Kamloops This Week, October 09, 2015

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KTW friday

30 CENTS

WHAT’S HAPPENING

THIS WEEKEND

OCTOBER 9, 2015 | Volume 28 No. 122

kamloopsthisweek.com

AT NEWSSTANDS

INSIDE TODAY ▼ LISTINGS/B1

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kamthisweek

‘IT WAS A MIRACLE’

After their fishing boat capsized on a remote lake in the North Thompson last month, Allan Pasichnyk and Ernie Matechuk thought they were done for — then some heroes showed up STORY/A5 Allan Pasichnyk (left) and Ernie Matechuk are lucky to be alive — and now they want to thank their unidentified saviours.

BRUTAL START FOR BLAZERS With no wins and five losses, the WHL club is off to its worst start in franchise history

SPORTS/A13

MURDER CHARGE FOR MOM Kamloops woman facing second-degree murder charge in death of newborn

DAVE EAGLES/KTW

NEWS/A3

THEATRE LOVERS REJOICE If plays are your preference, it is a weekend for which to be thankful

ARTS/B1

VOTERS’ INTEREST PIQUED? Advance voting numbers are higher than in previous federal elections

NEWS/A6

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FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

CITYpage

www.kamloops.ca

Council Calendar October 14 5:30 pm - Heritage Commission DES Boardroom, 105 Seymour Street

Tournament Capital Centre Parking Improvements

October 19 4:30 pm - Arts Commission Corporate Boardroom, City Hall

two-hour parking is FREE for TCC and Hillside Stadium visitors. Registering your licence plate enhances the City's ability to manage misuse of the parking lot and improve parking for clients and guests.

October 20 9:00 am - Audit Committee 2nd Floor Boardroom, City Hall

Remember Your Licence Plate Number

Go to the Parking Station

October 20 1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting 7:00 pm - Public Hearing October 26 10 am - Coordinated Enforcement Task Force Corporate Boardroom, City Hall October 26 11:15 am - Police Committee Corporate Boardroom, City Hall October 27 9 am - Council Workshop Council Chambers, City Hall

You must register your licence plate for FREE two hour parking. To remember your licence plate number, take a picture of it with your phone or get a complimentary KAMPARK wallet card and key tab from the TCC front desk.

Re-register Your Vehicle After Two Hours

in the TCC lobby.

Disabled Parking

October 28 5 pm - Social Planning Council DES Boardroom, 105 Seymour Street November 3 1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting 7:00 pm - Public Hearing Regular City Council meetings are broadcast on Shaw Cable as follows: Thurs and Sat at 11 am and Sun at 7 pm. Council meetings can also be viewed online at: kamloops.ca/webcast.

Time limits are enforced. After two hours, you must re-register your licence plate at a parking station or

Persons with vehicles with a valid disabled parking permit may park for FREE and do not have to register at a parking station.

Weekly Traffic Update Overlanders Bridge Crews will continue removing west side scaffolding at night. All southbound passenger vehicles traveling downtown continue to detour through the temporary bypass off the south west ramp. The webcam feed at the south end of the bridge may be down intermittently due to electrical work taking place in the area. Motorists are reminded to slow down through the construction zone. For info about the "bumpiness" of the bridge, go to www.kamloops.ca/kammute. Columbia Street All left turn bays are now open. Motorists are advised to expect periodic lane closures along the Columbia Street corridor as crews do final deficiency checks. Crews will be completing landscaping and sign installation during the week. The #9 Gleneagles bus traveling from downtown to Aberdeen continues to temporarily re-route on Battle Street. For more information and to view the new transit service changes (effective Sept 6), visit www.bctransit.com (trip alerts) or call 250-376-1216.

Imagine Imagine

Meeting schedule is available at kamloops.ca/council.

A bold vision for the heart of the City Authorized by the City of Kamloops. For more information, email pacinfo@kamloops.ca. www.kamloops.ca/imagine

A bold vision for the heart of the City Authorized by the City of Kamloops. For more information, email pacinfo@kamloops.ca. www.kamloops.ca/imagine

Job Opportunity: Cooking Instructor Deadline: Oct 28, 2015 at 4:00 pm Seeking qualified applicants to teach ‘Cooking 101’, and specialty cooking ‘Soups’, and ‘Vegetarian Cooking’. Please submit your resume, cover letter and three personal/professional references to: Cara Graden Arts, Culture and Heritage Coordinator Email: cgraden@kamloops.ca Phone: (250) 828-3611

www.kamloops.ca/contracts

7 Victoria Street West, Kamloops, BC, V2C 1A2 | Phone 250-828-3311 | Fax 250-828-3578 | Emergency only after hours phone 250-372-1710


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

ToTal CarpeT

LOCAL NEWS

‘We were waiting for the end’ TIM PETRUK

STAFF REPORTER

tim@kamloopsthisweek.com

I

t was “a fluke.” That’s how Good Samaritan Ryan Fisher described it — the chance role he played in saving the lives of two Kamloops men who had all but given up on survival after their boat flipped in a small North Thompson lake last month. Fisher said he was driving with his family down a back-country road near Barriere when he was flagged down. “I was taking my kids camping and one guy came running up, yelling and screaming,” he said. “By then, they’d already got the two guys down to the dock.” The “two guys” were Allan Pasichnyk and Ernie Matechuk. Pasichnyk, 84, and Matechuk, 71, have been fishing buddies for more than a decade. They spend most Thursdays at Gorman Lake, 19 kilometres northwest of Barriere. The secluded spot became their go-to fishing hole because of its isolation. “We go on Thursdays because there’s no one else on the lake,” Pasichnyk told KTW. “We could be there all day and see maybe two or three vehicles.” Pasichnyk characterized the “fluke” as something else entirely. “It was a miracle,” he said. *** More than a month removed from their Sept. 3 brush with death, Pasichnyk and Matechuk are still unclear on the details. “I don’t know exactly what happened,” Pasichnyk said. “I caught a fish, but I had my line behind the oar, so I just turned around and stepped back — and over we went.” Their nine-foot flatbottom boat flipped. Both men had life vests, but only Matechuk was wearing his. Pasichnyk had given his preserver

CAN YOU HELP? Allan Pasichnyk and Ernie Matechuk would really like to track down the two Good Samaritans who saved them from drowning in Gorman Lake on Sept. 3. So far, all they know is that the men were young — likely in their 20s — were from Kamloops and work as electricians at the same local company. If you know who they are, call 778-471-7540 and we’ll get them in touch.

to his friend to keep his legs dry in the rain. In all their years fishing together, the pair said, they had never gone into the water. “It just happened so quick,” Matechuk said. “The boat created some sort of vacuum underneath and we couldn’t move it.” The water in Gorman Lake was 13 C, according to Pasichnyk’s fish finder. Both men went into shock. “I didn’t feel cold at all,” Matechuk said. “That’s why I didn’t think I would get hypothermia, because I didn’t feel cold.” They were about 100 feet from shore — too far for Pasichnyk to swim without a life vest. So, he grabbed hold of the overturned boat and prayed. “I hung on,” he said. “We finally realized we’re not going to make it, so both Ernie and I prayed. “We turned to the good Lord, the only one who could help us, and he did. “It really was a miracle.” *** After spending an hour trying to stay afloat in cold water, with colder rain pouring down, Pasichnyk and Matechuk had given up. “I told Allan, because he said a few times, ‘You swim to shore — I’m going to let go of the boat,’” Matechuk said. “I said, ‘I’m not going to leave you here.’ “I remember, when it started getting blurry for me, I said, ‘Allan, I think this is it.’” All the while, Pasichnyk said, they were praying. “I had given up, too,” he said. “Then, we heard a

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holler from the road and our hopes just boosted right up. “Both of us sent up a holler. I think they heard it down to Kamloops. “About the last thing I remember is a boat coming out to our boat. I just remember the boat coming to ours.” *** According to Fisher, the two life-savers happened upon the distressed men by complete chance. “They told me the only reason they stopped is because one of them had to go pee,” he said. “And, the other one was just looking around with his binoculars and he saw the capsized boat. “It was a fluke.” Fisher said the Good Samaritans rushed into action, getting their own boat into the waters of Gorman Lake and rushing to rescue. They towed Pasichnyk and Matechuk to shore and began to warm them up — slowly. “They knew what they were doing,” Matechuk said. “The RCMP said that, if they warmed us up too fast, we would have had heart attacks.” When Fisher happened upon the scene, the Good Samaritans

had already loaded Matechuk into their truck. Pasichnyk, who was in rougher shape, was lying passed out on a wooden boardwalk. Fisher said he approached and grabbed his hand. “When you grabbed him, it was like you were grabbing onto an ice cube,” he said. Pasichnyk said he was told a different metaphor. “Ryan was saying, when he grabbed onto my hand, it was like grabbing the hand of a dead man,” he said. *** Fisher said he helped load Pasichnyk into the Good Samaritans’ truck. They then drove to meet a pair of waiting ambulances near Barriere, where the two fishermen were rushed to Royal Inland Hospital. Matechuk was released the following morning. Pasichnyk wasn’t discharged until a day later. Both men feel lucky to be alive — and both want to thank their unidentified heroes. “We were waiting for the end to come and, thankfully, it didn’t,” Pasichnyk said. “We sure would like to get a hold of the boys and thank them.” *** All is not lost for Pasichnyk and Matechuk. Pasichnyk said he hired a diver to fetch his sunken gear from the bottom of Gorman Lake. The pair will fish again.

But, not on Thursday. “Not yet,” Matechuk said. “We’ll wait until spring, probably.”

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FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

Voter turnout is already heavier than usual ANDREA KLASSEN

STAFF REPORTER

andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com

There’s more than a week left until voting day, but about Ken Smedley presents THE

1,300 Kamloops voters have already decided not to wait until the end of this year’s longer-thanaverage federal elec-

CONTENDERS Sat, Nov. 7 7:30 PM Sage Brush Theatre, Kamloops

Photo by: Lena Whitaker

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tion to cast a ballot. Elections Canada’s KamloopsThompson-Cariboo returning officer Nancy Plett said the number of voters who have voted by special ballot is much higher than in previous elections. “Over the last couple weeks, we’ve really started to pick up,” Plett said. Voters can cast a special ballot at Elections Canada’s office at the corner of Columbia Street and Summit Drive until 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 13. The office’s regular hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on weekdays, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturdays and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sundays. Plett believes awareness of special-ballot voting is growing thanks to

educational efforts by Elections Canada. “A lot of people think special-ballot voting is if you’re leaving town and going away and won’t be here on election day, which is definitely one of the purposes of it,” she said. “But, it’s also for those people who may be working that day and maybe can’t get to the polls. It may be that they just don’t like being with the crowds. There’s various reasons.” This weekend, voters will have additional chances to go to the polls ahead of general voting day on Oct. 19. Advance polls are running from noon to 8 p.m. today through Monday at 20 locations in the riding. Plett said elections

WHAT TO KNOW WHEN VOTING Elections Canada’s voter information cards cannot be used as identification in this election. Voters must bring two pieces of ID to their polling place, at least one of which shows a current address. Identification can include a driver’s licence, library card, income tax assessment or band membership card. E-statements from banks or utility companies are also accepted. For a full list of accepted identification visit elections.ca.

ELECTION2015 #elxn42 #kamloops

staff are expecting a good turnout for the advance polls as well, even though they fall on the Thanksgiving weekend. “Some people will take advantage of that,” she said. “They’re already off, they’re relaxed,

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they feel, ‘Oh, I could just do it now when it’s not so busy.’” Advance poll locations are listed on Elections Canada’s voter information cards, mailed out over the past few weeks To find the correct polling place, go online to

elections.ca or call the local elections office at 250-571-1580. Plett recommends voters take a look at their voting cards before Oct. 19, regardless of when they plan to vote. More than 5,000 voters in Toronto were issued new cards after they were instructed to vote at an address that does not exist. If voters find anything that seems strange on their cards, Plett said they should call the local elections office. Plett said Elections Canada has re-issued some voting cards locally for Sun Peaks and in the community of Vavenby, where a new poll was set up after voters were initially instructed to drive 45 kilometres to Avola to vote.

Final debate of campaign Oct. 14 Kamloops This Week, CFJC-TV and CBC Radio Kamloops have teamed up to host the final political forum of the campaign — on Wednesday, Oct. 14, in the Grand Hall at Thompson Rivers University. The debate will take place five days before voters go the polls in the Oct. 19 federal election. All four candidates running in the KamloopsThompson-Cariboo riding have confirmed their attendance: Conservative Cathy McLeod, Green Matt Greenwood, Liberal Steve Powrie and New Democrat Bill Sundhu. The debate will start at 7 p.m. with candidates’ opening statements, followed by a question from each of the three media sponsors, followed by questions from the public. Each candidate will also have a closing statement. Questions from the public must be directed to a specific candidate, who will have one minute to answer. The remaining candidates can then use 30 seconds for a rebuttal. T I F F

A V I A

T A C T I N Y C B E A C A L S C A M

N O B U

O D O R

Y E A S T Y

P E T U N I A

A N A T O M Y

A R N D O K L E T H O M S N O T A A S A B L O N B U Y O N A H E D H R C E R A Y L O R E L R D O N M O L I A U M N S R E A E D W S

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A R K L E N O V E S A S D A T T W I P E C R E Y E T P Y

T F I R E T A P I S C I N G E E T O S O E R D V E R E T O N L A M E P O O A S C O M T I V A I G U P M S S T T R U M O U F O R E O P E S S E

R O T C U N L I E C T E E F R R I C P A S D E U I S H R I E N X

B R I E K E R P L U N K S T A S

J U J I T S O U D I Z L E E D S Y O K S E N O O G G R A E M S E L A S S

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I E R T E A L E I A

ANSWERS TO NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD ON PAGE B23 10/1/2015 3:36:24 PM

E L L S


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FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

VIEWPOINT

KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK is a politically independent newspaper, published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays at 1365B Dalhousie Dr. in Kamloops, B.C. V2C 5P6 Ph: 250-374-7467 | Fax: 250-374-1033 e-mail: editor@kamloopsthisweek.com

Kamloops This Week is owned by Thompson River Publications Partnership Limited

THE HOT AND NOT OF THE WEEK Kamloops This Week looks at the stories of the week — the good, the bad and all in-between:

HOT: The atmosphere and quips at the penultimate election campaign debate in Kamloops. All four candidates were at the Brock Activity Centre on Wednesday for the Centre for Seniors Information-sponsored forum on issues focusing on seniors and veterans’ affairs. Turnout was healthy, questions were incisive and the candidates were energized. Here’s hoping the final debate of the campaign is as vibrant. Everyone is welcome to head to the Grand Hall at Thompson Rivers University on Wednesday, Oct. 14, for the 7 p.m. event. Bring your questions and take part in democracy.

OUR

NOT: The layabouts who are too cheap or lazy to properly dispose of their junk. Instead of paying a few bucks to take their old and broken belongings to the landfill, these miscreants are dumping their mess at St. Vincent De Paul Society’s North Kamloops location. The society — like many others in the city — does accept legitimate donations to pass on to needy people, but does not need the headache and cost associated with getting rid of the junk.

VIEW

HOT: The Kamloops Broncos offence. As the B.C. Football Conference club prepares for an Oct. 18 playoff game in Kelowna, it is basking in the glory of its spot on the league’s all-star team. Congratulations to the six Broncos who were named league allstars: Quarterback Stephen Schuweiler, running back Jacob Palmarin, receivers Derek Yachison and Devin Csincsa and offensive linemen Derek Walde and Cameron Brown.

KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

Publisher: Kelly Hall

Editor: Christopher Foulds

Robert W. Doull President Aberdeen Publishing Inc.

EDITORIAL Associate editor: Dale Bass Dave Eagles Tim Petruk Marty Hastings Andrea Klassen Cam Fortems Adam Williams Jessica Wallace Jessica Klymchuk ADVERTISING Manager: Rose-Marie Fagerholm Ray Jolicoeur Don Levasseur Randy Schroeder Brittany Bailey Nevin Webster Linda Skelly Tara Holmes Neil Rachynski Glyn Evans-Percy Nicky Plato

CIRCULATION Manager: Anne-Marie John Serena Platzer FRONT OFFICE Manager: Cindi Hamoline Nancy Graham Lorraine Dickinson Angela Wilson Marilyn Emery PRODUCTION Manager: Lee Malbeuf Fernanda Fisher Mike Eng Sean Graham Jackson Vander Wal Dayana Rescigno Kaitlin Moore

CONTACT US SWITCHBOARD 250-374-7467 CLASSIFIEDS 250-371-4949 Classifieds Fax 250-374-1033 classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com CIRCULATION 250-374-0462 All material contained in this publication is protected by copyright. Reproduction is expressly prohibited by the rightsholder.

The ABCs of wacky voting

I

t’s blue and red neck-andneck, with orange fading fast. Or, it’s red and blue neck-and-neck and orange falling slowly. Or, it’s blue expanding its lead over red and orange dropping like the loonie. Or, it’s red with an increasing lead over blue, with orange losing its a-peel. Sometimes you need a bad pun to weather the eyestraininducing national polls that seem to be released every time a leader burps. Abacus Data, Nanos, Ekos, Ipsos Reid, Légere Marketing, Forum Research — there might be as many polling firms as there are candidates in the 338 ridings nationwide. But, can we trust the polls in these days of dying landlines and an extreme aversion to 1-800 numbers that do filter through to the old home phone? When polling numbers failed miserably in the April 2012 election in Quebec, the September 2012 election in Alberta and the May 2013 election in B.C., it appeared the only trustworthy Angus Reid was the former centre for the B.C. Lions — when he was healthy. Then again, polls were on the mark in this year’s Alberta election, which produced the unthinkable — a New Democrat government in the free-enterprise capital of Canada. If — if — the latest national polls are on target, we are looking at a photo finish between Stephen Harper’s Conservatives

CHRISTOPHER FOULDS

Newsroom

MUSINGS and Justin Trudeau’s Liberals, resulting in a minority government with Thomas Mulcair’s New Democrats ready to be courted. Prominent during this election campaign has been nauseating attacks. Actually, Trudeau just may be ready. Harper is not evil personified. And, Mulcair is no more a career politician than any other MP with at least the magic six years of service that opens a lifelong bank account. Also prominent during this campaign has been the vocal ABC movement — Anybody But Conservatives. The strategy from the Hate Harper brigade is to have nonConservative voters cast a ballot for the candidate of the party that has the best chance to win in their riding. (While these ABC advocates will tell all who will listen that “everybody” wants change in Ottawa, polling would suggest otherwise.) The ABC faction has websites that suggest where NDP/Liberal

voters should park their vote in the quest, but such an approach may create unintended results. Here in the KamloopsThompson-Cariboo riding, popular belief is that the race is between Conservative Cathy McLeod and New Democrat Bill Sundhu, though Steve Powrie’s Liberal team members whose knuckles are raw from doorknocking will tell you we all might be in for a surprise come Oct. 19. Nevertheless, think about it: If Liberal and Green supporters jump on the ABC train to back the NDP locally, and if national polling is correct, Kamloopsians would go from having a government MP (and the significant funding that has been brought to town) to electing an MP sitting in the third tier of benches in Ottawa, looking up at the Official Opposition and government MPs. The elimination of the pervote subsidy (until the 2011 election, registered political parties received $2.04 per vote if they garnered a certain percentage of support) has killed at least one incentive to cast a ballot for a candidate with no shot at winning. It has also contributed to that all-too-Canadian pastime of voting against something rather than for something. Here’s a novel thought: Why not read the party platforms and talk to the four Kamloops candidates and vote for the person and party you believe will best serve your household and Canada? editor@kamloopsthisweek.com Twitter: @ChrisJFoulds


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

YOUR OPINION LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

ALLOW WOMEN THE RIGHT TO BE VEILED Editor: “Freedom, respect and tolerance” are the very words of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, signalling Conservative values. Yet, these three tenets don’t hold in regard to his treatment of Muslim women who wish to wear the niqab and follow their faith. The culture of women wearing the niqab is foreign to most Canadians, but why should a woman not choose to wear the niqab if her belief in modesty is so strong? Easy for these women to discard the niqab;

LADIES, THAT WAS MY MONEY Editor: Thank you to the two elderly ladies who were observed picking up a $20 bill and $10 bill from the floor at Tim Hortons in Valleyview (the location next to A&W) on Wednesday, Sept. 30, just after 10 a.m. Fortunately, you were observed leaving the building without turning in the money to staff. The number to call is 778-220-6698 if you wish to return my lost money to me. Robert Allaire Kamloops

so easy for Canadians to disregard freedom of choice, respect for different dress code and forget about tolerance of the opposite sex. This is what Harper is doing. He is defying not just niqab wearers, but the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Our society should listen to the poem A Nun Takes The Veil by the great Jesuit poet Gerard Manley Hopkins: “I have desired to go “Where springs not fail, “To fields where flies no sharp and sided hail

“And a few lilies blow. “And I have asked to be “Where no storms come, “Where the green swell is in the heavens dumb, “And out of the swing of the sea.” Surely Canada is such a safe haven for all women, nuns or not, including those whose beliefs are so strong in public they choose the right to be veiled. John Brook Kamloops

WILL PRICES AT PAC PRECLUDE ATTENDANCE? Editor: Outside of raising property taxes again to pay for the cost of debt in building a new arts centre, I was wondering if anyone else is asking if the price of a performance ticket will also increase. We have been attending and greatly enjoying performances of both Western Canada Theatre and the Kamloops Symphony Orchestra since moving to Kamloops. The ticket prices have been so affordable and we have never once

been disappointed in any performance due to the venue being Sagebrush Theatre. We have forgone seeing a play in Vancouver to come home to Kamloops to see the same play at a more affordable price. Considering we are being promised the cost of building the new performing-arts centre will “only be” $100 million, what about the cost of running the building? I suspect the costs of running the new arts centre will be passed

on to the audience. The performing arts are appreciated in Kamloops. It helps that tickets are so reasonable. If we increase the number of seats, they will need to be filled. If we then increase ticket prices, will there still be a full house? I would be so disappointed if I am no longer able to attend performances. Rosemary Maier Kamloops

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[speak up] You can comment on any story you read @ kamloopsthisweek.com

A selection of comments on KTW stories, culled online RE: STORY: TAYLOR MURDER TRIAL: ACCUSED MAY HAVE BEEN PSYCHOTIC:

“Well, obviously they are trying the wrong person. “The real criminal is the one who made him take all those evil drugs. “The real sad truth is that being intoxicated is a valid excuse for committing a crime in Canada — except when it comes to impaired driving. I am not sure why that is, though.” — posted by No

RE: LETTER: SUNDHU WAS NOT APPROACHED TO RUN AS CANDIDATE IN KAMLOOPS:

“Well, let us see. “He is a lawyer, was a judge and now wants to be a politician. “Where else would a lawyer go?” — posted by Cwowo

OUTDOOR FILM NIGHT WAS AN AWARD WINNER Editor: Thank you to Your Independent Grocer in Northills Shopping Centre for organizing the recent outdoor movie night in the shopping centre’s parking lot. The event was well organized with the seating, vehicle area and security.

