Red Deer 1913 — 2013 Create Celebrate Commemorate
Remembering the magic Columnist Harley Hay recounts glory days of drive-in movies PAGE A6
RED DEER
ADVOCATE WEEKEND EDITION BREAKING BR REEA AK KIING NG N NEWS EEW WS ON O ONLINE LIN AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM
SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013
JUST FOR KIDS Red Deer Children’s Festival photos on PAGE C1
2012 oil spill left lasting impact ‘There’s some awful strange things going on,’ says farmer Wayne Johnston BY PAUL COWLEY ADVOCATE STAFF SUNDRE — For the Johnstons, the signs that all is not the same a year after the oil spill can be found in the wildlife. “I don’t really know what to say. It’s different,” says Ila Johnston, who has lived all her married life on the farm just downstream from where up to 3,000 barrels of light sour crude oil bubbled into the Red Deer River a year ago. “The geese for one thing. They’re still flying around in flocks. We haven’t seen a single gosling or duckling.” Ominously, she remembers a similar situation in 1994 when a natural gas pipeline ruptured in the area. Husband Wayne, who was born and raised on the farm about eight km north of Sundre, said the family dog Tip hasn’t been the same since the June 7 spill about a kilometre to the north. “He’s gone from a young dog to an old dog, and he’s gone hyper.” Their yearling calves also are acting wilder, and even deer in the area don’t seem the same. Ila says a lot of the wildlife look to be skin and bones; inexplicably because there is no shortage of food along the river. “There’s some awful strange things going on,” says Wayne. “All you have to do is pay attention to the animals. It’s not normal.” Down at the river, there are no obvious signs of the mess that was created late last spring. The brown film that covered the water and the overpowering stench of hydrocarbons is long gone. Johnston is troubled by a brown foam that has gathered in a small eddy and scoops it up in a glass jar. He wants to see what it looks like in a few days when it has had a chance to settle, he says.
Please see SPILL on Page A2
Photo by PAUL COWLEY/Advocate staff
Sundre-area farmer Wayne Johnston checks out this brown foam from the Red Deer River below his home. He doesn’t know what it is but believes it is connected to last year’s oil spill.
PLEASE
WEATHER
INDEX
30% showers. High 17. Low 9.
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RECYCLE
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ATTEMPTED MURDER CHARGES LAID
MERION STUMPS PLAYERS
Two alleged motorcycle gang members have been charged with attempted murder in connection with a shooting near Sylvan Lake last week. A3
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A2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
FROM PAGE A1
SPILL: ‘What happens if more oil damage is found?’ It doesn’t smell unusual, which may be a good sign. But that doesn’t mean it’s a good thing either. The uncertainty that comes with being a neighbour to the oil and gas industry is a constant worry for the couple. Plains Midstream’s spill is only the latest in a long line of incidents the couple have had to cope with, including a 1994 natural gas leak that killed a dozen calves. In 2008, a Pembina pipeline broke not far from the more recent spill. As recently as fall 2011, another company’s pipeline carrying processed water to a well site broke three times in three months before it was finally replaced. “We worry all the time,” said Ila. “We generally don’t get through a year without a pipeline break, either on our property or somewhere next door.” All of the spills, unexplained foul-smelling whiffs from nearby oil and gas facilities have taken a physical toll, the couple believes. “I know it’s affected her health and I know it’s affected my health,” Wayne says. Just a few days ago he was in Red Deer’s hospital getting checked for pancreas and liver problems. Ila also suffers. I’ve got numerous problems. Just pain where there shouldn’t be. Most of them kind of unexplainable.” Wayne says he turned down a company compensation offer of $10,000 because it required him to release them from any future obligations. What happens if more oil damage is found later then, he asks. He can’t afford to clean it and fears he could lose his land. Last year’s oil spill put Dennis Overguard in hospital with a heart attack. By the time, he left he had four stents propping up his collapsed arteries. The doctors told him the sickening fumes he inhaled were to blame. Overguard, 61, was told he should sue. That’s not his style, he says, but some residue of bitterness remains. “What I figure is whatever goes around, comes around. Hopefully, the guys in charge of Plains will end up on their back getting their hearts operated on and they’ll know what it feels like.” The thing is, he says, all those on the land, whether they are farming it, drilling it or logging it are neighbours, and should act that way. “That’s what I told Plains, all I wanted to be was treated humanely. Unfortunately, the humane society doesn’t look after me like they do cattle,” he said with a grim chuckle. He was given compensation for the 126 days he was out of his home, but not for any of his medical issues, he says. He’s still extremely susceptible to fumes — even a backdraft of exhaust from his truck can trigger heart pain. The health of the river is a different matter. Overguard is curious what effect the spring runoff will have. While Plains has done about as much as it can to clean the river and its banks the torrent of spring melt will probably be the real cleaning mechanism for the damage. “I’ll be really interested to see how much of an oil slick we have in (Gleniffer Lake) after the high water here.” “I know in the back waters there’s still traces (of oil),” he says. Despite the damage, the river will bounce back, he believes “I think so — as long as they don’t do it again.” Plains Midstream spent tens of millions and employed hundreds last year cleaning up the mess, which was completed by the fall. A spokesperson could not be reached for an interview. But the company’s most recent update paints an encouraging picture of those efforts. A detailed inspection at the release site “found no contamination and observed good progress with reclamation of the area.” Further inspections will take place in the late summer or early fall. No contamination was found at other inspection points either. “The willow stakes from last year were found with new shoots and good vegetation emergence was observed,” says the update, noting regular river inspections will continue. Regulators plan to return to the river this summer to evaluate the effectiveness of the cleanup operations. A wildlife and bird survey was conducted in late May and found “wildlife presence observed was typical for this environment.” Reminders of the spill’s impact are easy to find. A sign posted near the Garrington Bridge over the Red Deer River warns anglers that the river and all tributaries upstream of Gleniffer Lake remains under zero harvest regulations until the impact on fish populations has been assessed . Until then, only catch and release is allowed. The results of those fish studies are not expected until fall or early winter. Restrictions were imposed last August, a delay that drew some criticism. The toll on wildlife was relatively light. About two dozen birds and mammals and 27 fish were found dead. This spring, there have been no other casualties found. Mountain View County Coun. Paddy Munro said looking at the whole incident in the rear view he remains disappointed. “I really feel let down. First of all, I think the (Environmental Resources Conservation Board) should have done a better job of monitoring these pipelines. “It’s not like it’s the first time.” Plains is now boring its pipeline much deeper under the river to prevent a repeat incident. That should have been done before there was a disaster, says Munro. pcowley@reddeeradvocate.com
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Photo by PAUL COWLEY/Advocate staff
Wayne Johnston scooped up this brown foam from the Red Deer River below his home. He doesn’t know what it is but believes it is connected to last year’s oil spill.
Oil-spill disaster: a timeline of events April 29, 2011 — Plains Midstream Canada responds to a 28,000 barrel leak northeast of the Peace River — one of the largest spills in Alberta’s history. Plains operates over 5,000 kms of pipeline systems in Western Canada and about a fifth of the crude oil that is produced goes through the system on a daily basis. June 8, 2012 — The media learns of the 3,000-barrel spill on the Red Deer River near Sundre, which was detected by Plains Midstream Canada at 9:40 p.m. the day before. June 8, 2012 — More than 100 energy workers, cleanup crew members and energy regulators go to Gleniffer Lake, about 50 kms from Sundre by road. June 8, 2012 — The City of Red Deer monitors the situation but reports that the city’s water system is unaffected. June 8, 2012 — Crews work to contain the spill from the Plains Midstream Canada 12-inch Rangeland South Pipeline system, built in 1966, near Sundre, which ran underneath the Red Deer River. The pipeline was dormant at the time of the leak, which may have minimized the consequences of the event. June 8, 2012 — Premier Alison Redford issued a statement in response to the Plains Midstream leak. “Many questions will be asked over the coming days about Alberta’s pipeline infrastructure. June 8, 2012 — Alberta’s Energy Resources Conservation Board (ERCB) investigates the spill and cleanup efforts while Alberta Health Services works with Plains Midstream to watch for signs of contamination beyond the affected area. June 11, 2012 —Mountain View County Reeve Bruce Beattie questions the age and maintenance of the pipeline. June 11, 2012 — Cleanup continues notably on the Red Deer River at Township Road 331A and Township Road 340, locations north of Sundre. June 11, 2012 — The company said they believe the break occurred under the Red Deer River. Originally the company reported the leak occurred in Jackson Creek, which flows into the Red Deer River. Medicine River Wildlife Centre said a oneweek old baby beaver was the first to come to the centre. The kit was found close to the original spill site, north of Sundre. June 15, 2012 — About a week after the spill, an information centre is established at the James River Community Hall north of Sundre. About 56 five-gallon jugs of water, along with 70 cases of bottled water, are trucked to the community hall. June 14, 2012 — The 3,000-barrel leak in the Red Deer River is only about a 10th of the size of the Peace River leak on April 29, 2011. It was a 28,000-barrel leak northeast of the Peace River and residents of Little Buffalo Lubicon Lake Nation, a community about 30 kms west of the spill site,
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TONIGHT
Timeline continued on PAGE A3
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WEATHER LOCAL TODAY
are still up in arms about the spill that stretched 0.4 kms wide and 4.8 kms long. June 14, 2012 — A story quotes local oil company officials on the cause and prevention of pipeline deterioration. The leading cause of an oil and gas pipeline failure is said to be corrosion. June 16, 2012 — Workforce is at its peak with 275 people on site. Sixteen work crews are gathering, bagging and removing wood debris at eight different locations. June 18, 2012 — About 500 resort residents turn out for weekend information sessions put on by Plains Midstream Canada as the oil spill cleanup continues. Gleniffer Lake Resort and Country Club and Carefree Resort were effected by the spill. June 19, 2012 — Residents meet at the James River Community Hall, north of Sundre. They are met by Plains Midstream Canada representatives, Alberta Environment, the ERCB and the Sundre Petroleum Operators Group (SPOG). This is when Stephen Bart, vice-president of crude oil operations for Plains Midstream Canada, said the typical inspection frequency “is in the neighbourhood” of every three to five years. The pipeline, built in 1966, was last inspected in 2009, he said. June 22, 2012 — A class-action lawsuit is filed against Plains Midstream Canada over the oil spill into the Red Deer River and Gleniffer Lake. Representing 30 plaintiffs, the Merchant Law Group files the suit seeking $75 million in damages. June 27, 2012 — Sherry Tytkanych, president of the Sundre and District Chamber of Commerce, said that some businesses have been contacting them because clients have been cancelling reservations to campsites or for activities such as whitewater rafting and fishing. June 28, 2012 — The majority of Gleniffer Lake is reopened. At this time the far southwest corner of the lake near Dickson Point remained closed to the public, along with the Cottonwood day-use area. Shoreline fishing is permitted at Dickson Trout Pond but boats are not allowed. July 16, 2012 — During the first week of the spill, Carol Kelly, executive director at Medicine River Wildlife Centre, says four other patients joined the kit — an adult beaver, baby muskrat, Canada goose and baby crow. The baby muskrat and adult beaver have since been released back into the wild. The baby beaver is still at the centre. The goose and crow did not survive. July 29, 2012 — The Sundre community comes together to show support for the tourism industry with a rally to raise the area’s profile. The event was organized by the Sundre and District Chamber of Commerce and Wild Rose riding Conservative MP Blake Richards.
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
including DIESELS!
NEVER SEEN BEFORE! BEFORE! HIGH 17
LOW 9
HIGH 19
HIGH 21
HIGH 21
30% chance of showers.
Clearing.
A mix of sun and cloud.
A mix of sun and cloud. Low 12.
60% chance of showers. Low 10.
REGIONAL OUTLOOK
Olds, Sundre: today, chance of showers. High 17. Low 6. Rocky, Nordegg: today, chance of showers. High 15. Low 6. Banff: today, mainly sunny. High 17. Low 6. Jasper: today, sun and cloud. High 17.
SUNLIGHT
Low 6. Lethbridge: today, chance of showers. High 21. Low 9. Edmonton: today, a few showers. High 16. Low 9. Grande Prairie: today, chance of showers. High 17. Low 6. Fort McMurray: today, chance of showers. High 17. Low 10.
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TONIGHT’S HIGHS/LOWS
RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013 A3
Alleged bike gang members charged with attempted murder BY PAUL COWLEY ADVOCATE STAFF
This sign warns anglers not to eat anything they catch in the river. More tests are being done this summer and catch-and-release rules are expected to be in place all fishing season.
Continued from PAGE A3
Photo contributed by the RCMP
Daniel Huddlestone, 34, seen here, is charged with attempted murder using a firearm, robbery with a firearm, aggravated assault, possession of a restricted weapon, and other weapons-related offences.
Dreeshen bill passes third reading BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF Red Deer MP Earl Dreeshen’s private members bill to deal with those personating an officer to commit a crime unanimously passed third reading on Friday in the House of Commons. Discussion for third reading on Bill C-444, an amendment to the Criminal Code, started on May 31. When discussion ran longer than expected the bill was scheduled to return to the House of Commons in September. “We were able to get it moved up in the order and we presented it this afternoon, the last part of the second hour of third reading,” Dreeshen said from Ottawa on Friday. A voice vote, which is quicker and doesn’t require attendance of all present members, was held instead of a standing vote. “The next stage is to speak to Senate colleagues and find someone to carry it through the Senate process.” Once it is passed by the Senate, the bill can be
given royal assent and becomes law. Dreeshen has been working on the bill for over three years and re-introduced the bill after it died on the order paper when the 2011 federal election was called. He put forward the bill after the 2009 abduction and sexual assault of a Penhold teen. A man who posed as a police officer stopped her outside her home and told her to get into his car, which was equipped with red flashing lights. Gerard John Baumgarte of Red Deer, who was 57 at the time, was given a six-month sentence for personating a police officer. That sentence runs concurrently with his 18-year prison sentence on other charges. Bill C-444 would see that personating a peace officer, or public officer, to commit another offence is made an aggravating circumstance for sentencing purposes. Aggravating circumstances cause judges to impose longer sentences, up to the five-year maximum that is allowed. szielinski@reddeeradvocate.com
Pipeline expert to speak at forums BY PAUL COWLEY ADVOCATE STAFF
ronmental Resources Conservation Board) and the government is handling these pipelines he would have had the report out the next day.” Alberta Energy spokesman Mike Feenstra said the department is still reviewing the initial report and an analysis prepared by ERCB staff. The report will be released this summer for feedback from the public. As for the bad news theory? “The timing of the release does not have to do with the content,” he says in an email. The forums are as follows: ● June 17, 1:15 p.m. at Camrose, Norseman Inn, 6605 48th Ave. ● June 19, 7:30 p.m. at Eagle Hill Community Hall (five km west of Hwy 766 on Township Road 34-0, west of Bowden) ● June 21, 2-4 p.m. at Lac La Biche Kinsmen Centre pcowley@reddeeradvocate.com
A U.S. pipeline safety expert has been invited to provide his insight at a series of forums in Alberta hosted by landowner and environmental groups. Don Bester, of the Alberta Surface Rights Group, said Anthony Swift, an attorney and pipeline safety expert from the Washington, D.C.based National Resource Defence Council, is well versed in Alberta’s pipeline issues. “He knows his stuff,” said Bester on Friday. Swift’s group has done a lot of research on Alberta in relation to the council’s work on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline project to transport Alberta crude to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries. “They’re probably more up on Alberta pipeline companies than we are (in Alberta),” he said. Bester expects there will be discussion about the risk of an aging pipeline infrastructure and what safety measures are in place versus what should be there. The forums, co-hosted by Greenpeace, Council of Canadians and Sierra Club are also meant to turn up the heat under the provincial government to release a longawaited report on pipeline safety. “We’ve been trying to convince the Minister of Energy to actually reAlbertans have the right to access information, and to have their personal lease the pipeline safety report he’s had since Noinformation protected. Help us strike the right balance. vember, and we haven’t The Government of Alberta is holding public consultations as part of its had much luck,” he said. “We can’t get our govreview of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy (FOIP) Act. ernment to talk about it.” Don Scott, Associate Minister of Accountability, Transparency & Bester has his suspiTransformation, will be travelling across the province to meet with cions about why it’s taking so long. Albertans to talk about the legislation. “If this had been a very favourable report You are invited to attend one of the following sessions in your area: on how the ERCB (Envi-
WE’RE TALKING ABOUT ACCESS TO INFORMATION & PRIVACY – IN PUBLIC.
CALGARY — The Calgary Humane Society is investigating after a video taken at a pet grooming salon shows a worker hitting a dog several times. The video was shot last week at Fur Kids Dog Daycare and Grooming by an apprentice groomer who says she witnessed a fellow groomer striking a dog in her care several times.
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Media are invited to attend one of two separate media stakeholder sessions:
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Aug. 3, 2012 — The province announces that anglers face catch-and-release restrictions. This comes two months after the oil spill. Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development will assess fish populations and aquatic ecosystem health through various sampling and monitoring programs on the main stem of the Red Deer River, upstream of Dickson Dam, including Gleniffer Lake and Dickson Trout Pond, to Banff National Park boundary and all flowing tributary waters. The zero harvest restriction will be in place for the remainder of the 2012 to 2013 angling season to allow officials to productively study the fish. Aug. 20, 2012 — An Aug. 9 Plains All American quarterly report states that Plains Midstream Canada will spend upwards of $53 million in cleanup and remediation actvities. Aug. 24, 2012 — The company rushes to remove the pipeline before fall freeze up. A segment of the pipe has been removed from the west side of the river and was signed over to Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development, a Plains update states. The company reports that over one week, 200 bags of debris were removed from the shoreline and about 210,740 work-hours have supported the response and cleanup. Sept. 5, 2012 — Provincial and federal regulators are back on site inspecting oil spill cleanup efforts on the Red Deer River. Eight sites remediated by Plains Midstream were inspected by regulators about two weeks earlier and the latest visits are a follow-up to that work. Alberta’s Environment and Sustainable Resources Development departments, the Energy Resources Conservation Board and the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans are involved. Sept. 30, 2012 — A number of individuals who attend a Plains Midstream Canada’s information session at James River Hall in Mountain View County say the company is not adequately addressing their concerns. Sept. 30, 2012 — Stephen Bart, vice-president of operations for Plains Midstream Canada, said the company broke the Red Deer River into 15 sections and met with regulators to determine what should be done in each section. Oct. 15, 2012 — Plains Midstream said in a news release that the cleanup is complete. The company states it plans to return to the site in spring or early summer to inspect the sites again. Feb. 26, 2013 — The Energy Resources Conservation Board issues four high-risk enforcement actions against Plains Midstream in relation to the April 2011 Peace River spill. The board cites the company for not properly digging the pipeline, for inadequate operating and maintenance procedures, and for inadequate leak detection and response. April 26, 2013 — In relation to the Peace River spill, Plains Midstream is charged with three counts under the provincial Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act, which allows for maximum fines of $500,000.
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Two alleged motorcycle gang members have been charged with attempted murder in connection with a shooting near Sylvan Lake last week. It was the second alleged attempted murder about the same time and near the same location, although police do not believe the cases are elated. RCMP said on June 3 a man suffering from gunshot wounds was found walking near Sylvan Lake. He was taken to hospital and underwent surgery and is expected to recover. Sylvan Lake RCMP with the assistance of the RCMP Serious Crimes Branch and forensic identification and dog units investigated and announced the arrests on Friday of two men allegedly associated with the Malicious Crew Motorcycle Club. Sgt. Patricia Neely, Southern Alberta media relations officer, said Malicious Crew is based in Central Alberta, including Red Deer. Daniel Huddlestone and Cameron Monkman have both been charged with attempted murder using a firearm, robbery with a firearm, aggravated assault, possession of a restricted weapon, and other weapons-related offences. Monkman has also been charged with possession of marijuana. Both remain in custody and are next due in court on June 27. Neely said the incident does not appear to be connected to another alleged attempted murder in the area. Andrew Waunch, 30, has been charged with attempted murder and unlawful confinement following the incident in Sylvan Lake. He also faces numerous other charges. RCMP said Waunch has no known link to the Malicious Crew gang, but that he is an associate of Huddlestone. pcowley@reddeeradvocate.com
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A4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
Red Deer man charged with theft
LOCAL
BRIEFS Three people charged in escort scam Three people have been charged with using Internet escort websites to lure and rob men looking for female companionship. Two males and one female face a combined 48 charges stemming from at least two incidents within the past week. Red Deer City RCMP started the investigation after two reports of robberies that originated from male victims using the Internet for escort services. According to police in both instances the males contacted a female from these websites and set up a location and time to meet with them. Once the man arrived at the meeting place two male suspects brandishing a knife or firearm would steal money, credit cards and in one instance a vehicle from the victim. Police said during one of those robberies the male was held against his will for an extended period of time before escaping capture and contacting police. Police have arrested and charged Lindsey Rae Mazzei, 30, of Red Deer, Florian Edward Poitra, 31, of no fixed address and Mark William Bitterman, 30, of no fixed address. Mazzei, Poitra and Bitterman each face charges of robbery with a firearm, extortion with a firearm, kidnapping with a firearm, forcible confinement, uttering threats, theft over $5,000, unauthorized possession of a firearm, use of an imitation firearm in the commission of an indictable offence and use of a firearm while committing an indictable offence. Poitra and Bitterman also face assault charges and Bitterman faces a breach of probation charge. Court dates for all three suspects have not been set.
A 39-year-old Red Deer man was arrested following a seven-month police investigation into thefts from various oilfield sites. The break and enters that resulted in large amounts of copper wire being stolen occurred mostly in the Three Hills region between December 2012 and February 2013. Police officers from Three Hills and other RCMP detachments investigated, as well as members from the Red Deer Forensic Identification Section. Stephen Barnes was arrested on Wednesday and charged with eight counts of break and enter. He’s currently in custody awaiting bail, and is scheduled to appear in Drumheller Provincial Court on July 3.
Horses found wandering back alley Two horses are currently homeless after they were found wandering a back alley in Red Deer. Red Deer City RCMP were called to the Lancaster neighbourhood at 6:30 a.m. on June 9 to a report of the two animals. One is described as a paint horse while the other is a pony cross. Police said they are currently being cared for and are in good health. Police are asking for the owners or anyone who knows who the owners are to contact Livestock Iden-
tification Services at 403-509-2088, the Red Deer LIS office at 403-309-4716 or Cpl. D.J. Heaslip at 780-2895510.
Road near Bower Place Shopping Centre closed for repairs A section of road near the Bower Place Shopping Centre will be closed for a week. From Monday to Friday Molly Bannister Drive and Barrett Drive from Bremner Avenue to Bennett Street, the road around the Bower mall, will be closed to traffic for road improvements and frost boil repairs. Drivers are encouraged to access the mall via Gaetz Avenue an Bennett Street westbound. Access to Botterill Crescent will remain open. According to a City of Red Deer release frost boils occur when moisture infiltrates the base of a paved road. When it freezes it expands and pushes up to the surface of the road, then when it melts the pavement collapses back into the voids left behind. Frost boil repairs are necessary to maintain the integrity of the city’s roadways. The City asks that drivers slow down when approaching or driving in construction areas and obey all signs. For more information about road construction and closures visit www.reddeer.ca/roadclosures.
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A man charged with shooting at Red Deer RCMP, two carjackings at gunpoint, attempted murder, two police chases, and much more remains in custody and returns to court on June 28. Andrew Allen Waunch, 30, of no fixed address, was arrested Monday morning and made his first court appearance on Friday. He faces a total of 37 charges. Waunch, also known as Navi, was initially wanted in connection with two incidents — an attempted murder in Sylvan Lake that took place on June 3 and a gunpoint carjacking on June 7 near Olds. On Sunday evening at about 7 p.m., Red Deer City RCMP were called to a reported armed carjacking. Four hours later police located the stolen vehicle in Creekside Trailer Park. Police attempted to initiate a traffic stop, but the vehicle fled from police. A pursuit ensued and police followed the vehicle outside of Red Deer where shots were fired from the suspect vehicle at a police vehicle. The suspect vehicle evaded police and was later located, abandoned, near Olds. A second vehicle was reported stolen, this time a black Dodge truck. Through police investigation it was determined the truck, driven by the same suspect from the earlier incidents in Red Deer, had returned to the city. Police located the vehicle in the south end of the city and attempted a traffic stop, but the truck fled and another pursuit ensured. Charges against Waunch include attempted murder, robbery of money and jewelry using a firearm, extortion using a firearm, two counts of breaking and enter of a dwelling house and robbery, two counts of robbery with a firearm, counselling to commit an indictable offence, robbery of a vehicle using a firearm, theft of a vehicle, concealing a handgun, unlawfully using a handgun during flight from police, dangerous operation of a vehicle, kidnapping, discharging a firearm, uttering a death threat, possession of a prohibited weapon, being an occupant of a motor vehicle knowing there was a firearm in the vehicle and two counts of flight from police.
RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013 A5
Art brings an ‘intelligence’ to society: Lt.-Gov.
CENTENNIAL MOSAIC
BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF
Premier touring flooded Fort McMurray BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Installing his latest photographic mosaic project, Tim Van Horn of Red Deer hangs a 2,013 portrait work of art on his garage in Parkvale Friday. The piece will be officially unveiled today at noon. Located at 4617-46 Avenue, the new mosaic replaces another that was a Canadian flag made up of thousands of portraits. The unveiling of the mosaic coincides with the Red Deer Artwalk Festival being held Saturday at Rotary Recreation Park near the corner of 47 Ave and 44 St. For Van Horn, this Centennial mosaic is his gift to the residents of the City of Red Deer.
Health minister wants quick end to $3.2M bonus pay dispute BY THE CANADIAN PRESS EDMONTON — Alberta Health Minister Fred Horne says he wants a quick end to a dispute over $3.2 million in bonus payments to 99 health executives. “We want to bring this to a resolution as quickly as we can,” Horne said Friday at a news conference held to introduce Janet Davidson as the new administrator of Alberta Health Services. Horne conceded the dispute has become “a bit of a legal quagmire” given that the former board of Alberta Health Services, or AHS, authorized the money be paid. On Tuesday, Horne directed the 10-member board to cancel the bonuses because they were out of step with the province’s tight budget. When the board refused — citing the sanctity of signed contracts and pointing out that the money was for the fiscal year already ended —Horne fired all it members and replaced them with Davidson. He said Davidson is to give him options on the bonus payouts, but Davidson said she is still getting up to speed. “I need to really familiarize myself with all the background on this,” she said. Davidson will be paid $580,000 in her new role. She replaces the board for an indefinite period until — and if — Horne appoints a new board. Horne said that’s still up for discussion. Davidson has more than 30 years in hospital and health-care management following a career as a nurse and a worker on the front lines dealing with AIDS and malaria patients in Africa. In 2006, she was named to the Order of Canada, in part for her work helping transform the Canadian Red Cross. Horne said Davidson’s role will be helping him reorganize Alberta Health Services, but he cautioned that they will be reforming the system, not tossing everything out and starting over. “This is not an ex-
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FORT MCMURRAY — Alberta Premier Alison Redford toured the northern city of Fort McMurray on Friday and visited with volunteers filling sandbags. The stop came a day after a second neighbourhood was evacuated in the northern oilsands community. More than 400 ousted residents have registered WALMART CORRECTION NOTICE at the city’s emergency reception centre. Our flyer distributed between June 12 - 14 and effective June A local state of emer14 - 20, 2013. Page PO1: Hipstreet 9” Flare Tablet (#30524162) gency was issued for the at $98. The description is incorrect. The correct description is as area earlier this week, follows: Single Camera. after water eroded the We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused. banks of the overflowing 43905F15 Hangingstone River that runs through Fort McMurray. A flood warning has since been downgraded to a flood watch because the water is receding. Environment Canada has also ended a weather warning for the area, but forecasts warn that there Biology 20, 30 will likely be more rain Chemistry 20, 30 over the next two days. Math 10-C, 10-3, 20-1, 20-2, 20-3, 30-1, 30-2, 30-3, 31 Brad Grainger with emergency operations English 10-1, 10-2, 20-1, 20-2, 30-1, 30-2 for the Regional MuniciPhysics 20, 30 • Science 10, 14, 20, 24, 30 pality of Wood Buffalo is Social 10-1, 10-2, 20-1, 20-2, 30-1, 30-2 glad the water isn’t risTourism • Work Experience 15, 25, 35 ing. CALM (3 credits) • PHYS. ED. (3 credits) “But from a safety perJuly 2-18, 2013 • 8:00-11:45am spective and an evacuation perspective, it hasn’t for students 19 yrs. or age or younger as of changed much, just beSeptember 1, 2012. Plus cost of Books. cause the water levels Payment of Books due at time of registration. and the erosion of the $600 for students 20 yrs. of age or older as of September 1, 2012. banks are still the issue.” Plus cost of Books. Payment of Books due at time of registration. Crews have been DEADLINE TO REGISTER: working along the river htpp://communityprograms.rdpsd.ab.ca to prevent further erosion. In one area, large boulders were placed on the shore.
ercise to revamp the health-care system from the ground up. We’ve been down that road before.” Davidson said she won’t trip over the roles and responsibilities of AHS CEO Dr. Chris Eagle. “When I talk about working with Chris and giving advice as required, that does not mean getting in and running the organization. That’s not the role of governance,” said Davidson. “But that doesn’t mean governance does not have a role in providing strategic advice and strategic oversight — and that’s what I think is absolutely critically important.” AHS is an arm’s-length agency of 100,000 employees tasked by Alberta Health to deliver day-to-day care. It was created in 2008 to centralize all the work of Alberta’s then-nine health regions and three agencies. A government task force review of AHS released Wednesday by Horne makes clear that five years later, a lot of work still needs to be done.
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Alberta’s Lieutenant Governor Donald Ethell is the first to admit he’s not an artist — he leaves that to his wife, Linda, a prize-winning quilter. But all the official invitations he gets to gallery openings, music and theatre functions have left Ethell with an appreciation for arts and culture that he wishes all other Albertans shared. “I think it brings an intelligence to society,” said the retired Canadian soldier who is presenting the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Distinguished Artist Awards tonight in Red Deer. Lt.-Gov. Donald The art in question could be the aboriginal work Ethell Ethell admired at Head-SmashedIn Buffalo Jump, literature or even puppetry (tonight’s award recipients are Calgary author Aritha van Herk and the three founders of Calgary’s Old Trout Puppetry Workshop — Judd Palmer, Pityu Kenderes and Peter Balkwill). Whatever the medium, he believes art “triggers discussion, and brings out things that people should know.” While Ethell realizes that some Albertans disagree with public money going to support the arts, he believes more access to funding would help art and culture flourish in the province. He would like to tell these dissenting people, “Think of your kids . . . “You might not have an interest in art, but your children might have an interest in it,” — or could even become involved with it. Ethell has two sons in science-oriented jobs. But his granddaughter is a ballerina who has danced in New York and is now at UCLA in California. “We strongly supported our kids,” in all their endeavours, added the lieutenant governor, who’s pleased to support the Alberta arts scene though the yearly awards program that alternately recognizes up-and-coming as well as established artists with sizable cash prizes. This year, Red Deer has the honour of hosting the awards that were started in 2005 by Alberta’s former lieutenant governor, the late Lois Hole. When asked why this community was picked, Ethell doesn’t mention the Red Deer Symphony Orchestra, whose last concert he had the pleasure of attending, or the long-standing visual arts and theatre groups in the city. He admitted, “It’s your outstanding mayor. He can convince a lot of people!” Tickets to tonight’s 7 p.m. awards presentation and dessert event at the Red Deer College Arts Centre are $52.50 from the Black Knight Ticket Centre. lmichelin@reddeeradvocate.com
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Saturday, June 15, 2013
Nelson Mandela’s democratic legacy As I write this Nelson Mandela is still with us. He may even still be living at the end of this year. But this is his fourth hospitalisation in six months, and the prognosis for 94-year-old men with persistent lung infections is not good. How will South Africa do without him? Wrong question, actually. In practice, South Africa GWYNNE has been doDYER ing without him for more than a decade already – but psychologically, it is just now getting to grips with the reality that he will soon be gone entirely. For all its many faults and failures, post-apartheid South Africa is a miracle that few expected to happen. Although Mandela retired from the presidency in 1999, fourteen years later he is still seen as the man who made the magic work, and somehow the guarantor that it will go on working. If only in some vague and formless way, a great many people fear that his death will remove that safety net. Just in the past two weeks, however, the tone of the discussion has begun to change. On hearing that Nelson Mandela had been admitted to hospital yet again, Andrew Mlangeni, one of his dearest friends and once a fellow-prisoner on Robben Island, said simply: “It’s time to let him go. The family must release him, so that God may have his own way with him... Once the family releases him, the people of South Africa will follow.” That one comment opened the floodgates, for it had a strong resonance in traditional African culture, which holds that a very sick person cannot die until his family “releases” him. They have to give him “permission” to die, by reassuring him that his loved ones will be fine when he’s gone. So South Africans must now accept that they can get along without Nelson Mandela, and then he will be free to go. It’s not that everybody really believes in this tradition, but it frames the conversation in more positive and less distressing way. People can argue about whether or not South Africa is doing as well as it
INSIGHT
Photo by Advocate news services
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, talking about Nelson Mandela’s inevitable death, said last week: “The best memorial to Nelson Mandela would be a democracy that was really up and running: a democracy in which every single person in should, but they can at least agree that Mandela got the country safely through the most dangerous phase of the transition, and that they can carry on with the job of building a just and democratic society without him. Except for President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, of course. Mugabe has always deeply resented the fact that Nelson Mugabe is revered as the father of his nation while he himself is seen as a vicious tyrant who
has ruined his country. So he seized the opportunity of a recent highprofile interview on South African television to accuse Mandela of having failed in his duty to South Africa’s black majority: he had been too soft on the whites. What would have particularly annoyed Mandela, if he was well enough to watch the show, was that the interviewer was Dali Tambo, the son of his oldest and most trusted ally, the late
Oliver Tambo. As young lawyers, the two men cofounded South Africa’s first black-run legal office in 1952, and when Tambo became the president-in-exile of the African National Congress he made Mandela’s release from prison its highest priority. Dali Tambo is another kettle of fish: a flamboyant man who has traded on his family name to forge a career as a TV interviewer. He has his own soft-focus interview show, “People of the South,” and recently he persuaded Robert Mugabe to give him a two-hour interview. In the course of it, Mugabe dismissed Mandela as “too much of a saint.” “Mandela has gone a bit too far in doing good to the non-black communities, really in some cases at the expense of blacks,” the Zimbabwean dictator said. “That’s being too saintly, too good, too much of a saint.” Nonsense. What Nelson Mandela and his white negotiating partner, F.W. De Klerk, were trying to avoid in the early 1990s was a South African civil war that would have killed millions and lasted for a very long time. The 20 percent white minority were heavily armed, and they had nowhere else to go. Their families, for the most part, had been in South Africa for at least a century. Therefore, a settlement that gave South Africa a peaceful (and hopefully prosperous) democratic future had to be one in which the whites still had a future. So you either make the kind of deal that Mandela and De Klerk made, in which nobody loses too much, or you submit to a future that would make the current civil war in Syria look like a tea party. And by the way, Mugabe was making his remarks in a country whose economy has been so devastated by his “tougher” approach that fully onequarter of the population has fled abroad in search of work, mostly to South Africa. Archbishop Desmond Tutu, talking about Mandela’s inevitable death, said last week: “The best memorial to Nelson Mandela would be a democracy that was really up and running: a democracy in which every single person in South Africa knew that they mattered.” That is still some distance away, but Mandela has laid the foundations. He was the right man for the job: a saint who also understood realpolitik. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.
Grab a beverage and steam up the windows They used to rise from the towns and cities like joyful rectangular monoliths. Huge white walls looming happily over flat acres of fenced-off gravel. Evenly spaced posts dotting the landscape. And when night came, these passion pits came alive, as moving magic lantern pictures appeared, dancing images suspended in the air of the dark summer evenings. Couples in their cars busy not watching. Most people who remember Drive-In theaters miss them. Miss them in the same way we miss dance halls and Dayliners. Our own fair town, years ago, when the population was a fraction of what it is now on account of we hadn’t hit boom times yet where what we now HARLEY call a “deficit” used to be HAY called a “surplus”, we had two Drive In theaters, and one of them was a Multi. Three giant screens out on south 40th avenue. There’s a church there now, and I’m not sure what that says about drive-ins, but I’m pretty sure there’s an insightful or possibly wildly misinterpreted social message there somewhere. And for those who didn’t drive in, but happened to drive by a drive in at night when a movie was on were often treated to about 20 seconds of neckcranking, distracted-driving free movie. And if it was a particularly racy movie consisting of scenes slightly exceeding a PG rating (which for some unknown reason happened occasionally I’m told) drive by-ers would pull over to the side of the road and watch the action (on the screen) from outside the official driving theater parking lot that you had to pay to get into. The old 2/11 Drive In on the north side of town, at the turn off to the lake was surrounded by streets that were particularly clogged on nights when steamy flicks like Valley of the Dolls or Barbarella happened to be projected about 30 feet high for all to see for free. It wasn’t all that stellar for these cinema stealers of course, on account of every movie outside the gates of a drive-in was a silent movie. You had to pay at the gate for the privilege of pulling up to a post, pointing your jalopy at the big screen, rolling down the window and removing a ridiculously heavy metal box from the post. Your speaker, technically one per car, was made from some mysteriously heavy pot metal and featured a prong at the top to hang about 300 pounds of speaker (1700 kilograms) on the inside of your window which you then attempted to roll up as far as it would go without breaking the roll-up handle on your car door, or shattering your window itself. This marvel of technology — the Drive-In theater speaker — had a volume dial at the bottom and when the movie started and the speakers were switched on each and every one of them sounded exactly like a 6 inch (15 decimeter) plastic RCA transistor radio with a cracked speaker at full volume submerged in a bath tub. And there wasn’t a single drive-in theatre in history that didn’t have someone drive off with the speaker still attached to their car. Dragging a broken
HAY’S DAZE
Photo by Advocate news services
They used to rise from the towns and cities like joyful rectangular monoliths. Huge white walls looming happily over flat acres of fenced-off gravel. Evenly spaced posts dotting the landscape. And when night came, these passion pits came alive, as moving magic lantern pictures appeared, dancing images suspended in the air of the dark summer evenings. cable alongside the car for several days before somebody pointed out to the oblivious drive-in driver that there was a big grey thing attached to the inside of his window. But nobody seemed to care about things like speakers, because like I said, nobody was watching or listening anyway. We were all much too involved in deep conversation with members of the opposite gender, or if you went to the drive in with your buddies, you spent most of the time hiking over to the concession building or skulking around spying in on various cars. Especially the ones with steamed up windows. What got me thinking about those delirious drivein days was an article in the news recently that described a special drive-in theatre experience being celebrated in Paris, France, of all places. There’s a lavish 100 year old exhibition hall there called the Grand Palais (which is French for “big honkin’ palace”) and someone got the bright idea to put a drivein theatre right inside the Big Honkin’ Palace. Thing is, you don’t even have to bring your car! Not only is the huge screen there, but the Paris people also have thoughtfully provided the cars too. A whole palace full of little Fiat 500 automobiles are there for the taking, which doesn’t sound like all that much fun on account of there’s hardly any room in those tiny cars if you get my drift. And no 300 pound crackling muffled incomprehensible drive-in speaker either. The Grand Palais drive-in patrons receive wireless headphones. The wimps. Oh, and they also get a nice glass of Champaign.
Which is sort of comparable to our drive-in days when many theater-goers (I’m told) would sneak in a few beverages of their own, hidden in ingenious places in their ’58 Fords and ’63 Pontiacs. This of course, was in addition to the 17 friends that were hidden in the trunk, sneaking in without paying and who would be surreptitiously freed when it became sufficiently dark. The key to that maneuver was to park along the back rows where nobody could see what you were up to. The back rows of course, were always full. And speaking of back rows, it was a perfect place for a hearse. Our first band vehicle happened to be a 1951 Buick Hearse. It perfectly fit all the guys in the band plus our equipment (both of which were much smaller then) and it was perfect venue vehicle to house your 17 friends or perhaps seven or eight couples. But we had to park it along the back row, sideways, so the monstrosity wouldn’t block other vehicles’ view, where we could utilize about 6 speakers and the inhabitants of said hearse could sit on the pallbearer jump seats and along the coffin rails looking out the vast side windows. We’d open all the dark purple velvet curtains first of course. Now you just can’t beat that, even with a big honkin’ palace and dozens of Fiat 500s. Besides, I bet there weren’t too many steamed-up windows at the Paris Palais Drive-In. They wouldn’t want to spill their Champaign. Harley Hay is a local freelance writer, award-winning author, filmmaker and musician. His column appears on Saturdays in the Advocate. His books can be found at Chapters, Coles and Sunworks in Red Deer.
RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013 A7
Love and understanding amid the chaos It’s Tuesday afternoon, about four able to grab a coffee or a water and o’clock, and in the kitchen final prepafind a chair, but not last night. When rations are being made, while outside the door was unlocked, all the noise the people are gathering for and disorder came in the the soon-to-open door. door with them like an unSupper is served at 4:30 expected tsunami. p.m., but they have a half We are used to a lot of hour to settle in; grab a cofnoise at this time, but last fee and so on. night along with the noise There are far too many was an attitude that we young kids outside that don’t see all that often. should be in school or It was an attitude of belengaged in something conligerence, mixed with arstructive, but there they are rogance and false bravado right outside the window, brought on with the help of and they are boisterous and drugs or alcohol or mouthextra loud. wash. CHRIS Some are under the inMostly mouthwash; SALOMONS fluence which makes them there is something in it that extra loud, while others makes people irritable, stand around in groups therefore very arrogant. laughing and yelling at each On Monday, two long other, all of it adding to the chaotic time users of mouthwash — even scene on the street. though at the time they were sober Under most circumstances, this al— had seizures out on the sidewalk. most frenzied noise settles down a bit Attended to by the paramedics, they once the door is opened and they are were up and around within a half hour;
STREET TALES
off in pursuit of some more substance of some kind or another. The chaotic behaviour continued as we began to serve, and for the first time we saw drugs being dealt even when we stood within three feet of them. These people were immediately ousted and their kitchen privileges suspended for a few weeks. All of this was really starting to wear on me and those with me, so I retreated into the kitchen itself before I said or did something I would regret later. Then once I caught my breath, I went back out to the serving area where I once again would greet the different people that come to eat. Don’t get me wrong; the large majority of the people who come to eat are good, friendly and appreciative people and they make the whole effort worthwhile; it’s just that proverbial few that in any society that make it difficult. The good people are unique in that when the others are in the process of
creating chaos; these unique individuals make an extra effort to compensate in some way for the actions of the few. Last night was no exception; in the midst of the chaos created by the few, these others would make an extra effort to say thank you for the meal; they would come and shake our hands and make encouraging comments, striking up a conversation hoping in some way to take our minds off of the troublemakers. Two ladies in particular, one a diminutive bundle of laughter, and the other a street walker came up to me; gave a big hug and encouraged me to ‘keep on doing what I was doing because it was helping a lot of people’. So you see, in the midst of chaos, there are those who from a history of suffering and who still suffer, have the presence of mind to offer love and encouragement to someone who for that moment needs that very thing. It’s a beautiful thing isn’t it? Chris Salomons is kitchen co-ordinator for Potter’s Hands ministry in Red Deer.
Trudeau stumbles on learning curve He has no link to Jean Chrétien appointees or the halcyon days of the high-flying Senate under Liberal rule. But the Liberal leader has had difficulty muscling his way into the debate on the Senate spending scandal, which has largely been a battle between Opposition leader Tom Mulcair and Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Trudeau is caught in the middle, appearing to advocate something too close to the status quo to be noticed in the TIM debate. HARPER Part of this is his own making. As a neophyte leader he is still on a learning curve and at least twice in recent days he has bluntly weighed in on the scandal in interviews that have been unhelpful to him and his party. But part of his approach is his bet that principle will beat political expediency when it comes to the future of the Senate. First, the learning curve. While no one is suggesting the Liberal leader should emulate so many others in this town and tether himself to talking points, he lacks what might be called message discipline. He was far too enthusiastic about the possibility of welcoming Mac Harb back into his caucus when asked about the senator’s future last weekend by Global’s Tom Clark. Instead of showing a little caution regarding a Liberal senator who could, according to one report, eventually owe taxpayers as much as $200,000 in wrongly claimed living expenses, Trudeau said he would “absolutely” welcome him back in the fold once his little spending misunderstanding was resolved. The answer was a mistake and although likely to be forgotten in the long run, in the short run, it knocked the Liberals off their game in the Commons on the Nigel Wright-Mike Duffy affair and clearly caused discomfort in his caucus.
INSIGHT
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
As a neophyte leader, Just Trudeau is still on a learning curve and at least twice in recent days he has bluntly weighed in on the scandal in interviews that have been unhelpful to him and his party. Tuesday, upon his return to the Commons, Trudeau amended his Harb analysis — “If he’s innocent, he is in. If he’s guilty, he is out.’’ Trudeau also says he was just stating facts when he told La Presse “we” (Quebec) had 24 senators from that province compared to six each from Alberta and British Columbia, so “it’s to our advantage. To want to abolish it is demagoguery. We’ll have to improve it.’’ It was a statement of fact, but it was a statement that an experienced politician would have known would have backfired in the West, as it did. Trudeau is prone to verbal meandering, something that led to his widely parsed “root causes” of terrorism remark in the hours following the Boston Marathon bombing. Senior Liberals are certain Trudeau will learn, and are taking solace in the fact he is learning now, not a week after the election campaign begins. Trudeau, however, needs to be more clear in belling NDP Leader Tom Muclair, who is preaching the half-century old party doctrine of “abolish, abolish, abolish” when it comes to the Senate, introducing motions to starve the Senate of its funding and riding a wave of public disgust with the spending irregularities in the Red Chamber. Liberals maintain Mulcair, as a Quebec MP, knows he would never be able to abolish the Senate. It is Quebec, as Trudeau has pointed out, that is disproportionately represented in the Senate and
would be disproportionately hurt by its abolition. When Mulcair shouts “abolish,’’ Canadians should hear “constitutional debate,’’ Liberals maintain. Trudeau, they say, is staying true to his promise of not inflicting another divisive constitutional debate on Canadians. Those preaching wholesale Senate reform as a response to Wight-Duffy scandal are “pandering,’’ Trudeau says, because “they know, or ought to know,” how withering the constitutional debate on the way to reform would be. Abolition would hurt Canadians from Ontario eastward, Trudeau says. An elected Senate would hurt the underrepresented West. Opening the Constitution to do either would hurt the country as a whole, he says. Trudeau would take the appointment of senators out of the patronage realm and give a group of Canadians “of good repute” the task of compiling a list of worthy Senate candidates from which the prime minister could choose. That’s not the status quo, but it is awfully close. Trudeau is correct to point out the constitutional perils of Senate reform. That is the messy part of abolition, the shiny object now drawing everyone to its light. But sometimes, rightly or wrongly, political expediency wins the day. As he continues along his learning curve, the temptation to play the expedient game will be tough for Trudeau to resist. Tim Harper is a national affairs writer.
How a national drug plan would benefit Canada BY MARC-ANDRE GAGNON TROY MEDIA Canada is one of the world’s most expensive countries when it comes to prescription drugs. Per capita, prescription drug costs are on average 50 per cent higher in Canada and had the fastest yearly growth in the last decade than in other developed countries. Why is this the case? Canada is one of the rare developed countries in the world without universal pharmacare, and we are the only country in the world with a universal medicare system that excludes prescription drugs (as if pharmaceuticals are not an essential element of medical treatment). A staggering 10 per cent of Canadians each year cannot fill a prescription due to financial reasons. Canadians understand the gaps in our current system and want them addressed. An EKOS poll released recently shows that 78 per cent of Canadians support the implementation of a universal pharmacare program. Last week, economist Yanick Labrie from the Montreal Economic Institute criticized a conference I co-hosted on universal pharmacare in Ottawa, and published the report, “Wrong Prescription” against cost-containment measures for prescription drugs. Labrie argues that a national drug plan would be bad for Canadians because it would reduce drug costs, thus reducing spending in research and development for new drugs and increase drug shortages. Private drug plans are touted as solutions because they offer more “generous” coverage. Labrie should have attended the conference because he would have heard each of these arguments discussed and refuted in turn. More than 80 per cent of new drugs entering the market today do not represent any therapeutic advance com-
Photo by Advocate news services
Canada is one of the rare developed countries in the world without universal pharmacare, and we are the only country in the world with a universal medicare system that excludes prescription drugs. pared to existing, cheaper drugs. If we have drug plans reimbursing any new drug, whatever the cost, and even when there are cheaper, equivalent drugs available, do we really provide incentives for drug companies to invest in breakthrough innovation? In fact the opposite occurs: we give them a huge incentive to bring to market reformulations of existing products. The pharmacy benefit management company Express Script Canada estimates that private drug plans waste $5.3 billion in reimbursements for drugs that do not provide any additional therapeutic benefits compared to existing formulations. This amount represents 56 per cent of total money spent by private drug
plans. At our conference, an executive from Great-West Life explained that, in their current form, private drug plans are not sustainable. However, it is these wasteful, inefficient and unsustainable drug plans that are touted as the main solution by the Montreal Economic Institute. In contrast, the universal pharmacare system in the United Kingdom employs market forces in an ingenious way. Through value-based pricing, drug companies get paid according to how much they improve the health outcomes of the population. This creates formidable market incentives for drug companies to focus on therapeutic innovation instead of lavish promotion and copycat drugs.
But would a bulk-purchasing agency for generics create more drug shortages because of lower prices, as Labrie argues? Canada is one of the world’s most expensive countries for generics and we pay, on average, twice as much for the same generic drug in Canada as the United States. Following Labrie’s logic, because we pay more Canada should be less afflicted by drug shortages than countries with universal pharmacare and bulk-purchasing capacities. In fact, we observe exactly the opposite pattern. Countries that have introduced bulk-purchasing powers use their buying clout to make sure tenders on specific drugs include clauses to avoid the possibility of drug shortages. In an era of global mergers and acquisitions and growing concentration among generic manufacturers, bulkpurchasing is another smart way to use market forces to decrease costs and ensure stable supply. When it comes to prescription drugs, Canada’s current system is plagued by massive waste, massive costs and plenty of people unable to afford their drugs. Universal pharmacare does not mean an “open bar” for everybody, it means leveraging buying power and using market forces in order to contain drug costs, achieve sustainability and improve the health outcomes of the population. Economist Bob Evans recently described the main obstacle for the implementation of universal pharmacare in Canada: “Anyone’s spending is somebody else’s income. Universal pharmacare could save billions to Canadians, so there are powerful corporate interests that will do everything they can to make sure it does not happen.” Marc-André Gagnon is an expert advisor with EvidenceNetwork.ca and assistant professor with the school of public policy and administration, Carleton University.
A8 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
Presidential election offers window into Iran BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Iranian women cast their ballots for the presidential election, in a polling station in Tehran, Iran, Friday. clear envoy, Hasan Rowhani. A preliminary sampling of results from around Iran suggested Rowhani’s appeal was broad in cities and rural areas, although the tally was too small to draw clear trends, officials handling the ballot count told The Associated Press. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief media. But even if the last-moment surge around Rowhani brings him to the presidency, it would be more of a limited victory than a deep shake-up. Iran’s establishment — a tight alliance of the ruling clerics and the ultra-powerful Revolutionary Guard — still holds
all the effective power and sets the agenda on all major decisions such as Iran’s nuclear program and its dealings with the West. Security forces also are in firm control after waves of arrests and relentless pressures since the last presidential election in 2009, which unleashed massive protests over claims the outcome was rigged to keep the combative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in power for a second and final term. He is barred from seeking a third consecutive run. The greater comfort level by the theocracy and Revolutionary Guard sets a different tone this time. Opposition groups appear too intimidated and
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Gunman in U.S. shooting a Somali immigrant with anger after divorce BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ST. LOUIS — A businessman who killed three employees in Missouri before turning the gun on himself was a Somali immigrant, described by friends as an intelligent man who was quick to reach out to other new-arriving Somalis, but who had lingering anger years after the divorce from his first wife. Police say 59-year-old Ahmed Dirir walked into his business, AK Home Health Care LLC, on Thursday afternoon, got into a brief argument, and then shot his three employees. Killed were 44-year-old Khadra Muse, 29-yearold Seaeed Abdulla and 54-year-old
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Bernice Solomon-Redd. Dirir, Muse and Abdulla were all from Somalia, said Omar Jamal of the Somali mission to the UN Jamal, who often gets involved in issues of high interest involving Somalis in the U.S., said he spoke with several friends and relatives of Dirir and the victims, including the wives of Dirir and Abdulla. The home health agency was headquartered in a small business incubator building in a revitalizing mixedrace neighbourhood south of downtown St. Louis. Police Capt. Michael Sack said Dirir used a semi-automatic handgun. Video surveillance showed what appeared to be a verbal dispute, followed a short time later by shots.
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TEHRAN, Iran — Reform-minded Iranians who have faced years of crackdowns looked Friday to claw back a bit of ground in a presidential election that gave them an unexpected hero and a chance to upend a vote that once appeared solidly in the hands of Tehran’s ruling clerics. While Iran’s presidential elections offer a window into the political pecking orders and security grip inside the country — particularly since the chaos from a disputed outcome in 2009 — they lack the drama of truly high stakes as the country’s ruling clerics and their military guardians remain the ultimate powers. Election officials began the ballot count after voters waited on line for hours in wilting heat at some polling stations in downtown Tehran and other cities, while others cast ballots across the vast country from desert outposts to Gulf seaports and nomad pastures. Voting was extended by five hours to meet demand, but also as possible political stagecraft to showcase the participation. The apparent strong turnout suggested liberals and others abandoned a planned boycott as the election was transformed into a showdown across the Islamic Republic’s political divide. On one side were hard-liners looking to cement their control behind candidates such as nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili, who says he is “100 per cent” against detente with Iran’s foes, or Tehran’s mayor, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf. Opposing them were reformists and others rallying behind the “purple wave” campaign of the lone relative moderate left in the race, a former nu-
fragmented to revive street demonstrations, and even a win by Rowhani — the only cleric in the race — would not likely be perceived as a threat to the ruling structure. Rowhani led the influential Supreme National Security Council and was given the highly sensitive nuclear envoy role in 2003, a year after Iran’s 20-year-old atomic program was revealed. “Rowhani is not an outsider and any gains by him does not mean the system is weak or that there are serious cracks,” said Rasool Nafisi, an Iranian affairs analyst at Strayer University in Virginia. “The ruling system has made sure that no one on the ballot is going to shake things up.” Yet a Rowhani victory would not be entirely without significance either. It would make room for more moderate voices in Iranian political dialogue and display their resilience. It also would bring onto the world stage an Iranian president who has publicly endorsed more outreach rather than bombast toward the West. The last campaign events for Rowhani carried chants that had been bottled up for years. Some supporters called for the release of political prisoners including opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mahdi Karroubi, both candidates in 2009 and now under house arrest. “Long live reforms,” some cried at Rowhani’s last rally. The rally was awash in purple banners and scarves — the campaign’s signature hue in a nod to the single-colour identity of Mousavi’s Green Movement. “My mother and I both voted for Rowhani,” said Saeed Joorabchi, a university student in geography, after casting ballots at a mosque in west Tehran.
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TRAVEL
» SEE MORE ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM SPORTS ◆ B4 Saturday, June 15, 2013
Fax 403-341-6560 editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
Life as a cadet DEBBIE OLSEN TRIES HER HAND AT TRAINING TO BE AN RCMP OFFICER AND ENDS UP DOING A LOT OF PUSH-UPS
Photos by DEBBIE OLSEN/Freelance
Top: A cadet troop demonstrating proper marching technique. Marching properly is harder than it looks. Until a troop learns to march properly, they have to shuffle around the base doing “double time.” It’s a big motivator to learn to march properly. Above: Our drill instructor said that “push-ups are not part of Drill Hall instruction, they are part of screwups.” Let’s just say that I did a lot of push-ups. Right: This is a shot of me in my cadet uniform. One of my fellow troop members stated that she was hot in her uniform. I think she was referring to her body temperature, because none of us felt very attractive. We did look official, though.
TRAVEL
couple of days and I managed to score a spot in the group. As I check into Depot, my home for the next two days, I receive a blue duffle bag with a pair of snug fitting navy pants, a cadet uniform shirt, cotton gym shorts, a white T-shirt and a karategi for mixed martial arts training. We have only a few minutes to settle into our room before we are due at our first class — Simulation and Judgmental Training. Simulators are some of the latest technology in police training and that is what our first class is all about. Using actual police encounters, computer programs lead cadets through situations where deadly force may be warranted. There are also simulators designed to teach techniques for defensive driving and high-speed chase situations. As I buckle myself into the driving simulator, Corporal Blaine Landry explains the purpose of the exercise. “You are not here to learn how to drive,” he explains. “You are here to learn how to drive like an officer.” I try three different driving simulations and do well until I reach the fourth
and most difficult scenario involving a high speed driving situation. Things are going well until I hit an unfortunate pedestrian, spin out and disable the vehicle. Corporal Landry raises a disapproving eyebrow and I realize that I will need a few more lessons before I will be able to drive like an officer. The next simulator relates to the use of deadly force. Corporal Landry explains that these simulators give cadets a feel for what it is like to use handguns, pepper spray and other weapons in simulated situations long before they have to use such devices in real life. More importantly, they can practice various techniques for defusing a situation before it becomes deadly. I am standing beside Corporal Landry when he asks for volunteers, so naturally I am the first up. Turns out I am actually pretty good at the firearms simulator — when it is set at the easiest level.
Please see CADET on Page B2
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hings are not starting off well. I am heading to the RCMP Training Depot in Regina, Sask., to live the life of a cadet for a couple of days and I just stole a pair of socks. The instructions in my cadet package clearly say I need navy socks to go with the cadet uniform and since I couldn’t find any of my own, I took my husband’s blue dress socks. It was more of a “borrowing DEBBIE without permission” situaOLSEN tion if you want to be technical about it. I plan to return them later — if I don’t ruin them at boot camp. A small group of travel writers has been invited to experience the life of an RCMP cadet for a
B2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
Photos by DEBBIE OLSEN/freelance
Top Left: Yolanda Iolanda sews a red serge uniform. Yolanda is one of seven custom tailors who tailor uniforms for the recruits across Canada. The seven custom tailors work on red uniforms, while the seven general tailors work on the blue uniforms. Above: The oldest still standing building in the City of Regina is the Depot Chapel. It was built in 1885 and is the place where troops graduate. Left: A group of cadets demonstrates proper troop formation in front of one of the historic buildings at the RCMP Training Depot.
CADET: Maintaining composure tough
changing out of my cadet uniform and into my karategi for Police Defensive Tactics Class that I realize that none of the drill instructors bothered to look at my newly acquired navy socks.
freelance writer. If you have a travel story you would like to share or know someone with an interesting travel story who we might interview, please email: DOGO@ telusplanet.net or write to: Debbie Olsen,
c/o Red Deer Advocate, 2950 Bremner Ave., Red Deer, Alta., T4R 1M9.
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● Visitors to Regina are welcome to After a good dinner in the mess hall tour the RCMP Heritage Centre Musewith the other cadets, we have a tour um and to watch the Sergeant Major’s of the base led by an actual cadet in parade, the Sunset Parade and attend training and go back to the dorms to special events as scheduled throughiron our shirts for Drill Hall the next out the year. Touring the museum will morning. I have never been so highly cost $10 per adult or $30 per family. motivated to iron. If the drill sergeants At the museum, you can try on a real find wrinkles in your uniform or hairs police uniform – without having to go out of place on your head, it could through boot camp. mean push-ups for the entire troop. ● If you would like to experience Getting up with the sun has never life as a cadet at the RCMP Training been easy for me and when the alarm Depot, you might be interested in a goes off, I try to figure out where the new program called “Send Your Boss fire is. Our second day at depot is a to Boot Camp.” Used as a fundraiser busy one. We have Drill Class, Police to support the RCMP Heritage Centre, Defensive Tactics, Applied Police Sci- the program allows companies and inences, Fitness and Advanced Driving dividuals to raise money to send their on the schedule. boss, husband, wife or friend to RCMP To begin the day, we practice boot camp to live the life of a cadet for marching. Then we practice more a couple of days. In the first ever Boss marching. Then we follow that up with Boot Camp, a minimum fundraising some double-time marching. It turns effort of $2,500 was required in order out marching is not as easy as it looks. to participate. For more information I have a new appreciation of the skill on Boss Boot Camp experiences or to required as I watch the troops in the find out more about the museum, visit: morning parade. www.rcmpheritagecentre.com. Breakfast is really delicious, but we only have about 15 minutes to eat it before drill class begins. Once we are in the drill hall, we line up from tallest to shortest for inspection. “When you The RCare standing at attention there are four M P h a v e TRAVEL WITH things you are allowed to do,” explains one of the Corporal Penny Hermann in a loud top training FRONTIER commanding voice. “You can breathe, facilities in RIVERCREE CASINO blink, shiver and sweat. If you do any- t h e w o r l d EDMONTON thing else, you will be paying for it. and use the Tuesday, July 2 Push-ups are not part of Drill, they are latest techRIDE THE CASINO ADVENTURE BUS part of screw-ups.” n i q u e s i n PAY FOR 5 CASINO DAY TRIPS, 6TH TRIP IS FREE! I knew right then that I would be do- police train- Calgary Stampede ing a lot of push-ups. ing. Police July 9th Standing at attention and march- forces from $ $ ing properly were difficult skills to around the Reserved 103 pp Rush 48 pp Departs Red Deer Arena 9:00 am learn, but the hardest part of drill hall world visit was keeping your composure when Depot Divi- PASSION PLAY DRUMHELLER the drill instructors were boisterously sion includSat. July 20 Inc. Show/Supper yelling at the troop. I couldn’t help but ing repre$ smile when a fellow troop member got s e n t a t i v e s Depart 12 Noon south of Denny’s 115 pp in trouble for wearing a friendship from Russia, JUBILATIONS THEATRE bracelet and earrings with her regula- China, Spain EDMONTON tion uniform. a n d e v e n “Johnny Be Goode” A RockNRoll Good Time When it was over, the Drill Sergeant the famous Sun. July 28 $ explained that the purpose of Drill LAPD from Depart RD arena 1 pm 95 pp Hall is to teach recruits the impor- the USA. BELUGA WHALE TOUR tance of projecting a certain image Debbie OlCHURCHILL MB and keeping their wits about the even sen is a LaAug. 9-18 when people are yelling at them. “We combe-based Details on website or call for info are trying to teach recruits BRANSON/MEMPHIS/ to have discipline and Escorted Motorcoach Tours NASHVILLE FALL TOUR composure even in diffiSept. 6-23/13 ALASKA cult situations,” explains Call or visit our website for details MIDNIGHT SUN Sergeant Andre Clemente Includes Inside Passage Cruise! SPRUCE MEADOWS when class is over. “We 19 days, June 24 guaranteed MASTERS don’t swear. We don’t beBRITISH COLUMBIA Sat. Sept. 7 little recruits. Laughter BEST $ is what we deal with most Reserved 90 pp Rush $48 pp Victoria, a cruise & train ride! often and after enough 10 days, July 24 guaranteed MINOT NORSK push-ups they learn to get MARITIMES HOSTFEST it under control.” Sept. 30 - Oct. 6 BY MOTORCOACH By the time I leave Drill Several Tours to Choose From! Call for Details Hall, I have done more push-ups in a single day NAGELTOURS www.nageltours.com than I have done in the entire year previous. It is on36 Years of Service! 403-347-4990 ly 10 am and I am already Call Your Travel Agent or Toll Free 1-888-Let-S-Bus tired. It is not until I am www.frontierbuslines.com 1-800-562-9999 43738F15
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STORIES FROM PAGE B1
RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013 B3
Some alternatives to pricey Alaska cruise shore excursions JUNEAU, Alaska — It’s cruise season in Alaska, with more than 1 million cruise passengers expected between April and September in port towns from Ketchikan to Seward. Cruise passengers who sign up for shore excursions can spend hundreds of dollars, if not more in the case of families, in each port they visit. Taking a helicopter to see Juneau-area ice fields can easily run $1,000 for a family of four for a one-hour trip. A nature tour near the tiny town of Ketchikan can run $89 for adults and $50 for kids. But there are many low-cost and even free things to do in Alaska port towns, from hiking to exploring glaciers to learning about Alaska and Native culture. Here are some ideas from some of Alaska’s most visited ports. Just remember: Your ship won’t wait for you if you run late from an outing you’ve organized on your own, so allow plenty of time to get back to port for your ship departure. KETCHIKAN This southeast Alaska town is now known more for tourism than for its once-thriving timber industry. But timber workers’ skills can still be admired at the Great Alaskan Lumberjack Show, $35 (kids 3-12, $17.50) plus tax. Historic Creek Street, once a red-light district, now houses shops, galleries, restaurants and Dolly’s House Museum, former home of madam Dolly Arthur, where visitors can learn about Ketchikan’s bawdy past for a $5 admission. Off Creek Street along Married Man’s Trail, you can catch the salmon running in the creek from mid-July into September. Free downtown shuttle buses stop near the docks. SITKA A must-see in this stunning town is the Sitka National Historical Park. A national monument, it commemorates the 1804 Battle of Sitka between the Tlingit Indians and Russians. To-
tems — many of them replicas — are scattered along the park’s two-mile (3.2-kilometre) wooded trail. There’s also a visitor centre, where you can see Native artists working, and the Russian Bishop’s House, which the park service says is one of the last surviving examples of Russian colonial architecture in North America. The house tour is $4 (free for kids under 16). JUNEAU Alaska’s capital has a walkable downtown with museums, shops, easy access to trails and the state capitol, which offers free tours. The popular three-mile (4.8-kilometre) Perseverance Trail is within walking distance from the port, though it requires a jaunt up steep streets. The trail, which forms a spine for a network of trails, features scattered exhibits on the region’s mining history, along with stunning views of rushing water, waterfalls and mountains. You’ll likely see birds — possibly a bald eagle — and maybe even a mountain goat, black bear or porcupine. The trail is steep and narrow in sections and can be hot in the sun, so bring water. Hikers also can try the Mount Roberts Trail, though it’s an uphill trudge, muddy and mucky in spots. You can take the Mount Roberts Tram down for $10, or $31 round-trip (kids 6-12, $15.50). Another popular destination is Mendenhall Glacier, reachable by bus. The $16 roundtrip rides, offered by MGT Blue Glacier Express, run every halfhour, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. most days during the summer season. Hikes near the glacier include an easy stroll to Nugget Falls. SEWARD Seward is a final stop for some Alaska cruises, and many disembarking passengers head straight to Anchorage, 110 miles (177 kilometres) away, by bus or train. But there are plenty of reasons to spend a day or more here. A free shuttle runs every day in summer, taking people along a circuit from the cruise ship terminal to the chamber of commerce office to downtown. If you have time, rent a car or hire
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†Book by June 20, 2013. Round-trip from Calgary. Price is per guest, based on double occupancy unless otherwise specified. Advertised fares are based on non-stop flights unless otherwise specified. Taxes and fees not included. Taxes for U.S., Mexico and Caribbean destinations can fluctuate based on exchange rate. Transfers not included unless otherwise specified. Advance booking required. Non-refundable. Offer limited and subject to availability. Price is accurate at time of printing deadline. New bookings only. *Tours with Insight Vacations, prices reflect Land Only costs, for full details contact an AMA Travel counsellor. All prices are for new bookings only, per person (accommodation based on double occupancy) in Canadian funds and do not include taxes and fees unless otherwise stated. Round-trip from Calgary. Prices quoted are valid for specific dates only and subject to change based on availability at time of booking. Other conditions apply, ask for details. Most advertised prices can be booked online with no booking fee. Booking fees apply to in-centre and phone bookings. For Cruise product: Additional AMA Member benefits available such as onboard spending credits, specialty dining or member benefit savings on select sailings. Ask your AMA Cruise Specialist for details. *CAA, CAA Logo and CAA Dollars trademarks are owned by Get $100 FREE towards your vacation when you apply for, and use is granted by the Canadian Automobile Association. ®* MasterCard is a registered trademark of MasterCard are approved and spend $100 on your new CAA MasterCard®*. International Incorporated and is used pursuant to license. Plus, get a $20 gift just for applying. Visit your nearest AMA Centre today! Conditions apply. Ask for details.
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restaurants and cafes, a hot dog stand when lots of people are in town and a museum. Several fantastic hikes can be done in two or three hours. The Horsetail Falls hike doesn’t disappoint, and offers views of waterfalls above the tree line. The Portage Pass hike affords views of Portage Glacier.
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purpose. The Army saw Whittier’s almost constant cloud cover as a perfect way to hide an almost ice-free port. The Army left in 1960, and most of the town’s 180 year-round residents live in one of two former garrisons converted to condos. There are a couple of souvenir shops, a few
The Anabella Hotel +++½ June 23, 24 & 26 – 4 Nights
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spend in town before departure. Also this year, one company is making a port call here every other Monday, giving passengers a chance to look around town. It’s probably unlike any other they’ve seen. Whittier is the gateway to the fjords of Prince William Sound, but the U.S. Army saw another
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a taxi to take you a few miles (kilometres) outside town to Exit Glacier, located within Kenai Fjords National Park, for spectacular up-close views of the glacier. The downtown historic area offers shops, cafes, the Seward Community Library and Museum in a new building, and the Alaska SeaLife Center, which is Alaska’s only aquarium ($20; $15 for ages 12-17, $15; $10 for 4-11). Chamber officials don’t recommend hiking the city’s famed Mount Marathon, site of an annual July 4 mad scramble up and down the 3,022-foot mountain. A runner disappeared during last year’s race and several were injured. Instead, if you want to hike, try Jeep Trail. Locals say it’s not too strenuous, and offers a view of the Anchorage Bowl. WHITTIER Chances are you won’t spend much time in Whittier. Chamber officials say 90 per cent of cruise passengers leaving their ships immediately head to Anchorage, about 40 miles (64 kilometres) north. But passengers beginning their Alaska cruises here arrive about 1 p.m. and have a few hours to
It’s a holiday...
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9 days - Oct 19 $469.00 Includes: 4 nights in Laughlin, 2 in Wendover, 2 in Helena, 7 meals, $14 Slot Play & side tours
File photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Hot dog vendors, or in this case reindeer dog vendors, set up in downtown Anchorage, Alaska. There’s plenty of cultural, historical and fun activities to do in Anchorage for cruise ship passengers who don’t want to pay for expensive excursions.
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BY BECKY BOHRER AND MARK THIESSEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Saturday, June 15, 2013
Greg Meachem, Sports Editor, 403-314-4363 Sports line 403-343-2244 Fax 403-341-6560 sports@reddeeradvocate.com
Merion stumps players JOSE REYES
REYES IMPROVING ARLINGTON, Texas — Blue Jays shortstop Jose Reyes played in a simulated game Friday and may start a rehab assignment next week. Reyes played two innings and had three plate appearances at Toronto’s minor league complex in Dunedin, Fla., and manager John Gibbons said Reyes also did some sliding drills afterward. The four-time All-Star sprained his left ankle April 12 sliding into second on a stolen base attempt. Gibbons said Reyes could start a rehab assignment Monday in Dunedin. In his first season with Toronto, Reyes is hitting .395 with five RBIs and five stolen bases.
TODAY
● Rodeo: Innisfail Pro Rodeo, performances at 1:30 p.m. and 6:45 p.m., Daines Ranch. ● Peewee AAA baseball: Fort McMurray at Red Deer, doubleheader at 3 and 6 p.m., West Park diamond. ● Junior B tier 2 lacrosse: Strathmore at Innisfail, 7 p.m.
SUNDAY
● Peewee AAA baseball: Fort McMurray at Red Deer, 10 a.m.; Edmonton Cardinals at Red Deer, 1 p.m., both games at West Park diamond. ● Midget AAA baseball: St. Albert at Red Deer, doubleheader at noon and 3 p.m., Great Chief Park. ● Parkland baseball: Acme at Lacombe, doubleheader starting at 1 p.m. ● Rodeo: Innisfail Pro Rodeo, 1:30 p.m., Daines Ranch. ● Junior B tier 2 lacrosse: Okotoks at Innisfail, 3 p.m.
GIVE US A CALL The Advocate invites its readers to help cover the sporting news in Central Alberta. We would like to hear from you if you see something worthy of coverage. And we would appreciate hearing from you if you see something inaccurate in our pages. We strive for complete, accurate coverage of Central Alberta and are happy to correct any errors we may commit. Call 403-343-2244 with information and results, or email to sports@ reddeeradvocate.com.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARDMORE, Pa. — Phil Mickelson made his first birdie on his last putt. Billy Horschel never missed a green. It was all they could do to barely break par against Merion, which is turning out to be the real star of this U.S. Open. Nearly half the field did not finish the second round when it was suspended by darkness. Moments after the horn sounded to stop play, Mickelson opted to finish his round and drilled a 20-foot birdie putt for a 2-over 72. That gave him a share of the clubhouse lead with Horschel, who made it as easy as possible by hitting every green in regulation for a 67. They were at 1-under 139. Even with the round not finished, it was becoming clear that this U.S. Open might be up for grabs until the very end. Tiger Woods, who grimaced with every shot out of the rough because of pain in his left elbow, was at 3-over 143 and still very much in the game. “I don’t know how anyone is going to separate too far from the field,” Mickelson said. “There might be a hot round tomorrow, and they might get a hot round on Sunday, but unlikely to be the same player.” No one was hotter than Horschel, playing in his first U.S. Open since he was a 19-year-old in college. Nothing is tougher than Merion, the little course in the tony suburbs of Philadelphia that even in rain-softened conditions is showing plenty of might. And to think there was chatter at the start of the week
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Phil Mickelson reacts after his birdie putt on the 18th hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Merion Golf Club, Friday in Ardmore, Pa. about the potential for the first 62 in major championship history. “Perhaps next time you guys will believe when we say it’s really not that easy, that it’s really not that easy,” Geoff Ogilvy said after a 70.
That put him at 4-over 144, which gave him and dozens of others a legitimate shot going into the weekend. Luke Donald (72), Justin Rose (69) and Steve Stricker (69) were at even-par 140.
The surprise were a pair of amateurs — Michael Kim of Cal and Cheng-Tsung Pan of Taiwan. They were 2 under for their round and among those who didn’t finish. Mike Weir of Brights
Grove, Ont., is 5 over through 10 holes. His second round included a birdie, two bogeys, and a double-bogey before play was halted.
Please see GOLF on Page B5
STANLEY CUP
Crawford, Rask finally earning recognition THE CANADIAN PRESS CHICAGO — Corey Crawford has never been considered an elite goaltender. Even as the Chicago Blackhawks dominated the NHL this season, he wasn’t the centre of attention on a team featuring Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane. Tuukka Rask was in net when the Boston Bruins blew a 3-0 series lead to the Philadelphia Flyers in 2010 and then had a great seat on the bench a year later when Tim Thomas led them to a Stanley Cup. With Thomas gone, the starting job was his. Now the young goalies are across the ice from each other in the Cup final, and in the spotlight, getting the kind of attention usually reserved for the best in the world. “Right now we have
a battle of two goaltenders that are at the peak of their game,” Bruins coach Claude Julien said. It’s particularly a remarkable ascent for Crawford, who was once considered a weak link on the Blackhawks’ talented roster. During the regular season he was tied for third in the NHL with a 1.94 goals-against average and tied for fifth with a .926 save percentage as the Blackhawks captured the Presidents’ Trophy. In the playoffs his numbers are even better (1.73 and .936), and he’s a major reason why Chicago is here, up 1-0 on the Bruins. “Obviously having a good goaltender can give the whole team a lot of confidence,” defenceman Duncan Keith said. “He’s been great all playoffs and all season long. He definitely gives
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
In this photo taken Wednesday, June 12, 2013, Chicago Blackhawks goalie Corey Crawford makes a save against the Boston Bruins in Chicago. Crawford has never been considered an elite goaltender. Now the young goalies are across the ice from each other in the Cup final and in the spotlight, getting the kind of attention usually reserved for the best in the world. us that confidence, and it’s nice to see him get some recognition.” Recognition starts with Crawford being respected as one of the better goalies in the league. But it doesn’t end there. Now there is some buzz about Crawford being an option for Canada’s Olympic team in Sochi in 2014, given the uncertainty surrounding the position and his strong performance this
spring. There are lingering questions about Carey Price, Roberto Luongo, Cam Ward, Marc-Andre Fleury and others, but the fact that Crawford is even being touted as a possibility for Canada makes Toews happy. “I certainly think he deserves it,” said Toews, who helped lift Canada to a gold medal at the 2010 Games in Vancouver. “I feel like, to get to
that level, you need to have some sort of name in the media and have people know who you are. If they didn’t really before, I think everyone knows who Corey Crawford is now and the influence and the effect he’s had on our team all season and in this Cup run that we’ve had.”
See NHL on Page B5
GM Feaster says Flames “have to win” at draft, in free agency THE CANADIAN PRESS CALGARY — It’s a pivotal month for the Calgary Flames. General manager Jay Feaster has three firstround selections among his nine at the NHL entry draft June 30 in Newark, N.J. According to capgeek. com, Calgary currently has about $19 million in cap space — $5.8 million more if goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff retires — to work with when un-
restricted free agency opens July 5. The Flames have not made the playoffs in four years, so there is considerable pressure on Feaster to maximize these opportunities and turn the team around. “I don’t know that it’s feeling the pressure as much as it is recognizing the importance of it,” Feaster said Friday at Scotiabank Saddledome. “The importance of this draft is not lost on the organization and it certainly isn’t lost on the
management of the organization.” Calgary has the tools and the motivation to be a mover and a shaker both at the draft and in free agency. Other than the two teams currently involved in the Stanley Cup final, competition between NHL clubs moves off the ice into scouting and negotiations. It’s no less intense, says Feaster. “There’s no question it’s big-time competition off the ice,” Feaster said. “Yes, as a franchise, we
have to win. “I feel very good about our preparedness level.” Calgary has the No. 6 pick via the draft lottery as well as No. 22 and No. 28 from trading Jarome Iginla to Pittsburgh and Jay Bouwmeester to St. Louis this past season. “We have had extensive conversations with teams about moving up into the top five in the draft,” Feaster said. “We at least know which teams are willing to do something and if they are, what it would take to
do that, and also which teams are not willing to do that. “The one thing I believe with the pick at six, we want to get a player who has the opportunity to come in here right now and compete for a job. We really like this draft. We think at 22 and 28, we’re going to be happy with the players who are still on the board.” This will be Feaster’s third draft as GM of the Flames.
See FLAMES on Page B5
RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013 B5
Daines family enjoys success BY DIANNE FINSTAD SPECIAL TO THE ADVOCATE The Daines family has a proud history in the sport of rodeo, and patriarch Jack Daines was bursting with pride Friday night after a stellar, if surprising, double header of family success in the second performance of the Innisfail Pro Rodeo. His nephew Denver kicked it off in the saddle bronc riding when he nodded his head and spurred like the wind, to move out in front by half a point. The 82.5 mar came with the assistance of a horse called Devils Who. Daines made the Canadian Finals last November, largely on his big Ponoka Stampede championship. But he’d only been on one bronc this spring, busy with his work as a personal trainer, and with his blossoming music career. But he couldn’t pass up his hometown show, and it looked like a wise decision after the classy ride. “I worked out hard, but I didn’t think riding eight seconds was that hard again,” puffed Daines, moments after receiving the $100 bonus cheque for high mark of the night. “I think it’s the adrenaline and everything else going on. I feel good, though.” “I had a tough beginning of the year with music and everything. I haven’t had a chance to get on many. I just really wanted to come here and show everyone I could still ride, and I’m still a cowboy – I haven’t faded out yet. I’m just glad to be here, especially at my hometown rodeo, and to come out on top makes a guy feel good.” Between developing his music career and his work, and still wanting to ride broncs, Daines finds himself with divided loyalties. “It’s a lifestyle someone could only dream of, but I’m torn between the two. I go where I can, and I ride as hard as I can, but it’s hard not to put your whole heart and soul into everything. I’m trying to do both. It’s fun and I love it to death, but it’s challenging,” he admitted. Daines will put away his bronc saddle and tune up his guitar to entertain at the rodeo dance at the Ranch tonight.
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate
Denver Daines of Innisfail puts in a winning ride Friday in the saddle bronc event at the 53rd Annual Daines Ranch Professional Rodeo. Then a few events after the bronc riding Friday night, Cheryl Daines, Duane’s wife and Jack’s daughter-in-law, came blazing into the arena in the barrel racing, and took over top spot in that evening with a time of 15.640 seconds. She hadn’t been competing much this spring, so was shocked at her success. “Flame is the story,” the school teacher from Innisfail. “He’s just an amazing horse and it doesn’t seem to matter who gets on him. He fires, and he’s phenomenal.” “I actually went to Camrose (in March) and knocked a barrel to win it. My daughter Sydney has been high school rodeoing with him. He’s our only barrel horse, so she gets precedence with him. I thought I should enter our hometown rodeo, though, and so far it’s really worked out good.” The nine-year-old sorrel was revved up before the run, with some loud motorcycles going up and down the road behind the ranch attracting his attention. “He just went crazy. He’s really spooky. He’s just a lot of horse. He’s scared of flags, he’s scared of cows.
