FRIDAY
< A Day In The Life
DECEMBER 21, 2012
It’s a busy time for Food Bank volunteers | Page 3
Keeping the wheels rolling >
MBSS basketball launches fundraising ventures | Page 8
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Vol. 60, Issue 247
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Mayor happy to see sign bylaw feedback ANNALEE GR ANT Townsman Staff
ANNALEE GRANT PHOTO
Chair of the School District 5 School Replacement Committee Chris Johns, Mayor Wayne Stetski and Key City Theatre board chair Sandra Cave sign a proclamation stating the three parties will keep the Key City Theatre in the new Mount Baker Neighbourhood Learning Centre when it is built.
Theatre key to new school Proclamation declares that theatre space will be part of new “neighbourhood of learning” ANNALEE GRANT Townsman Staff
Theatre goers of Cranbrook and area needn’t worry anymore. There will be a theatre in the Key City for many years to come. School District 5, the City of Cranbrook
and the Key City Theatre signed a proclamation on December 20 at City Hall that puts just that in writing. When the new Mount Baker Neighbourhood Learning Centre is constructed, it will have a theatre space. “The School Board,
Key City Theatre Society and the City of Cranbrook are all in agreement,” Mayor Wayne Stetski told the Townsman. “It’s a very good partnership.” The proclamation puts to rest rumours that have been swirling as the call for a new
high school building has become even louder over the past few years. The Key City Theatre, attached to the school on the North side of the building and used hundreds of times a year by students in the district, would be difficult to
maintain if the Mount Baker is torn down to make way for a new building. But now, all three involved parties have officially said they will make room for theatre space in the new Neighbourhood Learning Centre.
See THEATRE , Page 5
Driving safe for the holidays and beyond ANNALEE GR ANT Townsman Staff
Mainroad East Kootenay is out in force on the region’s road, and they are encouraging motorists to take care this holiday season. Jim Conley, general manager for Mainroad East Koote-
nay Contracting, said weather can be unpredictable in the Kootenays, and drivers need to be prepared just like the staff at Mainroad are. “We know the importance of having our drivers and equipment ready because in a couple of hours we can go
from clear sky to blizzard in the East Kootenays,” Conley said. “We’re working with the public to make sure everybody gets home safe; we treat these roads as ours because we know they’re yours.” Mainroad is encouraging riders to check out www.drive-
bc.ca before they head out this season. The website has current driving conditions and weather forecasts. It even has webcams of popular routes that can help better inform you before heading out.
See MAINROAD , Page 5
The City of Cranbrook originally set a deadline of Dec. 31 to receive feedback forms on the controversial proposed sign bylaw, but Mayor Wayne Stetski said as long as the feedback is coming in, they’re happy to have it. Chris Zettel, corporate communications officer with the city announced Thursday that the deadline would be extended to February 1, 2013 at 4:30 p.m., to allow all parties to get their feedback in. The mayor would like to see plenty of feedback beyond what the business community has already contributed in forms and at the open house meeting earlier this month. “It’s really important that we get the public input, as well as the business input because Cranbrook belongs to all of us,” Stetski said. The sign bylaw issue arose back in the spring when a local business owner came before council to ask that he be allowed to have an Electronic Changeable Copy (ECC) Sign, similar to the ones used at Western Financial Place and Mount Baker Secondary School. The city decided to open up the entire
bylaw to review. “It’s all about trying to improve the look to Cranbrook as we move into the future,” Stetski said. An update to the 30-year-old bylaw is important as many sign types didn’t exist when it was developed, the city said during the public meeting; but Stetski said they must balance the needs of business with aesthetics by having standards. The meeting, held December 5, was one of the most well attended meetings in the city’s history, and Stetski, who was away, is happy to see people so involved. “It’s great to see people interested in their city, but it’s important they have accurate information,” he said. Many business owners at the meeting expressed concern that complying to the bylaw would cost them money to get up to code. Stetski said current signs will be grandfathered into the new bylaw and be deemed legal non-conforming. He said the bylaw says that if a new business moves in, they can use the old sign infrastructure to add a new logo or sign to the existing one.
See DEADLINE , Page 3
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Weatoheurtlook Tonight -7
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An n al ee Gr an t Townsman Staff
Almanac Temperatures
High Low Normal...........................-4.3° ...............-11.5° Record ........................7°/1994.........-31.6°/1983 Yesterday -1° -5.3° Precipitation Normal..............................................1.2mm Record.....................................9.1mm/1969 Yesterday ........................................7.8 mm This month to date............................40 mm This year to date........................1480.5 mm Precipitation totals include rain and snow
Tomorrows
Annalee Grant photo
unrise 8 37 a.m. unset 16 46 p.m. oonset 3 10 a.m. oonrise 1 22 p.m.
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Across the Region Tomorro w Prince George -16/-19 Jasper -19/-22
Edmonton -18/-19
Banff -12/-14 Kamloops 0/-3
Revelstoke -1/-4
Kelowna 1/-4 Vancouver 6/3
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m.sunny-28/-31 p.sunny-27/-29 rain 6/3 showers 7/3 flurries -18/-19 p.sunny-17/-18 p.cloudy-13/-20 p.cloudy-13/-20 flurries -6/-14 p.cloudy -3/-9 flurries 0/-5 p.cloudy 2/-2 flurries -2/-15 flurries 0/-12 flurries 1/-12 showers 4/-7 tomorrow
windy 8/-2 sunny 11/2 sunny 23/17 sunny 23/22 flurries 2/-2 windy 2/-3 showers 9/6 cloudy 9/2 showers 25/12 sunny 22/10 cloudy 23/20 p.cloudy 20/17 snow -11/-14 snow -13/-13 showers 8/6 rain 11/6 p.cloudy 17/8 p.cloudy 16/12 showers 20/7 p.cloudy 21/9 showers 9/6 rain 12/8 rain 9/7 p.cloudy 11/4 tshowers 30/24 tstorms 31/24 cloudy 20/20 cloudy 25/22 cloudy 9/5 showers 8/6 windy 8/2 windy 7/1 The Weather Network 2012
JCI Kootenay (Junior Chambers Internation) dropped off their biggest donation to the food bank yet, after the 42nd annual Santa Claus Parade. The organization plans the parade every year, with entry by donation to the food bank. This year they were able to hand over $3,239 to the food bank. Pictured is Jackie Jensen accepting the cheque on behalf of the food bank from Parade Chair Lindsey Di Marcello.
The Salvation Army of volunteers are keeping up the Christmas cheer as the charity heads into the final days before Christmas. Cpt. Kirk Green said Cranbrook has been generous as always, and the Salvation Army is $30,000 away from their $160,000 goal this Christmas. “The season’s been very, very good,” he said. “The people in Cranbrook and area have been quite generous.” There have been too many contributions to
the Salvation Army to list, but Kirk said some memorable ones this year have been the Chamber Turkey Drive and as always, the Christmas Kettles. Donations are still happily accepted as they hope to top up their fund to $160,000 to make sure all Cranbrook residents have a happy holiday season. “We have every confidence that the citizens will be every bit as generous as they’ve always been,” Kirk said. Demand has been a bit different this year, with many applications but some not actually using the service in the end. On Tuesday, December 18, Kirk said they had 20 new applications, which points to a possible upward trend in Salvation Army usage. Volunteers are always needed, even in the last days heading into Christmas. Kirk said the Salvation Army has a dedicated team of 100 volunteers who are out collecting funds through the Christmas Kettles and packing and handing out hampers. There are still a few open kettle shifts before Christmas for anyone looking to do a little community service. “We’re always looking for volunteers, even at this late date,” Kirk said. Pick up this year is December 21. Kirk said this year they have shifted operations from their main building to a new one, where the hampers will be picked up this year. It was decided with all the other big projects underway by the Salvation Army such as the shelter, they needed a new space to greet the public and do the hamper work. They will now be operating out of 216 Slater Rd. Kirk said the mood as always at the Salvation Army is jolly and happy as the volunteers put the finishing touches on the Christmas hampers. “We’re used to this, the mood’s good.”
daily townsman
Local NEWS
friday, december 21, 2012
Page 3
A day in the life of the Cranbrook Food Bank
The Food Bank is at the forefront of our minds as Christmas approaches: how does this long-standing Cranbrook organization turn donations into monthly hampers for people who need a helping hand? Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff
S
tep through the doors of the Cranbrook Food Bank at 1 p.m. on a Monday, Wednesday or Friday and you’ll find the little house bustling with activity. On the porch, pallets of bread wait to be picked through. Inside, front desk staff assign numbers to hamper recipients, who line up to collect a week’s supply of food. Behind the desk, more than a dozen volunteers dash here and there, weighing donations, packing canned goods, washing produce, and separating meat. It’s a finely tuned routine, and around 50 volunteers pitch in to create about 400 hampers every month. The Cranbrook Food Bank has been helping residents who are struggling to make ends meet for more than 30 years. Anyone who needs a hamper can ask for a hamper once a month, and when they pick it up they will find a week’s worth of food for every member of their family. “The idea is that we are helping them with food for a week out of the month to help stretch their budget,” explained manager Jackie Jensen, herself a Food Bank volunteer of 10 years. In August, for example, the Food Bank gave out 27,000 pounds of food in 380 hampers to feed 778 people. Of those 778 people, 306 were children and 87 were single parent families. It’s a huge undertaking for a 100 per cent volunteer run organization. The Food Bank is open Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The Townsman visited on a “quiet” Friday where 18 hampers were given out. An average day will see between 30 and 35 hampers picked up. The day starts at 9:30 a.m. when delivery drivers visit the Food Bank’s
Sally MacDonald photo
Sean Cloarec picks up a hamper to hand out to a waiting Food Bank client.
Sally MacDonald photo
Shirley Yurchyshyn packs donated donuts from Tim Hortons into smaller groups that will be added as a sweet treat to food hampers. new 4,000 square foot warehouse in Industrial Park. This is where big deliveries from out of town will come because there is much more space. Also, many big department stores can claim damaged goods on their insurance if they are donated to the Food Bank. These deliveries will also come to the warehouse. At the warehouse each morning, drivers will pick up non-perishables – canned goods, cereal, drinks, rice and
so on. Then they drop it back to the Food Bank headquarters on 8th Avenue South downtown, where volunteers are ready to weigh, sort and stack the items. Drivers will also visit Safeway, Save On Foods, Little Caesar’s and Tim Hortons, which all donate every day the Food Bank is open. The drivers will stop at Walmart, Superstore and Giant Tiger, which have donation bins. Sometimes groups that have organized a donation drive
will ask for the goods to be picked up, too. Clients can call in or drop in between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on the day they need a hamper to place their order. Front desk volunteers answer the call and take down important details, like the number of people the hamper is for, any dietary needs such as a diabetic or gluten free diet, and whether the client is in a car or on foot. Each client is assigned a hamper number to protect their pri-
vacy and a time to come back and pick up their food. Pick-ups are done in 15-minute intervals starting at 12:15 p.m. and ending at 2 p.m., so it doesn’t get congested all at once. Behind the scenes, volunteers take the deliveries and package them into individual servings. For instance, each person receives two pounds of potatoes. Potatoes are one of the few things the Food Bank is rarely donated, along with milk, eggs and butter. The organization also has to buy meat quite often, although during hunting season they are sometimes donated wild game, which is prepared at Rick’s Fine Meats. When a client comes to pick up their hamper, they can choose the type of bread they would like off the porch, then come
inside and choose two toiletry and miscellaneous items. Then they visit the pick-up window and hand over their hamper number. Inside, volunteers are placed at three different stations: produce, “sweets and meats”, and shopping. Each station refers to the list of hamper requests for the day and prepares food to meet those needs. Runners collect from each station, weigh each outgoing hamper, and deliver it to a separate room, behind the pickup counter. A waiting volunteer checks the hamper number, finds the bags or boxes with the corresponding number, and gives them out. From November 21 to December 21, when the Food Bank closes for the holiday, each hamper recipient also receives a ham (for sin-
gles) and a turkey (for families). They are told to come back on a certain day in December when the Christmas meats will be available. While many of the turkeys will be donated by the community, the hams are usually purchased by the Food Bank using cash donations. In 2010, for example, the Food Bank gave out 190 hams and 198 turkeys. Things start to wind down in the Food Bank about 2:30 p.m., when the day’s hampers have been given out. After a quick clean up, volunteers head out for the day, having helped dozens of families keep their bellies full for another week. To donate to the Cranbrook Food Bank, call 250-426-7664 or visit 104 - 8th Avenue South.
Deadline extended for sign bylaw feedback Continued from page 1 “It’s kind of crying wolf to say it’s going to be costly to business to follow the bylaw,” Stetski said. The mayor stresses that the bulk of the bylaw is actually a series of guidelines that provides photos and suggestions of existing signage in town. The city has received a lot of phone calls since
the public meeting, not all of them opposing the new bylaw. “The challenge is, how can we end up with a more aesthetically pleasing Cranbrook, including Highway 3?” Stetski said. Meanwhile, the Chamber ad-hoc sign bylaw committee continues to research and collect feedback. Com-
mittee chair Jason Wheeldon said the group has met twice, once with city staff. They have gone through the bylaw paragraph by paragraph to identify areas of concern and plan to have something to present before council by the first week in February. The research is expected to be done mid-January, and the Chamber’s board will
have to approve the presentation. Wheeldon said the committee is a great mix of business owners from all areas of the community from the Strip to Baker St. “We’ve got a lot of volunteers for our sign committee,” he said. The city has asked the Chamber to research sign bylaws across the country as
well. The committee is penning a letter to inform the city on their process as they collect their information and prepare for the presentation. Wheeldon said the Downtown Business Association has been extremely helpful providing feedback, and comments continue to stream in to the Chamber. Feedback is wel-
come, and Wheeldon invites anyone to call the Chamber with their ideas on the proposed bylaw. Copies of the bylaw are available at City Hall for anyone interested in taking a look. If you have any questions, please contact Rob Veg, Senior Planner at (250) 489-0241 or veg@cranbrook.ca.