The movie was fantastic — as was the yummy popcorn handed out from Skippy’s Perfect Pop Kettle Korn. Thanks again. Linda McClelland Kamloops

To read more letters, turn to page A10 and go online to kamloopsthisweek.com

TALK BACK Q&A: kamloopsthisweek.com We asked:

Should the Tk’emlups and Skeetchestn Indian bands be given title to lands owned by KGHM?

Results:

No: 653 votes Yes: 231 votes 884 VOTES

What’s your take? 26% YES 74% NO

Do you support the Conservatives’ proposed tip line to the RCMP for “barbaric cultural practices”?

Vote online:

kamloopsthisweek.com

Kamloops This Week is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 1-888-6872213 or go to bcpresscouncil.org.

for Kamloops—Thompson—Cariboo

Paid for and authorized by the official agent of the candidate. cope:225-cm

BillSundhu.ndp.ca


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FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

YOUR OPINION

OVERLANDERS ‘BLIPS’ A FEELING JOB WAS NOT DONE RIGHT Editor: Re: Dale Bass’ column of Oct. 1 (‘And another thing . . .’):

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Editor: Thompson Rivers University professor Michael Mehta has every right to be concerned about the threats to our academic mission and academic freedom (‘Unearthing’ controversy at TRU? Professor claims branding language tied to Ajax,’ Sept. 29). Most people who will jump on the bandwagon and criticize his petition don’t understand Mehta’s concern. If you asked these critics to define academic freedom and explain the threats to

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Street and feel the way it should feel if it’s done right. This is a buzzardgrade job for a premium price and it should be fixed before the final payment. By the way, have another look at the Valleyview bike path for $6 million as another example of this city’s construction expertise. Ken Barry Kamloops

masters in Ottawa and Victoria and removal of assigned books that offend corporate interest is all too common at universities. Abuse of power against whistleblower professors, cancellation of research grants by corporations who are the main beneficiaries of higher education, denial of tenure for professors who publish unpopular research that exposes corporate malfeasance is an attack on democracy. University administrators oversee

removal of all who challenge corporatism and unfettered capitalism. Academic freedom is democracy. Attacks on academic freedom by the power elite will silence, ban and blacklist all those who protect the rights of the working class. The new antiterrorism legislation in Canada and the U.S. is reinvigorating a new form of McCarthyism, which wants to silence the voice of progress. Walter Trkla Kamloops

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it, they would not be able to do it. Universities should not be corporatized and politicized and turned into an old boy’s club so scholarly expertise, peer review, tenure and board of governors is used to restrict individual and institutional autonomy in research, teaching and service. Internal and external attacks against faculty members taking politically unpopular or intellectually unorthodox positions, cancellation of outside speakers who hold views different from the political

Editor: In August, I spent a week in Royal Inland Hospital. While there, I was asked to remove my

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wasn’t done right. We shouldn’t settle for mediocre when $10-million-plus is being spent. One City of Kamloops bright light said it will get better when the pavement and concrete settle. Wow! I sure hope the concrete doesn’t settle. Go over the railway crossing by Buzz’s Autobody on Lorne

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because of a little two-inch “blip” in the middle of it. The outfit doing work on Overlanders had all sorts of expensive equipment laying out the expansion joints and then screwed it all up with the two-inch drop from the pavement to the joint. It’s really simple — the job done was crap because it

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earrings as they wanted to take X-rays. I was so sick that I was not completely aware of what was happening. They gave me a clear plastic bag in which to store my earrings while I was having the X-rays. We left this bag on the hospital table beside the bed. When I returned after having the X-rays taken, the earrings were gone. Only an empty container remained. But, this was not

the end of it. When I was leaving the hospital, I went to put on my shoes and — no shoes. They were gone, too. They were good leather Rockport thongs. I am sure these items were stolen. I wrote to the hospital about it, but received no answer. If you are going to the hospital, leave your belongings at home and go in bare feet. Margaret Huntington Kamloops

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Kamloops This Week reader Breanna Turmel was driving east on Highway 1 on Wednesday afternoon, near Orchards Walk, when she came across this accident at 3:20 p.m. Kamloops RCMP Cpl. Cheryl Bush said police were called to the single-vehicle crash, with the driver being the lone occupant of the car. He was uninjured and handed a violation ticket for driving without due care.

Gravel-pit route not done deal ANDREA KLASSEN

STAFF REPORTER

andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com

The owners of a gravel pit west of Barnhartvale say a controversial road through Crown land isn’t the only option they are exploring to link their operation to Kamloops’ roads. Speaking on behalf of Hunter pit owner Rob Hunter and an unnamed partner, consultant Dave Cunliffe said negotiations with private landowners are also ongoing to secure a route off the 106-acre property. Residents in the Uplands Drive area have objected to the road application, under review by the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations, as has the City of Kamloops. The road would branch off

from McLeod Drive — and neighbours worry the local road cannot support increased truck traffic. The route would also cut through a network of well-used trails on Crown land. Cunliffe said between 25 and 40 truckloads of material are hauled from the pit every week, but noted the operation is looking to expand. For now, trucks access the pit via a road through Orchards Walk in Valleyview, but Cunliffe said the route “doesn’t have the kind of security of access going forward that they need.” Cunliffe said he couldn’t provide details on the issues with the current access route, as they could harm ongoing negotiations for two other potential routes to the site. “Really, the message to the Uplands community is this is

by no means a certainty and one of several options being examined,” he said. However, even the Crown land road isn’t needed, Cunliffe said, BC Hydro will only connect the pit to the power grid if it can do so through the McLeod Drive connection. The pit owners want power on the site so they can expand their operation, and Cunliffe said future developments on the large property are also a possibility. Residents with concerns or comments about the road application have until Tuesday to contact the province. Should the ministry approve the road plans and other route negotiations fail, Cunliffe said the pit owners would meet with residents to try to alleviate their concerns.

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A12

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LOCAL NEWS

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The city’s medical-marijuana referral clinic will not be closing, thanks to an agreement between the company that runs it and a similar organization in Vancouver. Ron Bell, president of ReaLeaf Wellness Centre, said his company has been acquired by the Medicinal Cannabis Resource Centre (MCRC), noting plans are to keep the office at 546 St. Paul St. open. The clinic will continue its relation-

TIM PETRUK

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A Kamloops girl who was “a bully” in youth jail has been ordered to spend two weeks behind bars at an adult prison. Madison Calder pleaded guilty in Kamloops provincial court this week to three counts of failing to comply with a Youth Criminal Justice Act order. Court heard the 18-year-old was sentenced as a youth earli-

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support by doctors might be one of the reasons. He noted when the College of Physicians and Surgeons set guidelines requiring patients be approved by their doctor for cannabis therapy, it had an impact on potential patients. Many doctors aren’t educated on the benefits of it, Mitchell said, with only about seven per cent of physicians prescribing cannabis. Bell said patients with questions, or others who want information on medical marijuana, can call the MCRC at 1-855537-6272 or go online to mcrci.com.

er this year to spend 12 months under a number of strict conditions, including orders requiring her to abide by a curfew, go to school and abstain from drugs and alcohol. On July 23, she was sentenced to spend eight days in a youth custody centre. Crown prosecutor Will Burrows said Calder was “a bully” in the youth jail. “She was behaving like a top dog,” he said. Within weeks of Calder’s

release from custody, court heard, she began breaching her conditions by taking drugs, skipping school and not showing up to counselling appointments. Burrows said Calder’s probation officer suggested some time behind bars with adults might change her course. “She’s sort of at her wit’s end with Ms. Calder,” he said. “She thinks she might benefit from some time at B.C. women’s corrections.”

Calder, who has a two-yearold son, said she is eager to turn her life around. “I’ve said it before, but my life is going downhill,” she said. “I’m going to end up dead if I don’t turn my life around.” Kamloops provincial court Judge Stephen Harrison sentenced Calder to 14 days in adult prison, to be followed by a nine-month probation term. “You are on a course that carries with it the risk of a fatal mistake,” he said.

Zak takes another bite out of crime

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ship with Dr. Ian Mitchell, who has been a consultant for Bell and works with patients to determine if they would benefit from medical marijuana. The clinic helps connect patients with producers and provides counselling on everything from how to use a vaporizer to determining dosages to dealing with the bureaucracy that surrounds the medication. Bell said the MCRC has been in operation in Vancouver for the past few years and was looking to expand. At the time he thought the clinic would be closed, Mitchell said a lack of

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Kamloops RCMP police dog Zak has again taken a bite out of crime. Zak was instrumental in helping officers arrest a suspected vehicle thief in the dead of night this week. Cpl. Cheryl Bush said police were called at 2:20 a.m. on Wednesday about a pickup truck that had been stolen from a business compound on Chief Louis Way in the Mount Paul Industrial Park. About an hour later, the stolen vehicle — a red Ford F350 — was seen on Highway 5 near Mount Paul Way. The driver drove away when police tried to stop the truck. While officers were attempting to stop the vehicle, another call was received that a red Ford truck had been driving on the Mt. Paul Golf Course and had backed into the vehicle of a golf course employee who was trying to note the licence plate. The golf course employee was not injured, but his vehicle suffered damages. Mounties then found the vehicle abandoned on Crescent Drive in Valleyview, where Zak tracked the suspect from the stolen vehicle to where he was hiding, in a nearby yard on Glenwood Drive. Bush said a 48-year-old man remains in police custody and will be facing multiple charges in relation to the incident. Police continue to investigate and are trying to identify a second man who was involved in the theft of the vehicle.

KTW FILE PHOTO

RCMP service dog Zak has had success in tracking down suspects of crime — and he did it again this week in Valleyview.

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SPORTS

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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A13

THIS WEEKEND IN SPORTS Friday FUL @ S. KAM Football 4:30 p.m. Hillside Stadium TRU @ UBCO Soccer W: 5 p.m.; M: 7 p.m. Nonis Sports Field CV @ KAM 7 p.m. McArthur Island

Collin Shirley attempts to centre the puck for Dawson Davidson in a Wednesday game against the Tri-City Americans. Kamloops lost 4-3.

Saturday

ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW

BLAZERS SEARCHING FOR ANSWERS

KAMLOOPS AIMING TO REBOUND AFTER POOREST START IN FRANCHISE HISTORY MARTY HASTINGS STAFF REPORTER sports@kamloopsthisweek.com

Answers are escaping the Kamloops Blazers, who, five games into the 2015-2016 WHL season, are off to the worst start in the franchise’s 35-year history. Goaltender Connor Ingram, often quick-witted and smiling, was in a bad place after his team’s latest loss — 4-3 to the Tri-City Americans at Sandman Centre on Wednesday. “I don’t know what to do with myself,” said the 18-yearold backstop, who has a goalsagainst average of 4.61 and an .864 save percentage. “I come into camp, I’m in the best shape of my life, the best I’ve ever been, working hard in practice, putting my time in . . . I’m not sure right now. “It’s frustrating trying to figure it all out, but I think it’s coming.”

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The Victoria Royals have sprinted out of the gate and are 5-1 heading into a tilt tonight against hometown Kelowna (5-2). Kamloops will get its third shot at the Vancouver Island squad tomorrow, having dropped the first two meetings last weekend in Victoria. Game time is 7 p.m. at Sandman Centre. Ingram has not yet found the excellent form he enjoyed after Christmas last season, but he was not to blame for the loss on Wednesday. He couldn’t say exactly what went wrong, outside of suggesting the young Blazers are still acclimatizing to the speed of the WHL, and neither could 20-year-old stalwart D-man Ryan Rehill. “It’s hard to pinpoint it on one thing,” said Rehill, whose Blazers relinquished three leads

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against the Ams. “Nobody really expected this would be the way we would start our season. “We’ve got to find ways to string together a couple wins. We’re close. We’re getting better. But, it’s not quite there. We need to find a way to get points.” Kamloops has 67 games remaining, ample time to reverse its fortune, a task that will become less daunting when dangerous Deven Sideroff returns to the lineup. The 18-year-old Summerland

product is recovering from a virus and is expected to skate with the team today. He might return to the lineup against Seattle on Oct. 16. Kamloops captain Matt Needham will be praying for Sideroff, wishing him an expedited return to health. Needham, who scored 76 points playing on a line last season with Sideroff and Cole Ully, has one assist in five games and is minus-8 on the campaign. “I know, personally, he complements me very well,” Needham said. “We miss him, but we can’t really focus on that.” Head coach Don Hay did not seem fazed by the defeat on Wednesday night. Instead, he focused on how his charges responded to a Monday morning meeting. “We asked for them to com-

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A14

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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SPORTS

Air Force Falcons the future for Storm’s Johnson ADAM WILLIAMS

STAFF REPORTER

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A few years from now, Robb Johnson won’t just be flying on the ice.

Last season, the Kamloops Storm forward, a dual-citizen

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with Canadian and American passports, accepted a scholarship to attend the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs following his junior hockey career. He is in line to hit the ice for the Air Force Falcons in 2017-2018. The full-ride scholarship to the Division 1 NCAA school means Johnson will not only graduate from the institution with a bachelor’s degree, but also as a second lieutenant in the United States Air Force. “It was a fantastic opportunity — it’s a great achievement,” Johnson said of the scholarship. Describing himself as a math person, he’s particularly interested in the academy’s engineering program. “I’ve just got to keep my grades up and work hard, bury my head and go at it.” The Vancouverborn forward came to the Storm from the Trail Smoke Eaters of the BCHL earlier this season. Though he was Trail’s property for the last two seasons, he only suited up in 30 games in junior A, twice sidelined by a broken collarbone and shoulder issues. He tallied 11 points, all assists, with Trail. The 17-year-old said the fit with the Smoke Eaters wasn’t quite

ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW

The Kamloops Storm’s Robb Johnson has been on a tear of late, scoring seven points in four games, including this goal against the Golden Rockets last weekend. Johnson had four points in the 5-1 win.

right and it made for a comfortable transition to Kamloops, on and off the ice. Though his mother hails from Oregon, the family makes its home in the Tournament Capital. His play on the ice tells a similar story — he has 11 points, including four goals, in nine games with the Storm. “Robb’s game, overall, he’s got high-end skills,” said Storm head coach Ed Patterson. “He can skate well, he can shoot the puck well. He needs to slow the game down and learn how to make his skills work for other people as well as himself and utilize all areas of the ice and facets of the game — that’s coming.

“We’ve seen some signs of brilliance at this level and, pretty soon, it’ll be consistent. “He won’t be here by Christmas if the plan goes right.” That, too, is the plan for Johnson, who said he’s ultimately trying to return to the BCHL this season. Seven of his points have come in the Storm’s last four games. The club will be in action in Kamloops tonight, facing the Columbia Valley Rockies at 7 p.m. The team will be on the road to face the Sicamous Eagles and the North Okanagan Knights tomorrow and Sunday. Following the 2015-2016 campaign,

Johnson will play one more year of junior hockey before reporting to Colorado Springs and donning the Falcon blue and silver. So will begin the next chapter of his life, playing NCAA hockey, studying toward a degree and serving in the United States military. Until his Air Force induction, though, Johnson is focused on helping the Storm continue flying through KIJHL opponents. “The boys here and the atmosphere in the room is great,” he said. “We’re just a closely knit team. “We’ve had a lot of success lately and I think we’re going to keep moving on from here.”

Patterson expecting more from Storm Ed Patterson isn’t about to let his team get overconfident. The Kamloops Storm head coach was putting his club through the paces at a spirited practice on Wednesday, hammering home his expectations as his players stretched at centre ice. Through nine games this season, the Storm are good, but they aren’t perfect. “Just disappointed with everyone’s focus and compete,” Patterson said when asked for the message. “They’re reflecting on themselves by their record and not their commitment and their work ethic. Unfortunately, it’s my job to rein them in when their heads get too big for their helmets.” Patterson is known for demanding the most from his players. His practices are intense, his expectations are high. He loathes shortcuts and bad habits. So, though his team is 7-1-0-1 and atop both the Doug Birks Division and the Okanagan Shuswap Conference, there’s still work to do. “The disappointing part is, we blew the game in Chase — that’s our overtime loss — and then we lost to Revelstoke, who has five points,” Patterson said. “So really, we should be 9-0 if we were that good

and our goals against would be down and our goals for would be up. The boys need to look at all areas of the game, not just the record.” Despite the rap on the knuckles from their head coach, the Storm are off to another strong start in a young KIJHL season — especially so, considering the team turned over nearly its entire roster in the off-season. Only the Kimberley Dynamiters have more points than the Storm — 15 to Kamloops’ 14 — and the former’s roster is near-identical to the one that won it a KIJHL title in 2014-2015. Kamloops also has three forwards in the league’s top 20 in scoring — Dante Raposo, Robb Johnson and Dario Piva all have 11 points — and one of the best goaltenders in the league in 17-year-old Tavin Grant. The Storm will play three basement-dwelling teams this weekend in the Columbia Valley Rockies, Sicamous Eagles and North Okanagan Knights. Consider it an opportunity for Patterson’s players to show their coach they heard the message, loud and clear. “They get in a little bit of crap today, but they are a good group of kids,” Patterson said.


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS

A15

All-star

ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW

Braden Vankoughnett, seen here breaking up a play in the Valley Huskers’ backfield, is a 2015 B.C. Football Conference all-star

The B.C. Football Conference named its defensive all-stars yesterday and one member of the Kamloops Broncos cracked the list. Braden Vankoughnett was one of three linebackers named to the team, along with Dexter Shea of the Vancouver Island Raiders and Brendan Desjardine of the Langley Rams. Vankoughnett had 36 tackles, nine tackle assists, one-and-a-half sacks, two pass knockdowns, one forced fumble and one interception for a touchdown. There were six Broncos named to the league’s all-star team on Wednesday — Quarterback Stephen Schuweiler, receivers Derek Yachison and Devin Csincsa, running back Jacob Palmarin and offensive linemen Cameron Brown and Derek Walde. The Broncos will be in Kelowna for a playoff matchup against the Okanagan Sun on Oct. 18.

PICKLEBALL GROWING

Mark McDaniels (left) and Grant Bennett pick up the intensity in pickleball action last month at the Kamloops Tennis Centre. The Kamloops Pickleball Club is always looking for new members. The club started in 2007 and has more than 170 members today. To learn more, go online to kamloopspickleballclub.ca. ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW

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Call Claudio @ 250-318-1219 or visit www.kamlupsia.org

DO YOU HAVE AMAZING LOCAL PHOTOS?

TRU signs top prospect The Thompson Rivers WolfPack might have a gem in women’s volleyball player Sarah Dobinson. The six-foot left side from Ontario is considered one of the top high-school recruits in the country and this week she signed to play for head coach Chad Grimm and the WolfPack. “I chose TRU because, even though it is across the country, I felt like it was home,” Dobinson said. “The coaches are amazing. That really influenced my decision.” Grimm has been pursuing the top prospect since last January. “A friend of mine who coaches in the U.S. had been to a couple

of ID camps and sent me some information,” Grimm said. “When we went to CIS [Canadian Interuniversity Sport] nationals in Toronto last spring, I met with her and her mom.” Dobinson was a member of Team Ontario and finished second at the 2015 National Team Challenge Cup. “Sarah is a dynamic player,” Grimm said. “She is physically strong. She is able to elevate and she has something that a lot of girls don’t have in terms of arm speed. She has a very fast arm.” Dobinson will learn in her first year at TRU from CIS all-star Iuliia Pakhomenko.

WIN A GIFT CARD TO A LOCAL KAMLOOPS BUSINESS

WE’RE LOOKING FOR YOUR LOCAL PHOTOS TO USE IN LOCAL PUBLICATIONS This months theme is Fall & Winter Deadline: Oct 30 To submit your photos, visit the link below:

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A16

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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country yesterday to take in the team’s first post-season game in 22 years. And, according to dozens interviewed by The Canadian Press before the game, the Blue Jays will crush the Texas Rangers and won’t stop until they win the World Series. To one of the clairvoyants, Glenn Smith, it’s been a long road back. Smith and his friend, Norm Bassett, drove from Hay River, N.W.T. to Edmonton — a drive of more than 1,000 kilometres — before hopping on the red-eye to make it to Toronto a few hours before the opening pitch. Smith, clad in a full Blue Jays uniform, was delirious. Delirious with joy, but mostly delirious because he hadn’t slept in more than two days, due to his commute.

“But we’re ready, ready for two games, then we gotta go back home and get some turkey in us,’’ Smith said, adding Tim Hortons iced cappuccinos are keeping him alive. He said he was able to get playoff tickets because he bought season tickets for next year — allowing him the ability to buy playoff tickets before the public. “We did, we got

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those, got fifth-deck tickets, but thought that wasn’t good enough, so we upgraded to tickets in the lower bowl,’’ he said. “We decided after 22 years, it’s worth it, we gotta spend the money.’’ Smith, who said he’s also a man of the people, figures he won’t actually buy season tickets next year, just give up his deposit. “Logistical issues, you know,’’ he said, laughing. Bassett said the Jays are going to sweep

the Rangers, take the American League in five games and win the World Series in six. Many others outside the stadium agreed. Angela Gleason and her husband, Michael, drove in from Barrie, Ont., hoping the Blue Jays replicate the result of the last playoff game they attended in 1993 when the team won the World Series. Gleason said the game “means everything.’ “We finally have a great team to cheer for — not that the Leafs aren’t great, but here we have some promise.’’

Game 1

The Blue Jays and Rangers completed the first game of the best-of-five American League Division Series yesterday after KTW’s press deadline. Game 2 gets underway at 9:45 a.m. today in Toronto.

Sutter’s synergy DONNA SPENCER

THE CANADIAN PRESS

Achieving success is a challenge. Recognizing it is a pleasure. The Partners of KPMG in Kamloops are pleased to announce the promotion of Jennifer Brooks to manager. Through her talent, dedication and passion for client service excellence, Jennifer has earned the opportunity to further bolster our KPMG management team and help our business thrive. For more information on how KPMG’s professionals can assist in your business, contact us at 250.372.5581. kpmg.ca

© 2015 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved 10514

CALGARY — Playing an unfamiliar position, Brandon Sutter complemented Vancouver Canucks linemates Henrik and Daniel Sedin nicely in a 5-1 win over the Calgary Flames on Wednesday. Sutter has spent his seven-year NHL career at centre, but was shifted to the wing in Vancouver’s final pre-season game. The 26-year-old, acquired in a trade from the Pittsburgh Penguins in July, scored a pretty goal and added an assist in the regular-season opener for both clubs at Scotiabank Saddledome. Sutter batted a rebound out of the air past Karri Ramo with a deft touch at 18:01 of the first period to make it 2-0 for his new team. “Never really scored one like that before, but I’ll take it,’’ Sutter said. “I’d say 99 times out of 100 you miss it, but I was fortunate enough to get a stick on it.” Daniel Sedin had a goal and two assists with captain Henrik also collecting a goal for the visitors. “Hank and Daniel are pretty smart guys, so we can read off each other and to be honest, it’s been a little easier than I expected in terms of the positioning of it,’’ Sutter said. The Canucks dealt forward Nick Bonino, defenceman Adam Clendening and a draft pick to Pittsburgh in July to obtain Sutter, who is the son of former Calgary Flames head coach Brent Sutter. Vancouver and Calgary will square off again tomorrow night in the Canucks’ home opener at Rogers Arena. Game time is 7 p.m.


