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FEBRUARY 1, 2013
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Name that brew house
Heidi’s invites suggestions for new brewpub set to help revitalize downtown SA LLY MAC DONAL D Townsman Staff
Ladies and gentleman, don your thinking caps: it’s time to play NAME – THAT – PUB! Heidi Romich, owner of Heidi’s Restaurant in downtown Cranbrook, wants your idea for naming the new brewpub she and business partners Marlies Romich and David Beardsell hope to open this spring. Temporarily named The Black Dog Brewpub, the new development will replace Heidi’s Restaurant with a brewhouse and restaurant — a family friendly dining area on one side, and a restaurant and pub on the other side. Now, Heidi is asking the future patrons of the brewpub to help name it. Ideally, the name will combine an animal with local history and geography. First prize will receive a $250 gift certificate, as well as four “growlers” of the pub’s first brew.
See HEIDI’S , Page 3
PHOTO COURTESY GERRY SOBIE
Bishop John Corriveau of the Diocese of Nelson and elder Annie Capilo of the Ktunaxa Nation take part in a Reconciliation Service at the conclusion of a 10 day Returning To Spirit workshop, bringing Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people together to address the residential school legacy. Thirtyfive participants gathered at the St. Eugene Golf Resort and Casino for a week in early November. Forty years ago, this building served as the St. Eugene Residential School, one of 18 in our province, closing in 1970. It was symbolically significant to conduct this workshop at the source where injustices were acknowledged and positive steps taken to begin the healing process.
RETURNING TO SPIRIT
The paths to reconciliation BARRY COULTER
A chapter in the process of reconciliation and healing between the Ktunaxa First Nation and the Diocese of Nelson over their mutual residential school history has concluded, opening up a new chapter in relations between the two groups. Returning To Spirit (RTS) is a series of workshops; the first for aborig-
inals, the second for non-aboriginals and a third — the Reconciliation Workshop — that brings the two groups together. The St. Eugene Residential School near Cranbrook was the only such school in the Diocese of Nelson, and one of 18 in British Columbia. Mary Richardson, Lay Pastoral Worker to the First Nations of the
East Kootenay for the Diocese of Nelson, explained the process. The first two workshops of Returning to Spirit (RTS) are exactly the same workshop, but given to each group separately. In these workshops the concept of residential school and how it affected the children who attended is brought to light within the workshop along with how such past experienc-
es of our own can also affect our lives. “We all carry baggage from our past and it is what happens to that baggage we carry into the present and into the future,” Richardson said. “In order to become the ‘real you’ you have to let go of the baggage that is weighing you down.
See RETURNING , Page 5
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Page 2 Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
Weatoheurtlook Tonight -4
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Almanac Temperatures
High Low Normal...........................-1.5° ...............-11.3° Record .......................10°/1971........-31.8°/1996 Yesterday -1.1° -10.9° Precipitation Normal.................................................1mm Record.....................................9.8mm/1987 Yesterday ...........................................0 mm This month to date.........................19.5 mm This year to date............................19.5 mm Precipitation totals include rain and snow
Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff
The regional district is refusing to pay expenses for its new non-voting board director representing Jumbo Glacier Mountain Resort Municipality. Set to be formally incorporated on February 19, the new municipality’s mayor is entitled to a seat at the Regional District of East Kootenay (RDEK) board of directors. However, the three person council was appointed by the provincial government, rather than elected by residents, since Jumbo has
RDEK directors recommend no allowance for non-voting board member representating Jumbo
no residents yet. Members of the RDEK board – made up of six electoral area directors and nine municipal representatives – have previously expressed disappointment that a non-elected representative should be allowed to sit at the board. However, the Jumbo representative would not be permitted to vote at the RDEK board until 2017, or until Jumbo’s tax base reaches $30 million, whichever
comes first. On Thursday, January 31, the RDEK’s Governance and Regional Services Committee, attended by 14 of 15 board directors, passed a recommendation that the board not pay for the Jumbo director’s attendance at meetings, travel or accommodation expenses. “They are not putting any money in the pot,” pointed out board chair Rob Gay. One director, Invermere’s Gerry Taft, voted
against the recommendation because he felt approving it would make him complicit in accepting the non-elected representative’s presence on the board. “Although of course I don’t think we should be paying for the Jumbo representative to go to meetings, I also don’t think the Jumbo representative should be allowed to have a seat at this table,” said Taft. “I hope that just getting rid of their expenses does not clean one’s
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conscience. It still doesn’t change the fundamental issue, which in my mind is it’s wrong to have an appointed representative who is not representing the people in this region sitting at this table.” The recommendation was set to be brought forward to the RDEK board meeting on Friday, February 1 where the same board members would vote whether to approve it.
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KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Twelve Interior B.C. communities or hospitals have been placed on a so-called “A-list’’ as the Interior Health Authority searches the globe for doctors willing to come to this province. Clearwater Mayor John Harwood says the list is part of an Interior Health initiative dubbed “Better Here,’’ aimed at encouraging doctors to relocate to B.C. regions lacking physicians. He says his district, 125 kilometres north of Kamloops, was included on the A-list because it needs three more doctors to serve its roughly 5,000 residents. According to Harwood, Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloops may also be on the list because the facility has a shortage of anaesthetists. Dozens of communities across B.C., from Enderby to Logan Lake, Chase, Princeton, Lake Cowichan, Alert Bay, and numerous northern districts and towns are searching for physicians. Two South African doctors arrived Monday in the town of Ashcroft, to alleviate a shortage there, but other communities, such as Princeton, have been forced to cut hours in local emergency rooms to cope with similar shortages.
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daily townsman
Local NEWS
Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
Page 3
Farmer’s Market celebrates five years of local food Annalee Gr ant Townsman Staff
It’s been chilly, and snowy and grey, but here’s a wonderful tidbit of good news to warm up those winter boots: the Cranbrook Farmer’s Market Society has set the dates for 2013. It’s looking to be the longest market season yet as the society celebrates five years of local food and community. “We’re heading into our fifth season of operating the Cranbrook Farmer’s Market,” said Erna Jensen-Shill, market manager. The fifth year will be bigger and better than ever as the society continues to expand what they offer to the community. “As the community and our customers have seen over the last few years, we continue to grow,” Jensen-Shill said. This year’s market season will start on June 22 and run for 17 consecutive Saturdays until October 12 on 10th Avenue South. “It will be our longest Saturday season ever,” Jensen-Shill said. There will be two Wednesday night markets in Rotary Park, but this year there will be a slight twist for patrons. For those who are eager to get shopping, the season will kick off with a spring market on May 25 at the Cranbrook Curling Club. “It was very popular last year for those market customers that just can’t wait,” Jensen-Shill
ing professionally. This year the society will finally get the chance to attend the B.C. Association of Farmer’s Markets annual general meeting, which is being held in Kamloops. Jensen-Shill said the meeting is often held on the coast or Vancouver Island, which makes it difficult for the board to travel. They also plan to do more training for the board members and Jensen-Shill to make the already well-established markets run even smoother. “I’m very excited about all of that,” Jensen-Shill said. The farmer’s market wouldn’t have been so successful if it weren’t for the community sup-
port, Jensen-Shill said. The community embraced the local food issue early on, and the movement has grown right along with the market. “It’s all sort of come together in somewhat of a perfect storm,” she said. “I think we’re on a really great track.” The society is planning on hosting a vendor introduction seminar in March, which will help potential vendors take their idea from the planning stages to the market table. Jensen-Shill gets a lot of phone calls from entrepreneurs wondering how they can join the market scene, or whether their idea is a good one. She said that’s been one of the highlights of
the market over the past five years – growing small businesses. “That’s a part of the goal of all farmer’s market, is being sort of an incubator for business ideas,” Jensen-Shill said. “It’s a great testing ground if you have an idea.” New vendors get the chance to test out their product, hear direct feedback from the customers and get suggestions on how they can improve. The new vendor applications will be released on the Cranbrook Farmer’s Market webpage shortly at www. cranbrookfarmersmarket.com. The society also has a Facebook page that is updated with the latest market news.
Have fun with science Registration is now open for the 2013 East Kootenay Regional Science Fair, coming to the College of the Rockies in March Townsman file photo
Carrots? Check. Potatoes? Got ‘em. Tattoo? Done! You never know what you’re going to find at the Cranbrook Farmer’s Market. After picking up some produce, Patty Cavalier stopped and got some new (temporary) ink at a 2012 night market. said. The evening markets will be back by popular demand again. This year, Jensen-Shill said they are going to celebrate the very thing that brought the society together and
started the farmer’s market craze: local food. “This year we’re going to put more of a festival market spin on it,” she said. Those markets will be held in Rotary Park on July 17 and August
14.
Behind the scenes, there’s plenty of activity going on for the society as well. Jensen-Shill said the board is focusing on looking at what they are successful at, and grow-
Heidi’s to close later this month Continued from page 1 Each growler is 1.89 litres, and the winner can take one home, drink it, then bring it back three times to be refilled. The runner-up will win a $150 gift certificate and one growler. Entries will be accepted until 5 p.m. on Friday, February 15. Email your suggestions to barry@ dailytownsman.com, or drop them off to The Townsman office, 822 Cranbrook Street North. “We hadn’t come to an agreement, and we thought it would be fun to open it up because everybody locally will have great ideas. The intent is for this to be a fun place for locals to be, so we want people to feel a part of it,” said Heidi.
Meanwhile, Heidi is waiting to hear later this month if the new brewpub’s liquor license has been approved. Cranbrook city council threw its support behind the license application in early January. If the license is approved, construction on the brewpub would begin on March 1, brewing would begin on April 31, and the new venue would open at the end of May or in early June. That means there is only weeks remaining to enjoy your favourite items on Heidi’s menu as the restaurant would close later this month to make way for renovations. “Heidi’s will be relegated to history, closed forever at the end
Name That Pub contest Suggestions should include an animal and a reference to local history or geography
Deadline: Feb. 15, 5 p.m. Email barry@dailytownsman.com or drop off at the Townsman office, 822 Cranbrook Street North of February,” said Heidi. “After 14 years of Heidi’s, that part will be sad and emotional, but exciting at the same time.”
Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff
Grades K-5, will be held on Saturday, March 2. This gives parents more opportuHey, kids: it’s time to enrol in this year’s East Kootenay Regional Sci- nities to come to the fair and see ence Fair, which will be held on Fri- their child’s hard work on display. day, March 1 and Saturday, March 2 “We welcome visitors and hope at the College of the Rockies. people come and support the stuThe theme of the dents of our area,” said 2013 Science Fair is Savage. “water cooperation”, East Kootenay Regional Entrance to the scisays organizer Anita ence fair costs $15 Science Fair Savage. each. “It’s not just the March 1 and 2, 2013 The fair will be science of water; it’s held in conjunction College of the Rockies with the College of the also about cooperation because of the Rockies Regional Tickets $15 deficiencies of water SkillsBC competition www.ekrsf.ca – long and short term on March 1. solutions to water College students management,” said will compete in weldSavage, adding that the theme was ing, carpentry, cabinet making and chosen to reflect the United Nations’ automotive service. International Year of Water CooperaThe public is invited to view the tion. competition at the same time as the Students in all grades can register Science Fair. for the science fair at www.ekrsf.ca, Savage said organizers are also where you can also find helpful tools hoping that having part of the fair on to plan out your project. a Saturday will make it easier to “The website is a great resource drum up volunteers. for anyone wanting to do a project,” The fair needs volunteer judges said Savage, who said there is a six- for both days, as well as general volweek schedule to spread out the unteers. project work between now and the You can stand in for intervals as fair. short as two hours, up to all day. This year, the competitive fair for To register as a volunteer, please Grades 6-12 will be held on Friday, call Anita Savage at 250-420-7287. March 1. The major sponsors of the Older students will compete for a East Kootenay Regional Science chance to go to the national science Fair are BC Hydro, School Disfair in Lethbridge, Alberta, in May. trict 5, Teck, and College of the The non-competitive fair, for Rockies.
Page 4 Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Fernie may have graves outside cemetery Nicole Liebermann Fernie Free Press
Two Fernie community members believe that inaccurate record keeping and the improper designation of cemetery boundaries has led to the misplacement and/or removal of hundreds of people that died and were buried in the mountain town. After receiving calls from family members searching for burial sites of their ancestors, John Gawryluk and Corlyn Haarstad of Cherished Memories Funeral Services started researching in 2000 internments in St. Margaret’s Cemetery. They began gathering data from the Fernie and District Historical Society and the City of Fernie. After comparing the two sources, they discovered there were names missing from the records of St. Margaret’s Cemetery, as well as discrepancies with the B.C. Archives online databases. Gawryluk and Haars-
tad went on to acquire records through the B.C. Archives of the 935 deaths in Fernie and the surrounding area between 1889 and 1911. They began the process of cross-referencing them with records from Holy Family Catholic Church, Anglican Church Archives, Knox United Church, newspaper articles and obituary notices, and the Fernie Heritage Cemetery Restoration Society. They also conducted walks through St. Margaret’s to authenticate the actual gravesites with records. Concerned residents packed the Aquatic Centre for a Committee of the Whole meeting on Monday to see Gawryluk and Haarstad present their findings to council following 12 years of research. “The records show that 542 people are buried at St. Margaret’s Cemetery,” explained Haarstad. “393 people of the 935 [who died from 1889 to 1911] have records showing their
“With the findings of the skeletons, numerous people came to Cherished Memories to tell about their recollections of the old cemetery which included unplanned exhumations during the construction of the C.L. Salvador, or Ridgemont Elementary School. More recently, citizens began to express concerns with the development at Silver Ridge Estates.” Corlyn Haarstad cause and place of death in Fernie, however the location of these people is not recorded.” Haarstad listed several problems she and Gawryluk came across through their work, including inaccurate record keeping, possible removal of bodies without proper authority, unmarked graves, and a lack of care and maintenance to the cemetery grounds. The pair also takes issue with the development of the Silver Ridge Estates in Fernie’s Ridgemont area. “In 2008, workers on the construction site of Silver Ridge found four complete skeletons,” explained Haarstad. “To my understanding, the
following process took place. “The developer stopped the construction and notified the RCMP. Afterwards, the coroner, the City of Fernie, the British Columbia Consumer Protection Agency, which governs all cemeteries in the province of B.C., and the Archeological Branch, which now oversees all involvement on the lots of Silver Ridge Estates surrounding the existing cemetery, became involved.” The four bodies that were found were turned over to Cherished Memories, who held a graveside service and ensured they received a proper burial.