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friday, december 21, 2012
Local NEWS
Page 5
Proclamation guarantees theatre will be part of new school Continued from page 1 “What this does it put all those rumours to rest,” Stetski said. “(It) makes sure that a new theatre will be part of a new school.” Trustee Chris Johns,
who is the chair of the School Replacement Committee, said in his research to lobby for the new high school, he noticed many Neighbourhood Learning
Centres have had theatre space in them. Keeping the Key City Theatre intrinsically linked to Mount Baker is a feather in the cap as they try to get a new building underway. “The majority of
them had some sort of theatre attached to it,” Johns said. “We saw the establishment of a new Key City Theatre as an important lynchpin in our efforts.” The theatre is well used by students in the
district, from the many Mount Baker theatre productions, to elementary school Christmas concerts to middle school band performances. “It goes without saying, but I’ll say it: it’s a
Mainroad is busy all over the East Kootenay this week. Larry Tooze photographed this snowplow in action.
Larry Tooze photo
Mainroad urges driver/snowplow awareness Continued from page 1 Conley said safety is key for their drivers when they’re out clearing roads. He encourages drivers to give them a wide birth and being patient. “Help our crews by maintaining a safe following distance when approaching highway maintenance vehicles,” he said. “When you attempt to
pass, you put yourself, the truck operator, and the driving public at risk.” Mainroad sends out a full complement of winter operators after every snowfall, plus mechanical support for every shift until the job is done. The drivers have access to three different materials – winter sand,
salt brine and salt – to make the roads safer, and they use them based on the conditions at the time. The materials are stored throughout the region Mainroad services in nine different depots. Mainroad has a 24-hour hotline for reporting accidents, unsafe road conditions and road kill by calling 1-800-6654929. They encourage drivers
to use it. The service area stretches from Brisco in the north, to Goatfel in the west, the Alberta border in the east and the U.S. border. To keep up with Mainroad and their activities this winter, visit their Twitter feed for updaters, @MainroadEastK. they also encourage drivers to visit www.shiftintowinter.ca for tips on winter driving safety.
It’s the festive season, and the RCMP are urging residents to be responsible as they celebrate. “With the Christmas season upon us, I would like to remind the citizens of the East Kootenays to plan their evenings and drive responsible,” Cpl. Shayne Parker of East Kootenay Traffic Services said in a recent release. The message comes as B.C. celebrates a successful year of its new impaired driving program. On Nov. 21, the province announced that an estimated 104 lives had been saved and incidents of impaired driving have dropped significantly. The immediate Roadside Prohibition
Program was introduced in September, 2010. Since then alcohol-related motor vehicle deaths have dropped to 62 a year – a 46 per cent decrease from the average of 114 over the previous five years. The provincial government set a goal in 2010 in honour of imparied driving victim Alexa Middleaer to reduce alcohol-related deaths by 35 per cent. They reported that new research suggests they have more than met that goal. “The message that I would like to get across is very simple: if you drink any amount, don’t drive,” Parker said. The RCMP as usual around this season will be out on the roads ensuring the community has a safe and happy
holiday. “We are out there, and we will be looking for violators,” Parker said. For those planning to throw a holiday party this year, Parker said it is
the onus of the host to ensure all their guests are safe — even when they leave. “You are civily responsible for the safety of the people you serve,” he said. “It is important
that you are consious not to over serve and that you are able to provide them with options for a safe ride home.” With that, Parker wishes everyone a safe and Merry Christmas.
2.8125” x 3”
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Cranbrook office holiday hours: December 24, 25 and 26 - Closed December 27, 28 and 31 - 8:30 a.m.- 4:30 p.m. January 1 - Closed Regular office hours will resume January 2, 2013. www.cbt.org • 1.800.505.8998
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“It’s really an important part of what Cranbrook is,” he said. “I love the professionals that come in, but I also really love the local productions.” Trustee Trina Ayling previously sat on the Key City Theatre’s board of directors. She will be stepping down and Johns will take her position as the School Board’s representative. Stetski said the new high school is something all Cranbrook residents are looking forward to – when it finally happens. “The replacement of the high school is one of the priorities we all have for Cranbrook,” the mayor said. “It’s not a matter of if, but when.” Johns said the work continues behind the scenes to get funding approved for the new Neighbourhood Learning Centre. They continue to be in contact with MLA Bill Bennett and the province and hope to someday have a big, exciting announcement to make. “We’re going to have a new Mount Baker opening in September – we’re just not sure what year that will be.”
City of Kimberley
PUBLIC NOTICE
2013 CITy COUNCIL MEETINgs
RCMP wish Merry Christmas to all Annalee Gr ant Townsman Staff
key part of all performing arts activities in our school communities,” Johns said, adding that the theatre goes way beyond what happens in the schools. “We would be sadly missing an opportunity if we didn’t have this theatre in our community. It’s bigger than its attachment to Mount Baker.” Stetski said the city has always been involved with the Key City Theatre. Currently they contribute $65,000 to the theatre’s operating costs and are even proposing to raise that contribution to $70,000 for 2013. “We’re happy to do that because the theatre is such an important part of our community,” Stetski said. The theatre is used by many different community groups and captures a wide array of audiences. “The productions that they have brought in have been excellent,” Stetski said. But the mayor says what he enjoys the most about the theatres are the locally produced, homegrown productions from school concerts to elaborate plays.
2013 Regular Meetings of City Council will be held at 7:00 p.m. in the Council Chamber, City Hall, 340 Spokane Street as follows: Monday, January 14 and 28 Tuesday, February 12 and Monday, February 25 Monday, March 11 and 25 Monday, April 8 and 22 Monday, May 13 and 28 Monday, June 10 and 24 Monday, July 8 and 22 Monday, August 12 and 26 Monday, September 9 and 23 Tuesday, October 15 and Monday, October 28 Tuesday, November 12 and Monday, November 25 Monday, December 9 and 23 RSS
Copies of the above schedule are available at City Hall. RSS
Dated this 27th day of November 2012. George Stratton Chief Corporate Administration Officer
PAGE 6
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2012
OPINION
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LETTERS to the EDITOR Tribute to a Cranbrook nurse
It is with great sadness, but also honour, that I write this public address. I miss my sister Theresa Sanche Dean’s cheerful, compassionate demeanor that made her a wonderful nurse throughout her career in Cranbrook, Castlegar, Terrace and Prince Rupert. She was a great sister, daughter, mother, wife, family and community person. Theresa (Terry) underwent serious surgeries in her youth to correct her spine, due to polio syndrome in the late 1950s. She was considered to be one of the first recipients of the Harrington Rod used to fuse the spine. Thus she is part of Canadian medical history. That surgery was done at the Alberta Children’s Hospital in Calgary. Terry was a strong-willed determined lady of intellect, becoming a Licensed Practical Nurse. She lived a fabulous, happy family life and had a wonderful nursing career. She took her nurse’s training in the late 1970s at Selkirk College in Nelson. In her passing, I am acknowledging family and friends to be part of a special charitable contribution in honour of Terry, set up at the Nelson Bank of Montreal. This account will also be accessible at the Cranbrook Bank of Montreal, to all family and family friends in the Cran-
brook/Kimberley area and in the Nelson/Castlegar area. This special fund will be presented to a needy family with a child going through complicated surgery at the Alberta Children’s Hospital in Calgary in July, 2013. There will be an honorary plaque given to the surgeon’s team and board of directors at the hospital at that time. Due to distant communications and waiting the legal set-up of the trust fund, set for late January, 2013, people wanting to submit a Christmas charitable donation for January may make a post-dated cheque payable to the Terry Sanche Dean Fund, which will be at BMO. For further information, call 250-505-4185. Lianne Sanche Nelson
Outdoor Live Nativity As Christmas Day approaches, the spirit of Christmas grows stronger each day. With the mass choir concert, school concerts everywhere and events throughout the community. One such event was a great success for the LDS church as they performed an outdoor live nativity on the 17th and 18th of December. There was two casts of children, youth and adults, and more than 15 crew members on board. They even had two donkeys, two sheep and a goat! It was
cold both nights, but many hearts were warmed with the story of Christ’s birth. The music was powerful, the costumes were wonderful, and the actors were honored. One nine-year-old girl, who was a shepherd in Tuesday night’s performance, stated that she felt as though she was really there that night long ago. It was an experience that will not soon be forgotten for anyone who was involved or attended. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints will carry on this nativity tradition for many years to come. Amy Miller Cranbrook
Hit & Run Humbug My 2007 Buick was subjected to a hitand-run on December 14, possibly in the rear parking lot at the Rec Plex, which ended up costing me $500 (deductable) for repairs through ICBC. Whoever hit my vehicle (which was unoccupied and parked at the time) must have known that they caused this damage, and that they intentionally left the scene of the incident To whoever was involved I say a humbug Christmas to you and yours. G. Bryant Cranbrook
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Letters to the Editor should be a maximum of 400 words in length. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject any contribution. All letters must include the name and daytime phone number of the writer for verification purposes. The phone number will not be printed. Anonymous letters will not be published. Email letters to barry@dailytownsman.com. Mail to The Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3R9. In Kimberley, email bulletin@cyberlink.bc.ca. Mail to The Daily Bulletin, 335 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 1Y9.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Opinion/Events
friday, december 21, 2012
Page 7
To everything there is a What’s Up? season: Christmas 1954 D
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
JANUS: Cranbrook Then & Now
Jim Cameron ateline: Cranbrook, Christmas 1954: Both the economy and the town were in reasonable shape. The country was more or less between wars, temperatures were mild and future prospects inviting. The 1950s eventually spelled the end of “old Cranbrook” as the old-timers knew it, but in 1954 major changes had barely begun. For that matter, it was many of the old-timers who made the changes. There were 75 births and 22 deaths in the district that December, but only a handful in Cranbrook. Heart disease took eight, cancer claimed three, For some perhaps a transistor radio, Matchbox cars or Robert the Robot but for others: This. – strokes two, and nine (includCourier, December 1954 ing four infants) from other causes. The Christmas Cranbrook of 1954 saw the city just one Televisions were not cheap, grade in the party-line sys- and Rotary Park. Movies at year shy of its 50th anniversathe lowest being in the $200 tem. Party-lines (shared tele- the Armond and Star Therange. The flashiest of the phone connections) allowed atres on 10th Avenue and the ry 56 if you count the early bunch was the Fair- curious listeners to monitor Rex Drive-In (believe it or unincorporated years). The banks-Morse combination neighbours’ calls by simply not) included the Christmas town was larger as of 1953, television-phonograph at (and generally gingerly) pick- favourites “Mission over when the area between 4th– $589.50 (over $4,000 by pres- ing up the telephone and lis- Korea,” “Thunder over the 11th Street and 3rd–11th Aveent day standards). The Sylva- tening in. Further, when it Plains,” “Three Sailors and a nue was incorporated into the nia model with Ha- rang at one house in the Girl” and “She Couldn’t Say city, thereby bringing the lo-Light-Surround and the group it rang at them all. The No.” population near the 5,000 Philco Balanced Beam Gold- new system did not get rid of Fourteen young profesmark. en Grid Tuner Deep Dimen- party-lines but it did revamp sionals organized the Jaycees, Cranbrook was on the cusp sion 21-inch Aluminized Fil- things so that the only time the Canadian Army set up a of a technological-media ter-Face picture were some- your phone rang was when recruiting booth at the Arboom. During December, what cheaper. To the delight of someone was calling you. mouries, an addition to 1954, cable television came on Cranbrook viewers CBS A party-line was still in- Mount Baker School was dethe local market. Antennae prime-time shows included convenient of course, even layed and the Historical Assoplaced on Bald Hill (which Lassie, Jack Benny, Red Skelt- more so that December when ciation made plans for the was much balder then) alon, What’s My Line, Arthur the ladies of the Lions Club coming year. Members of the lowed the local broadcast of Godfrey, Father Knows Best, conducted a telephone Fire Dept. hosted a ladies CBS through KXLY-TV of SpoI’ve Got a Secret, Truth or bridge match to raise money night turkey dinner at the fire kane. Few locals had televiConsequences, Jackie Glea- for the St. Eugene Hospital. hall which was only intersions but the stores along son and the year’s number “That’s odd; I swear I just rupted twice by alarms, and a Baker Street (the strip still a one hit, I Love Lucy. heard old Mrs. Landon say logger collided with a locomostly empty road out of A public viewing demon- she’s looking for a squeeze.” motive on King Street. No one town) were doing their best to stration was given by CranThe newly reformed City was hurt. City workers apconvince customers to turn on brook Television on their Band played a lot during the proached council for a reducand tune in. Parks and Mitchpremises and was attended month, not over the phone tion in their work week from ell’s Hardware, Cockwell’s Furby a great many people eager though, they played the Me- 44 hours to 40 with the same niture, Modern & Hume Electo see the new medium in morial Arena while the Cran- pay, a concession granted tric and Eaton’s all offered action. The pitch worked — brook Selkirks A-B.C. hockey early the next year. Santa televisions for sale within four within a year over 500 people team took on all comers. They Claus found time to visit The city blocks. In fact pretty much in the city owned TV sets. also caroled through the city Legion, Laurie’s Dry Goods everything that could be Overwaitea opened their new streets while the Girls Bugle on 12th Avenue, and the steps bought was within four city building on Baker Street (now Band knocked on doors to col- of city hall where he handed blocks unless you shopped out the site of the Credit Union) lect donations for the March out goodies to 1100 children of town, a habit that the Chamwhich coincided nicely with of Dimes campaign. watched by a like number of ber of Commerce tried their the Swanson Co. wide-spread Cold War civil defense was adults. best to discourage, out-ofrelease of frozen TV dinners. an ongoing matter of conChurch services, school town shopping being an ongoAnother local technical ad- cern, although volunteer De- concerts, food hampers for ing problem since 1898 when vancement came with the fense Officer Ernie Rowe ex- the needy, a collective “Aaaah.” locals realized that the train opening of the new B.C. Tele- pressed frustration over the on Christmas morning and coming in also travelled out. phone building on the corner lack of local interest and then it was gone. Eventful for For very upscale shoppers a of 1st Street and 11th Avenue. threatened to resign. He some, not so much for others, one-way Canadian Pacific Modern equipment allowed didn’t. The old air raid sirens all in all a typical Cranbrook flight from the old Cranbrook for both direct dialing and, have recently been removed Christmas, perhaps the very airport to Vancouver took 2-1/2 hours and cost $32.35. more importantly, an up- from Amy Woodland School best kind.