I was worried because he was so scared of the motorcycles, just before my run. But that’s what’s amazing about him. He can really be hot out behind, but once you come down the alley, he’s so focused. He knows his job, and it’s easy for him.” Flame will get a chance to do it again today, when Sydney Daines runs him. Duane Daines was pretty proud up in the announcer’s stand, as he presented his wife with the flowers given for the fastest racer each night. “We’ll have to go dancing tonight,” he grinned. There were other leader changes Friday night as well. Red Deer based Cole Collins moved in front in the bull riding, with an outstanding 87.5 point ride on a bull called Brahma Boots. “He just went to spinning right away, like they said he would,” stated Collins. “He’s a pretty fast little bull, but good to ride. It was the one I needed for here, I guess. It feels pretty good to do good here at Innisfail.” There’s now a tie for first in bareback riding, with Reid Rowan of Seven Persons equalling the 85 posted opening night by Matt Lait. Rowan rode a horse called True Grit. “That’s a sweetheart of a bucking horse,” he commented. “He probably looks like he’s quite a bit harder than he actually is. That’s one of those ‘feel good, rare back and have fun while you’re doing it’ horses.” In steer wrestling, Casey Lawes of Provost remains the fast man with his 4.4 second run, while the tie-down roping time to beat is still 7.4 seconds, posted by Texans Randall Carlisle, Barrett Threadgill and Tyson Durfey. The fast team ropers are Chase Simpson and Brady Davies, with their 4.5 second time. Daniel Gratton of Sundre leads the novice saddle bronc, while Tanner Young of Fairview is the high man in novice bareback riding. Kagen Schmidt of Barrhead has a 73 to lead steer riding. There are two performances today, at 1:00 pm and 6:00 pm at the Daines Ranch, with the final performance Sunday afternoon at 1:00 pm.
Constantine re-introduced as Everett’s head coach BY NICK PATTERSON EVERETT HERALD WRITER EVERETT — The doors to the Edward D. Hansen Conference Center opened, and when the man stepped through the doorway, the awaiting crowd rose to its feet for a raucous standing ovation. To many in Snohomish County, Kevin Constantine is the living embodiment of hockey. Now the Everett Silvertips are banking on Constantine rekindling the magic of the past. The first and greatest coach in Silvertips history is coming home as he was re-introduced as Everett’s head coach Thursday afternoon. The news that Constantine was headed back to Everett leaked earlier this week, so those who attended Thursday’s press conference, which was open to the public, came to show the popularity of Constantine being chosen the team’s new head coach. “It was a nice welcome back,” Constantine said. “It feels good (to return to Everett). It’s an opportu-
GOLF: Course could get tougher Mackenzie Hughes of Dundas, Ont., and David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., are over the projected cut line of 7 over as it stands. Both sit at 9 over but have time to recover — Hughes has played nine holes in his second round, while Hearn is through 10. Calgary’s Ryan Yip is 11 over for the tournament through 16 holes, while Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford, B.C., finished his second round at 16-over 157. The long day, brought on by storm delays on Thursday, began with cool conditions and patches of light rain that eventually gave way to sunshine. That led players to wonder how much tougher Merion will be once it starts to dry out. “It’s not as easy as people think,” defending champion Webb Simpson said after a 75 put him six shots behind the clubhouse lead. “I heard 15, 16 under floating around. And it’s going to be a normal U.S. Open winning score, I think.” Horschel hit all 18 greens in regulation, a stellar achievement at a regular tour event, let alone the U.S. Open. It sent USGA officials searching for hours to find the last time anyone failed to miss a green in the toughest test in golf. Records of that detail only go back as far as 1989. That last documentation of someone doing that was Johnny Miller when he closed with a 63 at Oakmont to win in 1973. David Graham used his putter on every hole — three from the fringe — when he shot 67 to win the 1981 U.S. Open at Merion. “I didn’t know I hit every green until I walked off 18,” Horschel said. “It’s a cool thing. But like I said, it’s not the first time I’ve hit all 18 greens. I’ve done it plenty of times in my career. Obviously, it’s at a U.S. Open, but I think the softness of the greens helped that.”
NHL: Consistent Crawford, from Chateauguay, Que., has never played for Canada in international competition. He said he has never even got a look at a selection camp. That all could change, especially if he helps Chicago to a championship. “I’m worried about winning a Stanley Cup right now,” Crawford said. “Obviously that would be a huge honour. But right now there are other things to take care of.” The Blackhawks are three victories away from hoisting the Cup and that has a lot to do with Crawford’s stellar play. Coach Joel Quenneville praise the 26-year-old’s consistency, and sev-
way to the WHL finals. The success continued to pile up for Constantine and the Tips. In Constantine’s four seasons in Everett the Tips won three U.S. Division championships, as well as the Scotty Munro Trophy for the league’s best record in the 2006-07. He won the Dunc McCallum Memorial Trophy in 2004 as the WHL’s Coach of the Year. He departed in 2007 having compiled a 16297-20-9 record, and he remains the winningest coach in franchise history. Constantine spent the past six years coaching in the professional ranks. After leaving Everett he spent three seasons as the head coach of the American Hockey League’s Houston Aeros, the affiliate of the NHL’s Minnesota Wild. After compiling a 117-9411-18 with the Aeros his contract was not renewed. Then in 2010 he took over the reins of HC AmbriPiotta in Switzerland. Ambri-Piotta went 30-57-5-7 in parts of three seasons under Constantine, and he was fired early last season after the team won just two of its first 14 games. He remained with the team the rest of the season as a consultant.
eral teammates lauded him for being even-keeled amid chaos in the tripleovertime Game 1 victory. Being poised in that situation is a testament to how far Crawford has come. “Had to answer a lot of questions this year going into the season: What about our goaltending?” Quenneville said. “We said we’re very comfortable with Corey. Think he’s got the capability of being a top goalie in the league.” Yet for so long Crawford hasn’t been thought of as even a top-10 goalie. Asked why he has constantly been overlooked, Toews and Crawford had the same response: “I don’t know. You tell me.” Rask hasn’t had to overcome a lack of respect. Instead, his job has been to follow Thomas, who was far and away the top reason the Bruins won it all in 2011. Now the 26-year-old Finnish netminder is earning his own Conn Smythe Trophy talk. “He’s been rock solid all season, all playoffs, has been keeping us in hockey games a lot of nights,” defenceman Dennis Seidenberg said. “It’s nice to have him as your last backbone.” Rask had to forget about past struggles, especially the playoff loss to the Flyers as a 23-year-old. That’s a distant memory now as he’s at the centre of the Bruins’ playoff run. “I don’t think it surprises any of us that he’s at that elite level,” Bruins forward Daniel Paille said. “I think we should consider ourselves fortunate that we have a goalie like that.”
FLAMES: Rebuild Calgary traded their 14th pick last year and dropped to No. 21 to gain a second-rounder. The Flames selected college centre Mark Jankowski in the first round and defenceman Patrick Sieloff at No. 42. Calgary chose left-winger Sven Baertschi at No. 13 in 2011. Baertschi had three goals and seven assists in 20 games for the Flames and spent the rest of the lockout-shortened season with their AHL team in Abbotsford, B.C. The Flames haven’t had multiple first-round picks since 1976, when the Flames took defenceman Dave Shand at No. 8 and forward Harold Phillipoff at No. 10 Calgary’s current needs are size and talent at centre, more size on their third defensive pairing, plus a shooting right-winger to replace Iginla, Feaster said. “We have to get bigger and we have to get harder to play against,” the GM said. Feaster fought the term “rebuild” as he traded away the team’s captain and top defenceman during the season. He joked Friday that via “therapy” he’s accepted that rebuilding is what Flames are doing. His intention, however, is to make that process as short and as painless as possible.
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STORIES FROM PAGE B4
nity to coach and I really love coaching, it was fun being here last time. It’s unusual in sports to go back to a franchise, so it’s kind of nice to get that opportunity to go back, so I’m very excited. “I only looked at two coaching opportunities, but this was the only thing I really looked at,” Constantine added. “I think that alone is evidence that I was very comfortable if given the chance to come back. There wasn’t much that interested me a lot besides coming back here.” Constantine becomes the sixth head coach in franchise history. He succeeds general manager Garry Davidson, who served as interim coach after Mark Ferner was fired in January. Constantine became a living legend in Everett during his first stint with the Tips. He arrived in Everett with a strong pedigree, having spent seven seasons as a head coach in the NHL with the San Jose Sharks, Pittsburgh Penguins and New Jersey Devils. He then performed the unthinkable during Everett’s first season in 2003-04, as the Tips set every record imaginable for an expansion team and went all the
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Saturday, June 15, 2013
Hockey
Baseball
NHL STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS FINAL ROUND Stanley Cup Final (Best-of-7)
x-Boston at Chicago, 6 p.m. x — If necessary. NHL SCORING LEADERS PLAYOFFS / Through June 12 GP G A David Krejci, Bos 17 9 14 Nathan Horton, Bos 17 7 11 Milan Lucic, Bos 17 5 11 Evgeni Malkin, Pit 15 4 12 Kris Letang, Pit 15 3 13 Sidney Crosby, Pit 14 7 8 Marian Hossa, Chi 18 7 8 Patrick Sharp, Chi 18 8 6 Patrick Kane, Chi 18 6 8 Bryan Bickell, Chi 18 8 5 Jeff Carter, LA 18 6 7 Slava Voynov, LA 18 6 7 Brad Marchand, Bos17 4 9 6 tied with 12 pts.
Chicago (W1) vs. Boston (E4) (Chicago leads series 1-0) Wednesday’s result Chicago 4 Boston 3 (3OT) Saturday’s game Boston at Chicago, 6 p.m. Monday, June 17 Chicago at Boston, 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 19 Chicago at Boston, 6 p.m. Saturday, June 22 x-Boston at Chicago, 6 p.m. Monday, June 24 x-Chicago at Boston, 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 26
PTS 23 18 16 16 16 15 15 14 14 13 13 13 13
Basketball Miami (E1) vs. San Antonio (W2) (Series tied 2-2) Thursday’s result Miami 109 San Antonio 93
Transactions BASEBALL MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL — Suspended Arizona RHP Ian Kennedy 10 games, INF Eric Hinske five games and Kirk Gibson one game and L.A. Dodgers RHP J.P. Howell, INF/OF Skip Shumaker and hitting coach Mark McGwire two games and manager Don Mattingly and RHP Ronald Belisario one game for their parts in Tuesday’s brawl. Named Chris Conroy umpire. American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Optioned RHP Kevin Gausman to Norfolk (IL). Recalled RHP Jake Arrieta from Norfolk. BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned RHPs Alfredo Aceves and Alex Wilson to Pawtucket (IL). Recalled RHP Rubby De La Rosa from Pawtucket. Agreed to terms with C Jake Romanski; RHPs Taylor Grover and Kyle Martin; 2B Carlos Asuaje and Reed Gragnani; and OF Forrestt Allday on minor league contracts. CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Sent OF Dewayne Wise to Charlotte (IL) for a rehab assignment. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Agreed to terms with RHP Casey Shane and LHP Matthew Whitehouse on minor league contracts. Sent RHP Blake Wood to Lake County (MWL) for a rehab assignment. DETROIT TIGERS — Reinstated OF Austin Jackson from the 15-day DL. Optioned OF Avisail Garcia to Toledo (IL). Agreed to terms with RHPs Jonathon Crawford, Brett Huber, Johnnie Kirkland, Zac Reininger, Tanner Bailey, Buck Farmer, Calvin Drummond, Jonathan Maciel, Austin Pritcher and Scott Sitz; LHPs Ryan Beck and Joe Mantiply; Cs Austin Green and Duncan McAlpine; OFs Kasey Coffman and Ben Verlander; SS Curt Powell; 1B Dominic Ficociello; and 2B Taylor Johnson on minor league contracts. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Agreed to terms with 1B Dennis Raben on a minor league contract. Signed RHP Carter Hope, RHP Andrew Edwards, LHP Javier Reynoso, LHP Tripp Davis, C Zane Evans and C Logan Davis. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Assigned 3B Chris Nelson outright to Salt Lake (PCL). Agreed to terms with RHPs Keynan Middleton, Harrison Cooney, Grant Gordon, Ryan Etsell, Brian Loconsole, Trevor Foss, Alan Busenitz, Michael Smith, Alex Blackford,
Clinton Sharp, Dan Tobik and Benjamin Carlson; OFs Riley Good, Chad Hinshaw, Mark Shannon, Miguel Hermosillo, Taylor Johnson, Michael Fish, Eric Aguilera and Brandon Bayardi; LHPs Nate Smith, Jonah Wesely, Cole Swanson, Matt Hernandez and Colin O’Keefe; SSs Angel Rosa, Alex Allbritton, Jon Pellant and Nathan Goro; Cs Stephen McGee, Cambric Moye and Eric Weiss; and 3Bs Cal Towey and Garrett Cannizaro on minor league contracts. MINNESOTA TWINS — Agreed to terms with RHP Cody Eppley on a minor league contract. Reinstated 3B Trevor Plouffe from the 15-day DL. Optioned C/OF Chris Herrmann to Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Placed INF Kevin Youkilis on the 15-day DL. Optioned 3B David Adams and RHP Adam Warren to Scranton/WilkesBarre (IL). Selected the contracts of OF Thomas Neal and RHP Chris Bootcheck from Scranton/ Wilkes-Barre. Transferred INF Eduardo Nunez to the 60-day DL. Assigned LHP Cesar Cabral outright to Trenton (EL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Optioned LHP Hideki Okajima to Sacramento (PCL). Selected the contract of RHP Dan Otero from Sacramento. Transferred LHP Brett Anderson to the 60-day DL. Agreed to terms with OF Billy McKinney and SS Chad Pinder on minor league contracts. SEATTLE MARINERS — Sent 1B Justin Smoak to Tacoma (PCL) for a rehab assignment. Agreed to terms with C Henry Blanco. Designated C Kelly Shoppach for assignment. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Optioned RHP Jake Odorizzi to Durham (IL). Reinstated RHP Alex Cobb from the bereavement list. Signed SS Riley Unroe. TEXAS RANGERS — Sent 2B Ian Kinsler to Frisco (TL) for a rehab assignment. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Assigned 3B Andy LaRoche outright to Buffalo (IL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Agreed to terms with OFs Zachary Esquerra and Taylor Ratliff; SSs Ryan Gebhardt and Randy McCurry; 3B Jordan Parr; 1B Ryan Kinsella; C Grant Nelson; and RHP Alex Byo on minor league contracts. CHICAGO CUBS — Added RHP Henry Rodriguez. Optioned LHP Brooks Raley to Iowa (PCL).
Girls Softball Ladies Fastball Pts 21 14 10 8 8
Conaco/Phillips Threat 1 8 Lac Physio Shooters 0 7 Scores Thursday N. Jensen’s 4 Lacombe Physio 2 U18 Rage 10 Conaco/Phillips 10 TNT 12 Stettler 12
1 0
3 0
Soccer MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts Montreal 8 2 2 26 New York 7 5 4 25 Philadelphia 6 5 4 22 Houston 6 4 4 22 Sporting KC 6 5 4 22 New England 5 4 5 20 Columbus 4 5 5 17 Chicago 3 7 3 12 Toronto FC 1 7 5 8 D.C. 1 10 3 6
GF 22 23 22 19 18 15 16 11 12 6
Arizona San Francisco Colorado San Diego Los Angeles
Central Division W L Pct 43 24 .642 41 27 .603 40 27 .597 27 38 .415 27 39 .409
GB — 2.5 3 15 15.5
West Division W L 37 30 35 31 35 33 33 34 28 38
Pct .552 .530 .515 .493 .424
GB — 1.5 2.5 4 8.5
Today’s Games Chicago Cubs (Feldman 5-5) at N.Y. Mets (Niese 3-5), 11:10 a.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 5-4) at Pittsburgh (Cumpton 0-0), 2:05 p.m. San Francisco (Gaudin 2-1) at Atlanta (Minor 8-2), 2:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Gallardo 5-6) at Cincinnati (H.Bailey 4-4), 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Pettibone 3-2) at Colorado (Chatwood 3-1), 2:10 p.m. St. Louis (Lynn 8-1) at Miami (Koehler 0-4), 2:10 p.m. Washington (Zimmermann 9-3) at Cleveland (Kazmir 3-4), 5:15 p.m. Arizona (Miley 4-5) at San Diego (Richard 1-5), 8:10 p.m.
Oakland Texas Seattle Los Angeles Houston
41 38 30 29 24
28 29 38 38 44
.594 .567 .441 .433 .353
— 2 10.5 11 16.5
Today’s Games Boston (Lackey 3-5) at Baltimore (F.Garcia 3-3), 2:05 p.m. Toronto (Dickey 5-8) at Texas (Lindblom 0-1), 2:05 p.m. Kansas City (Guthrie 7-3) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 6-2), 2:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 1-2) at Houston (Harrell 4-7), 5:15 p.m. Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 6-5) at Minnesota (Deduno 2-1), 5:15 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (D.Phelps 4-3) at L.A. Angels (Hanson 3-2), 5:15 p.m. Seattle (F.Hernandez 7-4) at Oakland (Griffin 5-5), 5:15 p.m. Washington (Zimmermann 9-3) at Cleveland (Kazmir 3-4), 5:15 p.m. Sunday’s Games Washington at Cleveland, 11:05 a.m. Boston at Baltimore, 11:35 a.m. Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 11:40 a.m. Chicago White Sox at Houston, 12:10 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 12:10 p.m. Toronto at Texas, 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at L.A. Angels, 1:35 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 2:05 p.m.
040 000
002 000
0 2
— —
000 000
410 000
111 000
— —
3 5
0 0
7 10 2 6
1 0
8 11 0 5
0 0
Boston Baltimore New York Tampa Bay Toronto
GB — 1.5 3 5 9.5
Buehrle, Loup (8), Oliver (9) and Arencibia; Grimm, McClellan (8) and G.Soto. W—Buehrle 3-4. L— Grimm 5-5. HRs—Toronto, Col.Rasmus (11), Arencibia (13).
Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota Chicago
Central Division W L Pct 37 28 .569 33 33 .500 32 33 .492 29 35 .453 28 36 .438
GB — 4.5 5 7.5 8.5
Porcello, Smyly (8), Benoit (8), Valverde (9) and Avila; Diamond, Fien (6), Pressly (8), Thielbar (9) and Mauer. W—Porcello 4-3. L—Diamond 4-6.
West Division W L
Pct
GB
Chicago Houston
000 000
004 000
000 000
100 020
000 00x
— —
3 10 2 7
1 1
— —
— —
4 0
1 2
200 101
000 11x
— —
2 6 5 13
0 1
INTERLEAGUE 000 000 — 100 001 —
1 2
2 7
0 0
G.Gonzalez, Clippard (8), Abad (9) and K.Suzuki; Masterson, Allen (8), J.Smith (9) and C.Santana. W—J.Smith 3-0. L—Abad 0-1. HRs—Cleveland, Raburn (8). NATIONAL LEAGUE L.A.D. 000 000 000 — Pittsburgh 002 000 01x —
0 3
6 8
0 0
Fife, Howell (6), Guerrier (8), P.Rodriguez (8) and A.Ellis; Locke, Melancon (8), Grilli (9) and R.Martin. W—Locke 6-1. L—Fife 1-2. Sv—Grilli (24). 200 020
001 120
010 00x
— —
4 8 5 10
1 1
001 000
000 200
— —
6 3
9 9
0 0
E.Jackson, Russell (7), Marmol (8), Gregg (9) and D.Navarro; Marcum, Aardsma (6), Edgin (8), Burke (9) and Buck. W—E.Jackson 3-8. L—Marcum 0-8. Sv—Gregg (8). HRs—Chicago, Schierholtz (9).
AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct 41 28 .594 39 29 .574 37 30 .552 35 32 .522 30 36 .455
Detroit 000 Minnesota 000
Wash. 001 Cleveland 000
Chicago 140 New York 001
Mendoza, Crow (7), Collins (7), K.Herrera (9) and S.Perez; M.Moore, J.Wright (6), Farnsworth (8), Rodney (9) and Lobaton. W—Mendoza 2-3. L—M. Moore 8-3. HRs—Tampa Bay, Joyce (13). Toronto Texas
110 010
Westbrook, J.Kelly (6), K.Butler (7), Siegrist (8) and Y.Molina; Fernandez, Qualls (8), M.Dunn (8), Cishek (9) and Mathis. W—Fernandez 4-3. L—Westbrook 2-2. Sv—Cishek (8).
Dempster, Uehara (8) and D.Ross; Tillman, O’Day (7), Tom.Hunter (8), Ji.Johnson (9) and Wieters. W—Tillman 7-2. L—Dempster 4-7. Sv—Ji.Johnson (24). HRs—Baltimore, C.Davis (22). 100 200
000 010
Pettitte, Bootcheck (8) and Au.Romine; C.Wilson, Jepsen (8), Frieri (9) and Iannetta. W—C.Wilson 5-5. L—Pettitte 5-4. Sv—Frieri (15).
St. Louis Miami
Monday’s Games Kansas City at Cleveland, 5:05 p.m. Colorado at Toronto, 5:07 p.m. Baltimore at Detroit, 5:08 p.m. Oakland at Texas, 6:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Houston, 6:10 p.m. Seattle at L.A. Angels, 8:05 p.m.
K. City T. Bay
010 000
New York 000 L.A.A. 100
AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 000 000 000 — Baltimore 011 000 00x —
Monday’s Games Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 5:05 p.m. Washington at Philadelphia, 5:05 p.m. Colorado at Toronto, 5:07 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 5:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 5:10 p.m. Miami at Arizona, 7:40 p.m. San Diego at San Francisco, 8:15 p.m.
Seattle Oakland
J.Saunders, Farquhar (8), O.Perez (9) and Zunino; Milone, Otero (7), Doolittle (9) and D.Norris. W—J. Saunders 5-6. L—Milone 6-6. Sv—O.Perez (1). HRs—Seattle, Zunino (1). Oakland, C.Young (6).
Friday’s Games Baltimore 2, Boston 0 Cleveland 2, Washington 1 Kansas City 7, Tampa Bay 2 Toronto 8, Texas 0 Houston 2, Chicago White Sox 1 Detroit 4, Minnesota 0 L.A. Angels 5, N.Y. Yankees 2 Seattle 3, Oakland 2
FRIDAY’S LINESCORES Sunday’s Games Washington at Cleveland, 11:05 a.m. Chicago Cubs at N.Y. Mets, 11:10 a.m. Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 11:10 a.m. St. Louis at Miami, 11:10 a.m. L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 11:35 a.m. Arizona at San Diego, 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Colorado, 2:10 p.m. San Francisco at Atlanta, 6:05 p.m.
5-5. Sv—Veras (12).
5 3
6 5
2 0
2 0
Milwaukee 001 001 Cincinnati 110 001
010 000
0 — 1 —
312 2 4 7 3
(10 innings) Lohse, Axford (7), Fr.Rodriguez (8), Kintzler (9), Mic.Gonzalez (9), Badenhop (10) and Maldonado; Arroyo, LeCure (8), Chapman (9), Simon (10) and Hanigan. W—Simon 5-2. L—Badenhop 0-3. HRs— Milwaukee, Gennett (1), Maldonado (3). Cincinnati, Bruce (11). San F. Atlanta
111 000
010 000
200 000
— —
6 11 0 3
1 0
Bumgarner, S.Rosario (8) and Posey; Medlen, A.Wood (7), Varvaro (8), D.Carpenter (9) and McCann. W—Bumgarner 6-4. L—Medlen 3-7. HRs— San Francisco, G.Blanco (1). Phila. Colorado
000 120
203 310
300 000
— —
8 13 7 13
0 0
K.Kendrick, Horst (5), Stutes (6), Diekman (7), De Fratus (7), Mi.Adams (8), Papelbon (9) and Quintero, Lerud; Nicasio, Outman (6), W.Lopez (7), Scahill (7), Belisle (9) and Torrealba. W—Stutes 2-0. L—W. Lopez 1-3. Sv—Papelbon (13). HRs—Colorado, C.Gonzalez (19), Rutledge (6). Arizona 100 San Diego 000
000 002
000 00x
— —
1 2
2 5
1 1
Sale and Flowers; Bedard, Cisnero (7), Blackley (8), Veras (9) and Corporan. W—Bedard 2-3. L—Sale
Cahill, W.Harris (6), Ziegler (8) and M.Montero; Stults and Grandal. W—Stults 6-5. L—Cahill 3-8.
David Howell Peter Hedblom Martin Kaymer a-Michael Weaver Kevin Chappell Josh Teater Steven Alker Alistair Presnell Morten Orum Madsen Jim Herman Dustin Johnson Brandt Snedeker Justin Hicks a-Chris Williams Michael Thompson Brian Stuard Morgan Hoffmann Casey Wittenberg Kevin Streelman a-Steven Fox Zach Johnson D.A. Points Sang Moon Bae a-Gavin Hall a-Max Homa Brendan Steele David Toms Marcus Fraser Francesco Molinari Luke Guthrie Brandon Brown Keegan Bradley Marc Leishman Graeme McDowell Thongchai Jaidee Branden Grace Jordan Spieth
148 148 148 148 148 148 148 148 148 148 148 148 149 149 149 150 150 150 150 150 151 151 151 151 151 152 152 152 152 152 152 152 153 153 153 153 153
Jung-Gon Hwang Estanislao Goya Scott Piercy Eddie Pepperell Jesse Smith Darren Clarke Angel Cabrera Jose Maria Olazabal Jim Furyk Joe Ogilvie Russell Henley Adam Hadwin Thorbjorn Olesen Yoshinobu Tsukada Zack Fischer Matt Harmon Brandon Crick John Nieporte Ryan Sullivan a-Grayson Murray Louis Oosthuizen
2 0 0
Wednesday’s result Toronto 24 Winnipeg 6
Golf
PEEWEE GIRLS SOFTBALL Thursday score RD U14C Don’s Oilfield 20 Lacombe U14 C 3
RED DEER LADIES FASTBALL W L T TNT Athletics 10 0 1 Snell/Oslund Badgers 6 1 2 U18 Rage 4 4 2 N Jensen Bandits 4 4 0 Stettler Heat 3 4 2
St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago Milwaukee
GB — 5.5 6.5 12.5 18.5
Friday’s Games Pittsburgh 3, L.A. Dodgers 0 Cleveland 2, Washington 1 Chicago Cubs 6, N.Y. Mets 3 Cincinnati 4, Milwaukee 3, 10 innings Miami 5, St. Louis 4 San Francisco 6, Atlanta 0 Philadelphia 8, Colorado 7 San Diego 2, Arizona 1
Tuesday’s result San Antonio 113 Miami 77 Sunday’s game Miami at San Antonio, 6 p.m. Tuesday, June 18 San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m. Thursday, June 20 x-San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m. x — If necessary.
NBA PLAYOFFS FINAL ROUND NBA Final (Best-of-7)
Atlanta Washington Philadelphia New York Miami
NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct 39 28 .582 33 33 .500 33 35 .485 24 38 .387 20 46 .303
GA 15 19 24 14 13 9 16 19 19 24
WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 8 2 4 28 23 17 Real Salt Lake 8 5 3 27 24 16 Portland 5 1 8 23 24 16 Seattle 6 4 3 21 19 15 Los Angeles 6 6 2 20 22 18 Colorado 5 4 5 20 15 12 Vancouver 4 5 4 16 18 20 San Jose 3 6 6 15 13 23 Chivas USA 3 8 2 11 13 26 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Today’s Games FC Dallas at Portland, 3 p.m.
Toronto FC at D.C. United, 5 p.m. Montreal at Columbus, 5:30 p.m. San Jose at Colorado, 7 p.m. New England at Vancouver, 8 p.m. Wednesday, June 19 Houston at Montreal, 6 p.m. Colorado at Chicago, 6:30 p.m. Chivas USA at Vancouver, 8 p.m. Portland at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, June 22 San Jose at D.C. United, 5 p.m. Chicago at Columbus, 6 p.m. Sporting Kansas City at FC Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Toronto FC at Houston, 7 p.m. Seattle FC at Real Salt Lake, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, June 23 New York at Philadelphia, 3 p.m. Colorado at Portland, 5 p.m. Los Angeles at Chivas USA, 9 p.m. Goals leaders Jack McIlnerney Marco Di Vaio Mike Magee Claudio Bieler Thierry Henry
Team Phila. Montreal Chicago KC NY
Goals 10 9 8 7 6
U.S. OPEN At Merion Golf Club, East Course Ardmore, Pa. Purse: TBA ($8 million in 2012) Yardage: 6,996; Par: 70 (a-amatuer) Partial Second Round Billy Horschel 72-67 — Phil Mickelson 67-72 — Luke Donald 68-72 — Steve Stricker 71-69 — Justin Rose 71-69 — John Senden 70-71 — Nicolas Colsaerts 69-72 — Mathew Goggin 68-74 — Tiger Woods 73-70 — Rory McIlroy 73-70 — Gonzalo Fernandez-CastaIno71-72 — Ernie Els 71-72 — Matt Bettencourt 72-71 — Geoff Ogilvy 74-70 — Bo Van Pelt 73-71 — Edward Loar 73-71 — Russell Knox 69-75 — Scott Langley 75-70 — Kyle Stanley 71-74 — K.J. Choi 70-76 — Jamie Donaldson 73-73 — Webb Simpson 71-75 — Hideki Matsuyama 71-75 — Paul Lawrie 76-71 — Lee Westwood 70-77 — Carl Pettersson 72-75 — Adam Scott 72-75 — Bio Kim 72-75 — Bubba Watson 71-76 — Matt Kuchar 74-73 —
139 139 140 140 140 141 141 142 143 143 143 143 143 144 144 144 144 145 145 146 146 146 146 147 147 147 147 147 147 147
77-71 70-78 76-72 74-74 72-76 74-74 73-75 73-75 74-74 76-72 71-77 74-74 76-73 75-74 71-78 75-75 76-74 79-71 72-78 76-74 74-77 77-74 77-74 74-77 73-78 76-76 75-77 79-73 78-74 73-79 75-77 77-75 78-75 76-77 79-74 70-83 77-76
— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —
75-78 71-83 78-76 77-77 73-81 80-75 74-81 75-81 77-79 75-81 77-80 81-76 79-79 78-80 82-76 78-81 81-78 78-84 81-82 83-81 75
— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —
153 154 154 154 154 155 155 156 156 156 157 157 158 158 158 159 159 162 163 164 WD
LEADERBOARD SCORE THRU -1 F -1 F E 9 E F E 14 E F E F + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1
11 13 F 12 F
1. Billy Horschel 1. Phil Mickelson 3. Cheng-Tsung Pan 3. Steve Stricker 3. Ian Poulter 3. Justin Rose 3. Luke Donald 8. Michael Kim 8. Charley Hoffman 8. John Senden 8. Jerry Kelly 8. Nicolas Colsaerts
Football Hamilton Toronto Montreal Winnipeg Sask.
CFL PRE-SEASON East Division GP W L T PF 1 1 0 0 33 1 1 0 0 24 1 0 1 0 26 1 0 1 0 6 West Division GP W L T PF 1 1 0 0 31
PA Pt 26 2 6 2 33 0 24 0 PA Pt 24 2
B.C. Calgary Edmonton
1 1 1
1 0 0
0 1 1
0 0 0
29 27 24
27 29 31
Week One Friday’s results B.C. 29 Calgary 27 Saskatchewan 31 Edmonton 24 Thursday’s result Hamilton 33 Montreal 26
Week Two Thursday, June 20 Winnipeg at Hamilton, 5 p.m. Montreal at Toronto (Varsity Stadium), 5 p.m. Calgary at Saskatchewan, 8 p.m. Friday, June 21 Edmonton at B.C., 8 p.m.
Alberta Downs SATURDAY Post time 1:15 p.m. First Pace, purse $4,000 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Smoken Blue Water (Q. Schneider) 2 Shes A Ladro (J. Gagne) 3 Miss Dezilou (T. Redwood) 4 Fire Dance (D. Monkman Jr) 5 Pureform Olympia (J. Campbell) 6 Meadowlarkbonilass (K. Hoerdt) 7 Bettor Dreams (J. Jungquist) 8 Sheezgotdawoogies (G. Hudon) Second Pace, purse $3,600 (EX, PX, SF, TR). 1 Crafty Cracker (W. Tainsh Jr) 2 Cinderella Smiles (P. Giesbrecht) 3 Tu Wong Fu (J. Chappell) 4 Carro Avro (T. Redwood) 5 Justabitfaster (G. Hudon) 6 Whitehouse Secret (P. Davies) 7 Ruths Shadylady (J. Jungquist) 8 Glitteronthebeach (T. Cullen) Third Pace, purse $4,900 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Miss Reserve (B. Clark) 2 Only For Awile (J. Marino) 3 Clearly Best (K. Dressler) 4 American Passion (G. Hudon) 5 Isle Of Shoals (C. Kolthammer) 6 Keystone Maddie (P. Giesbrecht) 7 Jennas Ideal (T. Cullen) 8 Kim Chee (T. Redwood) Fourth Pace, purse $5,600 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Beach Baby (B. Clark) 2 Shirley Girl (G. Hudon) 3 Outlaw Star Maker (D. Mcleod) 4 Contesta Hanover (K. Clark) 5 Outlaw Blue Danube (J. Campbell) 6 As Seely Promised (T. Redwood) 7 Yarhos (J. Marino) 8 Overnight Success (T. Cullen) Fifth Pace, purse $2,800 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 My World (K. Hoerdt) 2 Cenalta Pride (To Be Announced) 3 Dreamway Confed (J. Gray) 4 Stiletto Spur (T. Cullen) 5 Nf Star Power (D. Monkman Jr) 6 Alcars Britefriday (P. Giesbrecht) 7 Best Out West (W. Tainsh Jr) 8 Connors Cam Bo (J. Campbell) 9 Rango (T. Redwood) ae Outlaw I See Red (J. Gray) Sixth Pace, purse $3,400 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Doda Gig (P. Davies) 2 Eternal Grace (P. Giesbrecht) 3 Westcoast Royal (C. Brown) 4 Artninspiration (K. Hoerdt) 5 As Hot As Promised (J. Campbell) 6 Westwood Chaos (J. Jungquist) 7 Flawless Art (D. Mcleod) 8 Hf Nancys Babygirl (T. Redwood) 9 Such A Night (J. Marino) Seventh Pace, purse $5,600 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Big N Bad (J. Marino) 2 Acesndeuces (P. Davies)
3 Watch And Pray (J. Gagne) 4 Lisvinnie (R. Hennessy) 5 Beren Hanover (K. Clark) 6 Steve O (B. Watt) 7 Arroway (J. Gray) Eighth Pace, purse $10,000 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Freedoms Treasure (W. Tainsh Jr) 2 Sweetycamtoplay (G. Hudon) 3 Chatter Box (J. Campbell) 4 Barona Lite (B. Piwniuk) 5 Outlawcherishafool (C. Kolthammer) 6 Sharkys Law (R. Hennessy) 7 Blue Star West (J. Gray) 8 Emotions Run Wild (K. Hoerdt) Ninth Pace, purse $10,000 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Shadow Time (J. Marino) 2 Kiss My Crouper (R. Grundy) 3 Barona Lilac (K. Hoerdt) 4 Outlawlookslikrain (C. Kolthammer) 5 Crackers Hot Shot (W. Tainsh Jr) 6 Va Va Varoom (R. Hennessy) 7 Cracklin Millie (G. Hudon) 8 Blazing By (J. Campbell) 9 Cenalta Fireworks (R. Goulet) Tenth Pace, purse $2,300 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Ok Excalibur (T. Cullen) 2 Notacent Tobemade (G. Schedlosky) 3 Red Star Chance (D. Mcleod) 4 Blasty Cam (G. Clark) 5 Light The Board (T. Redwood) 6 Psymadre (B. Piwniuk) 7 Outlawclassichrome (J. Marino) 8 Hey Scoob (J. Campbell) 9 Katies Gun (P. Giesbrecht) ae Domino Theory (W. Tainsh Jr) Eleventh Pace, purse $3,300 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Western Chrome (R. Goulet) 2 Capablenrewarding (D. Mcleod) 3 Somethinsgoinon (K. Clark) 4 Red Star Cashflow (B. Watt) 5 Remarkable Cam (J. Campbell) 6 Silent Rescue (K. Hoerdt) 7 Canbec Hooligan (T. Cullen) 8 Dees Promise (J. Chappell) 9 Getmethruthenite (J. Marino) ae Mjjz R Us (P. Davies) SUNDAY Post time 1:15 p.m. First Pace, purse $4,000 (EX, PX, SF, TR). 1 Blistillmyheart (J. Gagne) 2 Do You Feel Lucky (J. Campbell) 3 Jacksons Spin (P. Giesbrecht) 4 Justabitcrazy (G. Hudon) 5 Bettor In The Bank (K. Clark) 6 Intended Gold (T. Redwood) 7 Life On Homicide (J. Jungquist) Second Pace, purse $3,000 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Hope Wish Prey (K. Clark) 2 Western Superstar (Q. Schneider) 3 Neuf Vies (J. Gagne) 4 The Enemy Within (J. Marino)
5 Rays High Noon (K. Hoerdt) 6 Senga Shaman (R. Grundy) 7 Burn The House (G. Hudon) 8 As Hot As Hall (J. Campbell) ae Two Pack Habit (T. Redwood) Third Pace, purse $2,300 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Art By Dylan (K. Hoerdt) 2 Blue Star Ruler (J. Marino) 3 F Train (B. Piwniuk) 4 Lakers R Electric (Q. Schneider) 5 Frees B (T. Cullen) 6 Domino Theory (W. Tainsh Jr) 7 Knickfree (J. Chappell) 8 Payoff (G. Hudon) 9 Modern Man (C. Brown) ae Hes Country (Q. Schneider) Fourth Pace, purse $8,500 (EX, SF, TR). 1 Cowboy Caper (K. Hoerdt) 2 Outlaw Highvoltage (P. Giesbrecht) 3 Bachelor Pad (G. Hudon) 4 Mr Saratoga (Q. Schneider) 5 Sixdaysontheroad (W. Tainsh Jr) 6 Trust The Artist (J. Campbell) 7 Flak Jacket (J. Gray) Fifth Pace, purse $3,800 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Hollywood Jubilee (J. Chappell) 2 Sharon Blew Bye (Q. Schneider) 3 Market For Romance (K. Ducharme) 4 Truly Cruisin (B. Watt) 5 Whos In The Hat (J. Campbell) 6 Hollywood Monroe (G. Hudon) 7 Apalamine (T. Cullen) 8 Liz Lover (J. Jungquist) 9 Arctic Pine (J. Gray) ae Brave Rustler (P. Giesbrecht) Sixth Pace, purse $2,300 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 No Limit For Mjjz (T. Redwood) 2 Samnmadie (J. Jungquist) 3 Baja Beach (J. Chappell) 4 Minettaszoombyyall (J. Campbell) 5 Outlaw Like A Lady (W. Tainsh Jr) 6 Yankee Mystique (P. Giesbrecht) 7 Comeshomeearly (J. Campbell) 8 Major Ziggy (P. Davies) 9 Intrepid Kate (T. Brown) ae Caracas (W. Tainsh Jr) Seventh Pace, purse $7,500 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 I Hear Voices (J. Marino) 2 Caress Of Steel (J. Gagne) 3 No Fear (J. Campbell) 4 Stepuptotheplate (R. Lancaster) 5 Playbook (K. Clark) 6 Hollywood Warrior (G. Hudon) 7 Kg Explorer (R. Goulet) 8 Gts Jake (J. Jungquist) 9 Hilldrop Shady (P. Giesbrecht) Eighth Pace, purse $10,000 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Outlaw Falcon (J. Gagne) 2 Tinhorn Creek (G. Hudon) 3 Blue Star Admiral (W. Tainsh Jr) 4 Play Me Right (J. Campbell) 5 Lo Tengo (D. Monkman Jr)
6 Little Bit Faster (T. Redwood) 7 Tip Top Tap (R. Hennessy) 8 Rays Crown Royal (K. Hoerdt) Ninth Pace, purse $10,000 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Rascal Shark (P. Davies) 2 Cool Eyes (D. Monkman Jr) 3 Tatsu (J. Marino) 4 Attitude Adjuster (J. Campbell) 5 Cenalta Octane (R. Grundy) 6 Cams Wizard (W. Tainsh Jr) 7 Metajka Road (J. Gagne) 8 As Ruled (P. Giesbrecht) 9 Premium Attaction (K. Hoerdt) Tenth Pace, purse $5,100 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Total Rhythm (K. Hoerdt) 2 Boom Shazam (B. Watt) 3 Raging Fingers (T. Redwood) 4 Balzac Billy (J. Jungquist) 5 Bob Watts (T. Cullen) 6 Western Olympian (K. Clark) 7 Mr Brightside (W. Tainsh Jr) 8 Kg Art Dreamer (G. Hudon) 9 Terrorizer (P. Giesbrecht) ae B R Money Matters (J. Gray) MONDAY Post time 1:15 p.m. First Pace, purse $3,200 (EX, PX, SF, TR). 1 Rs Dottie West (J. Gray) 2 Bite Size (P. Giesbrecht) 3 My First Promise (J. Jungquist) 4 Drinkin Her Pretty (K. Clark) 5 Dickies Motel (J. Campbell) 6 Ida Apache (P. Giesbrecht) 7 Kumu (G. Hudon) 8 Two Pack Habit (T. Redwood) Second Pace, purse $3,400 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Modern Cowboy (G. Hudon) 2 M L Lightning Blvd (T. Redwood) 3 Jellos Fellow (P. Davies) 4 Artability (Q. Schneider) 5 Barndougle (G. Clark) 6 Da Terror (T. Cullen) 7 Western Shoot Out (R. Grundy) 8 Hesacamcracker (R. Hennessy) Third Pace, purse $3,200 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Broadies Dancer (P. Davies) 2 Minettas Leader (J. Jungquist) 3 Blue Star Cavalier (K. Ducharme) 4 Uptown Spirit (J. Chappell) 5 Timely Promise (W. Tainsh Jr) 6 Westcoast Son (C. Brown) 7 Whosurhero (J. Jungquist) 8 Classy Cracker (T. Redwood) 9 Arctic Artist (J. Gray) Fourth Pace, purse $7,500 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Call Me Up (K. Hoerdt) 2 Ashlynn Grace (J. Chappell) 3 Millbanks Ariel (T. Redwood) 4 Honor Roll (J. Campbell) 5 Blue Star Beauty (W. Tainsh Jr) 6 Just Fiction (J. Marino)
7 Feelin Flush (T. Cullen) Fifth Pace, purse $3,600 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Dieselystic (W. Tainsh Jr) 2 My Promise To You (J. Gray) 3 Location Baran (P. Giesbrecht) 4 Im A Wildcat (W. Tainsh Jr) 5 Cenalta Magic (J. Campbell) 6 Man Alive (T. Redwood) 7 Kg Rowan (G. Hudon) 8 Saltwater Cowboy (J. Marino) Sixth Pace, purse $5,600 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Big Bang Theory (G. Hudon) 2 Barona Josie (W. Tainsh Jr) 3 Cloud Nine (J. Marino) 4 Phoenician Gal (T. Cullen) 5 Baby You Save Me (T. Brown) 6 Jennas Pass (J. Chappell) 7 Credit Card Junkie (K. Clark) Seventh Pace, purse $2,800 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Tap Out (J. Marino) 2 Power Maid (P. Giesbrecht) 3 Fortunate Design (K. Clark) 4 Mood Light (R. Goulet) 5 Me Myself And I (B. Clark) 6 Sealedwithapromise (J. Gray) 7 Thats Witty (J. Campbell) 8 Charm N Wits (P. Davies) 9 G I Joan (T. Redwood) ae Wrangler Diva (T. Redwood) Eighth Pace, purse $3,800 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Frisco (T. Cullen) 2 Hollywood Hotel (G. Hudon) 3 Make It So (J. Chappell) 4 Gaucho Hanover (R. Hennessy) 5 Kg Cody (J. Jungquist) 6 Heartland Firmway (P. Giesbrecht) 7 Cenalta Spirit (W. Tainsh Jr) 8 Blue Star Quest (T. Redwood) 9 Farm Team (P. Davies) Ninth Pace, purse $6,000 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Cenalta Power (R. Grundy) 2 Greek Ruler (J. Chappell) 3 Outlawdangruswatrs (W. Tainsh Jr) 4 All Canadian Mjjz (T. Redwood) 5 Loneridge Shannon (P. Giesbrecht) 6 Strikes N Charges (T. Cullen) 7 Outlawtowerinferno (R. Hennessy) 8 Revoler (J. Campbell) Tenth Pace, purse $3,300 (EX, PF, SF, TR). 1 Barona Java (G. Hudon) 2 Blue Star Classic (J. Gray) 3 Keystone Vanyla (W. Tainsh Jr) 4 Fancy Camelot (T. Cullen) 5 Js Honeybet (T. Redwood) 6 Canyacrackher (R. Hennessy) 7 Cool One (D. Monkman Jr) 8 Just Saucy (P. Giesbrecht) 9 Im The Reason (J. Marino)
RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013 B7
MacLean wins coach of the year
Toronto 8 Texas 0 ARLINGTON, Texas — Mark Buehrle threw seven shutout innings, Colby Rasmus and J.P. Arencibia homered, and the Toronto Blue Jays handed the Texas Rangers their fourth straight loss, 8-0 on Friday night. Buehrle (3-4) improved to 13-5 against the Rangers. The left-hander gave up four singles and equaled his season high with seven strikeouts to win his first road game of the year. Rasmus hit a three-run shot in the fourth, and Arencibia capped the inning with a solo shot as the Blue Jays won for the sixth time in eight games. Texas starter Justin Grimm (5-5) allowed 10 hits and seven runs in 7 2-3 innings. The rookie is 0-2 with an 11.66 ERA in his last three starts. Texas has scored only five runs in its slide, its longest since another four-game skid from July 3-6, 2012. The Rangers’ frustration over the lack of offence boiled over in the sixth inning when shortstop Elvis Andrus was ejected after being called out on strikes by umpire Eric Cooper. Andrus yelled at Cooper from the dugout, and a bat was tossed onto the field after the shortstop was tossed. The 2 hour, 8 minute game ended when Lance Berkman grounded into a double play, the Rangers’ third of the game. It was the quickest game played at Texas since May 23, 2011.