“With the findings of the skeletons, numerous people came to Cherished Memories to tell about their recollections of the old cemetery which included unplanned exhumations during the construction of the C.L. Salvador, or Ridgemont Elementary School,” Haarstad said. “More recently, citizens began to express concerns with the development at Silver Ridge Estates.” She went on to say, “Once again, the remains of those buried there decades earlier would be disturbed. This possibility invoked citizens to voice outrage concerning the disrespect and disregard that officials and previous
developers had concerning the remains. The escalation of the situation prompted Cherished Memories to pursue more intense research of the area.” Through the use of maps from the City of Fernie, an AutoCAD mapping program, and an aerial photograph, Haarstad and Gawryluk have confirmed the existence of what they believe to be four additional burial areas outside of St. Margaret’s Cemetery, and within City boundaries. This includes a small chain link fenced cemetery at the Silver Ridge Estates. Haarstad assured council they were not appearing before them to place blame, but to ask for their help. She outlined several recommendations to the City on behalf of Cherished Memories: to acquire proper records and database of all internees; identify the missing people that could be located in any of the five cemeteries
within Fernie; identify unmarked graves; develop a memorial park at Silver Ridge Estates to honour and respect people buried or removed from the location; and to designate the cemeteries located outside of St. Margaret’s as true Heritage/Pioneer Burial Sites. They are also asking that a committee be formed to begin addressing their concerns. Following the presentation, Mayor Mary Giuliano thanked Haarstad and Gawryluk for their time and research. “I do want people to understand that we are taking this very seriously and we definitely appreciate the presence of the people here,” she remarked. Given the amount of information presented, mayor and council will take the matter under consideration. The topic may be brought forward at a future council meeting for further discussion.
Five vehicles damaged in parking lot smash Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff
A Cranbrook man was assaulted near 3rd Street South on the morning of Wednesday, January 30, according to RCMP. The man told police he was attacked by two stocky males, who flagged him over as he was driving a brown Dodge van with ladders on top. The driver escaped the assault, RCMP said, by driving away from the attackers. However, in his haste, he collided with five vehicles in the parking lot of townhomes on the 2200 block of 3rd Street South. The driver left the scene, but police locat-
ed the driver soon after the collision. He suffered minor injuries and was not hospitalized. One attacker was described as a Caucasian male, 36-38 years old; husky or stocky build; with short, dark brown hair. The second attacker was only described as being a Caucasian male with a similar hair style as the first attacker. The police are looking for anyone who saw this incident or may have information. Call the Cranbrook RCMP at 250-489-3471 or East Kootenay Crimestoppers (1-800222-TIPS). You can also Google Cranbrook Crimestoppers and leave a webtip.
Submitted
Eleine Gordon, on behalf of the BCGEU Cross Component Committee, is pictured presenting a $1,600 cheque to Captain Kirk and Nancy Zier from the Salvation Army.
daily townsman
Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
Local NEWS
Page 5
‘Making things right and moving forward’ Continued from page 1 “Also what happens to you today can become baggage tomorrow if you allow it to weigh you down, so therefore you always need to deal with ongoing issues, hurts in your life, in order to let go and move forward. And that is where reconciliation comes in: Reconciling with others and yourself is an ongoing process. “It is about letting go of the past, today, in the present before it becomes heavy baggage that you are carrying into your future. It is about making things right and moving forward.”
The RTS workshop helped me to look at my past — being a student who went to Residential School — and helped me accept the losses I suffered and to forgive those who were in charge of this and to finally be able to let go of the baggage I carried all my life. Feedback from RTS workshops, reprinted anonymously The RTS workshop for aboriginals was held in November, 2011, and the one for non-aboriginals in January, 2012. The RTS Reconciliation Workshop brought the two groups together at the St. Eugene Golf Resort (the old Kootenay Indian Residential School), in November, 2012. “For two days the groups met separately to work on communication skills and the final three days the two groups came together for reconciliation,” said Richardson, who served as host coordinator — not taking part in the workshops per se, but being there to assist the facilitators. In February of 2011, Richardson had made a presentation to Diocesan Pastoral Council, and was given the go
It has allowed me to be open to hearing the story of others without prejudices and to see the desire for justice is not a desire for revenge or “punishment”.
Made me realize that there is a way to deal with all of my anger, loss and sorrow so that I don’t continue to carry it all my life. Opened my eyes to the sorrow others carry. Feedback from RTS workshops, reprinted anonymously ahead to form a committee to look at bringing the workshops into the Diocese and in particular to the Cranbrook area. Richardson had previously attended a non-aboriginal workshop in St. Albert, Alberta, in 2008. From that she invited some Ktunaxa Nation members to participate in the Aboriginal Workshop in 2009 in Calgary. And the three attended the Reconciliation Workshop in Saskatoon in the fall of 2009. In early 2011, enough funding was secured to proceed with the workshops in the Cranbrook area. Among those who attended was Bishop John Corriveau, of the Diocese of Nelson. “When I came here (five years ago), the residential school question was really up front,” he said. “And I was struck by the testimony of bishops across Western Canada as to the effectiveness of the workshops. “The whole process reminded me of what it takes to be a truly reconciling person,” he said. “Reconciliation begins in myself. If the relationship has to change, you can’t sit back and think that it will be a gift from outside, it has to come from inside. “For a whole week we worked on that — it prepared us for the session when the two communities got together.” One thing that struck Corriveau during the workshops was the depth of cultural violence under the residential school system. “It made me aware of the tragedy of the resi-
Feedback from RTS workshops, reprinted anonymously Reprinted from Janus, Nov. 30, 2012/Cranbrook Herald, 1912.
A rear view of the St. Eugene Residential School and chapel nearing completion in 1912. dential schools — the systemic violence done to four generations of people.
It has opened my eyes, opened my understanding and life and my spirit. I have a renewed feeling of intentionality — one that I can apply in all aspects of my life. I will no longer look at two separate communities but of one united community. Feedback from RTS workshops, reprinted anonymously “If a five- or six-yearold goes into a school and is punished for speaking his or her own language, that is cultural violence. A child would personalize (an attack on his language),” he said. Another aspect that struck the Bishop was the commitment by the Ktunaxa people to move forward. “They are absolutely committed to rebuilding family and communal values,” he said. “I saw this as a real sign of hope.” “I also came away with the conviction that the wider society of our church and our culture will be impoverished if we allow this cultural divide to remain,” he said. Herman Alpine, an elder with the Ktunaxa Nation, attended the St. Eugene Residential School from 1949 to
1961. The trauma of being cut off from his culture, of being taught to hate who he was, left him with deep psychological injuries, that set him on a self-damaging path through life. “Being human, I reached for humans to blame. I blamed the priests, I blamed white people — for many years that’s the way I thought,” Alpine said. “There was a lot of hate, not only for other people but for myself. There was a lot of inner racism.” However, Alpine came to realize he was suffering from what’s known as Residential School Trauma, and he sought treatment for it, at a years-long program at the Ktunaxa/Kinbasket Health & Wellness Centre in Creston. The result was Alpine began looking within, and finding the strength to begin the healing process. “I realized I was no longer the centre of my universe, and I chose to tell myself I was no longer a victim,” he said. “I understood why I was the way I was, and could accept the things I did.” After the years of
Know It All
trauma, and the years of treatment and awakening, Alpine found a sense of closure from the Returning to Spirit sessions. “The fact that we did it with non-natives and clergy, and had a chance to put our feelings forward as to how we were treated, was eye-opening,” he said. “I had all sorts of feelings of how I would act when I met them — would I curse them? Would I call them down? But talking to them, I found we are all alike. “Being able to sit
there and talk to the Bishop and the priests, to tell them about what happened to me, how I felt about waking up and finding myself Catholic … about that purpose of trying to kill the Indian within.” Alpine also said that reconciliation starts with one’s self, and comes from within first. “The hope I have is that this never happens again,” Alpine said. “This process of controlling people or changing them. “I’d suggest to anyone who has the chance
to do the workshops to do them.” “I think it’s only going the bear good fruit,” Bishop Corriveau said. Richardson said there are still possibilities for another workshop here, or within the Diocese of Nelson which includes the Okanagan area. “We have experienced something unique, something that can change us within, ‘to Return us to the Spirit of Who We Are,’ something that can move us forward for ourselves, for our communities and move us towards working together for the good of all,” she said.
OPEN HOUSE Draft Amendment to the City of Cranbrook Official Community Plan The City of Cranbrook is considering adopting an amendment to the City’s Official Community Plan (OCP). Specifically, the proposed draft comprehensive amendment will update information and policy directions based on the City’s Integrated Sustainability Plan (ICSP) and Growth Management Study (GMS). The amendment will add new and updated policies with respect to Cranbrook’s regional context, sustainable land use, municipal boundary extension, and social, institutional and community considerations. In addition, the amendments will also update a number of provisions and guidelines for the City’s Development Permit Areas which will help clarify and streamline the development application process. The purpose of the open house is to provide an opportunity to review the draft bylaw amendment and collect feedback. There will be a short presentation at 7:15 p.m. The Open House will be held at: Manual Training School Cranbrook Public Library 1212 2nd Street North, Cranbrook Tuesday, February 5, 2013 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm If you have any questions, please contact Rob Veg, Senior Planner at (250) 489-0241 or veg@cranbrook.ca. Copies of the draft bylaw amendment will be made available at the Open House.
The Know It All is following our local arts scene. Send all your entertainment events to: entertainment@ dailytownsman.com
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FRIDAY, FERBUARY 1, 2013
OPINION
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The anniversary of Stalingrad
T
BA RRY CO U LT E R
omorrow, February 2, is the 70th anniversary of the end of the Battle of Stalingrad. I’m noting that publicly here because the Battle of Stalingrad, strange as it may seem, was the first “adult” story which fired my childhood imagination. When I was 11 or so, I plowed my way through a book written by a survivor of the German Sixth Army, and a subsequent survivor of post-battle Soviet imprisonment — “The Forsaken Army” (published in German in 1957, in English one year later), a copy of which I still own and read. Perhaps it was because, growing up on the Saskatchewan prairie as I did, I could just look out my window and see a frozen steppe, and easily populate it with hundreds of thousands of ghosts, starving and shelterless, constantly subject to the maximum violence humans can inflict upon each other. The German Sixth Army attacked Stalingrad in the autumn of 1942. After two months of horrific combat, a surprise Soviet offensive surrounded the entire German army — originally 270,000 men. To make a long story short, Adolf Hitler ordered this army to fight to the last man, as a symbolic gesture. Resupplying
A German soldier is taken prisoner by the Red Army, upon the defeat of the German 6th Army at Stalingrad, feb. 2, 1943. this army proved futile, and finally even evacuating the wounded was impossible. The Soviets starved the German army for more than two months, and after the final attack, only 91,000 Germans were left to surrender in February. Of those, only 6,000 survived the war years in captivity, and only a handful ever made it back to Germany after the war — one of whom was the author of “The Forsaken Army,” Heinrich Gerlach. How he wrote his book is a story in itself. Two million people — soldiers and civilians — died because of the Battle of Stalingrad. I have since read other great works of fiction and
non-fiction on the subject. In recent years, the release of old Soviet archives have shed a great deal of light on the subject, perhaps most of all confirming that it was the key point of a war between two totalitarian ideologies, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, who treated both their enemies and their own people — including their own soldiers — with inhumanity which seems incomprehensible to us today, though it is all well documented, of course. This anniversary is important because the Battle of Stalingrad was the turning point of the Second World War. It also set a benchmark for ferocity; it’s generally recognized as the most vicious battle (if such a
word even applies anymore) in history. There was plenty of viciousness left to come, of course. In Russia, they’re marking this anniversary by changing the name of the city back to Stalingrad, at least on the days commemorating the victory. The city was renamed Volgograd in 1961 as part of the Soviet Union’s rejection of dictator Joseph Stalin’s personality cult. But the name Stalingrad is inseparable with the historic battle. Still, it’s cause mixed feelings, to put it mildly. “It’s blasphemous to rename the great Russian city after a bloody tyrant who killed millions of his fellow citizens,” said one Russian lawmaker on Thursday. A Russian human rights activist said the move was among those that “legally and politically recognize the crimes committed by the Bolshevik regime, particularly Stalin and his inner circle.” Russian communists said the renaming for only a day or two was a “half step.” And in other Stalingrad anniversary news, the symphony orchestras of Volgograd and Osnabrueck, in Germany, accompanied by a 150-member choir, will combine to perform Beethoven’s 9th Symphony “Ode to Joy” for the occasion, which strikes me as inappropriate, though neither Germany nor Russia asked me.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Opinion/Events
the fabulous baker brothers: Part III
England’s bravest soldier JANUS: Cranbrook Then & Now
Jim Cameron “His career might have been among the most brilliant in our military services.” London Times newspaper obituary November, 1887.
V
alentine Baker, born April 1, 1827, in Enfield, England. Son of successful businessman Samuel Baker, and brother to John, Samuel Jr. and James, the latter of whom became the town founder of Cranbrook, B.C. Valentine was named for his paternal grandfather, an English privateer — that is to say, licensed pirate — who invested wisely in the sugar trade in Jamaica. Valentine the younger, strongly-built with dark, piercing eyes, was raised among the upper class of England. As with his brothers, he received a rather scattered education. It mattered not. He was bright, inquisitive, talented and very good with horses. So too did he have a fine mind for things of a strategic nature. It was almost inevitable that he would choose to join the army in accordance with his father’s wishes. In 1845 Val travelled with his two older brothers John and Sam to the island of Ceylon (Sri Lanka) to aid in the establishment of an English colony at Nuwara Eliya. The life of the landed gentry held little attraction however, and in 1852 he joined the Ceylon Rifles as a junior commissioned officer. Val was a cut above the majority of his barrack mates. He took army life very seriously, with both his talent as a horseman and his ability to inspire confidence and trust among his fellows readily apparent. Within a short time he left the regiment to join the 10th Hussars in Africa, then on to the 12th Lancers in the Crimea and, by 1860, a return to the 10th Hussars as commander, having seen much fighting along the way. He had only to serve to be advanced. Then came the fateful day
when things went very wrong. On the afternoon of June 17, 1875, a train passed through Walton station at forty miles an hour with, most unusually, a young lady half hanging out of a carriage, grasping the outside door handle with one arm and the other in the grasp of someone inside the compartment. Apprised of the situation the stationmaster signaled ahead and brought the train to a halt. The woman, helped from the train by a number of men, pointed to the man inside her compartment and declared he had “insulted her” (a euphemism for sexual advances) and “would not leave her alone.” The man in question was Valentine Baker. Val had boarded the train on his way to dine with the Duke of Cambridge and found himself alone with Miss Kate Dickinson, age 21. During their ensuing conversation, according to Miss Dickinson, Val moved to sit beside her, “asked her for a kiss and touched her on the leg above the ankle.” Miss Dickinson attempted to ring the bell alarm in the carriage but it was broken. She then made to depart the moving compartment by way of the outside door (there were no connecting corridors on trains at the time) at which point she was restrained by Col. Baker. Upon descending the halted carriage it was observed by three men that Val’s clothing was disarranged — more to the point, his flies were undone. Valentine Baker, darling of the army, was duly charged with indecent assault and assault with attempt to ravage. The case became a “cause célèbre,” with much debate among the populace as to the truth of the matter. It was, of course, her word against his, but Val refused to speak in his own defense, declaring that he would not impugn the honour of a lady by calling her a liar, if indeed that was the case. He was found guilty of indecent assault and was fined 500 pounds and sentenced to one year of imprisonment. He immediately wrote to the War Office to resign his commission only to discover he was already expelled, “the Queen having no further use of his services.”
