environment. That being said, I’m not crazy about there being no backup power. The Leaf, unlike the Chevy Volt, has no gas engine to rely on when the battery craps out — which it will do if you take its 160-kilo-

SILVERADO

metre range literally. For example, winter mornings often mean frosty windows, not to mention a cold car and little to no daylight. Turn on the headlamps, front and rear defrost, standard heated seats (both front and back) and heated steering wheel — which feels so nice after scraping windows — and the 160-kilometre range drops fast.

Case in point: A four-kilometre trip to work knocked 19 kilometres off the meter. And, on the way to a black-tie function one Saturday night, which included a long uphill grade, my wife and I nervously watched the meter count down one kilometre every few seconds. Needless to say, I turned down the heater, shut off the delightfully warm steering wheel and we mutually decided we’d forgo our toasty backsides. Several long downhill stretches and a few kilometres later, we had magically “regained” most of those lost kilometres. I left the house with 106 kilometres and arrived after driving 17 kilometres with 102 left. The trip home, however, wasn’t quite so generous, as my wife demanded the heated seat, which helped gobble double the expected distance. According to Nissan, the algorithm that calculates how many clicks are left on the battery monitors your driving style and accessory use — including climate control — and assumes you’ll continue down that reckless path. Mend your energy-sapping ways and the numbers improve. Putting the Leaf into Eco mode (via the wonky little palm shifter) also helps conserve battery, but it really sucks the life out of this car. X See LEAF B12

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On now at your western region Chevrolet Dealers. Chevrolet is a brand of General Motors of Canada. Visit www.gm.ca or call 1-800-GM-DRIVE. Offers apply to the purchase of a 2012 Silverado Thunder Light Duty Crew Special Edition, equipped as described. Freight ($1,495) included. License, insurance, registration, PPSA, administration fees and taxes not included. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited quantities of 2012 models available - Dealer order or trade may be required. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate this offer in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See your Chevrolet dealer for details. $11,500 manufacturer to dealer delivery credit available on 2012 Silverado LD Crew Cab models (tax exclusive) for retail customers only. Other cash credits available on most models. ◊Thunder package includes PDZ credit valued at $1,200 and PDJ credit valued at $350. Dealer trade may be required. Based on GM Testing in accordance with approved Transport Canada test methods. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. +Based on available competitive information from manufacturer websites. ††2012 Chevrolet Silverado, equipped with available Vortec™ 5.3L V8 engine and 6-speed automatic transmission and competitive fuel consumption ratings based on Natural Resources Canada’s 2012 Fuel Consumptions Guide and WardsAuto.com 2012 Large Pickup segment. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. Excludes hybrids and other GM models. ∞OnStar services require vehicle electrical system (including battery) wireless service and GPS satellite signals to be available and operating for features to function properly. OnStar acts as a link to existing emergency service providers. Subscription Service Agreement required. Call 1-888-4ONSTAR (1-888-466-7827) or visit onstar.ca for OnStar’s Terms and Conditions, Privacy Policy and details and system limitations. Additional information can be found in the OnStar Owner’s Guide.


B12 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

AUTO MARKET

Leaf is practical car for tooling around town X From B11

Otherwise, the Leaf is quite lively when you plant the pedal, thanks to its 48 laminated compact Lithium-ion battery modules and a highresponse 80kW AC synchronous motor that delivers 107 horsepower and 207 pound-feet — with all that torque available at launch. By comparison, the Mitsubishi i-MiEV only produces 66 horsepower and 145 pound-feet of torque and, although lighter, isn’t nearly as quick. But, on the upside, it seemed a little easier on the battery. I’ll acknowledge electric vehicles aren’t positioned as drivers’ cars, but a little nimbleness doesn’t hurt. Also helping improve the Leaf’s driving dynamics is its underfloor battery placement, which lowers the centre of gravity and delivers more fun in the corners. The suspension — an independent setup with stabilizer bar in front and torsion beam with stabilizer in rear — along with a rigid body also helps deliver a smooth ride. If you drive the Leaf in a way that takes advantage of its assets, expect to plug in more often.

That was a problem for me as I had only the Level 1 charger — a unit with long cord that plugs into the Leaf’s front-mounted receptacle and your regular 110-volt outlet. It takes approximately 19 hours to charge from depletion to full power but, without 19 hours between the end and beginning of each workday, I had to be vigilant about plugging in whenever possible. Most Leaf owners will probably opt for the 240-volt “Level 2” home-charging station. This takes about seven hours for a full charge, but such convenience doesn’t come cheap. The average installation can cost about $2,200. The DC Quick char-

Nissan Leaf SV 2012 at a glance Body style: Compact electric hatchback. Drive method: Front-wheel-drive, no gears, single-speed reducer. Engine: 48 laminated Lithium-ion battery modules with high-response 80kW AC synchronous motor (107 hp and 207 lb/ft). Range: 160 km (approx., depending on temperature, terrain, driving style, accessory use, etc.). Cargo capacity: 410 litres. Brakes: Four-wheel discs with ABS, electronic brake force distribution and brake assist, regenerative brakes. Price: base SV $38,395, as tested SL $39,995 Website: nissan.ca.

ger, which requires a 480-volt, three-phase utility, can apparently provide 80 per cent charge in as little as 30 minutes but, at a cost of around $15,000, it would defeat any savings in going electric. Indeed, there are several complexities in owning an electric car, but the Leaf itself was surprisingly normal in most ways. It had a bright, modern interior, with ample passenger room both front and back. I wouldn’t say the fit, finish and choice of materials was on par with other $40,000 vehicles, but it comes well-equipped, whether you choose the base SV model ($38,395) or Leaf SL ($39,995). Standard fare includes smart key with remote windows down, hatch release and pushbutton start; automatic climate control; heated front and rear seats with six-way manual adjust for the driver and fourway for the front passenger; six-speaker AM/ FM/CD/MP3/WMA audio system, navigation, Bluetooth, auto headlights and more. The SL model ads a photovoltaic solar panel spoiler, fog lights, cargo cover, HomeLink and rearview monitor. The Leaf also provides an ample 410litre cargo hold, which

expands when you drop the 60/40 split rear bench. Bottom line: In so many ways, the Nissan Leaf is a practical little

hauler for around town. And, if the industry could overcome its range problems so one could drive nearly as far as a conventionally powered car — and then charge it as quickly and easily as filling a tank of gas (and shave a few bucks off the price) — you could sign me up tomorrow. Until then, electrics like the Leaf — which has sold only 206 units so far in 2012 — are destined to remain niche vehicles. But, we all know what happened to the once overpriced, bulky and impractical cellphone.

