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MARCH 4, 2016 | Volume 29 No. 28
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Official Tournament Mark
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This manual provides you with tools and guidelines to ensure the tournament logo type (tournament mark) for the 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey Women’s World Championship appears in a consistent manner that is appropriate to IIHF standards in all communications. These standards should be followed as closely as possible, however it is understood that requirements for unspecified applications may arise.
NO PANEL REVIEW For questions and approvals related to sponsorship, please contact: Bruce Newton – bnewton@hockeycanada.ca For questions and approvals related to licensing, please contact: Dale Ptycia – dptycia@hockeycanada.ca
For questions and approvals related to multimedia or print, please contact: Kelly Findley – kfindley@hockeycanada.ca
The official tournament mark will appear prominently on all official communications and marketing materials pertaining to the 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey Women’s World Championship. The tournament mark has bilingual (English/French, horizontal only), English (horizontal and vertical), and French (horizontal and vertical) versions. The bilingual version of the official tournament mark should be used in cases where both English and French are being used in the communication.
English (horizontal)
English (vertical)
Bilingual
French (vertical)
Federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna has agreed to meet with City of Kamloops and First Nations officials — but, like Conservative ministers before her, she has rejected calls for a more robust review of Ajax
GANG ACTIVITY RISING? Recent shootings said to be part of turf war involving Red Scorpions, others
French (horizontal)
NEWS/A3
2016 IIHF Ice Hockey Women’s World Championship Logo Guide
STORY • PAGE A5
GOVERNOR GENERAL HONOURS Kamloops and area residents receive awards today in Vancouver
NEWS/A12
BIG MEET ON ICE AT MAC ISLE The B.C. Short Track Championship is in Kamloops this weekend
SPORTS/A13
JANN ARDEN SPEAKS The singer reflects on life in advance of her March 21 concert at Sagebrush Theatre
ARTS/B1
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Kamloops Mounties were kept busy last month responding to shootings — including this Feb. 18 attack at the Kamloops Travel Centre at Highway 1 and Copperhead Drive. According to a source in the justice system, that shooting, in which a man was hit in the leg, and another one on McGill Road a week later are connected to a gang war between Red Scorpions operating in the city and a Lower Mainland gang seeking to make inroads in the Tournament Capital.
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City on verge of bloody gang war? TIM PETRUK
STAFF REPORTER
tim@kamloopsthisweek.com
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A justice official speaking to KTW on the condition of anonymity says Kamloops is on the verge of a potentially bloody gang war. The source said the Red Scorpions gang, which is presently controlling drug sales in the Tournament Capital, is being pressured by an unnamed gang from the Lower Mainland looking to take over. Two shootings in recent weeks — one at the Kamloops Travel Centre at Highway 1 and Copperhead Drive on Feb. 18, the other at a McGill Road residence the following week — are connected to the turf war, the source said, noting the unnamed Lower Mainland gang was sending “reinforcements” to Kamloops late this week. The unnamed justice official said the fight between the two gangs is expected to be
bloody and could involve more shootings. Calls to RCMP Cpl. Cheryl Bush and RCMP Supt. Brad Mueller were not returned by KTW press time. On Feb. 18, emergency crews were called to the Dufferin Petro-Canada after a man was shot in the leg. The suspect fled the scene before police arrived and investigators said the victim, who has since been released from hospital, is not being co-operative. Details of the McGill Road shooting are protected by a court-ordered publication ban. Police did not issue a statement regarding the shooting. The suspected shooter, Jordan Kaplan, was granted bail on Monday. Due back in court on March 10, he is charged with discharging a firearm, possessing a prohibited or restricted firearm and unauthorized possession of a firearm.
International Women’s Day – A Celebration of Women & Community Presented by the Women’s Leadership Council • www.unitedwaytnc.ca/get-involved/wlc/
MARCH 8th 10am - 7pm • KAMLOOPS DOWNTOWN LIBRARY FREE activities all day long – call 250-372-5145 for more info
Please bring a ‘life starter’ donation for the YMCA Women’s Shelter – Find us on Facebook for details
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FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
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CITYpage
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Council Calendar March 8 1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting 7 pm - Public Hearing March 15 9 am - Council Budget Meeting 1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting March 18 6 pm - Special Council Meeting for Proposed KGHM Ajax Mine Grand Hall, Thompson Rivers University 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. Meeting schedule is available at kamloops.ca/council.
Career Opportunities Join our team of 650 employees, who work in a variety of fullfilling and challenging careers. Visit www.kamloops.ca/jobs for a list of current opportunities.
Notes Cemeteries ~ Scheduled Turf Maintenance Season The City of Kamloops Cemetery 2014 By-law states all artificial flowers and other tokens of remembrance composed of artificial foliage shall only remain on gravesites from October 1st through to April 11th. Therefore, we ask family members to remove all items before Monday April 11th. Any items not collected before this date will be placed at the Hillside Cemetery flower storage area and available for pickup no later than April 25th. Commencing Thursday April 14th, and every Thursday after this date through to October 1st flowers placed on gravesites will be removed and placed at the flower storage area for our scheduled turf maintenance. It is recommended limiting grave embellishments to fresh cut flowers only during the turf maintenance season. It is also recommended that anyone who wishes to place flowers on graves do so after 4:00 pm Friday of each week. The annual turf maintenance contract for flower stands is exempt from this rule. Any questions please contact 250-828-3462. Thank you for your co-operation.
Did you know... Home based businesses comprise 34% of all businesses in Kamloops.
EXPOSED ART REGIONAL EXHIBITION march 11–19 • 10am–5pm daily opening reception: march 11, 5–8pm
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Planning for the future ... is not easy The reality is our infrastructure is aging. We need to provide quality recreation services and we need to do it in a fiscally responsible way. It’s important the community is involved in these conversations. So, come talk to us about recreation services and a concept for our city. Everyone is welcome, please attend a public meeting near you. Visit kamloops.ca for more information.