Valentine “Pasha” Baker, circa 1880, labelled both a hero and a cad. (Public domain.) Despite pleas to the contrary from the Duke of Cambridge, the Prince of Wales and many others, his army career in England was effectively over. Val served his sentence uncomplainingly and upon his release soon found himself in Turkey fighting against the Russians. As a general in the Turkish army he took part in numerous bloody actions in which he carried himself so admirably that he became a media hero to much of the British public. In 1882 he accepted an invitation to command a new Egyptian army to be formed under the command of occupying British officers. His appointment was blocked at the highest levels and instead he found himself the head of the ragtag Egyptian civilian police force known as “The Gendarmerie.” In 1884 Val and his troops were ambushed in the Sudan by Mahdist rebels. His army panicked and was completely
routed at the cost of more than 2,300 men, over half of its strength. The following year Val’s 18-year-old daughter Hermione and his wife Fanny died from typhoid. He elected to stay on in Cairo as inspector-general of the gendarmerie. Valentine Baker died of a heart attack near Tel el-Kebir on Nov. 17, 1887, while in the company of his surviving daughter Sybil and two of his brother Sam’s children. His death came at the very time that a movement was underway to reinstate him in the English army. He was buried with full military honours, described by the commander of the British army in Egypt as “the bravest soldier England ever had.” Val was one of the most remarkable cavalrymen of the age, a warrior whose star continually glittered but sadly, never fully glowed. janusthenandnow@shaw.ca
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Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
Page 7
What’s Up?
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING Annual Scottish Tea Saturday Feb. 2 Kimberley United Church; 1 – 3 Pm. Highland Dancers!!! Scottish Fare at the Tea Tables and an ‘All Kinds Of Baking’ at The Bake Table. Twice Loved Jewelery Table. Royal Canadian Legion Super Bowl, Feb. 3rd 2013 - 4 pm. Potluck and prizes, for more info contact the legion 250-426-4512. 2013 FREE PUBLIC SWIM Wednesday, February 6, 5:00-6:00 PM is sponsored by Harmony Chapter Eastern Star. Resident Hunters Association Meeting is Thursday February 7, 2013 at 7:00 pm, basement meeting room of the Cranbrook ABC restaurant. Call Rob 250-426-7732 or Abbie 250-427-5236. Jean Pederson Water-based media Portraiture. Cranbrook & District Arts Council Office at 135 10 Avenue S in Cranbrook from Feb 8 – 11. Feb 8 is drawing from plaster cast and Feb 9-11 is instruction and model sessions. Deadline for registration is Feb 1. CDAC office at 250-426-4223 FMI ZUMBATHON® Charity Event: Family Day - February 11. Celebrate Family Day with a dance-fitness party! Have fun and work up a sweat... as a family! Marysville Elementary School, 9:00 AM-10:00 AM. Admission by donation, with proceeds going towards Jenna Homeniuk’s fight against cancer. *Pre-registration required*. FMI: Natasha Burgess; 250-421-6440 natashaburgess.zumba.com Tuesday Feb 12, 7:00-GoGo Grannies Travelogue: John Mandryk and Friends present highlight from their Motorcycle Tour from Vancouver to Cabo San Lucas. Adventures and fun with lots of time for discussion. Also a tour of Alaska. College of the Rockies Lecture Theatre. Admission by donation with all proceeds to the GoGo Grannies as they support Grandmothers in Africa. February 13th. Kimberley Garden Club February program: Floral Gardens slideshow and talk with pointers on how to take good garden photos. Selkirk High School Library 7-9 pm. New members welcome. For more info: Nola 250-427-1948. BE OUR VALENTINE! February is Toastmaster Month. Cranbrook First Toastmasters is celebrating with a Valentine’s Day party and you are invited! Come to room 210 at the College of the Rockies on Thursday, February 14 from 7-9 pm. Contact Pamela at 250489-3906 or Kathy: email twosimons@shaw.ca Valentines Day Dinner, Dance & Silent Auction. Friday, Feb. 15. Cocktails 5:30, Dinner at 6:30pm. Music by The Hollers. Tickets at Black Bear Books, FasGas and Lotus Books. Held at Kimberley Conference Centre. Valentine Jam, Cranbrook Legion - 8 pm Feb. 15th, Featuring Brad and the Boyz. ONGOING The Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society seeks volunteers to help us provide services to persons at the end of life and their families. Training is provided. Call 250-417-2019, Toll Free 1-855-417-2019 if interested. Cranbrook Quilters’ Guild hold their meetings on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays each month at 7:15 pm upstairs in Seniors Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. All skill levels welcome. FMI Betty 250-489-1498 or June 250-426-8817. 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. Special Olympics BC – Kimberley/Cranbrook now has an Active Start! Active Start is for children with intellectual disabilities ages 2-6, teaching basic motor skills through fun, positive experiences. Thursdays, 10-11am starting January 17 at Kimberley Aquatic Centre ** Transportation available. Call Julia 427.3324 or Cyra 250.919.0757 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. 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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Gore re-signs with Lions, Reilly dealt to Eskimos C ANADIAN PRESS
VANCOUVER - Wide receiver Shawn Gore has re-signed with the B.C. Lions, the club announced Thursday. The speedy wideout led the Lions with 722 receiving yards in 2012. The Toronto native has spent three seasons with the team after being selected in the second round (10th overall) in the 2010 Canadian draft. “I am very happy that Shawn has re-signed with our club rather than explore free agency,” vice president of football operations and general manager Wally Buono said in a statement. “He is a young and very exciting receiver who I believe will give all of us many great moments in the future.” Gore had a season-high 96 receiving yards in a 28-23 win over the Toronto Argonauts on Sept. 15. He had a 48yard reception in the
game, his longest gain of the year. Gore has 122 receptions for 1,558 yards and six touchdowns over 48 regular-season games. With veteran receivers Arland Bruce III and Geroy Simon no longer with the club, the Lions will rely on Gore to be a major part of their offence in 2013. “I’m very excited to re-sign with the Lions and I feel like the sky is the limit for our club,” Gore said. “Being part of this community has been an amazing experience and I’m thrilled at the prospect of continuing my career as a Lion.” The Lions also dealt quarterback Mike Reilly and a second-round pick (14th overall) in this year’s Canadian draft to Edmonton for the Eskimos’ second-round selection (11th overall) in the 2013 Canadian draft and their second-round pick in 2014.
Open HOuses saturday Feb. 2 11:00 am to 12:30 pm 416 - 21st Ave. S., Cranbrook $219,900 Many, many upgrades! 3+1 bdrms, 2½ baths, Peaka-Roll shutters control heat & cold! K217827 Jeannie Argatoff 11:00 am to 1:00 pm 229 - 14th Ave. S., Cranbrook $379,900 Amazing new home, 3 bedroom, 3 bath hardwood & tile flooring, his & her garage, workshop. K216990 Joe Amatruda 12:30 to 1:30 pm 701 - 34th Ave. S., Cranbrook $489,000 Across the street is Crown land, 1 block to Idlewild, 5 bdrms plus den - 4 baths - and $30,000 cash back to buyer for upgrades! K196044 Sonia Mama 1:00 to 2:30 pm 713 - 22nd Ave. N., Cranbrook $218,000 Immaculate 3 bdrm, 2 bath renovated half duplex. Close to school, transportation & shopping. K new Lori Boettger 1:00 to 2:30 pm 1004 - 17th Ave. S., Cranbrook $269,900 3+1 bdrms, 2 baths, 6 appliances. This beautiful home has been completely redone! K216634 Jeannie Argatoff 1:45 to 3:00 pm 2117 John Road on West Highway $239,900 Creekside 3 bdrm rancher set on 1.43 ac. with nice view of Fisher & Steeples. Conveniently located close to Cranbrook. K217792 Sonia Mama 3:00 to 4:30 pm 5500 Six Mile Lane, Cranbrook $569,000 On 6.75 acres backing onto Rails to Trails. 4 bdrms, 3 baths, solarium & much more! K217667 Jeannie Argatoff
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KOOTENAY ICE
Mistakes plague Ice in 6-2 loss to Rebels TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
The road was not kind to the Kootenay Ice as they dropped a 6-2 decision to the Red Deer Rebels on Thursday night to wrap-up a pair of games in Alberta over the week. Turner Elson broke a 2-2 tie with 30 seconds to go in the second period and the Rebels added three more goals in the final frame to close out the win. “We didn’t manage the puck very well and some key turnovers cost us,” said Ice assistant coach Chad Kletzel. Brock Montgomery scored his 21st goal of the season for the Ice, and Sam Reinhart added the other Koote-
nay goal, extending his point streak to 15 games, with 14 markers and and 10 assists. Reinhart’s run is tied with Ty Rattie for the longest active streak, as the Portland Winterhawks’ sniper has put up 11 goals and 16 assists in 15 contests. The Ice fell behind in another poor start like the game before in Edmonton, going down two goals that were scored 1:36 apart by Elson and Matt Bellerive near the middle of the opening period. Montgomery managed to cut the deficit in half with five minutes remaining, wristing a shot that went high over the glove of Rebels goaltender Patrik Bartosak
after intercepting the puck in the offensive zone.
“We didn’t manage the puck very well and some key turnovers cost us.” Chad Kletzel Reinhart drew the two teams even nearly nine minutes into the second period, scoring a bank shot off of Bartosak after he skated backwards out from behind the Red Deer net. The two teams played each other even, until the Ice had another turnover in their own zone, which Elson picked up and put in the
back of the net after avoiding a poke check from Ice goaltender Mackenzie Skapski. That goal, which lit the goal lamp with 27 seconds to go in the period, broke the tie and put the Rebels up 3-2. “We had the momentum in the second period, we put some good shifts together back-to-back and at that moment in a game, you have guys on the ice that need to make plays and we just didn’t get it done,” said Kletzel. Red Deer kept pouring on the pressure in the third period, while the Ice continued to struggle in their own end, giving up a pair of goals scored by Rhyse Dieno and a solo mark-
er from Dominik Volek. Skapski ended the night with 24 saves, while Bartosak turned away 23 shots on the other side of the rink. The Rebels capitalized once in three opportunities on the powerplay while shutting out both of Kootenay’s two chances. The will return home and play the Lethbridge Hurricanes on Saturday night at Western Financial Place in another important divisional matchup. The ‘Canes are currently in sixth place in the Eastern Conference and caught up in the logjam between fifth and eight, which are separated by all of two points.
Luongo to get third straight start for Canucks JOSEPH SAPIENZ A Canadian Press
VANCOUVER - The Vancouver Canucks’ goaltending saga is showing no signs of coming to an end. The club will turn to Roberto Luongo for his third straight start ahead of Cory Schneider on Friday when they host the Chicago Blackhawks. Luongo (1-0-2) picked up his first win of the season in Wednesday’s 3-0 shutout of the Colorado Avalanche. That means that Schneider (2-2-0), who was tabbed to be the starter before the season with the Canucks looking to trade Luongo, will
again find himself on the bench. Canucks head coach Alain Vigneault, who has grown tired of being asked to explain who plays and who sits, jokingly flipped a coin to show reporters how he arrived at his decision. “I’m not going to get into all the reasons behind it but (Friday), Lui is playing,” Vigneault said Thursday. The players in the Canucks’ locker-room, meanwhile, say it doesn’t matter which goaltender starts. “For us it’s never been an issue,” said Vancouver forward Daniel Sedin. “We’re confident in both
goalies, they’ve been good so far so it’s a non-issue for us.” Boasting a .938 save percentage, Luongo credited his sharpness to an extensive work regimen during the lockout. “You just want to keep working hard and making sure you put the work in in practice and keep it going and stay fresh and sharp,” he said after Thursday’s practice. “And when you do that and you come to the game prepared and ready to have fun, usually good things will happen. “Right now I’m feeling good about the way I’m playing and hopefully I will be able to carry
that over.” Luongo and the Canucks (3-2-2) will face a stiff test against league-leading Chicago (6-0-1), which has forwards Patrick Kane (10 points), Marian Hossa (nine points) and Jonathan Toews (seven points) firing on all cylinders. “It’s exciting, nothing better than a game against the Blackhawks to get a little playoff intensity going there,” Luongo said. “Those guys have been one of the top teams in the league so far so it’s a good measuring stick for us.” Putting on a brave face for the cameras,
Schneider - who has a save percentage of .897 said he can’t argue with the decision because Luongo is playing better at the moment. “It’s just some adversity,” Schneider said. “I don’t cry myself to sleep at night, I don’t feel bad for myself, I just have to work hard and be better, it’s as simple as that. So if you’re the best goalie, you’re going to play. “For me it’s being as good as I can be and outplaying him, it’s something you can control so there’s no point in feeling bad about it or being upset about it, I just have to channel all that into motivation.”
X Games snowmobiler dies after crashing last week PAT GR AHAM Associated Press
DENVER - Caleb Moore, an innovative freestyle snowmobile rider who was hurt in a crash at the Winter X Games in Colorado, died Thursday morning. He was 25. Moore was being treated at a hospital in Grand Junction since the Jan. 24 crash. Family spokeswoman Chelsea Lawson confirmed his death, the first in the 18 year history of the X Games. “He lived his life to the fullest. He was an
inspiration,” Lawson said. A former all-terrain vehicle racer, Moore switched over to snowmobiles as a teenager and quickly rose to the top of the sport. He won four Winter X Games medals, including a bronze last season when his younger brother, Colten, captured gold. Caleb Moore was attempting a backflip in the freestyle event in Aspen when the skis on his 450-pound snowmobile caught the lip of the landing area, send-
ing him flying over the handlebars. Moore landed face first into the snow with his snowmobile rolling over him. Moore stayed down for quite some time, before walking off with help and going to a hospital to treat a concussion. Moore developed bleeding around his heart and was flown to a hospital in Grand Junction for surgery. The family later said that Moore, of Krum, Texas, also had a complication involving his brain.
Colten Moore was injured in a separate crash that same night. He suffered a separated pelvis in the spill. The family said in a statement they were grateful for all the prayers and support they have received from people around the world. X Games officials expressed their condolences and said Moore, a four-time X Games medallist , would be remembered “for his natural passion for life and his deep love for his family and friends.”