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NOW AT YOUR BC CHEVROLET DEALERS. Chevrolet.ca 1-800-GM-DRIVE. Chevrolet is a brand of General Motors of Canada. */**Offers apply to the purchase of a 2013 Silverado EXT 2WD (1SA), 2013 Cruze LS (1SA), 2013 Equinox LS (1SA) equipped as described. Freight included ($1,500). License, insurance, registration, PPSA, administration fees and taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Offer available to retail customers in Canada. See Dealer for details. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in BC Chevrolet Dealer Marketing Association area only. Dealer order or trade may be required. GMCL, Ally Credit, TD Auto Financing Services or Scotiabank may modify, extend or terminate this offer in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See Chevrolet dealer for details. **Offer available to retail customers between December 17th, 2012 and December 30th, 2012. Applies to new 2012 Chevrolet Sonic and Cruze and 2013 GM vehicles excluding 2013 Chevrolet Camaro, Corvette, Volt, Spark, Orlando, Express, Traverse, and Trax, GMC Savana and Acadia, Buick Enclave and Encore, and Cadillac ATS and XTS at participating dealers in Canada. Employee price includes freight and PDI but excludes license, insurance, registration, fees associated with filing at movable property registry/PPSA fees, duties, marketing fees and taxes. Dealer may sell for less. Limited quantities of 2012 models available. Dealer order or trade may be required. Offer may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without notice. See dealer for details. †To qualify for GMCL’s Cash For Clunkers incentive, you must: (1) turn in a 2006 or older MY vehicle that is in running condition and has been registered and properly insured in your name for the last 3 months (2) turn in a 2006 or older MY vehicle that is in running condition and has been registered and properly insured under a small business name for the last 3 months. GMCL will provide eligible consumers with a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) to be used towards the purchase/finance/lease of a new eligible 2012 or 2013 MY Chevrolet Colorado, GMC Canyon, Chevrolet Silverado, GMC Sierra, or Chevrolet Avalanche delivered between October 2, 2012 and January 2, 2013. Incentive ranges from $1500 to $3,000, depending on model purchased. Incentive may not be combined with certain other offers. By participating in the Cash For Clunkers program you will not be eligible for any trade-in value for your vehicle. See your participating GM dealer for additional program conditions and details. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate program in whole or in part at any time without notice. ^Based on latest competitive data available. ~ OnStar services require vehicle electrical system (including battery) wireless service and GPS satellite signals to be available and operating for features to function properly. OnStar acts as a link to existing emergency service providers. Subscription Service Agreement required. Call 1-888-4ONSTAR (1-888-466-7827) or visit onstar.ca for OnStar’s Terms and Conditions, Privacy Policy and details and system limitations. Additional information can be found in the OnStar Owner’s Guide ^^Based on WardsAuto.com 2012 Upper Small segment, excluding Hybrid and Diesel powertrains. Standard 10 airbags, ABS, traction control, and StabiliTrak.

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UP TO

TUESDAY, December 18, 2012 â?– B13

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B14 TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

COMMUNITY

CP RAIL DELIVERS CHRISTMAS The CP Holiday Train rolled into Kamloops on Sunday, Dec. 16, bringing with it brightly lit cars and entertainment. Among those taking in the annual fund- and food-raiser for the Kamloops Food Bank was the Ouelette family — Lucas (left), Tanis, Dale and Rachel. Entertainment was provided by Miss Emily and Doc Walker (right). When the event was done, the local agency had collected more than 3,000 pounds of food and more than $26,000 in sponsorship money, including $5,000 each from CP Rail, B.C. Lottery Corporation and the Conconi Foundation, $10,000 from Sun Life Insurance and $10,485 from the employees at New Gold. The amount is bound to grow, however, as many of the Kamloopsians who headed down to the show on the tracks north of Interior Savings Centre also dropped of cash and cheques that are being added up this week. Allen Douglas photos/KTW

shaping the smiles of our community

Arthur “Art” Arnold Robinson March 6, 1939 – December 12, 2012

It is with great sadness that we announce the sudden passing of Art Robinson. He will be lovingly remembered and his memory cherished by his daughter, Sandra (Gary) Lawrence; son, Ryan (Tammy) Robinson; grandchildren, Kyana and Calli Lawrence and Rayelle and Dane Robinson; companion, Pat Kerr; all of his brothers and sisters, especially Jacquie Wilkinson, Scott ( Jill) Robinson and Ed (Betty-Lou) Swanson; and the Kerr family. He was predeceased by his soul mate and loving wife Dorinda Robinson. Art was born and raised in Peace River, Alberta where the Robinson family roots ran deep and strong. He left home at the very young age of 13 to begin his courageous journey where no path was too long or obstacle to great. Art’s family life began in Clinton, BC where he married Dorinda in 1964. In 1973 the family moved to Kamloops to start a business. Robo Transport Ltd., Art’s beloved trucking company, was his passion for many years to come. He lived to work and worked to live; always putting others ahead of himself, especially his kids. Reluctantly parking his big truck (#38), his life led him to Yuma, Arizona where he and Pat spent their winters having “Happy Hour” and stirring up the dust in the desert on his RZR. He loved to entertain, party, listen to music (especially when his cousins and granddaughter played guitar), attend and watch rodeos (driving his son all over North America and later on chasing his grandchildren to their rodeos) and to his chagrin, but with the utmost of pride, attend every grandchild’s music and dance recital. You could find him many a day and this past summer on the farm in Heffley Creek; Dad’s true “happy place”. For those of you that had the pleasure of sharing in our Dad’s life, you know of his kind and generous heart, his tenacity and strength and of course, his stubborn Robinson way! A Memorial Service will be held on Thursday, December 20, 2012 at 1:00pm at the Coast Kamloops Hotel and Conference Center, 1250 Rogers Way Kamloops, BC. In lieu of flowers, his family would appreciate donations to the BC Little Britches Rodeo Association c/o 40450 No. 1 Road Abbotsford, BC V3G 2R2 or by all means, a charity of your choice.