7 to 9 pm March 7 - Parkcrest Elementary Gym March 9 - NorKam Secondary Cafeteria March 15 - Sandman Centre
7 Victoria Street West, Kamloops, BC, V2C 1A2 | Phone 250-828-3311 | Fax 250-828-3578 | Emergency only after hours phone 250-372-1710
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LOCAL NEWS
McKenna nixes call for Ajax joint panel review ANDREA KLASSEN AND CAM FORTEMS
STAFF REPORTERS
andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com cam@kamloopsthisweek.com
Canada’s environment minister has rejected renewed calls for a joint panel review to be applied to the Ajax mine proposal. Catherine McKenna has, however, agreed to meet with the City of Kamloops and First Nations about the copper and gold mine proposed to be developed south of Aberdeen. Mayor Peter Milobar said a letter from McKenna, which will be part of next week’s council agenda, turns down the city’s request for a joint panel review for the mine, while offering representatives a meeting in Ottawa. “It’s a no to a panel review at this time,”
Milobar said. “She expresses faith in the current process.” The city and the Skeetchestn and Tk’emlups Indian bands are all seeking a federal panel review — the highest standard — for the mine proposal immediately south of the city. Representatives from local First Nations also confirmed yesterday that McKenna has agreed to meet with them. Skeetchestn Indian Band Chief Ron Ignace said McKenna’s office has agreed to hear concerns from Stk’emlupsemc te Secwepemc Nation (SSN), composed of his band and Tk’emlups. They have neither a date nor a location, but Ignace is hoping McKenna travels to Kamloops to
FEDERAL ENVIRONMENT MINISTER CATHERINE MCKENNA
hear concerns. “There’s going to be a meeting. That’s all I really know,” he said. “We do have concerns about the environment at Ajax and how we go forward. Obviously, we’ll be calling for a panel review.” Peter Kent, environment minister under the Stephen Harper Conservative government, visited Kamloops and toured the Ajax site in January 2012, but
rejected calls for a joint panel review, as did his successor, Leona Aglukkaq. KGHM Ajax, the joint venture between a major Polish mining firm and a small Vancouver firm, submitted its application in January to the joint harmonized comprehensive environmental assessment with the federal and provincial governments. It is still possible for Ottawa to call a halt and convene a joint panel review that would include public hearings overseen by independent experts, but Milobar is not optimistic the federal government will change its mind. At council’s Tuesday meeting, Milobar said he will ask councillors whether they feel it’s worth it to send him
to Ottawa, along with Coun. Tina Lange, as it had originally planned. Ignace said he’s hoping to meet as soon as possible with
the minister. In the meantime, SSN continues to plan its own assessment of the mine. It will include public
VICTIM OF A CORPORATE POWER PLAY? A corporation is a great vehicle for running a business, large or small. However, there are times when major shareholders or directors decide to run the business to their own advantage, and trample over the interests of other shareholders or investors.
DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU’VE BEEN TRAPPED OR PUSHED OUT OF THE BUSINESS? Fortunately, corporate law in Canada provides numerous options for shareholders and others who have been wrongly treated by a corporation, or those in control of it. Courts can order that the controlling party buy the shares of other parties at a fair price, account for money that properly belongs to the corporation or to another party, pay damages, and more.
Differing views on numbers TEACHERS’ UNION, SCHOOL-DISTRICT ADMINISTRATION DEBATE SPECIAL-NEEDS STUDENT NUMBERS DALE BASS
STAFF REPORTER
dale@kamloopsthisweek.com
The Kamloops-Thompsion school district doesn’t dispute assertions by its teachers’ union that there has been an increase in the number of special-needs students in classrooms — but its superintendent doesn’t see the same issue the KamloopsThompson Teachers’ Association (KTTA) does. Karl deBruijn said when the KTTA presents reports with concerns about classes with four or more special-needs students, the union doesn’t address the level of need, noting many students need minimal extra support from teachers. DeBruijn said focusing on teachers’ interaction alone with special-needs students ignores the increased number of certified education assistants — formerly referred to as schoolsupport workers — the district has hired.
Nor does it address the role of the learning-assistance teachers, he added. In a report to trustees this week, deBruijn noted the increase of classes with four or more students studying according to an individual education plan included eight of the 198 kindergarten-to-Grade 3 classes and 267 of the 1,279 grades 4-12 classes. In total, there are 275 — or 18 per cent — of 1,477 classes in the district with four or more students studying according to an individual education plan. The provincial percentage is 24.6 per cent. The secondary numbers are not reflective of the reality, however, deBruijn said, noting a student may have an individual education plan for a few classes, but will be counted as if he or she has one for all classes. The KTTA said its members are reporting more complex issues with designated students,
adding the situation has deteriorated since 2007, when statistics like these were first collected by the provincial government. KTTA president David Komljenovic said the union is concerned the education fund negotiated in September 2014 is not being used appropriately to add supports to schools with class-composition challenges. Komljenovic said the union will continue to draw attention to this concern publicly, but will also continue to use its grievance procedure to address its concerns. DeBruijn said there are other realities the union doesn’t take into consideration, including that of schools with declining enrolment that could create smaller classes, but still have four or more students with an individual education plan. “It’s important to note all of our children are entitled to attend a school in their neighbourhood,” he told trustees.
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hearings and a decision by a 46-member panel. SSN’s joint council will make a decision whether to approve the mine in June.
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Personal. Professional. Proven. Personal Injury Divorce / Family Law Collections Employment Law Contract Disputes
Civil Litigation Wills & Estates Real Estate Corporate Commercial Bankruptcy & Foreclosures
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PUBLIC CONSULTATION PUBLIC CONSULTATION
2016 – 2020 Draft Financial Plan 2016 – 2020 Draft Financial Plan
PUBLIC CONSULTATION
LOCAL NEWS
Notice is hereby given that pursuant to Section 166 of the Community Charter a Council must undertake a Notice is hereby given that pursuant to Section 166 of the Community Charter a Council must process of public consultation regarding the proposed Financial Plan before it is adopted. A draft Financial Plan is available for inspection and comment at the Municipal office, undertake a process of public consultation regarding the proposed Financial Plan before it is #1 Opal Drive, Logan Lake, BC during regular office hours and available for viewing on the adopted. A draft Financial Plan is available for inspection and comment at the Municipal office, District’s website at www.loganlake.ca. Please provide any comments and/or suggestions on Opal Drive, Lake, BC during regular hours and available for viewing on the the Financial #1 Plan to the District Logan office prior to March 31, 2016. You may office also contact Randy Lambright, Chief Administrative Officer (rlambright@loganlake.ca) or Colin Forsyth, Director of District’s website at www.loganlake.ca. Please provide any comments and/or suggestions on Finance (cforsyth@loganlake.ca) or by telephone at 250.523.6225. the Financial Plan to the District office prior to March 31, 2016. You may also contact Randy Colin Forsyth Lambright, Chief Administrative Officer (rlambright@loganlake.ca) or Colin Forsyth, Director of Finance (cforsyth@loganlake.ca) or by telephone at 250.523.6225. Director of Finance
2016 – 2020 Draft Financial Plan
Notice is hereby given that pursuant to Section 166 of the Community Charter a Council must undertake a process of public consultation regarding the proposed Financial Plan before it is adopted. A draft Financial Plan is available for inspection and comment at the Municipal office, #1 Opal Drive, Logan Lake, BC during regular office hours and available for viewing on the District’s website at www.loganlake.ca. Please provide any comments and/or suggestions on Colin Forsyth the Financial Plan to the District office prior to March 31, 2016. You may also contact Randy Do you have a club or Director of Finance Lambright, Chief Administrative Officer (rlambright@loganlake.ca) or Colin Forsyth, Director of organization that needs Finance (cforsyth@loganlake.ca) or by telephone at 250.523.6225. new members? Do you want more people Colin Forsyth Director of Finance to know about your
business?