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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K A M LO O P S C r i m e S to p p e r s WA N T E D

NATIONAL SPORTS

www.kamloopscrimestoppers.ca

Messi situation TALES AZZONI

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MADRID — Lionel Messi will stand trial in Spain on three counts of tax fraud and could be sentenced to nearly two years in prison if found guilty. A Spanish judge yesterday rejected a request to clear the Barcelona player of wrongdoing and decided to charge him and his father, Jorge Horacio Messi, with tax fraud. Prosecutors had said Messi — a four-time world player of the year — was not fully aware of his father’s unlawful activities and should not have been charged, but the state attorney’s office contended the Argentina forward knew enough to also be named in the case. The attorney’s office called for a prison sentence of 22 months and 15 days for Messi and his father, along with a fine in the amount defrauded, payment of all legal proceedings and the loss of any possible tax benefits for a year and a half. Prosecutors had called for an 18-month prison sentence for Messi’s father only, along with a fine of twomillion euros ($2.2 million). A court had recently rejected an appeal filed by Messi’s lawyers to drop the Barcelona

player from the case. Things seemed to be going Messi’s way after prosecutors this week announced their request to clear him of any irregularities, but the judge ruled yesterday there was enough evidence of crimes committed by both Messi and his father. They are being accused of defrauding Spain’s tax office of 4.1-million euros ($4.6 million) in unpaid taxes from 2007-09. Messi’s father made a payment of more than five million euros ($5.6 million) in August 2013 to cover unpaid taxes, plus interest. A date for the trial has not yet been set. The El Pais newspaper reported recently that Messi told authorities he would “sign anything with his eyes closed’’ if his father told him to do it. The court in Gava, Barcelona, had said that, although Messi was unfamiliar with tax issues, there was sufficient evidence to believe the Barcelona playmaker could have known and consented to the creation of a fictitious corporate structure to avoid paying taxes on income from his image rights. Authorities said some of the income came through companies located in tax havens.

 Obituaries 

KIM LIAN KLOP (née CHEUNG) October 19, 1931 – October 6, 2015

It is with insurmountable pain and sadness that we must announce the passing of Kim Lian Klop nee Cheung. Born October 19, 1931, Kim was a mom, a grandma, a sister and an aunt to many at home in Singapore. Kim is survived by her only daughter, Nancy, her son-in-law, Manny and her loving granddaughter, Monique and many relatives in Singapore. My parents immigrated to Canada in 1955, my mom left her homeland to marry the man of her dreams, my Dad. My mom fought with a vengeance and did not believe in arranged marriages. She begged her mother to let her marry the man she loved. I suppose even in that time, my grandma would have been progressive in her thinking as that arranged marriage was never to be. Instead my parents married in Singapore and both worked at Heineken brewery, my dad the brewmaster, my mom his assistant. As immigrants, it was difficult at best. My Dad was educated, however, that education did not apply here in Kamloops. He worked at a sawmill and they rented company housing. My mom came from a cosmopolitan city to a tiny community where horses were still tied to the post on main street. She endured the minus 30 temps, wind and snow whistling through their little house with a baby in tow being me. Through the years my dad refused to stay in the life he had, he had a responsibility to his wife and child so he got his real estate licence. My mom was a stay at home mom, who would take the occasional job to make ends meet but her first priority was to be the best wife and mom she could ever be and she was. My mom suffered a stroke in 1987 and continued to fight that with a vengeance as she suffered an aneurysm. She lost her husband in 1989 which was devastating for her. Mom became a part of our family unit and continued to live with us until we could no longer physically care for her. She lived out her days in Ponderosa and then for the past six years in Ridgeview Lodge. My mom will always be remembered for her respectful ways, she was a non demanding person, always to be polite and quiet. Even as of the last year, my mom participated in floor hockey from a wheelchair, intent to win. She was always participating whether it be music, hockey, tai chi or social teas. It would surprise everyone my mom would be so competitive but not a surprise to me. I remember growing up and thinking that despite my mom`s quiet nature, she had the will to fight when all was against her. And we all saw this in these last few days. Mom will be remembered as the “woman about town” as she walked her granddaughter, Monique, in a stroller as a baby. It was the same route each and every day as she would smile or wave to people she knew downtown. She would take her rest in Riverside Park sometimes to just look out and enjoy the view before continuing home. My mom’s health woes over the years have been tragic, however, she will be remembered for her fight to retain her dignity to the end. It was her time and I had given mom the last of her choices if she chose to take them. Our family is devastated by the loss of this beautiful passive woman who touched the lives of many. She was a loyal partner in her marriage to my dad, the best mom I could ever ask for and her relationship with Monique is a bond never ever to be broken even in death. There will be a graveside service at Hillside Cemetery on Friday October 9th at 2:00 p.m. This is an open invite to anyone who would like to attend please feel free. In lieu of flowers, Kim was a huge believer of education and would like her granddaughter to be the recipient, if you wish. There will be a Celebration of Life for Kim at a later date. We love you so much Mom and we miss you already......”What’s new pussycat, whoa whoa whoa” will be retired by our family. We will remember you always and forever. May you now rest in peace, fly with angels and be with your husband, sister and mother once again. There will be no more suffering mama and we love you more than words could ever say............. Condolences may be expressed to the family from www.kamloopsfuneralhome.com

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250-554-2577

CRIMES OF THE WEEK

MUG SHOTS

BREAK & ENTER AT BUSINESS Early in the morning on Friday, October 2, an alarm was set off at Interior Craft on Tranquille Rd. The suspects fled down a back alley prior to the arrival of the police. The suspects forced open a basement door; once inside, the suspect tried to open a door that would have lead them into the main area of the business with all the store’s products. The business used good crime prevention techniques to prevent any thefts from occurring. This is a busy street any time of the day or night and someone may have seen some suspicious activity in the area. The suspects did leave some interesting evidence that may be useful in helping to convict these suspects. Now if you have any information or may have seen something suspicious, do the right thing and call Crime Stoppers, you will never have to give a statement or go to court.

DENNIS, Rick William

ROSSETTI, Jimmy Curtis

TESKEY, Jason Charles

Birth: 1986-03-15 Age 29 Non White male, 170 cm (5’07”) 084 kg, (185 lbs), Black Hair, Brown Eyes

Birth: 1985-09-07 Age 30 Non White male 170 cm (5’07”) 066 kg, (220 lbs) Black Hair, Brown Eyes

Birth: 1972-12-20) Age 42 Caucasian male 175 cm (5’09”) 082 kg, (181 lbs) Brown Hair, Hazel Eyes

WANTED FOR: Parole Suspension – Canada Wide Warrant

WANTED FOR: Parole Suspension – Canada Wide Warrant

WANTED FOR: Fail to Comply with Recognizance X 2, Fail to Appear in Court, Break and Enter

If you know where any of these people are, call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477). The tip line pays up to $2,000 for information leading to the arrest of fugitives. Remember, Crime Stoppers just wants your information, not your name. Crime doesn’t pay, but Crime Stoppers does. This program is jointly sponsored by Kamloops Crime Stoppers & Kamloops This Week. People featured are wanted on arrest warrants not vacated as of 3 p.m. on October 7, 2015.

SUSPECT CAUGHT 0N CAMERA On Monday October 5, a lone male entered the Shell service station on Hugh Allan drive. This suspect had a plan. When the employee was busy with another customer in the back of the store the suspect struck quickly. The suspect went behind the cash register area and took cigarettes and lottery tickets. The cigarettes may not be able to be traced but

all lottery tickets with the store’s lottery number can be followed up on easily. There is no doubt this is not the first time the suspect has committed this type of theft. Although the picture is not the best of quality, someone may recognize this person. If you have any information on this theft or may know who this suspect is, please

contact Crime Stoppers, you will remain anonymous and will receive a cash reward upon the arrest of the suspect.

SUSPECT USING STOLEN BANK CARD This female was caught on camera using a stolen bank card at the Walmart in Kamloops, the past couple of weeks. It is unknown how this female came into possession of this bank card but on Friday, September 18, a vehicle had been broken into at McAruthur Park parking lot and a purse was stolen that contained the bank card. The female is described as

Caucasian, mid 20s, dark and at the time of the photo she was wearing glasses. This is a reminder that even though you may not have broken into the vehicle, being in possession of stolen property and using the stolen bank card are both offences under the criminal code of Canada. If you have information on this theft or may know this person,

p l e a s e contact Crime Stoppers, you will remain anonymous and will never have to go to court.

CRIME STOPPERS IS SUPPORTED BY

MOBILE PATROLS GUARD SERVIcE ALARM RESPONSE

(250) 828-0511 (24 hours) SERVING KAMLOOPS & AREA SINcE 1972

A L i g h t i n t h e n i g h t. . .


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FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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 Obituaries & In Memoriam  QUINTEN LEVI VAN HORLICK March 15, 1975 October 1, 2015 “Teammate for Life” After a long and courageous battle with his addictions, Quinten chose on Thursday, October 1 to head out on his next road trip. Born March 15, 1975 in Kamloops to John and Judy (Fisher) Van Horlick, Quinten’s personality traits of hard work and determination quickly became apparent . The diagnosis of a rare form of leukemia at the age of 14 months, made it necessary for Quint to have extended stays at the BC Children’s Hospital. At age 6 (much to the surprise of his team of doctors) Quint was declared cancer free. This was a huge milestone for the entire family but especially Quint. He was able to start school and join all his favorite sports leagues. Quint took his elementary schooling at 150 Mile House and Williams Lake, and his secondary schooling in Kamloops and Quesnel where he made many life-long friends. Throughout his school years, Quint was an avid and tenacious participant in many sports, including hockey, soccer, rugby, baseball, and crosscounty running. His main passion, hockey, enabled him to plav, coach and travel throughout North America. It also afforded him the opportunity to play on junior and semi-pro teams with his favourite team-mate, his brother Matt. Quint was able to give back and encourage the passion for hockey in many kids by developing his own hockey schools, as well as coaching and managing at hockey camps throughout North America. His love of running saw him participate in the very first Terry Fox Run and many more over the vears, including as recent as two weeks ago. In between, he attended numerous half and full marathons. Giving his time for charitable causes was also very important to Quint, as evidenced by his cooking for the less fortunate and volunteering at various fund-raising events. Left to cherish Quinten’s memory are his father John, mother Judy, brother Matt, half-sister Kaci, numerous cousins, aunts, uncles, extended family and far-reaching network of friends (All team-mates for life). “Let us remember the smiling, the laughing. the taiking, the sharing, the caring and the loving.” A tribute memorial to be held at the Kamloops Desert Gardens, 540 Seymour Street on Friday, October 9 at 3:30 pm. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Ouinten’s memory to the BC Children’s Hospital online at www.bcchf.ca/donate

HUGH L. TURNER

NOELLA THERESA (DEWIT) DICKINSON 1940 - 2015 Noella was born on Christmas day 1940 and chose a sunny, fall day to start the next leg of her journey. She passed away on September 29, 2015 after her battle with dementia. She was predeceased by her brother Peter and her parents Martin and Mary deWit. She is survived by her husband Dave, her two sons: Darrell (Sandra), Duane (Laura-Lee Connery) and grandchildren Derek and Jayden. Noella enjoyed her time as Teacher-Librarian at the Ashcroft High School and after moving to Kamloops she worked with Community Policing. She and Dave enjoyed many years of Vintage Cars along with their many trips. The family would like to thank all staff members of Brocklehurst Gemstone Care Centre for their wonderful care and love that she received during her stay. A Memorial Service will be held at 1:00 PM on Saturday, October 17 in the Kamloops Funeral Home Chapel, 285 Fortune Drive. If you would care to make a donation in memory of Noella, to the charity of your choice, that would be appreciated. No flowers by request. Arrangements entrusted to Kamloops Funeral Home 250-554-2577 Condolences may be emailed to the family from www.kamloopsfuneralhome.com

Schoening Funeral Service 250-374-1454

First Memorial Funeral Service 250-554-2429

MARY MARIA (PROSSER) BEGLEY Our mother, Mary, was born on September 18, 1920 to Charles and Ann Prosser of Newport, South Wales. Mom was the middle child of two sisters and a brother. Mom was a strong willed person who always called it as she saw it. As a child learning to ride a bike she fell and broke her arm. She needed screws to hold the bones together to give them time to heal. The next week after returning from the hospital, she was back on that bike and learned to ride with cast, screws and all. During the war, she was made floor supervisor in the munitions factory at the age of 22, unheard of in that day. Mary met her husband to be, William Robert Begley, in a little park in London. After a few hours, Dad said he would be marrying Mary. Her response, “No bloody way”. They were married two years later in August of 1945 in Newport. Dad was determined, too. She made her way to Canada alone aboard a small ship with several other war brides. Left in Halifax, trucked to the train station and left to board and find her way to Vancouver, where she rejoined our Dad. Married life was hard as they had nothing. Mom always had a garden She learned to be frugal, a virtue she and Dad passed on to their daughters. Hard work, and thriftiness helped her and Dad to have a good life together. They went on several cruises to Alaska, the Carribean and through the Panama Canal. The best cruise, she thought, was to the Mediterranean. Mom loved travel and enjoyed her Hydro trips to Reno. When our Father passed on December 17, 2003, Mom stopped travelling for a time. Her last cruise was to Frisco and L.A. Of course, there was a stop over in Vegas. Our mother enjoyed games of chance. Mom often went to the casinos, where she never won a sausage, as she put it. She loved the stage shows and was particularly fond of The Lion King. Mom went on many short trips to places she and Dad had been to on vacation. She revisited Salmon Arm, Echo Beach, Loon Lake, Cache Creek, Vernon, Kelowna, and Adams Lake, to name a few. After she broke her pelvis, she lived in L.C.U. at Berwick On The Park. Mom did not like it, she wanted her own place, being a very private person. The staff at Berwick were both kind and patient with Mom. They worked hard and took great care and understanding to make our mother’s final days as best as possible. She passed peacefully the morning of October 1, 2015.

250-554-2577

August 12, 1929 ~ October 4, 2015 It is with great sadness we announce the passing of Hugh L. Turner on the evening of October 4, 2015.

In Loving Memory of JOHN JACK 1945 - 1982

Hugh was the fourth son, born August 12, 1929 to Fred and Gertrude Turner of Salmon Arm. He was predeceased by his parents, as well as Don and Peggy Turner, Herb Turner, Mac and Hazel Turner. Leaving his wife of 61 years, Audrey, daughters Janice (Ted) Hamm, Judith (Ray) Turner and son Rodney Turner, grandsons Darryl and Matthew, grandaughter Heather (Kent) Njaa, great-grandchildren Landon and Gabriel Njaa, and sister-in-law Lorna Turner. Hugh worked with Highways and transferred to the engineering division of the forest service, building access roads to timber in 1950. In 1963 he moved to Prince George district office and was there untill he retired in 1984. After that, he built a home at Blind Bay. He loved spending time in his workshop and garden. A Celebration of Life will be held at the Oddfellow & Rebekah Hall, 423 Tranquille Road, Kamloops at 2:00 p.m. on Sunday, October 25, 2015. Special thanks to friends, staff of 7 North, Royal Inland Hospital, and to Dr. W. Stinson and Dr. J. Wiltshire.

Always on my mind; Forever in my heart. To live in the hearts of those we love is never to die. Love you Dad

Rob

Donations to a charity of your choice in Hugh’s name would be appreciated.

National Transferability Should you move more than 100 kilometers from where your original advance arrangements were made, your prearranged funeral services are fully transferable and will be honoured by any Dignity Memorial provider in North America.

L. MARGUERITE BEESLEY (BYRNES) February 20, 1925 - October 1, 2015 Marguerite passed away peacefully with family at her side on October 1, 2015 at Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloops. Marguerite leaves a legacy of seven children: Cecelia (Tom) Burns, Mary-Marguerite (Kirk) Johnstone, Bernadette Beesley, Tom Beesley, Maureen (Garry) Reynolds, Alan (Joanne) Beesley and Kathleen (Phil) Bennett; fourteen grandchildren: Sean Burns, Erin (Jesse) Smith, Sheila (Kemp) Edmonds, Brendan (Melissa) Burns, Leigh (Dan) Fortuna, Heather (Reto) Camenzind, Derrick Harrison, Mark Harrison, Kimberly Beesley, Drew Beesley (Anastasia Tsareva, Ryan Reynolds, Matthew Reynolds, Darcy (James) Searcy, Dylan (Becky) Beesley; and eight great-grandchildren: Cieran and Kali Smith, Liam Edmonds, Cole Burns, Kye Fortuna, Triniti, Christian and Arianna Beesley. Marguerite was predeceased by her husband – the love of her life – Dr. Bernard Beesley; her parents Tom and Cecelia Byrnes and three infant children, Anne-Marie, Terrance and Moira. Marguerite was raised in Vancouver. She graduated from UBC in 1947 with a BA in English and History and a minor in Psychology. She married in 1950 and moved to Kamloops in 1954 when her husband Bernard joined the Irving Clinic as a General Practitioner. Marguerite enjoyed an extremely active family, church and community life. She worked for her parents in Vancouver at the Byrnes Typewriter Ltd. until her marriage in 1950 and as a secretary for St. Ann’s Academy in Kamloops from 1970-1986. She was a long time member of Sacred Heart Cathedral, the Catholic Women’s League, the Newman Club and Marriage Encounter. In the community she participated in many organizations including the University Women’s Club, the Council of Christian and Jews, the YMCA/YWCA, the 1993 Canada Summer Games, the Hospice Association, the Happy Choristers, the Kamloops Medical Wives Group, Seniors Outreach and the Mayors Advisory Committee for Persons with Disabilities. She received the YMCA/YWCA Women of Distinction Award in 2001. In 2008 she was honored with eleven other women by the Kamloops Women’s Resource Group Society for contributions to community life in Kamloops, in the book “Not Just A Tea Party.” Mom loved life! She loved to spend her summers at the Bee Hive family cabin on Shuswap Lake surrounded by family and friends. She especially loved watching each new generation discover the beauty of the Lake and the love of family. Mom loved to travel to discover new adventures and meet people, but most of all she savored moments with her family.

We love you Mom! You will always remain in our hearts.

Mary is survived by her daughters Sheila Begley, and Ann (Rick) Mattiussi. Also, to mourn her loss are grandchildren Michelle and Chrisitie Mattiussi and great-grandchildren Gianna and Grace Mattiussi. And to her friends at Berwick, no one person could have had better, her lunch and dinner buddies were always there for her. Mary Begley had a good life filled with family and friends, two of world’s greatest riches.

The family thanks the staff at Berwick on the Park, Ponderosa Lodge and Royal Inland Hospital for providing superb loving care for mom this year. We are very grateful to Dr. Bantock and the staff who took care of Mom for so many years. Thank you to Fr. Weisbeck for his spiritual counsel on this journey. We consider ourselves to be very blessed to have had the tremendous support these organizations and individuals provided both Mom and our family. Prayers will be at Holy Family Catholic Church in Valleyview, 2797 Sunset Drive, V2C 4K7 on Thursday, October 8 at 7:00 pm and the Funeral Mass will be held on Friday, October 9 at 11:00 am. The Celebrant will be Fr. Weisbeck, pastor of Holy Family. If friends desire, donations may be made in her memory to St. Ann’s Academy, 205 Columbia Street, Kamloops, B.C. V2C 2S7

To honour our Mom’s wishes there will be no service. In lieu of flowers, a small donation to the Kamloops Hospice Association, 72 Whiteshild Cres. South, V2E 2S9, would be appreciated. A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.

Condolences may be expressed at www.schoeningfuneralservice.com

Schoenings Funeral Service 250-374-1454

PHYLLIS LANPHEAR

Celebration of Life for Phyllis will be held at 1 pm Saturday, October 10, 2015 at the Chase Community Hall


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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 Obituaries & In Memoriam  ROBERT (BOB) BRUCE ROE July 13, 1937 – October 4, 2015 Bob passed away peacefully after a short battle with cancer. He is lovingly remembered by his wife of 55 years, Bertha, and his 5 children : Penny, Bonnie, Cathy, Jim (Lisa) and Beth (Kevin); sister Karen; brother Bill (Diane); sister-in-law Lillian (Andy); 11 grandchildren; 2 great grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews.

Remembering

Saba Dhaliwal October 10, 2003

Loved, missed so very much and never to be forgotten. Family and Friends

In Loving Memory of

FAYE WILLIAMSON Faye left us suddenly and quietly, which was her nature, on October 10, 2014. “And let your best be for your friend.

If he must know the ebb of your tide, let him know its flood also.

Bob was predeceased by his parents Peggy and Harold Roe, his parents-in-law Laurense and Lewis Aadland, his sister-in-law Aline (Teddy) Haugen, his brothers-in-law Oscar and Leverne Aadland and Bill Weeks.

For it is his to fill your need but not your emptiness.

Bob grew up in Saskatchewan and moved with his family to Kamloops in 1971 where he lived until his death. He worked at Civil Engineering (McEllhaney Engineering) as an engineering technician until his retirement.

For in the dew of little things the heart finds its morning and is refreshed.”

A Celebration of Bob’s life will be held in the Kamloops Funeral Home Chapel, 285 Fortune Dr., on Sunday, October 11th at 2pm. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to your charity of choice. Arrangements entrusted to Kamloops Funeral Home 250-554-2577

And in the sweetness of friendship let there be laughter, and sharing of pleasures.

Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet

Faye was all that and more to us. We will never forget our dear friend and feel blessed to have had her in our lives Julie, Nicole, Dean, Adria and Jenna

Condolences may be emailed to the family from www.kamloops funeralhome .com

August 18, 1948 - October 04, 2015

Mrs. Lynn Mildred Chester passed away surrounded by her loved ones in person and spirit at Kamloops on October 4, 2015. She was 67. Lynn was a care-aid at Overlander Extended Care Facility and has spent over 45 years in this field. She is loved by her husband Ron, her children Teresa, Christine, Jeff, Inch, Ronnie and Donna, her five brothers and sisters Rod, Arlene, Ruth, David and Terry, four grandsons and four granddaughters, one great-granddaughter (and one more on the way), many cousins, nieces and nephews, and many other friends and family. Lynn was a generous angel, helping everyone that needed her, and was loved by everyone who met her. Thank you to all the nurses at Royal Inland Hospital that were so compassionate to all the friends and family that visited. A private family service will be held at a later date. Arrangements entrusted to First Memorial Funeral Services Kamloops (250) 554-2429 Condolences may be left for the family at www.firstmemorialkamloops.com

(née Drummond)

It is with deep sadness that we announce the passing of our Mom Leah Wharton on October 4, 2015 after a lengthy illness. Leah was born in Port Alberni on December 18, 1935. She leaves behind her husband Cliff of 62 years, daughter Sherrie (Hans) Lind, son Gary (Valerie) Wharton, four grandchildren who Mom was so proud of Angela (Steven) Turner, Tim (Melanie) Lind, Kelsie (Mathew) Davis and Marlyse (Justin) Harrison. Mom delighted in the visits from her eight greatgrandchildren Emily, Jacob, Faith, Seth, Samuel, Clark, Flynn and Gwen. Leah is also survived by her brother Douglas Drummond, sister-in-law Joy (Bruce) Wisbey and five nieces and three nephews. She was predeceased by her sister Elizabeth Hannah and her parents Charles and Adeline Drummond. Mom will be remembered for her love of gardening. She could be found in her garden when the sun came up. That was her happy place. Over the winter months she would be pouring over seed catalogues and preparing seeds for germination. Spring, summer and fall, she would be planting, tending and harvesting the bounty from her garden. Mom and Dad were vendors for over 15 years at various Farmers’ Markets in Kamloops, Salmon Arm, Enderby, Armstrong and Vernon. Mom had many repeat customers that would seek her out for her jams, jellies, pickles, breads and especially her monster cookies! She enjoyed the people she met through the markets; many who became good friends. Mom was such a cheerful, positive and caring person. Mom never complained or pitied herself even while battling 3 years of cancer treatments. She would always remind us that someone else was far worse off than she. She will be remembered for her courage, thoughtfulness and kindness to others. We would like to thank the wonderful staff at the Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Hospice House who provided excellent care and made Mom feel so special during her last days. Upon Mom’s request there will be no funeral service. Cremation arrangements entrusted to North Thompson Funeral & Drake Cremation Services, Kamloops, BC, 250-377-8225 www.NTFuneral.com

Ask DRAKE Good Questions, Honest Answers! Every Friday in KTW!