Until We Meet Again ~ Keep On Truckin’ Arrangements entrusted to Kamloops Funeral Home: 250-554-2577 Condolences may be emailed to the family from www.kamloopsfuneralhome.com

Canadian Mental Health Association Kamloops Branch 857 Seymour Street 374-0440 www.cmha.kamloops.net

Others Who Have Gone Before

By Joanetta Hendel, Indianapolis, Indiana

Others who have gone before Hold up my trembling hand. They comfort me in the blind despair I cannot understand. They suffer with me when I hurt, Weep with me in my pain, Remind me that we are not lost ... Though I must now remain. Those who’ve gone before me, Hear me when I cry. Sing softly with me soothing chords Of unsung lullabies. Mourn anniversaries never marked, A future I cannot keep. They gently kiss the pain away, And love my heart to sleep. The ones who’ve gone before me Hold me in my dreams. They gently stroke my furrowed brow, And calm my silent screams. They love me in my heartache, Wait quietly nearby., Hold patiently, one to another Till I join them by and by.


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012 ❖ B15

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Your community. Your classifieds.

250.371.4949 INDEX

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

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

Employment

(No businesses, 3 lines or less)

(based on 3 lines)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Tax not included. No refunds on

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

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classified ads.

Announcements

Travel

Employment

Employment

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Information

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The most effective way to reach an incredible number of BC Sportsmen & women. Two year edition- terrific presence for your business.

Please call Annemarie 1.800.661.6335 email: fish@blackpress.ca

Deadline: 11 am - Dec 20 2pm- Dec 21 11am-Dec 28 11am - Dec 31 PERFECT Part-Time

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

Word Classified Deadlines

*Run Until Rented

(No businesses, 3 lines or less)

Based on 3 lines

Announcements

DEADLINE CHANGES

*Run Until Sold

Regular Classified Rates

2pm Friday for Tuesday’s Paper. 2pm Tuesday for Thursday’s Paper.

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

Community Newspapers We’re at the heart of things™

Coming Events

If you have an

Opportunity

2 Days Per Week

HAWAII ON the Mainland, healthy low-cost living can be yours. Modern Arenal Maleku Condominiums, 24/7 secured Community, Costa Rica “friendliest country on earth”! 1-780-952-0709; www.CanTico.ca.

go to

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

NEW!

Professional Truck Driver Program Funding is available for those who qualify! REGISTER NOW!

Employment

Lost & Found

Lost 7yr old small female shihtzu creamy white color fur Valleyview (250) 828-2827

Travel

Timeshare

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

CANCEL YOUR Timeshare. NO Risk Program, STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call Us NOW. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248.

GIFT BASKET franchise needed in your area. Start before the Christmas Season. For more information go to www.obbgifts.com and click on “own a franchise”. Any questions? Email head office directly through website or call (778)-753-4500 (Kelowna).

Administration

Administration

Auto & RV Sales Professional Are you interested in an opportunity to earn an above average wage? Local Auto & RV dealer is seeking qualiÀed individuals who will be an asset to their sales team. Applicants should have good communication skills, a willingness to learn and a great attitude. Previous sales experience an asset but not a requirement. We offer a competitive pay plan with excellent bonuses. Please send resume to PO Box 1411, Kamloops This Week, 1365-B Dalhousie Dr. Kamloops, BC V2C 5P6 or email to autoandrvsales@hotmail.ca

upcoming event for our

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Truck Driver Training

call 250-374-0462

Found red wallet no id on Alder Dr call to identify (778) 470-4666

Place a classified word ad and...

IT WILL GO ON LINE!

Career Opportunities

CERTIFIED ICBC AIR BRAKE COURSE

Jan. 11-13

250-828-5104

Tax not included. No refunds on classified ads.

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities Please call to make an appointment

DO YOU NEED IMMIGRATION ASSISTANCE? • Skilled Workers Program • Student and Visitors Visa • Live-In Caregiver • Family Sponsorship • Citizenship • Business Immigration • Temporary and Permanent Work Visa • Advise Employers on Work Visa Procedures • Appeal to Immigration Decisions Shirley Palmer-Hunt, Certified Canadian Immigration Consultant

#302 - 141 Victoria Street, Kamloops Ph: 250-314-6555 Fax: 250-314-6514

shirley@sphimmigrationservices.ca www.sphimmigrationservices.ca

METALSMITHS STERLING is now hiring for our Aberdeen Mall location.

School of Trades & Technology

Funding provided through the Canada-British Columbia Labour Market Agreement

BUILD YOUR CAREER WITH US

Roads Supervisor

Okanagan Region TOLKO INDUSTRIES LTD. is currently seeking a Roads Supervisor to join our team in Lumby, BC. The Roads Supervisor is responsible for operational road construction and maintenance activities associated with road infrastructure within the Okanagan Region. This positiondirectly supervises the company road crews and associated mobile equipment to ensure the safe and cost effective operation of all construction and maintenance projects. In addition, the position directs various contract road building and maintenance crews. JOIN THE TOLKO PROFESSIONALS Competitive wages Development opportunities On-going training Dynamic and challenging environment Stable employment Strong values of Safety, Respect, Progressiveness, Open Communication, Integrity and Profit guide us at Tolko. READY TO APPLY YOURSELF? If you are interested in exploring this opportunity and being part of our community, please visit our website at: www.tolko.com and submit your resume by December 21, 2012.