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SING FOR THE STARS
St. Ann’s Academy Rising Stars school choir dropped by Royal Inland Hospital to help with fundraising efforts yesterday during the second annual RIH Foundation Radiothon. From left: Brooke Blower, Kathy Zhang, Alice Lanzoni and Felicia Chase are among the young voices that sang pop/rock songs as the pledges came in. This year, fundraising efforts were donated to four areas of the hospital: emergency, mental health, pediatrics and cardiology. While the event wrapped up yesterday, those who wish to make a donation can still do so by going online to rihfoundation.ca.
Beckett was willing to fight for inheritance, jury hears TIM PETRUK
STAFF REPORTER
tim@kamloopsthisweek.com
The former New Zealand politician standing trial for the murder of his wife in 2010 told relatives following her death he would fight in court to get his share of her inheritance. The 14-person B.C. Supreme Court jury in Kamloops tasked with deciding Peter Beckett’s fate listened yesterday to recordings of wiretapped phone calls intercepted by police in the months following Laura LettsBeckett’s death. Letts-Beckett drowned in Upper Arrow Lake, near Revelstoke, on Aug. 18, 2010.
Her death was initially believed to be accidental, but Beckett was charged one year later. The Crown has alleged Letts-Beckett was killed out of greed, saying Beckett’s motive was financial. Prosecutor Sarah Firestone has told jurors Beckett stood to gain a significant amount of money in life-insurance and accidental-death benefits, as well as LettsBeckett’s schoolteachers’ pension. In court yesterday, jurors heard a number of wiretapped phone calls made by Beckett both before and after his August 2011 arrest. The first call played was between Beckett and Margaret
Blatchford, LettsBeckett’s aunt. In the May 2011 conversation, Beckett tells Blatchford he’s willing to fight for his share of his wife’s inheritance. “I’m still their sonin-law, right?” Beckett asked Blatchford. “So, what was due to Laura is certainly due to me. I’ll challenge that in court any time.” “You’ll challenge that in court, Peter?” Blatchford replied. “Of course,” Beckett said. “And I believe they caused her death.” Through her questioning, defence lawyer Donna Turko has implied LettsBeckett struggled with depression, potentially because of issues with
her family. Beckett and LettsBeckett met in 1995 in New Zealand. Five years later, he moved to Westlock, Alta., to be closer to her. The couple married in 2003. Previous witnesses have described their relationship as a rocky one. The Becketts split up in late 2007, but reconciled months later. Letts-Beckett also went to police alleging physical abuse on the part of her husband, but no charges were laid. Beckett was formerly a city councillor in Napier, New Zealand. His trial, which began in mid-January, is expected to last three months.
Jail follows Rayleigh car chase An 18-year-old man cried in a Kamloops courtroom on Tuesday after learning he will spend the foreseeable future behind bars. Tristan Olson was arrested on Feb. 15 following a highspeed car chase in Rayleigh. Court heard the chase saw Olson, who does not have a driver’s licence, driving a white Mazda at high speeds through stop signs, into oncoming traf-
fic, over medians and over a spike belt. He was arrested after a police dog found him hiding under a tarp, court heard. In denying Olson’s bail, Kamloops provincial court Judge Len Marchand said the chase was extremely dangerous. “His conduct puts the lives of law-abiding members of the public at risk,” Marchand said, noting there were too many
potential risks involved with releasing Olson on bail. At the time of his arrest last month, Olson was on bail for a separate incident in January. In that instance, court heard, Olson was arrested after police found him in the passenger seat of a stolen vehicle. He will remain at Kamloops Regional Correctional Centre until his next court appearance on March 17.
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LOCAL NEWS The City of Kamloops purchased the Owl Road dump for $10 million last year and plans to use it to divert construction materials from the Mission Flats landfill. The public works department held meetings this week at Valleyview secondary and at Juniper Ridge elementary to get neighbourhood feedback on where the landfill’s access point should be. DAVE EAGLES/KTW
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Angst over dump’s access road ANDREA KLASSEN
STAFF REPORTER
andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com
Sharie Lomas had plenty to say about a proposal to move the access road for the Owl Road dump to Highland Drive, but the sticky notes the Juniper Ridge resident affixed to a city comment board Wednesday night seemed to sum it up. “A stupid idea!” read one, while another began, “Do not go there!” City staff is studying whether to move the dump’s access point out of Valleyview after a delegation from that neighbourhood complained to city council that speeding trucks and poor visibility were causing safety issues. The city purchased the dump for $10 million last year and plans to use it to divert construction materials from the Mission Flats landfill. The study began this week with a pair
of open houses to collect public feedback on where the road could be moved, if it should be moved at all. Public works director Jen Fretz said recommendations will come to council later this spring. At the Juniper meeting, the second of the two city gatherings with residents, Lomas said she is worried adding truck traffic from the dump to Highland Drive will make the road more dangerous. She’s also concerned about the cost of such a project. “I just can’t see where they would locate it,” she said. “They’d have to spend a heck of a lot of money.” Cost has also been a concern on the city’s side. Fretz previously told council staff had not seriously looked at moving the access road to Highland Drive because it would be cost-prohibitive. Juniper resident Andrea Wallin believes the Highland route would likely
lead to increased emissions and increased gasoline consumption, since the road is steeper than its Valleyview counterpart. She said she would rather see a focus on improving safety at the existing access point. “Obviously, Valleyview residents are concerned, so maybe the city needs to consider improving that,” she said. Not everyone in the neighbourhood is against the move. Tracy Hendry thinks the city could solve its problems by creating a new loop road, which she hoped would restore access to bench lands between the two neighbourhoods. Hendry said the hiking area has been difficult to access since Highland Drive was widened and the road shoulder where she used to park was eliminated. “There’s open sky up there and it might be an opportunity to have Kamloops’ first star park,” she said.