LOCAL
Preferred Qualifications: • Must be able to pass the RCMP reliability screening requirements • Proficiency in CPIC, JOIN, PROS • Must type a minimum of 40 words per minute • Exceptional communication skills, both verbal and written • Must be able to work in a fast-paced environment, often with many interruptions • May be required to work some nights, weekends and holidays • Demonstrate the ability to maintain confidentiality when working with confidential subject matter
FINANCIAL SERVICES MANAGER Duties include arranging financing for vehicle purchasers and the sale of insurance products, extended warranties and vehicle appearance protection products. Business office experience preferred, but will train the right candidate.
Salary range: $48,942 - $61,173 depending on skills and experience. The City of Lacombe has an excellent benefits package. This posting will remain open until a suitable candidate is found.
Experience the difference of a career with
All applicants are thanked for their interest, but only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. Applicants will be required to bring a current Criminal Records Check to the interview.
A great opportunity is available to talented, motivated individuals who share our entrepreneurial spirit and vision for the future. We are ATCO Gas, Alberta’s largest natural gas distribution company, serving more than one million people in almost 300 communities across Alberta. ATCO Gas is part of the ATCO Group of Companies, an Alberta-based organization, with more than 8,800 employees worldwide. Build your future with us and see where your potential can take you. ATCO Gas offers a competitive compensation and benefits package, a challenging work environment and excellent career and development opportunities within the ATCO Group of Companies.
We are currently hiring for:
• STORE MANAGER • PRODUCT MANAGER/VISUAL FOOTWEAR EXPERT For our BOWER PLACE location!
ATCO GAS IS NOW HIRING A FULL-TIME SURVEY TECHNOLOGIST
To apply & learn more about any of these exciting opportunities, please visit:
www.lechateau.com/careers
RESPONSIBILITIES: Under the general supervision of the Supervisor and under the direction of a Foreman/Senior Survey Technologist, is responsible for providing the survey requirements and documentation necessary for the construction, maintenance and location of all ATCO Gas pipelines and facilities. QUALIFICATIONS: • Grade 12 Diploma or General Equivalency Diploma (GED) plus a two-year Technology program at a recognized Institute of Technology. • Certification by the Alberta Society of Engineering Technologists (A.S.E.T.) as a Technologist. • Minimum of two years applicable experience as a Survey Technologist. • Familiarity with various regulating codes governing the natural gas industry is required. • Knowledge of company safety policies, procedures and Health & Safety regulations is required. • Must display good verbal and written communication skills, decision-making skills and a strong work ethic. • Must have a Valid Alberta Driver’s License and be able to obtain a valid In-House Operator’s Certificate. • Must be prepared to work for periods away from home base, and in all types of weather.
located in the Parkland Mall has an openings for:
SENIOR & JUNIOR TRAVEL CONSULTANTS If you are outgoing, passionate about travel and ready to build your client base in a busy mall location then we offer you the best of both worlds – the opportunity of working for a locally owned family business and the benefits and programs of the world’s largest travel company. Sabre experience preferred. No evenings or Sunday shifts, limited weekends. Employee Benefit Plan available. Minimum 3 days per week required. All replies will be held in confidence. Apply by fax or email only to: CWT Vista Travel Ltd #910 4747 67th St. Parkland Mall Red Deer, T4N 6H3 Fax 403-341-3950 Email iwoit@shaw.ca
If you see yourself excelling in this role please forward your resume and hand-written cover letter to: Attn: Human Resources City of Lacombe 5432-56 Avenue Lacombe, AB T4L 1E9 E-mail: humanresources@lacombe.ca
GREAT OPPORTUNITIES. GREAT PEOPLE.
For more information on this position and to apply online, visit us at: 48829F15,17
THE HAGUE, The Netherlands — First-year teammates Chaim Schalk of Red Deer and Ben Saxton of Calgary posted their best result this season on the FIVB World Tour circuit, finishing 17th overall. On Friday, Schalk and Saxton lost their opening knockout round match of the beach volleyball tournamet, falling to seventh seeds Grzehorz Fijalek and Mariusz Prudel of Poland, who have three fifth-place finishes this season, 21-19, 21-18. The Canadians posted a 2-3 record this week at the tournament and advanced to the main draw for the first time this season.
For information on these or other employment opportunities, please visit our website at www.oldscollege.ca/employment
The ideal candidate will perform a variety of duties including: process over-the-counter inquiries, respond to front counter complaints and general inquiries, motor vehicle collision reports, Lion’s Bike ID, property reports, pardon applications, and fingerprint requests. This position also provides technical assistance to LPS members and will manage and process all security clearances, control building access and security and ID all visitors.
Eire Og hosting second stage of Alberta Cup today at rugby park
Schalk, Saxton post best result this season on FIVB World Tour
48661F15
Reporting to the Office Manager, the Civilian LPS Clerk provides immediate assistance in emergency and non-emergency situations to Lacombe Police Service and to the general public, internal and external agencies. Successful candidate may be cross-trained in front counter, records management and court liaison duties.
Do you have a talent for accounting but a love of the arts and heritage? The Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery is seeking a detail-oriented person with accounting qualifications to provide financial support and guidance to the Executive Director, the Board and the staff. S/He is responsible for maintaining accurate financial and human resources records for the Red Deer & District Museum Society. The Coordinator assists the Executive Director and the Board to develop sustainable short-term and long-term financial plans for the MAG. S/He researches grant opportunities and works with the ED and the staff to develop grant requests and to report on completed grant projects. Please submit your application in confidence to: Lorna Johnson, Executive Director Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery 4525 – 47A Avenue Red Deer, AB T4N 6Z6 Lorna.Johnson@reddeer.ca Deadline for applications is Monday, June 17. 43837F8,15
BRIEFS Red Deer’s Gaelic football team, Eire Og, is hosting the second stage of the 2013 Alberta Cup today at Titans Rugby Park. Joining the Red Deer squad will be men’s and women’s teams from Calgary, Fort McMurray and Edmonton, with the winners advancing to the next round. Games start at 10 a.m and run to 5 p.m.
Salary Range: $47,023.37 to $56,075.61 The Corporate Communications Department within Advancement is seeking a dynamic communications professional to fill the role of Communications Coordinator. Reporting to the Manager, Corporate Communications, you will be responsible for researching, writing and editing content for a wide variety of media and ensuring positive information about Olds College is delivered to target audiences. Please forward a resume quoting the appropriate competition number by the closing dates indicated on our website.
Lacombe Police Service (LPS)
Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery
Or, introduce yourself to a member of our Management Team today!
TECHNICIAN III (Communications Coordinator)
Clerk
COORDINATOR OF FINANCE AND GRANTS
Lucrative compensation plan based on salary and commission, excellent work environment and benefits. Only high performance candidates need apply. Please send your resume to: doug@reddeertoyota.ca Fax: 403.346.4975
Salary Range: $73,354.81 to $100,862.86 Olds College has an exciting and unique opportunity for an exceptional candidate to fill the position of Director who will be responsible for providing strategic direction and leadership for the development of a broad range of recreations, fitness, and intercollegiate athletics programming.
48903F15,22
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Director ATHLETICS, FITNESS & RECREATION
All applications must be made to website.
Deadline for Submissions: June 21, 2013 Only candidates being considered for an interview will be contacted.
48973F15
Jays club slumping Rangers 8-0
“Since then I really worked on every little part of my game that I could.” Beat by Toews for Selke, Bergeron still got an award Friday, given the King Clancy for his humanitarian work. Tampa Bay Lightning right-winger Marty St. Louis won his third Lady Byng Memorial Trophy for sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct. St. Louis already won the Art Ross Trophy by finishing the 48-game season with an NHL-best 60 points. Ray Shero of the Pittsburgh Penguins was named general manager of the year, and Minnesota Wild goaltender Josh Harding, who battled back after being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in the offseason, got the Bill Masterton Memorial trophy for perseverance. On a much different scale, MacLean showed plenty of perseverance in getting the job as Senators coach. The long-time assistant wondered if he had passed the expiration date for becoming an NHL head coach. But experience kept MacLean from being “overwhelmed” by anything this season, and a berth in the playoffs provided validation that was only furthered by being coach of the year. “I just think that sticking to it and still believing in what I did as an assistant coach has helped me now that I get the opportunity to be the head coach,” MacLean said. “This kind of gives us credibility that all those times when I was thinking that I could do this that now this kind of gives me the credibility that I was right, I could coach in the league.”
48845F15,17
CHICAGO — Paul MacLean didn’t want to take too much credit when accepting the Jack Adams Award as the NHL’s coach of the year. He called himself a “representative” of a lot of other peoples’ hard work around the Ottawa Senators. But amid injuries to Norris Trophy-winning defenceman Erik Karlsson, centre Jason Spezza and goaltender Craig Anderson, it was MacLean who held it all together as the Senators managed to make the playoffs. “For me it was important that I continue to set the expectations of the team at a high level but also be realistic about those expectations,” MacLean said. “We had Erik Paul MacLean Karlsson injured, we had Jason Spezza injured. We didn’t have those two players playing in Binghamton. For us to expect someone to come up and be able to be those two players is not realistic and it’s not fair to the players. “We try to stay as real as we could game-by-game and give the players realistic expectations and a realistic way to play the game to have success.” Despite losing Spezza for all but five games and Karlsson for all but 17, the Senators had success in the form of a 56-point season. MacLean credited captain Daniel Alfredsson, the winner of the Mark Messier Leadership Award, along with Chris Phillips, Sergei Gonchar and Chris Neil, for providing a veteran presence given plenty of adversity. When the injury bug started to become an epidemic for the Senators, MacLean first wondered, “Who’s next?” Then, the 55-year-old did some impressive coaching. “That’s what good teams do is find a way to win,” he said. “So we were challenged early in the season to find ways to win and I think our leadership group accepted that, and the quality of our young players that we were able to bring up accepted that.” Ottawa won with Kyle Turris as its leading scorer and players like defenceman Patrick Wiercioch and forward Mika Zibanejad playing major roles. MacLean also credited Anderson for his impressive season, along with young goalies Robin Lehner and Ben Bishop. The Chicago Blackhawks didn’t have to deal with as much adversity this season in large part to the play of captain Jonathan Toews, who captured the Frank J. Selke Trophy as the league’s top defensive forward. “It means the world,” Toews said. “It’s a tremendous feeling, I think, first of all, when you’re mentioned in the same sentence after a full NHL season as guys like Pavel Datsyuk and Patrice Bergeron. To be able to go head-to-head with guys like that in the playoffs and to know them from the past, you understand how much they mean to their teams and how much they contribute offensively and defensively.” Toews narrowly beat Bergeron of the Boston Bruins to win his first Selke Trophy, after a season in which he won 59.9 per cent of his faceoffs and had a plus-28 rating. The 25-year-old centre pointed to his time at Shattuck-St. Mary’s under coach Tom Ward as the point when he became a strong two-way player. “I really understood the importance of playing good hockey on both ends of the rink,” Toews said.
NHL AWARDS
49605F15
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
B8 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
CFL
BRIEFS Kicker O’Neill leads Lions to 29-27 win over Stamps Hugh O’Neill kicked five field goals for the B.C. Lions in a 29-27 CFL preseason win over the Calgary Stampeders on Friday. His winning field goal from 46 yards at 13:47 of the fourth quarter bounced off the crossbar and over for the victory. The CFL tuneup was both a preview of the regular-season opener for both clubs and a rematch of the 2012 West Division final, which the Stampeders won to earn a berth in the Grey Cup. B.C.’s Korey Williams scored on a 105-yard kickoff return and Nick Moore caught a touchdown pass from Thomas DeMarco for the visitors. Calgary backup quarterback Kevin Glenn threw touchdown passes to Mo Price and Khalil Paden. Running back Jonathan Williams scored on a oneyard dive to give the hosts the lead with six and a half minutes remaining in the game. Stampeders kicker Rene Paredes contributed a pair of field goals. Lions No. 1 quarterback Travis Lulay played a fraction of the first quarter before giving way to backups DeMarco, Chris Hart and Joey Elliott. Lulay completed two of five passes for 13 yards. DeMarco was 6-for-12 for 68 yards and a touchdown. Hart was 1-for-6 for two yards and Elliott made two passes
for 14 yards. Calgary rotated starter Drew Tate, Glenn and Bo Levi Mitchell through the game with third-stringer Mitchell working the majority of the second half. Tate made two of five passes for seven yards in the first quarter. Glenn was 7-for-10 for a pair of touchdown passes and one interception in the second quarter. Mitchell was 8-for-11 and 103 yards. Ryan Perilloux had one throw for three yards.
UP TO
59 MPG HIGHWAY 4.8 L/100 KM HWY
¤
Roughriders score two late TDs in win over Eskimos EDMONTON — Craig Newman’s 57-yard interception return for a touchdown with 25 seconds left in the fourth quarter capped a late rally by the Roughriders on Friday as Saskatchewan scored a 31-24 come-frombehind victory over the Edmonton Eskimos in CFL pre-season play. After Riders quarterback Tino Sunseri hit DeDe Dorsey for a TD on third and goal from the Eskimos one-yard line to tie the game 24-24 with 54 seconds left, Newman picked off a deflected pass by Edmonton pivot Jonathan Crompton on the ensuing drive and raced in for the decisive points. Drew Willy got the start at quarterback for Saskatchewan and engineered a scoring drive on the Riders’ first possession as Chris Milo nailed a 40-yard field goal six minutes in. Edmonton went up 7-3 with three minutes to play in the opening quarter when Don Oramasionwu popped a ball loose from Riders receiver Taj Smith. Eskimos defensive back Marcel Young scooped up the loose ball and galloped 58 yards into the end zone.
2013 Dodge Dart GT shown.§
CLASSIC DODGE PERFORMANCE. AND A WHOLE NEW STANDARD OF FUEL ECONOMY.
TECHNOLOGY
• •
8.4-INCH TOUCH-SCREEN DISPLAY 7-INCH RECONFIGURABLE TFT DISPLAY
SAFETY
• •
10 AIR BAGS, 4-WHEEL ABS DISC BRAKES ELECTRONIC STABILITY CONTROL
•
EXCELLENT FUEL ECONOMY – UP TO 59 MPG HWY (4.8 L/100 KM ¤ ) POWERFUL, FUEL-EFFICIENT 2.0 L 160 HP TIGERSHARK TM ENGINE
ADVERTISING CONSULTANT Farm Press Publication - Alberta Division has an immediate opening for a full time Advertising Consultant for the bi-weekly Ag-Viser publication.
EFFICIENCY
The successful candidate must possess the following:
2013 DODGE DART
t 4USPOH 4BMFT #BDLHSPVOE t )JHIMZ .PUJWBUFE t &YDFMMFOU $PNNVOJDBUJPO 4LJMMT t 1SFTFOUBUJPO BOE 0SHBOJ[BUJPOBM 4LJMMT t .VTU CF BCMF UP TFSWJDF BO FYJTJUJOH DMJFOU CBTF BOE EFWFMPQ OFX DMJFOUT JO B DPNQFUJUJWF NBSLFU t 3FMJBCMF 7FIJDMF
THE MOST TECHNOLOGICALLY ADVANCED VEHICLE IN ITS CLASS ** •
16,998
$
In addition to regular commissions, travel and communications expenses will be paid.
PURCHASE PRICE INCLUDES FREIGHT.
FINANCE FOR
Competition closes: Friday, June 21, 2013
ALSO AVAILABLE
94 @ 3.49 0
$
FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN INCLUDES FREIGHT.
‥
2013 DODGE 2013 CIVIC◊ DART BEST AVAILABLE HIGHWAY FUEL ECONOMY ¤
2013 COROLLAâ—Š
2013 FOCUSâ—Š
54 MPG
50 MPG
51 MPG
10
6
6
6
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Showcasing the extraordinary volunteer spirit of Central Alberta
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FOR THE KIDS Photos contributed
Miserable weather didn’t prevent more than 6,500 people from attending the Central Alberta Children’s Festival at Rotary Recreation Park on June 5 and 6. Organizers are calling the event, which was staged with the help of 400 volunteers, a big success.
Planning has already started for the 2010 children’s festival, which will feature internationally known children’s entertainer Fred Penner. Next year’s event, to be held on June 4 and 5, is in need of more performers, volunteers, and sponsors. Anyone interested is welcome to call festival coordinator Judy Scott at 403-309-8222 or email iscott@ fsca.ca
Saturday, June 15, 2013
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Saturday, June 15, 2013
Carolyn Martindale, City Editor, 403-314-4326 Fax 403-341-6560 E-mail editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
Outdoor dance to benefit causes GARAGE SALE FOR WHISKERS Whisker Rescue Society is holding its annual garage sale from July 26 to 28 at Cannery Row Bingo Hall, at 5239 53rd Ave. Last year the sale raised $7,000 to help find forever homes for cats. Donations of items will be accepted at the bingo hall July 2 to 23, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Clothes, televisions, computers, mattresses and large appliances will not be accepted. Sale hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on July 26 and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on July 27 and 28. Whisker Rescue Society is a Red Deer non-profit, no-kill organization that provides shelter, food, medical attention and adoptions for cats. For more information call 403-347-1251.
BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF
LACOMBE
A thousand people could be shakin’ it this month to raise money to build a performing arts centre in Lacombe. The All That Jazz Dance Studio is hosting an outdoor dance exercise event on Saturday, June 22, at the Lacombe Athletic Park to benefit two local causes. Proceeds from the 11 a.m. Shakin’ It For the Arts event will go towards efforts by the Lacombe Performing Arts Centre Foundation to build a new performing space in the city — and also to help finance a July trip by dancers from the studio to perform at Disney World in Florida. While foundation president Grant Harder has no fundraising goals in mind, he hopes the event attracts 1,000 people, “from age eight to 98” to get some fun exercise
while supporting the causes. Community groups, including the All That Jazz Dance Studio, have been pushing to build a new performing arts centre in Lacombe for some time. A needs assessment done by consultants concluded that constructing an acoustically excellent, “but not too ambitious” performing arts centre is feasible. Since then, the foundation has asked the Wolf Creek School District to lease some land for the project. Sandi Stewart, recreation and culture manager for the city, said the aim would be to have the school district lease some land to the city, which could then sub-lease it to the foundation for the centre’s construction. Discussions are ongoing.
Harder believes the performing arts centre will eventually be constructed in partnership with the local Children’s Resource Centre Group, which also needs new space for a day care centre, after-school care, Lacombe Parent Link Centre, and Family and Community Support Services. Having a performing arts centre under the same roof as services for children makes sense to Harder. “It’s a great way of allowing kids to get involved with the arts,” through music or art classes in the complex, he said. The next step will be getting community feedback, then embarking on the design and costing stage, he added. Tickets to the Shakin’ It For the Arts event are $10 in advance from Sunny 94 radio station in Lacombe, Altered Images in Bentley, and Rip’n Ronnie’s Fitness in Ponoka. Tickets are $12 at the field. lmichelin@reddeeradvocate.com
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SUICIDE AWARENESS SESSION Suicide Information and Education Services is hosting a public suicide awareness session on Tuesday (June 18) from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at The Outreach Centre. Education co-ordinator Dawne Adkins, said the short education session is being held as part of ongoing community education and is suitable for both adults and youth. Another session will be held on Sept. 24. Adkins is leading the presentation. No fee or pre-registration is required. The centre can accommodate about 20 people. The Outreach Centre is located at 4101 54th Ave.
MAYOR’S GARDEN PARTY Red Deer senior citizens will be treated to Victorian era characters during the Mayor’s Garden Party on July 3 at City Hall Park. The annual event will feature live entertainment, prizes, and food served by the mayor and city councillors. The event is free. This event is handicapped/wheelchair accessible. The party runs from 2 to 3:30 p.m. at 4902- 48th Avenue. For more information call 403-348-5078 or go to www.reddeer.ca
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Twin brothers Jared and Parker Allison fly over the 100-foot jump at their motocross track on their family’s farm near Delburne on Thursday. The two University of Calgary students are helping to finance their education through their professional motocross racing careers. This weekend the two travel to Calgary for races and head to Edmonton next weekend for races there. The Monster Energy Motocross Nationals take the two riders from Nanaimo, B.C., to Moncton, N.B., through the summer.
Clinic marks World Blood Day BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF When Nancy Dillabough was in need of blood, donations provided enough. She woke up with significant pain in her stomach last summer and had to go in for emergency surgery. “When I woke up from my surgery my blood pressure was dramatically low,” said Dillabough. “So I needed two units of blood to help my blood pressure get up. Thanks to the generosity and kindness of those who donate blood it saved my life.” She is thankful for the blood supply that kept her alive in her time of need. Now she sports a large scar across her stomach from her surgery. “I’m trying to advocate that it is very important for people to donate blood,” said Dillabough. After her recovery she decided she wanted to help with Canadian Blood Services, as they were how she managed to stay alive. Although she is unable to donate herself, she does volunteer at the
blood donor clinic in Red Deer every Monday for about six hours. Dillabough was at Red Deer’s blood donor clinic Friday handing out cake and carnations to people after they had donated blood. The presents for the donors were a part of World Blood Day, a day to honour donors, which took place on Friday. Though Dillabough only needed two units of blood, it can take five to eight donations of blood for one person involved in a serious motor vehicle collision. Tanya Paul, Canadian Blood Services community co-ordinator, said World Blood Day and the Red Deer event is meant to honour those people who come in and donate on a regular basis. “As well it is meant to encourage new owners to come in and consider giving blood.” “It’s our way of giving back to the people who come in and help save lives,” said Paul. Over the summer months there is typically a lull in blood donations. mcrawford@reddeeradvocate.com
Rapid HIV test now in Red Deer BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF
GIVE US A CALL The Advocate invites its readers to help cover news in Central Alberta. We would like to hear from you if you see something worthy of coverage. And we would appreciate hearing from you if you see something inaccurate in our pages. We strive for complete, accurate coverage of Central Alberta and are happy to correct any errors we may commit. Call 403-314-4333.
A new HIV test that provides quicker results is now available at Red Deer Regional Hospital’s emergency department. “With this test it’s a 60-minute wait time from the time it arrives at the lab bench to the result,” said Dr. Ifeoma Achebe, a medical officer of health for Alberta Health Services Central Zone, on Thursday. The Rapid Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Antibody Test has been available at Red Deer hospital emergency room since April 3. It is part of a pilot project to expand testing beyond AHS Calgary Zone where it was initially available. Now the test is accessible at 11 more hospitals across the province. “This is all in an effort to better control HIV,” Achebe said. Tests are ordered in specific situations: ● Blood or body fluid exposure depending on the source. ● Women who are pregnant and
near term or in labour with either no previous HIV testing or tested HIV negative more than four weeks prior to delivery with on-going high risk behaviours for HIV infection. ● Acutely ill patients with a differential diagnosis of HIV infection. ● An individual presenting with HIV risk behaviours where testing is highly indicated, such as an injection drug user or sex trade worker, and there is a low likelihood of a follow-up visit to get results. Achebe said rapid testing is also available to patients on hospital wards other than emergency. As of Thursday, a total of 325 rapid HIV tests have been performed at the AHS facilities that began offering the test in April. Regular HIV testing, which takes about five days for results, is still used for other patients. Achebe would like to see rapid testing expanded in AHS Central Zone to Wetaskiwin Hospital and Care Centre. Rapid testing is available in the ER 24 hours a day. Patients must give their consent to be tested. szielinski@reddeeradvocate.com
‘School of the Future’ eyed for pilot project BY CRYSTAL RHYNO ADVOCATE STAFF A student-designed School of the Future may become a reality in Red Deer. The Red Deer Public School District is now exploring options to submit a pilot project proposal following a recent visit with Premier Alison Redford. The blueprints are the work of four Eastview Middle School students who earned an international award for the innovative design in April. Grade 8 students Cole Webber, Connor McCallister, Alison Harman and Grade 7 student Aidan Schafer pitched the idea to the premier, Education Minister Jeff Johnson, Infrastructure Minister Wayne Drysdale and other esteemed guests at the school on June 3. “We really tried to make it realistic because that was our big goals going into it,” said Webber. “We wanted to do something that we actually thought would have an impact for the better and also be feasible with the guidelines they have now. To have it up for debate right now is extraordinary.” The students won an international School of the Future Design Competition in April in Pittsburgh, Pa. The Mamawayawin School, or ‘living in a community’ in Cree, is a kindergarten to Grade 12 school designed to be part of downtown Red Deer. Classes would be incorporated into multi-use community facilities with sustainability features like geothermal heating, solar energy, and harness waste energy from rinks to cool buildings. Webber said making school a more engaging experience for students is at the root of the project. He said the community integrated model plays a key factor in reaching this goal. The school is set in the downtown for this reason so it would be connected to other facilities either physically or through programs. Board chairman Lawrence Lee said they received positive feedback from the ministries at the meeting. Lee said the board would like to see it become a pilot project for the province. “(That way we can) show what is possible for future school buildings in the province,” said Lee. Webber said the reaction from the student body in the school has been amazing. “They were asking questions and wanted to get involved in it. (Alison Harman) described it as a spark that was set off.” crhyno@reddeeradvocate.com
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Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
City of Red Deer culture and community development coordinator Wendy Meers, left, speaks with artist Alysse Boyd at City Hall After the unveiling of her art piece titled Where We Would Have Lived. Boyd and about 300 grade six students from the city worked on the large two panel piece which hangs on the main floor of City Hall.
Where We Would Have Lived RED DEER’S CENTENNIAL DEPICTED AS A TOPSY-TURVY PATCHWORK QUILT BY 300 GRADE 6 STUDENTS BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF Red Deer’s 100-year history was depicted as a topsyturvy patchwork quilt by 300 Grade-6 students who helped create two new “legacy” murals, unveiled this week at City Hall. Students from six city schools were invited by city artist Alysse Bowd to create images of their own homes out of fabric. The student’s colourful houses were later hand-sewn by Bowd onto large 2.4-by-3metre fabric maps of Red Deer, becoming a flowering of residential neighbourhoods, turned in every direction. This first public art project commissioned for the inside City Hall got a big thumbs up from acting mayor Tara Veer, as well as other onlookers. “It’s wonderful that children were brought together to
. . . show us our city, as we see it,” said Dennis Nault, chair of the city’s public art jury committee. Veer said she hopes the youngsters will view their work with pride over the years. But considering the murals are mounted on the east wall of the first floor of City Hall, where parking tickets are paid, she joked, “Perhaps we shouldn’t wish them to view it too often!” Bowd was commended for utilizing the talents of some of Red Deer’s youngest citizens to help create a lasting imaginative legacy for the city. Her two fabric murals, titled Where We Would Have Lived, were selected by the Red Deer Public Art Jury
Committee because of their historic theme and contributions by students. They will mark the city’s centennial year, as well as Red Deer’s stint host the 2013 Alberta Lieutenant Governor’s Distinguished Artist Awards.
ing the Lieutenant Governor awards, to be held Saturday. Bowd, who attended Red Deer College’s visual arts program and the Alberta College of Art and Design, is primarily a ceramic artist, but has lately become fascinated with maps, incorporating them in her drawings. For her first public — DENNIS NAULT, CHAIR OF THE CITY’S a r t c o m PUBLIC ART JURY COMMITTEE m i s s i o n , she drew the streets of historic “It’s a beautiful project,” Red Deer onto fabric, then said Janice Shimek, vice-chair invited students to find their of the Red Deer Arts Council, own houses and mark them. which first approached the Around Bowd’s black line city about commissioning a drawings of the Old Courtlegacy art project. house, St. Luke’s Anglican The $9,000 cost was covered Church, the train stations and by the city’s public art reserve CP Rail bridge she sewed and from some of the money colourful residential neighearmarked for the city host- bourhoods made up of the stu-
‘IT’S WONDERFUL THAT CHILDREN WERE BROUGHT TOGETHER TO . . . SHOW US OUR CITY, AS WE SEE IT.’
dent’s 300 fabric houses. A different colour palette was used for each participating school — River Glen, St. Patrick’s, St. Francis of Assisi, West Park, Normandeau, and Gateway Christian — so students would later be able to identify their homes easier. The greatest challenge was working with so much fabric, said Bowd, who had to transport the massive murals to various schools and find ways to hang them to show students. Grade-6 River Glen students Kati Steele and Jalayna Brosinsky liked the hand-made look of the murals and thought they had colourful appeal. “I think they look really good,” added Brosinsky. Bowd thanked participating students, as well as members of the community and Red Deer College who helped her with the sewing, framing and fabric stretching. lmichelin@reddeeradvocate. com
Alice in Chains’ new album selling well, but not like ’90s BY THE CANADIAN PRESS TORONTO — Alice in Chains’ second album since their recent reunion, The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here, opened at No. 2 on the Billboard chart in Canada and the U.S. with more than 60,000 in sales. Positive numbers, to be sure — at least, for bands who don’t remember the 1990s. “Doing well in today’s market is a lot different than doing well in the ’90s market as far as records go, you know what I mean?” said founding guitarist/songwriter Jerry Cantrell in a recent telephone interview with a rueful laugh. “You can’t even really compare the two.” True enough. So the lofty heights the Seattle band reached in the early-90s heyday of its muck-encrusted hard rock are largely unreachable nowadays — after all, 1992’s Dirt and 1994’s Jar of Flies EP went platinum a combined seven times in the U.S. and thrice in Canada. But he says it wasn’t just sales that were better then. “The fact is, I don’t feel that we value people’s efforts and commitments and investments (anymore), in music particularly,” said the 47-year-old. “I think in general, we’ve grown to expect less and pay the same or more for it. And actually be OK with that.”
Hoping to be the exception to the rule, Cantrell says the band pushed themselves hard in making this, their second record with a revised lineup that features vocalist William DuVall in place of founding singer Layne Staley, who died of a drug overdose in 2002. Cantrell talked to The Canadian Press about the inspiration behind the new album, touring Canada and wanting to take Alice in Chains into new musical territory. CP: 2009’s Black Gives Way to Blue was your first album with William singing lead vocals. Has playing together since given him a greater comfort level in the band? JC: I wouldn’t say that the balance is much different. I mean, we kind of figured out how we operate during the process of making the first record, and this record is a continuation of (that). We’re a team. And we don’t classically have a lead singer. That’s what this band kind of evolved into being. There’s a lot of bands that have more than one voice in rock and roll, and we’ve kind of modelled ourselves after being that. We do it in our own way. CP: The second single from your new album, Stone, is built on a riff that sounds a little uneasy, even queasy. JC: It makes you sick? Sick in a good way? I’ll take that. (laughs) It’s a good one, man. It’s very simple. I’ve always been a fan of that, and recog-
Contributed photo
Alice in Chains’ second album since their recent reunion — The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here — is selling with positive numbers. nized that simplicity is a beautiful thing. I ‘learned that lesson from AC/ DC. And I’m not even calling them a simple band, but the formula and the riffs are based in really good chunks of bedrock. It’s just a simple idea that just kicks ass. I would say the same thing about Stone. The funny thing about that song is I didn’t even write it on guitar. I kind of hummed it into the phone when I was in a sling (after shoulder surgery). I couldn’t even play guitar, but I was hearing this riff, so I sang it into my phone and saved it for later. CP: Alice in Chains has gigs in nine Canadian cities this summer. Many
bands only play some combination of Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, so why did you decide to do a more thorough tour here? JC: For that exact point. We haven’t done a proper tour across the country, and it’s been a long time. A couple of the times we were going to do it, it was in the dead of winter or just didn’t work out schedule-wise. So it was a point that we discussed. We need to get up to Canada and we need to do a proper (tour) across there instead of just hitting a couple major cities. We’re really glad that we had the opportunity to make a good run across there. We love to see you guys.
C4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
Canadian Idols look back on 10th anniversary BY NICK PATCH THE CANADIAN PRESS
my music scene too as opposed to: I’m just a guy with a billboard that had it paid for, or got radio play because my label forced it, or whatever,” said Malcolm, who’s relieved he was at least an adult when he was on the show. “I was 23 when I won. If I had won when I was 18, it would have been a disaster,” he said. Well, Melissa O’Neil was a mere 17 years old when she was crowned the victor of Season 3. While she says she had a positive experience, she adds that some elements of her Idol background have lingered in an unpleasant way. “There’s pictures of me when I was 16 that I really wish weren’t on the Internet or out there anymore, and I can’t do anything to change that,” O’Neil said. “I wish those shows had a bit more of a higher age limit, because at that age, not everyone knows what they want to be yet. They don’t really know or understand what it means to be giving up so much by saying, yeah, sure, I’ll be on this television show, I’ll subject myself to all kinds of judgment and put myself on a national scale so everyone can see me before I’ve even decided who I want to be.” And yet, for those Idols who did go on to pop stardom, even the unsavoury elements of the show provided a preview of the rigours of the industry. “It was kind of my first experience at getting any little bit of Canadian fame — even if it was that 15 minutes, it was really beneficial,” said Carly Rae Jepsen, who finished third in Season 5 as a frecklefaced folk ingenue who later dialled in a worldwide smash with the multiple Grammy-nominated “Call Me Maybe.” “I felt like too it was a bit of a training camp for what all of this entails, and a teaser taste of whether I liked it or not.” Added Hedley frontman Jacob Hoggard, who finished third in Season 2, in an email: “It helped me to determine what I wanted out of a music career, and what I didn’t.” Hoggard and Jepsen serve as a shining example of
the sort of stardom that Idol made possible. They’re also largely the exception to the rule. But platinum plaques are not the only measure of success, and some former Idol contestants have found different lanes in the entertainment industry. O’Neil, for instance, is set to star as Eponine in a fall production of Les Miserables to be staged at Toronto’s Princess of Wales Theatre, and she headlines a group of Idol graduates who have found careers in musical theatre that also includes Season 3’s Aaron Walpole and Season 4’s Steffi DiDomenicantonio. And Season 2 winner Kalan Porter put out one of the show’s most successful albums — the doubleplatinum 219 Days — but dealt with a serious illness in his family and ultimately chose a different path, enrolling at the University of Pennsylvania. (A representative for Porter declined an interview request). Still, even those who would defend Idol’s record simultaneously offer reasons why the show’s alumni failed to consistently cash in on the opportunity granted by the show. Executive producer John Brunton, CEO of realityTV giant Insight Productions, points out that due to the deluge of American Idol grads also needing record deals, Canada’s Idols were rarely signed on both sides of the border, which would have helped “a lot.” Reliably unrestrained Idol judge Zack Werner, meanwhile, says the problem was “souvenir records” meant to quickly cash in on viewers’ memories of the show.
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SHOWTIMES FOR FRIDAY JUNE 14, 2013 TO THURSDAY JUNE 20, 2013 STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS (PG) (VIOLENCE,NOT REC. FOR YOUNG CHILDREN) SAT-SUN 12:40 STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS 3D (PG) (VIOLENCE,NOT REC. FOR YOUNG CHILDREN) FRI-SUN 3:45, 6:45, 9:45; MON-WED 6:45, 9:55; THURS 6:30 MONSTERS UNIVERSITY 3D (G) NO PASSES THURS 9:30 IRON MAN 3 (PG) (NOT REC. FOR YOUNG CHILDREN,FRIGHTENING SCENES,VIOLENCE) FRI 3:55, 6:55; SAT 12:55, 3:55, 6:55; SUN 12:55, 3:55; MONTHURS 6:30 FAST & FURIOUS 6 (14A) (VIOLENCE) FRI 4:05, 7:10, 10:15; SAT-SUN 1:00, 4:05, 7:10, 10:15; MON-THURS 7:00, 10:05 MAN OF STEEL (PG) (VIOLENCE,FRIGHTENING SCENES,NOT REC. FOR YOUNG CHILDREN) NO PASSES FRI 9:50; SAT-SUN 12:10, 9:50; MON-THURS 9:45 MAN OF STEEL 3D (PG) (VIOLENCE,NOT REC. FOR YOUNG CHILDREN,FRIGHTENING SCENES) NO PASSES FRI 3:20, 4:00, 6:35, 7:15, 10:30; SAT-SUN 12:45, 3:20, 4:00, 6:35, 7:15, 10:30; MON-THURS 6:35, 7:00, 10:15 EPIC 3D (G) FRI 5:20, 7:55, 10:30; SAT-SUN 2:45, 5:20, 7:55, 10:30; MON-WED 7:15, 9:50; THURS 6:55 EPIC (G) SAT-SUN 12:10 NOW YOU SEE ME (PG) (COARSE LANGUAGE) FRI 4:30, 7:20, 10:10; SAT-SUN 1:40, 4:30, 7:20, 10:10; MONTHURS 6:40, 9:35
poker room
NOW YOU SEE ME (PG) (COARSE LANGUAGE) STAR & STROLLERS SCREENING WED 1:00 WORLD WAR Z 3D () NO PASSES THURS 9:30 THE HANGOVER PART III (14A) (CRUDE CONTENT,COARSE LANGUAGE,NOT RECOMMENDED FOR CHILDREN) FRI 5:00, 7:30, 10:00; SAT-SUN 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00; MON-THURS 7:20, 10:00 THE HANGOVER PART III (14A) (CRUDE CONTENT,COARSE LANGUAGE,NOT RECOMMENDED FOR CHILDREN) STAR & STROLLERS SCREENING WED 1:00 THIS IS THE END (18A) (GORY VIOLENCE,CRUDE COARSE LANGUAGE,SUBSTANCE ABUSE) FRI 5:10, 7:45, 10:20; SAT-SUN 12:00, 2:35, 5:10, 7:45, 10:20; MON-THURS 7:35, 10:10 THE INTERNSHIP (PG) (CRUDE COARSE LANGUAGE,NOT REC. FOR YOUNG CHILDREN) FRI 3:50, 7:00, 10:05; SAT-SUN 12:50, 3:50, 7:00, 10:05; MON-THURS 6:50, 9:40 THE PURGE (14A) (VIOLENCE) FRI 3:25, 5:45, 8:05, 10:25; SAT 1:05, 3:25, 5:45, 8:05, 10:25; SUN 1:05, 3:25, 6:55, 10:25; MON-THURS 7:10, 9:25 MUD (PG) (COARSE LANGUAGE,VIOLENCE) FRI-SUN 9:55; MON-THURS 9:30 WWE PAYBACK - 2013 () SUN 6:00 SPIRIT: STALLION OF THE CIMARRON (G) SAT 11:00
24 HOUR CASH GAMES
TOURNEYS DAILY AT 2PM & 7PM
BEGINNER TOURNAMENTS Tuesdays & Wednesdays at 7pm Sundays at 2 pm $750 Low Limit League Free Roll runs Tuesday June 4 at 7 pm (invitational)
SATELLITES TO THE $560 RDPC MAIN EVENT
Run Sunday @ 7pm & Tuesday @ 2pm $30 NLH RE-BUY TOURNAMENTS
Run the last Sunday of each month
$120 Holiday Tourney st July 1 at 2:00 p.m.