We require: Manager, Assistant Manager First key, Full time and Part time staff. Manager and Assistant Manager position (Management Experience required) 40hrs a week, Monthly Performance bonus, Health Benefits, annual corporate Retreat (Banff, Niagara falls) Full Time Sales Associates $11.00-12/hr (35-40hrs a week) plus bonus (monthly) Part Time Sales Associates (FLEX HRS) hr 20-35hrs a week PLUS bonus (monthly) Great position for University Students. ************************* Metalsmiths Sterling Offers: • Monthly Performance Bonuses • Health and Dental Benefits for ALL Managers and FT staff • Full Training with Training Videos & One on One • Semi Annual Manager Retreats (Banff, Niagara Falls) • Potential to travel across Canada & USA If you’re interested in joining our family please email your resume to:

careers@metalsmiths.ca ATTN: Angela Check us out online: www.metalsmiths.ca

Apply today at www.tolko.com We’re on the net at www.bcclassified.com


B16 â?– TUESDAY, December 18, 2012 Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Career Opportunities

School District No. 73 KAMLOOPS/THOMPSON

Commercial Transportation Mechanic School District No. 73 has an opening for a part-time Commercial Transportation Mechanic in Kamloops. Hours of work will vary. The incumbent must be qualiďŹ ed at the Journeyman level as a commercial vehicle mechanic, be proďŹ cient in all aspects of repair and maintenance to vehicles, and be able to work with minimal supervision. The successful applicant should possess a Class 2 Drivers License with Air Brake Endorsement, Commercial Transport CertiďŹ cate and Inspector Authorization CertiďŹ cate. Preference will be given to individuals with ďŹ ve (5) years’ experience in engine and transmission electronic controls and other computerized systems. Written applications outlining experience and qualiďŹ cations should be forwarded by 12:00 p.m. on Monday, December 31, 2012 to: Sharlene Bowers, Director of Human Resources School District No. 73 (Kamloops/Thompson) 1383 Ninth Avenue Kamloops BC V2C 3X7 E-mail to sbowers@sd73.bc.ca or fax: (250) 372-1183

INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICIAN

Graymont’s Pavilion Plant is accepting applications for an Industrial Electrician. Candidate must possess current B.C. Red Seal certification. Preference will be given to well-rounded individuals willing to also perform other nonelectrical maintenance work as part of the maintenance team. A background in lime or cement industry along with computer and or PLC skills is preferred as well as a proven track record of developing and maintaining a safe work culture. Additional skills required: t &MFDUSJDJBO XJUI JOEVTUSJBM FYQFSJFODF SFRVJSFE UP XPSL BU UIF (SBZNPOU 1BWJMJPO Lime Plant. t .VTU CFDPNF FOHBHFE JO DPOUJOVPVT JNQSPWFNFOU BOE XJMMJOH UP XPSL JO B UFBN environment. t 3FHVMBS TIJGUT XJMM CF IST EBZ GSPN .POEBZ UP 'SJEBZ o TUFBEZ EBZ TIJGU t .VTU CF XJMMJOH UP XPSL PWFSUJNF XIFO SFRVJSFE t 8BHFT BOE CFOFĂśUT BT QFS UIF DPMMFDUJWF BHSFFNFOU t -PDBUFE JO 1BWJMJPO # $ TJUVBUFE CFUXFFO $BDIF $SFFL BOE -JMMPPFU # $ Qualified applicants please submit your resume to: jking@graymont.com or Graymont Pavilion Plant Attn: Dan Buis P.O. Box 187 Cache Creek, BC V0K 1H0

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Foundation Development OfďŹ cer needed Kamloops Foundation is seeking a dynamic individual to serve as Foundation Development Officer. Responsibilities include donor outreach, coordination of grant requests and awards, representing the Foundation at meetings and events, staff coordination and building the Foundation’s profile. It also includes annual budgeting, planning for service delivery and strategic plan implementation. This is a contract position, minimum 20 hours a week, reviewed and renewed annually. The hours are flexible and for the right individual there will be room to grow the position. The successful candidate will have experience with the non-profit sector and/or fundraising. A post secondary education in a related field such as business or marketing is a definite asset. Resumes will be accepted by email until 4pm on December 21. Email: info@kamloopsfoundation.com Mail: Box 15, Kamloops, BC V2C 2K3 Only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. www.kamloopsfoundation.com

MAKING A DIFFERENCE IN OUR COMMUNITIES

Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

Education/Trade Schools

JOB OPPORTUNITIES IN KAMLOOPS Train to be an Early Childhood Educator

Positions available in McBride and TĂŞte Jaune Cache. Minimum of Class 3 BC Drivers Licence with air endorsement or recognized equivalent required. Wages and allowances per collective agreement.

Apply in person at the TĂŞte Jaune Cache OfďŹ ce, or to careers@ldmltd.ca or fax to 250-692-3930 www.ldmltd.ca

Education/Trade Schools

WHY WAIT? START IMMEDIATELY

OFFICE ADMINISTRATION

699 Victoria St. FOODSAFE COURSE by certiďŹ ed Instructor Saturday January 19th 8:30am-4:00pm $60 Preregister by phoning 250-554-9762

HUNTER & FIREARMS Courses. Next C.O.R.E. January 5th & 6th Saturday & Sunday. P.A.L. Saturday Dec 29th. Challenges, Testing ongoing daily. Professional outdoorsman & Master Instructor:

Bill

250-376-7970

TAYLOR PRO TRAINING *Heavy Equipment Operator Training *Commercial Driver Training Call today 1-877-860-7627 www.taylorprotraining.com

www.pal-core-ed.com Year End Course Special PAL-nr Dec 27th CORE- Dec 28th, 29th PAL-r Dec 30th

Call 250-852-0595 or 250-579-1938

School District No. 73 has an opening for a full time dispatcher in Kamloops. This position reports to the Manager of Transportation and is required to schedule and dispatch the school bus drivers.

Help Wanted

CALL KAMLOOPS:

SPROTTSHAW.COM

250-314-1122

PHONE DISCONNECTED? We Can Help! EVERYONE APPROVED.

1-877-852-1122 PRO-TEL RECONNECT

The candidate should be proďŹ cient in both Microsoft Excel and Word as well as the ability to work with various software programs. Previous dispatch experience would be a deďŹ nite asset.

We’re on the net at www.bcclassiďŹ ed.com

Lakes District Maintenance Ltd. is looking for Auxiliary / Seasonal Snow Plow Drivers for November 1, 2012 to March 31, 2013

250-310-5627

Bus Dispatcher, Kamloops

If you have the above qualiďŹ cations, please submit written applications by 12:00 p.m. on Monday, December 31, 2012 to: Sharlene Bowers, Director of Human Resources School District No. 73 (Kamloops/Thompson) 1383 Ninth Avenue Kamloops BC V2C 3X7 E-mail to sbowers@sd73.bc.ca or fax: (250) 372-1183

Drivers/Courier/ Trucking

TAKE THE FIRST STEP

Early Childhood Educators develop curriculum for childcare centres. They respond to family needs, as well as work with other professionals in increasing the health and well being of children. According to market research there is a demand for well-trained Early Childhood Educators and Sprott Shaw has a reputation of producing well-trained grads that are working.