Naturalists working to protect Dewdrop CAM FORTEMS
STAFF REPORTER
cam@kamloopsthisweek.com
While off-road damage has long been a problem on the Dewdrop range northwest of the city, the Kamloops Naturalist Club is reporting ever-increasing incursions by trucks and other vehicles in the protected area. The club is working with the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Development to produce brochures and increase signage in the grasslands and fir-dotted area north of Kamloops Lake. “It’s been a problem, but
never at the level it is now,” said club vice-president Frank Ritcey. The Dewdrop-Rosseau Creek area is west of Lac Du Bois Provincial Park, but has special status as a wildlifemanagement area under provincial law. That status includes a requirement for vehicles to remain on marked roads, but Ritcey said it’s not uncommon to see rutted tracks being made around signs and plunging into muddy areas. The culprits are not necessarily large trucks with big tires, but, typically, everyday
four-wheel-drive pickups. “So many people are driving off-road illegally, they almost look as tracked as legal roads,” Ritcey said. He said when approaches drivers who venture off the marked road, he is typically met by a feigned ignorance of the rules — or told to get lost. The club is encouraging people to take photos of trucks off road and report them to the provincial RAPP (report all poachers and polluters) line at 1-877-952-7277. Conservation officers enforce the laws. Ritcey said the Dewdrop
area is one of the largest wildlife-management areas in B.C., with rare grasslands and Interior Douglas fir habitat. It is home to six varieties of snakes, spadefoots and bighorn sheep. The Kamloops Naturalists Club is organizing a clean-up of the Dewdrop, which is also being plagued by dumping and litter. The event is set for March 20 and the club is seeking volunteers. The club can be found online via a Google search and also has a Facebook page.
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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
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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 dialogue between the federal government and city and First Nations officials on the contentious subject that is the proposed Ajax mine. Word came down yesterday that Environment Minister Catherine McKenna has agreed to meet with representatives from the City of Kamloops and Stk’emlupsemc te Secwepemc Nation (composed of the Skeetchestn and Tk’emlups Indian bands), but that a joint panel review is not in the cards. The city and the bands want Ottawa to put Ajax under such a review, a more rigorous process that was applied to the twice-rejected Prosperity mine proposal in the Cariboo. McKenna has not set a date or location for the meeting — and even a visit to the Ajax site may not change her decision. Remember, Peter Kent, then-environment minister in the Stephen Harper Conservative government, visited Kamloops and toured the Ajax site in January 2012 and still rejected calls for a joint panel review.
OUR
VIEW
NOT: The revelation that parents will continue to endure hourslong lineups to register their kids for French immersion classes at Lloyd George elementary. The process works on a first-come, first-served basis, which creates an unfair playing field for families who simply do not have the luxury of camping out overnight to secure a spot. If there is an overwhelming demand, and if budget woes do not allow for another French immersion school, perhaps it is time the Kamloops-Thompson school district fills seats with local kids and siblings of current students — and then move to a lottery system. Drawing names from a hat would be more fair in the eyes of the family whose parents might be shift workers and cannot spend 12 or more hours on the sidewalk every winter.
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 Linda Skelly Tara Holmes Neil Rachynski Clay Ganton
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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.
Dear drug dealer . . .
T
he letter is powerful, raw, searing and brutally honest — and it apparently never made it into the hands of the one person who needs to read it. Since the letter writer seems to have discarded the neatly written message, here’s hoping the intended recipient reads it — an unrepentant Kamloops drug dealer whose callous disregard for life led to at least one death. A KTW reader found the letter and was impacted by its power. He gave it to me. The letter is written by the sister of a man (youth?) who died from using drugs. She talks to the dealer in a straightforward manner. She is angry. She is hurt. She is frustrated. She wants him to stop killing people like he killed her brother. “Everyone has to make a living,” she writes. “I get that. But why this? Why sell drugs to people and watch them die because of it? How can you do that?” She is angry and in pain, but even while carrying that weight, she understands the reality of the dealer and addict relationship. “I don’t blame you for what happened to him because I know everyone makes their own decisions, but I just have to tell you I hate what you do to people. I don’t know how you live with yourself. I really don’t.” What she cannot fathom is how cold, hard cash can trump the sight of a life withering away with each illicit purchase. “How can you sell drugs to people and watch them get
CHRISTOPHER FOULDS
Newsroom
MUSINGS addicted and continue to sell to them?” she asks. “I know you told him to be careful, to not get addicted to oxy, but you probably knew he already was. “I just hope that if you have a soul at all, a heart that beats in your chest, that you will stop doing this. Why sell drugs to people and watch them die because of it? How can you do that?” That’s the eternal question, really. What behavioural defect allows the parasitical drug dealer to wake up every day — in mind a businessman; in fact a killer — and not be drenched in the guilt of his homicidal actions of trading hard drugs for money? A normal person, a person possessing minimal conscience, would fail at such a vocation. She wants the dealer to know the agony, to feel the torment that has permeated her family, the death of a brother and son shattering their lives forever. “I just really want you to know how much pain you have caused me, how much pain you have caused our mother, how much pain you have caused to his
friends and family. I want you to feel the weight of that pain. “You deserve to feel this pain. You need to know the part you played in this, the part you probably played in the pain of so many other people. “Sucks, doesn’t it? I’ll tell you what sucks — to have to hold my mom’s hand as we say goodbye to [his] body.” The storm of her anger can be felt when reading the curve of each handwritten letter of each word, yet she rises above blunt fury in an attempt to appeal to whatever empathy may be lurking in the core of the dealer who killed her brother. “Most of all, I hope you stop selling drugs, stop hurting yourself and others. Maybe if you realized what it does to other people, what it’s done to my brother, my family, maybe you would understand.” But he won’t stop selling. The body count does not affect the cash count and that is all that matters to serial killers firing oxy and fentanyl as their weapons. Deep down, she knows this. She knows the letter is a way to vent and nothing more — even if he reads it. “I don’t want to hate you,” she writes. “But I do. I hate you for selling drugs to him, for the part you played in his death. If you have a soul, you will understand. You will stop doing what you do.” He won’t, of course. But maybe her words will compel another dealer, someone still connected to their conscience, to take a look in the mirror and do the right thing. editor@kamloopsthisweek.com Twitter: @ChrisJFoulds
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
YOUR OPINION
[speak up] You can comment on any story you read @ kamloopsthisweek.com
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
COMMUNITY POOLS BIND NEIGHBOURHOODS Editor: I very much oppose the city’s proposal to close pools in Westsyde, North Kamloops and Brocklehurst in favour of building a facility on McArthur Island. I am glad council works hard for us and is considering the views of the residents in the affected areas. A reminder to readers of the remaining meetings: Monday, March 7: Parkcrest elementary gym, 2170 Parkcrest Ave., Brocklehurst; Wednesday, March 9: NorKam Senior secondary, 1198 Kenora Rd., North Kamloops; Tuesday, March 15: Sandman Centre Parkside Lounge, downtown. The outdoor pools in Brocklehurst and McDonald Park are used by a lot by families and children, both locally and from around Kamloops.