$210 for 15,000 tournament chips 1st & 3rd Saturday of each month 2:00 pm $
325 for 25,000 tournament chips Last Saturday of each month
Satellites now running Thursdays @7 pm *Schedule can change without notice.
Phone in registration available
403-356-2100
6350-67th Street, Red Deer 53062F28
“ANYTHING GOES ON!”
File photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Canadian Idol finalists Theresa Sokyrka, left, and Kalan Porter, right, look on as host Ben Mulroney speaks following their performances on in Toronto Wednesday Sept. 15, 2004. It was a decade ago this week that Canadian Idol debuted, and it was also something of a premiere for host Mulroney.
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TORONTO — It was a decade ago that bespectacled restaurant server Ryan Malcolm and smalltown church crooner Gary Beals began the hotly contested, widely watched race to become Canadian Idol: Waiter Boy vs. the choir boy. Except that, then and now, Beals and Malcolm didn’t feel like they were competing with one another. After the Canadian adaptation of the blockbuster international reality singing showdown launched on June 9, 2003, Beals and Malcolm became friends, even while traversing a collision course toward the show’s finale. They played tennis together on the sprawling grounds that housed the Canadian Idol mansion on Toronto’s ritzy Bridle Path. They took pleasure in each other’s triumphs. And, although Malcolm ultimately won in a finale that saw the Kingston, Ont., product belt Creedence Clearwater Revival’s Down on the Corner and the Motown classic Stand By Me, the champion and his runner-up had eerily similar experiences upon the show’s conclusion. “The show wasn’t real life,” Malcolm said in a recent phone interview. “We had our own little family.... When you’re on the show, there’s no problems, because you have people taking care of everything for you.... So when the lights go out on that final show, then you’re surrounded by people that really just want to make money off of you. “You take a relatively unknown person and then put them on the front page of every publication the next, (that) can do a lot to someone’s mental health — some negative, some positive,” he added. Canadian Idol launched in 2003 as a ratings powerhouse, pulling in more than 2 million total viewers on average each week in its quest to crown the next Canadian superstar crooner. In that fledgling phase, most of the criticism heaped upon Idol centred on its lack of originality, its alleged glorification of sales above artistry or simply its status as a reality show when reality shows were still new enough to be resented for their supposedly culture-decaying vapidity. Then as the years went on, a pattern was established where each Canadian Idol winner would put out a commercially successful debut before floundering on a follow-up. And as those Idols failed to become the sort of bankable money-makers produced by the American show in such talents as Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood, the criticism of Canadian Idol began to focus in some quarters on its inability to create viable, sustainable stars. The phrase ‘Canadian Idol’ curse” was even batted about in some corners. It was only after Malcolm edged Beals for the first-season crown that both contestants realized how drastically different their lives were suddenly going to be. Beals, from the cozy community of Cherry Brook, N.S., mostly had experience singing at his church, and was certainly unprepared for wading through the muck of an occasionally seedy industry. “It’s kind of like being a newborn baby kind of chucked out into the world and saying: ’OK, survive,”’ said Beals recently. “There’s a lot of snakes in the grass and a lot of people who are not necessarily for you but they talk a great talk, and they may not be what they present themselves to be. And being new to the industry, it was hard to decipher who’s real and who’s not.” “It was like when a lion is walking and a trainer is holding a big fat steak out in front as he’s walking,” added Hale Bay, N.L., native Tara Oram, who finished fifth in Season 5 en route to a Juno-nominated career as a country crooner. “We’re getting a taste and a smell of what we can have, but it’s really only short-lived.” Early on, however, labels were more likely to pour resources into an Idol album. Malcolm says about $500,000 went into making his first and only solo album, 2003’s platinum-selling Home. In many ways the album was a success, and while Malcolm says he has “no idea” if his record recouped that weighty investment, he presumes it wasn’t a money-losing venture. Still, he says he was lamentably a cautionary tale for those who looked at the Idols and saw dollar signs. “After the first season, people were expecting it to make millions after the fact,” he said. “And I think when they realized, wait, this isn’t America ... I definitely made it easier for the people after me, because there wasn’t quite the same amount of pressure. Because people CAT’s One Acts! weren’t investing the same Nickle Studio & Bar, amount of money.” Memorial Centre, But things didn’t neces4213 58 St., Red Deer sarily get easier for MalCurtain 7:30 p.m. colm himself. As the furiCall BKI Tickets ously publicized winner @ 403-755-6626 or online: http://www.blackknightinn.ca/ of a visible and controversial singing contest, he be- black-knight-inn-ticket-centre.html came — fairly or not — an June 13, 14, 15 easy target for derision Death Takes The Train among non-fans. “It’s one of those things Roller Coaster where if 50 people like Where Is Gwendolyn Marsh you, there’s 100 people Chick’s and Monologues who don’t like you,” Malcolm recalled. “You’re Hitting On Women 101 like ... ’Why is there so June 20, 21, 22 much anger?’ But I get it now. If I’m not a fan of a At The Orgy singer you actually shove Murder By The Book down my throat every five How About Me, Dumpling? minutes on television and the news, I’m going to hate Still Life that guy too. It’s not a perAxed Files sonal hate.” Ultimately, Malcolm + Live music at all the breaks rejoiced at the opportunity to form the alt-rock band Low Level Flight in 2005, in part because he thought people would give him a chance without thinking of him as an Idol first. He says the band still fares better in Europe, “because we have a fair shot at being judged by our music.” Particularly stinging, he says, was the highly publicized criticism from Toronto’s Broken Social Scene, who slagged the show and its contestants backstage at the Juno Awards after the third season had wrapped, with singer Kevin Drew saying: “I feel really sorry for those kids in ’Canadian Idol’ because they’re going absolutely nowhere.” “It’s taken me a long time to get to the point where I can be like, this is
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MODIFIED WHEAT FOUND IN OREGON FIELD APPEARS TO BE ISOLATED WASHINGTON — The Agriculture Department says it has no indications that genetically modified wheat found in Oregon last month has spread beyond the field in which it was found. No genetically engineered wheat has been approved for U.S. farming, and the department is investigating how the engineered wheat got in the field. USDA spokesman Matt Paul said in a statement Friday that the department “has neither found nor been informed of anything that would indicate that this incident amounts to more than a single isolated incident in a single field on a single farm.” Agriculture Department officials have said the wheat is the same strain as a genetically modified wheat that was designed to be herbicideresistant and was legally tested by seed giant Monsanto a decade ago but never approved. Japan, Korea and Taiwan have suspended imports of western white wheat from the Pacific Northwest as the USDA investigates.
NORDSTROM, HOLT RENFREW POISED TO SNATCH UP SEARS LOCATIONS TORONTO — Sears Canada Inc. (TSX:SCC) will be vacating at least two major Toronto-area stores and possibly a third in return for cash payments from its landlords, who, analysts say, will be able to offer the prime space to tenants such as Nordstrom and Holt Renfrew. Sears, operator of a national chain of department stores, says it will receive $191 million cash for vacating its locations at Yorkdale Shopping Centre in Toronto and Square One Shopping Centre in Mississauga, Ont., by next March. It could also receive up to an additional $54 million if the landlords exercise an option to have Sears withdraw from its location at Scarborough Town Centre within five years. That would include $1 million that Sears gets for the option. — The Canadian Press
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BUSINESS Economy still weak C5
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Harley Richards, Business Editor, 403-314-4337 E-mail editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
U.S. REVIVAL TO INJECT LIFE INTO CANADIAN ECONOMY, BUT NOT TILL 2014: FORECAST BY JULIAN BELTRAME THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — Canada’s recovering economy hit a major pothole Friday with a manufacturing report showing activity in the country’s factories slumped 2.4 per cent in April, the worst decline in almost four years. As well, Statistics Canada said the sector suffered an even worse March than previously reported, with sales falling by twice as much as the original 0.3-per-cent estimate. The double-whammy constitutes a major setback to an economy that had been thought to performing better than expected,
CANADA-EU FREE TRADE
Talks have been ‘difficult’: Harper and Hollande
given the strong 2.5 per cent growth spurt in the first three months of the year, strong housing starts, and the 95,000 new jobs created in May. Analysts said the manufacturing data likely signals a return to the previous expectations of a weak first half to the year, with the pace picking up toward the latter part of 2013. The Conference Board of Canada released a new outlook Friday morning in line with the scenario. It says the economy will likely be receiving a boost from stronger U.S. demand for Canadian products, but that won’t be felt until 2014. In the updated forecast, the Ottawabased think-tank estimates Canada’s growth
rate at 1.8 per cent this year, the same as last year and four-tenths of a point below its previous call, before picking up to 2.5 per cent in 2014. That is near the Bank of Canada’s call of 1.5 per cent growth in 2013 and 2.8 per cent in 2014. “Overall, Canada’s domestic economy is not expected to muster enough strength to get growth ... above two per cent this year,” said economist Pedro Antunes, the think-tank’s director of national and provincial forecasting. “The stronger pace of U.S. growth in 2014 should help lift spirits, resource prices, trade prospects and income here at home,” he added.
Please see GROWTH on Page C6
Hockey on tap
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS PARIS — Prime Minister Stephen Harper and French President Francois Hollande are acknowledging the “difficult” nature of free-trade talks between Canada and the European Union. The two leaders were asked about the long-running negotiations at a joint news conference Friday in Paris. “There are obviously, always in negotiations, some areas that are more difficult than others,” Harper said. “But both of our countries look to considerable gains from an eventual agreement, and we will continue to work with that objective in mind.” “In a negotiation it is well understood that there are some hurdles at some points, that there are some difficulties,” Hollande added in French. “We know them in a number of fields. What matters most is to have the willingness to conclude and to overcome what might be difficult at some point in order to (conclude talks).” Sources close to the talks told The Canadian Press this week the two sides have moved closer during the most recent round of negotiations. Canada did most of the moving, they said, agreeing to allow more European access for bidding in Canada’s hydro-electric sector and reducing foreign investment restrictions. Still, Ireland and France have been reluctant to reciprocate on Canadian demands for greater quota on beef exports. NDP critic Don Davies says European intransigence is understandable given how “desperate” the Harper government has appeared to cement its first deal with a major economy. The biggest mistake, he says, is publicly elevating trade to one of the top two political and economic objectives. The Conservatives could also use a success story to take attention way from a series of expense-claim scandals that have dominated headlines for weeks, resulting in the resignation of Harper’s chief of staff Nigel Wright. “I was a union lawyer for 16 years and the No. 1 rule of bargaining is not to convey desperation even when you are. That’s exactly what Canada has done and the Europeans know it,” Davies said. “There are five or six important issues outstanding and the Europeans are holding all the trump cards.” The elusive agreement has been a backdrop to Harper’s European trip ahead of the coming G8 summit in Northern Ireland. Harper called an agreement “monumental” while addressing the British Parliament earlier in the week, but also insisted he won’t be pressured into a bad deal by what he called “some artificial timeline.”
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Hockey Central Sports Lounge owner Michelle Beaudin holds up a beer tube customers can use to serve themselves at the Sylvan Lake bar. BY HARLEY RICHARDS ADVOCATE BUSINESS EDITOR SYLVAN LAKE — Customers entering Hockey Central Sports Lounge face a dilemma. With about 130 seats embroidered with the logos of National Hockey League, Canadian Football League and other teams, should they plant their rumps on the colours of their favourite team or on those of a rival franchise? Michelle Becker, who owns the Sylvan Lake sports lounge with Darren Field, isn’t sure what the proper etiquette is. But she’s pleased so many of the seats there have been covered since the business opened last month at 5000 Lakeshore Dr. — the former site of Smuggler’s Inn and Ricardo’s Ristorante. A sports theme for their lounge was a natural choice for Becker and Field, who
have operated Hockey Central Sports Memorabilia in Sylvan Lake for nearly five years. Previously located in Marina Merchants Mall, the shop is now on the main floor beneath Hockey Central Sports Lounge, with each occupying 3,000 square feet. The lounge displays a broad sampling of the store’s collectables, and sports-minded patrons upstairs are expected to spill into the retail area below. “If you’re waiting for your food you can go down and have a look around,” said Becker. “It all works out really good.” Able to accommodate nearly 150 people, not including its outdoor patio, Hockey Central Sports Lounge is equipped with 23 video screens — including nine that have been grouped together to create a 10-foot viewing area.
Please see LOUNGE on Page C6
Minimum wage rising 2.1% in September Dear Working Wise: I hear that minimum wage is going up, but I am wondering if both minimum wages are increasing? I am a server in a lounge and sure would like a raise. — Wondering Waitress Dear Wondering: Alberta’s minimum wage is rising 2.1 per cent, from $9.75 to $9.95 per hour, beginning Sept. 1. The liquor-server minimum wage of $9.05 per hour will remain unchanged. CHARLES The minimum STRACHEY wage for alcohol s e r v e r s w i l l r e - WORKING WISE main until the general minimum wage reaches $10.05 per hour. From then on, both wage rates will increase together, so that a $1 differential between the two is maintained. The separate minimum wage rate for alcohol servers recognizes that these employees earn tips. Minimum-wage increases take effect on Sept. 1 of each year and are based on in-
creases in average weekly earnings and the consumer price index in Alberta. Setting an annual date and indexing the minimum wage helps make the increases more predictable for both employers and employees. It’s important to remember that these are minimum-wage rates — many employers choose to pay their employees more to attract and retain good people. In fact, fewer than two per cent of Alberta employees make minimum wage right now — the least in the country. And more than half of minimum-wage earners are under 25 years old, with many working in the accommodation and food-services industries. A minimum wage is meant to give students and others new to the workforce a foothold in the world of work. It is about getting job experience, work skills, extra income and savings for further education and training. Minimum wage is the minimum amount employers must pay workers in Alberta, but there are a few exceptions, including: ● farm or ranch workers; ● securities salespersons; ● real estate brokers; ● insurance salespeople; ● students in approved work-experience programs or training courses;
● counsellors/instructors at non-profit camps; and ● extras in film or video production. Alberta’s Employment Standards also includes a minimum weekly wage for some salespersons and professionals (which will rise to $397 on Sept. 1) and a minimum monthly minimum wage for domestic employees (which will rise to $1,893). After personal exemptions and taxes are considered, Alberta’s new general minimum wage of $9.95 per hour will be the second highest in Canada. For more information on Alberta’s minimum-wage rates and exemptions, visit http://humanservices.alberta.ca/es. Anyone interested in increasing their earning power can visit their nearest Alberta Works Centre and talk to a Career & Employment Consultant about upgrading their skills and finding a better-paying career. To find an Alberta Works Centre near you, click http://humanservices.alberta.ca/ offices. Working Wise is compiled by Charles Strachey, a manager with Alberta Human Services, for general information. Strachey can be contacted at charles.strachey@gov.ab.ca.
C6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
MARKETS COMPANIES OF LOCAL INTEREST Friday’s stock prices supplied by RBC Dominion Securities of Red Deer. For information call 341-8883.
Rona Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.07 Shoppers . . . . . . . . . . . . 44.98 Tim Hortons . . . . . . . . . . 53.59 Wal-Mart . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74.87 WestJet Airlines . . . . . . . 21.85 Mining Barrick Gold . . . . . . . . . . 19.84 Cameco Corp. . . . . . . . . 21.23 First Quantum Minerals . 16.91 Goldcorp Inc. . . . . . . . . . 28.21 Hudbay Minerals. . . . . . . . 7.71 Kinross Gold Corp. . . . . . . 5.92 Potash Corp.. . . . . . . . . . 41.03 Sherritt Intl. . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.27 Teck Resources . . . . . . . 23.93
Consumer Canadian Tire . . . . . . . . . 80.03 Gamehost . . . . . . . . . . . . 13.10 Leon’s Furniture . . . . . . . 12.89 Loblaw Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . 47.55 Maple Leaf Foods. . . . . . 13.27
Energy Arc Energy . . . . . . . . . . . 26.72 Badger Daylighting Ltd. . 47.50 Baker Hughes. . . . . . . . . 46.03 Bonavista . . . . . . . . . . . . 14.59 Bonterra Energy . . . . . . . 48.90 Cdn. Nat. Res. . . . . . . . . 29.20 Cdn. Oil Sands Ltd. . . . . 19.73 Canyon Services Group. 11.92 Cenovous Energy Inc. . . 29.59 CWC Well Services . . . . 0.750 Encana Corp. . . . . . . . . . 17.78 Essential Energy. . . . . . . . 2.70 Exxon Mobil . . . . . . . . . . 90.58
MARKETS CLOSE TORONTO — The Toronto stock market closed lower Friday as traders looked ahead to next week’s U.S. Federal Reserve meeting and hope that the central bank will provide clues as to whether it plans to ease off on some of its economic stimulus. The S&P/TSX composite index dropped 89.76 points to 12,187.36 amid a string of disappointing economic data. The Canadian dollar was off 0.03 of a cent to 98.34 cents US as Statistics Canada reported that manufacturing sales fell 2.4 per cent in April to $48.2 billion. It’s the fourth decline in five months and the largest monthly percentage drop since August 2009.
The agency says lower sales in the petroleum and coal product and primary metal industries were largely responsible for the decline. U.S. indexes were also in the red amid signs of a weakening American manufacturing sector and consumer sentiment. The Dow Jones industrials dropped 105.9 points to 15,070.18 as May industrial production was flat. Economists had expected a 0.3 per cent increase after production fell by 0.5 per cent in April. And the University of Michigan’s consumer confidence index came in at 82.7, well below expectations that it would remain at a five year high of 84.5. The Nasdaq was down 21.81
Halliburton Co. . . . . . . . . 42.93 High Arctic . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.11 Husky Energy . . . . . . . . . 27.99 Imperial Oil . . . . . . . . . . . 39.51 Pengrowth Energy . . . . . . 5.13 Penn West Energy . . . . . 11.48 Pinecrest Energy Inc. . . . 0.710 Precision Drilling Corp . . . 9.03 Suncor Energy . . . . . . . . 30.96 Talisman Energy . . . . . . . 11.63 Trican Ltd.. . . . . . . . . . . . 15.49 Trinidad Energy . . . . . . . . 7.40 Vermilion Energy . . . . . . 50.55 Financials Bank of Montreal . . . . . . 60.15 Bank of N.S. . . . . . . . . . . 56.82 CIBC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77.18 Cdn. Western . . . . . . . . . 28.41 Carfinco . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.60 Great West Life. . . . . . . . 27.86 IGM Financial . . . . . . . . . 44.89 Intact Financial Corp. . . . 60.62 Manulife Corp. . . . . . . . . 15.73 National Bank . . . . . . . . . 75.51 Rifco Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.30 Royal Bank . . . . . . . . . . . 59.99 Sun Life Fin. Inc.. . . . . . . 29.96 TD Bank . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81.32
points to 3,423.56 and the S&P 500 index gave back 9.63 points to 1,626.73. Concerns about Fed intentions have weighed on markets since late last month. That’s when Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said that the Fed might pull back on its US$85 billiona-month bond-buying program, known as quantitative easing, if economic data improves, especially hiring. The QE program has underpinned a strong rally on U.S. markets. The Fed holds its next regularly scheduled meeting on interest rates next Tuesday and Wednesday and wraps up with a news conference by Bernanke. Hopes for more details were
fuelled Thursday by a Wall Street Journal story that suggested Bernanke will likely use next week’s meeting to try to calm market worries that the central bank is in a hurry to moderate its bond purchases. “I think (the nervousness) is a reflection of the amount of leverage that is in the market that there’s a lot of speculators,” said Norman Raschkowan, North American strategist with Mackenzie Financial Corp. “It’s no longer the big New York banks that are leveraged up and speculating, it’s foreign investors, it’s hedge funds, it’s whoever. And that’s why any time one of the Fed governors sneezes, there’s someone who is panicking because they’ve got this leveraged position that’s in danger of going under water.” Nervousness about Fed intentions helped push TSX down 186 points or 1.5 per cent last week while the Dow industrials fell 178 points or 1.17 per cent. The base metals sector led decliners, down 2.33 per cent as July copper was up two cents to US$3.20 a pound. First Quantum Minerals (TSX:FM) gave back 56 cents to C$16.91 while Teck Resources (TSX:TCK.B) shed 82 cents to $23.93. Techs were also weak, down 1.25 per cent with CGI Group (TSX:GIB.A) down 71 cents to $30.05. The gold sector was off about 1.5 per cent as August bullion rose $9.80 to US$1,387.60 an ounce. Goldcorp Inc. (TSX:G) faded 71 cents to $28.21. The telecom sector added to a string of losses, down 0.85 per cent. Speculation about cutting back on the QE program has had the effect of pushing U.S. Treasury yields sharply higher, which in turn has had a negative effect on TSX interest-rate sensitive sectors such as real estate, utilities, telecom and pipelines. But Canada’s telecom sector
na Doupe at shanna.doupe@accessprosperity.ca or at 403-356-4935 by June 28.
BUSINESS
BRIEFS
CFGA conference and AGM date set
Seminar on doing business in Europe Local business operators with eye to Europe will have a chance next month to learn about opportunities there. Central Alberta: Access Prosperity and Alsace International are organizing a seminar about doing business in Europe. Entitled “Why Europe?”, it will look at the investment partnerships between Canada and Europe, and in particular between Alberta and the Alsace region of France. The supports available to Central Alberta companies will also be discussed. A release issued by Central Alberta: Access Prosperity pointed out that the proposed Canada-European Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement contains provisions for increasing the predictability of investment rules, reducing investment risk, and enhancing two-way investment flows. The release added that the European Union is the largest regional market in the world. Why Europe? will take place July 5 at Red Deer College. Registration and breakfast are scheduled to begin at 7:30 a.m., with presentations from 8 to 9:30 a.m. Meetings with representatives of Alsace International — an economic development agency for Alsace — and tours of the Red Deer College Centre for Innovation are also planned. For more information or to register, contact Shan-
STORIES FROM PAGE C5
GROWTH: Hope for the future
The Canadian Forage and Grassland Association will hold its 2013 conference and annual general meeting Dec. 9 to 11 in Olds. The first day will be dedicated to a tour of forage industry businesses and practices in the region. Dec. 10 will feature presentations on forage topics, a banquet, the CFGA Leadership Award and a speaker. Industry presentations will continue on the final day, with the annual general meeting to take place in the afternoon. The event is being hosted by the Alberta Forage Industry Network.
CWB organizing football pool The Canadian Wheat Board is offering farmers another diversion from farming. The CWB announced on Friday that it is organizing a football pool. Farmers will be able to win cash prizes of $500, $250 or $100 by picking game winners during the 2013 Canadian Football League season. The football pool follows a National Hockey League pool that the CWB ran this spring. “Farmers have had fun watching their team’s results in the hockey pool standings each week, so we decided to offer a similar pool for football fans” said CWB president and CEO Ian White. The football pool is free to all farmers, who can sign up at www.cwb.ca/footballpool.
ster Canadian manufacturing again.” On that front, there was some encouraging news Friday. The International Monetary Fund reported the U.S. economy is on sounder footing than it was a year ago, although it expects recent tax increases and government spending cuts to shave 1.5 per cent from growth this year. Once those impacts fade later the year, the economy should start accelerating to a more healthy 2.7 per cent rate, the IMF said.
has also been pressured after Ottawa quashed the idea that big telecoms could take over the spectrum of smaller players. Federal Industry Minister Christian Paradis said current rules would stand, leading to Telus to abandon its plan to buy Mobilicity. BCE Inc. (TSX:BCE) gave back 47 cents to $44.16 while Rogers Communications (TSX:RCI.B) dropped 54 cents to $45.35. Financials shed 0.74 per cent with TD Bank (TSX:TD) down 92 cents to $81.32. The July crude contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange ahead $1.16 to US$97.85 a barrel. The energy sector was off 0.53 per cent. Suncor Energy (TSX:SU) was down 36 cents to C$30.96. Utilities were ahead 0.63 per cent following a string of losses. Speculation about cutting back on the QE program has had the effect of pushing U.S. Treasury yields sharply higher, which in turn has had a negative effect on TSX defensive/interest-rate sensitive sectors such as REITS, utilities, telecom and pipeline stocks. Fortis Inc. (TSX:FTS) gained 70 cents to $33. On Thursday, New York regulators cleared the way for Fortis Inc. to buy CH Energy Group, the parent of Central Hudson Gas and Electric Corp. in a deal valued at US$1.5 billion. FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS TORONTO — Highlights at the close of Friday at world financial market trading. Stocks: S&P/TSX Composite Index — 12,187.36 down 89.76 points TSX Venture Exchange — 933.57 up 3.50 points TSX 60 — 697.73 down 6.38 points Dow — 15,070.18 down 105.90 points S&P 500 — 1,626.73 down
9.63 points Nasdaq — 3,423.56 down 21.81 points Currencies at close: Cdn — 98.34 cents US, down 0.03 of a cent Pound — C$1.5971, up 0.03 of a cent Euro — C$1.3574, down 0.12 of a cent Euro — US$1.3347, down 0.17 of a cent Oil futures: US$97.85 per barrel, up $1.16 (July contract) Gold futures: US$1,387.60 per oz., up $9.80 (August contract) Canadian Fine Silver Handy and Harman: $23.379 per oz., up 53.4 cents $751.63 per kg., up $17.16 ICE FUTURES CANADA WINNIPEG — Closing prices: Canola: July ’13 $2.10 higher $598.60; Nov. ’13 $2.50 lower $548.50; Jan. ’14 $2.10 lower $551.10; March ’14 $1.20 lower $548.50; May ’14 $1.20 lower $544.50; July ’14 $1.20 lower $542.60; Nov. ’14 $1.20 lower $512.40; Jan ’15 $1.20 lower $512.40; March ’15 $1.20 lower $512.40; May ’15 $1.20 lower $512.40; July ’15 $1.20 lower $512.40. Barley (Western): July ’13 unchanged $244.00; Oct. ’13 unchanged $194.00; Dec ’13 unchanged $199.00; March ’14 unchanged $199.00; May ’14 unchanged $199.00; July ’14 unchanged $199.00; Oct. ’14 unchanged $199.00; Dec. ’14 unchanged $199.00; March ’15 unchanged $199.00; May ’15 unchanged $199.00. Friday’s estimated volume of trade: 294,900 tonnes of canola; 0 tonnes of barley (Western Barley) Total: 294,900.
IMF: US economy on better foundation, but tax increases, spending cuts still drag on growth WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy is on sounder footing than it was a year ago but is still being restrained by government spending cuts and tax increases, the International Monetary Fund said Friday. The IMF’s annual report on the U.S. economy noted that the underlying fundamentals are gradually improving: Home prices and construction are rising, household finances have strengthened and employers are steadily adding jobs. The outlook was much more optimistic than IMF’s 2012 report. “There are signs that the U.S. recovery is gaining ground and becoming more durable,” Christine Lagarde, the IMF’s managing director, said in a written statement. Still, the IMF forecasts economic growth of just 1.9 per cent this year, the same as its April forecast. That would be down from 2.2 per cent in 2012. And it’s below many private economists’ expectations that the U.S. economy will grow more than 2 per cent this year. The IMF says the tax increases and spending cuts that kicked in this year will shave about 1.5 percentage points from growth. The international lending organization had opposed the steep federal spending cuts that began on March 1. The reduction in the U.S. budget deficit “has been excessively rapid and ill-designed,” the IMF’s report says.
In addition to hockey, the lounge will showcase other sports, including football and mixed martial arts. This evening, for example, Hockey Central Sports Lounge will broadcast Game 2 of the Stanley Cup finals, followed by UFC 161 and live entertainment by musician — and former Boston Bruins leftwinger — Kraig Nienhuis. hrichards@reddeeradvocate.com
TD Bank’s analysis also says Canada must wait until its largest trading partner to the south fully swings into growth mode before seeing any significant pick-up here. That remains a hope for the future, however. For the present, the manufacturing report constitutes a significant setback for this year, particularly in the short term. “It’s amazing,” said Becker. “We can play nine “(It’s) an upsetting report in many respects. This different games or we can play one game on the cools the mood a bit on Canadian fundamentals, screen.” after the robust employment and housing starts There’s also a 90-inch screen in a separate room received recently,” said Jimmy Jean, an economic called The Forum. With seating for about 45, includstrategist with Desjardins Capital Markets. ing 10 stadium chairs, it’s available for private funcApril’s decline was the fourth in five months. In tions and meetings. terms of volumes, shipments are down 3.5 per cent in “It’s really a neat room,” said Becker. “Every guy the past year. The drop was also broad-based, with who comes in loves it.” 13 of 21 industries representing about 86 per cent of Food is prepared in the lounge’s own kitchen, For $300 dollar loan for 14 days total cost of borrowing is $30 dollars. Annual percentage rate is (APR)=260.71%. manufacturing declining, led by an 8.8 per cent slide with options ranging from appetizers to entrees. As Limited time offer. in petroleum and coal products sales, and an 8.7 per for beverages, customers can choose from 16 draft cent fall in primary metals. Autos fell 2.2 per cent. Downtown Co-op Plaza, Red Deer 403-342-6700 beers as well as bottled stock. Union economist Erin Weir of the United SteelHockey Central Sports Lounge even offers workers pointed out that despite reasonable growth 100-ounce “beer tubes,” with each featuring a sports in employment, manufacturing has shed nearly team. 100,000 jobs in the past year, and about 600,000 in the “You bring it over to past decade. your table and you have Weir notes that trend coincides with the apprecia- your own tap,” explained tion of the Canadian dollar from about 65 per cent of Becker. “It’s really cool.” the U.S. currency’s value to the current near-parity status. The U.S. recession and weak recovery has also kept the sector returns from making as strong up to a comeback as some others, particularly reInvesting in Canadian Real Estate source-based industries that are more closely RRSP/RRIF/TFSA Eligible 6.4L Hemi, 425HP!!!!, Leather, tied to emerging econo6.4L Hemi 425HP!!! Leather, Monthly Income or Compounding Navigation, Panoramic Sunroof, 5.7L Hemi, Leather, Navigation, Navigation, Sunroof, Premium mies such as China. SafetyTec Group, Chrome Panoramic Sunroof, Back-up Sound, Bluetooth streaming “Manufacturing is the Geographic mix of mortgages Appearance Group, 20’s camera, Blind Spot Detection, 20’s audio, 20’s sector that is perhaps the For information call MSRP $54,590 MSRP $53,090 MSRP $54,290 most integrated between our exempt market dealer, Canada and the United CVC Market Point Inc.: PERFORMANCE PRICED AT PERFORMANCE PRICED AT PERFORMANCE PRICED AT States,” he explained. $ $ $ Toll Free: 1-877-509-0115 “So I do think the recesPhone: 403-538-5837 “ Building Investors Wealth for over a Decade” sion in the U.S. explains www.cvcmarketpoint.com & GST & GST & GST a lot of the malaise to This advertisement does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to purchase the securities referred to herein, which is being made under an Offering Memorandum available from our date and if the American office to qualified purchasers in specified jurisdictions. There are risks associated with this investment 3115 GAETZ AVE. • 403-346-2035 • 1-800-666-8675 and this investment is not guaranteed or secured. Historical performance may not be representative of economy picks up, that future performance. Please read the Offering Memorandum before investing. The issuers referred to www.northwestmotors.ca herein are related issuers of CVC Market Point Inc. has the potential to bol-
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HOMES
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Saturday, June 15, 2013
Fax 403-341-6560 editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
Luxurious, spacious bathroom rises from depths of basement junk room
COLIN & JUSTIN
DESIGN
Gut down Clearing the room, thankfully, was a doddle. With the aid of two mulleted builders, a hefty wheelbarrow and a yard sale, the clutter quickly evaporated. Before wielding your demo
Above photo by BRANDON BARRE
A modern, almost exquisite basement bathroom rose from the cluttered area seen below.
ball, however, ensure all utilities (such as electrics, gas and water) are suitably capped. Never remove a wall without first examining that which is (and isn’t) load-bearing, or your brand-new ceiling could end up in the bath beside you as you dip below the bubbles. Respect the building code at every turn and, if in doubt, approach a licensed contractor.
There’s little point, after all, affixing tile and ceiling finishes unless power sources have been positioned. For this project, that meant an even spread of pot lights as well as wall-mounted lamps at the vanity area and concealed pin spots within the shelved area.
Plumbing route
To create commanding visual impact, we positioned the bath centre stage upon the main elevation. Dropped neatly into custom (and subsequently tiled) framework — constructed from two-inch by two-inch lumber — it suffuses our project with immediate focus. A large perimeter lip provides display space (ideal for candles and bath oil, etc.) while two shelved areas — backed with mirror to bounce light — create a perfect home for towels and ancillary bathroom paraphernalia.
To enhance the feeling of space, we opted for an openframed vanity, one beset with lashings of period charm. The shiny nickel surface bounces light and its traditional lines are a lovely foil to the matte finish of our modern grey tile. Don’t be shy about mixing styles; great results can be achieved when you play around with different eras.
Tiling
Seating area
We specified two tile styles in an identical colour palette: one, a skinny mosaic in various sizes (used as a feature panel above the bath and on the vanity wall) and the other a slab, which we used on the
In the world’s grandest hotels, it seems space goes hand in hand with luxury. Working to this principal, we were thrilled to afford our clients a generous dressing and seating zone as a valuable
This level of transformation, as we see it, goes well beyond the ability of even the most competent DIY’er. We’re fortunate to travel in a pack with a full supporting cast of experts who know precisely what they’re about and, with their assistance, we were able to draw water from upstairs and create a pipe stack (set at the correct gradient) to deal with waste.
Lighting Being that our palette is somewhat moody and utilizes various shades of grey, we didnít underestimate the importance of good lighting to provide balance.
Illumination
Bath wall
floor and the boxed-in bath area. It’s worth spending as much time as possible aligning corners and grout lines as the last thing you want is wall or floor planes to miss each other. Our reputation as detail freaks probably precedes us but we make a fuss because, visually, it’s simply very important. And when our clients are happy, weíre happy. And so, too, is our team.
Vanity area
adjunct to their exciting new bathroom. A walloping great mirror from HomeSense (bagged for a whisper under $300) provides form and function while a slipper chair, again from HomeSense, is the perfect spot upon which to dry off after a long, languid soak. We suppose, all things considered, the foregoing categories provide the essence (the bath essence?) of this week’s transformation. But, just as important: were our clients happy with the stratospheric transformation of their previously dingy junk room? Well, let’s just say their new ‘spa at home’ freshened them up and changed them forever. While some folk observe the kitchen as the heart of the home, our paymasters prefer to think their dazzling new room provides the pulse of — and the kick-start to — each and every day. Job done. And awash with success! Colin McAllister and Justin Ryan are the hosts of HGTVís Colin & Justin’s Home Heist and the authors of Colin & Justin’s Home Heist Style Guide, published by Penguin Group (Canada). Catch them every Monday on Cityline (9 a.m. on City). Follow them on Twitter @colinjustin or on Facebook
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As designers, we consider a luxurious, well-equipped bathroom to be a crucial aspect of any home — not to mention an important tool with which to shore up real estate value. Bathrooms, after all (and kitchens, for that matter), are the spaces buyers inherit ‘fully furnished.’ If properly attired, they encourage saleability. This observed, we still encounter homes where wash zones have been utterly overlooked. Worry not, though: we can fix anything. It’s safe to say that below the thick skin of even the dowdiest room lies the potential — in capable hands — to unravel opportunity. Sometimes the work required is simple: perhaps a new coat of paint or a lovely new faucet. But other times it takes stealth — and a great deal of resolve — to pull off our mini miracles. Take today’s bathroom, for instance. Or rather today’s junk room. For that’s what it was before our decorative muscle was stretched. Short of a leak in one corner which let in rain, and a bucket auspiciously placed to catch Mother Nature’s stormier moments, there was nothing even remotely ‘wet room’ about the gloomy scene. But of course we saw past the problems, though our plan — to create a veritable rain storm of style and function — was somewhat tortuous. The main issues? That the room, as we found it, had no plumbing whatsoever. Nor proximity to a waste stack. Hmm. So an ambitious conversion? Yes, and then some. Now empty nesters, our clients knew it was time to ‘spec’ up their home, thereby futureproofing its value. Not for them the prospect of settling into early retirement with bubble perms, golf carts and bingo halls. Our young at heart pair, in fact, were strictly determined to use our drawing board as their springboard to a new and fulfilling life. And of course we had all the answers. And so it came to pass that, working with their input, we scanned paint charts, brochures and flooring samples. We suggested ‘borrowing’the footprint of an unused hallway closet and the realization of this idea provided 20 per cent more space with which to turn tricks. Here’s the lowdown on how we pulled the plug on yet another decorating disaster:
D2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
Spray foam boosts energy efficiency
Question: Have you any ideas for backyard shade other than the traditional table umbrella? We have a small but very sunny backyard and Iíd like to be able to cover a kidsí play area and picnic table. Thanks for your help. Answer: With the concerns about getting too much exposure to the sun’s harmful rays, it is important to find a solution for shading that is not only effective, but also enhances our outdoor spaces. The latest in shade sails or shade tarps is the perfect solution. These versatile covers come in various shapes and sizes, generally triangular, that can be tied to trees, porches, or poles and set up DEBBIE to shade gardens, pools, play TRAVIS and sitting areas. The sails are thin and stretched taught so that they take up very little visual space unlike a traditional umbrella. They come in different fabrics that provide UV protection as well as shade. They are light weight, and as most fabrics are translucent, you can still watch the clouds go by. A DIY version such as the Wallabee Ready-Made Shade Sail shown here can be found at www.shadesailscanada.com. Queastion: I have a small living room, however, my sofa and love seat are rather large. They are browns and beige. I would like help picking a paint colour for the walls that would work. Iím considering blue or sage green. Answer: To make your living room look and feel larger, you might consider replacing one or both of the large pieces of furniture. It is possible to find pieces that allow you to seat four or five people, but take up a smaller footprint. Or can they be arranged in a different way? If the furniture is staying, then I suggest a soft cornflower blue for the walls; this colour is fresh and inviting and will enhance the browns and beiges you have. For added impact, choose a focal wall and hang one of todayís stunning wallpaper designs, such as a blue and green contemporary floral pattern. Question: Our 70s brick fireplace really dates our family room. There is a stove insert, black with gold trim. Walls and bookshelves are blue/gray, the Berber carpet is taupe. Is painting the fireplace a project I could complete on my own? Answer: Painting a brick fireplace is not difficult, and it will make a big impact on your room. Choose a colour that is a few steps lighter than the wall paint, or cream or white. A fireplace is always a focal point, and this will give the brick a distinctive colour that blends well with what is already there. To paint the brick, clean it first with a wire brush and then warm soap and water. Allow the bricks and grout to dry completely, wait a day or two. Prime the bricks and grout with a masonry primer (a primer that is designed to cover bricks). Use a roller and a brush to get into all the nooks and crannies. This is an important step, repeat it if you find any missed sections. Once the primer is dry, proceed with painting. Use a water-based paint and apply two coats for full coverage. It will look great!
HOUSE TO HOME
Debbie Travis’ House to Home column is produced by Debbie Travis and Barbara Dingle. Please email your questions to house2home@debbietravis.com. You can follow Debbie on Twitter at www.twitter.com/debbie_travis, and visit Debbieís new website, www.debbietravis.com.