School District No. 73 KAMLOOPS/THOMPSON

The duties include the ďŹ lling of relief trips, booking ďŹ eld trips, drivers’ payroll, designing and implementing school bus routes. This position requires maintaining effective working relationships with the public, other board employees as well as various outside agencies. The successful applicant must possess effective problem solving skills along with the ability to supervise and direct other employees and must be able to work with minimal direction.

Employment

SHOP ONLINE...

Anytime! bcclassified.com .com

An Alberta Construction Company is hiring Dozer and Excavator Operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experienced in oilďŹ eld road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Construction at 780-723-5051. BUS Depot Restaurant hiring cashier/kitchen helper. Please drop resume to: 725 Notre Dame Dr I PAY Cash $$$ For All Scrap Vehicles! and $5 for auto batteries Call or Text Brendan 250-574-4679

Need $ for Xmas?

KTW needs door to door carriers in all areas of Kamloops. Call 250-374-0462 for a route near you!


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012 ❖ B17

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Regional Advertising Consultant Award winning Kamloops This Week has an opening for an a Regional Advertising Consultant. The position requires a highly organized individual with ability to multi-task in a fun, fast-paced team environment. Strong interpersonal skills and a strong knowledge of sales and marketing are required. Excellent communication skills, valid driver’s license and reliable vehicle are necessary. If you have a passion for the advertising business, are creative and thrive on challenges, we want to hear from you. Interested applicants should send their resume and cover letter to: Attention: Advertising Manager 1365 B Dalhousie Drive Kamloops BC V2C 5P6 Fax: 250-374-1033 Email: sales@kamloopsthisweek.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Eldorado Log Hauling in Williams Lake requires experienced Low Bed and Log Hauling drivers immediately. We offer a competitive benefit package. A Class 1 license and drivers abstract are required. Applications can be delivered in person, by fax: 250-392-3504 or email: eldoent@telus.net. Only successful applicants will be contacted.

Employment

Employment

Employment

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Trades, Technical

Need extra $ $ $ Kamloops This Week is currently hiring Substitute Carriers for door-to-door deliveries. Call 250-374-0462 for more information.

is looking for substitute distributors for door-to-door deliveries. Vehicle is required. For more information please call the Circulation Department at

250-374-0462

Delivering the newspaper is a great form of exercise. What better way to burn calories, enjoy the outdoors, and make a bit of extra cash. Consider being an independent carrier for Kamloops This Week You will earn extra dollars twice a week to deliver an award winning community newspaper to the homes in your neighbourhood. Call us for more information on how you can become an adult carrier in your area.

Need More

250-374-0462

Exercise?

zzzzzzz zz zzzz zz zzzz zzzz......... zz zzzz zz zzzz zzzzzz. z ..........

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: 780725-4430 Resident caretaker position for established well run mobile home park North Shore ideal for semi retired person/couple. Some experience required. Excellent office skills and general construction experience an asset Fax 604-925-2292 or email sunnysideheights@ telus.net RESIDENTIAL BUILDING MANAGER We are seeking a mature person or couple for managing an apartment building. This is an on-site position located in Kamloops, BC. Suitable applicants will be sales oriented with strong computer skills, self-motivated, and have maintenance experience. Only those selected for an interview will be contacted. Please email resume to central.city@telus.net.

OfÀce Support MERRIT B.C Data Entry Clerk: responsible for daily data entry of time sheets for up to 150 unionized employees. Payroll experience would be a definite asset. Please forward Resume to careers@rokstadpower.com

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

Trades, Technical

Aberdeen Publishing has an opening for the position as Publisher of the Jasper Fitzhugh.

Ideally, you should have a good understanding of all facets of newspaper operations with emphasis on sales, marketing and financial management. In addition, our new publisher should be well suited to working with community groups and clients as well as developing sponsorship opportunities for the newspaper. As publisher of the Fitzhugh, you will help develop strategy for the newspaper as it continues to serve this diverse marketplace. Aberdeen Publishing is one of Western Canada’s largest independent newspaper companies with properties in British Columbia and Alberta. If you have the ability to innovate, are customer driven, success oriented, and want to live in one of the most beautiful places in Alberta, then we want to hear from you. We offer a generous compensation and benefits package as well as the opportunity for career advancement. Please submit your resume by December 31, 2012, to the attention of: Ron Lovestone, Regional Manager Prince George Free Press 1773 South Lyon Street Prince George, BC V2N 1T3 Telephone 778.349.6327 or Email publisher@northeastnews.ca

Eagle West Truck & Crane Inc. is currently accepting resumes for Crane Operator for our Kamloops & Kelowna Operations. We are a Non - Union Company Offering Employees a Competitive Wage & Benefits Package. Eligible candidates will be required to have valid crane certification & must have a Class 1 with clean abstract, and be willing to work in a challenging environment. Please forward resumes: Attn. Branch Manager: rtrowsse@ eaglewestcranes.com or fax (1)250.573.0040 Only successful applicants will be contacted for an interview.

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

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

Services

Alternative Health Asian Methods

Acupuncture - Acupressure Ultrasound - Aromatherapy Hot Stone - Paraffin bath FOR Chronic Disease Pain Management Mon-Fri 9-6 Sat. by reservation

250.320.1209

www.yangjonesclinic.com

LOOKING FOR A CAREER IN PLUMBING, ELECTRICAL OR CARPENTRY?

Publisher We are seeking a proven leader with the entrepreneurial skills to continue and further enhance the strong growth this paper has experienced over the past six years.