These pools are also used by local schools and provide swimming lessons to kids. The pools are doing what we want them to do — help kids to unplug and walk or ride their bike to their local pool on a hot day. If the proposal proceeds and there is one facility on McArthur Island, children would not be able to get their safely on their own. It would require families driving, which adds to our carbon footprint, which is something we do not want. In addition, McArthur Island already has parking and traffic problems. We’ve often been stuck in bottlenecks with tournaments and other events underway. Having a pool facility on McArthur Island will not improve that problem. I believe because of its lack of accessibility and parking problems, a facility on McArthur
Island would not be as well-used as the current pools, something we don’t want. We need our families and kids exercising to keep healthy and relieve stress. I am not sure what to recommend with respect to Westsyde Pool, but I believe it is also important to that community’s families and active seniors. On another note, the pools were paid for by taxpayers many years ago. Losing them would likely negatively affect our property values. We need to maintain the pools. I believe many people would be willing to pay a bit more to keep them. To residents who like the pools — please let your views be known at the various meetings. Linda Kennard Kamloops (Brocklehurst)
THE SHAME OF REVEALING TRASHY, DIRTY CANADA Editor: I know this is a frequently complained-about topic, but I just had to vent my disgust. I lived in China for many years and one of the things I disliked most about it was how dirty it was and how people didn’t respect their environment. There was dog poop everywhere.
LAUNDRY MOVE ‘SHAMEFUL’
However, although there was litter, there were city workers employed to pick up trash. You would see them everywhere with their bags and tongs. Just wait, I’d say to my wife, who was going through the immigration process, when we get to Canada, you will see how clean it is there. Fast forward to this week as
Editor: Re: (‘18 local jobs lost in laundry privatization,’ March 3): Somehow the decision makers never look at saving money by cutting executives and perks. That edifice in Kelowna that houses
we walk down Bank Road in Westsyde and see the plethora of dog feces. It embarrasses me to no end that what I said about my Canadian neighbourhood is not true. We go to Rainbow Park and there is trash everywhere. My wife asks: Where are the city workers?
administrators and their assistants is a prime example of excess. Chopping laundry jobs looks far more impressive as it axes a number of positions. But these, grouped together, would probably barely cover an executive salary and perks.
Why don’t they clean this up? I have no answer — only shame. Shame on you, residents of Westsyde, who don’t pick up your dog poop and litter. Shame, shame, shame. Chad Pearson Kamloops
And what about the carbon footprint? All that trucking of laundry back and forth produces plenty of pollution. So much for keeping jobs in our community. It is shameful. Jean Humphreys Kamloops
TALK BACK Q&A: kamloopsthisweek.com Results:
We asked:
Should residents who live outside Kamloops, but who use city services, have a greater say in Tournament Capital matters?
No: 628 votes Yes: 130 votes 758 VOTES
What’s your take?
17% YES
83% NO
If you could vote, which candidate would get your nod as Republican nominee?
Vote online:
kamloopsthisweek.com
A selection of comments on KTW stories, culled online RE: FLETCHER COLUMN: : BOWING TO THE POWER OF JUDGES:
“Shorter Tom Fletcher: We can’t let these unelected activist judges run our country! “This guy sounds like a Tea Party member. Hey, Tom, you don’t want to participate in legal marijuana or assisted suicide? “Then don’t. You retain your freedom to abstain.” — posted by Joey Jack
RE: STORY: CITY OF KAMLOOPS OFFERS RAIN BARRELS FOR $55:
“I’m just afraid if too many people get in on this, the price per cubic meter to us will go up. “In Kamloops, less water use equals higher costs — or something like that.” — posted by Geo
RE: LETTER: ROBBED AGAIN AT THE GAS PUMPS:
“As I write this, a barrel of crude is $34.71. Western crude from the tar sands is less than $10. “Our federal government budgeted for oil revenues when oil was over $100. Look in the mirror and you will know who will be making up this shortfall.” — posted by Richard Lodmell
Kamloops This Week is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent organization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please email publisher@kamloopsthisweek.com or call 250-374-7467). If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the website at mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844877-1163 for additional information.
>č8ĉ; IĀ$Fċ<ĉ@ĉ>% Friday, March 4 to Sunday, March 6.
Join us at the McDonald’s on the North Shore for the unveiling of our newly renovated restaurant, completely reimagined to serve you better than ever before. Enjoy celebratory special offers and giveaways all weekend long! ®
All offers are valid only at the McDonald’s restaurant located at 661 Fortune Drive in Kamloops, BC from Friday, March 4 to Sunday, March 6, 2016. ©2016 McDonald’s
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Plus a ribbon cutting and interactive magic show ® by Ronald McDonald on Saturday, March 5 at 11:15am.
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FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
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Many cat owners believe that their cat enjoys listening to music. Anecdotally, some cats (and dogs) appear to listen attentively when their human companions play the piano, guitar, or other musical instrument. But what does science have to say about how cats respond to music? One of the most unusual studies was recently published by veterinarians at the University of Lisbon, Portugal. They wondered if recorded music would have any effect on cats that were anesthetized and undergoing surgery. In their study, music was delivered to patients under general anesthesia by means of miniature headphones. The volume was carefully controlled to protect the cat’s hearing. At various points during the surgeries, the investigators played short clips of either classical or heavy metal music (“Thunderstruck” by AC/DC), and measured the response of each anesthetized cat. Cats exposed to classical music showed a small drop in respiratory rate indicating a deeper, more relaxed state of anesthesia. Not too surprisingly, heavy metal music had the opposite effect. The authors of the study suggested that playing classical music in the surgical theatre might be of significant benefit
to anesthetized cats (presumably heavy metal music should be avoided in the operating room). Recently, animal behaviour scientists from the University of Wisconsin have developed music written especially for cats. In an effort to make the music interesting and appealing to cats, it is based on the tempos and frequencies used by cats when they communicate with each other, interspersed with purring and other friendly cat noises. According to an article published in the May 2015 issue of Applied Animal Behaviour Science, cats in the study showed a marked preference for this “cat appropriate music” over other types of music, and demonstrated their approval by rubbing their heads against the speakers when the cat music was played. (You can find this music on the internet by doing a search for “cat species appropriate music”). Dr Diane McKelvey practices at Aberdeen Veterinary Hospital and is one of only six veterinarians in Canada who are recognized as a Feline (only) specialist. Videos on cat health care, prepared by Canada’s feline specialists, can be found at aberdeenvethospital.ca and at cathealthy.ca
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LOCAL NEWS
Sluggish start to 2016 ANDREA KLASSEN
STAFF REPORTER
andrea@kamloopsthisweek.com
It’s a slow start to building in Kamloops this year. According to the city’s development and engineering services department, the total value of building permits issued in the first two months of the year is about half of what it was in 2015. To date, $15.3 million in permits have been issued in 2016, compared to $30.8 million this time last year. In February, permit value totalled $11.4 million, compared to about $22.4 million in
February of 2015. While residential construction values have stayed relatively stable — $12.6 million so far this year, compared to $15.8 million this time last year — commercial permit values are down substantially. The city has handed out only $2.3 million so far in commercial permits, compared to $14.3 million in the first two months of 2015. Director of development services Marvin Kwiatkowski said there’s still plenty of time left for permit numbers to pick up. “You get some larger projects
coming in and they can be $10 or $12 million,” he said. “One or two months doesn’t really dictate how the year’s going to go.” The city will see some larger permits in coming months, he added, mainly multi-family apartments. “We’re looking fairly strong there, which has been the trend the last few years,” Kwiatkowski said. “There seems to be the trend out there for the rental. “We hadn’t had many apartments being built here until recently.”