B.C. Vaught, Caleb Moore’s agent for almost a decade, said he first saw Moore when he was racing an ATV in Minnesota and signed him up to star in some action sports movies. Later, Moore wanted to make the switch from ATVs to snowmobiles and Vaught helped him. A natural talent, it only took Moore two weeks to master a difficult backflip. Moore’s brother also got involved in snowmobiling, the close-knit duo pushing each other to become better.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
Sports
Page 9
Avalanche have a big weekend against the Blues Tre vor Cr awley Sports Editor
It’s an important weekend for both Avalanche teams as the reality of provincials gets closer and closer. Especially since their opponents, the Capilano University Blues, sit one place above both the men and women’s College of the Rockies volleyball squads. The men are eight points behind the Blues, and sit in fifth place, while the women are four points behind their counterparts in seventh place. “It’s probably one of the most important games coming up,” said Jen Pillon, who plays libero with the ladies. “We have to win both of them if we’re going to have a chance at provincials.” The women are coming off a big win last Saturday, where they downed the Douglas College Royals in straight sets, which gave the team a big boost of confidence. “It felt really good,” said Ashleigh White, Pillon’s teammate who plays middle. “We finally started clicking and stuff started working, so hopefully it’ll happen again this weekend.” While the ladies lost a close 3-2 match the night before in a close tiebreak, they came out firing for some revenge, and earned it in straight sets. “We all played really hard, trying not to think too much about it,” added Pillon.
The Avs faced the Blues once already during their season opening road trip to the Lower Mainland in October, recording a win and a loss. “Last time we split and hopefully we can just beat them both times this weekend,” continued Pillon. “They have some good hitters and servers so we’ll just try to shut them down.” The men also know that this weekend has big implications for the provincial standings as well, with the chance gain some valuable points that could help them climb a rung or two in the standings. “Anything can still happen,” said men’s Avalanche head coach Steve Kamps. “Looking at the standings, we have six matches left in the season, our last matches at home of the season against Capilano University and we just need to continue to take care of business at home.” “Mathematically, we can finish anywhere from sixth to potentially seventh, all the way up to second place, so with six matches left, it’s a very tight league.” The men’s Avs have split their home records following the Christmas break, winning on Fridays and losing on Saturdays in a two weekend stretch against Camosun College and Vancouver Island University. The Douglas College Royals—the leader of the Pacwest standings—
Trevor Crawley photo
Men’s Avalanche head coach Steve Kamps (far left) addresses members of his team during practice on Thursday at the College of the Rockies. took away a pair of victories on home soil last weekend. Kamps and his team have been trying to find a way to beat the Saturday blues after putting in a strong performance the night before. “We’ve tried a little bit of everything,” said Kamps. “We’ve tried coming into the gym and doing a little practicing, we’ve tried staying at home, we’ve tried preparing—the bottom line is they have to want it.” “I think they’ve kind of been content winning on Fridays in the past
and Saturday they just show up and expect to play at that level again, but it’s not a miracle that you’re playing that good on Friday, you have to do the little things and prepare mentally and physically bring your
energy.” Like the women, the men split their weekend with the Blues when the two teams met in Capilano University’s gym in October. “They are a real scrappy team, well
coached, they seem to do the basics very well, dig a lot of balls and frustrate teams,” said Kamps. “They play their system very well so we will really have to be on our game.” Volleyball action at
the College of the Rockies kicks off in the gym at 6 p.m. with the women, followed by the men at 8 p.m. Matches continue on Saturday, with the ladies starting at 1 p.m. and the men at 3 p.m.
More troubles surround the purchase of Phoenix Coyotes John Marshall Associated Press
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. - Greg Jamison has missed his deadline to buy the Phoenix Coyotes before a lease agreement with the City of Glendale expires. The former CEO of the San Jose Sharks had until midnight Thursday to buy the team from the NHL under the terms of the lease agreement with Glendale, but was unable to get the money or investors he needed in time to hit the deadline. “We will not be able
to complete our purchase of the Phoenix Coyotes today in time to meet our deadline with the city of Glendale,” Jamison said in a statement. “However, our journey to purchase the Coyotes will continue. We realize this will require additional conversations with the city of Glendale and the NHL. We still believe we can reach an agreement that satisfies everyone. We hope negotiations with the city proceed as smoothly as possible, as everyone involved wants the Coyotes to
remain in Arizona.” Jamison had emerged as the latest and arguably best chance for the Coyotes to land an owner after more than three years of being run by the league. He reached a 20-year, $308 million lease agreement with Glendale for Jobing. com Arena in the fall, creating what was believed to be a clear path to ending the Coyotes’ up-and-down ownership saga. Instead, the uncertainty with the franchise will continue with still no end in sight.
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Page 10 Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
daily townsman / daily bulletin
NEWS
Calgary psychiatrist gets five years in prison for sex assaults on patients Bill Gr avel and Canadian Press
CALGARY — A judge has sentenced a psychiatrist who molested three court-appointed patients to five years in prison. Justice Donna Shelley said Dr. Aubrey Levin exploited his patients in a “predatory and repetitive manner.’’ “It was a horrible violation of the trust of these three patients,’’ the Queen’s Bench justice said in handing down her decision Thursday. The Calgary psychia-
trist’s actions were an “extreme breach of a particularly vulnerable victim,’’ Shelley said. Levin was convicted on three counts of sexual assault by a jury earlier this week. The Crown had asked for six to eight years for a man it said was a predator who broke his patients’ trust. The defence had argued the 74-year-old would suffer in prison and should be sentenced to 60 to 90 days, to be served on weekends.
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JEFF MCINTOSH / CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO
Dr. Aubrey Levin, left, pictured with his wife Erica while leaving court in Calgary, in October 2012, was sentenced to five years in prison Thursday for sexually assaulting some of his patients. The patients, all male, had been assigned to Levin between 1999 and 2010 by the justice system. Levin, who had remained out on bail since the verdict Monday night, was taken into custody after the sentence was read. One of the victims offered his reaction out-
side the courtroom. “This isn’t just for me, but for the victims that have been silenced,’’ he said. “This is much bigger than me.’’ Levin initially faced charges involving nine different men, but was found guilty on three counts and acquitted on two others. The jury could not reach a ver-
dict on four of the charges. The allegations against him came to light in 2010 after one of his patients came forward with secret videos he had recorded during court-ordered sessions with the psychiatrist. The videos, played in court last fall, show Levin undoing the man’s belt and jeans and appearing to fondle him. The patient, identified only as R.B. in court, was on probation at the time the videos were taken and had been ordered to see Levin twice a month. The man said he had told authorities about previous assaults and no one believed him, so he bought a spy camera and brought it to his appointments. “It seemed hopeless,’’ R.B. said in a victim impact statement presented to the court Wednesday. “I had nowhere to turn.’’ Levin, who immigrated to Canada from South Africa, was frequently used by the courts to assess people and provide expert
opinions at hearings. He served briefly as regional director for the Regional Psychiatric Centre in Saskatoon and was licensed in 1998 to practise psychiatry in Alberta. Levin is no stranger to controversy over his work as a psychiatrist. He faced heated accusations about his time as a military psychiatrist during apartheid in South Africa, where he earned his degree in 1963. In the 1970s he was a psychiatrist at a military hospital where aversion therapy through electric shocks was allegedly used in an attempt to change the sexuality of gay soldiers. Levin is mentioned in a report entitled the aVersion Project that aimed to shed light on abuses of gays and lesbians in the military by health workers. Media coverage of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission said Levin was named in a human rights submission as a key figure in the abuse of gay men in the military. It acknowledged
the submission was based on anecdotal reports. Levin has denied abusing any patients under his care and has argued that the submission was based on a distortion of facts, according to an article in the South African Medical Journal. A 2003 report compiled by the Gay and Lesbian Archive and the South African History Archive tried to put together a history of Levin’s work as a psychiatrist in any role he may have played related to gay and lesbian soldiers. According to the report, Levin confirmed in a letter to the Truth and Reconciliation Committee that he had practised aversion therapy, but said it was an accepted therapy at the time for patients who did not accept their homosexuality. He has denied in media reports that he ever administered shock therapy and has said the aversion therapy consisted of applying very slight discomfort to the arm of consenting patients.
Three Conservative MPs ask RCMP to investigate some abortions as homicides C ANADIAN PRESS
Three Conservative members of Parliament want the RCMP to investigate any abortions performed after 19 weeks in Canada as possible homicides. The MPs from Saskatchewan, Alberta and Ontario make the request on House of Commons letterhead to RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson. They say abortions performed at 20 weeks gestation or later breach Section 223 (2) of the Criminal Code and must be investigated as “possible murders.’’ “These incidents that need investigating took place across Canada,’’ reads the letter, dated Jan. 23. “I look forward to your expeditious confirmation that you have commenced an in-
vestigation.’’ The letter is signed by MPs Maurice Vellacott of Saskatoon-Wanuskwein, Leon Benoit of Vegreville-Wainwright and Wladyslaw Lizon of Mississauga East-Cooksville. Officials at RCMP national headquarters in Ottawa were not immediately available for comment. On Monday, Rona Ambrose, minister for the status of women, told the Commons that Canadians don’t want to revisit the abortion debate. She made the comments on the 25th anniversary of a Supreme Court decision in 1988 that declared the country’s ban on abortion was a violation of women’s rights. In their letter, the MPs wrote that between 2000 and 2009
there were 491 abortions performed on Canadian women who were pregnant for longer than 19 weeks. They contend that at this stage of gestation, the abortions involved live babies. “These are vulnerable, innocent children that homicide has been perpetrated on,’’ Vellacott said Thursday from Ottawa. “The individuals who have perpetrated the breach of the Criminal Code should be charged and brought to justice.’’ According to the Criminal Code, a child is a human being when it emerges completely from the womb — whether or not the umbilical cord has been severed, it is breathing on its own or has “independent
circulation.’’ Section 223 (2) says a person commits homicide when he causes injury to a child before or during its birth as a result of which the child dies after becoming a human being. Velacott said he and his two colleagues do not believe the letter will embarrass the Conservative Party or Prime Minister Stephen Harper. He said they did not share the letter with Harper’s office before sending it to the RCMP. Velacott said all members of the government are staunch supporters of the Criminal Code. “If we have a Criminal Code that is supposed to mean anything and be of value, then you need to have the enforcement of it.’’
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
NEWS
Page 11
New bells bound for Notre Dame cathedral for 850th birthday V I L L E D I E U - L E S - P O E L E S, France — Nine enormous bronze bells have made their way on flatbed trucks from a Normandy foundry to what is hoped will be their home for centuries to come, Notre Dame Cathedral, helping the medieval edifice to rediscover its historical harmony. The bells, named after saints and prominent Catholic figures, will be on display at the Paris cathedral from Saturday through Feb. 25. Then, they will be hoisted to its iconic twin towers, where they will replace older bells
that became discordant. The new bells are scheduled to ring for the first time March 23, in time for Palm Sunday and Easter week. Eight of the nine new bells were cast in a foundry in the Normandy town of Villedieu-les-Poeles. The ninth — a “bourdon,’’ or Great Bell, named Marie — was cast in the Netherlands and then sent to Normandy to join the others. The president of the foundry rang the bells, to the cheers of onlookers, before the nine new bells were sent on a convoy of trucks Thursday
from Villedieu-les-Poeles to Paris. They are joining the cathedral’s oldest surviving bell, a Great Bell named Emmanuel, to restore the 10-bell harmony originally conceived for Notre Dame’s bell towers. The old bells, which dated from different periods throughout Notre Dame’s history, were out of tune with each other and with Emmanuel, which has hung in the cathedral since the 17th century, according to cathedral officials. So the diocese decided to have new ones cast as part of celebrations marking 850 years since
Smelly find could mean massive payout for U.K. beachcomber Associated Press
LONDON — One very smelly sperm whale secretion may soon make one lucky British beachcomber a very happy man. Ken Wilman told British broadcasters that he had been walking along Morecambe beach in northern England when his dog, Madge, discovered a hard, soccer ball-sized piece of smelly rock. “She wouldn’t leave it alone. I picked it up and it smelt horrible so I knocked it with my walking stick and a small lump came off,’’ he told Sky News television in comments broadcast Thursday. “I put both pieces back on the beach but something in the back of my mind told me it might be something unusual.’’ One Google search later and Wilman realized that Madge had found ambergris, a waxy byproduct of sperm whale digestion that has traditionally been used in perfumes, spices, and
medicines — and can fetch large sums of money. He said he immediately drove back to the beach to find the ambergris. He said he has been offered $68,000 for the musky material. Callum Roberts, a professor of marine conservation at the University of York, said the find appeared legitimate. “It’s a waxy, yellow-grey piece of flotsam. I’m sure that 95 per cent of people would walk past it without further thought,’’ he said in a telephone interview. He praised Wilman’s quick thinking, invoking the scientific dictum that “fortune favours the prepared mind.’’ Wilman, 50, had a slightly different take on his find, telling BBC television that people should trust their dogs. “If your dog pays an interest in something, YOU pay an interest in something,’’ he said. “Because you never know. There’s gold out there on that beach — floating gold.’’
Man breaks out of police cell, stops for beer during escape Associated Press
BURGETTSTOWN, Pa. — Police say a western Pennsylvania man stopped at a bar and had a beer minutes after he broke out of a police station holding cell after his arrest on an assault charge. The Washington County public defender’s office on Wednesday declined to comment on the charges filed against 40-year-old Smith Township resident Timothy Bonner. Police say they were processing
Bonner, removed his handcuffs, and placed him in the cell. That’s when Bonner allegedly knocked the cell door off its hinges and ran away. After stopping at a house to borrow shoes, police say Bonner went to Richy’s Bar, where a customer tells WPXI-TV the suspect acknowledged breaking out of jail and then asked for a beer. The customer says he bought a beer for Bonner, who didn’t get to enjoy it before police arrested him.
the beginning of the cathedral’s construction in 1163. It took nearly 90 years to build. The arrival of the bells “is historic precisely because since the 18th century, we haven’t experienced such an event,’’ the cathedral’s rector, Patrick Jacquin, told Associated Press Television News. “During the French Revolution, they (the bells) were all brought down and broken except the great bell, Emmanuel, which is here and four other bells that were recast in the middle of the 19th century .... This will complete in a definitive manner the entire set of 10 bells as conceived ... in the Middle Ages.’’ The $2.7 million bell-casting project was funded by donations, cathedral officials say. “Historically the idea of this project was to recreate the old bells of Notre Dame in terms of power, in terms of tune, which means that there will be again 10 bells ringing into the cathedral as it used to be in
CHRISTOPHE ENA / AP
A new bell known as Gabriel is hoisted from a flatbed truck in front of the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris, Jan. 31. the Middle Ages and up until the French Revolution,’’ said Paul Bergamo, president of the Cornille-Havard Foundry in Villedieu-les-Poeles. One of the new bells was named Jean-Marie, after Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, a
Jewish-born convert to Catholicism whose mother was killed at the Auschwitz death camp and who later worked to reconcile Catholics and Jews. Lustiger was archbishop of Paris from 1981 to 2005; Jean-Marie was the name he adopted
when he converted to Catholicism. “This is a wonderful return to history and at the same time an extraordinary leap forward because it means that with these bells we are going to endure for the centuries to come,’’ the rector said.