Crane Operator

Outlook Peace Arch News Richmond Review South Delta Leader Surrey/North Delta Leader Tri-City News WestEnder 100 Mile House Free Press Ashcroft Cache Creek Journal Barriere North Thompson Star Journal Burns Lake District News Castlegar News Clearwater North Thompson Times Cranbrook Kootenay AdvertiserFort St. James Caledonia Courier Golden Star Houston Today Invermere Valley Echo Kamloops This Week Kelowna Capital News Kitimat Northern Sentinel Kitimat/Terrace Weekend Advertiser Merritt Herald Merritt Valley Express Nakusp Arrow Lakes News Penticton Western News Prince George Free Press Princeton Similkameen Spotlight Quesnel Cariboo Observer Quesnel Weekender Revelstoke Times Review Salmon Arm Observer Shuswap Market News Sicamous Eagle Valley News Smithers Interior News Summerland Review Summerland Bulletin SunTerrace Standard Vanderhoof Omenica Express BugleStuart/Nechako AdvertiserVernon Morning Star Williams Lake Tribune Williams Lake Weekender Total BC Interior North Island Weekender North Island Gazette Campbell River Mirror Comox Valley Record Parksville Qualicum News Nanaimo News Bulletin Ladysmith Chronicle Lake C o w i c h a n G a z e t t e Cowichan News Leader Cowichan Pictorial Gulf Islands Driftwood Peninsula News Review Saanich News Oak Bay News Victoria News Esquimalt News Goldstream N e w s Gazette Sooke N e w s Mirror Monday Magazine Abbotsford News AgassizHarrison Observer Aldergrove Star Bowen Island Undercurrent Burnaby/New Westminster News Leader Chilliwack Progress Hope Standard Langley Times Maple Ridge/ Pitt Meadows News Mission City Record North Shore Outlook Peace Arch News Richmond Review South Delta Leader Surrey/North Delta Leader Tri-City News WestEnder 100 Mile House Free Press Ashcroft Cache Creek Journal Barriere North Thompson Star Journal Burns Lake District News Castlegar News Clearwater North Thompson Times Cranbrook Kootenay AdvertiserFort St. James Caledonia Courier Golden Star Houston Today Invermere Valley Echo Kamloops This Week Kelowna Capital News Kitimat Northern Sentinel Kitimat/Terrace Weekend Advertiser Merritt Herald Merritt Valley Express Nakusp Arrow Lakes News Penticton Western News Prince George Free Press Princeton Similkameen Spotlight Quesnel Cariboo Observer Quesnel Weekender Revelstoke Times Review Salmon Arm Observer Shuswap Market News Sicamous Eagle Valley News Smithers Interior News Summerland Review Summerland Bulletin - SunTerrace Standard Vanderhoof Omenica Express BugleStuart/Nechako AdvertiserVernon Morning Star Williams Lake Tribune Williams Lake Weekender Total BC Interior North Island Weekender North Island Gazette Campbell River Mirror Comox Valley Record Parksville Qualicum News Nanaimo News Bulletin Ladysmith Chronicle Lake Cowichan Gazette Cowichan News Leader Cowichan Pictorial Gulf Islands Driftwood Peninsula News Review Saanich News Oak Bay News Victoria News Esquimalt News Goldstream News Gazette Sooke News Mirror Monday Magazine Abbotsford News AgassizHarrison Observer Aldergrove Star Bowen Island Undercurrent Burnaby/New Westminster News Leader Chilliwack Progress Hope Standard Langley Times Maple Ridge/Pitt Meadows News Mission City Record North Shore Outlook Peace Arch

Think big.

Big deals across BC

250-371-4949

By shopping local you support local people.

We are currently accepting applications for a 19 week Construction Trades Training Program focusing on Carpentry, Electrical and Plumbing. This program is being offered in Kamloops starting in February. Go to www.sica.bc.ca/pdf/CTTbrochureKA.pdf to see our brochure about the program. For more information and applications contact: Kym Behrns 250-574-9389 cttkamsica@gmail.com www.sica.bc.ca Proudly Sponsored by the Southern Interior Construction Association

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

School Programs Coordinator The Kamloops Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada is hiring a School Programs Coordinator to implement the Foundation’s Jump Rope for Heart and Hoops for Heart fundraising programs within the Kamloops area of¿ce. Overall responsibility is to meet event revenue and sales goals in the Jump Rope and Hoops for Heart events during the current school year. The position will run to the end of June 2013 at approximately 25 to 30 hours per week with a rehire start date of September 2013 to June 2014.

The successful candidate should have: • Experience in a related ¿eld (sales/marketing/ fundraising) • Excellent sales skills with the ability to promote and sell ideas and programs • Strong oral and written communication, interpersonal and presentation skills • Pro¿cient in MS Of¿ce (Outlook/Word/Excel) • Ability to work independently with limited supervision • Contributes effectively in a team environment • Experience in coaching and leading teams • Strong community connections • Valid Driver’s License and access to a vehicle For complete job description please see our website www.heartandstroke.bc.ca Please email resume and cover letter by January 4th, 2013 to: TERESA MOORE, Kamloops Heart&Stroke Area Manager Email: tmoore@hsf.bc.ca Fax: 604-736-8732 Thank you for your interest in the Heart & Stroke Foundation of BC & Yukon. Please be advised that only those applicants selected for an interview will be contacted.


B18 ❖ TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Services

Services

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Real Estate

Rentals

Health Products

Landscaping

$500 & Under

Heavy Duty Machinery

Houses For Sale

Apt/Condo for Rent

Homes for Rent

RIVIERA VILLA

Brand new 4bdrm house for rent $1850 incl util Westmount (778) 470-0779 (250)574-3332 N/Shore 2bdrm util incl N/S N/P lovely yd Ideal for semi retired couple $1,100 579-8140 TOBIANO 3bdrm + den 2 1/2bth gar, f/p, lrg deck, access to pool, $2000/month + util Avail Jan1st 250 320-6576

GET 50% off - Join Herbal Magic this week and get 50% Off. Lose weight quickly, safely and keep it off, proven results! Call Herbal Magic today! 1-800-854-5176.

Financial Services DROWNING IN debts? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. Avoid bankruptcy! Free consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1 877-556-3500 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. M O N E Y P R OV I D E R . C O M . $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877-776-1660.

YOUR BUSINESS HERE

Only $120/month Run your 1x1 semi display classified in every issue of Kamloops This Week

Call 250-371-4949 classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com

Do you have an item for sale under $500? Did you know that you can place your item in our classifieds for one week for FREE?

Call our Classified Department for details!