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Miyagishima, Makoto (Mak) Nov 3, 1923 - Aug 23, 2015 Mr. Makoto Miyagishima of Ashcroft, BC passed away peacefully of agerelated complications at the Nikkei Home in Burnaby. He was 91 and was predeceased by his devoted wife Hisayo in 2005. He leaves sons Edward (Calgary) and Dennis (Kamloops); Siblings: Etsuko Horiba, Kazuko Takei, Fumiko Watanabe, Akira Miyagishima (Japan) and Tadashi Imai (Los Angeles). Mak was born in New Westminster, B.C. and was a long-time resident of Ashcroft. He was well known in the area for his beautiful, productive garden at the top of Tingley Street. During his career, he worked in the orchards of Vernon, sawmills in the area, railways with CP and then mining at Bethlehem Copper where he retired. Throughout his life, gardening was his pleasure where the fruits of his labour were shared with the community. His longevity speaks to his generosity and active life which included his other favourite pastime, fishing...especially for salmon and steelhead at Spences Bridge. The Miyagishimas extend their thanks to the staff in Ashcroft health care, the Nikkei Home in Burnaby, the Thompson Valley Funeral Home and to all of the friends who have assisted over the years. The family would like to hold a memorial tea on Saturday Oct.17/15 from 1:00 – 3:00 pm at the Zion United Church hall. Koden and flowers gratefully declined.

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WALTER JOSEF GAISER On October 6, 2015, a beautiful fall day just days before his 85th birthday, Walter died at the Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Hospice Home overlooking the Kamloops hills and the Thompson Rivers that he loved. Walter was born October 15, 1930 in Oberkirch, Germany the son of Josef and Franziska(Maier) Gaiser. He apprenticed with a Mercedes Benz dealer in Germany at the age of 14 and after completing his apprenticeship, in September 1949, he began a lifetime of working at a job he loved – that of automechanic. He immigrated to Canada with his brother, Werner, in August of 1951, and after his arrival in Winnipeg, he initially worked on a farm. Not finding that too much to his liking, he then went into the bush to work for the winter, earning money that helped his brother Werner bring his family over to Canada. After some unforgettable experiences in the bush he moved, in 1952, to Humboldt, Saskatchewan where he boarded with the Pape family. His mother and step father, Alex Wormsbecker later immigrated and he helped support them on his wages of 90¢ an hour. Moving to Kamloops to work in the fall of 1955, he found a job with Wilson Motors in North Kamloops and then returned to Humboldt in December to marry his sweetheart, Lena Pape, and bring her back to Kamloops to live. He was a well-respected member of the Kamloops business community for many years, owning Star Motors in North Kamloops and Valleyview and then Gaiser Services in North Kamloops. He is still remembered by many people in town as “Mr. Mercedes”. He had the ability and the patience to fix anything - he could fix what no one else could! His talents have been a definite asset to the Red Cross equipment loan service since 2003. In his younger days, he was an active soccer player and downhill skier. He loved to fly, owning his own plane for a number of years, and belonging to the Kamloops Flying Club where he served in a variety of positions. He began playing golf in the 1960’s and from then on to the present was an avid golfer belonging to the Kamloops Golf and Country Club until 2013. Since his marriage to Gill in 1996 he also participated in many activities that brought him much enjoyment – dancing, hiking, cross-country skiing, canoeing and biking. As one of the founding members of the “Walkie-Talkies” in 2001 he enjoyed the wonderful camaraderie of the group and participating in as many of their activities as he was able. Walter was predeceased by his first wife Lena, his brother Werner and sister Christa. He is survived by his wife Gillian, daughter Caroline Gaiser of Vancouver and stepsons Jonathon (Cheryl) McIntyre of Abbotsford (children Braedon (Emma), Bryce and Shanice) and Craig (Becky) McIntyre of Kamloops (children Dustin (Heather), Mathew, Emily and Sarah). Also left to mourn are his brothers Kurt (Marilynne) Wormsbecher and Alex (Judy) Wormsbecher and their families, all of Kamloops; brother-in-law Martin O’Brien of Vernon and sister-in-law Lotte Gaiser of Brandon, Manitoba as well as many other relatives in BC, Alberta, Manitoba and Germany and his very special “adopted sister” Marlene. Many, many thanks to Dr. Bruce Newmarch for the exceptional care he gave to Walter and also to Dr. Ruth Farren and all the wonderful staff at the Hospice who cared so lovingly for him in his last days. In lieu of flowers donations to Kamloops Hospice Association, 72 Whiteshield Crescent South, Kamloops, BC V2E 2S9 in memory of Walter would be greatly appreciated. We will miss his gentle spirit and the twinkle in his eye. At his request there will be no service but one day soon we have been instructed to hold a celebration. Arrangements entrusted to Alternatives Funeral & Cremation Services 250-554-2324 Condolences may be expressed to the family from www.myalternatives.ca


A2

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

THE TRANS PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP (TPP) A Historic Opportunity for British Columbia OPPORTUNITIES FOR EVERYONE!

A RECORD YOU CAN TRUST.

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This is an exciting moment for Canada… we’re looking at huge gains for Canadian farmers, food processors, and companies in forestry, mining, aerospace, financial services and information technology, among other industries.

British Columbia Chamber of Commerce

“The TPP represent a new type of agreement. From market access for goods, services/investments, financial services, government procurement, temporary entry and labour, the TPP will set the standard of a 21st century comprehensive agreement and will bring huge economic benefits across the B.C. economy.” Jon Garson, Vice President of Policy Development and Government Relations, British Columbia Chamber of Commerce

Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC)

“The TPP can only help us further sharpen our edge and be more competitive in these emerging markets for the benefit of jobs and prosperity in Canada.” David Lindsay, the President and CEO of FPAC.

Canadian Vintners Association

“The proposed Agreement will offer immediate and tangible benefits to the Canadian wine industry, reducing costly tariffs on wine, providing greater protection for authentic Icewine, streamlining complex technical and administrative barriers and tackling other barriers to wine exports that unfairly limit access to markets. Without Canada’s inclusion in the TPP, the sole benefit of these negotiations would have gone to some of the world’s most ambitious wine exporting countries- Australia, Chile, New Zealand and the United States – leaving Canadian vintners significantly disadvantaged.” Dan Paszkowski, President and CEO, Canadian Vintners Association

Canadian Cattlemen’s Association (CCA)

CCA President Dave Solverson called the agreement a game-changer for Canada’s beef industry -- and Canadian agriculture as a whole. “This is really fantastic news for Canada’s beef producers,” he said

Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance

“This is an historic moment for the hundreds of thousands of Canadians who are employed by Canada’s export-based agriculture and agri-food sector. Whether you are a farm family who depends on world markets, a processor, exporter, or live in a community supported by agriculture or food processing, improved access to TPP markets bodes well for a stable and prosperous future. We congratulate the Canadian government on concluding this critical agreement. Trade Minister Ed Fast, Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz and Canada’s negotiators have worked tirelessly over the last three years since Canada joined the negotiations. We have seen first-hand the benefits of being at the table to shape this historic agreement.” Brian Innes, President of the Canadian Agri-food Trade Alliance

Mining Association of Canada

“NAFTA, free trade agreements with Chile, Peru, Colombia, and other countries in Latin America, Africa, and Asia have all helped to increase Canadian exports and investment, supporting jobs for Canadians here and abroad. TPP, representing such a massive trade block, including critical emerging markets, is a trading partnership Canada must not risk being left out of”. Pierre Gratton, MAC’s President and CEO.

Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters

“TPP will give better access to a market of more than 800 million consumers to Canada’s small and medium sized companies, will benefit Canada’s manufacturing and exporting companies and the Canadian economy as a whole.” CME president and CEO Jayson Myers.

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A20

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

FAITH

Thanksgiving lived out all year long

A

phrase from psychology — “hostile dependence” — describes a state that must depend on someone else, but is not appreciated. That means being in a state of tension. One may not like the person, the nature of their gifts or the fact of his dependence on them — but there’s no option. Atheists feel the problem acutely in the spiritual realm. While feeling pleased, they dislike their dependence and reject the Giver. Many missionaries dislike fundraising for the same reason. Though they appreciate the donation, they dislike their dependence on the donors to carry on their religious outreach. The only alter-

ing. We need to develop thanksgiving into a wholesome and active philosophy of living.

Defining thanksgiving

NARYAN MITRA

You Gotta Have

FAITH

native to hostile dependence, especially toward a loving benefactor, is grateful dependence. It is the essence of thanksgiving. Unfortunately, many believers in God try to walk the fine line between hostile dependence and grateful dependence, being convinced that non-hostility toward God is the same as gratitude. Nothing could be more antithetical to the spirit of thanksgiv-

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The general definition of thanksgiving” is “a conscious joyful emotion toward unearned blessing.” Christian thanksgiving would extend that into “an awareness and expression of personal dependence on the ultimate Giver of all good things.” Thanksgiving, then, would be intentional, not a default stance in Christian living. A grateful person is aware of joyful emotion in receiving unearned favour. The more unearned your gift is, the more thankful you are, It is expressed by:

Thanksfeeling

“A happy emo-

tion, a gladness to have what is given,” says one dictionary in describing thanksgiving. You must experience a glad feeling of thanks to a giver. A critical or complaining spirit would hardly accompany feelings of gratitude. Remember the “thankful” Pharisee in the New Testament (Luke 18:11), who used the right verbal formula for having done the right thing? His feelings of selfrighteous self-congratulation were not those of thanks at all. There was pride rather than gladness in his heart for his abilities.

Thankssaying

Feelings of thanks are better expressed by saying and doing’ thanks. The Old Testament Book of Psalms con-

tains many genres of thanksgiving. “It is good to give thanks to the Lord,” opens Psalm 92. It’s really by thankssaying that the Psalmist clarifies the virtue of public thanksgiving. We say thanks to God in public because God is good, but also because thanksgiving in itself is good.

Thanksdoing

Gratitude not only identifies the donor as giver and generates the appropriate attitude, but also motivates actions that will please the giver. There is grateful conduct toward the donor and the grateful use of the gift. Conduct motivated by thanks is easier to execute than those motivated by rewards. God uses both kinds of motivations in our obedience.

Since we are clearer about blessings already received, we can be better motivated by God’s grace than by future rewards to be obtained by our good works yet.

Thanksliving

Year-round, lifelong thanksgiving, then, is thanksliving. “Let your lives overflow with thanksgiving for all he has done” (Colossians 2:7). Thanksliving comprises thanksfeeling, thankssaying and thanksdoing 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. Indeed, all eternity will resound with your thanksgiving as you understand the “of course” of all circumstances and experiences in your life and in all reality. We have a choice between hostile or grateful dependence on God, our Creator,

Redeemer and Sustainer. After Thanksgiving is not Christmas. That’s a calendar view of existence. After Thanksgiving comes . . . Thanksgiving, And that precedes . . . Thanksgiving. Let’s thank God for all we have by thanksgiving — and trust Him for all we need by thanksliving.

KTW welcomes submissions to its Faith page. Columns should be between 600 and 800 words in length and can be emailed to editor@kamloops thisweek.com. Please include a short bio and a photo.

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Help Plura Hill make those salmon, tuna run Plura Hills United Church is once again challenging the community to donate extra cans of salmon and tuna to the Kamloops Food Bank. The Adams River salmon run will be smaller than expected, but the church is keeping its seafood theme for October. The food drive is undertaken each year because salmon and tuna are brain food. Kids are back in school and need the extra protein. Fish is also the sign of Christianity. Other churches are urged to join the cause. Plura Hills members pick up donations, which can also be dropped off at the church at 2090 Pacific Way. Previous years have seen more than 1,000 tins of salmon and tuna donated to the food bank. For more information, call Donna at 250 372 2470.


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A21

NATIONAL NEWS

REVIEW SAYS CROWN DECISION IN REHTAEH PARSONS’ CASE WAS REASONABLE THE CANADIAN PRESS

HALIFAX — A review into the handling of the Rehtaeh Parsons case by the RCMP and Nova Scotia’s Public Prosecution Service says it was reasonable of the Crown to conclude there was no realistic prospect that sexual assault charges would result in a conviction. The provincial government ordered the review by Murray Segal, a former Ontario chief prosecutor, in August 2013, but it was delayed until legal proceedings involving two men charged with child pornography offences in the case concluded. “Another Crown counsel could have reasonably chosen to prosecute the sexual assault component of the case, but it no doubt presented a unique challenge for the prosecution,’’ said the report, which was released yesterday. “The police investigator understood that the decision whether to lay charges was still hers to make but, in light of the Crown prosecutor’s opinion, the decision not to lay charges of sexual assault was understandable.’’ The young woman’s family alleged she was

KEY RECOMMENDATIONS • Police officers investigating sexual assault allegations involving children should try to interview children with a Department of Community Services worker at the earliest opportunity. • Crown prosecutors who handle sexual assault cases should receive more training about sexual violence and how to respond to those cases. • There should be more Crown counsel available to prosecute Internet child exploitation cases and those Crown attorneys should receive increased training in this specialized area. • The police should explore the creation of a cybercrime support unit with a broad mandate to be involved in any investigation that requires its expertise. sexually assaulted in November 2011 when she was 15 and bullied after a digital photo of the alleged assault was passed around her school. Parsons was taken off life-support after attempting suicide in 2013. Police said they looked into the allegations of sexual assault and an inappropriate photo, but concluded there weren’t enough grounds to lay charges after consulting with the prosecution service. The child pornography charges were laid after Parsons died. A 20-year-old man pleaded guilty last

November to distributing a sexually graphic image of Parsons. Another 20-yearold man later pleaded guilty to making child pornography by taking a photo of the accused having sex with Parsons. Both men were youths at the time of the offences and were charged under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, which means they cannot be identified. Segal’s report also deals with the subsequent allegations of child pornography and says the police investigator was told by another Crown

prosecutor that those offences could not be prosecuted. The investigator was told it was not possible to tell from the photo that the persons involved were under age. “The Crown’s advice related to child pornography offences was incorrect,’’ the report says. “It reflected a misunderstanding of the law as it relates to child pornography.’’ The report says the Internet Child Exploitation Unit reviewed the file and concluded child pornography charges could have been laid at the conclusion of the initial investigation. In his report, Segal describes Parsons as a “vibrant and promising young woman’’ with a loving and supportive family. He writes that Parsons was “devastated by the circulation of an intimate photograph taken without her consent and the bullying and cyberbullying that resulted from it.’’ The investigation into Parsons’ allegations of sexual assault took close to a year to conclude, the report says. It was during that time that Parsons changed schools twice

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and was hospitalized for weeks following renewed thoughts of suicide. “In the end, she did not receive the support and assistance a young person in crisis required,’’ the report says.

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A22

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

NATIONAL NEWS MISSED CHANCE TO OPPOSE PIPELINE: CAPP THE CANADIAN PRESS

VANCOUVER — A lawyer representing Canada’s oil and natural gas industry says those groups that didn’t take part in an environmental review process lost the chance to have their voices heard on the Northern Gateway pipeline project. Lewis Manning told a Federal Court of Appeal in Vancouver it’s a shame some organizations chose not to take part in the process. A group of 18 First Nations, environmental groups and a labour union launched the appeal aimed at overturning approval of Enbridge’s controversial $7-billion pipeline proposal. Manning, a lawyer for the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, told the court the joint review panel made “every conceivable effort’’ to accommodate participation and would have done its best to mitigate any concerns. Northern Gateway would see a 1,177-kilometre pipeline carry diluted bitumen from Alberta’s oilsands to B.C.’s coastline for export overseas.

‘Image of Muslim women Actor Randy Quaid ordered released; . . . damaged by this’ THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — The woman whose fight to wear a niqab during her Canadian citizenship ceremony has unexpectedly become a dominant election issue fears the raging debate has tarnished Canadians’ views of her fellow Muslims. Zunera Ishaq said much of the discussion swirling around the issue in recent weeks has been based on misconceptions about Islam, the niqab and the women who

WOMAN AT HEART OF NIQAB ISSUE TALKS TO CANADIAN PRESS embrace both. She attributed much of that misinformation to the Conservative government, accusing Prime Minister Stephen Harper of turning her personal choice into a national vote-getting strategy. She fears the tactic may be working. A spokesman for Harper did not immediately comment. Ishaq said the Canadian public is not being well-informed.

“They are being misguided by the government on this particular issue,’’ she told The Canadian Press in an interview. “They were of the view that Muslim women who are wearing the niqab objected to show their identity for security purposes, but that’s not the case. “The image of Muslim women, and as a whole the Muslim community, has been damaged by this.’’

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facing removal from Canada next week THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL — Actor Randy Quaid has been ordered released by the Immigration and Refugee Board but faces the looming prospect of being returned to the United States as early as next week. Quaid appeared briefly before the board in Montreal yesterday for a detention review and was released in short order by board member Dianne Tordorf, who said there were no grounds to hold him. Quaid has already been arrested once by CBSA officers in May and released on $10,000 bond and a host of conditions by the same board member. “All the conditions have been respected, I find that the offer of release that I made in the past is completely valid today,’’ Tordorf ruled. “I’m releasing you right now because there’s no reason to detain you, there is no breach, there is nothing under the law that would permit me even to deprive you of your freedom.’’ The Canadian Border Service Agency’s (CBSA) Anthony Lashley told the hearing an impending departure date and the rejection of a pre-removal risk assessment application on Sept. 22 prompted the arrest on Tuesday, fearing he wouldn’t comply with an order to leave the country next Wednesday. “This is the position of the agency: Mr. Quaid represents a flight-risk, we feel it’s an important one, we feel that the circumstances have changed enough to warrant his arrest,’’ Lashley said, before Tordorf immediately rule Quaid be released. Sporting the same massive beard and shoulderlength grey hair, Quaid was silent during the hearing as his wife, Evi, sat in the audience. They both left the downtown Montreal office, declining comment. His lawyer, Mark Gruszczynski, told the hearing Quaid’s arrest was “tantamount to a preventative detention.’’ The 65-year-old Quaid was informed this week he would be sent back to the United States, where he faces an outstanding warrant and pending criminal charges. Contacted yesterday, a CBSA spokeswoman did not say whether removal would proceed or provide any further explanations. Quaid and his Canadian wife fled to Canada in 2010, saying they were the victims of persecution. Quaid had sought to stay in Canada and said he was being hunted by “Hollywood star-whackers.’’ After arriving in 2010, the Quaids lived in Vancouver, Toronto and Ottawa before moving to Montreal in January 2013. Quaid’s bid for permanent residency was denied in December 2012 and he was arrested earlier this year after he stopped checking in with immigration officials. Quaid has said he’s willing to return to his native United States to deal with those legal cases and wouldn’t jeopardize the bond his father-in-law had put down in May to secure his release. Santa Barbara senior deputy district attorney Lee Carter said Wednesday there is an active extradition order for Quaid on a felony vandalism case and prosecutors would be seeking his extradition if he’s returned to the United States. Carter said Quaid and his wife also face felony charges for failing to appear at a November 2010 court hearing while out on bail. A friend of the couple, Janet Olmsted Cross, told reporters following the hearing the two are happy in Montreal living off residuals from Quaid’s film career. She’s confident there is an explanation for the charges they are facing and drove from New York to bring them back to the U.S. if they must leave.


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A3

LOCAL NEWS

LOCAL NEWS

NEWS FLASH? CALL 778-471-7525 or email editor@kamloopsthisweek.com

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A Kamloops mother has been charged with second-degree murder in connection to the 2011 death of her newborn son. During a brief hearing in Kamloops provincial court yesterday, Courtney Fawn Saul was ordered to undergo an assessment to determine whether she was “disturbed”

at the time of her son’s death. The Crown alleges Saul, now 23, killed her newborn baby, George Carlos Saul, shortly after his birth on Dec. 15, 2011. “The allegation involves the death of an infant that was a few hours old at the time it was killed,” Crown prosecutor Will Burrows said in court. “As a result, there’s a necessity in the Crown’s submission for an assessment.”

Kamloops provincial court Judge Chris Cleaveley ordered the assessment under a specific section of the Criminal Code that deals with “whether the balance of the mind of the accused was disturbed at the time of commission of the alleged offence, where the accused is a female person charged with an offence arising out of the death of her newly-born child.” Saul, who is not in custody, is due back in court on Nov. 2. The South Kamloops secondary student body took part in the school’s Terry Fox Run and Walk yesterday. The school has 74 fewer students than last year, but officials believe enrolment across the school district is beginning to stabilize.

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Karl deBruijn believes the region’s declining school enrolment may have finally stopped. The superintendent for the Kamloops-Thompson school district said final figures submitted to the Ministry of Education show 13,982 students in the district, which is higher than what was forecast. Administrators had predicted enrolment to drop by 386 students when classes resumed in September, but the decrease was just 51 students. The statistics include distance, adult and continuing education. Of the 13,982 students in the

district, 990 are in kindergarten and 1,255 are in Grade 12. “We are still graduating more than are coming in,” deBruijn said, noting the average of students per grade is now about 1,000 districtwide, which gives him some comfort the system has stabilized to the reality families are having fewer children. He attributed much of the unexpected influx of students in September to families moving to Kamloops, with anecdotal evidence they have been attracted to the city for its job opportunities and affordable housing. There were some unexpected surprises at specific schools. Arthur Hatton elementary in North Kamloops saw its enrolment rise by 36 students.

“That’s big,” deBruijn said. “It was at 242 last year and that’s a big increase for a small school that has been on the decline since amalgamation [the district closed some schools a few years ago due to declining enrolment].” In Brocklehurst, Parkcrest elementary is up 20 students, but Kay Bingham elementary unexpectedly showed a decrease of 21 students. At the secondary level, deBruijn said, Brock middle school went up 52 students and Valleyview secondary saw its population increase by 27. South Kamloops decreased by 74 students and NorKam went down 25 students. The big concern for the district is in Clearwater, where the secondary school is now at 189 students, having lost 28, and in Barriere,

which saw the school population decrease by 17 at the secondary level, although there were 15 new elementary students. Declining enrolment in rural schools creates its own problems, deBruijn said, because families are often loathe to see their children travel long distances to other schools. He praised the teaching staff in the two locations for the innovative ways they’re ensuring basic courses like chemistry and physics are still provided through podcasts, video-conferencing and tutoring. With classes now established, deBruijn said only two of the teachers laid off at the end of the last school term are not working. Each had been offered job postings, but opted to not accept them.