HOUSEWORKS Check out my video on spray foam injection at http://goo.gl/rBXr2 Attic Condensation Question: Why did water drip from a light fixture in our house this past spring, even though it wasnít raining? I looked in the attic and found melting frost on the underside of the roof running down. Answer: There’s no doubt about the cause of
your problem. Warm, moist indoor air was escaping into your attic all winter, condensing and forming n increasingly thick layer of frost during long spells of cold weather. When things finally did warm up, this frost melted all at once and ran down and out through your light fixture. Water an electricity are never safe together, so youíd better fix things up for next winter. Look for and seal any holes, gaps or cracks that lead from inside your home into the attic.
Steve Maxwell, syndicated home improvement and woodworking columnist, has shared his DIY tips, how-to videos and product reviews since 1988. Send questions to steve@ stevemaxwell.ca
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The attic hatch itself is often a hidden and large source of air leakage. You should also switch the power off and have the electrical box above the light inspected. There may be corrosion and poor connections there that could lead to heat and a fire.
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In the shade
STEVE MAXWELL
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Photo by DEBBIE TRAVIS
Versatile and contemporary shade sails can be positioned anywhere in your garden or patio by the lake.
Question: What is your opinion on foam injection for boosting energy efficiency in an old house with double brick walls? There’s no insulation there now, just an air space between bricks. Answer: Foam injection could be an excellent option for you, but you need to use the right kind of foam in the right sort of way. If you’re handy at all, I’d recommend you tackle the work yourself, mostly because of the added care you can bring to the task. The challenge with any brick house is that the space between layers of brick can be narrow and clogged with mortar. You’ll need to use an infrared camera to track the expansion of foam after injection, drilling more or less holes as needed to inject foam depending on what the camera shows. Slow rise foam gives off a lot of heat, allowing the infrared camera to ìseeî where the foam exists within the wall. I’ve had the most personal experience with a Canadian product called Tiger Foam (www.tigerfoam.ca; 888844-3736). When hollow, cold areas are identified with the camera after the first round of injection, they can be marked and additional foam injected as needed. I was involved in a job this past winter using injectable foam to insulate a hollow stud frame wall, and the process you’ll need to follow is similar.
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D3
YOUTH
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Saturday, June 15, 2013
Protective parents can harm more than help Dear Harlan; I work for a univer- want to risk getting rejected by some- date me? — Studying you are OK with her rejecting you. sity in the admissions office. Can you one else, or risk falling in love and getThe better you feel about yourself, Dear Studying; I’m going to tell you please, please, PLEASE tell the moms ting hurt, that’s also a bad reason. what to do, but you must do it. No ex- the more she will want you. Some peoto quit calling us with their kids sitting It’s scarier to go back to a relation- cuses. ple call this “playing the game.” I call on the couch beside them. ship that is over and stir up old emoWalk up to her and ask her on a it accepting the Universal Rejection If the child is old enough tions. If you want to hook date. Call it a date. Truth of dating and relationships, and to go to college, he or she up with your ex because Use the word “date.” Don’t ask her training in your thongs. is old enough to make the you need to get some ac- to hang out. And don’t make excuses It’s recognizing that you have opphone call. tion from a man, this is a for her. Assume that no one is too busy tions and a life that makes you interI know it is hard to let horrible reason. esting and attractive. to share a meal with you. go, but please tell parents As a man, I can promise When you have options and interTell her: “I want to take you on a letting go is a sign that they you that many other men date. How about lunch or dinner? Are ests that keep you busy, you naturally have done a good job, and without a history with you you available [pick a day or night]?” will attract women. that their child is ready to will want to hook up with As for this one, she knows what you If she’s not, ask her for another day or go out on his or her own. — you. You don’t need an ex. want, she can get in touch when she’s night. If she still says no, smile. In fact, Let Go Finally, if you want to ready — that is, if you’re still available. Dear Let Go; You just hook up with your ex be- act even sweeter. Harlan is author of “Getting Naked: Tell her you completely understand. told them. Parents don’t cause you don’t think you need to let go — they just can find any another man If a night opens up, she should let you Five Steps to Finding the Love of Your Life (While Fully Clothed and Totally need to loosen the grip. on earth who will want you, know. Then move on. Ask out other women. Hang out with Sober)” (St. Martin’s Press). Write Harlan You know why they call you are desperate. Desperwith their kids sitting next ate people make mistakes. friends. Do things that interest you and at harlan(at)helpmeharlan.com or visit to them on the couch? They Your ex is an ex for a rea- make you more interesting. Pretend online: www.helpmeharlan.com. HARLAN believe they are being helpson. Date, get fixed up or COHEN ful, supportive and loving. reach out to a crush on FaThey’re used to doing it this cebook, but don’t go back way. Their kids don’t stop to your ex. them. Parents don’t stop Besides, when you’re themselves. with an ex, it makes you unavailable Some of them never stop calling. for other guys to date you. They call every morning to make sure - Authorized Baldor Motor Sales & Don’t be lazy, scared, horny or desthe kids are up for class. perate — find someone better. Don’t Service Center They call college professors when hook up with your ex. their kids are sick. They even call em- Motor rewinding, sales of all types Dear Harlan; I really like this girl ployers and ask if their kid got a job and want to ask her out. of pumps (yes, this happens). It’s OUT OF CONShe gives off the impression that TROL! she’s too focused on her schoolwork to 6751 GAETZ AVE. 403-346-3361 As a parent of a 7-year-old daugh- enter into a long-term relationship. RED DEER, AB. T4N 4C9 www.harbourpumpandmotor.com ter, 5-year-old son and a baby on the Is there any way I can still get her to way (yes, we are crazy), I know how much parents want their kids to be comfortable. But as an expert who has visited more than 400 college campuses, I also know that students are struggling to deal with the uncomfortable parts of life. When I was in college, I couldn’t text, email and call my parents at will. I had to plan it. Today’s college students are never out of touch with their parents. Technology makes it possible for kids to continue to ask their parents to say it and do it for them. For those parents who want to help their kids become self- advocates, here’s a suggestion. When your kid asks for help, let them do the talking. Help them find the name, number and department, but they need to do the talking and calling. If they don’t want to do it, then let them struggle. When they email, text or call, do not fix the problem — ask them what they can do. Ask them who they think they should call for help. Direct them, but let them say it and do it. Fixing it for them just means they will break later in life when you’re not around. Life can be uncomfortable at times. It should be. It’s how we learn. Give them room to get comfortable with the uncomfortable. Dear Harlan; I’ve been on a few dates with a guy I really like. I can tell that he’s interested in taking things to another level sexually. I’m not one to jump into bed. What is the best way to tell a guy I’m not interested in having sex so soon without scaring him off? — Waiting Dear Waiting; A bad time to tell him is at 3 a.m. when he’s drunk with his pants around his ankles. A better time is during daylight hours when * you are both sober and clothed. Tell him there are some things you save for a serious relationship. Sex is one of them. Tell him you just wanted to be honest. And remind him how much you enjoy spending Get a FREE Samsung® Galaxy Note 10.1™ tablet when time with him. If the truth scares him, you sign up for Optik TV™ and Internet on a 3 year term.† find another man. Dear Harlan; I’m going It’s a perfect way to watch Optik TV on the go. home for the summer and I know I’ll see my ex. I’m single and have been thinking about hooking up with him again. I don’t want to have a relationship, but it would be nice to have someone to hang out with over the summer. Good idea or bad idea? — Ex Reunion Dear Ex; Bad idea. Call 310-MYTV (6988), go to telus.com/optik You’re either lazy, or visit your TELUS Store or Authorized Dealer. scared, horny or desperate. Let me go through the ® To learn more, scan with list to help you figure it out. If you want to hook up with your ex because you don’t want to do the work TELUS STORE OR AUTHORIZED DEALER to find someone better, Red Deer Bower Place Mall 5125 76A St. 7434 50th Ave. you are lazy. 5301 43rd St. 6838 50th Ave. Yes, it’s convenient to Parkland Mall date an ex, but there are *For use in Canada only. Mobile service available on select devices within wireless network coverage areas. Subscription to Optik TV and channel required. Data charges may apply for mobile service outside Wi-Fi coverage. †Offer available until July 29, 2013, to residential customers who have not subscribed to Optik TV or Internet in the past days. Minimum system requirements apply. Final eligibility for the services will be determined by a TELUS representative. TELUS reserves the right to modify channel lineups and packaging and regular pricing. Cannot be combined with other offers. Offer not available with TELUS Internet 6. Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet offer available while so many other options. If 90quantities last and cannot be combined with promotional prices. TELUS reserves the right to substitute an equivalent or better product without notice. Manufacturer’s suggested retail price of Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet is $479. Cancellation fee for early termination of a service agreement will be $13/mo. for the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 you want to hook up with tablet and $10/mo. for the HD PVR and digital boxes multiplied by the number of months remaining in the term. Current rental rates apply at the end of the term. Rental equipment must be returned in good condition upon cancellation of service, otherwise the replacement cost will be charged to the account. TELUS, the TELUS logo, Optik, Optik TV your ex because you don’t and the future is friendly are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under licence. Samsung and the Samsung logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Samsung Canada. HBO Canada®, Game of Thrones and the associated logos are service marks of Home Box Office, Inc. used under license. © 2013 Home Box Office, Inc. © 2013 TELUS. 53291F28
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Saturday, June 15, 2013 Sunday, June 16 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: Sibel Kekilli, 33; John Cho, 41; Daniel Bruhl, Saturday, June 15 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: 35 THOUGHT OF THE DAY: The Moon in Courteney Cox, 49; Helen Hunt, 50; Neil PatVirgo reminds us that we cannot skip the derick Harris, 40 THOUGHT OF THE DAY: Take a closer tails today. Exert methodical procedures and diligent look at your health and implement the necessary changes that will contribute to your manoeuvres within all ongoing endeavours. A harmonious link to Mercury suggests even wellness. As the Moon travels through Virgo, it en- and easy understandings with one another. Communications flow beautifully making it courages us to be methodical and through easy for us to be on the same wavelength. about our lives. A somewhat edgy aspect to the Sun deThe Moon makes a square to Mars but notes that our needs and wants are at odds a trine to Pluto. Intense feelings abound us today but nonetheless, we should watch out with each other. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: If today is your for impulsivity. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: If today is your birth- birthday, this year you may decide to make day, this year you may be quite busy with the some repairs around the house. You may decide that your living environrelocation to another home. It ment needs some unavoidable is possible you might suddenly improvements and lucky for you, decide that it is time to move out this is the perfect year to do just or simply, move in with someone that. else. Consider how much you can Take the time to evaluate invest, both financially and emoyour decisions and do not rush tionally into any new domestic into anything without a second ventures. Be wise about your thought. spending. ARIES (March 21-April 19): ARIES (March 21-April 19): Do not act out of anger today. An impulsive tick may push you Rash-decision making may to say the wrong thing at the make you make rub someone wrong time. the wrong way. Concentrate on ASTRO You may not be the best listhe tasks at hand and be meDOYNA tener today making you see only thodical in your procedures. You your point of view. If you sense a could accomplish a lot today if verbal confrontation, take a few you are well organized. steps back. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You desire a Passionate feelings make you go after your heart’s desire with tremendous zeal. Your ap- special celebration all to yourself for your perpetite for intense pleasures skyrockets. Avoid sonal, unique talents. You seek appreciation spur-on-the-moment expenses. Your decision and validation for your creative tendencies. will likely be based in the heat on the moment If others are not dancing at the same tune as you are, it’s their loss. They don’t know what and not on practical needs. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You might be they are missing. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You know tempted to get into a domestic dispute today. what your family needs are and you know One of your parents may disapprove of your rash behaviour or tendencies. You want to how to go about it. The material approach protect your valuables and your safety is a that you employ towards your domestic necessities will prove quite practical and solid concern to you. CANCER (June 21-July 22): You may mainly because your sense of objectivity is engage yourself into a heated, yet deep con- highly developed. CANCER (June 21-July 22): You have a versation with someone close to you. There will be nothing easy or breezy about it. You reputation for being a great listener. Today, are concerned about finding out the truth and your antennas are sharply attuned to the outer world. Your perceptivity is razor-sharp you will accept nothing less than that. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You are strongly and your ability to read between the lines attached to your possessions. You feel an gives you hues as to what others are trying almost emotional link to what you own and to convey. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Getting along what you have. Watch out for a possible tendency to act too erratic with one of your bud- with others today may prove a bit difficult. dies. Unintentionally, you may erupt into an Even though you may share similar points of view, you will find that your egos could clash. unwanted argument. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): A small di- Your ability to hear the most subtle messages vergence of opinion may put you into the may reveal to you something interesting. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): It’s important hot pot today. Avoid the urge of becoming to you to be accepted by the group you are over-confident or you may give out the wrong impression. Romance will be sizzling and you involved in or within your circle of friends. will feel anything but modest about the one External forces will act in your favour while bringing you closer to one another. Speak up you have your eyes on. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): This is one of and you will be heard. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Tap into your those days where you seek to be by yourself. The company of others doesn’t appeal to you crowd’s atmosphere and feel the mood as much as your own private time. Emotional around you. This will give you clues as to how retreat is necessary for your recovery from you should approach your audience. Use the last few days. Don’t let feelings of insecu- your rationality and your common as the main tools for today. Your family and career life rity get the best of you. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You will need to be managed sensibly. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your mind display a strong presence among your peers. wonders to distant lands. Group activities If you are involved in any group projects, you will have the ability to persuade others today. work in your favour and this gives you a cerPresent your opinion, but do not impose your tain relief in regards to your acceptance with ideas onto others too forcefully. Seize the others. If everyday tasks start to weigh heavily on your shoulders, put yourself first with no ambience of your crowd. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Your feelings of guilt. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Avoid merits and your values will serve you as a being too demanding with others today. If you useful tool to move up the professional ladder. Make yourself known as your name and are not welcomed in a chosen circle, don’t your merits will be taken into account by im- take it to heart. Odds are that you don’t necessarily have the same interests. portant people. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): If you CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): This is a seek advice or guidance, ask your partner. great time for travelling, be it for pleasure or business. Be open-minded and welcome in- Another person’s opinion could open up your dividuals into your life that have a completely eyes to many issues. Now you are more different background from yours. Chances eager to explore your subconscious self and are, you will gain so much more from this your potential through higher learning. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Health experience. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Try to not related issues will be of concern to you today. over-react to matters today. Impulsive urges You seek answers and counselling. Some will make you less logical that usually. Any- past related inhibition or fear might still be thing that you own, you will have a pretty pondering on your mind. A teacher might strong attachment to it. Dig deep into the truth bring you light to your current problems. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Open up as solutions might just appear. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): One-on- yourself and share your feelings towards one relationships figure prominently for your someone special. The other person seems today. You also tend to put greater emphasis to have the same emotions as you are. This on your general appearance and how you ap- sweet synchronicity brings you closer to one pear to others. Consultations with profession- another. Let love speak from itself. Astro Doyna is an internationally syndials should give you greater insight about your cated astrologer/columnist. personal situation.
SUN SIGNS
Son being picked on for having to move back in with parents Dear Annie: I recently had to move of us who donate our time and money back into my parents’ house due to fi- to deliver meals to those in need. I nancial hardship. think they should have returned their I’m 23 years old and have rarely prizes to be awarded to a volunteer. asked them for any sort of help. But Most of my co-volunteers agree with I receive a lot of grief, sarcasm and me. What do you think? — Shocked Voljokes about my current position, and unteer this is from my entire famDear Volunteer: We agree ily. that giving the prizes to peoMeanwhile, I have two ple other than volunteers older brothers who rely was tacky, but we assume and depend on my parents the organization was tryfor everything. One lives ing to raise money through at home, and the other is the sale of raffle tickets, in struggling with a drug probwhich case, whoever bought lem and divorce. Yet in my them can win, and what parents’ eyes, they are comthey choose to do with those plete angels, and I am the prizes is up to them. Yes, it “troubled child” because I would have been gracious asked for help when I absoto donate the gifts back to lutely needed it. the organization (or to the MITCHELL I don’t want to feel like volunteers), but they are & SUGAR a dog with his tail between not obligated to do so. The his legs anymore. What can problem is, this sort of thing I do? — The Boy Who Cried leaves a sour taste for the Help others and can have a negaDear Boy: It’s likely that you are be- tive impact on future volunteer work. ing picked on because it makes those Please talk to the organizers of the on the lowest part of the totem pole event and let them know how poorly feel superior. this went over. It’s the only way your brothers have Dear Annie: I read the letter from of feeling better about themselves, and “RLS,” who doesn’t like to ask for sepyour parents back them up because arate checks when out with friends at they fully expect you to move out, and a restaurant. they still have to deal with their other When we go out with really good sons. friends, we get one bill and divide the We know it’s not fair or justified, cost by the number of people. If one but this is what happens when people person buys a much more expensive think they must drag you down to their meal or drink, that person pays a little level. Ignore your brothers, and ask more. However, sometimes one person your parents to stop treating you so will order an expensive bottle of wine poorly. Do your best to get back on and still want to split the tab evenly. your feet, and find other living ar- I think this is rude. I get the impresrangements as soon as possible. We’ll sion that these people purposely order be rooting for you. more expensive items so they don’t Dear Annie: I recently attended a have to pay the entire cost. volunteer appreciation lunch for my RLS should not be so quick to judge local Meals on Wheels. This is a great friends because they want separate organization, and once a year they in- checks. I know that I do not like to pay vite the volunteers to lunch. We buy for other people’s extravagances, nor raffle tickets, and there are generous do I expect others to pay for mine. — door prizes given. Paid My Fair Share This year, several members of Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy our city council were invited. I was Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime edishocked when several of them won raf- tors of the Ann Landers column. Please fle prizes. One council member had his email your questions to anniesmailbox@ name called three times. comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, I realize anyone can buy a raffle c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, ticket, but this luncheon was for those Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
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SOBEY ART AWARD
HALIFAX — The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia and the Sobey Art Foundation have announced the five finalists for the 2013 Sobey Art Award, which celebrates contemporary art. Vying for the $50,000 top prize are Isabelle Pauwels, Mark Clintberg, Duane Linklater, Pascal Grandmaison and Tamara Henderson. Work by the shortlisted artists will be shown in an exhibition at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia beginning Sept. 13. Each of the other finalists will receive $5,000 when the winner is announced at a gala event at the Halifax gallery Oct. 9. The artists are chosen to represent the West Coast and the Yukon, Prairies and the North, Ontario, Quebec and Atlantic regions.
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Saturday, June 15, 2013
Baptists without baptisms? Visitors who enter Southern Baptist churches these days will usually see posters and pamphlets for everything from marriage-enrichment retreats to tornado-relief fundraisers, from weight-loss classes to drives to find volunteers for African hospitals. But one thing is missing in the typical church lobby or fellowship hall, according to the leader of the denomination’s LifeWay Christian Resources branch. It’s rare to see appeals for members to join evangelism programs that strive to win local unbelievers to the Christian faith. “Why is this? It’s hard to say what happened to our commitment to evangelism. ... I’m not hearing any answers to this question that go deeper than anecdotes,” said TERRY the Rev. Thom Rainer, who, MATTINGLY before reaching what Nashville locals call the “Baptist Vatican,” was founding dean of the Billy Graham School of Missions and Evangelism at Southern Baptist Seminary in Louisville, Ky. “It’s like our people lost confidence in the old evangelistic programs that our churches had been using for years and years,” said Rainer, reached by telephone this week during the Southern Baptist Convention’s annual meeting, held this year in Houston. “That’s understandable, but the problem is that they never bought into anything new and moved on.” This sea change is directly linked to a recent statistic that should be causing “sorrow and rising concern” throughout America’s largest Protestant flock, he said. Think of it as the Baptist bottom line: Local churches reported 314,959 baptisms in 2012, a sharp 5.5 percent downturn from 2011.
RELIGION
Baptisms have declined six out of the last 10 years, falling to the SBC’s lowest number since 1948. While hotter issues — the Boy Scouts of America and gays, for one — will grab most post-Houston headlines, Rainer posted a pre-convention essay online seeking candid discussion of this painful question: “Where have all the baptisms gone?” “Baptisms are our way to best estimate the number of people we reached for Christ with the Gospel,” he wrote. “When someone declares that he or she is a follower of Christ in our churches, that person is expected to follow through with baptism. ... “Of course, baptisms are an incredibly important metric for us in the SBC. We use that metric to see how we are doing on eternal matters. Yes, the metric is fallible. ... But that does not explain why we mention it less and less.” So what has happened in recent decades? — The decline can, in part, be explained by the fact that nearly 20 percent of the convention’s churches have stopped voluntarily reporting some, or all, of their annual statistics. “We don’t know if some churches have stopped sending in baptism numbers because their annual number is zero,” said Rainer. — It’s impossible to ignore the fact that the fastestrising statistic in American religion — among those who attend church — is the percentage of people who attend nondenominational Protestant congregations. In previous generations, some of these megachurches would have had Southern Baptist signs out front. The charismatic flocks in the Assemblies of God are growing as well, noted Ed Stetzer, president of LifeWay Research. Meanwhile, evangelism efforts remain strong in the SBC’s growing number of African-American and Latino congregations. “It seems that the decline is largely in our predominately white churches,” he said. — Southern Baptists are strong in the rural Sun Belt and, while population growth in Southern states
remains strong, Americans are increasingly moving to big cities and their suburbs. — A key question Stetzer and Rainer agreed deserves study: How many SBC churches have stopped requiring baptism by immersion for those who move their memberships from churches that use different baptism rites? — Another unanswered question: To what degree have birthrates fallen in Southern Baptist congregations? A decline would affect the number of baptisms among children and teens. — SBC leaders would, if pressed, have trouble finding as many as six million of the nearly 16 million people whose names are on membership rolls in their churches. Why? Too often, churches have focused on mere “incantation evangelism” that expects people to recite a few “magic words” that prove they are Christians, said Rainer. That brand of faith is not enough “We have baptized too many members who seem to show no evidence of salvation,” he said. The millions of missing members are “certainly not the kinds of believers who win other people to true faith in Christ.” Terry Mattingly directs the Washington Journalism Center at the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities. Contact him at tmattingly@cccu.org or www. tmatt.net.
LOCAL EVENTS JUNE 15 Mount Calvary Lutheran Church Garage Sale continues June 15 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Phone 403-341-4351. JUNE 23 Seniors Church meets at 11 a.m. on Sundays at Bower Kin Place for hymns and gospel preaching. Phone 403-3476706.
Centre for Spiritual Living 11:00 a.m. Celebration Service Rev. Judy Andersen www.cslreddeer.org
#3 - 6315 Horn Street
BAHÁ'í Faith “The diversity in the human family should be the cause of love and harmony, as it is in music where many different notes blend together in the making of a perfect chord. If you meet those of different race and color from yourself, do not mistrust them and withdraw yourself into your shell of conventionality, but rather be glad and show them kindness. Think of them as different colored roses growing in the beautiful garden of humanity, and rejoice to be among them.” (Abdu’l-Bahá ) CONGRATULATIONS to the City of Red Deer on their Centennial year and the many wonderful celebrations happening around the city. The Inter-faith celebration will be June 29th at 4 pm at Bower Ponds along with a vegetarian potluck supper and city BBQ.
Helping people encounter the goodness of God Corner of 55th St & 46th Ave 10:30 am Contemporary Worship
streamschurch.com 403.342.7441
Streams Christian Church afÀliated with the PAOC
CHURCH
Join us this Sunday, June 16 at 9:00am, 11:00am or 6:30pm The Art of Neighbouring - #3 Life Interrupted t CrossRoads Kids (to gr. 6)
10:30 a.m. Father’s Day
SW Corner of 32 Street & Hwy 2, Red Deer County
www.firstbaptistrd.ca
www.CrossRoadsChurch.ca
AFFILIATED WITH THE EVANGELICAL MISSIONARY CHURCH OF CANADA
Sunday Services Services Sunday 8:30a.m., 10:30a.m. 9:00a.m. & 11:00a.m. & 12:30p.m. Wednesday Wednesday Ministries Ministries 7:00p.m. 7:00p.m.
SUNDAY MORNING 8:00 A.M. CKMX AM Radio 1060
For information call 403-346-0811
Passion for God, Compassion for People. 2020 40th Ave, Red Deer www.livingstones.ab.ca 403.347.7311
4907 GAETZ AVE.
403-346-0811
Balmoral Bible Chapel 403-347-5450
Joffre Road (East of 30 Ave. on 55 St.) 10:30 am Worship Service Speaker: Wayne Tomalty “Jacob wrestles & limps” Genesis 32 Verses 22-32 Childrens Sunday School 2 1/2 - Grade 5 www.balmoralchapel.ca
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
SUNDAY SCHOOL & SERVICE — 11:00 A.M. WED. MEETING. 8:00 P.M., 2ND WED. EACH MONTH. Christian Science Reading Room: Wed., 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.; Thurs., 12 Noon-3:00 p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST 43 Ave. & 39 St. • 403-346-4281 Pastor Chris Wilson Worship Pastor David Richardson
www.news.bahai.org
Listen To The Christian Science Sentinel Radio Edition
The Anglican Church of Canada
THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH IN CANADA
Sunday, June 16
Loving God . . . Loving People 10:15 am Worship Service
Established 1898
4718 Ross St. • 403-346-4560
2960 - 39 Street, Red Deer 403.343.1511
www.deerparkchurch.ca
UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA GAETZ MEMORIAL
Corner of Ross Street and 48th Avenue — Phone 403-347-2244
10:30 a.m. “Who does God Love more?” www.gaetzmemorialunitedchurch.ca
SUNNYBROOK UNITED CHURCH 12 Stanton Street
KNOX
403-347-6073
10:30 a.m. “Unexpected” Babyfold, Toddler Sunday www.sunnybrookunited.org Babyfold, Toddler Room,Room Sunday Club Clubwww.sunnybrookunited.org
Minister: The Rev. Wayne Reid “I am Joseph your brother” 10:30 am Worship Service
West Park Presbyterian 3628-57 Ave.
403-346-6036
SUNDAY WORSHIP 11:00 a.m.
Sunday, June 16
ST. LEONARD’S ON THE HILL “A Church For All Ages” 43 Avenue & 44 Street 403-346-6769
www.stleonardsonthehill.org Celebrant: Rev. Gary Sinclair
Saturday, June 15 5:00 p.m. “The Gathering” Contemporary Eucharist Sunday, June 16 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion 9:00 a.m. Celebration Service 10:30 a.m. Holy Eucharist Sunday School/Nursery
ST. LUKE’S
“Old Church Blessing a New World”
Gaetz & 54th 403-346-3402
www.saintlukereddeer.posterous.com
Celebrant Noel Wygiera 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion 10:00 a.m. Family Friendly Worship with Eucharist Sunday School & Refreshments Thurs. 2:00 p.m. Eucharist
LUTHERAN CHURCHES OF RED DEER WELCOME YOU
Sunday, June 16
ELCIC GOOD SHEPHERD 40 Holmes St.
403-340-1022 Rev. Marc Jerry
WORSHIP SUNDAY 10:30 AM with Holy Communion Everyone Welcome
Saved by grace - called to serve
MOUNT CALVARY (LC-C)
#18 Selkirk Blvd. Phone 403-346-3798
Pastor Don Hennig | Pastor Peter Van Katwyk
WILLOW VALLEY PRESBYTERIAN
DIVINE SERVICE 10:00 a.m. & 7:00 p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m.
Kings Kids Playschool
26016-HWY 595 (Delburne Road) Rev. Reg Graves Everyone Welcome!
VBS - July 22-26 www.mclcrd.org
Growing in Faith Through Word and Sacrament 42881F15
D6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013 FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
HI & LOIS
PEANUTS
BLONDIE
HAGAR
BETTY
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GARFIELD
LUANN
June 15 1993 — Ralph Klein leads provincial Conservatives to 7th majority win in a row. The party trailed in opinion polls under former leader and Premier Don Getty, before electing Klein, a former Liberal and mayor of Calgary. 1988 — Canada expels eight Soviet diplomats for industrial espionage that was not made public until June 21.
1962 — Canada launches first space vehicle from Wallops Island Virginia, an 11.3 kg non-orbiting instrument package. 1902 — Maritime Provinces switch from Eastern to Atlantic time. 1875 — Founding of the Presbyterian Church of Canada. 1873 — Renegade American whisky/ fur traders massacre Assiniboine Indians in their camp in Cypress Hills, Saskatchewan. It leads to formation of the NorthWest Mounted Police.
ARGYLE SWEATER
RUBES
TODAY IN HISTORY
TUNDRA
SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, every column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 through 9. SHERMAN‛S LAGOON
Solution
TO PLACE AN AD
Saturday, June 15, 2013
E1
CLASSIFIEDS
403-309-3300 classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com Office/Phone Hours: 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Mon - Fri
wegotads.ca
Fax: 403-341-4772 2950 Bremner Ave. Red Deer, AB T4R 1M9
wegotjobs
wegotservices
wegotstuff
CLASSIFICATIONS 700-920
CLASSIFICATIONS 1000-1430
CLASSIFICATIONS 1500-1940
Circulation 403-314-4300
wegotrentals
wegothomes
wegotwheels
CLASSIFICATIONS 3000-3390
CLASSIFICATIONS 4000-4310
CLASSIFICATIONS 5000-5240
DEADLINE IS 5 P.M. FOR NEXT DAY’S PAPER
announcements Obituaries
Obituaries
BEARDSWORTH Dr. John Hudson 1925 - 2013 Dr. John Beardsworth passed away at the Rosefield Care Center in Innisfail, on Monday, June 10, 2013 at the age of 87 years. John was born in Kinoulton, England and his family immigrated to Canada in 1926, homesteading in the Turtleford area of Saskatchewan. John completed grade 9 at Brooksdale School and began working as a farm hand for his father and then for various other farmers in the Mervin and Edam areas of Saskatchewan. At the age of 18 he joined the RCMP and spent 5 years in the force at various postings, most of which were located in the Northwest Territories and involved lengthy and lonely patrols by dogsled. A posting in Montreal was memorable as it involved providing security for President Harry Truman while addressing the Canadian parliament in 1947. During his years in the RCMP he completed grades 10 and 11 by correspondence and in 1948 he was granted an honorable discharge to attend full time school at Saskatoon Collegiate Technical, where he completed grade 12. He was accepted into medical school in Saskatoon and completed his degree at McGill in Montreal. His career as a family practitioner, surgeon and coroner was spent in Regina and Lashburn, Saskatchewan and finally in Innisfail starting in 1961. John is survived by three sons: Joe (Debbie) of Cochrane, David (Gloria) and Don (Pam) both of Innisfail, brother Roger (Maxine) of North Battleford and sister Joyce (Walt) of Saskatoon. He is also survived by 8 grandchildren: Melanie, Lauren and Audra Beardsworth; Alexa (Jeff) Blish and Casi Beardsworth; and Grayson, Chance and Landon Beardsworth. He was predeceased by his wife Jocelyn in 2000, his brother Phil (Nan) in 1999, his father John in 1988 and mother Doris in 1986. A Celebration of John’s life will be held at the Royal Canadian Legion, Branch #104, Innisfail on Tuesday, June 18, at 2:00 pm. If friends so desire, memorial tributes may be made to the Innisfail Ladies Hospital Auxiliary. HEARTLAND FUNERAL SERVICES LTD., INNISFAIL entrusted with arrangements. 403.227.0006 www.heartlandfuneralservices.com
Obituaries
BRUNTJEN 1962 - 2013 Della Marie Bruntjen of Blackfalds, Alberta passed away on Monday, June 3, 2013 at the age of 50 years. Della was born on August 3, 1962 to parents Edith and Richard (Dick) Bruntjen at Trochu, Alberta. Della grew up in the Trochu /Wimborne area and graduated from Trochu Valley High School in 1980. She also attended Red Deer College to study Business Administration. Della will be remembered by her brother Carl (Linda), uncle Roger (Jean) Bruntjen, uncle Alex (Sharon) Benedict, aunt Marcene Bruntjen, as well as by their families, extended family and friends. Della was predeceased by her mother Edith on May 2, 2012 and father Dick on January 28, 2010. Della’s life will be celebrated at Parkland Funeral Home, 6287 - 67A Street (Taylor Drive), Red Deer, on Monday, June 17, 2013 at 1:00 p.m. Memorial contributions in Della’s name may be made directly to the Alberta Heart and Stroke Foundation at www.heartandstroke.ab.ca, R e d D e e r S . P. C . A . a t www.reddeerspca.com or to the charity of one’s choice. Condolences may be sent or viewed at www.parklandfuneralhome.com Arrangements in care of Joelle Valliere, Funeral Director at PARKLAND FUNERAL HOME AND CREMATORIUM 6287 - 67 A Street (Taylor Drive), Red Deer. 403.340.4040
25
presenting
% OFF
*
SUMMER SALE
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403.342.1444
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403-347-3319 Red Deer
Funeral Home & Crematorium by Arbor Memorial Arbor Memorial Inc.
Newly Renovated Facility
44957CL31
reddeerfuneralhome.com
309-3300
48828F15,18
“In Your Time of Need.... We Keep it Simple”
Serving Red Deer and Central Alberta Since 1997 403-341-5181 & 888-216-5111
Funeral Directors & Services
*Exprires July 31, 2013 • Red Deer
Funeral Directors & Services
GOLDIE Dorothy Ellen 1919 - 2013 Dorothy Goldie passed away suddenly on Tuesday, June 11, 2013 in West Park Lodge at the age of 93. She is survived by her children, Carole (Gordon) Rear of Mexico, Neil (Ruth) Federspiel of Stoney Plain, Linda Federspiel of Red Deer, Merlyn (Lynn) Goldie of Rocky Mountain House, Myrna (Roy) Jamieson of Delburne & Brenda (Mel) Ebelina of Gull Lake as well as numerous nieces, nephews, grandchildren, great grandchildren,relatives and friends. She was predeceased by her husband Gerald on March 24, 2013. A joint Celebration of Life for Dorothy & Gerald will be held at the Chapel of Crossroads Church, 38105 Range Road 275, Red Deer County on Tuesday, June 25, 2013 at 2:00 pm. In lieu of flowers, donations in Dorothy and Gerald’s memory may be made to the Red Deer Lending Cupboard, 5406 - 43 Street, Red Deer, AB, T4N 1C9. The family wishes to thank all the caregivers & staff at the West Park Lodge. The loving & compassionate care given to both Dorothy and Gerald is greatly appreciated. Messages of condolence may be left for the family at www.myalternatives.ca.
PICKERING Louise Louise passed away June 11, 2013 at the age of 90. She is survived by her children Wilson (Phyllis), Gary (Nellie), Elaine (Art) Oldford, Leslie, Sylvia (Peter) Bouteiller, 12 grandchildren, and 20 great grandchildren. Her sister Alice Fairgrey and brothers Brian Harris and Phil Owen, also numerous nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her husband Bill, sister Edna Larsen and grandson Travis. A spiritual woman who asked nothing in return, she loved to entertain and help out in the community. Funeral service will be held at the Bentley United Church on Monday June 17th, 2013 at 11 A.M. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Bentley United Church. A time of fellowship and light refreshment will follow at the Blindman Valley Ag Center, Bentley with interment to follow at the Aspelund Cemetery at 2:30. Expressions of sympathy may be made by visiting www.wilsonsfuneralchapel.ca. WILSON’S FUNERAL CHAPEL & CREMATORIUM of Lacombe and Rimbey in charge of the arrangements. 403-782-3366 403-843-3388 “A Caring Family, Caring For Families”
Obituaries
IDLAND 1929 - 2013 M r. K a a r e ( K o r y ) I d l a n d passed away peacefully with his wife by his side on Wednesday, June 12, 2013 at the age of 83 years. Born October 18, 1929 in Norway, Kory immigrated to Canada as a young man. After trying his hand at several different trades and labour jobs, he chose to focus on being a heavy equipment operator and businessman. Kory was actively involved in the creation or operation of many business ventures including Kidd Construction, Contour Energy, Tr o p h y We l l S e r v i c e , 3 K Ranch, Krona Insulation, 6K Resources, Westridge Gas Plant, Paw Resources, Canadian Superior, Bri-Gar Resources and MDK Innovations. When not at work, he enjoyed golfing, curling and fishing, which always allowed him the opportunity to join in the social events; always taking great pleasure in a good laugh. Kory was an avid golfer and shot two hole-in-one’s over the years. Entering golf tournaments was a must and he appreciated good competition. Not being a winter traveller, curling was the activity of choice, participating in bonspiels and weekly league curling with great friends. Kory understood the value of technology, always eager to learn new computer programs, how to check and trade stocks online and never without a cell or smart phone out of his reach. In later years, Kory greatly enjoyed watching his grandchildren participate in their sporting activities. Kory will be greatly missed by his wife Joanne of 57 years; children Brian (Nola) and Gary (Teresa); grandchildren Kari, Karsten, Kyle, Keith and Karalyn, as well as by extended family and many wonderful friends. In honour of Kory, a memorial service will take place at Living Stones Church, 2020 40th Avenue, Red Deer on Tuesday, June 18, 2013 at 2:30 p.m., with a private family interment taking place at Red Deer Cemetery. Condolences may be sent or viewed at www.parklandfuneralhome.com Arrangements in care of Rhian Solecki, Funeral Director at PARKLAND FUNERAL HOME AND CREMATORIUM 6287 - 67 A Street (Taylor Drive), Red Deer. 403.340.4040
Obituaries
Engagements
SCHMIDT KEMSHEAD - RACHINSKY Daniel Larry & Judy Kemshead Daniel Schmidt of Red Deer and Dave & Pearl Rachinsky passed away peacefully at are delighted to announce the age of 82 at Extendicare the upcoming marriage of Michener Hill on Tuesday, their children Megan & Adam. June 11, 2013. Daniel was Wedding to take place born August 27, 1930 in August 24, 2013 in Red Deer. Neu-Strymba, Romania. Due to war unrest, he and his family moved around between Austria, Poland and Germany. At the age of 21, he immigrated to Canada in 1951 from Germany. He spent his first years in Saskatchewan working as a farmer’s helpers, a farmer himself, road construction and later as a floor layer. Daniel and his wife Hermine moved to Central Alberta in 1970 where he continued to install flooring until retiring in 1993. He spent his retirement tinkering in his garage, working on his prized 1962 Cadillac, creating small wood projects and enjoying his family. He will be missed by his loving wife of 60 years, Hermine; his children, Monika (Ed) Cappis of Entwistle, Dan VAN de WERFHORST - KALUCKI Schmidt of Red Deer, John Elly and Beerd Van de Werfhorst Schmidt (Kim McElroy) of announce the engagement of Sherwood Park, and Bob their daughter Amy Van de (Laura) Schmidt of Red Deer. Werfhorst to Tom Kalucki He will also be greatly son of Ella and Henryk missed by his grandchildren: Kalucki. Destination wedding Jason (Charissa) Cappis, is planned next year. Melody (Darcy) Waterfield, Mark Cappis, Michael Schmidt, Jeanette (Kevin) Macleod, Pamela (Greg) Dahl, Christopher Schmidt a n d S t e p h a n i e S c h m i d t ; Graduations great grandchildren, Cody, Gabriella, Ryan, Nicholas, Raegyn, Cayleigh, Presley, Dylann, Nola, Tobin and Heidi. Daniel was predeceased by his parents, Peter and Katharina; one brother, Adam; and son, Peter. A Graveside Service will be held on Monday, June 17, 2013 at 1:00 p.m. at Alto Reste Cemetery followed by a memorial tea at Red Deer Funeral Home, 6150 - 67 Street, Red Deer, Alberta. All are welcome to join the family in remembering and celebrating Daniel’s life. Memorial donations in Daniel’s honour may be made directly to the Alzheimer Society of Alberta and Northwest Deidra Dionne Territories (ASANT), 10531 Olympic Medallist Kingsway Avenue, Edmonton, AB T5H 4K1. Congratulations on obtaining Condolences may be forwarded your law degree from the to the family by visiting University of Ottawa. www.reddeerfuneralhome.com Arrangements entrusted to We wish you success and RED DEER FUNERAL happiness as you begin your HOME & CREMATORIUM articling position at 6150 - 67 Street, Red Deer. Goodmans in Toronto. Phone (403) 347-3319 Mom, Dad, Curt & Drew
In Memoriam HODGEN, GORDON CAMERON Thinking of my Dad on Father’s Day Dad, you remain with me, for love itself lives on. For as long as I have my cherished memories We can never be more than a thought apart. You are no longer where you were You are now wherever I am. SCHUMACHER Marguerite Eva RN, BScN, MA, Med. Born in Switzerland June 20, 1920, died in Red Deer June 10, 2013. A loved aunt, friend and mentor to thousands, and an inspirational nursing educator and administrator. An open celebration of her rich and influential life will take place on July 27, 2013 at Sunnybrook United Church, 12 Stanton St., Red Deer, at 1:00 PM. In lieu of flowers, please donate to a charity of your choosing.
~I love you and I miss you Nancy
HEATHER CHYZOWSKI (nee Cust) has received her Masters in Education, Educational Leadership with Honors from the University of Portland. Congratulations from Mom and Dad
Over 2,000,000 hours St. John Ambulance volunteers provide Canadians with more than 2 million hours of community service each year.