Misc Services THOMPSON VALLEY DISPOSAL LTD. 12 Yard Mini Bins & 20,30, 40 Yard BIG Bins NO JOB TOO BIG OR TOO SMALL Locally owned & operated

250-376-5865 / 250-320-5865 Stucco/Siding

250-371-4949 *some restrictions apply

Winter tires on steel rims 215 70 R16 Hankook approx 75% tread left. Balanced and ready to go on your car, came off a 03 Saturn Vue $400 250-5787202aft 5 / 250-571-4501aft 4

Fitness/Exercise

Will pay cash for oversized scrap steel, cats, yarders, saw mill equipment, farm equipment, etc. All insurance in place to work on your property. 250-260-0217

Misc. for Sale GREAT GIFT IDEA! ChillSpot is The COOLEST Dog Bed-A new and innovative, thermodynamically cooled dog bed, that enhances the cool tile surfaces our pets rely on during the warm weather months. Use promo code COOLGIFT For 10 % off! www.chillspot.biz LIKE NEW Vata-Health Machine 2 motors, oscillating and spiral vibration 60 speed levels great for strength and weight training excellent for circulation and lymphatic drainage less than 20 hours on machine cost $1200 new will sell for $895 Great Christmas Gift (250) 851-9276

WE will pay you to exercise!

Firewood/Fuel

Deliver Kamloops This Week Only 2 issues a week!

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

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

HOME DELIVERY MIXED CORDS

ROLL ENDS AVAILABLE $10/ROLL 1365 B Dalhousie Drive

250-571-2656

Kamloops BC call for availability 250-374-7467

PETE’S FIREWOOD

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.

Furniture

LEATHER SECTIONAL

Pets & Livestock

Pets Animals sold as “purebred stock” must be registrable in compliance with the Canadian Pedigree Act.

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

Electrical

classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com *some restrictions apply.

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR

REGIST. Great Pyrenees Pups 700.00 mic.chip, 1rst shts, health guar 250-998-4697 delivery avail.

“A” Licensed Small Jobs Service Up Grades

Merchandise for Sale

Call Gerry 250-574-4602 Email gerrycline@shaw.ca

$100 & Under

Handypersons

Christmas tree stand cast iron w/water pan Beautiful Holly design $40 (250) 819-9202 Conair Body Benefits Dual Jet Bath Spa. Brand new - still in box. $25. 250-573-2327 Metronome made in Germany perfect cond. $75 firm (250) 819-9202 Set of cables for 16 inch wheels never used in case $20 (250) 579-8014

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

250-377-3457

Landscaping

$200 & Under

LOOKOUTLANDSCAPING.CA

Antique men’s gold pocket watch circa 1910 $125 (250) 372-2082aft 5 lve mes

Snow Plowing, Removal, Sanding, Hand Shoveling. Yard Clean up and Hauling

$500 & Under

250-376-2689

Like new Horizon 9.1 treadmill $1600 new asking $500 obo (250) 314-1643

Livestock

Livestock

SHAVINGS & SAWDUST 10 TO 150 YARD LOADS BARK MULCH FIR OR CEDAR

- Regular & Screened Sizes -

REIMER’S FARM SERVICES

250-260-0110

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

QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS & BOXSPRING

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

5 PIECE DINING ROOM SET

STEEL BUILDINGS /metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 or online: www.crownsteelbuildings.ca

Misc. Wanted

Real Estate For Sale By Owner

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

BRAND NEW 4 PC BEDROOM SET

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

1&2/BDRM Suites

$529,900

709 ROSEWOOD CRESCENT

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

KEN FEATHERSTONE 250 374.1461

Call or email us for more info:

250-374-7467

FSBO....MUST SELL!!! 2400 sqft. fully finished 4bdrm 4bth Townhouse with all appliances. Beautiful and modern in desirable Batchelor Heights. A steal at $315,900.00 For photos see ad in Kijiji. Ad ID 437628987 Call 780-224-3999 No realtors please.

Other Areas 20 ACRES FREE! Buy 40-Get 60 acres. $0-Down, $168/mo. Money Back Guarantee. NO CREDIT CHECKS. Beautiful Views. Roads/Surveyed. Neaer El Paso, Texas. Call 1800-843-7537. www.sunsetranches.com

1bdrm apt new kitchen on site w/d, min 1yr lease n/s, n/p ref $750 (250) 320-7622 Priv. fully-contained Bachelor in Knutsford. 10 min from mall $625/mo incl util 372-5365 Sun Rivers, Talasa Crt, new studio $900 inc util, laundry in suite 250-320-0057

classifieds@ kamloopsthisweek.com

RUNSOLD TILL

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

34

ly n O

The Sands Lower Sahali

Rooms for Rent

Centrally Located Clean Secure building with resident manager. 1 Bdrm & 2 Bdrm some with views.

DOWNTOWN motel rooms avail, 1 or 2 beds. All util, parking & internet incl. Starting @ $750/mo kitchenette rooms also available 250-372-7761 Large new home in Brock very bright wd avail, wifi and util incl seniors and students also welcome n/s n/p, (250) 376-3305

(250)828-1711

Bed & Breakfast

RV Pads BC Best Buy Classified’s

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

Place your classified ad in over 71 Papers across BC.

Shared Accommodation

Call 250-371-4949

Male seeking roommate Westsyde Furn. Close to bus $550/mo util incl. 579-8193 Cell 250-572-1048

for more information

Suites, Lower Commercial/ Industrial

Apt/Condo for Rent

The special includes a 1x1.5 ad (including photo) that will run for one week (two editions)in Kamloops This Week. Our award winning paper is delivered to over 30,000 homes in Kamloops every Tuesday & Thursday.

250-554-7888

Westwin Realty

Rentals

For Sale By Owner $39.95 Special!