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FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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A7

LOCAL NEWS

Crown challenges assessment

Bad Breath

Is Just the Beginning…

CLAIM THAT PSYCHIATRIST DISPLAYED CONFIRMATION BIAS CAM FORTEMS

STAFF REPORTER

cam@kamloopsthisweek.com

Taylor also told the jury his last memory of the early morning of Dec. 5, 2012, was walking up Columbia Street and toward the Greyhound depot from Royal Inland Hospital with Fowler in the early morning hours. He said he next remembers seeing her on the ground and checking her pulse. She was dead. The 24-year-old testified, while paranoid and high on crystal meth and heroin, he ran from a red car, changing his clothes en route in order to run faster. Crown prosecutor Iain Currie accused Lessing of showing

A prosecutor has suggested to a psychiatric expert for the defence that she displayed bias in her assessment of Damien Taylor, who is on trial in B.C. Supreme Court in Kamloops for seconddegree murder. Dr. Sunette Lessing, a forensic psychiatrist, testified yesterday under cross-examination. She spent eight hours interviewing and testing Taylor, who is on trial for the Dec. 5, 2012, murder of his 16-year-old girlfriend, CJ Fowler. Her body was found in the [web-extra] Guerin More from this trial at Creek kamloopsthisweek.com area of the city on that day. Taylor testified ear- what he called confirlier in the trial that he mation bias — ignoring information conused large amounts trary to her opinion of crystal meth, along Taylor may have been with other drugs, psychotic that night. in the days before “You remember Fowler’s death. the details in a way The forensic psythat’s favourable to chiatrist said Taylor the opinion you’re may have been in expressing,” Currie and out of psychosis, told her. including experiencThe prosecutor ing paranoia and hallucinations at times. also told the psychia-

Damien Taylor, now 24, is charged with second-degree murder in connection to the Dec. 5, 2012, death of his 16-year-old girlfriend, CJ Fowler.

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trist she ignored other evidence that may have pointed to the fact Taylor was not psychotic that night, including video from the hospital and bus depot, details from medical staff at RIH who dealt with the couple and information from RCMP in Prince George who interviewed Taylor hours after his girlfriend was found dead. Currie also noted Taylor covered blood on his socks with a bandana so it could not be seen, changed clothes before getting to the bus depot and lied to police about his whereabouts. Currie said all are suggestions of rational behaviour. “There’s no col-

lateral information, other than what Mr. Taylor told you, that Mr. Taylor was on the psychotic continuum,” Currie said, calling Taylor actions after Fowler’s death “markedly inconsistent with psychosis.” But, Lessing insisted the drug use and lack of sleep described to her by Taylor suggests he may have been psychotic around the time Fowler was killed. Lessing also told the jury Taylor has normal intelligence in many respects, but his short-term memory is on par with a senior showing signs of demential, perhaps from extensive crystalmeth use. The trial is expected to continue today.

Correction In a story in the Oct. 8 edition of Kamloops This Week (‘Accused may have been psychotic’), Dr. Sunette Lessing, who testified in the murder trial

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Linda Skelly Ask me about the fabulous Women of the Thompson Valley supplement to be published in October!

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WHAT’S HAPPENING

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OCTOBER 9, 2015

To submit an item for THIS WEEKEND, email listings@ kamloopsthisweek.com.

TODAY W FRI., OCT. 9 COMMUNITY: • Anything Can Happen Fridays, Kamloops Library, 465 Victoria St., drop in 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Info: 250-3725145. • World Wide Web class, 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Kamloops Library, 465 Victoria St. MUSIC: • Hank Stallion, 8 p.m., The Blue Grotto, 319 Victoria St. 21+. $5 cover.

your backstage pass KTW’s Dale Bass has your theatre needs covered. Turn to B2 for a review of Back to Beulah. Then, on B3, catch the preview of Western Canada Theatre’s new comedy, Don’t Dress for Dinner. Finally, be sure grab a copy of Tuesday’s edition to read the review.

Monday, Oct. 19th, is election day.

Your vote is your voice. Be heard - go vote. This message from the Kamloops and District Real Estate Association, on behalf of your local REALTORS®.

THEATRE: • Western Canada Theatre presents Don’t Dress for Dinner, a sequel to Boeing Boeing, Sagebrush Theatre, continues to Oct. 17. Show times: Monday to Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m. Tickets at Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca. ART: • Piece of Mind, various artists, Old Courthouse Cultural Centre main gallery. A partnership between the B.C. Psychological Association and the Kamloops Arts Council, it focuses on psychological health. Continues to Nov. 14.

SAT., OCT. 10 COMMUNITY: • Windows 8 class, 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. North Kamloops Library, 683 Tranquille Rd.

See B4

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B2

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Thompson Rivers University theatre-arts students Selena Tobin (left), Jessica Buchanan, Maddison Hartloff and Morgan Benedict rehearse for Back to Beulah, the program’s first play at the Black Box Theatre on campus. EMILY-ANN OLSON PHOTO

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TRU theatre season off to strong start DALE BASS STAFF REPORTER dale@kamloopsthisweek.com

A

nother season of theatre at Thompson Rivers University has begun — and it’s opened with a powerhouse production. Back to Beulah by W.O. Mitchell clearly has its roots in the same swirling landscape that led the iconic Canadian to write Who Has Seen the Wind. Beulah also looks to the meaning of life, death, freedom and justice, not within a small Prairie town, but in a halfway house populated by three women with mental-health issues. And, like much of Mitchell’s work, the play finds humour in situations that really aren’t funny at all, but which still make us laugh. It’s the story of a doctor who wants to believe in her patients, in their ability to leave Beulah, the mental institution where she works and they had been living. She sets them up in a basement apartment, a halfway house experiment she likens to a parable of hope. It’s Christmas and she comes to check on them before leaving on a vacation with her married boyfriend — and that’s the catalyst that launches one of the women on a crusade fuelled by her religious indoctrination by her parents. Harriet, played by Maddison Hartloff, is the force for the storm that follows as she and her roommates Betty (Jessica Buchanan) and Agnes (Selena Tobin) take the doctor (Morgan Benedict) hostage, force-feeding her the pills she has been making them take. It’s a wordy script, one some might fumble

KTW

REVIEW at times, but Hartloff doesn’t fail in delivering Mitchell’s message. It falls to Buchanan and Tobin to bring some normalcy to the situation, albeit from the vantage point of their own neuroses, with Betty obviously the peacemaker and Agnes the rebel. It’s from the interaction of the three, particularly as they try to hide the unconscious doctor when her boyfriend arrives to find her, that brings the humour into what is otherwise an emotional play. Supporting the four women are Dan Moen as the handyman who, while fixing the furnace, alerts us early in the play that something is not right in the apartment; Joel Feenstra as the bewildered boyfriend, a doctor himself who is obviously skeptical of the halfway-house project; and Erik Hagar as a detective who makes a brief appearance, but who sets up a scene where we start to wonder about Harriet’s sanity. Directed by Robin Nichol, this cast of theatrearts students was faced with a challenge early in the school year and it delivers. Back to Beulah is at the Black Box Theatre in the Old Main Building on campus. It opened last night and continues today and tomorrow, with three additional performances from Oct. 15 to Oct. 17. Tickets are available at the theatre box office or at the Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca.


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B3

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Mistaken identities, affairs to lend laughs at Sagebrush Tess Degenstein, Kirk Smith and Krista Colosimo star in the Western Canada Theatre comedy, Don’t Dress For Dinner. It began yesterday and runs to Oct. 17 at Sagebrush Theatre.

DALE BASS

STAFF REPORTER

dale@kamloopsthisweek.com

B

est friends Bernard and Robert are back again — and Kirk Smith is delighted they have returned. Smith portrays Robert in Western Canada Theatre’s production of Don’t Dress for Dinner, a role he also filled in 2013 when WCT presented Boeing Boeing. Both are plays by Marc Camoletti and both focus on how Bernard uses Robert as he indulges in extra-marital affairs. In 2013, Bernard was played by Brett Christopher but, in this instalment of the ongoing friendship, Todd Thomson is the cad who takes advantage of his friend. Smith, a Kamloops native and familiar face at Sagebrush Theatre and with Project X, said Don’t Dress for Dinner is “sort of a sequel” and, while the scripts may seem somewhat similar, they’re definitely different. “There are a lot of mistaken identities,” he said, “and they all have a secret. At different times, some of it becomes known.” Like Boeing Boeing, it’s a physically demanding play, but there’s

MARK BERGINA PHOTO

more dialogue in this one, Smith said. The story can be explained simply as Bernard planning a romantic weekend with his mistress while his wife is out of town — but, then she comes back. That belies the totality of the play, Smith said, and he’s confident the audience will be laughing from the first scene to the

end. That helps propel the cast, he said. “You just feel the energy, people having a great time, all laughing together. That’s pretty special.” The play is a co-production with Thousand Islands Playhouse in Gananoque, Ont., and the Gateway Theatre in Richmond. It’s already had a run in

Ontario, where it was praised in the media as a rollicking romp. The five-week break from the last Ontario show presented a bit of a challenge for the recent Kamloops rehearsals, Smith said. Not much of an athlete as a youth, he had to do a lot of conditioning to handle the physicality and there have been a few mornings when he’s got up and “had to

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wipe the cobwebs from my eyes and just get going.” The cast helps, he said, having become a tight bond of friends who work hard and make it all seem effortless. “It’s so fun when you have that great chemistry on stage, where you can trust each other.” In addition to Thomson and Smith, Krista Colosimo is the lover, Tess Degenstein is the French cook, Alison Deon is the wife and Beau Dixon is George, the cook’s husband. Colosimo, Degenstein and Deon were also in Boeing Boeing. Thousand Islands artistic director Ashlie Corcoran is in charge of the play, with Jung-Hye Kim the set designer, Oz Weaver handling the lighting design, Doug Perry on sound design and Cindy Wiebe again creating the costumes. The play continues to Oct. 17. Tickets are at the Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca.

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B4

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT From B1

• Transition to and Life in Residential Care: Free Alzheimer Society of B.C. workshop on easing the transition of a family member to residential care, the role the health authority and working effectively with a care team 9 a.m. to noon, Alzheimer Resource Centre, Suite 405 – 235 1st Ave. Pre-registration required. Tara Hildebrand, 250-3778200, thildebrand@ alzheimerbc.org. Theatre: Western Canada Theatre presents Don’t Dress for Dinner, a sequel to Boeing Boeing,

Sagebrush Theatre, continues to Oct. 17. Show times: Monday to Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m. Tickets at Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca. Music: Hank Stallion, 8 p.m., The Blue Grotto, 319 Victoria St. 21+. $5 cover. Art: Piece of Mind, various artists, Old Courthouse Cultural Centre main gallery. A partnership between the B.C. Psychological Association and the Kamloops Arts Council, its focuses on psychological health. Continues to Nov. 14.

Sunday, Oct. 11

Community: Community dinner, 5 p.m., North Shore Community Centre, 730 Cottonwood Ave. Tickets $15 in advance at venue or by calling 250-376-4777.

Monday, Oct. 12

Theatre: Western Canada Theatre presents Don’t Dress for Dinner, a sequel to Boeing Boeing, Sagebrush Theatre, continues to Oct. 17. Show times: Monday to Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m. Tickets at Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St.,

250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca.

465 Victoria St., 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Free.

Tuesday, Oct. 13

Friday, Oct. 16

Community: Author Michael Christie (The Beggar’s Garden) talks about his work, 7 p.m., Kamloops Library, 465 Victoria St. • Files and folders class, 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m., North Shore Library, 693 Tranquille Rd. Theatre: Western Canada Theatre presents Don’t Dress for Dinner, a sequel to Boeing Boeing, Sagebrush Theatre, continues to Oct. 17. Show times: Monday to Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m. Tickets at Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca. Art: Piece of Mind, various artists, Old Courthouse Cultural Centre main gallery. A partnership between the B.C. Psychological Association and the Kamloops Arts Council, it focuses on psychological health. Continues to Nov. 14.

Wednesday, Oct. 14

Art: Drink and Draw, Red Collar Brewing Co., 355 Lansdowne St., 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., work on your own art or collaborate with others. Kamloops Art Gallery provides supplies. Minors welcome with adult. Community: Author Ian Weir talks about his work, 7 p.m., Kamloops Library, 465 Victoria St. • Federal election all-candidates meeting, 7 p.m., Grand Hall, Thompson Rivers University. Sponsored by local media. • Excel class, 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m., North Shore Library, 693 Tranquille Rd. • Kamloops Innovation and TRU Generator host Startup Coffee session, 2 p.m. to 3 p.m., Common

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Space permitting, they will appear in KTW’s Friday edition and online at kamloopsthisweek.com. Grounds in the Student Activity Centre. Admission free. Information online at kamloopsinnovation.ca/calendar. Theatre: Western Canada Theatre presents Don’t Dress for Dinner, a sequel to Boeing Boeing, Sagebrush Theatre, continues to Oct. 17. Show times: Monday to Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m. Tickets at Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca. Art: Piece of Mind, various artists, Old Courthouse Cultural Centre main gallery. A partnership between the B.C. Psychological Association and the Kamloops Arts Council, it focuses on psychological health. Continues to Nov. 14. • Drink and Draw, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., Red Collar Brewing, 355 Lansdowne St., all ages, free. Minors must be accompanied by parent or guardian.

Thursday, Oct. 15

Music: Shane Connery Volk (One Bad Son), 8 p.m., The Office Pub and Grill, 2020 Falcon Rd. Tickets $10 in advance, $15 at the door. Tickets online at kamtix.ca. Community: High Country Achievers Toastmasters, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Desert Gardens Community Centre, 540 Seymour St. • Kamloops Film Society presents Grandma, 7 p.m.,

Paramount Theatre, 503 Victoria St. Tickets $8 and $5 for Thompson Rivers University Students. Tickets at the venue, and Movie Mart, 444 St. Paul St. • Web-based email class, 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., North Shore Library, 693 Tranquille Rd. • Kamloops Naturalist Club meets, 7 p.m., Heritage House, Riverside Park. Guest speaker Doug Burles talks about bats. Information: 250-5541285. Theatre: Western Canada Theatre presents Don’t Dress for Dinner, a sequel to Boeing Boeing, Sagebrush Theatre, continues to Oct. 17. Show times: Monday to Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m. Tickets at Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-3745483, kamloopslive.ca. • Hamlet, starring Benedict Cumberbatch, live from the Royal National Theatre, shown at Cineplex Odeon, 7 p.m. Art: Piece of Mind, various artists, Old Courthouse Cultural Centre main gallery. A partnership between the B.C. Psychological Association and the Kamloops Arts Council, it focuses on psychological health. Continues to Nov. 14. • Arbour Aboriginal Artists Collective youth workshop, 12 and older, with Chris Bose, Kamloops Art Gallery,

Community: Anything Can Happen Fridays, Kamloops Library, 465 Victoria St., drop in 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Info: 250372-5145. • Front and Centre: Western Canada Theatre at 40 exhibition of costumes, props, videos and other elements, opening reception, 5:30 p.m., Kamloops Museum and Archives, 207 Seymour St. Display continues to March 26, 2016. • One-on-one Ebooks class, 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m., North Shore Library, 693 Tranquille Rd. Music: Creedence Clearwater Revival tribute band, 9 p.m., The Office Pub and Grill, 2020 Falcon Rd. Tickets $10 at the venue. • Brickhouse, 8 p.m., The Blue Grotto, 319 Victoria St. 21+. $5 cover. • Oktoberfest, Bailey’s Pub, 1050 Eighth St. Theatre: Western Canada Theatre presents Don’t Dress for Dinner, a sequel to Boeing Boeing, Sagebrush Theatre, continues to Oct. 17. Show times: Monday to Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m. Tickets at Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-3745483, kamloopslive.ca. Art: Piece of Mind, various artists, Old Courthouse Cultural Centre main gallery. A partnership between the B.C. Psychological Association and the Kamloops Arts Council, it focuses on psychological health. Continues to Nov. 14. Reception, 6:30 p.m., with guest speakers.

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The Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre Society presents Six Guitars, featuring Chase Padgett, on Tuesday, Oct. 20, at 7:30 p.m. Padgett portrays six guitar players, each with their own musical genre, character, songs and stories about how they fell in love with music. Tickets are $25 for adults, $22 for seniors and $20 for students. They can be bought online at ticketseller.ca or by calling the box office at 1-250549-7469.


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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B5

COMMUNITY

THANKFUL FOR ACTS HUMANITY

I

n flipping through the pages of KTW, it’s not hard to find bad news. A murder trial has splashed across our pages this week, along with the memory of a tragic incident on Overlanders Bridge from years past. It’s news and the reality is sometimes it’s sad, horrible and heart wrenching. But, here’s a little reminder of the simple acts of kindness in our community that often go unnoticed, one I recently witnessed that made me forget about all of the other stuff. I was preparing photos at a do-it-yourself kiosk at Walmart when I heard a baby crying. It was sharp, highpitch bellowing coming from behind me and, to be honest, my first thought was, “Ugh, pipe it, kid!” The screaming was on and off for a few minutes or so while I fumbled with cropping my pictures. It continued until I finished editing and printed them off.

JESSICA WALLACE Generation

GAP

It wasn’t until I turned around that I was able to hear beyond the crying and see what was happening. A young woman was standing next to a baby stroller at the counter in the photo centre, organizing several grocery and baby items. There were many products splayed everywhere in an area usually dedicated to simple photo-related transactions. An employee was helping the woman, ringing up the items and telling her the total amount owed, while the woman simultaneously combed through

it all, eliminating items one at a time while watching the costs subtracted from the total on the screen. She was embarrassed, apologizing while trying to lower the final tab by sifting through her musthaves and removing things she could do without. The baby continued crying and the employee helped, taking the time — not rushing the woman — and saying things like, “We’ve all been there.” She spent the better part of 10 minutes with her at the counter until the woman paid the bill and left with the baby. When I walked up to the counter, the employee said she’d charge me for the 1-hour service — a cheaper photo rate — for waiting, which seemed silly when I’d been mulling over ways I should have helped. I walked out of there with three photos for a steal, but was moved by the attention, generosity and compassion of the clerk. I’m sure she wasn’t

i pledge...

required to serve the woman in her department. She could have sent her up to the front — where a screaming baby and an empty bank account would have put the woman on display in front of a larger audience — or, perhaps, rushed her through her line, unable to take the time to lower her tab as needed. The employee took the time and showed compassion. It wasn’t something you learn in any customer service-training manual — it was just a person doing what she could in her circumstances to help. It was a small but significant act of humanity we should all be grateful for, especially on Thanksgiving. Because, you never know when you’ll be the one in Walmart’s photo centre in need of a hand and trying to pay for groceries. Jessica Wallace is a reporter for KTW. Email her at jessica@ kamloopsthisweek.com or find her on Twitter @KTWjess.

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I’m inviting everyone over. JAMES MACAULEY, AT CHARTWELL SINCE 2011. If you’re like James, you never miss an opportunity to get together with friends and have fun. That’s why you’re all invited to our Social Hour. Join us and learn why our residents feel so at home at Chartwell. CHARTWELL.COM

©Petland Canada Inc. 2014

October 1—31 OCT 20–Nov 2

to make your world more colourful

Tropical Fish Sale BUY GET

ALL 1 FISH FREE

SOCIAL HOUR Every Wednesday at 2:15 pm Live Music & Dancing

1789 Primrose Court, Kamloops

Buy one get one free fish cannot be combined with any other coupon or discount. Offer available

Buy one get one free fish cannot be combined any2015, otheror coupon or discount. Offer in-store only. in-store only. Offer is from October 1with to 31, while quantities last. Noavailable rain checks. Offer is from October 20 to November 2, 2014, or while quantities last. No rain checks.

905 Notre Dame Dr Kamloops (250) 828-0810 www.petlandkamloops.ca

Store Hours

Monday–Friday 9am–8pm Saturday 9am–6pm Sunday 11am–6pm Follow us on facebook: facebook.com/petlandkamloops

Make us part of your story. ™

778-376-2003 Conditions may apply.


B6

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

COMMUNITY

Hosting a haunted house this Halloween? It’s the spookiest time of the year and KTW is compiling a list of haunted houses and Halloween-themed events in Kamloops. Email details about the event — address, time, dates and other pertinent information — to editor@kamloopsthisweek.com and, as space permits, they will appear in the Community section until Halloween.

Haunted houses:

• The Field of Screams, Halloween yard, fireworks, kids’

games, begins at 4 p.m. Accepting donations for the Kamloops Food Bank. In the backyard at 1144 Bentley Place in North Kamloops.

Other events:

• Tickets are on sale now for the Ghost Train. The Halloweenthemed ride aboard the recently fixed 2141 steam engine will be at 7 p.m. on Oct. 23, Oct. 24 and Oct. 29 to Oct. 31, with a 2 p.m. ride — the only one suitable for children — on Oct. 31.

Tickets are $29 for adults, $24 for seniors, $20 for youth ages 13 to 18 and $15 for children ages four to 12. For more information, go online to kamrail.com/ghost-train. php. • Halloween Dance with Aaron Halliday (Almost Alan Jackson) on Saturday, Oct. 31, at 7 p.m. at the Fraternal Order of Eagles, 755 Tranquille Rd. Tickets are $15 each and includes snacks. Prizes for Best Costume. Seating is limited. Call 250-3761311.

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$102,000 raised for B.C. fire victims In the wake of raging wildfires, BC Liquor Stores’ customers and employees came together to help support Red Cross relief efforts for victims of the recent Rock Creek and Oliver wildfires to the tune of almost $102,000. To help support South Okanagan community members forced from their homes and starting from nothing following the fires, customers made donations of $2 or $5 — or multiples thereof — at checkouts at 196 B.C. Liquor Store in B.C. The donations, collected from Aug. 18 to Sept. 6, helped provide assistance to victims of the fires to reunite family members, provide necessities such as blankets, food and water and assist victims with longerterm needs such as replacing equipment to return to work and helping with rent.