Chase leads man to prison TIM PETRUK
STAFF REPORTER
tim@kamloopsthisweek.com
An 18-year-old man cried in a Kamloops courtroom on Tuesday after learning he will spend the foreseeable future behind bars. Tristan Olson was arrested on Feb. 15 following a high-speed car chase in Rayleigh. Court heard the chase saw Olson, who does not have a driver’s licence, driving a white Mazda at high speeds, through stop signs, into oncoming traffic, over medians and over a spike belt. He was arrested after a police dog found him hiding
under a tarp, court heard. In denying Olson’s bail, Kamloops provincial court Judge Len Marchand said the chase was extremely dangerous. “His conduct puts the lives of law-abiding members of the public at risk,” Marchand said, noting there were too many potential risks involved with releasing Olson on bail. At the time of his arrest last month, Olson was on bail for a separate incident in January. In that instance, court heard, Olson was arrested after police found him in the passenger seat of a stolen vehicle. He will remain at Kamloops Regional Correctional Centre until his next court appearance on March 17.
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
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FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
LOCAL NEWS As the honoree at the 2014 Walk for Memories in Kamloops, Linda Blanchet addressed the crowd while standing with daughter Monique and husband Paul. The couple will receive the Governor General’s Caring Canadian Award today in Vancouver. KTW FILE PHOTO
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Honours from the Governor General KAMLOOPS AND AREA RESIDENTS TO RECEIVE AWARDS TODAY A number of residents from Kamloops and the region will be honoured today in Vancouver by Governor General David Johnston. The locals will be among more than 150 Canadians to receive one of the following honours — the Governor General’s Caring Canadian Award, an Exemplary Service Medal, a Decoration for Bravery or a Meritorious Service Decoration — during two ceremonies at the Chan Centre for the Performing Arts. Governor General’s Caring Canadian Award: Linda Blanchet,
Kamloops: After being diagnosed with earlyonset Alzheimer’s disease in 2013, Blanchet began volunteering with the Alzheimer Society of Canada and the Alzheimer Society of British Columbia alongside husband Paul. She served as the face of Kamloops’ Walk for Memories in 2014, raising more than $30 000 that year alone, and continues to foster inclusivity through the Dementia-Friendly Communities initiative. The initiative works to reduce stigma and support people living with dementia through education and community-building
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Blair, Wilbert Kent and Robert Reid, Kamloops: On Jan. 23, 2013, Blair, Kent and Reid rescued a woman who was in danger of drowning in the Thompson River. She had fallen through the ice while trying to rescue her dog some 20 metres from shore. Forming a human chain on the thin, fragile ice, Blair, Kent and Reid managed to pull the victim out of the water and bring her to safety. The medals of bravery awarded to Kent and Reid will be presented at a future ceremony. Leading Air Cadet Shannon Young, Kamloops: On May 17, 2012, 13-year-old Young helped two children escape after an armed man made his way into her family’s house in
Dufferin. Young first hid the children in an upstairs room and then, despite the risk of being injured or taken hostage by the gunman, she guided them downstairs and out of the house to safety. Donald Alan St. Pierre, Blind Bay: On Dec. 19, 2012, St. Pierre was among six people who attempted to rescue a woman from a vehicle submerged in Wood Lake, near Kelowna. St. Pierre swam out six metres through freezing water to reach the Jeep and break its windows. Others then wrapped ropes around the vehicle to have it pulled to shore. Once in shallower waters, they were able to pull the victim out, but she did not survive.
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ADAM WILLIAMS STAFF REPORTER adam@kamloopsthisweek.com
T
hom Keijzer hails from the motherland of speedskating. But it is a move to Kamloops that is taking him to a new level. Keijzer is a Holland-born speedskater who came to the Tournament Capital in August, in pursuit of an education at Thompson Rivers University. Upon his arrival, he joined the Kamloops Long Blades, with whom he is drawing to the end of his first competitive season in Canada. Since landing in Kamloops, the Dutchman has been quite the addition for head coach Sandi Vyse. “It’s cool to have a guy like him who comes into the club, who is from Holland, where speedskaters are gods and [there’s] the whole culture of speedskating there,” she said. “It’s kind of neat to have somebody who has it in their blood like that.” The Canadian lifestyle has been different — people drive monster trucks and his online shopping purchases take days, not hours, to arrive. But more different is his life as a speedskater. Formerly a long-track specialist, Keijzer was forced to switch to short-track — the only option in Kamloops — following his arrival. It has been difficult to train here, he said, where speedskating isn’t on the radar for most young athletes, who are more preoccupied with hockey, football and basketball in the winters and baseball and soccer in the summers. “There’s not a lot of people doing it in Kamloops, so you don’t have a training buddy that is about the same speed,” Keijzer said. “So, that’s a little difficult. “But it has been good so far.” The amenities are far different, too. Canada has a dearth of speedskating ovals and few are refrigerated. Competing last month in the Canadian Junior Speed Skating Championships in
Saturday Western RC Championships TCC REG @ TRU* Men’s Basketball 7 p.m. TCC
Thom Keijzer, a Netherlands-born speedskater and member of the Kamloops Long Blades, will be in action this weekend at the B.C. Speed Skating Association’s B.C. Short Track Championship at McArthur Island Sport and Event Centre.