1/bdrm starting at $675/mth 2/bdrm starting at $800/mth Incl/heat, hot water. N/P. Senior oriented.

kfeatherstone@kadrea.com

Private Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Chad: 250-863-3082 in Town PURCHASING old Canadian & American coin collections & accumulations. 250-548-3670

Rentals

95 3 lines PLUS TAX

Add an extra line for only $10

250-371-4949

1400sq ft with small office 12ft overhead door, dimensions 30’ x80’ Avail Dec 1, $1000mo + hst Lyle 250-682-0005 or 250-578-7647 lv mess 2 Bay car garage / workshop 110 power rent/lease $400/mo Avail now 250-554-1300

Duplex / 4 Plex 2bdrm Brock, great view & lrg deck. w/d, util incl + cab and internet . $1200/mo No dogs! Refs (250) 319-9873 Merritt walk to sch/shop new reno 4bdrm 3bth avail immd n/s, n/p $1100 (604) 534-2748 WESTMOUNT 3bdrm +den rec rm Fnc’d yd. W/D F/S N/P N/S fresh paint 1800sq ft $1250/mo+util Refs DD Avail immediately 250-554-9409

1Bdrm downtown N/P N/S includes all utils & digital cable $720/mth Nov 1 250-374-6122 1BDRM Sep. Entr. Shared Lndry. N/S N/P $700/mo+DD+ ref’s, util. incl. Brock 554-2228 2bdrm Batchelor Heights n/p, n/s, util incl, prt ent, $750 (250) 376-5052 2BdrmfurnW/D N/SN/P near bus TRU $1300(util,wireless incl) avail Feb 1,250-819-1373 2 Bdrm in Sahali avail immed $900mo util incl, no laundry 250-318-4756, 250-828-1900 2bdrm. N. Shore. $900 incl. hydro & gas. NP NS. New reno 250-371-4893 2bdrm walk out suite on NShore, shr w/d, cls to sch/shp/bus, n/s, pet neg, $850 + low util in newer home Avail now (250) 376-0611 Aberdeen 1bdrm day light util and int incl n/s, n/p $800 Avail Jan 1 (250) 320-0057 Lovely 2bdrm n/s, n/p, 6 appl, working persons pref’d $950 + 1/2 util (250) 554-1235

Run Till Rented “Read All About It” Kamloops This Week Run Till Rented gives you endless possibilities... $52.95 + tax Max 3 Lines Max 12 Weeks Must be pre-paid (no refunds) Scheduled for 4 weeks at a time (Must phone to reschedule)

Private parties only - no businesses Special: Add an extra line to your ad for $10 CALL 250-371-4949

The Heart munity of Your Com


TUESDAY, December 18, 2012 â?– B19

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Rentals

Transportation

Suites, Lower

Commercial Vehicles

Cumfy 1bdrm suite. Close to University, Hospital. Perfect for student or quiet person. Excellent Location. np. ns. Call now (250) 372-5270

EARN EXTRA CA$H KTW needs door to door Carriers in all areas of Kamloops For a route near you call:

250-374-0462

FOR SALE Toyota Forklift • • • • •

Model 42-6FG18 Max lift 3500lbs. Older model. Seller motivated. Sold to best offer.

Call 250-374-0462

New 2bdrm in Batchelor Heights Incl heat hydro and cab tv $950 778-470-0779 or 250-574-3332 Valleyview lge living space 2 bdrm, 5 appliances, $950mo hydro & gas incl 250-372-2380

Townhouses

Recreational/Sale

2BDRM + den, Sahali f/s/w/d, City View, Avail now $1100/mo +util (250) 318-4756

TOWNHOUSES Best Value In Town

NORTH SHORE *Bright, clean & Spacious 2&3 bedrooms *Big storage rooms *Laundry Facilities *Close to park, shopping & bus stop PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED

318-4321 NO PETS

Transportation

Antiques / Classics 1948 John Deer D Painted and restored all documented $5000 (250) 372-8754 1967 Ford Falcon Futura V6 Auto 2dr all original runs good, $6000 obo (250) 376-5722

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

Call: 250-371-4949

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

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

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Scrap Car Removal

Auto Financing

Sport Utility Vehicle 09 Jeep Patriot North 4x4 std, ac, fully loaded 61,500km drk green $16,500. 250-672-9623

Trucks & Vans 1983 F350 Ford camper van low mileage new tires, runs good $3500 250-377-0892 Auto Financing - Dream Catcher, Apply Today! Drive Today!

1.800.910.6402

DreamTeam Auto Financing “0� Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals

1-800-961-7022

www.iDreamAuto.com DL# 7557

Cars - Domestic 02 Dodge Chrysler Seabring 4dr V6, 190,000km new tires gd cond $3900obo 319-1394 04 PT Cruiser GT Turbo. 5sp, loaded, 106,000kms, Excellent cond.$5500 obo 250-319-9232 1985 Mercury Grand MQS exc cond. power everything $1000 obo (250) 372-7146 LOOKING FOR A DEAL ON A NEW VEHICLE? Save up to 40% OFF your next new vehicle... No games or gimmicks, deal direct with local dealerships. www.newcarselloff.com No qr code reader? Text info: 778.786.8271

RUN UNTIL SOLD ONLY $34.95(plus Tax)

1997 GMC Safari SLX Van AWD pwr Braun Wheel Chair Lift $12,000 (250) 374-6138 2003 F150 Ford 4X4, 161000 kms, fully-loaded, w/canopy, $8900 obo 250-554-0175 2006 Toyota Tacoma (silver) 29,000km auto very clean truck $14,500 (250) 828-0225 96 GMC 4x4 3/4ton club cab 161270km wired for trailer, a/c, c/d, canopy incl, new battery $9,000 (250) 376-6918

Boats 20ft. Campion bow rider w/115 hpMerc outbrd EZload trailer FishFndr $2900obo 319-1394 Sailboat, 15.5’ Falcon, ďŹ berglass, centreboard, new Northsails on trailer. $2750. Louis Creek. 250-672-9623

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

(250)371-4949 *some restrictions apply call for details

Cars - Sports & Imports 2005 Honda EX coupe Exc condition, low kms $9995.00 ďŹ rm Call 778-220-6205 87 Volvo DL Wagon 2.3L 331,000k 5spd manual, spare set tires, pwr lock good cond runs well $1250 250-376-1695

1ST CHOICE

KAMLOOPS TEMPTRESS Sexy, fun, accommodating, & discreet. Ask about our daytime specials & Stag Parties.

Call 24/7 www.kamloopstemptress.com

250-572-3623 Fun blonde provides erotic massage and much more! 9:30am-10pm 250-376-5319

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B20 â?– TUESDAY, December 18, 2012

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

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ELLIPSE Recital series speakers SAVE

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Valid until December 23rd, 2012 inclusive or while quantities last. See details in store. Some products are in limited quantities or not available at all locations. Pictures or illustrations may differ from original product on sale. Taxes not included. ith any other offer. With all attention put into the making of this flyer, some errors may occur, if it’s the case, we apologize and deta This promotion may not be combined with details will be posted in the store.


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