UPCOMING Christmas at Baker Hill, Sunday Dec. 23rd, 6:00-7:00 pm. Instrumental music & carols. The DeHorst Sisters and guest, Jack Telman from Edmonton. Receiving canned goods for Cranbrook Food Bank. Abundant Life Assembly, 501-11 Ave S, Cranbrook. Limited seating. 250-426-2866 to request your free tickets. SOCIAL DANCE will be held at the Seniors Hall on New Year’s Eve to the music of Lyle, Ken and Duncan – The Pacemaker’s. Welcome in the New Year with family and friends from 8 pm to midnight. Admission includes a Lunch, Draws and Prizes. RSVP 250-489-2720 or 250-489-4442. Royal Canadian Legion New Year’s Eve Dance. Tickets: available Till Dec. 28th, 8 pm-2 am. Brad and the Boyz. Party Favors and Light Lunch. For more info phone 250-426-4512 2013 FREE PUBLIC SWIM Wednesday, January 2nd, 5:00-6:00 PM is sponsored by Kimberley Health-Care Auxiliary. ONGOING Mark Creek Lions “Meet and Greet” the 1st and 3rd Wednesday, from 6:00-6:30 pm. Dinner to follow at Western Lodge. FMI: 250-427-5612 or 427-7496. Cranbrook Branch of the Stroke Recovery Association of BC. Meetings are from 10:00am-1:00pm the 2nd and 4th Wed. in the lower level of the Senior Citizen’s Hall, 125-17th St. S. Bring bag lunch. Tootie Gripich, 426-3994. KIMBERLEY North Star Quilters meet 2nd and 4th Monday of each month at 7pm downstairs Centennial Hall, 100 4th Avenue. Everyone welcome. Info: Carol at 250-427-7935 or Joan at 250-427-4046. The Cranbrook Senior Floor Curling is looking for new members. Curling is Monday and Wednesday afternoons, upstairs in the Curling Rink. Info: Dave at 250-426-5387. Cranbrook Senior Centre, Branch 11 holding their meetings every third Thursday a month. 1:30pm at the hall. We always welcome new members. Play and Learn Parenting/Literacy Program – 8 week registered program for parents with preschool children with a facilitated play and activity component for children. Kimberley Early Learning Centre Kim 250-427-4468. StrongStart BC - FREE family drop-in program for preschoolaged children accompanied by a parent. Kimberley Early Learning Centre. Activities include circle time, play centers, nutritious snack and active play. Monday 9 - 12, Tuesday 9 - 12, Thursday 9 – 12, Friday 9 - 12. Gina 250-427-5309. Treehouse—Families with children 5 & under are invited to come play. Free drop-in program in gym of Kimberley Early Learning Centre. Transportation avail. Tuesdays, 9:00 - 12:00. Diana 250-427-0716. Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-4268916, drop by our office at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.fightwithus.ca and register as a volunteer. ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868. Tai Chi Moving Meditation every Wednesday 3-4 pm at Centre 64. Starts November 7th. Call Adele 250-427-1939. Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon - 1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs. org. Breast Cancer Support Group meets at McKim Middle School Library, every 3rd Thursday of the month at 7 pm. Contact: Daniela @ 427-2562. Super Christmas Bargains: New & next to new, warm clothing, footwear, small appliances, jewellery, Christmas decor galore! Bibles for Missions Thrift Store, 824 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook. 778-520-1981. The Cranbrook Skating Club is offering skating lessons for learners of all ages. Pre-CanSkate (for pre-schoolers), CanSkate (ages 4 & up), Intro-StarSkate (learn to figure skate), StarSkate (for advanced levels of figure skating), CanPowerSkate (skating skills for hockey players) and Adult lessons. Kathy Bates (Registrar) at 250-432-5562. Do you have 3 hours a week to give? Contact the Kimberley Health Care Auxiliary Thrift Shops at 250-427-2503 (Brenda) or 250-427-1754 Gayle) for volunteer opportunities: cashiers, sorters, after hours cleaners. CRANBROOK QUILTERS’ GUILD hold their meetings every 2nd & 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:15pm upstairs in the Seniors’ Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. Everyone welcome. Info: Betty at 250-489-1498 or June 250-426-8817. Place your notice in your “What’s Up?” Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and non-profit organizations to publicize their coming events — provided the following requirements are met: • Notices will be accepted two weeks prior to the event. • All notices must be emailed, faxed or dropped off in person. No telephone calls please. • NOTICES SHOULD NOT EXCEED 30 WORDS. • Only one notice per week from any one club or organization. • All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication • There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.
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PAGE 8
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2012
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SUBMITTED PHOTO
After a busy fall session both in the dojo and traveling to many events throughout BC and Alberta, students of the Rocky Mountain Dojo were promoted after grading. Back row, left to right: Al Domin 8th Kyu; Wendy McBride 2nd Kyu; Maxine Adshead assistant instructor; Bill Stalker assistant instructor; Don Corrigal head instructor; Jerry Gilchrist assistant instructor; Carla Lowden assistant instructor, Al Watson 2nd Kyu. Front row, left to right: Brogan Graham 10th Kyu; Tom Sutton 10th Kyu; Beth Sutton 10th Kyu; Andrea Spowart 10th Kyu; Mary Miskulin 10th Kyu; Zach McAdam 9th Kyu; Tynan McCracken 10th Kyu; Liam Whalen 10th Kyu; Ben Miskulin 10th Kyu; Gavin Segarty 9th Kyu; missing from the photo: Issac Vincelette 10th Kyu.
Canadian world junior team loses MBSS basketball team exhibition game to Finland fundraising for season C ANADIAN PRESS
VANTAA, Finland— It was an early wakeup call for Canada’s world junior team. Undisciplined and out of sorts, the Canadians dropped an exhibition game to Finland 3-2 on Thursday. Two of the Finnish goals were scored with a 5-on-3 power play during a game that saw Canada assessed nine minor penalties in total. “I think the challenge for us obviously is coming together as a
team,’’ said Canadian coach Steve Spott. “It’s our first game. But ultimately I think discipline is the subplot here tonight, where we have to get used to the standard of officiating and deal with our discipline a lot smarter than we did tonight.’’ Miro Aaltonen scored the winning goal 7:16 into the third period. Markus Granlund and Ville Jarvelainen had the power-play markers earlier in the game. Griffin Reinhart and
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“It’s our first game. But ultimately I think our discipline is the subplot here tonight, where we have to get used to the standard of officiating and deal with our discipline a lot smarter than we did tonight.” Steve Spott Mark Scheifele replied for Canada with goals 36 seconds apart in the second period while Malcom Subban finished with 19 saves. Canada was outshot 22-15 overall and Spott expects to see a better offensive effort when his team faces Sweden in another exhibition game on Saturday. “I think we’ve got to create more offence, but that comes from staying out of the penalty box,’’ he said. “That to me is going to be our challenge here. We turned over too many pucks, took penalties
and that took away from our 5-on-5 ability to create offence.’’ Canada played without forward Jonathan Huberdeau, who served the final game of a four-game suspension for abusing an official in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. The team also lost forward Brett Ritchie to an upper-body injury after an awkward collision with an opponent midway through the game. He was held out as a precaution and the injury isn’t considered serious. After facing Sweden over the weekend, Canada will travel to Ufa, Russia for the world junior hockey championship. It plays its first game there on Dec. 26 against Germany. “You want to make sure when you hit the 26th that your team is where you need it to be,’’ said Spott. “It’s a matter of getting better every day and learning what it’s like to play over here and the standard (of officiating) and the type of game that these teams play.’’
TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
The Mount Baker senior boys basketball team is heading out to its second tournament of the season this weekend as part of an eight tournament schedule over the winter and spring. All that travel—mostly to Alberta—adds up over a season, and the team has budgeted it out to roughly $18,000 to cover costs that include transportation and bus driver, hotel rooms and tournament entry fees. Thats a serious chunk of change and the boys (not to mention parents) are hoping to cut down on the expense with some fundraising ventures over the season. “When the kids are younger and they just play in the Kootenays, it’s not near as crazy, but as soon as they start having to go out of the area—other options is to go to the Okanagan, which is even further away,” said team manager Pearl Singer. First up on the docket is a training camp for some younger students
spanning Grade 7 to Grade 9 in the New Year on Jan. 4. Running all day from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., the Wild will be on hand, along with their coach, to run drills and work with young basketball proteges. Cost is $35 a player.
“We thought Grade 7 to 9 was a good age because basketball is just going to be starting in January and a lot of them haven’t been practicing or doing much towards it, so it’d be a good warm-up,” said Singer. After that, the team has kicked around some other ideas and are looking at organizing an alumni game which will pit former Mount Baker basketball players— men and women— against their current counterparts. “The girls and the boys are playing the
alumni—anybody who’s played on a senior team can come play, so it’s just a fun night,” said Singer. That event will be held at the Mount Baker gym on Wednesday, Jan. 23, with the girls starting at 6 p.m. and followed by the boys two hours later. There will be a concession and a free-throw competition in between games. Other initiatives include silent auctions and a high school dance on Valentine’s Day in February. The team is also turning to the business community, according to Singer. “We’re going to different businesses or organizations that the boys deal with, or their parents deal with and asking if they want to sponsor the team,” Singer said. “Some of those business have given us items, which we are using for silent auctions.” Anyone interested in signing up to the Mount Baker camp on Jan. 4 can call Singer at 250426-7410.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
friday, december 21, 2012
Sports
Page 9
NHL lockout has chilling effect on businesses John Wawrow Associated Press
BUFFALO, N.Y. — Most everywhere Lou Billittier turns these days, the Buffalo restaurateur is reminded of the NHL lockout, and its impact on his blue-collar, sports-mad town where Dominik Hasek became a star and the French Connection is still revered. Billittier misses the familiar faces of Sabres players having their traditional game-day lunch at his restaurant, Chef’s. He recalled a recent conversation he had with his seafood supplier, who’s struggling because he also provides salmon and chicken wings to the Sabres arena, the First Niagara Center. And then there are the arena’s idled, parttime employees who stop in looking for work. With his own business down 15 per cent, Billittier can only turn them away because he’s concerned whether there’s enough work for his staff. “It’s amazing the trickle-down effect,’’ Billittier said, standing in his lobby, not far from Chef’s “The French Connection’’ room, honouring the famed former Sabres line of Gilbert Perreault, Rene
Robert and Rick Martin. “It bothers me, not only because we’re down, but it affects everything. Our community outreach, we can’t donate to the people we normally donate to. It’s brutal.’’
“We are disappointed the NHL and NHLPA have not been able to negotiate a new collective bargaining agreement.” Ted Black From south Florida to Vancouver, Montreal to Anaheim, a wide array of businesses located in the NHL’s 30 markets have taken a significant hit because of the lockout, which is now in its fourth month and has wiped away 625 games. On Thursday, the league cancelled all games through Jan. 14. Joe Kasel, owner of the Eagle Street Grille in St. Paul, Minn., last month wrote a letter expressing his concerns to NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman. “I had to look 32 of 48 employees in the eyes and inform them that I no longer can afford to keep them on staff,’’
Kasel wrote. “The impact on our lives is immeasurable. One city’s devastation may not seem like a powerful incentive to end the lockout; but I know this is happening in other cities around the nation.’’ Chris Ray, manager of the Brewhouse Downtown in Nashville, said his establishment is losing an estimated $5,000 for every cancelled Predators’ home game. That’s already a $90,000 hit, given 18 Predators’ home games have been wiped out. It’s no different at Wayne Gretzky’s sports bar in Toronto, where much of the Great One’s memorabilia is on display. “Yes, it’s been very slow,’’ said a bartender, who wouldn’t give her name. “I’m scared about January.’’ The Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto is feeling the pinch. Hall of Fame spokeswoman Kelly Masse said they’ve made “adjustments’’ to staff because gate and retail revenues are down significantly. And so’s Hockeytown, aka, Detroit. The downtown three-level Hockeytown Cafe, operated by Red Wings owner Mike Ilitch, was nearly empty on Monday.