Winnipeg, the 19-year-old even found himself skating on an outdoor oval, against 20 km/h winds and with temperatures dipping as low as -13 C. Meanwhile, in Holland, every province has its own oval — and provinces are the size of the City of Kamloops. “I had like five within an hour of my home,” Keijzer said. “It’s just that you have more ovals, so you have more people who become good.” To Keijzer’s point, the Dutch dominate speedskating on the international stage, with the nation capturing all 24 of its medals at the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi in the sport — eight golds, seven silvers and nine bronzes. Netherlands swept the podium in four distances and won two of three medals in three others. The country also holds four world
Sunday
records and six Olympic records. All of the World Cups — two of which are hosted in the nation in each season — are televised, as are the national trials. Thialf — a stadium near Keijzer’s hometown of ’s-Hertogenbosch where races, including the World Cup, are held — is sold out for every competition. “I think it’s pretty big, but I don’t think it’s like hockey big,” Keijzer said comparing speedskating to Canada’s national pastime. “I think soccer is bigger in Holland. “I think people are proud of the speedskaters, but not everybody does it because it is so expensive. Soccer, you only pay like $100 for boots and for speedskating you’ve got to get the boots, the blades, all the cut-proof stuff, the suit. It’s at least $2,000 and then the ice time is also really expensive.” See SHORT-TRACK, A17
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A14
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SPORTS
Blazers riding high into Kelowna games MARTY HASTINGS
STAFF REPORTER
sports@kamloopsthisweek.com
Discontented after losing a heartbreaker to Seattle on Sunday, the Kamloops Blazers bounced back with one of their mostcomplete performances of the season on Wednesday at Sandman Centre. Five Blazers scored in a 5-0 victory over the Chiefs, a win that vaulted Kamloops over Spokane and into the Western Conference’s first wild-card position. “There was urgency and it’s getting down to crunch time,” said Blazers’ netminder Connor Ingram, who recorded his fourth
shutout of the season. “It’s time to stop messing around and get down to business.” The Kelowna Rockets always mean business and the Blazers will be looking to steal points from their nearest rivals in a home-andhome set this weekend. Game time is 7 p.m. tonight on Mark Recchi Way and the rematch
in the Little Apple gets underway tomorrow at 7:05 p.m. “We’ve got to play our best,” Blazers’ head coach Don Hay said. “Kelowna is a real good team. You can’t have any letdowns.” Kamloops forward Jermaine Loewen, already a fan favourite, increased his popularity with a cherry-on-top goal against the Chiefs, streaking down the left wing before cutting to the middle of the ice and tossing a backhander past Tyson Verhelst late in the third period. “That’s what we’ve been seeing in practice and he hasn’t been able to bring it to the game yet,” Hay said of Loewen’s foray to the
net, noting traffic in front created by Garrett Pilon helped clear the Jamaican-born forward’s path. “That’s a big confidence-booster for him.” Loewen’s parents happened to be in town for Wednesday’s game, visiting from Arborg, Man., and while they will be proud of their son’s goal, Stan and Tara might admit Jermaine needs to work on his celebrations. “I jumped off the glass and I kind of fell a little bit there,” Loewen said. “I didn’t land on both of my feet. I was just excited.” “I tried not to watch it,” Ingram said of the celebration. “I knew it was going to be messy.”
Also scoring on Wednesday for Kamloops were Matt Needham, Jake Kryski, Matt Revel (with a highlight-reel marker of his own) and Quinn Benjafield, production coming from all four lines. Ingram’s night was made less difficult by solid work from the Kamloops D-corps. The Blazers will need another complete team effort on Friday if they’re going to pry any points away from their B.C. Division rival. “The guys are going into next game with a sense of urgency,” Loewen said. “We’re really turning our game around right now.” See PLAYOFF, A17
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A15
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SPORTS
Morgan Kolasa blocks a kill attempt from Trinity Western’s Sophie Carpentier in the WolfPack’s win over the Spartans. ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW
WolfPack far from satisfied WolfPac
DESPITE BEST RECORD IN PROGRAM HISTORY, TRU WANTS DESPITE MORE BEST RECO
ADAM WILLIAMS
STAFF REPORTER
adam@kamloopsthisweek.com
The WolfPack walked away from the 2015-2016 women’s volleyball season wanting. And head coach Chad Grimm was happy to see that. “I think there was some disappointment in the sense that we knew we didn’t put together the match that we were capable of — which, from my point of view, was nice,” Grimm said, reflecting on Thompson Rivers’ 2-0 series loss to the Trinity Western Spartans last weekend. “I didn’t see that, ‘Well, you know, we made playoffs, its OK to lose to Trinity.’ I didn’t see that. So that was, I think, positive.” The fact Grimm’s club left Langley disappointed to have lost back-to-back 3-1 decisions to what was, a few short weeks ago, the nation’s No. 1 volleyball team, shows just how far the Kamloops program has come in the coach’s two-year tenure. Since taking over a team that was 0-22 in back-to-back seasons, Grimm has revived the WolfPack, removing the culture of losing fostered under former leadership and breathing life into women’s volleyball at Thompson Rivers University. The club is 22-26 in his first two full seasons at the helm.
The Wolves made the Canada West playoffs this year for the first time since 2011-2012. And they knocked off the No. 1 team in the country in their final weekend of regular-season play — a moment that stands out as the highlight of the season for the coach and former volleyball professional. “I don’t know the records, I don’t know if women’s program has ever beat a No. 1 before — I don’t think so — but I think it wasn’t only that, it was the importance of the match to both teams,” Grimm said, recalling the Pack’s 3-1 defeat of Trinity Western on Feb. 12, a victory that propelled the Thompson Rivers into the playoffs. “It wasn’t that we beat a No. 1 playing their second-string in a mean-nothing match. It was an important match to qualify for playoffs and they had their lineup out there wanting to win as well,” he said. Grimm expects the Pack to take another step forward next season, despite losing four of his regulars — setter Katie Woo, hitters Brianne Rauch and Krista Hogewoning and libero/hitter Alyssa Wolf — to graduation. Some of the vacancies will be filled with players who saw limited action this season. Others will be filled by players who redshirted in 2015-2016 or recently
there’s more
online »
committed to volleyball careers ADAM WILLIAMS at Thompson STAFF Rivers. REPORTER adam@kamloopsthisweek.com Grimm has already signed five high-school recruits for the 2016-2017. The WolfPack walked away from the 2015-2016 He acknowledged it’s not women’s volleyball season wanting. always realistic to move forAnd head coach Chad ward every season. However, Grimm was happy to see that. with Iuliia Pakhomenko — who there was some dis was named “I thethink Canada West’s in the sense tha women’s appointment volleyball player of the we knew we didn’t year yesterday — among theput togethe matchnext thatseason’s we were capab returningthe players, of — which, from my point of outlook still seems bright. view, was nice,”any Grimm “I don’t think there’s rea- said, reflecting Thompson son that we need toon take a step River 2-0next series losshe tosaid. the Trinity backwards year,” Western With what the Spartans Pack is last weeken “I adidn’t see that, ‘Well, you describing as stepping-stone know, we playoffs, its OK season officially inmade the books, to are losein tothe Trinity.’ I didn’t the Wolves midst of a see th that was, positive.” two-weekSohiatus fromI think, the court. The fact But following the Grimm’s break, club left to have they’ll getLangley back todisappointed physical lost back-to-back 3-1 decision training and, before the month to whatwill was,resume. a few short week is out, practices ago,this theisnation’s No. 1 volleyb After all, a club that team, shows justexit how has a first-round playoff it far the Kamloops expects to improve program upon. has come coach’s two-year “It hasthe been exciting for metenure. over a team and it’s niceSince to seetaking the excitethatthe wasgirls, 0-22especialin back-to-back ment within seasons, ly,” Grimm said. Grimm has revived th “[It’s nice] for them to be able WolfPack, removing the cultur to hold their headsfostered up highunder and forof losing be proudmer of the programand and breathing leadership make it feel something lifelike intoit’s women’s volleyball at that’s important and Rivers something Thompson University. worth working andissomeThefor club 22-26 in his firs thing thattwo canfull be seasons a success.” at the helm.