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

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COMMUNITY

Inquire about breastfeeding policies LINDA BOYD

SPECIAL TO KTW

T

he thought of returning to work while continuing to breastfeed can feel overwhelming. In the past, many moms felt it was easier to stop breastfeeding once back at work, but that’s starting to change. Women are finding ways to combine breastfeeding and working with the support of their employer and child-care provider. When I first went back to work after my babies were born, I

was fortunate to have a lunch break that gave me enough time to breastfeed at their nearby day care. I appreciated the chance to reconnect with my baby in the middle of the day and it made it easier to return to work fulltime. Here are a few suggestions to help you continue breastfeeding after returning to work. • Don’t be afraid to discuss your needs with your employer. Your workplace is required to support your breastfeeding under the Human Rights Code. An employer can give you a more flexible schedule or extend

breaks to allow time to nurse, pump milk or visit and breastfeed your baby. Your employer benefits by gaining a happier, more loyal and more productive employee. As a bonus, your baby will likely be sick less often, which can mean fewer days missed at work. • Choose a childcare provider that is supportive of breastfeeding. Ask if they have a breastfeeding policy. Let them know how important breastfeeding is to you and your baby and discuss your baby’s feeding routines. Make sure they can

safely prepare and store your expressed breast milk. Having these conversations before you start back to work will make the transition go more smoothly for you and your baby. • Nearby child-care arrangements can make breastfeeding during work hours easier. Using an onsite day care or child care near the workplace is ideal for moms to maintain breastfeeding. Some moms have been able to arrange for their child-care provider to bring their baby to them at work so they can breastfeed. If breastfeeding during work hours isn’t easy to arrange,

you can express some breast milk. Ask your friends or members of a local breastfeeding café for tips on pumping at work. Your employer can help by providing a private office with a sink, an electrical outlet to pump milk and a place to store pumped milk. Once your baby is closer to one year of age and your milk supply is well established, you may not need to pump at work.

no working smoke alarms. Other fire safety tips for the home include: • Install smoke alarms in every bedroom, outside each separate sleeping area and on every level of the home, including the basement. • Interconnect smoke alarms throughout the home. This way, when one sounds, they all do. • Test alarms at least monthly by pushing the test button. • Replace all smoke alarms when they are 10 years old or sooner if they don’t respond properly. • Make sure everyone in the home knows the sound of the smoke alarm and understands what to do when they hear it. • If the smoke alarm sounds, get outside and stay outside. Go to your outside meeting place. • Call the fire department from outside the home. At the open house, enter the contest to have your home set up with interconnected smoke/CO alarms. For more information on fire safety, go online to nfpa.org/safety-information or contact Kamloops Fire Rescue by phone at 250-372-5131 or by email at firesafety@kamloops.ca.

Breastfeeding is reassuring to your toddler and you’ll benefit from the relaxing hormones released when you nurse. For more information about returning to work and breastfeeding, go online to bit. ly/1G3o9sd.

Linda Boyd is a dietician with Interior Health Authority.

A G R E AT G O L F I N G E X P E R I E N C E AT A N A F F O R DA B L E P R I C E.

S

ING V A S FOR K E E LW FINA

Open house at fire station Kamloops Fire Rescue (KFR) is hosting an open house tomorrow as part of Fire Prevention Week, the theme of which is “Hear the Beep Where You Sleep.” The open house will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Fire Station 1, 1205 Summit Dr. The parking lot will be closed to vehicles and arrangements have been made with Sahali Mall for the public to park in its lot during the open house. The day will feature fire-safety education, tours of the Fire Hall Museum and fire dispatch, demonstrations of fire apparatus and fire extinguishers and activities for the kids, including the inflatable Fire Safety House. A barbecue will also take place, with all donations going to the BC Professional Fire Fighters Burn Fund. The 2016 Fire Fighter Calendar will also be available for purchase. According to statistics, half of home fire deaths result from fires reported between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m., when most people are asleep. Smoking materials are the leading cause of home fire deaths and three out of five fire deaths occur in homes with no smoke alarms or

Your toddler may be content to drink expressed breast milk, whole cow milk or water in a cup while you’re at work and continue to breastfeed at home. Health Canada and Interior Health recommend breastfeeding for two years and beyond. Stopping breastfeeding because of work before you and baby are ready can add extra stress to an already challenging time.

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DINNER TO HELP SUPPORT SYRIAN REFUGEES While it may be turkey time for many Kamloopsians, a group of faculty members at Thompson Rivers University is hoping to entice people with another menu. With a Trinidadian chef in the kitchen, members of the university’s equity, human right and status of women committees are whipping up a Caribbean fundraising dinner to help support Syrian refugees. The menu includes chicken, fish, pholourie (small balls of split-pea flour fried and served

with a chutney), coconut bread and other dishes. Entertainment will be provided and there will be a short talk about the Syrian refugee situation. The dinner is on Saturday, Oct. 17, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Southwest Community Church, 700 Hugh Allan Dr. Tickets are $30 for adults, $20 for students, $6 for children ages six to 12 and free for those younger than six. Tickets are available from Gail Morong,

who can be contacted at 250-374-1457 or by email to gailmorong@ hotmail.com.

Tickets are also available from CTQ Consultants Ltd. at 1285 Dalhousie Dr.

8888 Barnhartvale Rd, Kamloops • 250-573-2453 eaglepointgolfresort.com 1.888.86.EAGLE

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FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

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marketing, and energy efficiency. To nominate, go online to chbaci. ca, complete the online entry form and deliver the entry package to the Canadian Home Builders’ Association’s CentraI Interior office at 921 Laval Cres. Members and non-members can submit nominations, with the deadline being Friday, Nov. 20.

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Vehicle(s) may be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offers. Offers only valid at participating dealers. Retail offers may be cancelled or changed at any time without notice. Dealer order or transfer may be required as inventory may vary by dealer. See your Ford Dealer for complete details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. For factory orders, a customer may either take advantage of eligible raincheckable Ford retail customer promotional incentives/offers available at the time of vehicle factory order or time of vehicle delivery, but not both or combinations thereof. Retail offers not combinable with any CPA/GPC or Daily Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfit Program or the Commercial Fleet Incentive Program (CFIP). *Until November 30, 2015, cash purchase a new 2015 F-150 Super Cab XLT 4X4 300A 3.5L for $29,999 after Manufacturer Rebates of $10,000 are deducted. Taxes payable on full amount of purchase price after Manufacturer Rebates have been deducted. Offers include freight and air tax of $1,800 but exclude variable charges of license, fuel fill charge, insurance, dealer PDI (if applicable), registration, PPSA, administration fees and charges, any environmental charges or fees, and all applicable taxes. All prices are based on Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. **Until November 30, 2015, receive 0% APR purchase financing on new 2015: Edge; and 2016: Escape models for up to 48 months, or 2015: Focus BEV, C-MAX, Taurus, Flex, F-150 (excluding Regular Cab XL 4x2 Value Leader); and 2016: F-250, F-350 to F-450 (excluding Chassis Cabs) models for up to 72 months, or 2015: Focus (excluding BEV), Fiesta; and 2016: Fusion models for up to 84 months to qualified retail customers, on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest interest rate. Example: $25,000 purchase financed at 0% APR for 36/60/72 months, monthly payment is $694.44/ $416.66/ $347.22, cost of borrowing is $0 or APR of 0% and total to be repaid is $25,000. Down payment on purchase financing offers may be required based on approved credit from Ford Credit. †Until November 30, 2015, lease a new 2015 Focus 4 DR SE Sedan or Hatch Automatic/2016 Escape S FWD for up to 60/48 months and get 1.99%/0.99% annual percentage rate (APR) lease financing on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest APR payment. Lease a model with a value of $22,114/$25,189 at 1.99%/0.99% APR for up to 60/48 months with an optional buyout of $7,298/$10,579, monthly payment is $215/$268 (the sum of twelve (12) monthly payments divided by 26 periods gives payee a bi-weekly payment of $99/$124), with $2,550/$1,945 down payment, total lease obligation is $15,450/$14,809. Additional payments required for PPSA, registration, security deposit, NSF fees (where applicable), excess wear and tear, and late fees. Offers include freight and air tax of $1,665/$1790 but exclude variable charges of license, fuel fill charge, insurance, dealer PDI (if applicable), registration, PPSA, administration fees and charges, any environmental charges or fees, and all applicable taxes. Some conditions and mileage restriction of 80,000km/64,000km for 60/48 months applies. Excess kilometrage charges are 12¢per km for Fiesta, Focus, C-Max, Fusion and Escape; 16¢per km for E-Series, Mustang, Taurus, Taurus-X, Edge, Flex, Explorer, F-Series, MKS, MKX, MKZ, MKT and Transit Connect; 20¢per km for Expedition and Navigator, plus applicable taxes. Excess kilometrage charges subject to change, see your local dealer for details. All prices are based on Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. ^Receive a winter safety package which includes: four (4) winter tires, four (4) steel wheels, and four (4) tire pressure monitoring sensors when you purchase or lease any new 2015/2016 Ford Fiesta, Focus, Fusion, C-MAX, Escape, Edge (excluding Sport) or Explorer between October 1, 2015 and November 30, 2015. This offer is not applicable to any Fleet (other than small fleets with an eligible FIN) or Government customers and not combinable with CPA, GPC, CFIP or Daily Rental Allowances. Vehicle handling characteristics, tire load index and speed rating may not be the same as factory supplied all-season tires. Winter tires are meant to be operated during winter conditions and may require a higher cold inflation pressure than all-season tires. Consult your Ford of Canada Dealer for details including applicable warranty coverage. Some conditions apply. See Dealer for details. ©2015 Sirius Canada Inc. “SiriusXM”, the SiriusXM logo, channel names and logos are trademarks of SiriusXM Radio Inc. and are used under licence. ©2015 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.

B8 www.kamloopsthisweek.com

COMMUNITY Entries will be judged by awardwinning builders and other professionals from the Lower Mainland. The Keystone trophies will be awarded at the black-tie gala event on Saturday, April 2, at the Sun Peaks Grand. The CHBA-Central Interior chapter has 200 members representing the Central Interior Region of BC.

Available in most new Ford vehicles with 6-month pre-paid subscription


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B9

COMMUNITY

Q: In light of recent roadwork in Kamloops, what does four red flashing traffic lights mean at an intersection? What about lights that aren’t yet turned on? A: A flashing red light means come to a complete stop before driving through. When there are four red flashing lights, treat the intersection like a four-way stop. That means: the first vehicle to arrive and come to a stop goes through first; if two vehicles arrive at the same time, the one on the right goes first; and, if two vehicles are facing each other and have arrived at the same time, the one making a left turn yields to the one going straight through. When the lights go out, also treat the intersection like a four-way stop.

KAMLOOPS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE & TD

2015 BUSINESS EXCELLENCE AWARDS KAMLOOPS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE & TD 2015 BUSINESS EXCELLENCE AWARDS

TICKETS ON SALE NOW!

K Q? amloops uery

You supply the questions, we find the answers. Send us your query on all things Kamloops to editor@kamloopsthisweek.com.

IHA’S NEW CEO Chris Mazurkewich has been appointed president and chief executive officer of the Interior Health Authority, effective Oct. 26. Mazurkewich rejoins the IHA after spending four years at Alberta Health Services, most recently as executive vice-president and chief operating officer for the provincial agency, where he worked with the chief medical officer overseeing the clinical operations of the province’s health-service delivery system, including more than 100 hospitals, community and residentialcare programs and support services, with a budget of almost $10 billion. Prior to his move to Alberta, Mazurkewich was the chief operating officer, strategic and corporate services, for the IHA from its inception in 2002 until 2009. President and CEO Dr. Robert Halpenny’s last day as CEO will be Oct. 23.

8th

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2015 COAST KAMLOOPS CONFERENCE CENTRE

MEMBERS $115+tax NON-MEMBERS $135+tax

KAMLOOPSCHAMBER.CA 250.372.7722

Samantha Grist, CBCF-funded Researcher.

Ann

ual

Thank you Kamloops! Event Highlights presents...

(All included in Admission) l

l

THE KAMLOOPS CULINARY EVENT OF THE YEAR.

l

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MONDAY

November 2, 2015 Limited Tickets Buy yours NOW!

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Culinary creations from 20 Local Chefs, Caterers and Food Trucks Wine and beer tasting from 8 Wineries and Breweries You vote for the People’s Choice Award for best chef of 2015 Live Jazz Music Amazing quantities of Food, Fun and Fellowship … all packed into one great evening! Funds used to help END CHILDHOOD HUNGER in Kamloops

Your support for the 2015 Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation CIBC Run for the Cure means everything. You are helping to fund innovative breast cancer research, health education, and advocacy programs for the breast cancer community. For the hundreds of thousands of women in Canada living with breast cancer and their loved ones, thank you for making a difference. Join us again next year on Sunday, October 2, 2016.

or buy online at

www.chefsinthecity.ca 6–9pm • $65/person

GOLD SPONSORS Radio NL Fulton & Company KGHM / Ajax Project KPMG Kamloops This Week Noran Printing

Local Sponsors

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McDonald’s

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Country 103

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Canada Safeway

Mastermind Studios

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Domino’s Pizza

Nancy Martens & Jeanne Coverdale (in memoriam)

Visual Signs & Printing

Friends of the Run New Gold Inc. (New Afton Mine) Picket Fence Graphics

GK Sound

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Ronix Security

Jubilee RV

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(†) Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation, Run for the Cure and pink ribbon ellipse are trademarks of the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation. ”CIBC For what matters.” is a TM of CIBC.


B10

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

COMMUNITY BET YOU CAN’T EAT JUST ONE

Have a little cash on hand when you hear a knock at your door this month — the Second Aurora Sparks have Girl Guide cookies for sale. The youngsters will be out and about in local neighbourhoods through October selling nut-free cookies for $5 a box. The money raised goes back into the program. Girl Guides is also open for registration, with Sparks starting at age five. For more, go online to girlguides.ca.

FRI. OCT 9 - KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK (KAMLOOPS)

GRAND OPENING

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• Hot deals in every department • Enter to win a $500 Best Buy gift card • Free gift with purchase • Radio station B-100 on location on Friday 3pm to 7pm

Aberdeen Mall, Kamloops

PKG. AFTER SAVINGS PS4 500GB NHL 16 and Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain Bundle • PS4 console with redesigned DualShock®4 wireless controller • Physical copy of NHL 16 3001058 Web Code: 10389980 / 10255427

Prices and offers good October 9 through October 15, 2015. Prices and payments are subject to applicable taxes before programming credits. References to savings or sale prices are comparisons to Best Buy Canada regular prices.New release dates are subject to change without notice. Gift cards good toward future in-store or online purchases. ADVERTISING POLICY: Prices valid at Best Buy stores in Canada. Some products in this ad may be slightly different from illustrations. Not all products are available in all stores. Best Buy is committed to accurate pricing. Website prices, products, and promotions may differ from our retail store offerings. Best Buy reserves the right to correct errors. Special offers cannot be combined or applied to previous purchases. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Terms and conditions subject to change without notice. No purchase necessary. Contest runs from October 9, 2015 to October 12, 2015 and is open to residents of Canada only. There is one grand prize to be won; a $500.00 Best Buy gift card. Odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Selected entrant(s) must answer a mathematical skill-testing question. For full contest rules, visit www.bestbuy.ca/grandopening One per person. Maximum 150 gifts available


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B11

Happy Thanksgiving! FROM COOPER'S & SAVE-ON FOODS

CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR WINNERS!

And A BIG THANKYOU to everyone who taught us how to make a turkey!

Don’t forget your Pumpkin Pie! WESTSYDE 3435 Westsyde Road

SUMMIT PLAZA LOCATION BROCKLEHURST #38 - 1800 Tranquille Rd.

LANSDOWNE #200-450 Lansdowne St.

VALLEYVIEW #9 - 2101 E. Trans Canada Hwy


B12

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Happy Thanksgiving!

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

B13

FROM COOPER'S & SAVE-ON FOODS

r u o Y ocal L airy! D BLACKWELL DAIRY FARM blackwelldairy.com 250-573-4747

EVERYTHING YOU CAN IMAGINE FOR HALLOWEEN 1395 HILLSIDE DRIVE • ABERDEEN VILLAGE (ACROSS FROM CHAPTERS) • (250) 377-4124


B12

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Happy Thanksgiving!

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

B13

FROM COOPER'S & SAVE-ON FOODS

r u o Y ocal L airy! D BLACKWELL DAIRY FARM blackwelldairy.com 250-573-4747

EVERYTHING YOU CAN IMAGINE FOR HALLOWEEN 1395 HILLSIDE DRIVE • ABERDEEN VILLAGE (ACROSS FROM CHAPTERS) • (250) 377-4124


B14

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Happy Thanksgiving! FROM COOPER'S & SAVE-ON FOODS

Tranquille Tunnel Tours Presents:

“CROSSROADS”

Tranquille Tunnel Tours “Crossroads” and Heritage Tours running throughout October fb.com/tranquillefarmfresh

Written and Produced by Andrew G Cooper

Tickets @ kamloopslive.ca

4600 Tranquille Road, Kamloops BC | 250.574.7474

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October 17 & 18 Threshing, lawnmower races and vintage tractors!

Harvest Festival


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

TRAVEL

B15

TRAVEL CO-ORDINATOR: JESSICA WALLACE 778-471-7533 or email jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com

Bedazzled by St. Petersburg’s monuments CHRIS MILLIKAN

TRAVEL WRITERS’ TALES

C

ruising aboard HAL’s Eurodam familiarizes us with captivating Baltic ports. Of them all, St Petersburg stands out. There, ship’s excursions prove perfect for first time visitors like us. With the need for costly visas eliminated and transportation simplified, two sightseeing days are filled to the max. Local guide Tanya introduces her storied city. Named for his patron saint, apostle Peter, Tsar Peter founded St. Petersburg in 1703. This new capital provided crucial Baltic access and prospered, despite frigid winters. Nowadays, icebreakers keep the port open year round. Our tour reveals a dizzying kaleidoscope of legendary city sights. French-inspired architecture tags this city as “Paris of the East.” An enormous equestrian statue memorializes Tsar Peter; nearby, Decembrists’ Square recalls an 1825 revolt. Massive red granite columns support St. Isaac’s, a Russian Orthodox cathedral designed to accommodate 14,000 standing worshippers. Driving through old neighbourhoods and on into the countryside, we reach World Heritage “Peterhof,” Tsar Peter’s summer palace. Strolling alongside resplendent yellow, white trimmed buildings, we pause at a Russian

Orthodox Church topped with ornate golden domes. “Starting as a small family residence, this royal complex eventually encompassed these auxiliary buildings, upper and lower parks, several palaces and even a forest,” Tanya explains. Tsar Peter designed Peterhof’s first thirty rooms in 1714. Daughter Elizabeth and grandson’s wife, Catherine the Great, expanded his efforts. Inside, the Tsar’s bedchamber and oak-paneled office seem surprisingly austere compared to nearby chambers. The ballroom’s gilt carvings border tiers of towering windows. Between, 16 circular paintings feature Ovid’s Metamorphoses and Virgil’s Aeneid. And painted among ceiling clouds, daughter Elizabeth “floats.” Tanya smiles, “As you see, they loved the embellished Western European style . . . and today, Peterhof is often compared to Versailles.” In adjacent Chesma Hall, twelve gigantic paintings celebrate Russia’s naval victory during the RussoTurkish war. From the front terrace, we gaze over the Grand Cascade. This magnificent creation incorporates sixty-four fountains, two hundred gilded statues, bas-reliefs and other ornamentation. Amid its central pond, Rastrelli’s golden Samson wrestles a lion. A stroll along the lower gardens’ Marine Canal takes us to a pier on the Baltic. Aboard a hydrofoil, we’re back in the city within thirty minutes.

The Peterhot Grand Cascade fountain is named fittingly, with gold sculptures spraying water into an ornate pond.

Swimmers bask along the beach where Tsar Peter first established his defense fortress against the Swedes. Gold-spires soaring, Peter and Paul Cathedral entomb Russian royalty from Peter the Great to Alexander III. Disembarking along the Palace Embankment, we behold Catherine’s fabled Winter Palace. Visiting Resurrection of Christ Church concludes this day. Onion domes sparkle with blue, yellow and green glazed decorative tiles, two in gold. Inside, 7,500 square meters of glorious mosaics drench walls and ceilings with brilliant, almost overpowering colour. Breathtaking motifs frame radiant biblical scenes and figures. Shimmering in gold, silver and coloured enamels, Holy Gates enclose the

main altar. “Assassinated here in 1881, Alexander II’s son established this memorial on the very spot of his murder; it became fondly known as ‘Church of Our Saviour of Spilled Blood’,” Tanya relates. “Following our revolution, the church was ransacked and became a warehouse. “Russian artisans took over 27 years to restore it to former glory. “Using early pictures and lithographs, even the stolen Holy Gates were accurately re-created.” Wondrous artworks fill our second day. “One of the world’s oldest museums, The Hermitage houses’ three million pieces of art in the Winter Palace and four other buildings,” says guide Eva.

“We’ll just sample some of the most notable.” A marble spectacle in itself, the 18th-century Jordan Staircase leads upward to a lavish second floor ballroom. Following her husband’s death, Catherine the Great met eligible bachelors in the smaller Pavilion Hall. There, the bedazzling Peacock Clock, a magnificent gift from one such suitor, still works. Over a hundred grand halls and rooms exhibit 13th to 20th century European art. Among many marble sculptures, we spot Voltaire, eyes a-twinkle. Catherine, we learn, commissioned Houdon to create this likeness of the French philosopher, her beloved friend and correspondent. Another gallery encloses Tsar Peter’s original

Rembrandts, collected while studying shipbuilding in Holland. Adjoining rooms contain Catherine’s extensive masterpiece collections by da Vinci, Raphael and Goya. Paintings by Degas, Renoir, Monet, Cezanne, Gauguin and Matisse form the largest collection of French art outside France. A docent welcomes us into the Golden Room, an exclusive vaulted gallery. Pointing out exhibits of nomadic Scythian treasures, she recounts, “Uncovered during excavations and sometimes grave robbers, Tsars would purchase these fine gold artifacts.” We marvel at the delicate workmanship of each exquisitely crafted piece. Indeed, St. Petersburg’s dazzling monuments are a splendid legacy of imperial Russia in its heyday.

You’re invited to the Wells Gray Tours Fall Destination Travel Show!

250-374-0831

250 Lansdowne Street 800-667-9552

wellsgraytours.com

Join us for a media presentation of upcoming tours, cruises and international destinations. Tuesday, November 10th 1:30 to 3:30 PM St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, 1136 6th Ave. Please RSVP 250-374-0831 Jasper Park Lodge Senior Fall Getaway 6 Seats left! Oct 25 Nov 26 American Thanksgiving in Spokane EB Discounts! 25 Guatemala Winter Get-Away Jan 26

5 days 4 days 19 days

Hot off the Press! Early booking discounts! Caribbean Cruise with Panama Canal 25 India Safari

15 days 22 days

Feb 2 Feb 28

$1175 $995 $6150 from

$4655 $10,225

Photo: Guatemala Winter Get-Away

The Wells Gray Tours Advantage • Early Booking Discounts (EB) • Experience Rewards Program • Pick up points throughout Kamloops • Tour 25- Limit is 25 travellers

25


B16

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SAVE EVEN MORE THIS

THANKSGIVING This Friday, Oct. 9th and Saturday, Oct. 10th ONLY! PLUS EARN…

50

on your grocery purchase

SPEND $50 AND EARN

50 BONUS

ALL PRODUCE IS 20% OFF!

AIR MILES® Reward Miles

*With coupon and a minimum $50 Safeway grocery purchase made in a single transaction.

Coupon Valid in British Columbia from October 9 - 10, 2015

Enjoy more savings on hundreds & hundreds of items. No coupon required. 20% off ALL regular and sale priced items.