“If there’s not a show at the Fox, this is what it’s like in here,’’ bartender Molly Brown said, referring to the Fox Theatre next door. “We haven’t fired anyone, but everyone has had their days and hours cut because the Red Wings aren’t playing. We’re all suffering.’’ The effect goes beyond bars, restaurants and tourism. In Chicago, Gunzo’s Hockey Headquarters, a four-store chain that sells hockey equipment and jerseys, is losing business. “It’s been a huge impact. Huge, huge, huge. People don’t see the games and it’s out of sight, out of mind,’’ owner Keith Jackson said. “It’s kind of a double-whammy for us. We’re losing out on equipment sales and we’re losing out on the jerseys and licensed apparel sales.’’ With the Christmas shopping season nearly over, Jackson worries those are sales he’ll never get back even if the NHL resumes playing soon. Mid-January will be a critical time, since Bettman has said the league doesn’t want to play a season shorter than 48 games per team. With an entire sea-
son wiped out in 200405, outsiders are wondering whether the two sides _ rich owners and well-paid players _ are indifferent to the effects their labour disputes create. “People are disgusted,’’ said Tom Woolsey, owner of Andrews On the Corner in Detroit. He estimates his business is down 75 per cent on nights the Red Wings are playing. “It’s incomprehensible to me that after four or five prosperous years in the NHL, that they can’t figure out how to split $3.2 billion (in revenue),’’ Woolsey said. It’s mind-boggling to John Heidinger, chairman of the Service Employees International Local 200 in Buffalo,
ARE, Sweden—Mikaela Shiffrin showed that the American ski team can live without Lindsey Vonn, at least for a little while. In the first World Cup race since Vonn announced a break from the circuit, the 17-year-old Shiffrin picked up the slack quite successfully Thursday _ earning her first career victory by winning a night slalom ahead of Swedish home favourite Frida Hansdotter. Shiffrin has been touted as the next American skiing star and showed why under the floodlights on Are’s Olympia course, putting down a perfect second run to finish with a combined time of 1 minute, 45.36 seconds. “This is huge,’’ Shiffrin said. “I think the
best part besides the skiing was the ceremony. It made me cry a little bit when I heard the American anthem.’’ Shiffrin was second after the first run and was given quite a chal-
lenge by overall World Cup leader Tina Maze, who had a blazing second run to take a large lead just before the American was to ski. But Shiffrin kept her composure in a run that
was even faster, setting a time that first-run leader Hansdotter couldn’t match. Hansdotter was still ahead of the American at the first two intermediate times but wasn’t
NEW YORK _ The NHL is believed to be one step away from calling off another season. The league has cancelled games through Jan. 14, bringing the total number wiped away by the lockout to 625. That takes the NHL to the point where it must have a new collective
as fast in the final section and finished 0.29 seconds behind for second place. Maze was third, 0.52 behind. “It wasn’t two perfect runs but it was two fast runs,’’ said Shiffrin.
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local businesses. At the same time, we want to play hockey under the right circumstances that the NHL will negotiate on our behalf. ... The league has our full confidence.’’ The impact of another lost season would be high. In Buffalo alone, the city’s tourism bureau, Visit Buffalo Niagara, estimates local hotels that host visiting NHL teams will lose between $850,000 and $1 million if there’s no season. City transit is affected. Douglas Hartmayer, spokesman for the Niagara Frontier Transportations Authority, says up to 1,700 riders use Metro Rail to attend each Sabres home game.
NHL cancels games, moves closer to calling off season
American teenager earns 1st World Cup victory Oliver Gr assman Associated Press
who represents about 225 ushers at First Niagara Center. “When you’re making 12 bucks an hour working at an arena, and these guys are haggling over hundreds of millions of dollars, I think for a lot of people it’s a hard reality to understand,’’ Heidinger said. “It really frustrates you.’’ Sabres president Ted Black can understand the frustration. “We are disappointed the NHL and NHLPA have not been able to negotiate a new collective bargaining agreement,’’ Black said. ``Our fans are extremely disappointed, and we know the lack of NHL hockey is having a negative impact on many
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bargaining agreement in place to salvage a 48game schedule and playoffs that conclude by the end of June, something commissioner Gary Bettman has been adamant about. The league and NHL Players’ Association haven’t met since last week. On Wednesday night,
NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr said the union was willing to meet at any point but is waiting for the owners to resume talks. In 2004-05, the NHL became the first professional sports league in North America to cancel an entire season because of a labour dispute.
Holiday Office Hours Monday, December 24th - 8:30am to Noon Tuesday, December 25th - closed Wednesday, December 26th - closed Thursday, December 27th - 8:30 am to 5:00 pm Friday, December 28th - 8:30 am to 5:00 pm Monday, December 31st - 8:30 to 3:00 pm Tuesday, January 1st - closed
Monday, December 24th - 10:00am to Noon Tuesday, December 25th - closed Wednesday, December 26th - closed Thursday & Friday, December 27th & 28th - 10:00 - 4:30 Monday, December 31st - 10:00 - 3:00 Tuesday, January 1st - closed
Page 10 friday, december 21, 2012
daily townsman / daily bulletin
NEWS
Invasive fish fines will bite the wallet Tom Fletcher Black Press
Wanda Chow/Black Press
Snakehead fish released by persons unknown into Burnaby Lake was captured in June after the lake level was pumped down.
VICTORIA — Releasing a snakehead fish into B.C. waters could cost you up to $250,000. The B.C. government has amended its controlled alien species regulation to impose steep fines for releasing invasive fish such as the snakehead, a Chinese import with a voracious appetite and the ability
to wiggle across land to get to new waterways. A snakehead fish discovered in a pond in Burnaby Central Park in June forced environment ministry biologists to pump the lake level down so it could be captured. The toothy beasts were being imported and sold alive in Asian specialty food stores. The new regulations also aim to stop the
DON’T
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OFFER ENDS JANUARY 2ND ON SELECT MODELS
2013 ELANTRA DON’T
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2,000
$
WITH
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FRIENDS FRIENDS&&FAMILY FAMILY SELLING SELLING PRICE PRICE
PAYR
0
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%†
90
HWY: 5.2L/100 KM CITY: 7.1L/100 KM
Ω
DAYS
FINANCING FOR 24 MONTHS
15,444
spread of zebra or quagga mussels that can attach themselves to boats and equipment and infest lakes. Failure to remove those mussels, alive or dead, can trigger a fine of up to $100,000. “The impact of the snakehead and zebra mussel in other jurisdictions has been devastating to those local ecosystems,” Environment Minister Terry Lake said Thursday, announcing the latest changes. The regulations also prohibit possession and breeding of identified high-risk aquatic species. They expand the reach of legislation passed in 2009 that restricted ownership and breeding of tigers, snakes, crocodiles and a long list of other exotic animals. Added to the list are species of monitor lizard that grow to more than two metres long or otherwise repre-
sent a threat to public safety. B.C.’s restrictions for private zoos were passed after a woman was killed by a Bengal tiger kept in a cage at an exotic animal attraction on a farm near 100 Mile House in 2007. The new regulations add definitions for “accredited zoo or aquarium” as well as schools and research facilities that are permitted to possess exotic animals for study purposes. The regulation requires owners of controlled species to apply for permits. Conservation officers have authority to seize animals that are considered an immediate threat to health and safety of people. More information is available on the B.C. government website at www.env.gov.bc.ca/fw/ wildlifeactreview/cas/
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$
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Limited model shown
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$
WITH
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FRIENDS FRIENDS&&FAMILY FAMILY SELLING SELLING PRICE PRICE
PAYR
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%†
FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS
22,064
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SONATA GL AUTO. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.
Limited model shown
THE MOST FUEL-EFFICIENT FULL-SIZED CAR – NATURAL RESOURCE CANADA’S 2012 ECOENERGY VEHICLE AWARD◊
2013 SANTA FE
HWY: 6.7L/100 KM CITY: 10.1L/100 KM
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1,150
$
WITH
0
5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty 5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty 5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty
FO
27,109
90
♦
$
SANTA FE 2.4L FWD AUTO. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.
Limited model shown
PAYR
%†
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DAYS
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IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS‡
FRIENDS FRIENDS&&FAMILY FAMILY SELLING SELLING PRICE PRICE
90
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2013 AJAC BEST NEW SUV (OVER $35K)
HyundaiCanada.com
TM The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. †Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2013 Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Sonata GL Auto/Santa Fe 2.4L FWD Auto with an annual finance rate of 0%/0%/0% for 24/48/24 months. Bi-weekly payment is $297/$213/$522. No down payment required. Cost of Borrowing is $0/$0/$0. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination of $1,495/$1,565/$1,760. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. Financing example: 2013 Sonata GL Auto for $22,064 (includes $3,500 price adjustment) at 0% per annum equals $213 bi-weekly for 48 months for a total obligation of $22,064. Cash price is $22,064. Cost of Borrowing is $0. Example price includes Delivery and Destination of $1,565. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. ▼Fuel consumption for 2013 Elantra Sedan L 6-Speed Manual (HWY 5.2L/100KM; City 7.1L/100KM)/2013 Sonata GL Auto (HWY 5.6L/100KM; City 8.7L/100KM)/2013 Santa Fe 2.4L FWD Auto (HWY 6.7L/100KM, City 10.1L/100KM) are based on Manufacturer Testing. Actual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for comparison purposes only. †♦Friends & Family prices for models shown (includes $2,000/$3,225/$1,250 in price adjustments): 2013 Elantra Limited/Sonata Limited/Santa Fe 2.0T Limited AWD is $22,694/$27,339/$39,009. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,495/$1,565/$1,760. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. ♦Friends & Family Selling Prices are calculated against the starting price less all factory to dealer price adjustments (including Friends & Family price adjustments). Friends & Family Selling Prices include Delivery and Destination. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. ‡Factory to dealer price adjustments (including Friends & Family price adjustments) are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Factory to Dealer Price adjustments of $2,000/$3,500/$1,150 available on 2013 Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Sonata GL Auto/Santa Fe 2.4L FWD Auto. Factory to dealer price adjustments are applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. Ω0 payments for up to 90 days (payment deferral) is available on new in-stock 2012 Sonata Hybrid, 2013 Accent 4 Door/Accent 5 Door/Elantra Sedan/Elantra GT/Sonata/Santa Fe models and only applies to purchase finance offers on approved credit. If payment deferral is selected the original term of the contract will be extended by 2-months/56-days for monthly/bi-weekly finance contracts. Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. will pay the interest of the deferral for the first 2-months/56-days of the monthly/bi-weekly finance contract. After this period interest will start to accrue and the purchaser will pay the principal and interest monthly/bi-weekly over the remaining term of the contract. Ω†♦‡Offers available for a limited time, and subject to change or cancellation without notice. See dealer for complete details. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order may be required. ◊Based on Natural Resource Canada’s 2012 ecoEnergy award for most fuel efficient full-size car. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.
Hillcrest Hyundai
PAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HERE 2032 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook Local & Long Distance 1-250-489-0903 • 1-888-426-6665 DL #30315
Not sure about the whole
digital NOW thing? is the time to get with it! On-Line Advertising – call your advertising representative today. Townsman: 250-426-5201 Bulletin: 250-427-5333
daily townsman
friday, december 21, 2012
Page 11
Get the word out about your product! -
ad•ver•tise | ' adver ' tıtız|z| • verb [ trans. ] to describe or draw attention to (a product, service or event) in a public medium in order to
promote sales or attendance. • to make a quality or fact known. ORIGIN late Middle English : from Old French advertiss-, lengthened stem of advertir, from Latin advertere ‘turn toward.’ Turn toward the Cranbrook Daily Townsman 427-5333 426-5201 & The Kimberley Daily Bulletin for your advertising needs.
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Offer available until December 31, 2012, to residential customers who have not subscribed to TELUS TV in the past 90 days, where access and line of site permit. Not available to residents of multiple-dwelling units. *Regular bundled rate (currently $38.57/mo.) begins on month 7. TELUS reserves the right to modify regular rates without notice. Taxes extra. Not available with other promotions. Rates include a $3 digital service fee, a $5 discount for bundled services and an amount required by the CRTC as a contribution to the Local Programming Improvement Fund (LPIF). See telus.com/satellitetv-lpif. †Subscription to corresponding standard definition channels required. HD channels provided through the Bell TV satellite network. ‡On Demand content requires an HD PVR. TELUS, TELUS Satellite TV, the TELUS logo and the future is friendly are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under license. © 2012 TELUS.