Wolfe Creek line reloCation ProjeCt CommenCement BC Hydro will be making system improvements and re-locating the power line in the Wasa—Wolfe Creek area to improve reliability for customers along Wolfe Creek Road. Work will begin March 2013 and is expected to be completed by November 2013. The project will include vegetation clearing work, followed by construction activities and the use of heavy equipment, which could result in higher than normal traffic activity in the area. BC Hydro recognizes the inconvenience that the construction activity may cause, and will complete the work safely and efficiently as possible. If you have any questions, or would like more information about the Wolfe Creek Line Relocation Project, please contact Michael Price, Project Manager at 778 452 6882 or Diane Tammen, Community Relations Manager at 250 489 6862.
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Associated Press
Page 12 Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
daily townsman / daily bulletin
NEWS/features
Archaeologists find mound of sacrifice victims’ skulls Associated Press
MEXICO CITY — Archaeologists say they have turned up about 150 skulls of human sacrifice victims in a field in central Mexico, one of the first times that such a large accumulation of severed heads has been found outside of a major pyramid or temple complex in Mexico. Experts are puzzled by the unexpected find of such a large number of skulls at what appears to have been a small, unremarkable shrine. The heads were carefully deposited in rows or in small mounds, mostly facing east toward the rising sun, sometime between 660 and 860 A.D., a period when the nearby city-state of Teotihuacan had already declined but the Aztec empire, founded in
1325, was still centuries in the future. Georgia State University archaeologist Christopher Morehart, who found the skulls last year in Xaltocan, a farming village just north of Mexico City, said that between 150 and 200 adult skulls or their equivalent in bone parts have been excavated so far from fields that stand on a former lake bed. Experts weren’t expecting to find anything of this kind in the flat, undistinguished pasture land and corn fields. The site is near, but not immediately adjacent to, Teotihuacan, one of the biggest pre-Hispanic cities. It reached its height between 100 B.C. and A.D. 750 and was abandoned by the time the Aztecs
arrived in the area in the 1300s. While the Teotihuacan culture and the Aztecs were known to practice human sacrifice, and remains of hundreds of victims have been found in their pyramids or other large structures, the Xaltocan mound “is like a bump in the landscape that you could really easily walk over and not know you’re standing on it,’’ Morehart said. “The interesting question is, why are we seeing this kind of sacrificial act that we often associate with something like Teotihuacan or a big centre. Why do we see this ... in a place that’s not associated with these cities?’’ Physical anthropologist Abigail Meza Penaloza of the Institute of
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Chiapas state Attorney General’s Office
Skulls that were found in a cave sit on a table at the Chiapas state attorney general’s office in Tuxla Gutierrez, Mexico. Anthropology at Mexico’s National University said her team was still cleaning and assembling the skulls, but have a confirmed count of about 130 skulls so far, all of which appear to be of adult males. Meza Penaloza said it was the first find of its kind, both because of the location — a small, artificial mound built in
the middle of an agricultural field — and the kind of decapitations carried out there. She said mass sacrifices had been documented at temple inaugurations of temple closings, but not in the middle of fields. She said it was also unusual in that the skulls appear to come from a varied population, including people
who practiced cranial deformation and others who did not, as opposed to more homogenous groups of sacrifice victims found in the past. The key to the placement might be the natural springs that provided fresh, clean water in an area dominated by shallow, brackish lakes. The springs existed for centuries until they were
covered and tapped by pipes around the 1950s. The ancient inhabitants of Xaltocan apparently used those springs to water lakebed farm plots. Carvings associated with the water-god Tlaloc and corn and chile plants were found at the excavation site, suggesting it may have been an agricultural shrine. There were also indications that the site remained a ceremonial spot for centuries after the human sacrifices ended, and perhaps is still used for that purpose. Morehart said researchers found a plastic bag containing a black candle, an egg, and paper streamers wrapped around photographs of people at the site, what one local worker suggested was a form of witchcraft.
Trouble in the workplace Note: I am cleaning up the last planned. Do you see this hapof the letters and emails that I pening and do you see us having have received in 2012. I have not any children in the near future. started the letters and emails that Feeling Despondent people have sent me for 2013. However, I will start next week Dear Feeling Despondent: writing to you in the Townsman. If Sorry for taking so long in anthere is anyone out swering your there that I have email. I did ask not answered their my guides a few letter or email in ASK WENDY questions and 2012; give me a they told me that Wendy call or email me you are still emand I will respond ployed in the Evano to your questions same company before answering and you still have the 2013 correspondence. the same position. Therefore, let’s deal with the first problem Dear Wendy: that you are having and that is This is probably a typical your problems with your current question that you have been boss. asked so many times. We did a spec on her and she I recently acquired a promo- has quite a nervous, anxious pertion in my company and I like my sonality. She portrays to have a job but my new boss is really strong, forceful personality but controlling and nasty to me. I that is not the way she really is or don’t know what her problem is feels inside. She feels quite insewith me and I thought perhaps cure in her position and her anger you could answer a few ques- and nastiness comes out the tions about this person. more insecure she feels inside. Does she like me? If she We don’t feel that she dislikes doesn’t like me then why doesn’t you. We feel that she feels someshe like me? I don’t think I have what insecure around you bedone anything to offend her cause you know your job quite since I have taken on this new well. This to a degree intimidates position. her. Do you think I should take a We feel the best way to deal demotion and move to another with her is to be as kind and position in the company? I can’t helpful to her as you can. I know afford to quit my job and look for this can be very hard for you to a new one. The town I live in is do when you are dealing with a small and I have a good paying person of her character. Howevjob. er, just look at her as a fearful Do you see me and my hus- child and have some compassion band moving anytime soon? He for what she is working out menis looking for a better paying job. tally in her head space concernHe says if he get’s a better paying ing her job. I mean, really would job I will not have to work and we you like to go to work everyday can start having the children we feeling incompetent and fearful
in your job? We feel that if you try to support her more you may see a slight shift in the way she treats you. We don’t think that you should take a demotion and move to another position in the company that you are working for. Take a deep breath and relax and do your job and then leave the problems at your work place at your work place. This job is not your life this job is a means to make money so that you can have a better life for yourself and hubby. There are going to be a few changes for you and hubby in 2013 that will make you happy. We do see a move for you and your husband; I’m seeing the later part of 2013. There may even be a few inches of fresh snow on the ground as you are packing up to move to your new town. Your husband will attain a new job position in the late summer of 2013 but you will not be moving at the same time. He will have to commute for a few months until everything is arranged for you and him to finally live together again. I don’t know why it will work out this way; this is what my guides are showing me. We do see you working again in this new town you will be moving to and we do not see you and hubby having any children until 2015. I hope this information will help you. Wendy
For personal and over the phone readings phone Wendy @ 426-2127. Need some answers to your questions then write to me at the Townsman or email me @ wevano@shaw.ca
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
news/Features
Page 13
Believing or not: An interpretation of reality
I
appreciated the article in last Friday’s Townsman by Peter Moody which included the essay his father wrote just before the Second World War. As Mr. Moody indicated, it was indeed an exercise in courage for his father to write down his reasons for being an atheist when it went against all the norms of his society. This essay confirms in part a suspicion I’ve often had, namely that there were probably many who never accepted the norms of their society. They couldn’t say so publicly, because to our great shame, the church would persecute those who didn’t accept the church’s teaching. The cost of public disagreement was simply too high. That has changed in the 21st century. People no longer have to pay such a high cost to disagree with the church. These days, one can quite easily be either hostile or apathetic about religious faith without suffering any negative consequences. As the essay makes quite clear, Mr. Moody’s father grew up in an environment when Christian faith was simply the expected norm. As the essay notes, “this particular religion had been thrust upon me at birth.” It was the norm, and people rarely question a societal norm. It’s simply accepted by most, and even more so when that norm is buttressed by the law. In such an environment, when questioning a norm is discouraged, the other thing that happens is that people often will not think about whether it is true or not. I’m glad that has changed. I welcome the opportunity to talk with others who question my Christian beliefs. I delight in such discussion, because we are talking about important things. When we talk about religious faith or atheism, there is no sense of “self–evident truth” about it. Rather, we are talking about how we choose to make sense of the world we live in. From the time we wake up in the morning to the time we go to bed, the world we inhabit is open to interpretation— like a Rorschach inkblot. Mark Twain once quipped that “Life is one
damn thing after another.” Our days are like that. Something happens; then something else happens, a daylong string of events. Sometimes something happens that causes us to sit up and take notice. The question is, “What are those things?” What kinds of moments cause us to stop and say, “This is holy ground”? Now, we don’t need to use religious language. Everyone has this experience of something which makes us take notice. For some of us, it’s the sheer majesty of the beauty of nature all
Yme Woensdregt around us. For others, it’s a piece of art, or music. For some, it’s the love one receives from friends or family. For others, it’s the moment of quiet and sheer contentment. The point I am trying
to make is that life is open to interpretation, and each of us interprets life differently. We all try to discern patterns into which those events fit. Very few of us are comfortable with the notion that it’s all just random, and there really is no meaning to life. Some of us find meaning in the processes of nature. Meaning is found in the moment, in what we can see and smell, taste and touch. Others see a deeper meaning, pointing to what we can only describe as something “More”, a sense of grace or peace or hope.
This is what religious faith and atheism share in common: both are ways of interpreting the raw data of our lives. As I indicated above, I am deeply aware of how oppressive the church has been, and in some cases continues to be. Some try to coerce with threats of eternal punishment. Some see natural phenomena as signs of God’s anger and judgment. I can’t agree more with the essay that priests ought never to have prayed that God was on one side or the other, especially in the midst of war. But I also go on to say
that this is not the fault of “religious faith” per se. Rather, this comes about because the ones who hold these positions are fallible human beings. People get defensive when faced with opposition. That is true of Christians and atheists alike. Just as Christians attempted to force society to believe, so these days atheists pour the same kind of scorn on those who do hold religious faith. In their zeal to promote their own cause, people often feel obliged not only to proclaim the virtues of their own beliefs, but also to deni-
grate the beliefs of those who disagree. So the “new atheists” feel quite justified in pouring scorn on people of faith, and urge us not to say anything at all. Surely that’s not a realistic option. We learn best as we talk together respectfully and openly about the ways we choose to interpret our lives as individuals and as a community together. We grow as we engage in open, respectful, and gentle dialogue. Yme Woensdregt is Pastor at Christ Church Anglican in Cranbrook
Tories to introduce bill to change rules for royal succession C anadian Press
OTTAWA — The Harper government is bringing in legislation that will change the rules of royal succession to end centuries of discrimination against female heirs to the throne. “As our society changes, so too must our institutions,’’ Heritage Minister James Moore said Thursday as he outlined what he called “common-sense’’ changes. “This legislation will mean
that the Crown will remain an institution that is adapted to current values.’’ The bill follows an agreement among Commonwealth countries where the Queen is head of state to change the outdated tradition that favoured male heirs over their older sisters. Each country promised to legislate changes to give females equal status and end a 300-year-old rule that bans the monarch from marriage to
a Roman Catholic. In 2011, British Prime Minister David Cameron wrote to Commonwealth leaders telling them he planned to make these changes and asking for their agreement. He introduced the required legislation in the British Parliament in December. The issue took on more urgency with the news that Prince William and Kate, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, are expecting their first
child. The legislation means that the child, girl or boy, will be next in line for the throne after William. It also removes a prohibition that banned an heir from marrying a Roman Catholic. “These changes mean that if the first child of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge is a girl, she will be able to accede to the throne and will be in a position to marry someone of another faith,’’ Moore
said. He said the bill must pass Parliament, but isn’t a constitutional amendment and doesn’t require provincial assent. “This change does not require any modification to the Canadian Constitution, given that the rules of succession are part of U.K. legislation,’’ he said. Moore said the government hasn’t had any objections from the provinces.
Weekday Morning/Afternoon THIS WEEK
Cranbrook Ministerial
Church Directory Knox Presbyterian Church Corner Victoria & 3rd St. S. 250-426-7165
Cranbrook United Church #2 12 Avenue S.
(downtown by Safeway)
with Rev. Frank Lewis Senior Pastor: Dr. Ron Foubister Pastor to Young Families: Al Brouwer Ph: 250-426-2022 / Fax: 250-426-2085 Sunday Worship, Children’s Sunday Worship...10:00 am Classes – 10:00am Sunday School 1st & 3rd Sundays Friendly congregation, biblical preaching, www.cranbrookunited.com traditional and contemporary music. Everyone welcome.
First Baptist Church Christ Church Anglican Pastor Kevin Ewaskow Children’s Ministries Worship Service 10:30 am 334 - 14th Ave. 250-426-4319 office@fbccranbrook.org
46 - 13th Ave. S. 250-426-2644
The Reverend Yme Woensdregt, Incumbent Holy Eucharist & Sunday School 9:15 am Holy Eucharist 10:00 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
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.
Cbk. Kim.
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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
Sesame Street KSPS-PBS Builder Clifford Arthur Martha Georg Cat in Super Dino Marilyn Denis Live With Kelly The View CFCN (5:30) CTV Morning Live Good Morning America Live With Kelly The View KXLY-ABC News The 700 Club Price Is Right KREM-CBS KREM 2 News CBS This Morning Today KHQ-NBC News SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre Varied Programs TSN SportsCentre NET Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. Morn Hunt The Doctors GLOBAL BC Morning News Arthur Magic Tree Dino Pinky Peep Doggy Frank. KNOW Timo Hi-5 Tiger Mon Bo On/ Busy Super Cat in Poko Doodle CBUT CBC News News Hunt The Doctors Eat Debt CICT (6:00) Morning News Morn Hunt The Doctors Eat Debt CIVT (6:00) Morning News Super Side Bey Po Super Res Cat in Squir Ceorge YTV Kid Varied Paid Paid Jim Office Mother KAYU-FOX Cope Wom Better Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN CNN Newsroom SPIKE Varied Programs Disas In Hunt Hunt HGTV Prop Prop Varied Programs CSI: Miami Criminal Minds A&E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds CSI: Miami CMT Music CMT Music CMT Spotlight Var. Programs CMT CMT Music Love It-List It Love Cand Cand My Movie Var. Programs W Var. Programs Movie SHOW Movie How/ How/ DISC Varied Programs ET Debt Debt Prin Prop Intervention Nightmares SLICE Prin Baby Baby TLC Baby Baby Preg Preg Four Weddings Not to Wear Da Vinci’s Femme Nikita Wind at Back Criminal Minds BRAVO Wind at Back EA2 Movie Movie Varied Programs Loone Jim Jim Jungle Way Splice TOON Baku Johnny Johnny Nin Han Shake ANT Jessie Wiz Mickey Manny Pirates Little FAM Dino Justice Justice Judge Judge Million. Million. Law Order: CI WPCH Heat of Night COM Laugh Varied Red... Red... Kids... SCTV Laugh Varied Gags Gas TCM Movie Varied Programs Departures Saw GetS Mantracker Mantracker OUT Descending HIST Varied Programs Inner Sanctuary Star Trek Stargate SG-1 Stargate Atl. SPACE Star Varied Programs AMC Movie Ride Pass Pass Paid Paid NASCAR Racing SPEED Ride Earth: Conflict Varied Programs Golden Golden TVTROP Var. Programs Movie Varied Programs MC1 Movie Varied Programs KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 KTLA News Million. Million. KTLA KTLA News Matlock Heat of Night Heat of Night News WGN-A Matlock Movie Varied Programs Movie EA1 Movie Varied Movie Cope Meyer Youn 700 My Mass Varied Tribal Varied VISN Life Top 10 Music Videos New Music Music Videos 102 102 MM Music Videos Toc Zénon Mike Union Alors on jase! 105 105 SRC Matin Schtro Gar
Tiger Be Fit CTV News Paid Paid The Young Judge Varied
Charlie Rose Anderson Live The Chew News Bold Paid Paid
Var. Programs Barney Word Dr. Oz Show Dr. Phil Gen. Hospital Jeff Probst Sh. The Talk Make a Deal Days of Lives Katie NFL Live Record Pardon Soccer Central Var. Programs Days of Lives The Talk Save- Wibbly Big Dino Heartland Steven-Chris The Talk Ricki Lake The Talk Ricki Lake Squir Side Almost Super Law Order: CI Anderson Live The Situation Room
Sportsnet Con. Eat Debt Rolie Olly Steven-Chris Noon News Nn Nws Hour Ceorge Res Fam Fam CNN Newsroom
Hockeycentral News Dino Rob CBC News Days of Lives Days of Lives Super Kid Funny Videos
Holmes/Homes Criminal Minds CMT Rewind Love It-List It Movie Varied Programs Debt Debt Cake Cake Flashpoint (:15) Movie Iggy Spiez Suite Deck Law Order: CI Match N’Rad.