Celebrations SKALEY You are invited to a Come and Go Tea to celebrate Inez’s 80th Birthday on Sat. June 15, 1- 4 pm. at 147 Allan St. Red Deer. 403-343-0219 for details.
E2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
CLASSIFICATIONS 50-70
Class Registrations
51
SUMMER ART WEEKS for 7-Tween by Vivian W. (B.Ed./Artist) @AB Art&Drafting 403-346-8255 Limited spots
Coming Events
52
BUY DIRECT & SAVE!
Looking for a new pet? Check out Classifieds to find the purrfect pet.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS 403-347-8650
Central Alberta Greenhouse
Annual Bedding Plant Sale Hanging Plants starting at $12 Patio Planters starting at $15 Great selection of annuals, tomatoes, peppers & herbs
Come early for the best selection
COCAINE ANONYMOUS 403-304-1207 (Pager)
wegot CLASSIFICATIONS 700-920
LACOMBE
Registered Dental Assistant Full Time / Part Time Fax resume to 403-782-6326 or drop off in person. Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
Farm Work
755
LOOKING FOR
FULL & PART TIME CHICKEN CATCHERS willing to work night/early morning shifts. Immediate openings. Full Benefits. Contact Mike 403-848-1478
Clerical
720
EXPERIENCED PAYROLL ADMINISTRATOR REQUIREMENTS:
• Knowledge of accounting software
LOST DOG, brown/black, curly tail, answers to Sonny, lost in Gasoline Alley 403-749-3282 LOST IPHONE on June 11 in or around Costco. Reward offered, no questions asked 403-746-2456 or 403-350-1856 Start your career! See Help Wanted MEN’S LARGE BLACK LEATHER JACKET. Truck with mountain scene on back. Very special. Please call 403-352-7795 REWARD CAT, lost in Kentwood, black,18 lbs. Please call 587-377-2757
Found
56
FOUND: Child’s graduation picture (Probably Kindergarten age) Found in Waskasoo. Call 403-302-3935 SILVER necklace found in Sylvan Lake on Perry Dr. 403-506-1803
The successful applicant will be responsible for the regular weighing and sampling of milk from cows in DHI herds, keeping records and statistical data, and promoting dairy herd improvement. Applicants should have a thorough knowledge of the Alberta dairy industry along with excellent interpersonal skills. PC skills and a degree/diploma in agriculture will be considered a definite asset. This position could require the occasional heavy lifting of up to 65 lbs. If you possess the right qualifications for this position, please fax or email your resume by June 21 to Larry Ouimet, Head of Human Resources at:
Hair Stylists
Oilfield
800
TOO MUCH STUFF? Let Classifieds help you sell it.
Medical
A position for an RN, LPN or RDA is avail. for one day a week ( Wed.). We offer a friendly working environment and staff. Please bring your resume to 215-5201-43rd St. Red Deer or fax to 403 341-3599 Tired of Standing? Find something to sit on in Classifieds
Oilfield
800
A RED DEER BASED Pressure Testing Company req’s. Operators for testing BOP’s throughout AB. Only those with Drilling rig exp. need apply. Fax resume & driver’s abstract to: 403-341-6213 or email mikeoapt@gmail.com Only those selected for interview will be contacted.
Oilfield
* Experienced Production Testing * Day Supervisors * Night Operators * Experienced Production Testing Assistants If you are a team player interested in the oil and gas industry, please submit your resume, current driver’s abstract and current safety certificates to the following: Fax 403-887-4750 lkeshen@1strateenergy.ca
800
Ameritest Inc a professional well testing company is looking for experienced night and day supervisors for the North Dakota and Montana areas. Candidates must have a valid passport and be able to pass a back ground check. This is year round work on a 20 day on and 10 day off schedule. Please send your resume to hr@ameritest.us.com Only possible candidates will be contacted. No phone calls please.
CLASS 1 LOW BED TRUCK DRIVER HINTON, ALBERTA
Alstar Oilfield is looking for a highly motivated individual to join our Team. Alstar has been serving the oil and gas construction industry since 1969.
Oilfield
800
EXPERIENCED Oilfield Construction Lead Hands Experienced Oilfield Construction Labourers Industrial Painters Alstar Oilfield is looking for a highly motivated individuals to join our Team in both Hinton and Fox Creek. Alstar has been serving the oil and gas construction industry since 1969. If you have a Desire to be Part of a Growing Company Please email your resume to: hr@alstaroilfield.com Please Quote Job # 1356 on Resume
For detailed job description Please email If you have…. hr@alstaroilfield.com • Minimum 5 Years with Or visit our Career Section We would like to thank all Class 1 at: www.alstaroilfield.com those candidates who • Low Bed Experience apply, however only hauling Cats, Excavators, “Committed to enriching the qualified personnel will and Side Booms lives of our workforce, while be contacted. • Clean Abstract providing quality energy • Winch Tractor Experience construction solutions” CLARK CONSTRUCTION • O f f R o a d O i l f i e l d is currently accepting Start your career! Experience resumes for See Help Wanted FINISHING DOZER If you Desire to be AND HOE OPERATORS LOCAL SERVICE CO. Part of a Growing Company for the Hinton, AB area. REQ’S EXP. VACUUM Please email your resume Starting at $33.00/hr. Safety TRUCK OPERATOR to: hr@alstaroilfield.com tickets an asset. Fax resume Must have Class 3 licence Or fax to 780-865-5829 & drivers abstract to w/air & all oilfield tickets. Please Quote 780-865-9710 Fax resume w/drivers Job # 1355 on Resume abstract to 403-886-4475 “Committed to enriching Celebrate your life the lives of our workforce, Central Alberta’s Largest with a Classified while providing quality Car Lot in Classifieds ANNOUNCEMENT energy construction solutions” Please specify position when replying to this ad.
800
JUST CUTS is looking for F/T HAIRSTYLIST No clientele necessary. Call Jen at 403-340-1447 or Christie 403-309-2494
• Receive and verify time tickets for completion and accuracy • Coding, batching and processing time tickets / payroll • Preparation of month-end payroll reports • Organize and maintain a current and accurate filing system
Janitorial
• Performance of various clerical and accounting tasks • Aiding with administration of employee benefits
770
ARAMARK at (Dow Prentiss Plant) about 20-25 minutes out of Red Deer needs hardworking, reliable, honest person w/drivers license, to work 40/hrs. per week w/some weekends, daytime hrs. Fax resume w/ref’s to 403-885-7006 Attn: Val Black
• General office duties as required Pidherney’s is a progressive company that offers competitive wages, bene¿ts and a pension plan. We require an individual for our new Blackfalds of¿ce who enjoys being busy and can adapt to a constantly changing work environment. Email resume to: hr@pidherneys.com or Fax: 403-845-5370
760
790
1ST RATE ENERGY SERVICES INC., a growing Production Testing company, based out of Sylvan Lake, is currently accepting resumes for the following positions:
Oilfield
F/T EXP’D. HAIRSTYLIST REQUIRED. Phone 403-347-3010 Eileen’s Beauty Nook
306200F15
54
WE’RE HIRING!
CanWest DHI is currently accepting applications for full-time technician in the RED DEER area of Alberta.
CCCSI is hiring sanitation workers for the afternoon and evening shifts. Get paid weekly, $14.22/hr. Call 403-348-8440 or fax 403-348-8463
• Proficient with Microsoft Office
DESCRIPTION:
Lost
Only successful applicants will be contacted.
Fax: (519)
• Preference will be given to those candidates with relevant post-secondary education
Please join us and your West Park/Westlake neighbours for a classic car show, music, games, food, face painting and more! At the historic West Park Shopping Centre from 11am-2pm on Saturday, June 22.
louimet@canwestdhi.com Fax: (519) 824-1330
Only successful applicants will be contacted.
• Ability to work in a busy office environment
is celebrating 50 years!
This position is a contract position for up to one year (or less). The successful applicant will be responsible for the regular weighing and sampling of milk from cows in DHI herds, keeping records and statistical data, and promoting dairy herd improvement. Applicants should have a thorough knowledge of the Alberta dairy industry along with excellent interpersonal skills. PC skills and a degree/diploma in agriculture will be considered a definite asset. This position could require the occasional heavy lifting of up to 65 lbs. If you possess the right qualification for this position, please fax or email your resume by June 21st to Larry Ouimet, Head of Human Resources at:
louimet@canwestdhi.com 824-1330
• Previous experience in payroll and general accounting
• Excellent computer skills and attention to detail
The West Park Community Association
755 Janitorial 770
CanWest DHI is currently accepting applications for technician in the LACOMBE area of Alberta.
DRIVEN TO EXCEL FROM START TO FINISH
306164F22
LEARNING DISABILITIES ASSOCIATION Red Deer Chapter ANNUAL GENERAL Meeting being held on Thurs. June 20, 7:00 pm @Pioneer Lodge 4324 46A Ave. R.D. Members & Public Welcome! Refreshments served.
Farm Work
WE’RE HIRING!
CELEBRATIONS HAPPEN EVERY DAY IN CLASSIFIEDS
jobs
Friday June 14 1-6 Saturday June 15 10-4 Friday June 21 1-6 Saturday June 22 10-4 1 mi. N of Blackfalds on 2A, then east on Lakeside Sargent Road
60
Personals
740
Clerical
720
ACCOUNTING TECHNICIAN
We are seeking, immediately, an experienced bookkeeper with a high degree of MS Office knowledge. The purpose of this position is to insure accountability for the personal funds and assets of individuals who receive support from Parkland CLASS. This is achieved by providing training to other staff and monitoring compliance to policy and procedures. Additional responsibilities include rent subsidies, individual tax returns and other accounting related duties. Excellent verbal and written skills and at least two years bookkeeping experience is required. Hours of Work: 37.5 Hours/Week: Mon – Fri, 8 am – 4:30 pm Wage: $18.93/hour Please forward resumes by June 18, 2013 quoting # 4598ACC to:
www.parklandclass.org
Class 1 Driver / Operators: Fracturing, Nitrogen, Coiled Tubing, Cement and Acid; Supervisor Cement and Acid; Lead Mentor (Driver Trainer) Applicant Requirements: f Self-motivated f Willing to work flexible hours f Safety-focused
f Team orientated f Clean Class 1 drivers abstract f Oil and Gas experience an asset
Why Canyon? f Dynamic and rapidly growing company f Premium compensation package f New Equipment
f Paid technical and leadership training f Career advancement opportunities f RRSP matching program
We thank all applicants; however only those selected for an initial interview will be contacted.
Parkland CLASS, Human Resources, 6010-45th Avenue Red Deer, Alberta T4N 3M4 Fax: (403) 342-2677, email: hr@pclass.org We thank all applicants but only those selected for an interview will be contacted. Competition will remain open until position is filled.
Canyon is the fastest growing fracturing company in North America. We deliver quality customized pressure pumping and service solutions to the oil and gas industry, improving our industry one job at a time. If you’re looking for a career with a leading organization that promotes Integrity, Relationships, Innovation and Success, then we’re looking for you. Now hiring Canyon Champions for the following positions:
306742F16
WHAT’S HAPPENING
FOUND: Mixed breed dog. Medium size. German shepherd appearance, but smaller and fluffier. Brown and black body with grey hairs on face and tail. Found June 13 around 10 PM on the West Side of Gasoline Alley Red Deer by Ricky’s All Day Grill. If this is your pet or you have any information, please call 403-896-8929
Dental
306382F16
56
Found
How to apply: email: hr@canyontech.ca fax: (403) 356-1146 website: www.canyontech.ca
TO ADVERTISE YOUR SALE HERE — CALL 309-3300 90 ALBERTS CLOSE June 14 & 15 Fri. 4 - 8 & Sat. 9 - 4 Too Much To List! ****** MULTI FAMILY SALE Household items, massage table, rebounder, Bosch flour grinder, Craftsman lawnmower 21”, Corelle dinnerware, 36” Oak Vanity/Sink, Barbeque, etc. 163 ALLAN ST. June 14 & 15 Fri. 3 - 7 & Sat. 8 - 3
Deer Park
Sunnybrook
Out of Town
79 DUNNING CLOSE. MASSIVE - DON’T MISS THIS ONE!! Camping, sports, skiing, skates, bmx and mountain bikes, antiques, Ikea ent. centre, futon, toys, Lego, games, puzzles, kids craft items, books, and much more. Many new/like new items. One Day: 8-4, Sat. June 15.
ESTATE/HOUSEHOLD DISPERSAL SALE 54 SPRINGFIELD AVE June 14, 4-8, June 15, 8-4 Rain or Shine Multi-table Garage Sale at Sunnybrook Farm Museum 4701 - 30 Street, Red Deer Sunday, June 16th 2013 8:00 am - 4:00 pm Donations of gently used items gratefully accepted. No furniture please. Information: (403) 340-3511
JUNE 15 Sat. 9 - 5 June 16, Sun. 9 - 5 Renovators surplus, small tools, clamps, tool boxes, const., plumbing, electrical supplies, Target tile saw, drywall ladders & platforms, etc. etc. etc...... Less than 5 kms. W. of Red Deer - W. on 32 St. over hwy. 2, 1st left at R R 275 (CrossRoads Church) 2 kms. S. turn right twnshp Rd 380 gravel rd., 1 km. to #27543A Twnshp Rd. 380
Vanier Woods
YARD & Estate Sale. Antiques, collectibles, tools, household. Items too many to list. Rain or shine. 4 huge tents set up. Something for everyone. June 13, 14 & 15. Opens 8 am. Located 4 kms. W. of Alix Range Rd. 23-3 off Lakeside Sargent Rd. Follow signs to Emu Farm.
Inglewood
Bower
Huge Multi Family Garage/Estate Sale
ONE DAY ONLY!
Lots of new items. Everything is clean and working. Great prices, all items negotiable. Fri. June 14, 5-8. Sat. 9-3. 179 Isherwood Close
35 BARNER AVE.
Saturday June 15th, 9 - 3 MULTI-FAMILY SALE. Something for everyone!
Lonsdale
Buying or Selling your home? Check out Homes for Sale in Classifieds
60 LANTERMAN CLOSE Fri. June 14, 3-6 Sat. 9-5. Moving sale, furniture, lawn furniture, antiques, household and more
Deer Park
Morrisroe
32 DREVER CLOSE Fri. June 14, 2-8, Sat. 9-4. Wine making equipt, power washer, patio table, household items and more 55 DUSTON ST. June 14, & 15 Fri. 3-7 & Sat. 8-3 Multi Family - Moving Sale toys, baby & household Looking for a place to live? Take a tour through the CLASSIFIEDS
78 MAXWELL AVE. June 15 & 16, 9-4 Moving dispersal sale. Tools, furniture, books, board games, multi household items. See kijiji
Sunnybrook 2 ANTIQUE dressers and night stand, wicker furniture. Sat. June 15, 1-4. #9 Sunnyside Cres. 403-343-3516
LOTS OF TOYS! Princess Kitchen w/food, games, puzzles, books, kids clothes/bikes/rollerblades/skates/movies, helmets, dbl. stroller, wagon, massage table, and more! 12 Viscount Drive Sat. Only! June 15, 9:30 - 3
Waskasoo 5514 48A AVE. June 13, 14 & 15 Thurs. & Fri. 3-7,Sat. 10-1 MOVING SALE *******
Out of Town PETROLIA PARK 103 Petrolia Dr. East of Gary Moe Mazda - @ RED DEER STORE-IT June 14, Fri. 10-5 June 15, Sat. 10-4 Quad, exercise machine, tires & bikes. Lots of items from
Abandoned Units!!!
Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!
Innisfail 5155-36 ST. CLOSE back alley Scooter, drill press, wardrobe and many more items. Sun. June 16, 10-4 5239-41 ST. June 14, noon-8 & June 15, 9-5. Downsizing and moving sale.
Stettler DELBURNE VILLAGE WIDE GARAGE SALE, Saturday, June 15, 9-5 Over 30 garage sales, maps available at participating businesses. (Look for the yellow sign in the window) You can sell your guitar for a song... or put it in CLASSIFIEDS and we’ll sell it for you!
304921F16
Anders Park
RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013 E3
Oilfield
LOCAL Testing company seeking experienced Well Testers for areas including Sask. and US. Positions available immediately. Day/Night Supervisors & Assistants. MUST HAVE valid H2S and First Aid. Competitive wages and health benefits. Email resumes and tickets to: welltesting365@ gmail.com
800
Central Alberta Oilfield Construction Company REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY:
HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC
3rd, 4th year apprentice or Journeyman
OR
AUTOMOTIVE MECHANIC
800
Landcore Technologies Inc. is a leading provider of Rathole and Pile Driving services throughout Western Canada. We are currently seeking a full-time Journeyman or 3rd/4th Year Heavy Duty Mechanic for our Ponoka location. We offer competitive wages with an excellent benefits plan. Duties will include, but are not limited to: - Heavy Truck and Trailer maintenance and repair - Light Duty Pick-up maintenance and repair - CVIP inspection -Heavy off-road equipment maintenance and repair Candidates should own their own tools, class 5 drivers license, Heavy Duty Trade Certification. Experience in welding and fabrication an asset (but not necessary). Successful candidates should excel in oral communication skills, problem solving, and working with others. To apply, either email resumes to info@ landcore.ca or fax to 403 783 2011
WANTED
EXPERIENCED
CLASS 3
VAC/steamer Truck driver. Lacombe area, HOME EVERY NIGHT. Fax resume to 403-704-1442
3rd & 4th year apprentice or Journeyman
Something for Everyone Everyday in Classifieds 306266F13
Fax your resume to: 403-729-3236 Attn: Andy or Darry or email to bunwel@telusplanet.net
Oilfield
Oilfield
800
800
Oilfield
NOW ACCEPTING RESUMES FOR
Experienced Swampers For Red Deer area.
Fax resume & abstract to 403-885-0473 email: info@trysonenergy.com No phone calls please. Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
Professionals
AL-TERRA ENGINEERING (RED DEER) LTD. SEEKING CIVIL ENGINEERING DESIGN TECHNOLOGIST. Above industry standard wages, benefits plan, vehicle allowance, profit sharing. Experience a diverse variety of projects in Red Deer & all over Alberta. C.E.T designation with a minimum of 2-5 years of experience using AutoCAD or Civil 3D. Please email resumes to: Tyler Broks, R.E.T - tbroks@al-terra-rd. com or fax 403-340-3038. Visit our website www. al-terra-rd.com. Looking for a place to live? Take a tour through the CLASSIFIEDS
You can sell your guitar for a song... or put it in CLASSIFIEDS and we’ll sell it for you!
Professionals
810
Assistant Volunteer Resource Coordinator - Red Deer
Administratively supports the day-to-day personnel needs during recruitment, application, management and recognition process of volunteer engagement and retention throughout the Province of Alberta. Must have sound computer skills working with Excel. A working knowledge of Raiser’s Edge database systems is an asset. Excellent understanding of volunteer management is required. If this is your perfect job and life choice, view this responsibility further on our website at: http://www. redcross.ca/ article.asp? id=45791&tid=001
Restaurant/ Hotel
820
BIG MOO IN SYLVAN LAKE needs F/T SHORT ORDER COOK. Wage starting at $11- $13 /HR. Call Steph 403-887-5533
EAST 40TH PUB
Looking for Part/Full Time BARTENDER/SERVER. Apply with resume to 3811 40 Ave, Red Deer Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!
F/T & P/T avail. Apply in person with resume to Burger Baron Gasoline Alley,
810
OPERATIONS SUPERVISORS – NORTHERN ALBERTA REF # 13-0150
- PROGRAM SUPERVISOR (FULL TIME) - YOUTH & FAMILY COUNSELLORS (FT) - COMMUNITY YOUTH WORKER (MON-THURS EVENINGS) - YOUTH COUNSELLOR (.4 FTE) - YOUTH COUNSELLOR - RESIDENTIAL (WEEKENDS/OVERNIGHTS) - YOUTH COUNSELLORS (RELIEF)
Successful candidates will demonstrate strong leadership capabilities, as well as being solutions oriented and safety focused. Individuals with strong communications skills who are customer-service oriented and able to work under minimal supervision are ideal applicants for this position. Find out more about this and other exciting opportunities under Careers at www.newalta.com. Please email your resumé to westerncareers@newalta.com stating the job reference number 13-0150 or fax to 403-806-7076. 306083F15&22
Please visit our website
www.parklandyouthhomes.ca for more information. Applicants are sincerely thanked in advance for their interest. Only those selected for an interview will be contacted. Competition closes when positions are filled.
Resumes can be emailed to: HR@parklandyouthhomes.ca Faxed to: 403-346-3225 or forwarded to:
Industrial & Oilfield Waste Management
OPERATORS – NORTHERN ALBERTA REF # 13-0149
Human Resources Parkland Youth Homes Society 4920 54 St., Red Deer, AB, T4N 2G8
We are looking to fill full-time Operator positions in Northern Alberta. The ideal candidates will have at least three to five years of direct or related experience in oilfield activities. A 5th Class Power Engineering Ticket would be considered an asset but is not a requirement.
Restaurant/ Hotel
You are mechanically inclined, can troubleshoot your way through a problem and value the importance of safety in the workplace. You are a hard worker, able to work with minimal supervision, and are willing and able to work alone. You also have strong communications skills and are customer-service oriented.
820
LUAU Investments Ltd. (O/A Tim Hortons) FOOD SERVICE SUPERVISOR 1 yr previous experience. F/T shift work (open 24 hrs) Must be avail. weekends $13.00 per hour 4217 - 50 Ave. 6721 - 50 Ave. 7111 - 50 Ave. timhire@telus.net
SWISS Chalet Red Deer
HIRING 1.FOOD SERVICE SUPERVISORS: $13 and 40 hours per week Supervise and co-ordinate staff activities and customer service Establish work schedule and train associates 2.FOOD COUNTER ATTENDANT: $11.50 and 40 hours per week Take customers’orders and work with a cash register Prepare, heat and finish simple food items Serve customers at counters Use manual and electrical appliances to clean, peel, slice and trim foodstuffs Portion and wrap foods and package take out foods 3.COOK: $13 and 40 hours per week Prepare and cook full course meals Ensure quality of food and determine size of food portions Train staff in preparation, cooking and handling of food 4.SERVER: $9.75 and 40 hours per week Must have pro serve certificate Interested parties can email swiss1702@ cara.com, fax 1 866 928 5481 or deliver resume to unit #8, 5111 - 22nd street, Red Deer, T4R 2K1.
Sales & Distributors
Parkland Youth Homes is a non-profit, dynamic, learning organization that is passionate about providing quality service to youth and families in the Red Deer area. We are seeking qualified, motivated individuals to fill the following positions:
We are currently looking for Operations Supervisors in Northern Alberta. The ideal candidates will have a process engineering background or at least five years of direct or related experience in oilfield and/or industrial processing activities acting in a supervisory capacity. Preference will be given to candidates with H2S, First Aid, Confined Space and WHIMIS\TDG tickets and holders of a valid 4th or 5th Class Power Engineering Ticket. They must reside within driving distance or be willing to relocate to the specific area in order to work a five-on/two-off schedule as required.
Restaurant/ Hotel
THE BIG MOO in Sylvan Lake is looking for ICE CREAM SERVERS. F/T or P/T positions avail. $11/hr. must be 15 yrs. or older. Contact Stephanie at 403-887-5533.
PARKLAND YOUTH HOMES SOCIETY Red Deer, Alberta
Industrial & Oilfield Waste Management
We thank all applicants for their interest; however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
810
Professionals
830
Teachers/ Tutors
Position Available for completely redeveloped Smitty’s Restaurant, Lounge, Convenience Store and New Husky Gas Bar on Gasoline Alley in Red Deer, AB.
For further specifics on the above positions, please visit Wolf Creek Public Schools’ website at www.wolfcreek.ab.ca, or contact the Division Office at 403-783-3473.
306088F15&22
Find out more about this and other exciting opportunities under Careers at www.newalta.com. Please email your resumé to westerncareers@newalta.com stating the job reference number 13-0149 or fax to 403-806-7076.
If you are looking to start or advance your career within the Safety Industry look no further.
Canada’s Largest Full Service Family Restaurant Chain - Since 1960
Sales & Distributors
Trades
850
BUSY DEALERSHIP REQUIRES
LUBE TECH
Possibility of leading to apprenticeship. Fax resume to: 403-341-5066 Attn. Greg Rempel CRYSTAL GLASS needs summer help. Will train. Drop off resume at: 4706-51 Avenue or fax 346-5390 or email: branch208@crystalglass.ca
830
JOURNEYMAN AUTO TECHNICIAN TO START IMMEDIATELY We are looking for an :
ADMINISTRATOR Candidates must be self motivating, organized and fluent in Microsoft Excel and Word. Previous administration experience is an asset. Please send your resume to
For more information on how you can get started with Target Safety Services please visit our website at:
www.targetsafety.ca
306716F15
jrose@targetsafety.ca.
This position involves all internal reconditioning of Innisfail & Sylvan Truck Ranch vehicles for resale. No retail work. We have a great shop, with great equipment. If you want to work great hours and earn an excellent income with an excellent benefits package, apply now. To apply, contact Wayne or Daryl at 403-227-4456 for an interview. Or send your resume to wkarach@truckranch.ca
306598F19
in the Red Deer branch.
for work in Red Deer
Apply at: Email: careers@ clarkbuilders.com Fax: 1-888-403-3051 www.clarkbuilders.com 6 Fabrication Welders Needed
Full-time year round work days and weekends $25.00 - 30.00 per hour Must be Journeyman or Red Seal Welder Minimum 3 years experience with custom fabrication knowledge, truck, machinery, and equipment repair Knowledge of welding techniques: SMAW, GTAW TIG, GMAW MIG, FCAW, Tack and Spool Interpretation of Blueprints. Knowledge of Gas welding and Arc welding machines Apply with resume at: Comet Welding, P.O. Box 5933, 5604 Len Thompson Drive, Lacombe, AB, T4L 1X4 email: cometwelding @telus.net , or fax (403) 782-1500 ELECTRICIANS, Power Linemen, Power System Electricians and apprentices (any year), instrument mechanics and welders wanted for immediate full time employment opportunities for commercial/industrial construction, maintenance and powerline industry in all areas of Alberta, Red Deer, Calgary and Edmonton; includes great wages with full H&W and pension coverage. Call IBEW Local 424 at Edmonton (780-462-5076) or Calgary (403-717-0322) for more information.
EQUIPMENT OPERATOR REQUIRED AT THE RED DEER COLLEGE Brookfield Johnson Controls provides workplace management services for real estate portfolios in Canada. Our team is over 1,400 people strong and growing, taking the newest technologies indoors to help plant the seeds of sustainable, green innovation. Our streamlined, specialized services delivered by our hand-picked team have made us the Canadian leader in our field. What Makes Us Attractive Optimization - it means getting the very best out of everything and that carries through all that we do. In return for your best, we give you: • • • • •
•
•
•
•
•
Competitive Base Salary & Compensation Programs Work Life Balance Attractive Annual Incentive Program Flexible Benefits Package Rewarding RRSP & Savings Plans Qualifications: Experience with the operation of skid steer loader, snow plow truck, sander and landscape equipment mowers. Mechanically inclined capable to service and do minor repairs to the above equipment a definite asset. Must be available to work some extreme overtime hours during the winter snow removal season and participate in on call rotation. Some heavy labour is required at times must be physically capable of performing duties Team player able to work alone with minimal supervision Clean drives abstract and background check will be required Candidate must be able to adhere to company safety regulations and policies.
Joffre Plant
Teacher, AlixM.A.C. School
TARGET SAFETY SERVICES LTD.
Carpenters & Labourers
INSTRUMENTATION TECHNICIAN
General Manager or Operating Partner
SMITTY’s CANADA LIMITED #600 - 501, 18th Ave SW Calgary, AB T2S 0C7 (403) 229-3838 Fax (403) 229-3899 Email: sfee@smittys.ca www.smittys.ca
NOW HIRING
840
invites applications for the following position:
SET YOUR SIGHTS ON
850
850
Wolf Creek Public Schools
For more information, contact Steven Fee
Trades
EXPERIENCED repair req’d. Great opportunity to person req’d for local truck • company. Work involves work with heating/air all aspects of heavy truck conditioning professionals, and trailer repair and dis- • building the sales and manteling. Must be marketing division. Exc. physically fit. HD Mechanremuneration. Exp. in ic or equivelant experience HVAC sales preferred, We offer competitive training provided. Email: wages, benefits weekends Brad@ This is a full time position off. Fax resume to ComfortecHeating.com with full benefits. All 1-855-784-2330 or call 403-588-8399 uniforms, safety equipment FILLED! and tools will be supplied. RED DEER’S #1 Tool Store FOUNDATION COMPANY We also offer annual safety KMS TOOLS & footwear contribution. in Red Deer is currently Candidates please apply EQUIPMENT seeking Experienced online at: is looking for individuals Foundation Form Workers. www.brookfieldjohnson who are passionate about Please fax resume to controls.com/our-careers/ tools, and are committed 403-346-5867 to exceptional customer FULLY EXPERIENCED Something for Everyone service. If you are framers req`d. 403-350-5103 Everyday in Classifieds knowledgeable about NO BEGINNERS! Welding, Construction, EXP’D SIDER, must have Growing Company, TJ Wood Working, Shop truck and tools. We pay PAVING, needs Equipment or Automotive compensation & $95/sq. employees with paving industry tools, enjoy a fast Call 403-347-2522 experience. Great Working paced environment and EXP’D skidsteer operator Atmosphere. Email resume have a can-do attitude, we have the role for you. req’d for construction com- to: tjpaving@hotmail.com pany. Please fax resume Employee pricing, INDUSTRIAL painter extended health benefits to 403-342-6881 required for a sandblasting and training provided for & painting shop. Must pass TOO MUCH STUFF? the right candidate. drug/substance testing. Let Classifieds Now accepting Fax resume to help you sell it. resumes for 403-340-3800 SALES AND CASHIER positions, apply in person 53 Burnt Park Drive or Trades email employment@ kmstools.com
820
Full Service Restaurant experience as a General Manager with further experience in Lounge, Convenience Store & Gas Bar is an asset.
850
HVAC Salesperson
Newalta has much to offer including great benefits and room for you to grow with the company.
We thank all applicants for their interest; however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
Trades
Ferus Inc. specializes in the production, storage, supply and transport of liquid nitrogen and liquid carbon dioxide for the energy industry.
www.ferus.com
Ferus requires an Instrumentation Technician to join the team at our Joffre facilities. The ideal candidate would be prepared to travel and able to work alone, with minimal supervision. They must be an open, honest team player, willing to work with other trades. Responsibilities: • Maintain equipment in accordance with preventative maintenance program • Assist operations with plant optimization and troubleshooting • Work in close collaboration with maintenance and production • Provide technical support on new projects and designs • Assist with installation, commissioning, startup and maintenance of new equipment • Maintain and perform minor configuration changes to existing control systems. Current systems are Fisher DeltaV, Allen Bradley Control Logics, Wonderware and RS View • Work with, coordinate and supervise contract personnel as required • Participate in review process for establishing PM work orders for electrical/instrumentation • Assist in identifying cause of failure and making appropriate recommendations or upgrades • Provide input into turnaround and project planning and execution • Troubleshoot process and equipment problems over the phone and in person • Respond to afterhours maintenance/ operations calls • Journeyman instrumentation technician Requirements: • Must possess a class 5 drivers license • Willing and able to travel to other locations, in Western Canada and USA • Ability to read and understand electrical and P&ID drawings • Possess good troubleshooting skills for both instrumentation and control systems, previous configuration and programming experiences would be an asset • Willing to share knowledge and train others • Preference will be given to; Allen Bradley PLC and HMI Experience, DeltaV DCS experience, Foundation Fieldbus and DeviceNet experience and Dual Ticket (I&E) Ferus offers a competitive compensation package including a competitive base salary, bonus incentiveplan & an excellent Benefits Package, including a Group RSP Savings Plan. If you are interested in working in a positive and dynamic environment, please fax resume to:
(403) 342-5368 or email: humanresources@ferus.ca by June 17th, 2013. Please reference: JFIT-0613 We thank you for your interest; however only those applicants considered for the position will be contacted.
305283F15
We are currently seeking motivated hardworking personnel to join our busy oilfield trucking division. Top wages. Email or fax resumes to 403-782-0913 kelly@downtons.com
800
303599F15
JOURNEYMAN HD CVIP MECHANIC
Oilfield
302554E26
800
306887F15,17,21
Oilfield
E4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
Requires
SLOPED ROOFERS LABOURERS & FLAT ROOFERS Valid Driver’s Licence preferred. Fax or email info@goodmenroofing.ca or (403)341-6722 NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE!
OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT NEEDS A
Small Engine Technician
4C’S TRAILERS in Lacombe is HIRING! We are looking for a general labourer/trailer technician. Previous mechanical/trailer experience preferred, and ability to do heavy lifting. Benefits after 3 months, full time Mon-Fri 8am-5pm. Starting wage is $14-$16/hr. Email resume to 4cstrailers@telus.net or call 403-782-4879
Ideal for semi-retired person. Our parts department requires summer help on our
Is hiring for the following position:
Fulltime Dispatch/Batcher required
Experience an asset but will train the right candidate. You must pass a physical & Drug Test. Fax resume attn: Mike 403 347 8060 or mike.castilloux@ lafarge-na.com
Retail experience an asset. Apply in person with resume to John Ferguson @ Precision Cycle Works Ltd. #17, Gasoline Alley East. Red Deer County. No phone call please. SKILLED laborers req’d. Streetside Developments, Calgary. Resume submitted to info@ streetsidehomes.com or call 403-258-0703
JEETS PLUMBING & HEATING Service Plumbers. Journeyman, w/service For complete exp. Competitive wages. job††††††††††† Fax resume: 403-356-0244 descriptions,†please††refer JOURNEYMAN H.D. to our website at MECHANIC req’d immed. www.sparteksystems.com for very busy heavy equip. Applicants please forward sales lot in Innisfail. Wage resume to:† range $25. - $35/hr depending † keri.lee@ on exp. Fax resume to sparteksystems.com 403-227-5701 or email: or fax to† 403-887-4050 bouvier9@telus.net Please state which position LARGE roofing company you are applying for in your in Red Deer is looking for THE FRAMING NOOK person with approx 20 yrs experience in the residen- is looking for a shop worker to build custom picture tial shingling & exterior frames etc. Will be working industry. Has abilities to inside shop, part time flexible detect deficiencies & hours - must be handy with correct leaks, perform power tools & saws - Call preventative maintenance Brian @ 403-340-1575. & warranty work. Email resume to CELEBRATIONS nickerson_shawn@ HAPPEN EVERY DAY hotmail.com IN CLASSIFIEDS or fax to 403-346-7556 WATER WELL DRILLING COMPANY IN BENTLEY REQ’S EXPERIENCED
WATER WELL DRILLERS HELPER
OK TIRE
Red Deer North 7147 50 Ave. We are looking for JOURNEYMAN or 3RD / 4TH YEAR AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN to join our team in 5 bay shop. Alignment experience required. Customer satisfaction is our #1 priority. Fax resume to: 403-346-8186 or email to: alok@telus.net
PIKE WHEATON CHEVROLET
is currently seeking JOURNEYMAN AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIANS We offer competitive wages, a great working environment, and a great benefit package. Please drop off or fax resume to Joey Huckabone Call 403-347-3301 Fax 403-347-0031
PLASTERTONE
Stucco, Trowelers & Stone Masons Needed. Top wages. Everyone welcome to apply. Call Tony 403-588-0840
WESTPARK
• • •
FALL START
Community Support Worker Women in Trades Math and Science in the Trades GED classes days/ evening Gov’t of Alberta Funding may be available. 403-340-1930 www.academicexpress.ca
Candidate must have reliable vehicle and be 18+.
DEERPARK Dowler & Douglas St. Area $605.00/mo
Perfect job for seniors, students, or anyone looking to make extra $.
ALSO
with class 3, air. All safety tickets required. Meal and Accommodation provided when out of town. Fax resume with drivers abstract: 403-748-3015
860
Truckers/ Drivers
CLASS 1 drivers req’d for flat deck work. Steady year round work. Benefits, exc. wages and safety bonuses. Successful candidates must be hard working, must know your load securement and love driving as you will be traveling throughout BC, AB, SK & MB. Please fax resumes and drivers abstract to 1-855-784-2330 F/T TRUCK drivers req’d. Minimum Class 5 with air and clean abstract. Exp. preferred. In person to Key Towing 4083-78 St. Cres. Red Deer. TRUCK DRIVER w/ Class 3 & air endorsements. Send resume & clean driver’s abstract to: mpcanpak@xplornet.com Central Alberta’s Largest Car Lot in Classifieds
Looking for a new pet? Check out Classifieds to find the purrfect pet.
TRUCKING company based out of Red Deer looking for experienced Class 1 drivers for winch tractor used for heavy hauling and tank truck operators. Top wages and exc. benefit pkg. Fax resume and driver’s abstract to 403-346-3766
ADULT or YOUTH CARRIERS NEEDED For delivery of Flyers, Express and Sunday Life ONLY 4 DAYS A WEEK
in MOUNTVIEW 33 St, 41 Ave, 42 Ave, 42 A Ave, 34 St. Cl. $132/mo. ROSEDALE AREA Rowell Close & Ritson Close $98/mo. DEER PARK AREA Dandell Close Davison Dr. & 2 blocks of Dowler St. $78/mo. ALSO Dunham Close $68/mo. ALSO Dickson Cres., DicksonClose Dobler Ave. Drake Close, & Diamond St. $140/mo. ALSO Denovan Cres. & 2 blocks of Davison Drive $74/mo. ALSO Denmark Cres, Donnelly Cres, & Densmore Cres. $151/mo. ALSO 1 Block Dempsey St. Dumas Cres. & Duffy Close $95./mo. Call Jamie 403-314-4306 info
ADULT or YOUTH CARRIERS NEEDED For delivery of Flyers, Express and Sunday Life ONLY 4 DAYS A WEEK
EASTVIEW Erickson Dr., Ellenwood Dr. Area $360/mo.
Routes on average only take about an hour per day.
Call Jamie 403-314-4306 For more information
Also are eligible for monthly carrier contests & bonuses.
in MUSTANG ACRES Call Joanne 403-314-4308 info DISPATCHER req’d. Knowledge of Red Deer and area is essential. Verbal and written communication skills are req’d. Send resume by fax to 403-346-0295
Flexible hours including. weekends. Apply in person to the Baker at RUN’N ON EMPTY 5101 - 76 Street.
FOR FLYERS, RED DEER SUNDAY LIFE AND EXPRESS ROUTES IN:
DSM INC.
looking for laborers, in the Innisfail area. Salary is $14.75/hr. Fax resume to: 403-314-0676.
ANDERS AREA Asmundsen Ave. INGLEWOOD AREA
Cost $200 SCHOOL WILL BE STARTING July 2-25 Tues. Weds. & Thurs. 9 am - 1 pm. Upon successfully completing and passing course, work is available for casual to part time hours to start. Must be able to obtain Security Clearance Check from local RCMP Please telephone and leave a message for April M. 403-346-3339
LANCASTER AREA Lamont Close Lees St./ Lawrence Cres. MORRISROE AREA
GRAYSON EXCAVATING LTD. requires experienced foremen, pipelayers, equipment operators, Class 1 drivers, topmen and general labourers for installation of deep utilities (water and sewer). Fax resume to (403)782-6846 or e-mail to: info@ graysonexcavating.com
Call Prodie @ 403- 314-4301 for more info ********************** TO ORDER HOME DELIVERY OF THE ADVOCATE CALL OUR CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT 314-4300
HERITAGE LANES BOWLING
Red Deer’s most modern 5 pin bowling center req’s F/T kitchen staff, servers and front counter staff. Must be avail. eves and wknds. Please send resume to: htglanes@ telus.net or apply in person
Fluid Experts Ltd.
Is seeking to hire Shop Hand for our Red Deer location. This position is a fulltime and is a salary based position with company benefits. Duties include maintain shop and inventories, loading of trucks with fluid products and blending of KCl products in shop. Ideal candidate will have a mechanical background with a class 1 license with fluid hauling experience. Fax resume w/all tickets and current drivers abstract to: 403-346-3112 or email to: roger@fluidexperts.com
LICENSED mortgage agent. $35,000 salary + commission. Red Deer office. Submit resume to info@mortgagestogo.ca No phone calls please REG COX FEEDMIXERS Req’s In Service Shop, exp’d with farm equipment and the ability to weld. Apply fax 403-341-5622
880
BOBCAT OPERATOR(S) with a minimum of 2 years experience in fine grading and finishing, offering a competitive wage and benefits, on local job sites in Lacombe & area. Applicant must have a valid Class 3 license with air. Only those who have the above prerequisites will be interviewed. Please submit resume with Driver’s abstract to: E-mail: lloyd@dbbobcat.com or Fax: 403-782-7786 Please no phone calls.