Page 12 friday, december 21, 2012
TV GUIDE
Saturday Morni n g/Afternoon Saturday Morning/Afternoon
7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30
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Homes Hunt Scared Hunt Beyond Kitche Scared Kitche Beyond Live Scared Live Bryan Scared Bryan 1 HGTV Music Rewind Wide Open CMT Spotlight Pick Pick Beyond HolidaysScared Beyond Crossroads Chevy Top 20 4 Criminal Minds CMT Flip House Flipping Vegas Flipping Vegas Flipping Scared Beyond Scared Beyond Scared 2 CMT A&E CMT Love It-List It Love It-List It Eve’s Christmas Finding Mrs. Claus About a Boy Prop 5 W CMT Music CMT Rewind Wide Open CMT Spotlight Pick Pick Holidays Crossroads Chevy Top 20 4 CMT Paid Da Hornet Indiana JonesClaus and Crystal Skull The Green Hornet Love It-ListPaid It Love It-ListThe It GreenEve’s Christmas Finding Mrs. About a Boy Prop 9 5 SHOW W Salvage Hunt Cash How/ Indiana Jungle Gold Dangerous Salvage Hunt Driver MythBusters Paid JobsPaid Da The GreenJungle HornetGold Jones and Crystal Skull The GreenWorst Hornet : DISC Dirty 9 SHOW Dirty JobsPrin Salvage Hunt Jungle Gold Cash Prin How/ Stepmom Jungle Gold Dangerous Salvage Hunt MythBusters Prin Prin Prin Prin Prin Due Date Worst Driver Debt : SLICE DISC Prin ; Prin Prin Prin Prin Prin Lights Prin Prin CrazyPrin Stepmom Ex Due Debt Christmas Cmas More Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex Date Ex Ex Ex Ex ; SLICE < TLC Christmas Cmas Lights More Crazy Ex a Wonderful Ex Life Ex Ex Ex Ex Ex ExMail Ex Ex < BRAVO TLC Christmas Mail Christmas Come Dance With Me It’s Shrek Christmas = Christmas Mail Come Dance With Me It’s a Wonderful Life Shrek Christmas Mail = BRAVO (:25) The Family Man (:35) The Hudsucker Proxy Harvey (:15) Casper > EA2 Baby (:40) Casper Baby (:40) Casper (:25) The Family Man (:35) The Hudsucker Proxy Harvey (:15) Casper > TOON EA2 Spiez Jim Jim Johnny Tunes Jingle Tom & Jerry Chill Out, Scooby-Doo! 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Carol C COM TCM Red (:15) Twist of Fate Blazing-West Saint Meets (:15) Imitation General (:45) Bush Christmas Carol for Another Christmas C TCM E OUT Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liquiof the Apocalypse Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui E OUT Paid Cana Paid Urban Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Liqui Paid Liqui Paid Liqui Seven Signs Mayan Doom Ancient Aliens Nostradamus F HIST Urban School Paid Spirits Paid School Paid Spirits Paid Paranormal Paid Paid Seven SignsWi. of the Apocalypse Mayan DoomWi. Paranormal Ancient Aliens NostradamusWi. F HIST Cana School Spirits Wi. Paranormal Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi. Paranormal G SPACE School Spirits School Spirits School Spirits Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi. G (:45) The Shakiest Gun in the West The Ghost and Mr. Chicken (:15) Robin Hood: Men in Tights Mira H SPACE AMC No Name on the Bullet Name on the Bullet (:45) The Shakiest Gun in the West The Ghost and Mr. Chicken (:15) Robin Hood: Men in Tights Mira H AMC No Hot Hot Ga Monster Jam Lucas Oil Off On Dum Chop Chop Chop Chop Chop Chop Auto Racing I SPEED Gearz Hot Hot Ga Monster Jam Lucas Oil Off On Dum Chop Chop Chop Chop Chop Chop Auto Racing I SPEED Gearz Paid Weird 3rd 3rd Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend ’70s ’70s 3rd 3rd Friend Friend J TVTROP Paid 3rd 3rd Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend ’70s ’70s 3rd 3rd Friend Friend J TVTROP Paid Paid Weird Warrior Way The Dilemma The Change-Up Beat the World Joyful Noise Di W The Dilemma The Change-Up Beat the World Joyful Noise Di W MC1 MC1 Warrior Way KTLA News Res Res Spike’ Gummibar: Trans WWE Dragon Yu-GiYu-Gi Now Animal Career On Travel ¨ KTLA Res Res Spike’ Gummibar: Trans WWE Dragon Yu-Gi- Yu-Gi Now Animal Career On Travel Jim Jim ¨ KTLA KTLA News Matlock Matlock Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: ≠ WGN-A Matlock Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI CI ≠ WGN-A Matlock Emo All That Heaven Allows (:15) Along Came Polly (10:50) Bruce Almighty (:35) Fierce Creatures (:10) For Richer or Poorer Ø EA1 (:15) Along Came Polly (10:50) Bruce Almighty (:35) Fierce Creatures (:10) For Richer or Poorer Ø EA1 Emo All That Heaven Allows Sikh Hindu Eden Gur Watno Dur Pun Punjab Gaun Lamia Naavi Quran Mula Lok Singh Words Tehlka Sardari ∂ Watno Dur Pun Punjab Gaun Lamia Naavi Quran Mula Lok Singh Words Tehlka Sardari ∂ VISN VISN Sikh Hindu Eden Gur 102 102 105 105
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HomesBilly Live Live Kitche Park Kitche Park In In HGTV Stor Stor Stor Park Park Stor Stor Park Park A&E Holmes Stor Stor Wilsons Stor Stor Stor Park Park Park Park Pick Billy Billy Stor Stor Parkof Giving Park Park A&E Stor Pick Pick The Antebellum Christmas Comes Home Pick Antebellum Gift Holidays Park CMT Pick The Wilsons Antebellum Pick Pick Santa Antebellum Gift of Giving Holidays CMT Snow Pick Snow 2 Brain FreezeChristmas Comes Home Santa Baby Baby 2: Christmas Santa Baby W Snow 2 Brain Freeze Santa BabyHornet Santa BabyIndiana 2: Christmas Santa Baby W Snow Haven Solar Attack The Green Jones and Crystal Skull SHOW The Green Indiana Jones SHOW Cash How/ Cash Cash Solar Auc Attack Auc Worst Driver Auction OddHornet Gold Rush Worst Driver Auc and Crystal Auc Skull Auction Odd DISC Haven How/ Cash Cash Auc Auc Worst Auction Odd Gold RushPrin Worst Driver Auc Auc Auction Odd Prin Prin Prin Prin Prin Prin Prin Driver Prin Prin Prin Prin Stepmom Due DISC Cash SLICE Prin Prin ERPrin Prin Prin Prin Prin Prin Prin Stepmom Ex Ex Holiday Toddler-Tiara Four Wed Prin Deck HallsPrin Toddler-Tiara Four Wed Deck Halls Holiday ERDue SLICE TLC Prin Come Dance It’s a Wonderful Life Four Wed Mail Wonderful Ex With Me Holiday ER Toddler-Tiara Deck Halls(:45) Christmas Toddler-Tiara Four Wed (:45) It’s aDeck Halls Life Holiday ER BRAVO TLC Ex (3:15) Casper The Neverending Story The Family The Hudsucker Proxy Dance With Me It’s a Wonderful Life The Neverending Story II (:45) Christmas Mail Man (:45) It’s a(:10) Wonderful Life EA2 Come BRAVO Tunes Casper Jingle Bugs & Tweety Story Wakko’s Wish Dennis TOON The Neverending The Neverending Story II the Menace The Family Man Edward Scissorhands (:10) The Hudsucker Proxy Fugget EA2 (3:15) Good Jingle Sonny Bugs Jessie& Tweety Dog Shake Austin Good Really Dennis Wiz theDeck Santa Buddies Get a Clue FAM Tunes Wakko’s Wish Menace Sonny Ran Edward Scissorhands Fugget TOON Office Office The Body Lies WPCH Sonny Sein Jessie Sein Dog ShakeInvisible Austin Good Really Red Wiz Eye Deck Sonny Lakeview Ran Terrace Santa Buddies Get a ofClue FAM Good Red... Office Red... Red... Red... Red... Red... Red Red...Eye Red... Red GreenLakeview Terrace Jeremy Hotz Laughs Body of Lies Laughs COM Office Sein Red... Sein Red... The Invisible WPCH The Man Who to DinnerRed... Red... Rebel Without BlackboardLaughs Jungle Anatomy-Murd. TCM Red... Red...CameRed... Red...a Cause Red... Red... The Red...Wild One Red... Red GreenHidden Values Jeremy Hotz Laughs COM LiquiMan Who GetSCameMantracker Mantracker Liqui Liqui The LiquiWild One GetS Poker Hidden Values Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters OUT The to Dinner Rebel Without a Cause BlackboardGhost JungleHunters Anatomy-Murd. TCM Nostradamus The End Is Now Ice 2012 End Is Now HIST GetS 2012 Mantracker Mantracker LiquiPilots NWT Liqui Pawnathon Liqui GetS Pickers Poker GhostThe Hunters Ghost Hunters Nostradamus Ghost Hunters OUT Liqui Paranormal Wi. 2012 Paranormal Wi.Is Now Paranormal Wi. Ice Paranormal Wi. Pawnathon Paranormal Wi. Pickers Paranormal Wi. 2012 SchoolThe Spirits School Spirits SPACE The End Pilots NWT End Is NowSchool Spirits Nostradamus HIST Nostradamus (3:45) MiracleWi.on 34th Street Wi. Paranormal Miracle on 34th 34th StreetWi. School Spirits Miracle on 34th Street AMC Paranormal Paranormal Wi. Street Paranormal Wi. ParanormalMiracle Wi. onParanormal School Spirits School Spirits SPACE Auto Racing Ride Ride Ride Ride Ride Ride Miracle Ride onAMA Unique Whips SPEED Miracle onRide 34th Street 34thSupercross Street Racing Miracle on 34th Street AMC (3:45) Miracle on 34th Street Weird Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend Pickers ’70s ’70s 3rd 3rd Friend Friend TVTROP Pickers Ride Ride Ride Ride Ride Ride Ride Ride AMA Supercross Racing Unique Whips SPEED Auto Racing Feet Two Just Go With It Wanderlust (:45) The Change-Up Straw MC1 (3:30) The DilemmaWeird (:20) HappyFriend Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend Pickers ’70s ’70s 3rd 3rd Friend Friend TVTROP Pickers Bloop Bloop News News Two Two Two Two Family Family News Sports Alien Con KTLA Dog Who Saved Holidays The Dilemma (:20) Happy Feet Two Just Go With It Wanderlust (:45) The Change-Up Straw MC1 (3:30) NBA Basketball Funny Videos News Bones Bones Rock Rock Rock Rock WGN-A Law Order: CI Dog Who Saved Holidays Bloopthe Fockers Bloop News News Along Two Came TwoPolly Two Two BruceFamily SportsandAlien KTLA Meet (:35) AlmightyFamily News Dumb Dumber Con EA1 (:10) Meet the Parents Law Order: CI NBA Basketball Funny Videos Rock Rock Rock WGN-A Sanjha Masti Intezar Jee Des-Pardes Aikam News Bones Taur Lashkara Bones WAQT Aaja Rock Gospel Chall. VISN Gaun Pun (:10) Meet the Parents Meet the Fockers Nights Along CameCountdown Polly (:35) BruceAdam Almighty Dumber EA1 Adam Sandler’s-Crazy MuchMusic Sandler’s-Crazy Nights Dumb andAdam MM Elf Gaungrandes Punentrevues Sanjha Masti Intezar Jee Des-Pardes TaurDernière Lashkara WAQT Les AajaNocesGospel VISN 109 Semaine verte Telejnl Petite Aikam Univers La Chanson TJ rebellesChall. SRC Les
December 23
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Impact Inside Olympia Inside Europe Moyers-Comp NW Travel C’mas Carol KSPS-PBS Thomas Friend Wild Clifford Georg Cat in Sci App Holi A New Smile Re Re NFL Football SportsCenter Question CFCN Lovett Dr. Wall Good Morning This Week Holiday on Ice Paid Back Paid Made 12 Wishes of Christmas Christmas KXLY-ABC Mat Nation NFL Paid Paid Cash Paid Monster Jam NFL Football KREM-CBS Paid Paid CBS News Sunday News Invest Meet the Press Justin Juicing! Joint Skiing Adventure Triathlon KHQ-NBC Today Sunday NFL Countdown NFL Football Sports Boxing TSN Sports Re Game FishTV Sport Dodgeball: Underdog NFL Football NET Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. Bills Sunday Morning News News Con Osteen Touch News Best Years Simp Simp GLOBAL BC Angler Big Ber Sagwa Tree Word Word Ceorge Dino Little Little Little Ani Ani Wilderness What’s That? KNOW Bear Rob Cor Cor Cor Cor Cor Market Steven-Chris Land One/ Q With Jian Steven-Chris CBUT Super Poko Animal Art News Con Osteen Touch 16x9 Best Years Simp Simp Simp Nick CICT Sunday Morning News Block Con Osteen Minis 16x9 Howie Simp Simp Simp Movie CIVT Sunday Morning News Super Winx Young Star Home Alone Par Home Alone 2: Lost in New York Home Alone 3 YTV Kid NFL Football NFL Football KAYU-FOX Paid Paid Wild David Fox News Sun. NFL Sunday Fareed Zakaria Rel’ble Source State/Union Fareed Zakaria Next News Your Money Newsroom Newsroom CNN State/Union Ink Master Ink Master Ink Master Ink Master Ink Master Ink Master SPIKE Xtreme Horse. Trucks Muscle Ink Master Holiday Homes Celeb. Holiday Holmes Makes Haz Haz Hunt Hunt Bryan Bryan Four Houses Holmes Makes HGTV Celeb. Homes Hog Hog Hog Panic 9-1-1 Panic 9-1-1 Panic 9-1-1 A&E Criminal Minds Ship Ship Ship Ship Ship Ship Hog CMT Rewind Wide Open CMT Spotlight Pick Pick Gift of Giving Antebellum T. Carrie Funny Videos CMT Chevy Top 20 Property Bro Borrowed Hearts Night Before Night Before Santa Baby Santa Baby 2 W Property Bro Deck the Halls The Polar Express Alvin-Chipmnk SHOW Paid Paid Hoops The Elf Elf Auc Strip the City Strip the City MythBusters Dirty Jobs Auc Auc Auc Auc Hell Roads MythBusters DISC Auc SLICE Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Toddler-Tiara Toddler-Tiara Toddler-Tiara Toddler-Tiara TLC Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Toddler-Tiara Elf Mistletoe Over Manhattan Anything but Christmas BRAVO Any Christmas Jack Frost An American Tail Babe: Pig in the City (:40) The Natural Field of Dreams My Dog Skip EA2 Kid Johnny Bugs & Tweety Adven Wakko’s Wish Johnny Dennis the Menace Bugs & Tweety Jerry Jerry TOON Spies! Jim Deck Han Wiz Phi Gravity Good Win ANT Jessie Austin Shake Home Alone 2: Lost in N.Y. Gravity ANT FAM Win Win a Date With Tad Hamilton! The Nativity Story The Closer WPCH Sports Mad Career P. Aff Inkheart Jeremy Hotz Laughs Laughs Russell Peters N’Rad. N’Rad. Sein Gas Com Com Theory Theory COM Red Green All Mine to Give Bundle of Joy Period of Adjustment 3 Godfathers TCM Little Women OUT Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui HIST Cana Urban Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Hot Set Hot Set Face Off Face Off Face Off Face Off Face Off Face Off SPACE Hot Set Miracle on 34th Street (:15) Miracle on 34th Street Miracle on 34th Street Mira AMC (6:45) Miracle on 34th Street Clas Clas Chop Boats Boats German Tour. Road Champ. Hot Hot Hot Hot Hot Hot Hot Hot SPEED Ga Fletch TVTROP Fish Paid Casino Casino Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend The Goonies The Ides of March (:15) The Guard Wanderlust (:45) Unknown Ides MC1 (6:00) The Help KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 In Touch Juicing! AAA Back Paid Beauty Paid Paid Christmas-Max KTLA KTLA News The Station Agent Moonlight Mile The Devil Wears Prada Rock Videos WGN-A The Story of the First Noel (:45) Enter the Dragon Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story (:35) Conan the Destroyer (:20) Last Action Hero EA1 (6:30) Last Action Hero Living Truth Faith Food Qk Be Naked David Arise Tom VISN Creflo Jewish Cope Facts Islam Hour of Power Con The Voice The Voice The Voice The Voice The Big Jingle 102 102 MM Countdown Gar Contes Oniva Jour/Seigneur Découverte TJ Semaine verte Regard Noël 105 105 SRC Ours Ozie Manny Mickey
December 22 Sunday Afternoon/Evening
4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Cbk. Kim.