Varied Programs The First 48 The First 48 CMT Music CMT Music Property Bro Var. Programs Sea Patrol Varied Programs Not to Wear Femme Nikita Varied Movie Johnny Johnny Wiz Han Ex Ex Theory Com
Destination Pickers Sanctuary Movie The 10 Friend Friend
Ghost Hunters MASH MASH Supernatural Varied Programs Monster Jam Var. Programs
Four Weddings White Collar Var. Programs Way Splice Sonny Ran There There Laugh Varied
Hunt Hunt The First 48 CMT Music Movie NCIS Me Me The Mentalist Movie Varied Jim Jim Raven Deck King King Gags Gas Movie Stor Stor
Var. Programs Varied Programs Star Trek: Next Star Trek: Voy.
On Varied Chop Gearz 3rd 3rd Golden Golden Movie Movie Jerry Springer Maury News at 1pm Steve Wilkos Texas Ranger Texas Ranger Texas Ranger Law Order: CI Varied Programs (:25) Movie Varied Programs Little Classics Heartland Touched-Angel The Waltons Break Break Witch Sa Prince Prince Var. Programs Ric’do Telejournal Pour le plaisir Paix Paix
Page 14 Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
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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# Cbk. $ # % $ & % _ & ( _ ) ( + ) , + ` , 1 ` 3 1 4 3 6 4 7 6 8 7 9 8 : 9 < : = < ? = @ ? @ A A B B C C D D E E F F G G H H I I K K L L M M N N O O P P W W ¨ ¨ ≠ ≠ Ø Ø ∂ ∂ 102 102 105 105
# KSPS-PBS Amer FlyTy Motor Gree Wood Rough Home Old House Kitche Chef Sara’s Cook’s Victory Antiques Kim. 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00Drivers 1:30 Lovett 2:00 Dr.2:30 Henry 3:00FordCash 3:30 Written Car Operat. Smile Worst Cash $ CFCN (6:00) Juicebox Anne Hobo Marilyn Denis Sick Kids Amer FlyTy Motor Gree Wood Rough Home Old House Kitche Chef Sara’s Cook’s Victory Antiques Henry Ford # KSPS-PBS Res Recipe Food Paid Skin Dog Show X Games % KXLY-ABC Paid Paid Good Morning Hanna Ocean Ex Juicebox Anne Sick Kids Liberty Bull Written Operat. 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Snowboarding ` CBUT Mon Bear Word Rob Rolie Tree Ceorge Magic Arthur Lilly Miss Upside Echo Dogs Dogs Rivers Rivers Mega Builders , KNOW Weekend Morning News Driving Fishing Power Cana Best Years Mys Simp Simp Simp Snowboarding Ghost Rider M CICT Speed Skating NHL Hockey From the Bell Centre in Montreal. ` CBUT Mon Busy Animal Super Dood Cross Absolutely Driving Mys Simp O CIVT Saturday Weekend Morning MorningNews News Driving Fishing Fishing Power Power Cana Cana Best Best Years Years Mys Simp Simp Simp Simp Simp Ghost Ghost Rider Rider M CICT Cat in News Rated Side Squir Squir Spong Kung Cana Turtles Best TurtlesYearsBey Po Power Yu-GiMon Ghost Po Rider Po 6 YTV Kid Saturday Morning Driving Par Fishing Power Mys Simp Simp Simp O CIVT Jillian Look Paid Derm Lk. Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Kds Mother Paid Paid Bones Bones . KAYU-FOX Cat in Rated Side Squir Squir Spong Par Kung Turtles Turtles Bey Po Power Yu-Gi- Mon Po Po 6 YTV Kid Bottom CNN / CNN Sat. 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Homes Bryan Scared Bryan 1 HGTV CMT Music CMT Rewind Wide Open Chevy Top 20 Hit or Miss Talkin’ Talkin’ Cross Cross Pick Pick 4 Flipping Vegas Flipping Vegas Beyond Scared Beyond Scared Beyond Scared Beyond Scared Beyond Scared 2 CMT A&E Criminal Minds Flip House Love ItRewind Will Will Ghost Perfect Day 5 W Love CMT It-List Music It CMT Wide OpenWill Chevy TopWill 20 Hit or Miss Talkin’ Talkin’ Property Cross Bro Cross APick Pick 4 CMT Paid Continuum Law & Order Da The MatrixGhost Reloaded Indiana Jones and Crystal Love It-ListPaid It Love It Will Will Will Will Property Bro Skull A Perfect Day 9 5 SHOW W Handfishin’ Breakout An Africa Handfishin’Indiana Jones Greatest Know Skull Jungle Gold Paid JobsPaid Continuum Law & Order Da Idiot The MatrixBreakout Reloaded and Crystal : DISC Dirty 9 SHOW Dirty JobsBrides Housewives Handfishin’ Breakout An Idiot What Women Breakout Africa Handfishin’ Greatest Know King Jungleof Gold Housewives Prin Want The Tourist Nerds : SLICE DISC Brides ; Brides UpBrides Housewives Housewives Prin Want The Tourist King of Nerds Moving Up Moving Up Moving UpWhat Women Undercover Undercover Undercover Undercover Undercover ; SLICE < TLC Moving Moving Up Moving Up Moving Moving Up UndercoverSweet November Undercover Undercover Undercover Undercover < BRAVO TLC Missing The Listener Dallas Up Dallas Salute Alfie = The Listener DallasSwan Princess Dallas (:20) HeartSalute Alfie Simone = BRAVO Shat We’re Back! 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CashDestination Match Tokyo Match Just/Laughs JFL Key Largo Anger Theory Com White Cash HeatCash B (6:15) Kings This Is theCom Army Theory Cash (:45) (:15) C COM TCM Hiccup (6:15) Kings Row This Is the Army (:45) Destination Tokyo (:15) Key Largo C TCM Repo HeatRepo E OUT Can FishTV Paid Paid Paid Paid Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo White Paid Repo Repo E OUT Can Cana InFishTV a Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Repo Paid Repo Paid Repo Pawn Repo Pawn Repo Pickers Repo Repo Outback Hunt Gladiator Repo Repo Repo F HIST In a Paid Paid Inner Paid Egos Paid Video Paid Video Paid Scare Pawn Total Pawn Ghost PickersMine Outback Gladiator Inner Jon Mnemonic F HIST Cana Johnny Mnemonic Face Off Hunt Egos G SPACE Johnny Mnemonic Inner Egos Video Video Scare Total Ghost Mine Face Off Egos Inner Jon Mnemonic G (:15) The Undefeated Geronimo: An American Legend Robin H SPACE AMC Rifle Rifle Great Northfield Raid Rifle Great Northfield Raid (:15) The Undefeated Geronimo: An American Legend Robin H AMC Rifle Hot Hot Ga Auto Racing Auto Racing Touring Car Monster Jam Ferrari Chal. Continental Tire Sports Car I SPEED Gearz Hot Hot Ga Auto Racing Auto Racing Touring Car Monster Jam Ferrari Chal. Continental Tire Sports Car I SPEED Gearz Paid Instant Instant Ray Ray Ray Ray Friend Friend Friend Friend Ray Ray Ray Ray Ray Ray J TVTROP PR Paid Instant Instant Ray Ray Ray Ray Friend Friend Friend Friend Ray Ray Ray Ray Ray Ray J TVTROP PR Madoff Gone (:15) Bel Ami Dr. Seuss’ the Lorax Tower Heist (:15) Soul Surfer W (:15) Bel Ami Dr. Seuss’ the Lorax Tower Heist (:15) Soul Surfer W MC1 MC1 Madoff Gone KTLA News Res Res Son. X Son. X Trans Justice Dragon WWE Yu-Gi Yu-GiNow Animal Career On Travel Jim ¨ KTLA Res Res Son. X Son. X Trans Justice Dragon WWE Yu-Gi Yu-Gi- Now Animal Career On Travel Jim ¨ KTLA KTLA News Paid Paid Paid Paid Law Order: CI Law Law Law Law Law Law ≠ Law Order: Order: CI CI Law Order: Order: CI CI Law Order: Order: CI CI Law Order: Order: CI CI Law Order: Order: CI CI Law Order: Order: CI CI ≠ WGN-A WGN-A Paid Paid Paid Paid Law Order: CI Kid The War Wagon (:15) Grizzly Falls (10:50) Two Brothers (:40) The Mosquito Coast (:40) Daylight Ø EA1 The War Wagon (:15) Grizzly Falls (10:50) Two Brothers (:40) The Mosquito Coast (:40) Daylight Ø EA1 Kid 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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Saved/ Saved/ Rosie Rosie
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Saturday Afternoon/Evening Cbk. Kim.
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Sunday Morni n g/Afternoon February 2 February 2
# $ $ % % & & _ _ ( ( ) ) + + , , ` ` M M O O 6 6 . . / / 0 0 1 1 2 2 4 4 5 5 9 9 : : ; ; < = < > = ? > @ ? A @ B A C B E C F E G F H G I H J I W J ¨ W ≠ ¨ Ø ≠ ∂ Ø 102 ∂ 105
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Cbk. Kim.
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Poppy Poppy News News News News News News J’pard J’pard Criminal Criminal Minds Minds Ninja Ninja Warrior Warrior Chicago Fire Fire Law && Order Order News SNL SNL KHQ-NBC Wheel Chicago Law News KHQ-NBC SportsCentre NFL NLL Lacrosse Lacrosse SportsCentre NFL NFL NFL Sports SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre TSN NFL NLL SportsCentre NFL NFL NFL Sports SportsCentre TSN SportsCentre (2:00) Tennis Sportsnet Con. Con. UFC UFC Prelims Prelims Sportsnet Con. Con. Cross-Country Cross-Country Sportsnet Sportsnet Con. Con. Sportsnet Sportsnet Con. Con. Euro Euro Poker Poker NET Sportsnet Sportsnet NET (2:00) Tennis Ghost Rider News News News Hour Hour Secu Secu Secu Deception Deception Chicago Fire Fire Very Bad Bad Men Men News SNL SNL GLOBAL News Secu Chicago Very News GLOBAL BC BC Ghost Rider Frontiers of Prehis. Hunters Stonehenge Be/Creature Caiman Heartbeat Vera In Korea KNOW Frontiers of Prehis. 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February 3
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
Impact Inside Olympia Inside Europe Moyers-Comp Masterpiece Classic KSPS-PBS Rogers Sign Wild Clifford Georg Cat in Sci Re Re Super Bowl Road-Playoffs Bowl NFL The Super Bowl Today CFCN Lovett Dr. On Good Morning This Week Bolt Brady Award Paid Paid Derma Storms Millionaire KXLY-ABC Mat Super Bowl New Orleans All-Iron Team The Super Bowl Today KREM-CBS Paid Paid CBS News News Invest Meet the Press Justin NHL Hockey PGA Tour Golf KHQ-NBC Today Sunday NFL Countdown NBA Basketball Sports That’s Hcky TSN Sports Re Tennis Day three from Vancouver, Canada. NET Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. FishTV Sport Bobsledding Inven Sunday Morning News Block Con Osteen Touch News Myst Simp Simp Simp GLOBAL BC In a Rolie Tree Ceorge Magic Arthur Wild Little Little Babar Ani Ani Lions Gate What’s-About? KNOW Bear Word Rob Cor Cor Cor Cor Cor Market NHL Hockey From the Bell Centre in Montreal. 8th Fire CBUT Super Poko Animal Art Block Con Joel Osteen 16x9 Myst Simp Simp Simp Chicago CICT Weekend Morning News Block Con Osteen Minis 16x9 Myst Simp Simp Simp Chicago CIVT Sunday Morning News Super Young Baby Spla Zoink’ Spong Par Winx iCarly Victo Big Young Zoink’ Spla Boys SpongeBob YTV Kid Jim Rock Office Jillian Paid Movie KAYU-FOX Paid Paid Wild David Fox News Sun. Joint Look Old Fareed Zakaria Rel’ble Source State/Union Fareed Zakaria Next News Your Money Newsroom Newsroom CNN State/Union Res Res Res Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue SPIKE Res Holmes Makes HGTV Moves Moves Moves Moves Moves Moves Holmes Makes Canada’s Han Hunt Hunt Bryan Bryan Income Prop. Ship Ship Ship Ship Ship Ship Ship Ship Ship Southi Southi A&E Criminal Minds The Negotiator CMT Rewind Funny Videos Big Redneck Bayou Bayou Pick Pick Pet Pet ER ER Talkin’ Talkin’ CMT Chevy Top 20 Property Brot. Will Will Will Will Chris Chris Chris Chris Undercover Love It-List It Love It W Property Bro 27 Dresses Easy A The Blind Side SHOW Paid Paid Da Curiosity MythBusters Gold Rush Gold Rush Gold Rush Gold Rush Gold Rush DISC Highway Thru The Tourist Grease Their Baby SLICE Four Weddings Bride Bride Wed Wed Prin Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Gypsy Gypsy TLC Randy Rescue Randy Rescue Randy Rescue Say The Listener White Collar Suits The Thomas Crown Affair It’s Complicated BRAVO Missing Billy Elliot (11:50) Annie A Passage to India EA2 Reluctant Angl (7:50) Chariots of Fire (11:58) Hotel for Dogs Game- Ska Jim Jim TOON Spiez Spiez Scoob Trnsfr Drag Loone Marmaduke Deck Han Sonny Wiz Dog ANT Kings Kings Kings Kings Kings Kings Kings Kings Phi Gravity ANT FAM Win The Closer Women’s College Basketball King King Family Family WPCH Think Mad Career P. Aff Enchanted Comedy Now! Com Theory Cash Cash Match Match JFL Just/Laughs Theory Com Cash Cash COM Hiccup Dan Rebel Without a Cause (:15) The Nun’s Story Mister Roberts Auntie TCM Warner Bros OUT Snow Snow Paid Paid Paid Paid Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Cajun Cajun Cnt. Cnt. Cnt. Cnt. HIST Secret Secret Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Pawn Pawn Amer. Pickers Face Off Terminator 2: Judgment Day XXX SPACE Inner Egos Scare Ghost Mine Pet Sematary Two Christine The Walking Dead Walking Dead Walk AMC Pet Sematary Clas Clas Chop German Tour. Road Champ. ArenaX Super AMA Supercross Racing SPEED Ga Never Say Never Again The Living Daylights TVTROP Fish Paid Diamonds Are Forever (:45) The Lincoln Lawyer (:45) The Lucky One Happy Feet Two Sarah’s Key MC1 Sophie (:45) Paul KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 In Touch Auc Paid Auc Youth Auc Faces My Pil Paid Beautician-Bst. KTLA KTLA News Mindhunters Charlotte Gray Videos WGN-A Paid Paid Paid Paid The Human Stain (8:50) My Dog Skip Mr. Baseball (:20) For Love of the Game Friday Night Lights EA1 Khaled Jackie-1stStrike Living Truth Faith Food Qk Be Naked David Arise Tom VISN Creflo Jewish Cope Facts Islam Hour of Power Con Oh Sit! Library Library Billy Billy Trial Trial Arrow Arrow Pretty-Liars Pretty-Liars 102 102 MM Countdown Mé Schtro Gar Oniva Jour/Seigneur Les Coulisses TJ Semaine verte Regard Hockey 105 105 SRC Doigts Rosie Manny Ben
February 2 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
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February 3
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
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Music Videos Top 10 Matin Schtro Gar Toc
Heat of Night Movie 700 My Music Videos Zénon Mike
KTLA News Million. Million. Heat of Night News Varied Programs Movie Mass Varied Tribal Varied New Music Music Videos Union Alors on jase!