Limit one Bonus Offer per transaction. Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Purchase must be made in a single transaction. AIR MILES coupons cannot be combined with any other discount offer or AIR MILES coupon offer including Customer Appreciation Day & Senior’s Day. Not valid at Safeway Liquor Stores. Coupon excludes prescriptions, diabetes merchandise, insulin pumps, insulin pump supplies, blood pressure monitors, tobacco, transit passes, gift cards, enviro levies, bottle deposits and sales tax. Other exclusions apply. See Customer Service for complete list of exclusions. Cashiers: Scan the coupon only once to activate the Bonus Offer. Do not scan more than once.

®TM Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Co. and Safeway.

DONATE PACKAGE

OR

DONATE PACKAGE

Prices effective October 9th and 10th, 2015 only at British Columbia Safeway stores. See instore for complete details. We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. Some items may not be available at all stores. All items while stocks last. Actual items may vary slightly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions only. Advertised prices do not include GST. ®™ Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Co. and Safeway. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ.

BC1 Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Mission City, Maple Ridge, Peace Arch, Langley TImes,

OCTOBER 9 10

FRI

SAT


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Memories Milestones &

With lots of love from

Jeanne & Bob Chambers celebrate their 57 th Anniversary October 10, 1958

♥ Love from the family

HAPPY 50TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY!

Congratulations to Jan and David Davies, married October 8, 1965 in Vancouver, BC. What a milestone!

With lots of love from Susan, Trevor, Carlos, Joel, Pauline and your families in England xo

Happy 80 th Birthday Jeanne

HAPPY 50TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY JOHN & DARLENE DECICCO

October 8

October 9, 1965

Lots of Love From your children and grandchildren

Love from the family

95TH LEONARD FORD October 11

Let us help you say HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Friday Edition Kamloops This Week • Full Colour Announcements • Bonus No Extra Charge for Colour

♥ Love from your family ♥ Let Kamloops know about your new arrival! FRIDAY EDITION • Full Colour Announcements • Bonus No Extra Charge for Colour Call 250.374.7467 for details

Call 250.374.7467

B17


B18

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Announcements

Announcements

Announcements

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Anniversaries

Coming Events

Personals

Drivers/Courier/ Trucking

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

If you have an

Widowed Man N.S. N.D would like to meet slim attractive woman 55+-. Must be self sufficient, humorous and have a easy smile for weekend time together. Please send recent photo and letter to Box 436 Cache Creek, BC V0K 1H0

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

US capable Class 1 Drivers required immediately: We are an Okanagan based transport company looking for qualified drivers for US loads we run primarily in the Pacific Northwest, Utah, Arizona and Nevada. We offer a new pay rate empty or loaded. All picks and drops paid. Assigned units company cell phones and fuel cards. Regular home time Direct deposit paid every second Friday with no hold backs. We offer a rider and pet policy. Company paid US travel Insurance. All applicants must have reliable transportation and a positive attitude. Please fax resume & abstract to 250-546-0600 or by email to parris@ricknickelltrucking.com NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

Word Classified Deadlines •

2pm Friday for Tuesday’s Paper.

upcoming event for our

2pm Tuesday for Thursday’s Paper.

2pm Wednesday for Friday’s Paper.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Advertisements should be read on the first publication day. We are not responsible for errors appearing beyond the first insertion.

kamloopsthisweek.com

It is agreed by any Display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event that errors occur in the publishing of any advertising shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for the portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only and there will be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement.

go to and click on the calendar to place your event.

Information

IN FIND IT THE CLASSIFIEDS

Lost & Found Found: Change purse with jewelry near Riverside Park on Oct 5th. 250-372-3019. Found: Damaged camera, only disk survived in the Lac Le Jeune area mid June. Email: laclejeunecamera @gmail.com

DEADLINE CHANGE Kamloops This Week will be closed on Monday, October 12th, 2015 for the Thanksgiving Holiday. Please note the following Classified Deadline Change: The deadline for Tuesday October 13th paper will be Friday, October 9th at 11am.

Employment Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Paul & Company

Career Opportunities 7238451

Experienced Litigation Legal Assistant MJB Lawyers is looking for an experienced litigation legal assistant to work in a busy, expanding practice. Apply in confidence to 700 – 275 Lansdowne Street, Kamloops, BC V2C 6H6, email info@mjblaw.com, or fax 1-855-374-6992.

A healthy local economy depends on you

SHOP LOCALLY

PERFECT Part-Time

We have an employment opportunity for a

3 Days Per Week

Family Law Lawyer

Lawyers • Mediators • Notaries • Arbitrators

We are looking to grow our family law team in our busy law practice and are seeking an experienced Family Law Lawyer.

We have an employment opportunity for a

Opportunity

call 250-374-0462

Personals Gentleman non-smoking would like to meet slim nonsmoking lady for companionship and who likes to travel. 60-70’s. 250-612-1790.

Looking For Love? Try your luck with 1x1 boxed ad $35 plus tax for 2 weeks. Price includes box number. Call 250-371-4949 to place your ad and for more details. Looking for single 40-50 for longterm ship. Must like the and beaches. Must and healthy. Please time. 250-376-8578.

Business Opportunities

EXPANDING INTO Kamloops!

Includes Training. Call Dave for Home Inspection Franchise Presentation. 1.855.301.2233 www.bc.abuyerschoice.com

7211786 THANKSGIVING

TRY A CLASSIFIED AD

7212165

GWM relationoutdoors be clean call any-

Business Opportunities

We offer: • Competitive salary and benefit package • Excellent work atmosphere

Legal Assistant

Experience in family law an asset. Qualified applicants only.

Submit your resume in confidence by email to:

Submit your resume in confidence by email to: arlene@kamloopslaw.com

arlene@kamloopslaw.com

Urban Systems has an immediate opening

for a Payroll Coordinator

7176492

Truck Driver Training

Professional Truck Driver Program - Funding available for those who qualify!

This is a full-time position with our accounting team based in Kamloops. The primary function of this new position will be to support the Payroll Administrator in the preparation and processing of multi-jurisdictional payroll for 400 plus employees. Our preferred candidate will have 3-5 years experience in a professional office environment in a payroll capacity as well as related education. Our priority is to fill the position with the right candidate who is eager to learn and maintains a positive attitude and enthusiasm to help. Please visit our website for more details on this position and how to apply - www.urbansystems.ca

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

CERTIFIED ICBC AIR BRAKE COURSE

October 9-11 • October 23-25

Air Brakes

TRAINING TRUCK DRIVERS FOR 27 YEARS!

16 Hour Course 20 Hour Course

UNDER $10,000

call 250.828.5104 or visit

tru.ca/trades

Class 1, 2, 3 and B-Train Driver Training 7239256

Do You Want to Make a Difference?

With over 100 areas being serviced across Canada, we are looking for

“NEW DEALERS” Window Blinds & Shutters •Ottawa, Naniamo, BC ON •Kingston, Victoria, BCON • Vancouver, BC North Bay, ON • Kamloops, BC ON •Cornwall, Burnaby, BC •Peterborough, Kelowna, BC ON •Belleville, WenƟcton, BC ON

••No NoZoyalƟes Royalties ••Home Home Based Based Business Business ••Very VeryLarge LargeAreas Areas ••No NoInventory Inventory ••Very VerySmall SmallInvestment • Financing Available Investment ••LucraƟve Lucrative

“Persons Too Young To Retire” www.theblindspot.ca We Support Children of OPERATION SMILE 1-800-290-6972 ...Desired Profile...

If you are looking to start your career or take your career to the next level in retail or commercial banking; or in personal or commercial insurance, located in Kamloops, BC… look no further! Valley First, a division of First West Credit Union, is looking for high performing team players in Kamloops, BC who want to make a real difference in the lives of our members and clients. Our employees are integral to our success! Valley First is a division of First West Credit Union, BC’s third-largest credit union. With its’ regional office located in Penticton, BC, Valley First has 19 Valley First branches and 12 insurance offices throughout the Okanagan Valley to serve its local members. We offer a great place to work, opportunities for advancement and professional development, competitive compensation and benefits and rewards for exceptional performance. If you are energetic, self-motivated and want to contribute to a high-performing team; you want to make a difference in your community, work hard and play hard and thrive on challenges, then we want to hear from you. Visit our site to see great career opportunities we offer and to apply!

www.valleyfirst.com/careers We thank all applicants for their interest in Valley First; however, only short listed candidates will be contacted.


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Work Wanted

Furniture

Misc. for Sale

Education/Trade Schools

Job wanted by Computer Programmer-Analyst /OfďŹ ce Worker/Tutor Detail oriented, organized, problem-solver, extremely computer literate. Strong proofreading, editing, technical writing, public speaking skills. Can teach practically anything I know. IT work preferred but any job using problem-solving skills could be a good match. Gene Wirchenko 250-8281474. genew@telus.net

HUNTER & FIREARMS

Pets & Livestock

Antique Chesterfield & chair Dusty Rose Velour $3500. Antique loveseat Apple Green Velour $1000. 250-374-6674. ChesterďŹ eld & loveseat. $450. Chesterfield $400. 2-Recliners $75-$400. Solid Oak Ent Ctr $450. 250-579-8285. Corner display unit curved glass sides $400 250-3725062 Matching reclining couch & chair. $300. Coffee/2 end tables. $200. Entertainment Centre. $100. 2-TV’S $50/each. 250-573-5645.

Employment Caretakers/ Residential Managers MOTEL ASST Manager Team to run small Motel in Parksville BC. Non-Smoking, no Pets, good Health, fulltime live-in position. Fax 250-5861634 or email resume to: kjjr27@hotmail.com

Courses. Next C.O.R.E. Oct. 24th & 25th, Saturday and Sunday. P.A.L. Oct. 18th, Sunday. Challenges, Testing ongoing daily. Professional outdoorsman & Master Instructor:

Bill

250-376-7970

Employment

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

PETS For Sale?

Interior Heavy Equipment Operator School. Real World Tasks. Weekly start dates. GPS Training! Funding Options. Already have experience? Need certification proof? Call 1-866-399-3853 or IHESHOOL.com

for only $46.81/week, we will place your classified ad into Kamloops, Vernon & Salmon Arm.

Help Wanted

*some restrictions apply.

TRI-CITY SPECIAL!

EARN EXTRA $$$

I PAY Cash $$$ For All Scrap Vehicles! and $5 for auto batteries Call or Text Brendan 250-574-4679

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

$500 & Under Do you have an item for sale under $750?

Help Wanted

(250)371-4949

classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com

Merchandise for Sale Washer and Dryer set. $400. 250-554-1219.

Auctions AUCTION

1109 Chief Louis Way Saturday, October 17th at 9:30 am. Doors open at 9:00 am Preview of Auction items Friday, October 16th 10:00 am - 2:00 pm.

Did you know that you can place your item in our classifieds for

250-374-0462

one week for FREE?

Opportunity Tower Barbershop wants to give experienced barbers and hairdressers the opportunity to earn above average income. No clientele required for this very busy shop in Northhills Mall. Start earning immediately f/t or p/t call Alta 376-9223 or Barry 579-8166 for more info and interview.

Call our Classified Department for details!

250-371-4949

*some restrictions apply

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

Sales ADVERTISING Consultants: Our company is always looking for great sales representatives to add to our team. Our business requires a highly organized individual with ability to multi-task in a fun, fastpaced team environment. Strong interpersonal skills and a strong knowledge of sales and marketing are required. Excellent communication skills, valid driver’s license and reliable vehicle are necessary. If you have a passion for the advertising business, are creative and thrive on challenges, we want to hear from you. Interested applicants should email their resume and cover letter to:khall@aberdeenpublishing.com We thank all applicants; only those being considered for an interview will be contacted.

Work Wanted HOME & YARD HANDYMAN If you need it done, Give us a call ! Steve 250-320-7774. JOURNEYMAN Carpenter All Renovations Call for quote. No job too small. (250) 571-6997 Retired College Instructor willing tutor Grade 11/12 Biology and Chemistry, College Anatomy and Physiology after school and weekends. 778471-5919.

Misc. for Sale 12-place setting 63pcs American Beauty. $300. Procraft vacuum table. $100. S.west vac table. $150. 851-7687. 4 Goodyear Tires. P23555/R17. $400. 250-377-3002. Beautiful 9X12 Persian wool area rug, cream/teal colour. $750. 778-471-1816. Elec cheese grinder $100. (250) 374-7979 Jazzy Select Elite Power Chair. Like new. New batteries. $1,800. 250-376-0862. Lawn Ornament scale model of Dutch windmill 1.7m to top of blade $700obo 579-8915 MISC4Sale: Camperette $300, Oak Table Chairs-$400, 2-Standard 8ft truck canopies $300/ea Call 250-320-5194 after 6pm or leave msg. SEA-CANS 20ft starting at $2650. 40ft. starting at $2950. Kamloops. 250-374-5555. Solid oak table $97, China Cabinet $119 Kitchen cabinet set $395 (250) 299-6477

Appliances KTW requires door to door substitute carriers for all areas in the city. Vehicle is an asset Call 250-374-0462

Jewels, Furs White Gold engagement ring. Main diamond is .94 carat with another .5 carat in smaller diamonds. Size 7. Recently appraised at $5500 asking $4000 Call to view 250-578-7202 after 5pm

WANTED! Newer MacBook Pro or MacBook Air 250-3711333

Fruit & Vegetables APPLES:Spartan, Red & Gold en Delicious 0.60/lb. Walnuts $2/lb. Bring boxes! 579-9238.

Firewood/Fuel

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Tools

Food Products

Food Products

Holzer saw $1500, Safety Harness $500, Myte Extractor $2500. 250-377-8436.

TRY A CLASSIFIED AD

ROLL ENDS AVAILABLE $5-$10/ ROLL 1365 B Dalhousie Drive Kamloops BC call for availability 250-374-7467

Steel bandsaw $200. Dyson Upright Vacuum $200. Portable Shaw Sat Dish $75. 2-new Rec. $100. Pwr control for MH $200. 250-851-7687.

Misc. Wanted Private Coin Collector Looking to Buy Collections, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins, Estates + Chad: 778-281-0030, Local.

Sporting Goods Bowex Elite Plus. New in box. $500. 250-578-2663. Men’s Multi-spd Raleigh Mtn Bike. $150. Elliptical Trainer. $650. 778-471-1816.

WHERE DO YOU TURN

TO LEARN WHAT’S ON SALE?

YOUR NEWSPAPER:

The link to your community

Help Wanted

7236604

RECORD BREAKING SALES VOLUMES NEW AND PREOWNED VEHICLE SALES CONSULTANT NEEDED We are looking for a motivated, self starter with sales experience, We offer a very competitive sales plan and benefits, along with full training and support.

Forward resume in confidence to Brant Roshinsky at Kamloops Dodge Email: brant@kamloopsdodge.com

•

BEFORE YOU SELL: • ASPEN • BIRCH • COTTONWOOD • PINE - SPRUCE - FIR PULP LOGS Please call NORM WILCOX

24/7 • anonymous • conďŹ dential • in your language

YOUTH AGAINST VIOLENCE LINE

1-800-680-4264

info@youthagainstviolence.com

Stand up. Be heard. Get help.

(250) 395-6218 (direct line) • (250) 706-9728 (cell) (250) 395-6201 (fax)

Businesses & Services Mind Body Spirit

Relax and unwind with a full body massage for appointment couples welcome (250) 682-1802

Carpet Cleaning 7188069

CARPET CLEANING J.WALSH & SONS 250.372.5115

Quick drying. Use same day.

Financial Services GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com LARGE FUND Borrowers Wanted Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income. Call Anytime 1-800-639-2274 or 604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca TAX FREE MONEY is available, if you are a homeowner, today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income. Call Anytime 1-800-639-2274 or 604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca

Handypersons RICKS’S SMALL HAUL For all Deliveries & Dump Runs. Extra large dump trailers for rent. Dump Truck Long and Short Hauls!!

250-377-3457

Home Improvements

GREAT PRODUCT. SMART SERVICE.

WE will pay you to exercise!

Only 3 issues a week!

call 250-374-0462

info@nuoors.ca | 250.372.8141

Landscaping

CALL FOR A FREE ESTIMATE:

250-376-2689

VIEW OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY ONLINE AT WWW.K AMLOOPSDODGE.COM

MID-CAN ACCOUNTING CMA/CPA will do full cycle accounting in my home office. Accounting system provided or your preference. Specializing in Invoicing, A/R, Payment, Banking, and Financial Statements. + EXCEL adhoc reporting Barb @ 250-318-8059

Concrete & Placing

PETER’S YARD SERVICE

Hedge Trimming, Leaf Raking Tree Removal and Tree Pruning Licensed & Certiďƒžed

250-572-0753

Concrete & Placing

Luigi’s SMALL

YOUR BUSINESS HERE

Only $150/month

Run your 1x1 semi display classiďŹ ed in every issue of Kamloops This Week

Call 250-371-4949

classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com

Maintenance Services 7188089 FURNACE

DUCT CLEANING SPECIAL ON NOW!

J.WALSH & SONS 250.372.5115 Misc Services ACCURATE SPRAYFOAM LTD. Now booking in your area for August and September. Call Toll Free 1-877-553-2224 for more information www.accuratesprayfoam.ca

WWW.NUFLOORS.CA

Aerate t Power Rake Yard/Lot/Garden Clean Up Prune t Mow t Weed Whack Weed t Hedge Trim t Plant Gravel/Rock/Mulch t Turf Garden Walls t Paving Stones Irrigation: Start up & Repairs

Deliver Kamloops This Week

Landscaping

Carpet - Hardwood Laminate - Vinyl Tile - Stone

Fitness/Exercise

Accounting/Tax/ Bookkeeping

1-866-374-4477 2525 E. T R A NS C A N A DA H W Y, K A ML OOP S, BC

Box 67, 100 Mile House B.C. V0K 2E0

New Miller Bobcat 250 Welder. Never used. $3,500. 250578-2663.

for a route near you!

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

Education/Trade Schools

B19

CONCRETE JOBS

BRICKS, BLOCKS, PAVERS, SIDEWALKS + PRUNING

F R E E E S T I M AT E S !

t

STAMP COLLECTOR Looking to buy stamps stampcollector@shaw.ca

Painting & Decorating B and C PAINTING 25 years experience. Fully insured. Free estimates. No job to small. 250-319-8246, 250-554-8783

Miracle Painting & Handyman Services. 30 years plus, licensed. Senior discount. Ask for Gilles (250) 571-5560

Stucco/Siding


B20

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Real Estate

Rentals

Acreage for Sale

Apt/Condo for Rent

THOMPSON VILLA APARTMENTS

17Acre Farm Located 5 min from Butchard Gardens. It was Dairy Farm. It has Huge Metal Loafing Barn/Hay Barn Several out Buildings. Year Round Creek and Pond on Property. Southern Exposure Farm House Extra Income of 40Ft Trailer and Yurt. This property could be used for Berry/Grapes Greenhouse Operation plus Hobby Farm. Pictures on Request. $975,000 (250) 588-5180

Apt/Condos for Sale

1 Bedroom Apartments $830 - 910 • Seniors Orientated • Close to the Hospital • Quiet Living Space • Underground Parking • Newly Renovated Suites 520 Battle Street, Kamloops, BC, V2C 2M2 250-372-0510 2Bdrm clean quiet Adult Building, Northshore apt $900mo, heat incl ns/p Avail Oct 15th 250-554-0175 55+ building pet ok North Shore Lrg 2bdrm newly renovated avail now ref req 250299-3883.

Acacia Tower

For Sale By Owner Very comfortable 3bdrm 2 1/2 bth home on 5 acres within city limits Rayleigh area $497,000 call 250-377-8404

1bdrm & bachelor suites starting @$615/mth. Located downtown with great views, close to hospital, pharmacy, shopping & transit. 1 yr FREE Telus Essential TV pkg with signing 1 year lease. N/P, N/S. reference, credit check & security deposit required.

250-374-7455

Westsyde Mobile. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, central air, carport, addition, pets allowed. $169,995. 250-319-5760.

Houses For Sale

Available spacious 1bdrm apts. Starting at $850/mo. The Sands Apartment. Centrally located. On-site Management. 250-828-1711.

NORTH SHORE

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Clean quiet buildings. Reasonable Rental Rates

Rentals

Transportation

Transportation

Homes for Rent

Suites, Lower

Auto Financing

Cars - Domestic

FULL Small updated hse. 2bdrm full bsmt. $1250+util. SatTV incld. 2 fncd yrds, fruit trees & garden $100 gift card for 1yr lease 250-851-9310

2BDRM large N/S N/P Close to schools Working person pref’d $950 incl util 819-3368

Rentals

Lakeside Homes: 2bdrms, W/D. $750/mo +util. 1 cabin lrg balcony. $625 util incld. 778773-2465/778-928-4084.

Recreation ✰SHUSWAP LAKE!✰ VACATION RENTAL

5 Star Resort in Scotch Creek B.C. 1-bdrm 1-bath Park Model. Tastefully decorated guest cabin. One of only 15 lots on the beautiful sandy beach with a wharf for your boat. Provincial Park, Golf, Grocery/Liquor Store and Marina all minutes away. Resort has 2 pools, 2 hot-tubs, Adult and Family Clubhouse, Park, Playground. Asking $1500/week. 4 day, 1-week, 2-week & monthly rentals available. BOOK NOW! FMI CALL 1-250-371-1333

Room & Board Room and board North Kam for working person $750 per month (778) 470-4300

Senior Assisted Living

Independent and assisted living, short term stay’s, 24 hour nursing care and respite.

Utilities not included

CALL 250-682-0312

FOR SALE OR TRADE for residential property in Kamloops. This very bright, fully furnished, three bedroom/two bath corner unit townhouse in Big White offers your very own hot tub on the patio, carport, high end furniture/appliance pkge, stacking washer/dryer and rock-faced fireplace. Short stroll to Gondola, skating rink, tube park, Day Lodge. Ideal for family or as a revenue generator throughout the ski season. Strata fees only $155.00 per month. Call Don at 250682-3984 for more information. Asking $189,000.00

Rentals Apt/Condo for Rent 1&2bdrm apartment Down Town Covered prk Private ent common laundry, n/p n/s $675 -$890 376-8131 /250-3711623 2bdrm apt. Downtown. $1200/mo. heat included. N/S, N/P. 250-319-3680.

BC Best Buy Classified’s

Shared Accommodation

Place your classified ad in over 71 Papers across BC.

DOWNTOWN, shared 2bdrm furn apt. ns/np. $500/mo Incds util, cable & Wifi 778-471-3210

Call 250-371-4949 for more information

Male seeking roommate Westsyde Furn. Close to bus $500/mo util incl. Avail Immed. Call 250-579-2480. North Shore $400 per/mo incl util & basic cable, np/ns 250-554-6877 / 250-377-1020

Duplex / 4 Plex Brock 5bdrm duplex 3-up, 2-down. No dogs. $1100 +util. Ref, SD. Reliable family. 250682-0516, 250-376-0071. Call 3pm-7pm

N/Shore share 2bdrm apt. Quiet and clean. $400/mo inclds everything. 554-6761. Roommate to share house, w/pets and mature person North Shore smoker ok $600/ mo incl util. 250-376-4992.