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December 23
4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30
Christmas-Bel Tonic Sol-Fa Doc Martin Cat-Christmas Masterpiece Classic Foyle’s War Wartburg 2011 KSPS-PBS Choir Gas W5 News The Sound of Music News News The Mentalist CFCN Gas Hollywood Cel News ABC News Ex The Sound of Music News V’Impe KXLY-ABC Christmas Back Edition News News News 60 Minutes Blue Bloods The Good Wife The Mentalist News 5th KREM-CBS NFL Football (:20) NFL Football Mark CSI: Miami Criminal Minds News Paid KHQ-NBC Paid Meals Football Night/America Football Night (:15) NFL Football SportsCentre Motor SportsCentre SportsCentre TSN SportsCentre Sportsnet Con. FIS Cross-Country Dodgeball: Underdog On the Edge Sportsnet Con. Euro Poker NET (2:00) NFL Football News News Hour Deck the Halls Family Amer. Candy Cane News News GLOBAL BC Simp Nick and Norah Victorian Farm Palaces Frontiers of Sci.; Baby New Tricks Lewis Beatles KNOW Arctic Goose on the Loose! Frosty Frosty Elf National News fifth CBUT Reci Mercer Dragons’ Den News Evening News Deck the Halls Candy Cane Family Amer. News Block Paid Paid CICT Nick and Norah News News Hour Howie Cleve The Good Wife Simp Burg Family Amer. News Block Paid Paid CIVT (3:00) Movie Home Alone: The Holiday Heist Star Star Gift of Giving Pick Spla The Spla YTV Home Spong Home Alone 4 OT Paid Trout Theory Two Theory Two Simp Burg Family Amer. News Bones Sunny KAYU-FOX (2:00) NFL Football Newsroom CNN Presents Piers Morgan Newsroom CNN Presents Piers Morgan Newsroom CNN Presents CNN Newsroom Ink Master Ink Master Ink Master Ink Master Ink Master Tattoo Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue SPIKE Ink Master Haz House Hunters Hunt Hunt Four Houses House Hunters Holmes Makes Four Houses Urban Urban Haz Haz HGTV Haz Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Be the Boss Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor A&E Stor Wipeout Wipeout Blue Collar Comedy Tour Pick Pick Blue Collar Comedy Tour Funny Videos CMT Funny Videos Love It-List It Naughty or Nice Miracle on 34th Street Christmas With the Kranks Night W Santa Baby 2 Beauty Die Another Day The Polar Express SHOW Alvin-Chipmnk The Christmas Heart Auc Strip the City Yellowstone MythBusters Auc Auc Strip the City Yellowstone MythBusters DISC Cash How/ Auc SLICE Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Projct Runway Sin City Rules Sister Sister Sister Wives Sin City Rules Sister Wives Sin City Rules Sister Sister Sin City Rules TLC Toddler-Tiara Elf Mistletoe Over Manhattan Anything but Christmas Jack Frost BRAVO Jack Frost (:35) An American Tail An American Tail Babe: Pig in the City Agent Cody Banks (:45) My Dog Skip Cats EA2 My Jim Johnny Johnny Santa Powerpuff Girls Drag Adven Catch Santa Crash Fugget Amer. Robot Robot Archer TOON Jim Jessie Dog Shake Austin Good Really Wiz Deck Sonny Ran Good Luck Charlie Geek Charming FAM Good Ran Fool’s Gold The Closer Yes Man WPCH Theory Theory Theory Theory Ghosts of Girlfriends Past N’Rad. N’Rad. Sein Gas Com Com Theory Theory Russell Peters Dunham Colbert COM Russell Peters Dunham The Bishop’s Wife It Happened on 5th Avenue The Passion of Joan of Arc Sombrero TCM Fitzwilly Liqui Liqui Mantracker GetS Liqui Poker Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters OUT GetS Liqui Mantracker Amer. Pickers Pawn Pawn Mankind The Story of All of Us HIST Pawn Pawn Ice Pilots NWT Pawn Pawn Amer Amer Truckers Face Off Face Off Face Off Face Off Face Off Hot Set Hot Set Hot Set SPACE Face Off Miracle on 34th Street Miracle on 34th Street Miracle on 34th Street AMC (3:45) Miracle on 34th Street Hot Auto Racing Festival/Speed Goodwood Re Clas Crazy British Touring Festival/Speed FIA GT1 World Unique Whips SPEED Hot Tootsie Fletch Tootsie TVTROP Fletch The Goonies Winnie Pooh The Help Christmas Con The Guard Unknown MC1 The Ides of March News News Friend Friend KTLA 5 News Sunday Edition News at 10 Bloop Bloop KTLA Christmas-Max Together Again for First Time WGN-A Videos Bloop Bloop Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother News Replay Rock Rock Rules Rules Scrubs Scrubs Sunny Sunny (:05) Junior Twins (9:50) Dave (:45) Primary Colors EA1 LastH (:35) Red Sonja Cana Popoff Christ Armor V’Impe Tom Super Tribal VISN Prince Hope Discov. V’Impe Jere Facts Hagee Meyer Osteen Be Guys and Girls Ri De Rap Wedge The Voice The 102 102 MM Land Prep & Guys and Girls MuchMusic Countdown Un air de famille Telejnl Découverte Dieu Victoria: Les jeunes TJ (:40) 19-2 19-2 105 105 SRC Astérix et les Vikings
KTLAbulletin 5 Morning News at 7 ¨ ¨ townsman KTLA KTLA News daily / daily Matlock ≠ ≠ WGN-A Matlock Ø Ø EA1 Movie Varied Programs Cope Meyer Youn ∂ ∂ VISN Life 102 102 105 105
MM SRC
Heat of Night
700 My Top 200/2012 Varied Programs Matin Schtro Gar Toc Contes
KTLA News Heat of Night Mass Movie
Varied
Million. Million. Jerry Springer Maury News Texas Ranger Texas Ranger Movie Var. Programs Movie Tribal Varied Little Classics Heartland Sens
Ric’do
Monday Afternoon/Evening Cbk. Kim.
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Union
TJ
friday, december 21, 2012
News at 1pm Steve Wilkos Texas Ranger Law Order: CI Varied Programs Movie Touched/Angel The Waltons
PUZZLES Movie
Movie
X-mas Gift Ideas
December 24
Robes
Merry Christmas
(for him & her)
PJ’s Nighties Bras & Briefs Isotoner Slippers Scarves Jewellery Body Stockings
4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30
Word Wild Elec News Busi PBS NewsHour Keeping Up Antiques Choir Christmas Charlie Rose KSPS-PBS Sid News News News Bren Land Prep & It’s a Wonderful Life News A Christmas Carol CFCN Ellen Show The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Land Shrek Shrek the Third News N’tline KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac Mother Mother Broke Mike Hawaii Five-0 News Xmas KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel It’s a Wonderful Life News Xmas KHQ-NBC Ellen Show IIHF Hockey SportsCentre TSN Top 50 SportsCentre IIHF Hockey SportsCentre TSN Top 50 IIHF Hockey TSN SportsCentre Poker Tour Prime Time Sports UFC White Men Can’t Jump NHL Alumni Sportsnet Con. Cross-Country NET Euro Poker The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Disney’s A Christmas Carol The Kennedys News GLOBAL BC Ricki Lake Gar Wilderness Emma Emma Christmas Child’s Xmas KNOW Dino Arthur Clifford Word Xmas Gruff Ani Ste Dragons’ Den News News News Ex Georg Cor Scrooge National News Georg CBUT Reci News News News Bethle ET Ent Disney’s A Christmas Carol The Kennedys Bethle 18thC ET The CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Hawaii Five-0 Bones Parenthood News Hour ET The CIVT The Young Panth. Yogi Santa Claus Star Star T. One One One One One 2 Weird Spla YTV Spong Smurfy R’deer Anderson Live Simp Ray Theory Two Theory Two Rais Rais Rais Rais News Rock Sunny TMZ KAYU-FOX Ricki Lake Best Piers Morgan The First Christians Piers Morgan The First Christians CNN CNN Heroes All-Star Tribute Deadliest Deadliest Deadliest Deadliest Deadliest Deadliest Deadliest Entou Entou SPIKE Deadliest HGTV Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan The First 48 Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Dynasty Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Dynasty A&E The First 48 Christmas In Jason McCoy: Christmas Christmas Gift of Giving Holidays Christmas In Jason McCoy: CMT Holidays (3:30) Cheaper by the Dozen Movie A Dog Named Christmas Marley & Me Love W Home by Christmas Haven Ice Age: The Meltdown How the Grinch Stole Christmas Home SHOW Ice Age: Melt Worst Driver Worst Driver Worst Driver Worst Driver Worst Driver Worst Driver Mighty Planes Mighty Planes DISC Worst Driver Sarah SLICE Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Forgetting Sarah Marshall Me Me Me Long Island Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Long Island Me Me TLC Me A Christmas Kiss Baby’s First Christmas A Golden Christmas Christmas BRAVO Christmas Song The Swan Princess The Little Rascals Les Miserables (:15) Big Daddy EA2 (3:30) Hook Ice Merry Panda Holiday (6:58) Home Alone 2: Lost in New York Tunes Ftur Family Amer. Robot Family Fugget TOON Happiness Is Dog Phi Phi Really Good ANT Ran Jessie Deck ANT Dog Raven Really Lizzie Suite Deck Derek FAM Ran Sein Family Family Amer. This Christmas WPCH Office Office Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Sein Jeff Dunham Jeff Dunham Jeff Dunham Dunham Just for Laughs Jeff Dunham Jeff Dunham Dun Dun COM Dun The Shop Around the Corner Come to the Stable Auntie Mame Man TCM Meet Babes in Toyland Mantracker Mantracker Destination Stor Stor Stor Stor Destination Stor Stor Ghost Hunters OUT Mantracker Pickers Pickers Pickers Mankind The Story of All of Us Pickers HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pickers Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Treasure Island Treasure Island Timeline SPACE Sorcerer’s Ap (:15) Miracle on 34th Street Prancer Christmas Eve AMC Christms Carol Miracle on 34th Street Hot Truck Truck Gearz Gearz Hot Hot Truck Truck Unique Whips SPEED Pinks Pinks Pass Pass Gearz Gearz Hot Mar ’70s ’70s ’70s Drew Drew Frasier Frasier 3’s Co. Family Family Mar Mar ’70s ’70s ’70s Drew TVTROP Mar Pirates of the Caribbean Pirates! Misfits Stars Pirates! Misfits Christmas Con Pirates-Tides MC1 One Maury Family Family News News Two Two Christmas-Here Star KTLA 5 News Friend Friend KTLA Cunningham Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos WGN-A Chris Chris Funny Videos (:10) Lucky Numbers Love Actually (:20) Singin’ in the Rain American EA1 (3:45) The Pelican Brief Murder, She... Eas Yes... Road to Avonlea Christmas A Christmas Carol Holiday God’sGreatest Time- Popoff VISN Sue Thomas Prince Prince Land Prep & The Big Jingle Top 10 Video on Trial Land Prep & Prince Prince Adam 102 102 MM Video on Trial Monde Sens Union TJ 2012 Un conte de Noël Comme-magie TJ La messe de la nuit 105 105 SRC Krumbs
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 14 friday, december 21, 2012
COMICS Horoscopes by Jacqueline Bigar
• 5” Continuous Eaves Troughs • Gutter Cleaning • Soffit • Fascia
Mark Lee
• Siding • Custom Bending • Leaf Covers • Custom Down Spouts
Phone: 250.426.0422
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Communication flourishes. Oddly enough, others could decide to make themselves vulnerable and speak about their dreams and/or their fears. You might gain a great deal of understanding and empathy as a result of their openness. Tonight: Be spontaneous. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You’ll want to keep a certain matter under wraps. All indications show that you are a successful team player, while others tend to be very me-oriented. Detach from the actions and words of those people. Indulge an inspirational friend. Tonight: A party could dwindle to two. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Someone you care about is accommodating beyond what you feel is even possible. Do not count on this generosity lasting forever. Invite friends and loved ones to join you in celebrating not only the weekend but also the holiday! Tonight: And the
fun continues. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Take charge while others run around and get their errands done. You actually might like being commander of the ship, and, as a result, you will have a good time. Be careful with a very dominant person in your life. Tonight: Let your imagination invigorate the moment. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Reach out to someone at a distance whom you care about. This is best done now rather than in a few days. Start your holiday round of visits, and delightful and meaningful conversations will ensue. You will have an effect on someone special. Tonight: Pinch yourself. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You feel far more comfortable than you have in a considerable amount of time with partners, loved ones and friends. You will see the difference in their responses. Someone who often puts a smile on your face might share an important secret. Tonight: All smiles.