Jerry Springer Maury News at 1pm Steve Wilkos Texas Ranger Texas Ranger Texas Ranger Law Order: CI Varied Programs (:25) Movie Varied Programs Little Classics Heartland Touched-Angel The Waltons Break Break Witch Sa Prince Prince Var. Programs Ric’do Telejournal Pour le plaisir Paix Paix
Monday Afternoon/Evening Cbk. Kim.
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PUZZLES
February 4
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 KSPS-PBS Sid News News CFCN Ellen Show The Doctors KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray Dr. Oz Show KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Judge Judge KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Hocke NFL TSN SportsCentre Poker Tour NET Euro Poker The Young GLOBAL BC Ricki Lake Clifford Ceorge Arthur KNOW Rob Ste Dragons’ Den CBUT Reci News News CICT The Young News News CIVT The Young Spong Spong YTV Squir Side Steve Harvey KAYU-FOX Ricki Lake CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront SPIKE Deadli Ways Super Troopers HGTV Holmes/Homes Prop Prop Hoarders A&E The First 48 Pick Gags CMT Johnny Pet (3:00) Hush Property Bro W Continuum SHOW Hawaii Five-0 DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet SLICE Debt Debt Prop Prop Me Cake Boss TLC Me BRAVO Criminal Minds Flashpoint (4:50) The Jerk EA2 Go to Prison Jim TOON Scoob Loone Jim ANT Phi Austin FAM Wiz WPCH Office Office Theory Theory Sein Match N’Rad. COM Sein TCM (3:30) Gypsy Duck Duck OUT Mantracker Pawn Pawn HIST Pickers SPACE Inner Ripley Stargate Atl. AMC (3:00) Hannibal Pass Pass SPEED NASCAR Hub Tor TVTROP Eat St. Eat St. Tor MC1 (3:30) Flypaper (4:55) Melancholia Maury KTLA Cunningham WGN-A Chris Chris Funny Videos (:45) The Seventh Sign EA1 Dra Murder, She... VISN Twice-Lifetime Prince Prince 102 102 MM New Music Sens Union 105 105 SRC Les Docteurs
News Busi CTV News News ABC News CBS News News 24 CH Prime Time News News Martha Wild News News News News News Hour Spong Spong Simp Ray Cooper 360
Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
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January Clearance Up to
50%
OFF On Selected House Coats Nighties P.J.’s Bras Briefs Slippers
Page 15
Eric Hampton
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PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
Fill in the grid so that every row (nine cells wide), every column (nine cells tall) and every box (three cells by three cells) contain the digits 1 through 9 in any order. There is only one solution for each puzzle.
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 16 Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
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
Key City Answering Service Communication Center for the Kootenays! Talk to a Real Person 24/7. • Work Alone Check-In Service • Emergency Service • Basic Answering Service • Dispatch Service • Pager Rental / Service 218-B 1525 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, BC V1C 3S7
P: 250-426-2201 • F: 250-426-4727 •TF: 1-800-665-4243
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Others make efforts to head in the direction you want; however, something that’s been said or done could be getting under your skin. Until you know what is ailing you, do yourself a favor and say little. Others are only too happy to run the show. Tonight: Defer to others. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Listen to everything that is going on behind the scenes. You might opt to ignore the obvious -- for now, at least. A friend or loved one pushes you hard. Honor whatever responsibilities you must take care of first. Compliments come your way. Tonight: TGIF. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A compliment or kind message makes you smile. Understanding will evolve if you stay open and avoid making a judgment. A boss or someone you look up to might start demanding more. Make a careful choice as to how to respond. Tonight: Time to romp and enjoy yourself.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Observe, but do not commit to anything. Your major focus needs to be your own well-being. Money could play into discussions. Reach out to someone at a distance. Do not be surprised if this person seems to have an attitude. Tonight: Accept an interesting invitation. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) How you verbalize what you need will make a difference as to how the message is received. Others find you engaging and are disposed to go along with your ideas, though one person might differentiate him- or herself as a critic. Tonight: Happiest sharing news. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You could be very tired and withdrawn. You know what is necessary to do. Complete what you must now, and leave what you can do later for “another day.” A loved one and/or a close associate could be irritable. Tonight: Your treat. Try to soften up a loved one. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Don’t hesitate to beam in more
For Better or Worse
of what you want. Realize what is happening with a child or loved one. This person adores you, so make time to get together with him or her. Plan on taking a walk or doing a different type of stressbuster. Tonight: With a favorite person. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) If you feel as if you would like to avoid some people, do so. If they could get even a sense of your mood, they would want to avoid you as well. Tap into your imagination and your creativity for solutions and better ideas. Tonight: Talk to someone who understands you. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Meetings punctuate the day. If you can, schedule the most fun gathering for the end of the afternoon. You not only will participate in this meeting, but you also might witness its transformation into a fun evening get-together. Tonight: Continue as you would like. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Stay on top of your obligations. If you do, you could be more responsive to those around you.
You have a way of showing your compassion through actions that means a lot to others. Make a point of inviting a friend to join you. Tonight: A discussion could become too animated. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Reach out to someone you care about. You have not been your responsive self to this person as of late. Discuss your anger, but be sensitive, too. Maintain some detachment as you try to figure out what to do. Use caution when spending. Tonight: Only where there is music. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Deal with others directly. Though one person might be outrageous in his or her interactions, know that you have the wherewithal to handle this issue. Establish appropriate boundaries. Use caution with someone you meet today. Tonight: Dinner with a loved one. BORN TODAY Singer/songwriter Lisa Marie Presley (1968), actor Clark Cable (1901), musician Rick James (1952) ***
By Lynn Johnston
CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT
www.tribute.ca
for this week’s movie listings
Garfield
By Jim Davis
Open House Friday Feb 8 4-7 pm
Drinks & Appys
Hagar the Horrible
By Dick Browne
Come On In and Check It Out! 136B Wallinger Avenue, Kimberley, BC 250-432-5598 www.onelovehotyoga.ca
Cove ri
By Kirkman and Scott
nity mu
our Com Y ng
Baby Blues
Rhymes with Orange
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Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: Two years ago, my son’s fiancee recommended we rotate who hosts Christmas dinner. That year, she and my son went to her mom’s house, and last year they were supposed to come to mine. Instead, they went to her mom’s again and were upset that I didn’t want to tag along. Annie, at the time, my 73-year-old mother was in a rehab facility. There was no way I could bring her along for dinner, and I refused to leave her alone for the holiday. A week before Christmas, my future daughter-in-law sent me a text asking me to reconsider. I again said no. She accidentally texted me instead of my son and said, “Your mom is a nasty liar.” I was dumbfounded. I immediately got another text saying, “I’m sorry, but my feelings are hurt.” I forwarded both of these to my son, who said he was at work and didn’t have time to deal with this. Right after the holiday, my mother fell and broke her hip. She ended up needing two surgeries. She refused additional treatment, saying she’d had enough. She went into hospice care and died a few days later. My son became angry with me, saying I deliberately shortened Mom’s life by putting her into hospice. My son’s fiancee still has not apologized for what she texted. I haven’t heard from either of them since. I am hurt and upset. I not only lost my mother, but it seems I’ve lost my son, as well. How do I handle this mess? My husband and I are both losing sleep. -- Hurt Dear Hurt: Our condolences on the loss of your mother. Your son may be feeling guilty for pressuring you to abandon Grandma for his fiancee’s Christmas dinner, not realizing how short her time was. It is not uncommon to deflect that by blaming someone else. And his fiancee may be encouraging his anger toward you because it gets her off the hook entirely. Please forgive them so you can work on your grieving process without this additional sadness. Keep the lines of communication open, and try to maintain a certain superficiality. We hope this will allow the relationship to move forward. Dear Annie: We are getting tired of people telling us that the use of capital letters in our emails means we are “shouting” at them. This idea should be tossed out. We are visually impaired and have friends who have glaucoma, eye cancer and developing cataracts or are post cataract surgery, and some of us have macular degeneration in various stages. We are blessed that we can still use our computers, but are unable to read the small print of most messages. We need and appreciate the larger capital letters. Please tell your readers to think outside the box before criticizing those of us with limited vision. -- Windows to the Soul Dear Windows: We are sympathetic to your plight, but using all caps looks like shouting to most people. Of course, if that’s the only way you can see the type, by all means continue. However, please know that there are other ways to increase the type size. Try holding CTRL while pressing the plus sign or rolling your mouse wheel forward. Or hit “reply,” and then highlight the text and increase the font size. Your browser may offer other options in the manual or online. Dear Annie: Please tell “No Name, No Location” to get in touch with a local Cub Scout or Boy Scout troop for help shoveling snow or cutting their grass. Both groups of scouts are required to perform community service. When I was a Cubmaster, we organized kids to rake leaves for some elderly residents. Paying it back by volunteering is a win-win. -- Problem Solved 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 2013 CREATORS.COM
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN daily townsman / daily bulletin
Ferbuary 1, 2013 PAGE Page 17 17 Friday,Friday, February 1, 2013
Your community. Your classifieds.
Share Your Smiles! Cameron and Ethan are smiling because they love hockey!
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INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TRAVEL CHILDREN EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LEGAL NOTICES
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Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin office or email your high-resolution jpeg to production@dailybulletin. ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.
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Announcements
Help Wanted
Trades, Technical
Merchandise for Sale
Information
Journeyman HD mechanic required for oilfield construction company. Duties will include servicing, maintenance and overhaul of our equipment. The job will be predominately shop work , but with a portion of your time spent in the field. A mechanics truck will be supplied for you. The job is based in Edson, Alberta. Call Lloyd at 780-723-5051. PERMANENT FULL or Part time night work available in Kimberley. BC Security and Drivers licenses required. Must be physically fit. Toll Free: 1-877-277-9988
SHORE MECHANIC â&#x20AC;&#x201C; F/T Heavy Duty Mechanic Certificate or equivalent w/5 yrs exp. www.westcoast tug.ca/shore-mechanic
Heavy Duty Machinery
Research Participants Needed! PATIENTS OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS Do you receive, or have you received, health care from a BC Nurse Practitioner? Researchers from UVicâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s School of Nursing want to learn how you feel about care provided by nurse practitioners. Participation in this study means completing a short survey either by mail or telephone. To learn more and sign-up for the study, please contact Joanne Thompson Research Assistant at jethomps@uvic.ca or 250-721-7964 University of Victoria School of Nursing
Personals Dutch girl, 38
Independent, mature, classy, very pretty, fit & curvy. Fun red-head! Private sessions, magic hands.
Amy
250-421-6124
Cranbrook ~no rush~
PLAYFUL, SEXY, sweet, seductive 24 year old. Lacey (250)919-2815.
SUMMIT COMMUNITY SERVICES
Second Steps Daycare in Kimberley has an immediate opening for a qualified Early Childhood Educator/Educators Assistant to work with 3-5 year olds in our fun, play based environment. We are offering a permanent parttime position, benefits included. For more information and to submit a resume, please contact: Cindy-Lou Muise @ Phone: 250-427-3386 Fax: 250-427-3307 email: cl.muise@telus.net or in person at: Second Steps Daycare 1850 Warren Ave Kimberley, BC V1A 1S1 WILDSIGHT Cranbrook Sustainability Coordinator, 25-35 hr/week, 6 month contract with possibility of continuation, info www.wildsight.ca/cranbrooksustainabilitycoordinator
LOST: some time ago Sierra Design black fleece inside blue 2008 BC Winter Games jacket. Phone 250-427-2694
Children Daycare Centers FULL-TIME or part-time spot available in Registered Daycare for children aged 0-5years. Please call (250)581-1328
Misc Services
MARKET PLACE To advertise using our â&#x20AC;&#x153;MARKET PLACEâ&#x20AC;? in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202.
WATKINS PRODUCTS
Watkins Associate Loretta-May 250-426-4632 www.watkinsonline.com/ lorettamaystewart or at Woodland Grocery.
Biodegradable Environmentally Friendly Kosher Spices Personal Care Products Ointments/Linaments, etc **Since 1860**
Services
Contractors
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Pets & Livestock
Pets Gone But Not
Forgotten
Keep the Memory of Your Pet Alive with a Custom Memorial and/or Urn.