CLASSIFICATIONS 1000-1430
classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com
INDIVIDUAL & BUSINESS Accounting, 30 yrs. of exp. with oilfield service companies, other small businesses and individuals RW Smith, 346-9351 INDIVIDUAL & BUSINESS Accounting, 30 yrs. of exp. with oilfield service companies, other small businesses and individuals RW Smith, 346-9351
1070
1100
DALE’S Home Reno’s Free estimates for all your reno needs. 403-506-4301 MAMMA MIA !! Soffit, Fascia & Eaves. 403-391-2169 OVERHEAD DOORS & operators installed 391-4144 SIDING, Soffit, Fascia and custom cladding. Call Dean @ 403-302-9210.
Drafting & Design
1120
Escorts
1165
ROXY. I’M BACK! 403-848-2300
Financial
1170
NBT FINANCIAL
Barb LaPorte, Investor I Buy/Sell Ugly Properties 403-352-6871 / 403-343-7802 Fax: 403-986-9055 Email: blaporte@shaw.ca Distressed/Fixer uppers /Rehabs Contractor’s/Renovators Dream. Investors welcome. I can help-Let me do the work Call now... Won’t last long
Massage Therapy
1280
Moving & Storage
1300
BOXES? MOVING? SUPPLIES? 403-986-1315
International ladies
Painters/ Decorators
Now Open
Specials. 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Private back entry. 403-341-4445 HOT STONE, Body Balancing. 403-352-8269 MASSAGE ABOVE ALL WALK-INS WELCOME 4709 Gaetz Ave. 346-1161
1310
LAUREL TRUDGEON Residential Painting and Colour Consultations. 403-342-7801.
1100
1130
1200
handyman. Brian 403-598-3857 Int. & Ext. Bsmt. dev., decks, sheds, laminate flooring, GUTTERS CLEANED & GREYSTONE Handyman reno’s, etc.. Call Ken REPAIRED. 403-391-2169 Services. Reasonable 340-8213 or cell 391-8044 rates. Ron, 403-396-6089 VELOX EAVESTROUGH Cleaning & Repairs. BLACK CAT CONCRETE TIRED of waiting? Call Reasonable rates. 340-9368 Garage/patios/rv pads Renovation Rick, Jack of sidewalks/driveways all trades. Handier than 9 Dean 403-505-2542 men. 587-876-4396 or 587-272-1999 BRIAN’S DRYWALL Escorts Framing, drywall, taping, Massage textured & t-bar ceilings, ASIAN MZ. REIKO 36 yrs exp. Ref’s. 392-1980 587-377-1298 Avail. days Therapy
1165
CONCRETE???
We’ll do it all... Call E.J. Construction Jim 403-358-8197 or Ron 403-318-3804
EDEN 587-877-7399 10am-midnight INTOXICATING ESCORTS Cash or credit 403-550-0732
1280
ASIAN Executive Touch Exclusive for men. Open 9 am - 6 pm. Mon. - Fri. 5003-50 St. 403-348-5650
1372
Misc. Services
1290
5* JUNK REMOVAL
Property clean up 340-8666
companionship - in home or in facility. Call 403-346-7777 or visit helpinghands.com for info.
Window Cleaning
1420
WINDOW / EVESTROUGH CLEANING. 8-6 p.m. Mon-Sat. 403-506-4822 IRONMAN Scrap Metal Recovery is picking up scrap again! Farm machinery, vehicles and industrial. Serving central Alberta. 403-318-4346
Standard First Aid , Confined Space Entry, H2S Alive and Fire Training are courses that we offer on a regular basis. As well, we offer a selection of online Training Courses. For more information check us out online at www.firemaster.ca or call us at 403 342 7500. You also can find us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter @firemasterofs.
TRAINING CENTRE
Blackfalds Lacombe Ponoka Stettler
Industries #1 Choice!
NEWSPAPER CARRIERS REQUIRED To deliver 1 day a week in OLDS BOWDEN RIMBEY
“Low Cost” Quality Training
403.341.4544
24 Hours Toll Free 1.888.533.4544
(across from Totem)
RED DEER WORKS Build A Resume That Works! APPLY ONLINE www.lokken.com/rdw.html Call: 403-348-8561 Email inford@lokken.com Career Programs are
FREE
RETAIL STORE SUPERVISOR C-store Gas Cwash Apply ABA Investments Inc oa Heritage Esso, FT $15.50/hr Supervise, train staff, prep schedule, sales reports, merchandising, inventory mgt, HS grad, computer literate, some exp. Mail Resume 6020 67 St. Red Deer, AB T4P 3M1 STUDENTS! The Perfect Summer Job $18 p/h. Our Red Deer team has an opening for a Temporary Counter Sales Representative for the months of June to September. This is the perfect summer job before returning to school. The Counter Sales Representative handles customer telephone inquiries, services customers at the pick-up counter and picks and packs orders. In addition they perform a variety of warehouse tasks to meet customer needs. Qualified applicants are encouraged to submit their resumes to Ryan Ell at ryan.ell@cranesupply.com Please write “Application for Counter Sales Summer Help” in the subject line of your email. SWAMPERS F/T needed immediately for a fast growing waste & recycling company. Heavy lifting involved (driver’s helper) position. Reliability essential. Own transportation required. Please email resumes to canpak@xplornet.ca Tired of Standing? Find something to sit on in Classifieds
TOP WAGES, BENEFITS. Exp’d. Drivers & Swampers required. MAPLE LEAF MOVING Call 403-347-8826 or fax resume to: 403-314-1457.
UNC
SIMPLE!
It’s simple to run a Garage Sale Ad in the Red Deer Advocate and make quick cash. Phone Classifieds 309-3300.
AFFORDABLE
Homestead Firewood
Now Offering Hotter, Cleaner BC Birch. All Types. P.U. / del. Lyle 403-783-2275
1680
15’ LAUREL LEAF WILLOW 6-8’ NORTHWEST POPLAR & BROOK POPLAR Beautiful trees. You dig. Please phone 403-302-1919 3 PLASTIC RAIN BARRELS Pedestals & brass taps. $75 each 403-341-4632 4”x6” TREATED WOOD TIES. 72 linear feet. $20. 403-755-2760 PUSH LAWN MOWER. Like new. $45 obo. 403-346-4049
1710
KENMORE DRYER like new $50 obo 403-347-5873
CLASSIFICATIONS
WHIRLPOOL washer and dryer 6 yrs. old, $600/pair, Like New. 403-304-9610
1500-1990
1520
Household Furnishings
1720
ANTIQUE OAK office chair, original casters, very nice condition.† $80. Call (403) 342-7908
CHESTERFIELD, loveseat and chair, ottoman,navy blue w/light blue flowers, w/matching small cushions, very good cond, BUTTER BOX, Alberta label, clean $400 403-346-7237 excellent condition.† $25.† FREE to Pick Up. Light Call (403) 342-7908 pink leather couch and loveseat. Some wear on MEDALTA CROCK, couch. 403-309-0955 10 gallon, wooden handles, LIKE new cond., loveseat excellent condition.†$70.† w/matching chair Call (403) 342-7908. $200 403-986-6771
Auctions
1530
Bud Haynes & Co. Auctioneers
Certified Appraisers 1966 Estates, Antiques, Firearms. Bay 5, 7429-49 Ave. 347-5855
Bicycles
1540
1 LADIES and 1 mans bikes 403-346-7237
Building Supplies
1550
MOVING - all furnishings & small appls. must go. All items new in Dec. Sofa & loveseat, 2 queen Beautyrest mattresses & boxspring, oval wooden dining table w/leave & 4 chairs, 6 pc. queen bdrm. set, wooden coffee & end tables, dishes & glassware 403-343-3100
WANTED
Antiques, furniture and estates. 342-2514
Stereos TV's, VCRs
1730
PS2 w/6 games $70 obo, house speakers 100 w $100 obo 403-782-3847 Wii w/10 games $160 obo 403-782-3847
SMALLER Custom Interior Cedar Clad Solid Wood Misc. for Door. 24”w x 77.5”h Brass secure lock knob. Sale w/frame & cedar trim. Asking $100. 403-227-2976 2 ADULT sleeping bags, really good shape $25/ea. 403-343-0858
1760
Children's Items
1580
FISCHER PRICE VILLAGE Vintage toy. Lots of pieces. Good cond. $45. 403-314-9603 HIGHCHAIR $50, PLAYPEN $50. LIKE NEW 403-304-9610
SERVICE BEN ’S WRITER
We are currently looking for qualified, energetic, hardworking individuals to fill the following positions √ Concrete Finishers √ Carpenters/Form Setters √ Stringliners/Surveyors √ Labourers Proform provides excellent wages and an exceptional benefit plan. Apply by faxing your resume to (403) 347-4980 or email your resume to jobs@proform.ab.ca
COUCH - 4 seater, dark brown, nylon velvet. & Laz-E-Boy recliner in beige tones. $25 each. Good cond. Must be picked up. 403-342-0958
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Lampshades, new placemats, home decor. Whole box for $20. 403-314-9603 INVACARE PRONTO M51 Sure-Step Electric Wheelchair w/a special rehab seat. $2500 obo. 403-887-7696 WINDOW TYPE ROOM AIR CONDITIONER. 500 BTU, never used. Asking $75 obo. 403-346-4049
- Outgoing - Organized - Mechanically Inclined - Computer Proficient - Previous Experience A Must
• This is a career position. • Salary based on experience and ability. • Profit sharing and company benefits. Apply by: Email: bill@unclebensrv.com Fax: (403) 346-1055 or drop off resume, Attn: Bill/Service
BATHROOM VANITY 36” oak vanity w/Corian top & new faucet. 2 doors, 3 drawers. $50. 403-755-2760
GRAIN & FLOUR GRINDER K-Tec Kitchen Mill. From Bosch. New $220, asking $50. 403-755-2760
880
LE
1660
APPLS. reconditioned lrg. selection, $150 + up, 6 mo. warr. Riverside Appliances 403-342-1042
wegot
WINDOW CLEANERS Req’d. Hours will vary. $16/hr. Exp. pref. 403-550-5505
Misc. Help
Firewood
Household Appliances
stuff
Antiques & Art
1630
TRAILERS for sale or rent Job site, office, well site or storage. Skidded or wheeled. Call 347-7721.
Garden Supplies
920
Career Planning
EquipmentHeavy
FIREWOOD. Pine, Spruce, Poplar. Can deliver 1-4 cords. 403-844-0227
OILFIELD TICKETS
R H2S Alive (ENFORM) R First Aid/CPR R Confined Space R WHMIS & TDG R Ground Disturbance R (ENFORM) B.O.P. #204, 7819 - 50 Ave.
1590
Spruce, Pine, Spilt, Dry. 7 days/wk. 403-304-6472
SAFETY
PAINTING BY DAVE Interior, Exterior, New Construction. Comm/Indust. 2 Journeyman w/over 50 yrs exp. %15 discount for seniors. Free estimates. All work guaranteed. We carry WCB & Liability Insurance. 403-307-4798
VII MASSAGE Feeling over ARCHITECTwhelmed? CLEAN FREAK FOR HIRE RESID / COMM.- NEW / Hard work day? Available to start cleaning RENO/ ADDITIONS houses on July 2. Call: Pampering at its Handyman 403-755-6911 Sharla at 403-357-7801 best. #7 7464 Gaetz Services Seniors’ Ave. www. Eavestroughing Services viimassage.biz BUSY B’S HANDYMAN Contractors In/Out Calls to SERVICES LTD. EVESTROUGH / WINDOW Spring & summer bookings. Hotels. 403-986-6686 SENIORS need a HELPING CLEANING. 8-6 p.m. HAND? Cleaning, cooking Res./com. Your full service RED DEER’S BEST AA PHILCAN CONST. Mon-Sat. 403-506-4822
Cleaning
to meet your needs.
Attributes:
FANTASY MASSAGE
offers a variety of
SAFETY COURSES
- Service Writing - Warranty Administration - Service Scheduling - Maintaining Paper Flow
Call Classifieds 403-309-3300 Contractors
OILFIELD SERVICES INC.
In the towns of:
Call Rick for more info 403-314-4303
Clothing
LADIES JEAN JACKET. Tommy Hilfiger, size M-L. Good cond. $25. 403-314-9603
Duties include:
To Advertise Your Business or Service Here
1010
900
for all Albertans
GAMES DEALER SCHOOL
wegotservices Accounting
For afternoon delivery once per week
Employment Training
Please call Debbie at 403-314-4307
Ivey Close Irving Close Ingle Close Inglewood Drive
Celebrate your life with a Classified ANNOUNCEMENT
NEWSPAPER CARRIERS REQUIRED
DELI CLERK,
CARRIERS NEEDED
Misc. Help
880
Misc. Help
LOOKING for mature couple to manage mobile park, 20 min. outside of Edm. airport. Small equip. exp. preferred. $3500/mo. accommodations incld’d. Send resume to: 34654 Delair Road, Abbotsford, B.C. V2S 2C9
Call Quitcy at 403-314-4316
* QC ELEC. ASSEMBLY INSPECTOR * ELEC TECH * MECH ENGINEER * ELEC. ENGINEER†
Central Line Locating req’s a locator assistant. No experience necessary, willing to train. Must be physically fit. Working varied hours. Send resumes to: office@ centrallinelocating.com Fax 403-747-3535 Office: 403-747-3017 NOW HIRING CONSTRUCTION SAFETY OFFICER for F/T work in Red Deer. $30/hr. + fully paid benefit pkg. Email resumes to tedc@kellerdenali.com
6 days per week Vehicle needed
SPARTEK SYSTEMS INC In Sylvan Lake, AB is seeking qualified individuals for
LINE LOCATING ASSISTANT REQUIRED
Currently seeking reliable people to deliver morning newspapers in:
ADULT EDUCATION AND TRAINING
•
880
Misc. Help
ADULT CARRIERS NEEDED To deliver the Morning Advocate.
Academic Express
Parts Desk.
880
Misc. Help
278950A5
GOODMEN ROOFING LTD.
880
Misc. Help
306392F19
850
Trades
306449F27
850
Trades
WOODEN storage boxes $7-$15; wooden tables w/folding metal legs $20 & $30; ottoman black leatherette on casters $20; platform trolley w/locking 3” casters $15; wrought iron hanging basket brackets $8/set; trailer hitch bar w/1 7/8” chrome ball $15; trailer hitch bar, no ball $7; 29” pry bar $10; 16” nail puller $5; white resin 3 s h e l f s t a n d $15 403-314-2026 WOULD YOU LIKE TO DONATE A SWEING MACHINE IN WORKING ORDER to a special lady in a nursing home. Hers went astray during her move. Would be much appreciated. Thank you in advance. 403-346-9274
Musical Instruments
1770
GUITAR AMP. Rocker RX-100. 7 watt. $50. 403-227-2976
Pets & Supplies
1810
BEAUTIFUL KITTENS desperately need loving home. Calico, Orange & cream. Free to loving home. 403-782-3130
Cats
1830
FREE Russian blue X kittens and mother to good home,good mousers 403-885-9822
RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013 E5
BORDER Collie Australian Shepherd Cross puppies. 1 Blue Merle, 2 Black & White. 403-749-2411
Sporting Goods
1860
GOLF CLUB SET RIGHT HANDED Tour 2 Model 135 woods, 3-pw cavity backed irons, steel shafts, putter, like new bag w/stand, very good cond. $80 403-346-0093
Travel Packages
1900
TRAVEL ALBERTA Alberta offers SOMETHING for everyone. Make your travel plans now.
Wanted To Buy
1930
Houses/ Duplexes
3020
BLACKFALDS
Avail NOW 3 bdrm, 2 bath main floor, 6 appl, $1350 + 60% util, $1300 SD, No Pets, N/S, PM 565 ~ 25 Silver Dr Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
NEWER MODERN Duplex In Westpark
2-levels, 5 bdrms, 3 baths, 6 appls, N/S, No pets. $1750 & UTIL, Avail July 1st Hearthstone 403-314-0099 or Kristina 403-895-1506 WESTPARK, entire house 5 bdrms., 2 baths, new carpet/paint, fireplace, dble. garage, RV parking, private yard, all appls., $1500 + utils. N/S, no pets. Avail. July 1 Call Alex @ 403-519-2944 gordonalexandercameron @gmail.com
Condos/ Townhouses
3030
32 HOLMES ST.
WOULD YOU LIKE TO 1 1/2 blocks west of mall, DONATE A 3 bdrm. bi-level, blinds, lg. SWEING MACHINE balcony, 4 appls, no pets, IN WORKING ORDER n/s, rent $1245 SD $1000 to a special lady in a Avail. June 15 nursing home. Hers went 403-304-7576 or 347-7545 astray during her move. Would be much appreciated. ALIX: 2 bdrm. 1 bath, 5 Thank you in advance. appls, shows like new. 403-346-9274 $1000 + utils. Avail. now 403-341-9974
BOWER
AGRICULTURAL
CLASSIFICATIONS 2000-2290
Farm Equipment
2010
500 GAL. gas tank w/stand and hoses $200 403-556-6473
Haying Equipment
2020
NH mower conditioner 9’ exc. cond, $3000 403-556-6473
Horses
2140
WANTED: all types of horses. Processing locally in Lacombe weekly. 403-651-5912
wegot
rentals CLASSIFICATIONS FOR RENT • 3000-3200 WANTED • 3250-3390
Acreages/ Farms
3010
EXECUTIVE BUNGALOW ON ACREAGE IN RED DEER. 4 bdrms, 2 baths, rent $2000 + DD Avail. now. 403-346-5885
Houses/ Duplexes
3020
3 BDRM, 3 bath home , nice deck, new paint & carpet, for over 40 couple with no pets at 7316-59 Ave. Rent $1500/Sec. $1500. Ph: 403-341-4627 3 BDRM. 3 bath, house in Inglwood. 1250 sq.ft., dbl. garage. 403-886-4735 BOWER 1/2 duplex, Avail. July 1. 347-0163
Avail NOW 1 bdrm, 1 bath condo, 2 appl, laundry in bldg, renovated, $995 + pwr, $945 SD, N/P, N/S, PM 568 ~ 306, 19 Bennett St ~ Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
BOWER
Avail NOW 1 bdrm, 1 bath condo, 4 appl, laundry in bldg, $925 + pwr, $875 SD, N/S, pet okay fee, PM 374 ~ 203, 41 Bennett St ~ Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca LUXURY Condo Devonshire Estates. 3 bdrm., 2 baths, 7 appls., gas fireplace, blinds. att. heated garage. $1700/mo. incl. heat & elec. Near Collicutt Centre & shopping. Mature adults. N/S, no pets. RENTED SOUTHWOOD PARK 3110-47TH Avenue, 2 & 3 bdrm. townhouses, generously sized, 1 1/2 baths, fenced yards, full bsmts. 403-347-7473, Sorry no pets. www.greatapartments.ca
Riverfront Estates
Deluxe 3 bdrm. 1 1/2 bath, bi-level townhouse, 5 appls, blinds, large balcony, no pets, n/s, $1245 or $1270 along the river. SD $1000. Avail, July 1. 403-304-7576 347-7545
RIVERSIDE MEADOWS Avail July 1st 2 bdrm, 1 bath condo suite, 2 appl, laundry in bldg, $925 + pwr, $875 SD, N/S, pet ok with fee, PM 457 ~ 103, 5617 - 60 Ave ~ Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
SYLVAN LAKE
Avail NOW. 2 bdrm, 2 bath upscale condo, 5 appl, 2 balconies, $1150 + pwr, $1100 SD, No pets, N/S, PM 426 ~ 108, 3 Broadway Rise ~ Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
WESTPARK
11/2 blocks west of hospital!
3 bdrm. bi-level, lg. balcony, no pets, n/s, rent $1245 SD $1000. Avail. July 1, 403-304-7576, 347-7545
Condos/ Townhouses
3030
WOODLAND MANOR INNISFAIL Avail July 1st 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath, adults only condo, built in 2008, 6 appl, central vac, patio, $1000 + pwr, $950 SD, N/S, No Pets, PM 516 107, 5205 Woodland Rd Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
Manufactured Homes
3040
Newly Reno’d Mobile FREE Shaw Cable + more $950/month Mauricia 403-340-0225
4 Plexes/ 6 Plexes
3050
3060
Suites
LARGE 2 & 3 BDRM. SUITES. 25+, adults only n/s, no pets 403-346-7111
MORRISROE MANOR
1 & 2 bdrm., Avail. immed. Adult bldg. N/S No pets 403-755-9852
NEED A PLACE CLOSE TO RD HOSPITAL?
2 bdrm apt w/balcony, Adults only.†Dishwasher, N/S, No pets $1025 & Power, Avail July 1st Hearthstone 403-314-0099 or Kristina 403-895-1506
OPPOSITE HOSPITAL Large adult 2 bdrm. apt., balcony, No pets. $800 rent/SD, heat/water incld., 403-346-5885
Condos/ Townhouses
BUDGET MINDED
GLENDALE
2 Bdrm. 4-plex, 4 appls., $950 incl. sewer, water & garbage. D.D. $650, Avail. July 1. 403-304-5337
HIGHLAND GREEN
(Liberty Place) Avail NOW 2 bedr, 1 bath, 5 appl, small shed, carport, $1025 incl water, $975 SD, small pet ok with fee, N/S, PM 561 ~ 6547 – 59 Ave ~ Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
Suites
3060
AVAIL. July 1st. Large 1 bdrm. on 3rd flr w/balcony, new reno’s, 6 appls. $775/mo. $750 DD. Free water & heat. Close to parks/trails, Call Don (780) 554-2870. AVAILABLE JULY 1, 2013 40+ building (no children) † 1 bdrm & 2 bdrm units - WEST PARK non-smoking, no pets Moderate income. Rent $595-$695/mo. Call James Penny, Associate at Sunreal Property Management Ltd. †403-343-0200
BSMT SUITE For Mature Adults
in Glendale, 2 bdrms, 1 bath, 5 appls, in-suite laundry. Sorry N/S, No pets $945 & Power, Avail July 1st Hearthstone 403-314-0099 or Kristina 403-895-1506
CITY VIEW APTS.
Clean, quiet, newly reno’d adult building. Rent $850, S.D. $700. Avail. Immed. Near hospital. No pets 403-340-1032 or 318-3679
bath suite, 2 appl, laundry in bldg, $750 + pwr, $700 SD, No pets, N/S, PM 124 ~ 203, 5726 - 57 Ave ~ Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
SUNNYBROOK
1 bdrm. apt. avail. immed. 2 bdrm. avail. July. Water & heat incld, clean and quiet, great location, no pets. 403-346-6686
Acreages
Rooms For Rent
3090
2 Acres +/-
Zoned AG SE of Red Deer 26 kms. $194,500 403-505-6240
Mobile Lot
LACOMBE new park, animal friendly. Your mobile or ours. 2 or 3 bdrm. Excellent 1st time home buyers. 403-588-8820
MUST SELL By Owner. Mauricia 403-340-0225
Celebrating the birth of your child? Share your happy news with family & friends with a special announcement in the Red Deer Advocate Classifieds “Announcement” section.
2007 CHEV Monte Carlo LS FWD, 93492 kms., $10,888. 348-8788 Sport & Import
4100
4010
4130
Cottages/Resort Property
Lots For Sale
2007 BUICK ALLURE CX FWD, $7888 403-348-8788 Sport & Import
2008 HUMMER H3 Alpha lthr., sunroof, $15,888 348-8788 Sport & Import
2006 BMW X5 panoroof, lthr., $16,888 348-8788 Sport & Import
2005 VOLKSWAGEN Jetta GLS FWD, auto., $10,888 348-8788 Sport & Import
LOVE GOLF?
1997 33’ DUTCHMAN dbl. slide, walk around queen bed, exc. shape $8500 403-782-2993 2005 MINI COOPER lthr., 5 spd, 77596 kms, $17888 403-348-8788 Sport & Import
2004 CHEV SUBURBAN Z71, 120,000 km. Good cond. $12,000 obo. 403-347-1255 / 350-8018
CLASSIFICATIONS 4400-4430
Money To Loan
4430
2001 CHEVY Blazer SUV 4 x 4 -very good condition, low km’s -$5,750.00 OBO 403-343-1651, 341-0606
2005 BMW Z-4 3.0i 6 speed, lthr., $22,888 348-8788 Sport & Import
Trucks
5050
2010 FORD Expedition Eddie Bauer 4X4,.$26888 348-8788 Sport & Import
wegot
5020
FREE Weekly list of properties for sale w/details, prices, address, owner’s phone #, etc. 342-7355 Help-U-Sell of Red Deer www.homesreddeer.com MASON MARTIN HOMES New bi-level, 1320 sq.ft. 3 bdrm., 2 bath. $367,900. Dbl. att. garage. 403-588-2550 MASON MARTIN HOMES New bi-level, 1400 sq.ft. Dbl. att. garage. $409,900. 403-588-2550 MASON MARTIN HOMES New bungalow 1350 sq.ft. Dbl. att. garage. 403-588-2550 MUST SELL New 2 Storey 1550 sq.ft 3 bdrm, bonus room, 2.5 bath, $379,900. Dbl. att. garage. 403-588-2550
OPEN HOUSE
MASON MARTIN HOMES 1-5, Sat. 14th & Sun. 15th 639 Oak St. Springbrook 403-588-2231
www.laebon.com Laebon Homes 346-7273
2007 CHEV 4x4 new tires $13,000 403-343-1576
5030
VIEW ALL OUR PRODUCTS
at www.garymoe.com
Locally owned and family operated
2008 BMW 335i, lthr., 65,955 kms, nav., $25888 348-8788 Sport & Import
SUV's
5040
2010 LINCOLN MKX AWD, nav. sunroofs, lthr. $24888. 348-8788 Sport & import
Open House Tour These Fine Homes
4250
NEW HOME, 2 bdrm, 1bath, 4 stainless steel appliances, $314,900 Open House 12-6pm Sat & Sun, June 15 & 16 406 Teasdale Dr. Call Chris 403.392.7118
Auto Wreckers
5190
RED’S AUTO. Free Scrap Vehicle & Metal Removal. Enviro. Canada Approved. We travel. May pay cash for vehicle. 403-396-7519
5200
RED’S AUTO. Free scrap vehicle & metal removal. We travel. Enviro. Canada Approved. May pay cash for vehicles. 403-396-7519 WANTED FREE REMOVAL of unwanted cars and trucks, also wanted to buy lead batteries, call 403-396-8629
2004 GMC 1500 4x4 extended cab. Good shape in & out $6950. 403-746-5541 1997 F150 4x4 Lariet loaded, exc. cond, low kms. SOLD
Public Notices
A Star Makes Your Ad A Winner! CALL:
309-3300
6010 Invitation to Tender
Out Of Red Deer
Sealed Tenders clearly marked “Washroom and Change Room Addition to Dickson Jubilee Arena, Tender #15/13 will be received by: Red Deer County 38106 Rge Rd 275 Red Deer County, AB T4S 2L9 (403)350-3150 Up to 2:01 p.m. local time on July 4, 2013 Tenders not clearly marked, or conforming to the requirements laid out in the project speci¿cations will be refused. Oral, telephoned, telegram, fax or email tender bids will not be accepted. Only Bid revisions, up until closing time, will be accepted by fax. However, Red Deer County is not responsible if pages are lost or delayed in transmission, and the County’s fax receipt time shall be used to determine if revisions are received on time regardless of when they were sent. The work included in this project includes but is not necessarily limited to the following: Construction of Washroom and Change Room Addition to the Dickson Jubilee Arena located at Range Road 31, Dickson Alberta.
Directory East Red Deer
D & G 5th wheel hitch c/w rails, vented tailgate $300; chrome grill guard w/ rubber bumpers, $250 403-309-2066 391-2161
WASHROOM AND CHANGE ROOM ADDITION TO DICKSON JUBILEE ARENA, RED DEER COUNTY Tender #15/13
2009 DODGE VIPER SRT ACR replica 28000 kms., $74,888. 403-348-8788 Sport & Import
2008 GRAND PRIX $10,888 348-8788 Sport & Import
5180
★
1984 CORVETTE new engine, $8888 348-8788 Sport & Import
2007 5 bdrm., 3 full bath. Dbl. att. garage, fenced, landscaped. 34 Woodbine Ave. Blackfalds. Incl. 2008 Mazda 3I & 60” LCD TV & new appls. $315,000. 403-598-4501
Tires, Parts Acces.
2003 CIVIC DX 180,000 A-1 WILLY`S PARTS Place km. $5000. 403-340-0295 2008 GMC 1500, 4x4, 5.3 environmental friendly SLE, no issues. 161,000 km disposal of your unwanted $14,900. 403-346-9816 vehicles. We will pick up in Red Deer. We pay you! Phone for pricing. 403- 346-7278
1966 CADILLAC DeVille $9888. 403-348-8788 Sport & Import
2009 FORD MUSTANG Shelby GT 500 16163 kms lthr., $39888. 403-348-8788 Sport & Import
2011 UTILITY TRAILER Aluminum. With ramps. $775 obo. 403-314-0804
Vehicles Wanted To Buy
2003 AUDI A4, fully loaded, $7300. 403-340-0295
Cars
5140
Utility Trailers
4 CHROME 17” RIMS 5 studs, barely used. Asking $50 ea obo. 403-346-4049
2005 BMW Z4 3.0L 6 speed, lthr., $22,888. 348-8788 Sport & Import
wheels
Choosing the Right Realtor DOES make a Difference Call GORD ING at RE/MAX Real Estate Central Alberta (403) 341-9995
A HALF DUPLEX HOME located @ 4624-46A Ave. Close, Sylvan Lake, AB. The 980 sq. ft. main flr. living rm, dinette, kitchen w/oak cabinetry, 1 avrg size bdrm., a master bdrm. & 4 piece main bath. Recent updates incl. 3 windows, appls, roof, toilet & flooring. Full height concrete bsmt. is partly dev. w/family rm, spare rm, mechanical rm, & 1 complete bdrm. & 3 piece bath. 1-403-887-2693
5120
2004 LAND ROVER Free- Trailers lander sunroof, lthr., $8888 403-348-8788 Sport & Import 2010 23’ CREEKSIDE se2004 KIA Sorento LX, 4X4, lect model, used by retired seniors 3 summers, per77859 kms., $8,888. 348-8788 Sport & Import manently parked, but can move. Large deck and utility shed. 780-312-2567
FINANCIAL
Antique & Classic Autos
3 BDRM. 3 bath, house in Inglwood. 1250 sq.ft., dbl. garage. 403-886-4735
2007 SPORTSMAN
2004 LAND ROVER SE3 Freelander AWD, $8,888 348-8788 Sport & Import
2001 DODGE Durango 4x4, $5000 o.b.o. 403-348-1634
5000-5300
BLACKFALDS: Bungalow, 2 bdrm., 2 bath, front. att. garage. Many upgrades. Blow-out price, $319,900. Includes legal fees, GST & appls. Front sod & tree. Call Lloyd 403-391-9294
5110
Fifth Wheels
LX, 3254, 3 slides, clean, dual pane, fireplace, lots of extras. $28,900. trades considered. 403-598-0682
CLASSIFICATIONS
4020
5100
2007 SEABREEZE 34’, gas, 2 slides, 38,000 kms, very clean, very good cond., $69,900 403-843-6077
Holiday
BEN ORDMAN
Houses For Sale
2004 HARLEY CVO Screamin Eagle $21,888. 348-8788 Sport & Import
1994 TITANIUM model 31E36MK. Loaded, many extras. $27,500 obo. 403-347-1050 or 304-4580
BRIGHT four seasons home on 1/2 acre, Gull Lake. Price $259,000. Call 403-341-4854 Details on kijiji.com
309-3300 CLASSIFIEDS
2008 HYUNDAI Santa Fe AWD, lthr., sunroof, 52012 kms, $18,888. 348-8788 Sport & Import
4160
MORTGAGES AVAIL.on all types of real estate including raw land and acreages. Bruised credit and self employed welcome. Fast approvals Ron Lewis 403-819-2436
For Sale By Owner Consultant 403-506-8777
5080
NEW DUPLEX, 2 suites, for $389,900. 2000 sq.ft. 2 bdrm., 2 bath. Mason Martin Homes 403-588-2550
homes
Realtors & Services
Motorcycles
Motorhomes
wegot
4000-4190
5040
4090
Walk-out view lot (.40 acres) overlooking pond, backing W. at Wolf Creek Village. Power, municipal water & sewer to be connected. 10 MOBILE HOME PAD, in Red Deer Close to Gaetz, yr. Golf membership avail. 2 car park, Shaw cable incl. valued $30,000. Controls in place to protect your Mauricia 403-340-0225 investment. 403-782-4599
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3190
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2007 MERCEDES BENZ B200 FWD $8888 403-348-8788 Sport & Import
ROOM $500. Blackfalds. All incld’d, furn. 588-2564
HOSPITAL NORTH
Avail July 1st, 2 bdrm, 1 bath suite, 2 appl, laundry in bldg, $750 + pwr, $700 SD, N/P, N/S, PM 34 ~ 102, 5604 - 50 Ave ~ Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
4050
THE NORDIC
(Victoria Apts) Avail NOW 1 bdrm, 1 bath suite, 2 appl, adults only, laundry in bldg, $775 + pwr, $725 SD, N/S, No Pets, PM 479 ~ 10, 5110 - 43 St ~ Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
INNISFAIL
5030
AFFORDABLE WATERFRONT ON SHUSWAP LAKE, with own dock/buoy. Beautiful property in Sorrento only $249’000. If you are 55+ look at Property Guys ID Nr 65213 or call Roger†403-350-8089 2007 BMW 328 Xi sunroof, 1 & 2 bdrm. adult building, lthr., $20,888 403-348-8788 Tanja 250-804-6436 N/S. No pets. Sport & Import 403-596-2444
DOWNTOWN
(Bell Manor) Avail July 1st 1 bdrm, 1 bath, 2 appl, FREE laundry in bldg, adults only, $750 + pwr, $700 SD, N/P, N/S, PM 19 8, 5340 - 47 Ave Sim Mgmt & Realty 403-340-0065 ext 412 www.simproperties.ca
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MASON MARTIN HOMES New condo, 1000 sq.ft. 2 bdrm., 2 bath, 5 appls., $189,800. 403-588-2231
Income RIVERSIDE MEADOWS Property Avail July 1st, 1 bdrm, 1 A 4-PLEX FOR THE
In Normandeau, 3 bdrms, 1 bath, 4 appls, N/S, No pets $995 & Gas, Power, Avail NOW Hearthstone 403-314-0099 or Kristina 403-895-1506
4040
4310
SERGE’S HOMES 17 VINTAGE CLOSE BLACKFALDS Sat. & Sun. 12 - 4 1980 sq. ft. 2 storey walk out. Contact Robert @ 403-505-8050
Copies of Tender Documents may be obtained from the Red Deer County Of¿ce, located at 38106 Rge Rd, 275, Red Deer County, AB T4S 2L9 starting on or before June 14, 2013. A non-refundable deposit by certi¿ed cheque in the amount of $50 per set is required. Inquires shall be directed to Michael Liu, Supreme Engineering Group at 403-3921778. Supreme Engineering for Red Deer County.
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1840
Dogs
E6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Saturday, June 15, 2013
Clark, Redford all smiles at meeting BY THE CANADIAN PRESS KELOWNA, B.C. — The premiers of British Columbia and Alberta attempted to patch up — or at least patch over — their once “frosty” relationship Friday, with a meeting in B.C. that avoided the contentious issue of pipelines that has divided them in the past. B.C.’s Christy Clark and Alberta’s Alison Redford posed for the cameras in Kelowna, where Clark is currently running in a provincial byelection, before an hour-long meeting they said was focused on economic issues. A year ago, Clark and Redford were in a public dispute over the proposed Northern Gateway pipeline — specifically, Clark’s demand for a “fair share” of the economic benefits from the project. Pundits were busy keeping track of how far apart they sat from one another at last year’s gathering of the Council of the Federation, and Clark famously described a meeting between the two in October as “frosty.” But on Friday, the two premiers used a tried-andtrue method for calming any heated dispute: avoid talking about the problem. “No, I didn’t actually discuss that,” Redford told reporters when asked whether the Northern Gate-
way pipeline came up during the meeting. Clark suggested all is well between Canada’s two westernmost provinces. “British Columbia and Alberta have been friends for a long time — we are the best friends in this country that you’ll find between provinces,” said Clark, after giving Redford a bottle of wine and a hug. Redford and Clark downplayed repeated questions about the Northern Gateway project, which Clark’s government formally opposed at review hearings last month. Redford said there were other important economic issues to occupy the hour, while Clark cast the dispute as little more than two premiers standing up for their respective provinces. Clark did, however, suggest all hope is not lost that British Columbia could one day change its mind when it comes to Northern Gateway. “Between the closing arguments (at the National Energy Board’s joint-review panel) and the decision, there are a few more months,” said Clark. “So we’ll see what happens with that.” The 1,600-kilometre Northern Gateway project would transport 550,000 barrels per day of oilsands crude from just outside Edmonton to a port in Kitimat, on the northern B.C. coast. Once at the coast, bituman would be loaded onto hundreds of tankers a
year for transport to Asian markets. The premiers spoke of a shared interest in skills training, immigration and economic growth, and they announced a “ministerial working group” to tackle those issues. However, there were few specifics about what exactly each premier wants to see done in those areas, and the official news release following their meeting didn’t even mention — much less explain — the working group. Clark and Redford also complimented each other on their come-from-behind election wins. Both were counted out by pollsters and pundits, but each pulled off victories. B.C.’s Opposition NDP dismissed the meeting as little more than a campaign event. Clark lost her own Vancouver-area riding in the May 14 election, prompting one of her caucus members to step aside in a safe Kelowna-area riding to allow her to try again. The New Democrats were so unconcerned about Clark’s meeting with her Alberta counterpart that the party didn’t offer up its leader or any of its legislature critics to comment. Instead, the NDP left the reaction to Clark’s byelection opponent, Carole Gordon, who ran, and lost, in the May election.
FIFA allows turbans for now
IMPERIAL ASSAULT
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
The force was with Leslie Seiler and Paul Kingston the day they said I do. The Toronto couple have had to curtail their own honeymoon to deal with the spate of publicity surrounding one of their wedding photos. The image, taken on May 31st in central Toronto, depicts the two aspiring comedians and their wedding party being chased by the iconic All-Terrain Armored Transport vehicles (AT-ATs) from the Star Wars franchise.
Waste water pipeline leak fixed: owner BY THE CANADIAN PRESS ZAMA CITY — The owner of a pipeline that leaked a large amount of industrial waste water into a northern Alberta wetland says wildlife in the area doesn’t seem to have been affected. “There are no visible impacts on wildlife,” Marc Douglas, spokesman for Apache Canada Ltd., said Friday. Alberta regulators estimate that 9.5 million litres of waste water were spilled near Zama City in northwestern Alberta. The spill covers 42 hectares with water that contains salt, oil and minerals. There are 160 workers backed up by specialized equipment cleaning up the site, Douglas said in an emailed response to questions. The spilled water is being removed, tested and treated. “Wildlife, amphibian and vegetation studies are underway by an extensive environmental remediation team and analytics are being compiled,” Doug-
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las said. Aboriginals in the area have said all vegetation in the spill area, from grass to trees, is dead. Douglas said the spilled fluid from the five-yearold pipeline was 99 per cent water. “The water we collect will be further treated to ensure it meets water quality standards before it is released back into the environment.” Apache is investigating the cause of the leak. “While our priority right now is remediation and restoration, we will investigate the cause and develop a solution that will prevent this sort of thing (from happening) again.” The reason for the leak will be disclosed, said Douglas.
ENTER
MONTREAL — Soccer’s world body struck a blow against Quebec’s turban ban Friday, saying such headwear is perfectly acceptable on the pitch for now. The Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) said in a statement it is temporarily authorizing the wearing of male head covers at all levels of Canadian soccer. It is effectively applying a 2012 ruling that allowed specially designed hijabs for women. The statement outlines certain rules for allowing the male headwear on the pitch. “(FIFA) authorizes the CSA to permit all players to wear head covers ... in all areas and on all levels of the Canadian football community,” FIFA said. FIFA’s position came four days after the Canadian Soccer Association suspended Quebec’s soccer federation because the provincial body banned Sikh headwear. The move risked turning Quebec into a soccer pariah, with players in the province isolated from national and interprovincial competition. The Quebec organization had cited safety issues for its decision and the fact the garments were not endorsed by FIFA. FIFA responded that the head coverings are allowed — on a trial basis and just for the time being. The issue will be discussed in October by the International Football Association Board (IFAB), which determines the rules of the game, and a final decision is expected in March 2014. The Quebec Soccer Federation said Friday it welcomed the news “with enthusiasm and relief.” It said it had been waiting for clear instructions from FIFA. However, the Quebec body has not said exactly what it will do next. It is to hold a news conference Saturday morning and issue a ruling with respect to the “lifting of the ban.” The impact of the spat has already been felt. This weekend, at least 20 out-of-province teams are skipping a tournament in Montreal. Some players in Quebec leagues have also decided to wear turbans in protest of the ban. That ban had the support of the Parti Quebecois government and some sovereigntists have even used the case as an argument for Quebec independence. However, many federal politicians opposed the ban and applauded the CSA suspension — with the Conservatives and Liberals being the most forceful. NDP Leader Tom Mulcair had also written to FIFA, seeking clarification and expressing his hope children would be allowed to play.
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