For Better or Worse
Garfield
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Personal and family demands start piling up on you. Between commitments with your real family and wanting to touch base with your “family” of friends, you could feel stretched to the limit. Someone at a distance lets you know that you are cared for. Tonight: The only answer is “yes.” SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Pace yourself, and be aware of what is about to happen. Conversations will be lively, but you might be taken aback by what someone shares. Let your imagination play more into a relationship in order to add that magic touch. Tonight: Under the mistletoe, and very happy. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) The magic of the season starts to play a bigger role in your life. You might want to reach out to several people whom you might not get to see before Christmas. Get together with them, whether you all go to a fun party or meet up individually. Tonight: Be naughty and nice.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You are energized as a result of the Winter Equinox taking place. You might need to go for a walk in order to let go of your innate need to move. You are like a kid waiting for Christmas morning. Start making some of your holiday calls now. Tonight: Head home early. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Much is going on behind the scenes, but it is not overt enough that you would notice. Money could slip through your fingers like water if you are not careful. Of course, this vanishing act could be symbolic. Take preventive measures. Tonight: Get together with friends. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You can be so spiritual, that others could be stunned when your jealousy emerges. You can’t sit on this situation forever, but you can take some time to process it. Ask yourself why you feel so insecure. Maybe that is an excuse to do some shopping. Tonight: Be noticed.
By Lynn Johnston
By Jim Davis
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Hagar the Horrible
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Rhymes with Orange
By Hillary B. Price
Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I’m 27 and have lupus, a chronic autoimmune disease. My condition is usually under control, and I live a normal life. The problem is, I’m very sensitive to perfume, air fresheners and cigarette smoke, and with my medications, I can’t drink alcohol. A lot of my girlfriends throw candle parties and cosmetic parties or go out drinking, all of which involve things I react badly to. I typically decline these invitations, suggest something else or go along and stay silent so I won’t be a wet blanket. At a recent cosmetic party, I stupidly allowed a friend to smear makeup on me after being goaded into it. Within seconds, my face and scalp were burning, and I jumped up and stuck my head under the faucet. Everybody laughed, except the hostess, who was “deeply offended.” I haven’t been invited to any parties since. It upsets me that my friends, who have known me since we were children, don’t seem to care that the majority of their plans include activities that will make me physically ill. I have offered to host get-togethers at my home, but one of my friends told me my house “smells funny.” When I ask friends, family or co-workers to lay off the perfume or air freshener, I hear, “You’re the only one who complains.” Even my sister douses herself in a perfume that gives me hives and then gets insulted that I don’t want to hug her. How do I explain to my friends that their idea of fun literally makes me sick? I’m starting to feel very left out because of my disease. -- Shouldn’t Be Limited by Lupus Dear Not Limited: Your friends seem a bit immature, which makes them too focused on their own enjoyment and less sympathetic toward you. Do they know you have lupus? (Saying that you can’t drink or are sensitive to cologne might seem optional to them.) When you can participate without too much risk, you should make the effort, but otherwise, we recommend you start looking for better friends. For additional assistance and support, try the Lupus Foundation of America (lupus.org). Dear Annie: A co-worker and her husband are expecting a baby in late December and decided to throw themselves an elaborate baby shower. They have plenty of friends, relatives and colleagues who could have given them a shower. I have never heard of giving one for yourself. Isn’t this rude? -- Flummoxed in Florida Dear Florida: The idea of showers (bridal or baby) was for friends to help a new couple stock their home or prepare for the new child by voluntarily gifting them with things they would need. This sweet, helpful welcome has somehow morphed into the idea that people are entitled to demand gifts for every occasion. Throwing oneself a baby shower smacks of greed. It says, “I expect you to give me presents.” However, it’s possible that none of their friends offered to help and they thought it would be OK to do it themselves. Whether to attend is up to you. Dear Annie: “Old Enough” didn’t want her parents to visit her in Europe during her son’s spring break because he needed to study for his SATs. That letter took the cake. During the lifetime of one’s parents, children should adjust their schedules to accommodate those who sacrificed so much for them. What a lame excuse about the son wanting to study for SAT and AP exams. There are plenty of places he can go to study without interruptions. -- Parent Dear Parent: We disagree. Children should, of course, make accommodations for their parents whenever possible. But when Mom and Dad can visit at any time and deliberately choose to come on precisely those days that their daughter has asked them not to shows a lack of consideration and respect. Parents who want to maintain a healthy relationship with their children should not stomp all over them. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM
daily townsman / daily bulletin
friday, december 21, 2012
NEWS
Page 15
Perils of Show Biz
Solo artists at greater risk than groups Jill Lawless Associated Press
LONDON – Rock ‘n’ roll will never die – but it’s a hazardous occupation. An academic study published Thursday confirms that rock and pop musicians are more likely to die prematurely than the general population, and finds that solo artists are twice as likely to die young as members of bands. Researchers from Liverpool John Moores University and Britain’s Health Department studied 1,489 rock, pop, punk, R&B, rap, electronica and New Age stars who became famous between 1956 and 2006 – from Elvis Presley to the Arctic Monkeys. They found that 137 of the stars, or 9.2 per cent, had died, representing “higher levels of mortality than demographically matched in-
dividuals in the general population.’’ The researchers dismissed the “fanciful but unsubstantiated’’ popular myth that rock stars tend to die at 27 – as Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Kurt Cobain and Amy Winehouse all did. The average age of death was 45.2 years for North American stars and 39.6 for European ones. Solo performers had twice the death risk of members of bands. Lead researcher Mark Bellis speculated that could be because bands provide peer support at stressful times. “Solo artists, even though they have huge followings, may be relatively isolated,’’ said Bellis, director of the Center for Public Health at Liverpool John Moores University. Music critic John Aizlewood agreed that solo artists receive more
attention and adulation – and also more pressure. “And when you are a solo act, irrespective of what they say in interviews, it’s an incredibly egotistical thing,’’ he said. “So you tend to be dealing with people who are more emotionally extreme. “They have an ego in the way a drummer or even a lead guitarist in a band doesn’t.’’ In good news for aging rockers, the study found that, after 25 years of fame, stars’ death rates began to return to normal _ at least in Europe. A European star still living 36 years after achieving fame faces a similar mortality rate to the European public. But U.S. artists continue to die in greater numbers. Bellis said factors contributing to the difference could include longer careers _ and
Father, three sons need rescue after skiing out of bounds near Revelstoke Canadian Press
REVELSTOKE, B.C. _ For the second time in less than a week, rescuers have been called out to help people who went out of bounds in a B.C. ski area. In the latest case, a father and his three sons got lost Wednesday after leaving the marked ski area of the Revelstoke Mountain Resort, east of Kam-
loops. RCMP Const. Dan Moskaluk says the father used his cellphone to alert authorities that his group was stuck in an area just east of the resort. He says a search and rescue helicopter found the group and dropped supplies to them but was not able to get them out because of the weather and the
approaching darkness. Moskaluk says the group was forced to spend the night on the mountain until rescuers are able to return. On Tuesday, a snowboarder was rescued from the wilderness near West Vancouver after being stranded for two days after he went out of bounds at the Cypress Mountain resort.
Groups oppose Elk Valley pit mine plans C anadian Press
Three environmental groups are sounding the alarm over plans for an open pit coal mine in the Elk Valley in southeast B.C. The groups, which include the Sierra Club and Wildsight, say the Bingay project proposed by Centermount Coal
would jeopardize a crucial international wildlife corridor that the United Nations has sought protection for. Wildsight official Ryland Nelson says the mine would be in addition to five existing coal mines, four mine expansion proposals and three exploration proj-
ects in the Elk valley — and all this is too much stress for the watershed. Sierra Club spokeswoman Sarah Cox says a new open pit mine next to the Elk River is a crazy idea because the river already has alarmingly high levels of selenium from existing coal mines.
thus longer exposure to rock ‘n’ roll excess _ in the U.S., a huge, populous country with greater opportunities for aging stars to stay on the road. Europe’s stronger social safety net and socialized medicine may also play a role, he said. The research, which updates a 2007 study by the same team, was published in the online journal BMJ Open. The study suggests the infamous rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle may not be entirely to blame for rock stars’ death risk. The researchers looked for the first time at the role of “adverse childhood experiences’’ – such as physical or sexual abuse – on stars’ later behaviour. They found that performers who had had at least one adverse childhood experience were more likely to die from drug and alcohol use or “risk-related causes.’’ “Substance abuse and risk-taking in stars are largely discussed in terms of hedonism, music industry culture,
Janis Joplin responses to the pressures of fame or even part of the creative process,’’ the researchers said. However, they said, “adverse experiences in early life may leave some predisposed to health-damaging behaviours, with fame and extreme wealth providing greater opportuni-
ties to engage in risk-taking.’’ But Ellis Cashmore, a cultural studies professor at Staffordshire University and author of the book “Celebrity/ Culture,’’ said it would be wrong to overlook “artistic frustration’’ as a factor in artistic self-destruction. He said troubled art-
ists from Vincent Van Gogh and Ernest Hemingway to the Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson all illustrate “the torment that creativity brings with it.’’ “Perhaps it is the continual striving for some sort of unattainable artistic perfection that drives them,’’ he said.
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dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN
Page 16 friday, december 21, 201221, 2012 PAGE 16 Friday, December
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Help Wanted DOMINOâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PIZZA is now hiring delivery drivers. Earn $12.-$15./hr. Paid cash daily. Please apply to 1000B, Cranbrook St. N. after 4:00pm.
LOST & FOUND AT THE KIMBERLEY DAILY BULLETIN OFFICE:
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Wendy McDonald
LOST IN Kimberley downtown area, silver studded earring with triangular hanger and black stone. Sentimental value. Call 250-426-0408
Sept. 9, 1950 Dec. 23, 2005
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OFFICE MANAGER. Flexible part-time contract position. Proficient in Quickbooks, payroll, general bookkeeping, and clerical duties. Position starts January 15th. Deadline for application Dec.28, 2012. Send Resumes to: Kimberley Summer Theatre, PO Box 322, Kimberley, BC V1A 2Y9 or shirlrossi@shaw.ca Passionate about print
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Looking for Greenhouse / Farm Workers Transplanting, watering, loading plants. March 1, 2013 - September 2013 Fulltime and part-time seasonal positions Work at all three locations 2101 Cranbrook St. N. Cranbrook 2380 4th Ave S Cranbrook 3700 Depeel Rd. Cranbrook No educational or job experience required. $10.25 per hour Contact: Shannon Fisher or mail application
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friday, december 21, 2012 PAGE Friday, December 21, 2012 Page 17 17
Pets & Livestock
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Appliances Renovating â&#x20AC;&#x201C; newer white, higher-end Kenmore Elite appliances for sale. 18 cu ft fridge with bottom freezer, 30â&#x20AC;? smooth top stove with convection oven, built-in dishwasher with food chopper, plus over the stove fan. Bought new on sale for over $3700. Take all for $1200.
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Page 18 friday, december 21, 2012
communitysnapshot
daily townsman / daily bulletin
A true Kootenay Christmas in SD5
There was song, dance and performing arts. Cranbrook’s school children put on an amazing show in the days leading up to Christmas for their families. Here’s a snapshot of the wonderful holiday fun. Tage on guitar at Kootenay Orchards
Cody, April and Emma from Amy Woodland perform Silent Night
Annalee Grant photo
Annalee Grant photo
St. Mary’s Catholic School Alex Kosztinka photo
Go Santa! At Kootenay Orchards Annalee Grant photo
Wishing for their two front teeth at Gordon Terrace
Unhappy reindeer at Amy Woodland
Stewart Wilson photo
Annalee Grant photo
daily townsman / daily bulletin
friday, december 21, 2012
NEWS
Page 19
Christmas story comes wrapped in various ways In four days, Christmas will finally be here! Before we know it the decorations will come down, the turkey will be eaten, and the wrapping paper safely tossed in the garbage—hopefully to be recycled—and we will have moved on to our New Year’s parties. We spend so much time preparing for it that the Christmas celebration itself seems to pass by in the blink of an eye. But that’s just the beginning of Christmas. The 12 Days begin on December 25th. We have almost two weeks to celebrate the festival. The busy preparations are finished now; perhaps we can stop a moment now to savour the message. It’s easy to miss that message in all the noise and hubbub of the season. It’s a simple message of healing, of reconciliation, of peace and goodwill, of transformation and hope. Christians celebrate Christmas as the promise of a life–renewing experience with God. We
sing the carols and read the ancient stories in worship on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. I love these services; they are a moment of serenity in the midst of the consumerist silliness. We stop and experience anew the transforming presence of God. We focus on the stillness. It’s a holy hush, a time of silence and renewal. That same message of transformation can be found in many of the classic stories of Christmas, most of which are not explicitly Christian or even religious. The stories we read and watch in this season—Charlie Brown, George Bailey, the Grinch, Ebenezer Scrooge and others—all of them focus on a message about the renewal of life. Each of these stories has to do with life being renewed and made whole by an encounter with the Christmas spirit. Each of the characters receive a renewed sense of purpose for life and they become people of good will and good deeds.