Sales NEW Modular Home Dealership requires experienced Sales Associates to work full time at our new sales center in Cranbrook BC. Experience and a commitment to excellence is required. Send resumes and cover letter to tnerb8@gmail.com
Lost & Found
Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re on the net at www.bcclassiďŹ ed.com
Obituaries
2373 Cranbrook St., Cranbrook 250-426-6278 kootenaygranite.com
Obituaries
Sporting Goods WANTED: 2 COMPLETE
A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122;40â&#x20AC;&#x2122;45â&#x20AC;&#x2122;53 in stock. SPECIAL 44â&#x20AC;&#x2122; x 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Container Shop w/steel trusses $13,800! Sets up in one day! Also Damaged 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; $1950 Call Toll Free Also JD 544 & 644 wheel loaders JD 892D LC Excavator Ph. 1-866-528-7108 Free Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com
cross country ski sets. Skis & bindings, poles and boots. One size 7 womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, one size 10 menâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. In good condition/reasonable price. Please call: 250-426-5750 or email: classiďŹ eds@dailytownsman.com
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4HE "#30#! CARES FOR THOUSANDS OF ORPHANED ABAN DONED AND ABUSED DOGS EACH YEAR )F YOU CAN GIVE A HOMELESS DOG A SECOND CHANCE AT HAPPINESS PLEASE VISIT YOUR LOCAL SHELTER TODAY
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Sympathy & Understanding Kootenay Monument Installations Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations
2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132
IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com
6379 HIGHWAY 95A TA TA CREEK, B.C. 1-800-477-9996
www.kootenaymonument.ca
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Arthur Phillip King October 14, 1935 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; January 21, 2013
It is with profound sadness that we, Artâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s family announce the sudden and unexpected passing of Arthur Phillip King, of Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta. We have lost a husband, father, grandfather, brother, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Uncle Artâ&#x20AC;? and valued friend. Art passed away on January 21, 2013 in Victoria, BC at the age of 77. Left to mourn are his wife of 52 years, Verna, their three children; Sandra (Ralph), Jim (Denise), and Nancy, five grandchildren; Jordyn, Cassidy, Lane, Jared, Justin, and his only brother, Bruce (Maureen) who lives in Kimberley, BC. Art was born in Buchans, Newfoundland but grew up in Kimberley, BC, where he met and married Verna. In 1968 Art moved his family to Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta where he continued to reside for 45 years. He worked for Imperial Oil and for Sherritt Gordon Mines. In his spare time he enjoyed curling, skiing, hockey, golf, baseball, fishing, yard work, TV sports, and helping out at the local Food Bank. Art was known for the â&#x20AC;&#x153;twinkle in his eyeâ&#x20AC;?, his quick wit and his Newfie humor. He was sweet, generous, warm-hearted and kindly towards everyone. He will be missed by all who had the pleasure to know him. A memorial service, celebrating Artâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s life, will be held on April 13, 2013, starting at 11 a.m. at the First United Church in Fort Saskatchewan. In lieu of flowers donation may be made to the Fort Saskatchewan Hospital Foundation at Fort Saskatchewan Community Hospital Foundation, 9401 - 86 Avenue, Fort Saskatchewan, AB %8L 0C6 or the Canadian Pulmonary Fibrosis Association at www. canadianpulmonaryfibrosis.ca/donate.
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DAILY BULLETIN dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin
PAGE 18 Friday, February Page 18 Friday, Ferbuary 1, 20131, 2013
Real Estate
Rentals
Transportation
Transportation
Real Estate
Apt/Condo for Rent
Cars - Domestic
Trucks & Vans
1 BEDROOM APT. Downtown Cranbrook. F/S $700./mo, DD + hydro. (250)489-1324
First-Time Buyer? Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t Miss This Seminar!
2BDRM, 1 1/2 BATH Willow View apartment for rent, in Canal Flats. Great view, 2 parking stalls, F/S, D/W. Walking distance to arena, park and store. $850 + utilities & D.D., references required. Available immediately. Call (250)349-5306 or (250)489-8389, leave mess.
Brought to you by the industry leaders.
2 BEDROOM UNITS
available in Victoria Villas. Rent includes w/d and water. Starting at $776./mo plus electric. D/D starting at $388.00 N/P, N/S. 1 year lease. To view call 778-517-4517 CEDAR PARK Apartments: 1&2 Bdrm. Elevator, on-site laundry, central location, live-in manager. Heat & hot water included. N/P, N/S. $675-$800/mo. (250)489-0134.
t .PSUHBHF 2VBMJĂĽ DBUJPO t .BSLFU $POEJUJPOT t )PX UP CF TVDDFTTGVM JO ZPVS QVSDIBTF t /FHPUJBUJPOT BOE EVF EJMJHFODF t -FBSO IPX UP TBWF UIPVTBOET PG EPMMBST XIFO QVSDIBTJOH ZPVS TU IPNF
Thursday, Feb. 7 7:00pm, Heritage Inn
Jason
Modular Homes FOR SALE OR RENT!
WHEELDON
4bdrm Mobile home on itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s own lot. Many renovations. 60X85 lot, carport, sheds. A must see. Call Cyndie for details 250-919-6063
EAST KOOTENAY REALTY
P E R S O N A L R E A L E S TAT E C O R P O R AT I O N
stk#6185
stk#9129
2004 Pontiac Sunfire
Receive a Gift Certificate for $750*
towards legal costs of purchasing a home in 2013!
Limited seating available... call 250-420-2389 to reserve your seat
3,495
00
$
EK Transmission Ltd.
1019 Kootenay St. N., $SBOCSPPL #$ t
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Trucks & Vans
1998 DODGE Ram, reg. cab, shortbox, 4 x 4, 318, 5-speed, 6â&#x20AC;? lift. 35â&#x20AC;? tires. Blue. $4000./obo. 250-4217584
DL#29679
DL#29679
stk#3964
Canadian Home Builders Association
If you had cystic fibrosis, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d have no choice.
1019 Kootenay St. N., $SBOCSPPL #$ t
Award Winning Home Builder
DL#29679
Available for your custom home and renovation needs.
1998, 2500 Chev Silverado extended cab, 4 x 4. 275,000/km, good condition. $5500./obo. 250-919-5355
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Open Houses
Open Houses
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Open Houses 11:00-12:00 3021 Mt. Fisher Place $399,900 #FBVUJGVM MBSHF SFOPWBUFE GBSNIPVTF X IVHF MPU HBSBHF , $BSMB 4JODMBJS 11:00-12:00 3121 4th Street South $284,900 -PWFMZ )JHIMBOET IPNF JO HSFBU MPDBUJPO NBOZ VQEBUFT , 4BOEZ 4NJUI
QN t 8 1BUUFSTPO 4USFFU Lovely 3 bdrm mobile, updated electrical, new kitchen cabinets, countertop, backsplash, drywall, tile floor, washer/dryer. Sliders to covered deck. Updates galore. Good value in this mobile. K217079 $69,900 Hosted by Melanie Walsh
11:30-12:30 1216 10th Avenue South $219,900 8FMM QSJDFE CESN CBUI IPNF 0WFSTJ[FE HBSBHF Y EFDL X NUO WJFXT GVMMZ GFODFE ZBSE , $ISJT /BVMU
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TIP TOP CHIMNEY SERVICES
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SATURDAY FEBRUARY 2nd
To advertise using our â&#x20AC;&#x153;SERVICES GUIDEâ&#x20AC;? in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202.
~Snow removal. ~Senior discount.
2001 Dodge 1500
EAST KOOTENAY REALTY
Contact these business for all your service needs!
~Home repairs and renovations.
EK Transmission Ltd.
Open Houses
SERVICES GUIDE
5,99500
EK Transmission Ltd.
Would you like to swallow 20 pills every day, just to digest your food?
Please help us.
Business/OfďŹ ce Service
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Fully serviced, tune-up, safety inspected, 134,000 km.
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For reliable, quality electrical work *Licensed*Bonded*Insured* Residential, Commercial Service Work No Job Too Small! 250-421-0175
ClassiďŹ eds Get Results!
AND RENOVATIONS
Richard Hedrich 250-919-3643
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12:15-1:15 909 11th Street South $249,900 3FOPWBUFE CESN CBUI IPNF JO B HSFBU DFOUSBM MPDBUJPO , $BSMB 4JODMBJS 1:00-2:00 1860 Mt. Connell Crescent North $414,900 3FOPWBUFE WFSZ XFMM UBLFO DBSF PG CESN 1BSL 3PZBM IPNF CBDLJOH POUP DPNNVOJUZ GPSFTU , $ISJT /BVMU
1:30-2:30 124 18th Street $439,900 3FDFOUMZ SFEVDFE QSJDF 5IF ,JUDIFO EJOJOH SPPN WJFXT BSF FYDFQUJPOBM BOE NBLFT UIJT IPNF B NVTU TFF , 3PC 4UBOH
Fetch a Friend from the SPCA today!
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
Page 19
HOICE AWA C ’S
Celebrating the people, places and businesses of our great area.
12 S 20 RD
READ ER
READERS’ CHOICE AWARDS – THE BEST OF OUR REGION
G OL D G OL D
Food
HOICE AWA C ’S
READ AER EEDR
2102 S 2012 DS RD
All Around Restaurant _________________________ Bakery_______________________________________ Breakfast ____________________________________ Buffet _______________________________________ Chinese Restaurant ____________________________ Chocolate Shop _______________________________ Coffee Shop __________________________________ Deli _________________________________________ Donut Shop __________________________________ Family Restaurant _____________________________ Ice Cream Shop _______________________________ Japanese Restaurant ___________________________ New Restaurant ______________________________ Pizza ________________________________________ Steak House __________________________________ Vegetarian Restaurant _________________________ Restaurant Service_____________________________ Server _______________________________________
HOICE AWA C ’S
12 S 20 RD
READ ER
S I LV E R
Retail
Appliance Store _______________________________ Bike Shop ____________________________________ Book Store ___________________________________ Bridal _______________________________________ Camera Shop _________________________________ Card Shop ___________________________________ Carpet Store __________________________________ Cellular Phone ________________________________ Children’s Wear _______________________________ Computer Retail ______________________________ Convenience Store_____________________________ Craft Shop ___________________________________ Department Store _____________________________ Dollar Store __________________________________ Fabric Store __________________________________ Floral Shop___________________________________ Formal Wear _________________________________ Furniture Store _______________________________ Gardening Centre _____________________________ Golf Store ____________________________________ Grocery Store_________________________________ Hardware Store _______________________________ Health Food __________________________________ Home Electronics _____________________________ Jewelery Store ________________________________
B RON Z E
Tell us your favourites
Simply fill out the ballot and submit to Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin or Kootenay Advertiser. With the assistance of Taylor Adams Chartered Accountants, the ballots will be tallied and the winners announced in late February, 2013 in a special commemorative Reader’s Choice Supplement celebrating the best our communities have to offer. Lawn/Garden Equipment _______________________ Lighting _____________________________________ Linen ________________________________________ Lingerie______________________________________ Liquor Store __________________________________ Maternity Wear _______________________________ Mattress ____________________________________ Men’s Wear __________________________________ Motorcycle Shop ______________________________ Music Store __________________________________ New Car Dealer ______________________________ New Home Builder ____________________________ Office Supply Store ____________________________ Optical ______________________________________ Paint Store ___________________________________ Pet Store _____________________________________ RV Dealer____________________________________ Shopping Centre/area __________________________ Ski/Snowboard Shop___________________________ Teen Clothing ________________________________ Tire Store ____________________________________ Thrift Store __________________________________ Toy Store ____________________________________ Pre-owned Vehicle Dealer ______________________ Wine and Beer Making_________________________ Women’s Wear ________________________________
Entertainment Amusement Centre ____________________________ Art Gallery ___________________________________ Billiards _____________________________________ Bingo________________________________________ Casino_______________________________________ Dance Studio _________________________________ Driving Range ________________________________ Lounge or Pub ________________________________ Outdoor Patio ________________________________ Place for Live Music ___________________________ Place to Dance ________________________________ Sports Bar____________________________________
Places Fitness Centre ________________________________ Golf Course __________________________________ Neighbourhood to live in _______________________ Park_________________________________________
Place for a First Date __________________________ Place for Karaoke _____________________________ Place for Yoga ________________________________ Place to Get Pampered _________________________ Place for a Walk ______________________________ Place to Ride Your Bike ________________________ Place to Take Visitors __________________________ Place to Take Your Dog ________________________ Toboggan Hill ________________________________
People City Councilor ________________________________ Bartender ____________________________________ Corporate Citizen _____________________________ Local Athlete _________________________________ Local Radio Personality ________________________ Radio Station _________________________________ Local Columnist ______________________________ Friendliest Staff _______________________________ Most Beloved Citizen __________________________ Local Political ________________________________ Local Charity _________________________________
Services Auto Body ___________________________________ Auto Service __________________________________ Auto Rental __________________________________ Best Use of Tax Dollars ________________________ Carpet Cleaner _______________________________ Computer Repair _____________________________ Dry Cleaner __________________________________ Equipment Rental _____________________________ Financial Institution ___________________________ Gas Station___________________________________ Hair Salon ___________________________________ Home Security Provider ________________________ Hotel/Motel __________________________________ Internet Service Provider _______________________ Oil/Lube Shop ________________________________ Muffler Shop _________________________________ Pharmacy ____________________________________ Real Estate Agent _____________________________ Real Estate Company __________________________ Storage Rental _______________________________ Tanning Salon ________________________________ Travel Agency ________________________________
Drop off your entry before February 15th to be entered to win one of two
Name: _____________________________ prizes! $250 cash, plus one night accommodation at Trickle Creek Lodge and City/Town:_________________________ a Montana’s gift certificate or 2 rounds of golf at Wildstone Golf Course! Phone: _____________________________ 1510-2nd St. N., Cranbrook, V1C 3L2 335 Spokane St., Kimberley, V1A 1Y9 Email: _____________________________ 822 Cranbrook St., Cranbrook, V1C 3R9
daily townsman
Page 20 Friday, Ferbuary 1, 2013
THE
BIG
GAME 20 30 40 50 40 30 20 20 30 40 50 40 30 20
20 30 40 50 40 30 2
KELOWNA 20 30 40 50WEST 40KELOWNA 30 20 PENTICTON 2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
#200 - 2180 Elk Rd. 1001-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. 200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 493-3800 (250) 542-3000 (250) 707-2600 NOW OPEN
KELOWNA
WEST KELOWNA
KELOWNA
NOW OPEN
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
KELOWNA
2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600
CASTLEGAR
VERNON
#200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
WEST KELOWNA #200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600 NOW OPEN
WEST KELOWNA #200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
KELOWNA
200-1965 Columbia Ave. 2153 Springfield Road (250) 365-6455 (250) 860-2600
ORCHARD PARK MALL
20 30 40 50 40 30 20
NOW OPEN
Chapters Entrance (250) 860-8100 Springfield Rd Entrance (250) 717-1511
20 30 40 50 40 30 20
PENTICTON
VERNON
ANDRES WIRELESS
PENTICTON
VERNON
ANDRES WIRELESS
VERNON
ANDRES WIRELESS
1001-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. 200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 493-3800 (250) 542-3000
1001-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. 200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 493-3800 (250) 542-3000
KAMLOOPS
745 Notre Dame Drive 200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 851-8700 (250) 542-3000 NOW OPEN
WEST KELOWNA #200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600
CRANBROOK
101 Kootenay St. North (250) 426-8927
Villiage Green Mall (250) 542-1496
Cherry Lane Mall (250) 493-4566
Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880 TELUS KIOSK
NELSON
Chahko Mika Mall (250) 352-7258