Suites, Lower

Mobile Homes & Pads

1BDRM Downtown NP, no smokers! Inclds utils & int. $800/mth. 250-318-0318

3Bdrm mobile home Westsyde. Avail now. F/S, W/D, exc. cond $750 250-579-5381

1bdrm n/p, n/s util inl for quiet single person cls to bus and shopping $800 250-372-0808

Homes for Rent

2bdrm 4 quiet working person or couple, c/a, nice yard, no pets, shr util, ref $850 Avail Nov 1st (250) 376-0633

AllFURNISHED4Bdr2baShort/ longTermS.ShoreN/S/P$2370. 604-802-5649/1-888-208-5203

Daylight Bach Suite for single person $650/mo util incl + cab. Shared lndry N/S/N/P Avail now. 250-374-9983 Sahali. Legal suite all furnished. $1,800/mo includes util any extra help required neg. Suitable for independent senior lady. 250-376-5392.

2011 Hyundai Genesis 2.0T. Auto, prem. pkg, 28,700kms. $16,995. 250-554-1321

New 2bdrm Lrg suite prt ent, n/s, n/p w/d f/s util incl Avail Nov 1st $950 250-376-0107 North Shore. 1bdrm, F/S, W/D. N/S, N/P. Avail Immed. $800. 250-376-1072. Sahali 1bdrm suite, fully furn. brand new. N/S, N/P. $900/mo. 250-374-7096. Semi furn 1bdrm. in Batchelor area private ent and driveway. n/s/n/p, ref req’d. $750 Util/int incld. 554-3863.

Cars - Domestic 1997 Honda Prelude V-Tec, fully loaded. Clean inside & out. $6,000. 250-578-2080. 2002 Honda Civic. 2dr, 5-spd. $800. 250-376-5653.

Welcoming Cumfy 1bedroom. Close to University, Hospital. Student or quiet person. Excellent Location. $495or$725 ns/np. Call (250) 299-6477

Suites, Upper Newly reno’d upper flr in VV home 3bdrm, 2-1/2bath $1700m util inc 250-318-7993

Townhouses TOWNHOUSES Best Value In Town

NORTH SHORE *Bright, clean & Spacious 2&3 bedrooms

Commercial/ Industrial Property 7210200

2004 Chrysler Intrepid 3.5L, full load, new brakes, tires, battery. $3850/obo. 376-4163 2005 Toyota Corolla 5 speed extra set of mounted tires /rims $5250.00 250-318-8870 2006 Ford Taurus. 4dr, auto. Green. 177,000kms. Good shape. $3,550. 250-851-0264.

SAHALI Sat, Oct 10th. 11am-3pm. 371750 McKinley Crt. W/D, furniture, wooden dresser, chairs. VALLEYVIEW Friday to Sunday, Oct. 9-11th. 9am-2pm. 1834 Russet Wynd.

lilacgardens1@gmail.com NO PETS

WESTSYDE Sat Oct 10th, 8am-12pm, 921 McQueen Dr, antiques, pottery seconds & extruder, hshold goods & outdoor furn, books.

RUN UNTIL SOLD

Do you have a vehicle, boat, rv, or trailer to sell? With our Run til sold specials you pay one flat rate and we will run your ad until your vehicle sells.* • $56.00 (boxed ad with photo) • $35.00 (regular 3 line ad)

ONLY $35.00(plus Tax)

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

Camaro 1994 Z-28, V8, 6spd. cruise, a/c 125,000km $4,999 (250) 554-3240

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

Call: 250-371-4949

Scrap Car Removal

2006 Mazda 3. 157,000kms c/w snow tires/rims. One owner. All receipts kept. $6,000. 250-376-0992.

Wanted Small Pick-up for dump loads, Must run good don’t care about looks. Will pay up to $800 (250) 3711333

Commercial Vehicles

1967 Ford Falcon Futura St.6 Auto 2dr all original runs good, $5,500 obo (250) 376-5722

Auto Accessories/Parts 1-set of Nokian Winters on rims 235/75/R16. Used one season. Regular price new $1200 selling for $600. Call 250-851-1304. 2-215/60R16 Snow tires. $200. 2-245/50VR16 Eagle Snow. $200. 4-275/45R20 Eagle M&S. $400. 2-225/60R16 M&S. $200. 2-275/40ZR17 M&S. $300. 250-319-8784.

2008 Cadillac CTS Premium. 130,000kms. AWD, Great in the winter, BLK w/leather interior, CD, power windows, seats, mirrors, locks, heating/cooling seats. $15,800. 250-320-6900.

Commercial/ Industrial Property

Recreational/Rent

7210187

RV BOAT STORAGE Secure gated outdoor storage for RV/boats, etc. 1740 Kelly Douglas Road. $45/mo incl. GST. John 250-372-1999. Kamloops.

Trucks & Vans 1987 GMC Cube Van. Setup for tradesman. Runs good. $2,800. 250-3741988.

1993 Ford Ranger Ext-cab, V-6, auto, 2wd, 211,570kms. Winters on rims, canopy. $2,000. 250-828-1974.

Contractors Tundra HD Econo Custom. Hwy, hauler $35,000 Concrete work as possible part of the payment. 250-377-8436.

1996 GMC Suburban 4x4 good shape runs great $3200obo Call (250) 571-2107

Motorcycles 2008 Saturn Astra XR, 137K kms, 4-door hatch-back, white. $6,500. Call or text 250-572-2236.

Tires $400

Set of Goodyear Ultra Winters. P205/55-R16 on 5 stud rim will fit Mazda 3. $500. 851-0504.

Sport Utility Vehicle Jeep YJ 4x4 1987 restored, 6cyl 5sp, lifted, 33”tires on Eagle Rims, 10,000 lb Winch, over $15,000 invested asking $12000 (250) 828-0931

Antiques / Classics 1951 IHC LII0 Pick-up. Running when parked. $2,500. 250-578-2663.

4 Hankook Winter 215/65-R16 c/w rims (250) 374-1964

9FT Okanagan Camper. F/S, bathroom. Good shape. $1,800/obo. 250-376-1841.

New Price $56.00+tax

Transportation

5.98-acre parcel light industrial bareland lease property available on the south side of the Thompson River just off the E. Trans-Canada Hwy. John at 250-372-1999. Kamloops.

Recreational/Rent

Absolute gorgeous 03 Cadillac Deville one owner low kms $6900.00 obo 250-554-0580 Bi-Fuel Car $1000 (firm). 1993 Mercury Sable some rust but in good running order. 679-2296 (Chase).

2014 Jayco 31’ Class A Motorhome. 3 slides. $100,000. 250-828-0469.

Vehicle Wanted

2009 AWD Lincoln MKS. 70,000kms. Fully equipped. Dual sunroofs, white with black leather V-6. $18,800. 250-319-8784.

INDUSTRIAL LEASE PROPERTY

BROCK Sat & Sun Oct 10/11th. 9am3pm. 912 Invermere Crt. Household items, books, CD’s NORTH SHORE Multi Family 261 Royal Ave Sat Oct 10th 9-3:00pm Avon & Blue Mnt, Clothing, Halloween Costumes & Household items NORTH SHORE Sat, Oct 10th. 9am-1pm. 920 7th Street. Variety of items. Lots for Everyone. SAHALI Moving Sale Oct 10&11 Sat & Sun 10:30-6pm 239Monmouth Dr. High-end items. Furniture.

2012 Ford Focus Sedan. Auto, FWD. A/C, 50,000kms. Winters. $9,995/obo. 250299-2169.

2010 Mountaineer 305RLT $28,000. 34.4ft. One Owner, full load. Triple hydraulic slides, elec. stabilizers, awning. 2006 Silverado Diesel 151,000kms. $25,000. Package $50,000. 250-679-2518, cell 250-3183144.

Run until sold

2002 Nissan Altima. 4 door, auto. Fully loaded. Good condition. $6,000. Call to view. 250-376-4077.

*Big storage rooms *Laundry Facilities *Close to park, shopping & bus stop

318-4321

250.377-7275 www.berwickretirement.com

Recreational/Sale 2009 29ft. Cougar 278RKS 5th Wheel. 1-slide, slps4. Good cond. $19,500. 250-372-7397.

PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED

Bed & Breakfast

Transportation

1976 175 Yamaha Trails Motorcycle Restored. $1,750. 250-578-2663.

2008 HD Classic. Excellent condition. 1 year extended warranty. $18,000. 250-3765311. 2014 Motorino XPH Electric Scooter bike. 850kms. No scrapes. $1600 250-574-9846 Honda CRF 50F Kids Motorcycle. $800. 250-578-2663.

2002 Ranger Edge 2by2 4000. Largely rebuilt drive train, extra studded tires. Mint condition. $3,900/obo. 250-851-5951. 2002 Ranger XLT. 4dr. V-6, auto, front end damage runs. 119,000kms. $1100. 778-4700121. 2004 Dodge 1500 Topper, 4 Nokian studded tires. $3,000. 250-578-2663.

Recreational/Sale

2009 Hyundai Accent Sport. 91,000kms. 2 sets of tires. $6,000. 250-374-0452. 2009 Hyundai Sonata. 4dr, auto, fully loaded. 143,000kms. $8,900. 250-579-0195. 2010 Nissan Sentra. 4dr. Exec cond. Auto, new tires. 91,000kms. $9,000. 573-4401. 2013 Nissan Leaf SL, electric, black/tan. 12,000kms under warranty $27,500 250-3778436 2015 Ford Fiesta 4 dr, 1960kms, w/4 snow tires. $15,500. 250-319-5634

1989 Fleetwood AClass 120,000km slps 6, well kept, $8500obo (250) 579-9691 2005, 38’ RV trailer 2 slides, sleeps 6, appl incld, fully loaded, $14,900. 250-376-1655. 2005 Sprinter 25’ w/slide 1995 F250 Ford diesel w/low mileage both in exc cond. asking $20,000 obo for both (250) 314-6661

2008 29’ Springdale travel trailer with 12’ slide sleeps 6 in great shape $14,500 obo txt or call 250-851-1091

2004 Toyota Sienna XLE limited edition. Exec cond. 7 pass, all leather, auto doors, sunroof, brand new all seasons 2nd set of rims. 247,000kms. $6000. 250377-1296.

2008 Denali Crew Cab AWD. Sunroof, DVD, NAV. Fully loaded. 22” chrome wheels, leather. 141,000kms. $28,800. 250319-8784.


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Transportation

HAS THE FOLLOWING DOOR TO DOOR DELIVERY ROUTES COMING AVAILABLE

Utility Trailers

2006 Dumping Trailer. 5000lbs/ 2272 kg capacity. Holds 2.4 cubic yards. $6,800. 250-374-1988.

Flatdeck Hauler for Heavy Equipment. $3,400. 250374-1988.

Boats 12ft. Aluminum c/w 7.5 Evinrude gas and Minnkota elec motors. $1400. 778-538-1958 14’ Spingbok long deck fisherman Honda 8hp 4 stroke,trailer & accessories $3200 Honda Big Red 3 Wheeler top shape $1650 250-554-0201 2007 Sea Doo Speed Boat, 4 Seater.$15,000obo Call 250320-5194 (after 6pm)or lv msg

Legal

Legal Notices 7238024

BigSteelBox Corp

at 1284 Salish Road, Kamloops, BC, Canada claims a Warehouse Lien Against James Iwaskow of Kamloops for arrears of container rent amounting to $1157.60 plus any additional costs of storage that accrue. If not paid in full, the contents of household belongings, recreation equipment and storage unit will be sold at public auction. NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS Re: Estate of Beulah May Kathleen Klassen aka Beulah Kathleen May Klassen, aka Beulah Kathleen Klassen, aka Bonnie Klassen, deceased, formerly of 207-860 Nicolani Drive, Kamloops, B.C. Creditors and others having claims against the estate of Beulah May Kathleen Klassen aka Beulah Kathleen May Klassen, aka Beulah Kathleen Klassen, aka Bonnie Klassen deceased, are hereby notified under section 38 of the Trustee Act that particulars of their claims should be sent to the Executor at Morelli Chertkow LLP, 300 - 180 Seymour Street, Kamloops, British Columbia, V2C 2E3, on or before November 12, 2015, after which date the Executor will distribute the estate among the parties entitled to it, having regard to the claims of which the Executor then has notice. Signed: Randolf Desmond Klassen Executor of the Estate of Beulah May Kathleen Klassen Solicitor: MORELLI CHERTKOW LLP

Community Newspapers We’re at the heart of things™

B21

ABERDEEN

SAHALI

Rte 508 – 700 - 810 Hugh Allan Dr. – 41 p. Rte 470– Farnham Wynd, 102 - 298 Waddington Dr. – 68 p. Rte 527 – Hunter Pl, Huntleigh Cres. – 27 p. Rte 481– Whistler Crt, Pl and Dr, Robson Rte 583 – Butte Pl, Chinook Pl, 1423 Lane. – 76 p. 1690 MtDufferin Dr. – 42 p. Rte 482– 101 - 403 Robson Dr. – 56 p. Rte 584 – 1752 - 1855 Hillside Dr. – 31 p. VALLEYVIEW/JUNIPER Rte 593 – Avens Way, 1800-1899 Foxtail Dr., Primrose Cres. – 60 p. Rte 613– 2210 - 2291 Crescent Dr, 115 - 155 Highland Rd (odd), Park Dr, 2207 - 2371 BROCK/NORTHSHORE ETC Hwy. – 63 p Rte 106 – 1239-1289 10th St., Cranbrook WESTSYDE Pl., Creston Pl., 949-1145 (odd) Halston Ave., Kimberley Cres. – 72 p. Rte 201– Montrose Cres, Wedgewood Cres, Westlynn Dr, 1510 - 1672 Rte 28 – Calmar Pl., 1905-2082 Westmount Dr. – 74 p Fleetwood Ave. – 41 p. Rte 221– 3013 - 3065 Bank Rd, Bermer Pl, DOWNTOWN/LOWER SAHALI 710 - 790 Bissette Rd, 3007 - 3045 Rte 382– 114 - 150 Fernie Pl, Fernie Rd, (odd side) Westsyde Rd. – 61 p 860 - 895 Lombard St. – 50 p. Rte 384– 407 - 775 W. Battle St, 260 - 284 Centre Ave. – 44 p. Rte 385– 350 - 390 W. Battle St, Strathcona Terr. – 34 p.

INTERESTED IN A ROUTE? FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL THE CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT 250-374-0462

Visit the

fall in love.

,


B22

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

WEEKLY WORD SEARCH

FRANK & ERNEST

BY BOB THAVES

T H E B O R N LO S E R

BY ART & CHIP SAMSOM

B I G N AT E

ABSORBENT ABSTRACT ACCENT ACCURACY ACETATE ACRYLIC ADHESION AIRBRUSH AMBIGUITY ANALOGOUS ANGLE APPLICATIONS BALANCE BEZEL

BLEED BRUSHES CANVAS CARBON CHROMATIC COLORS COMPLEMENTARY CONTRAST DECORATION DECOUPAGE FIGURE HIGHLIGHT IMAGE

NEUTRAL PAINTS PALETTE PANORAMA PERSPECTIVE PIGMENTS SCALE TECHNIQUE TEXTURE

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

BY LINCOLN PEIRCE

Answers

SUDOKU

THE GRIZZWELLS

FUN BY THE NUMBERS

Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test!

BY BILL SCHORR

HERMAN

K I T ’ N ’ C A R LY L E

BY JIM UNGER

BY LARRY WRIGHT

Answers

Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!

MON—SAT @ 10AM SUNDAYS @ NOON

WORD SCRAMBLE

ANSWER 1: SKYSCRAPER ANSWER 2: SUBWAYTRAIN

HERE’S HOW IT WORKS:

Rearrange the letters to spell something pertaining to Big Cities Y C R K S P R E A S

T A S W Y N R I B U A

KAMLOOPS CIGAR & VAPE

TRU E-Juice 100+ Flavours! Available in 0-18mg Nicotine

• Locally Made • Kosher • Highest Standards • Custom Blending Available!

338 Seymour St. Kamloops, BC (778) 471-5641 (Located inside The Zoo Ice Cream & Crepery)


FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

B A BY B LU E S

BY RICK KIRKMAN AND JERRY SCOTT

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD SOUND ARGUMENT

SHOE

BY GARY BROOKINS AND SUSIE MACNELLY

H AG A R T H E H O R R I B L E

ZITS

BY CHRIS BROWNE

BY JERRY SCOTT & JIM BORGMAN

BY JEREMY NEWTON

ACROSS 1 Bye at Wimbledon 5 Bonnie who sang “Nick of Time” 10 Needle holder 13 Pop star with the fragrance Miami Glow 16 Scientist Pavlov 17 Move unsteadily 18 Ike’s charge during W.W. II 19 What King was king of 21 *Shrink who’s always changing his diagnosis? 24 Piece in early Indian chess sets 25 Grasp 26 **What ballet patrons dine on? 28 One side of a childish debate … or a phonetic hint to the answers to the four starred clues 30 Take care of 31 Lipton rival 32 30 Rock’s location 34 Bend 37 Arias, typically 39 Aerosol sound 40 *Oregon State’s mascot played by actress Arthur? 47 Festoon 50 Pick in class 51 Assuming it’s even possible 53 Cross, with “off” 54 **A deal on Afro wigs? 60 Commercial lead-in to Balls or Caps 63 “Couldn’t be” 64 Not so awesome 65 Court positions 66 In need of a cracker, perhaps 68 Listen to Christmas carolers? 72 Slipshod 73 Overlook 74 Multiple-choice options 75 Justice Kagan 77 Post-op locale 79 Cold War-era territory: Abbr. 80 *How actor Bill feels about houseguests? 86 Hershiser of the 1980s-’90s Dodgers 87 Cannabis ____ (marijuana) 88 Chicago suburb 92 Removes from a can? 95 **Find cake or Jell-O in the back of the fridge? 97 Hunger 98 Drawbridge locale 100 The Spartans of the N.C.A.A. 101 PBS benefactor 1

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How does it feel to be eight years old living in poverty? Left out. Mom says “we don’t have the money for extras.” $3.85/week provides safe after-school activities and transportation. That’s just spare change but you can make it real change:

www.unitedwaytnc.ca/give-now

119

79

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63 67

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13 19

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66

BY BIL AND JEFF KEANE

9

Crossword Answers FOUND ON A6

27

29

54

BY VIC LEE

8

119 122

Kick back First name in long jumps Open again, as a keg Sounds of fall? Odette’s counterpart in “Swan Lake” QB Tony “Over my dead body!” Prefix with realism London jazz duo? Sudden turns Belgian river to the North Sea Play for a fool Restaurant chain founded by a celebrity chef Febreze target Goof Greeting on el teléfono Supercharges, with “up” Get one’s hands on some dough? Alternative to Soave Nominative, e.g. Administrative worker on a ship Smoke Bank asset that’s frozen? Google ____ Rap shouts Casino activity with numbered balls Dander Part of a flight plan, for short Pig with pigtails Body of science? Kaplan course for H.S. students Hwy. violation Like bread dough and beer Looney Tunes bird Play the siren to Chatted with, in a way Emotionally distant Arsenal Aligns Where capri pants stop No. 2s at college Inhumane types Lumber-mill equipment Hover craft? Brood Film character who says, “I’d just as soon kiss a Wookiee!” Some pipe joints King of old Rome

23

50

FA M I LY C I R C U S

7

62 67 69 70 71 76 78 81 82 83 84 85 89 90 91 92 93 94 96 97 99 103 104 106 107 108 110 111 112 114 115 116 118

26

40

PA R D O N M Y P L A N E T

6

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DOWN 1 Small scrap 2 New Balance competitor 3 Employing strategy 4 Pyramid crosses 5 Rubbish 6 Cause of some impulsive behavior, for short 7 It might begin with a “What if …?” 8 Beach walkers 9 Mere vestige 10 They may have you going the wrong way 11 Announcer’s cry after a field goal 12 What knows the drill, for short? 13 It has a variety of locks and pins 14 Like buffalo meat vis-à-vis beef and pork 15 Vegas casino with the mascot Lucky the Leprechaun 17 Show piece 19 French cheese 20 Miss 22 ESPN’s McEachern a.k.a. the Voice of Poker 23 Edible entry at a county fair 27 Social welfare grp. with a Peace Prize 29 Neighbor of a “ ~ ” key 32 30 Rock grp. 33 Pro’s position 35 Check 36 Brunch spot 38 “Fire away!” 41 Dress at the altar 42 PC part of interest to audiophiles 43 Author Seton

44 45 46 48 49 52 55 56 57 58 59 60 61

18

25

32

102 And other stuff 105 Misconstrue, as words 109 Other side of a childish debate … or a phonetic hint to the answers to the four double-starred clues 113 *Fall colors? 117 Talk down? 120 Yawnfest 121 **Question from El Al security? 123 Like lightning rounds 124 Tear-stained, e.g. 125 Investigate, as a cold case 126 Pianist Gilels 127 “Woo-hoo!” 128 Half of a classic Mad magazine feature 129 County of Salem, Mass. 130 High ____

17

21

A R C T I C C I R C L E BY ALEX HALLATT

B23

ANSW ANSW


B24

FRIDAY, October 9, 2015

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

EVERY SAT & SUN 10AM-6PM

ALL

Offer valid 4 DAYS!

25,000

CHECKOUT LANES

OPEN

Friday, October 9th to Monday, October 12th, 2015.

when you spend $250† in-store. That’s $25 in rewards.

GUARANTEED†

When you spend $250 or more in store before applicable taxes and after all other coupons, discounts or PC® Points redemptions are deducted, in a single transaction at any participating store location [excludes purchases of tobacco, alcohol products, prescriptions, gift cards, phone cards, lottery tickets, all third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners, etc.) and any other products which are provincially regulated], you will earn the points indicated. Product availability may vary by store. We are not obligated to award points based on errors or misprints.

unless we are unable due to unforeseen technical difficulties

frozen Butterball turkeys regular or stuffed

1

20118435

FRESH TURKEYS now available

67

/lb

3.68 /kg

Campfire sliced side bacon 375 g 20772679

5

2/

00 OR

2.78 EACH

Grimms sausage selected varieties, 300-375 g

6

20838790

cranberries product of Canada or USA, no. 1 grade, 340 g 20160096001

1

46

.97

Del Monte canned vegetables selected varieties, 341-398 mL 20299306001

20 lb BAG russet potato

ea

product of Western Provinces, Canada no. 2 grade 20101572001

5

.97

88

Dole pineapple

ea

960 g 20708074

Christie’s crackers

ea

selected varieties, 398 mL

ea

selected varieties, 100-225 g

LIMIT 4

20298534

LIMIT 4

20686399

AFTER LIMIT

1.44

AFTER LIMIT

1.49

5

00

Farmer’s Market™ pumpkin pie

1

44

Franco gravy

ea

LIMIT 4

AFTER LIMIT

2.97

.77

selected varieties, 284 mL 20302507

Coca Cola or Pepsi soft drinks

ea

98

selected varieties, 24 X 355 mL 20308197004 / 20306687003

6

97

ea

ea LIMIT 4

AFTER LIMIT

1.18

ea

LIMIT 2

AFTER LIMIT

9.99

Prices effective Friday, October 9 to Monday, October 12, 2015 or while stock lasts. Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 2015 Loblaws Inc. * we match prices! Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.

superstore.ca

Run Date:

Fri, Oct 9, 2015

Kamloops / Kelowna / Comox / Langley / Surrey /Abbotsford / Mission / Campbell River / Duncan /

Typesetter: QL


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