Charlie Brown can’t seem to do anything right. He can’t even pick out a decent tree for the Christmas program, and yet, with Linus’ help that little tree becomes a glorious symbol of Christmas. It just takes a blanket and a few of Snoopy’s decorations to instill in Charlie Brown and his friends the joy of Christmas. The Grinch is a mean one, he is. This miser and hermit hates noise and just wants to be left alone. The racket of Christmas so upsets him so much that he gets a really horrible idea: he’s going to steal Christmas from the people of Whoville. He steals all their presents, their decorations, and every piece of food, even their Who pudding. But when Christmas morning dawns, the people of Whoville wake up and gather in the town square and begin to sing. He hears the songs of joy, and the Grinch discovers that Christmas isn’t really about material things.
WWII Jewish grave markers recovered C anadian Press
THESSALONIKI, Greece – In a find that local Jewish groups have described as highly significant, Greek police said Thursday that hundreds of marble headstones and other fragments from Jewish graves destroyed during the Nazi occupation in World War II have been recovered. The 668 fragments were found buried in a plot of land in Thessaloniki following a 70year search for the remains of graves smashed when the city’s main Jewish cemetery was destroyed. The head of the city’s Jewish community, David Saltiel, said most of the gravestones found dated from the mid1800s up until World War II. ``This is our history,’’ Saltiel, head of the Central Board of Jewish Communities in Greece, told The Associated Press. ``Apart from the names, the (gravestones) also include the person’s occupation. So this is a historic record.’’ An estimated 60,000
Greek Jews, most of the country’s prewar Jewish
population, were killed in the Holocaust.
THIS WEEK
Cranbrook Ministerial
Church Directory Knox Presbyterian Church
Cranbrook United Church
Senior Pastor: Dr. Ron Foubister Pastor to Young Families: Al Brouwer Sunday Worship, Children’s Classes – 10:00am
with Rev. Frank Lewis
Corner Victoria & 3rd St. S. 250-426-7165
Friendly congregation, biblical preaching, traditional and contemporary music. Everyone welcome.
#2 12 Avenue S.
(downtown by Safeway)
Sunday Worship...10:00 am Sunday School 1st & 3rd Sundays www.cranbrookunited.com
46 - 13th Ave. S. 250-426-2644
The Reverend Yme Woensdregt, Incumbent Holy Eucharist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:15 am Holy Eucharist . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 am
Cranbrook and Kimberley
Calvary Chapel Cranbrook 10:30 am Sunday mornings The Studio/Stage Door 11 - 11th Ave. S., Cranbrook
250-421-1822 www.calvarychapelcranbrook.com
Interpreter for the deaf available Text 250-919-6335
Yme Woensdregt
George Bailey isn’t a bad guy, but when things go bad, he decides everyone would be better off without him. Just as he is
its intervene and show him his past, present, and a possible future. In the course of these visions, Scrooge realizes that his past choices have not only damaged his life, but also the lives of other people around him, including Tiny Tim. As that realization dawns, Scrooge becomes the most generous and caring person in all of London. These stories, like the biblical story, are about peace and hope, renewal and transformation and healing. 37 years ago, Robert Macafee Brown wrote a book called “The Pseudonyms of God”. His
about to jump into that icy river on Christmas Eve, an apprentice angel appears and shows George that life would be much worse without him. George Bailey discovers that every life, including his, has value, and through an act of grace he is redeemed and enabled to do good works for others. And then there’s Ebenezer Scrooge (my favourite). A grumpy, unhappy old miser, he hates everyone and everything. Christmas is a humbug, a nuisance, a reminder of his inconsolable loneliness. One Christmas Eve three spir-
thesis was that God shows up in many different disguises, and part of our faith is to discern God’s presence. God’s transforming love is evident in these stories, even if God is never mentioned. May they, along with the biblical stories of a baby born in a manger in a small town in a far off land, bring comfort, peace, and a new sense of purpose for your life. Like George Bailey, Charlie Brown, the Grinch, and Scrooge, may you also be a blessing to all the people in your life.
Invisible Braces
Now starting at $1,995
“I had braces as a teenager, but my teeth have since moved. I’m getting married and want the perfect smile.”
“I had a hard time brushing and flossing because my teeth are so crowded.“
“I have always hidden my teeth for pictures because my teeth are crooked.”
“My 7 year old needs early orthodontics. He has an underbite and I am worried about his speech.”
“My son needs braces, but really doesn’t want to have wire brackets because he’s afraid he may get made fun of.”
Cranbrook Orthodontics Braces for children, teens, and adults East Kootenay’s Orthodontic Specialty Centre since 1970
Dr. Suzanne Cziraki, Certified Orthodontist
CALL TODAY 250.426.8312 Dental Insurance accepted All children require an orthodontic exam by age 7 as recommended by the Canadian Association of Orthodontists
#1 - 1124 - 21st Avenue North, Cranbrook, BC V1C 5L9 www.smiledoctors.ca
Ph: 250-426-2022 / Fax: 250-426-2085
First Baptist Church Christ Church Anglican Pastor Kevin Ewaskow Worship Service 10:30 am 334 - 14th Ave. 250-426-4319 office@fbccranbrook.org
On that day the Grinch’s tiny heart grows several sizes.
Kimberley United Church 10 Boundary St. – 250-427-2428
Rev. Christine Dudley Sunday Worship at 10 am www.kimberleyunited.ca
Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Parish (Kimberley)
invites you to join us in celebration. Saturdays at 7:00pm and/or Sundays at 9:30am Weekday mass as posted. Visitors are always welcome.
Excellence in Delivery = Results!
The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin have been publishing for 100 years and have been instrumental in providing the East Kootenay area the very best in local news, sports, entertainment, events and happenings that matter to our communities. In addition, the Townsman and Bulletin have developed a strong on-line news source that keeps our readers informed seven days per week, 24 hours a day with breaking news updates. Our customers expect the very best and our commitment is to deliver the very best. It starts with producing an exceptional community newspaper filled with great local stories in an easy-to-read tabloid format. Then we support it with eye-catching design, provide a good balance of advertisements to inspire the reader to seek sales and service opportunities and finally, ensure that delivery standards are at the highest level. Call For Home Delivery in Cranbrook: 250-426-5201 ext 208. Call For Home Delivery in Kimberley: 250-427-5333.
Wise customers read the fine print: •, *, ♦, ∞, †, ‡, §, » The Win Your Ride Boxing Week Event offers are limited time offers which apply to retail deliveries of selected new and unused models purchased from participating dealers between December 21, 2012 and January 2, 2013. Offers subject to change and may be extended without notice. All pricing includes freight ($1,500–$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees, other dealer charges and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. •$16,980 Purchase Price applies to the new 2013 Dart SE (25A) only. $19,998 Purchase Price applies to the 2013 Dodge Journey Canada Value Package (22F) only and includes $2,000 Consumer Cash Discount. $19,998 Purchase Price applies to the new 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package (29E) and includes $8,100 Consumer Cash Discount. $16,998 Purchase Price applies to the new 2013 Chrysler 200 LX (24H) only and includes $3,600 Consumer Cash Discount. Pricing includes freight ($1,500-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees and other applicable fees and applicable taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. See participating dealers for complete details. *Consumer Cash Discounts are offered on select new 2013 vehicles and are deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. Amounts vary by vehicle. See your dealer for complete details. ♦No purchase necessary. Contest closes at 11:59 pm ET on January 2, 2013. Open to Canadian residents over the age of majority. One Grand Prize consisting of a cheque for the total purchase amount of a new Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge or Ram vehicle purchased/described to a maximum of $48,500. Correct answer to a skill-testing question required. Limit one entry per person. Complete contest rules at WINYOURRIDECANADA.CA. ∞Holiday Bonus Cash of up to $1,000 is available on most new 2012/2013 models, excluding the following: Chrysler 200 LX, Dodge Caliber, Dart SE, Grand Caravan CVP, Journey CVP/SE, Avenger, Viper, Jeep Compass Sport 4x2 & 4x4, Patriot Sport 4x2 & 4x4, Wrangler 2 Dr Sport, Grand Cherokee SRT8, Ram 1500 Reg Cab & ST & SXT Trucks, Ram Cab & Chassis, Ram Cargo Van, FIAT 500 Abarth and 2012 FIAT 500 Pop models. Bonus Cash will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. See your dealer for complete details. †4.99% purchase financing for up to 96 months available on the new 2013 Dodge Dart SE (25A) model to qualified customers on approved credit through Royal Bank of Canada, Scotiabank, TD Auto Finance and Ally Credit Canada. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. See your dealer for complete details. Example: 2013 Dodge Dart SE (25A) with a Purchase Price of $16,980 financed at 4.99% over 96 months with $0 down payment, equals 208 bi-weekly payments of $99 with a cost of borrowing of $3,630 and a total obligation of $20,610. ‡4.49% purchase financing for up to 96 months available on the new 2013 Dodge Journey Canada Value Package/2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package/2013 Chrysler 200 LX models to qualified customers on approved credit through Royal Bank of Canada, Scotiabank, TD Auto Finance and Ally Credit Canada. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. See your dealer for complete details. Examples: 2013 Dodge Journey Canada Value Package/2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package/2013 Chrysler 200 LX with a Purchase Price of $19,998/$19,998/$16,998 (including applicable Consumer Cash Discounts) financed at 4.49% over 96 months with $0 down payment equals 208 bi-weekly payments of $115/$115/$97 with a cost of borrowing of $3,823/$3,823 /$3,250 and a total obligation of $23,821/$23,821/$20,248. Pricing includes freight ($1,500-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. §2013 Dodge Dart R/T shown. Price including Holiday Bonus Cash: $23,495. 2013 Dodge Journey Crew shown. Price including applicable Consumer Cash Discount: $27,595. 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Crew shown. Price including applicable Consumer Cash Discount: $27,395. 2013 Chrysler 200 Limited shown. Price including applicable Consumer Cash Discount: $24,885. Pricing includes freight ($1,500-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees and other applicable fees and applicable taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. »The Make No Payments for 90 Days offer applies to retail customers who finance a new 2012/2013 Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge or Ram vehicle (except 2012/2013 Dodge Avenger CVP and 2013 Dodge Dart SE) at a subvented fixed rate on approved credit through Royal Bank of Canada, TD Auto Finance or Scotiabank between December 18, 2012 and January 2, 2013. Monthly payments will be deferred for 60 days and contracts will be extended accordingly. Interest charges will not accrue during the first 60 days of the contract. After 60 days, interest starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay principal and interest over the term of the contract. Customers will be responsible for any required down payment, licence, registration and insurance costs at time of contract. See your dealer for complete details. **Based on 2012 Ward’s upper small sedan costing under $25,000. ^Based on R. L. Polk Canada, Inc. May 2008 to August 2012 Canadian Total New Vehicle Registration data for Chrysler Crossover Segments. Start date based on the marketing launch commencing May 2008. ■Based on Ward’s 2011 Small Van Segmentation. Excludes other Chrysler Group LLC designed and/or manufactured vehicles. ±Based on 2012 Ward’s upper middle sedan segmentation. ¤Based on 2013 EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide ratings published by Natural Resources Canada. Transport Canada test methods used. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on powertrain, driving habits and other factors. 2013 Dodge Dart – Hwy: 5.4 L/100 km (52 MPG) and City: 11.4 L/100 km (25 MPG). 2013 Dodge Journey Canada Value Package & SE Plus 2.4 L 4-speed automatic – Hwy: 7.5 L/100 km and City: 10.8 L/100 km. 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package – Hwy: 7.9 L/100 km (36 MPG) and City: 12.2 L/100 km (23 MPG). 2013 Chrysler 200 LX 2.4 L 4-speed automatic – Hwy: 6.7 L/100 km (42 MPG) and City: 9.9 L/100 km (29 MPG). TMThe SiriusXM logo is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc. ®Jeep is a registered trademark of Chrysler Group LLC.
Page 20 friday, december 21, 2012
SCAN HERE
FOR MORE GREAT OFFERS
T:10.25”
YOU COULD WIN YOUR PURCHASEz DEC 21ST to JAN 2ND
36
$ $
99
CANADA’S #1 SELLING CROSSOVER^
$
19,998 •
MPG
7.9 L/100 KM HWY¤
HWY
CANADA’S MOST AFFORDABLE MID-SIZE SEDAN±
INCLUDES $3,600 CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.
16,998 • BI-WEEKLY‡
2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Crew shown.§
$
OR FINANCE FOR
97
BI-WEEKLY‡
PLUS, GET UP TO
@
daily townsman
MAKE NO PAYMENTS FOR 2013 DODGE DART SE
THE MOST TECHNOLOGICALLY ADVANCED VEHICLE IN ITS CLASS.**
$
BI-WEEKLY†
2013 DODGE JOURNEY CANADA VALUE PACKAGE
38
OR FINANCE FOR
$
CANADA’S BEST-SELLING MINIVAN FOR 29 YEARS
$
19,998 •
42
2013 CHRYSLER 200 LX
$
1,000
ON SELECT MODELS∞
HOLIDAY BONUS CASH
90 DAYS
INCLUDES FREIGHT.
@ %
OR FINANCE FOR
4.99
INCLUDES $2,000 CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.
OR FINANCE FOR
$
BI-WEEKLY‡
»
16,980
5.4 L/100 KM HWY ¤
HWY 52 MPG
•
2013 Dodge Dart R/T shown.§
FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN
7.5 L/100 KM HWY ¤
MPG HWY
115 @ 4.49 %
FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN 2013 Dodge Journey Crew shown.§
BEST-IN-CLASS
283HP
2013 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CANADA VALUE PACKAGE
115 @ 4.49 %
FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN
INCLUDES $8,100 CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.
6.7 L/100 KM HWY ¤
MPG HWY
4.49 %
FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN
2013 Chrysler 200 Limited shown.§
ChryslerCanada.ca/Offers