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A17
SPORTS
Short-track championship begins tomorrow
CLASSICS FARE WELL IN WILLIAMS LAKE
From A13
The Kamloops Classic Swimming club swam to 79 top-three finishes at the Williams Lake Cariboo Dental Frost Meet on the weekend. The club’s 24 racers returned to Kamloops with 23 gold medals, 21 silver medals and 31 bronze medals. Sienna Angove led the Classics in 9- to 10-year-old girls’ action, finishing first in the 100-metre freestyle, 50m kick, 50m freestyle, 200m backstroke and 200m butterfly. Claire Bagabuyo also had a number of podiums, including gold-medal finishes in the 50m kick, 50m backstroke, 50m breaststroke and 100m breaststroke. Find more results online at kamloopsthisweek.com.
Despite all that’s different, Keijzer hasn’t complained. He’s in the midst of an impressive season with the Long Blades, which has seen him skate to a number of personal-best times. He’ll wrap up his first year with what he hopes will be an impressive showing at the B.C. Short Track Championships in Kamloops this weekend. More importantly, Vyse said Keijzer has been quite a fit with her club. “He’s a really good influence because he really loves it,” she said. “When he goes there [practice], he wants to be there, he’s enjoying it all the time, whatever program I throw at him, he’s good to go . . . he’s never
whining or complaining — he’s just happy. “He’s happy to be there and he’s just loving skating. That, as a coach, that’s your dream skater.”
B.C. Short Track Championship
A total of 128 skaters representing 19 clubs will be in the Tournament Capital on the weekend for the B.C. Speed
Playoff picture From A13
The WHL Western Conference playoff system sees the top three teams in the B.C. and U.S. divisions qualify, along with two wild-card spots reserved for the next two best records. Kamloops sits in the first wild-card slot with 69 points and is two points up on Spokane, which occupies the second wild-card position and holds a fourpoint lead on the
Tri-City Americans. The Prince George Cougars are third in the B.C. Division, five points ahead of the Blazers.
Throwback Friday
The Blazers are going old school. Kamloops will wear CCM Propac fulllength pants tonight against the Rockets. Similar pants were worn by Blazer teams in the 1980s, a fashion that lasted until 19861987.
The Kamloops Exploration Group is pleased to present their
2016 Lecture Series
MAGNITUDE 9 - COUNTDOWN TO THE NEXT GIANT EARTHQUAKE IN BRITISH COLUMBIA with John Clague Wednesday, March 9th Ashcroft, BC at the River Inn - 7 PM Thursday, March 10th TRU Mountain Room - 7 PM FUSION - THE ULTIMATE ENERGY SOURCE with Allan Offenberger Thursday, March 31st TRU Mountain Room - 7 PM WELLS GRAY WORLD HERITAGE: VOLCANIC GEM OF THE CARIBOO MOUNTAINS with Catherine Hickson Wednesday, April 6th - Clearwater, BC at the Dutch Lake Community Centre - 7 PM Thursday, April 7th - TRU Mountain Room - 7 PM There will be a KEG Social before the April 7th talk in the Mountain Room beginning at 5:30 PM. Appies and no host bar! T. REX DISCOVERY CENTRE Thursday, April 21st - TRU Mountain Room - 7 PM
For more information and biographies please visit our website at www.keg.bc.ca Some information subject to change
Skating Association’s B.C. Short Track Championship. The provincial event is a qualifying competition for the Canada West Short Track Championship in Edmonton on March 19 to March 20. Skaters from clubs including Fort St. John, Fort St. James, Prince George, Victoria and the Lower Mainland will compete in 14 divisions in Kamloops, with racers ranging in age from nine to 68. The Kamloops Long Blades, the hosts of the event, will have eight skaters competing in the competition. Races will begin at 9:15 a.m. tomorrow and Sunday at McArthur Island Sport and Event Centre.
A18
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
NATIONAL SPORTS Dickey feels ready after off-season knee surgery
Sidney Crosby is part of a core group of players who will suit up for Canada in the upcoming World Cup of hockey.
Stacked field set for opening of 2016 Brier
MELISSA COUTO
GREGORY STRONG
DUNEDIN — R.A. Dickey felt something was wrong with his knee after only a handful of starts last season. The Blue Jays knuckleballer knew it couldn’t be good, but he didn’t even want to find out how bad it was. “If I could keep going, I wanted to keep going,’’ Dickey said. “But it got to the point where we needed to figure out what it was so we could take care of it. “When you get older, you don’t really want to know all the maladies in your body. You just want to compete. That’s what I wanted to do.’’ Dickey said the pain began four or five starts into the year and an eventual MRI revealed that the 41-year-old right-hander had torn the meniscus in his right knee. He pitched the rest of the season — leading the Blue Jays rotation with 33 starts — before having surgery to repair it. The procedure, done in Dickey’s native Nashville by Dr. Burton Elrod of the Tennessee Titans, removed part of his meniscus and smoothed out some rough spots on his knee bone. “It was pretty rough looking,’’ Dickey said. “It was a bucket tear and there were some bone issues as well . . . but I feel fantastic. All things are pointing to being in good shape.’’ Dickey, who pitched the first two frames of Wednesday’s 4-4 tie with the Philadelphia Phillies in Toronto’s spring training home opener, said his body felt great after the outing. He got through the first inning without issue — inducing a flyout, a pop-out and a ground-out — then gave up two hits and a run in the second. Dickey finished last season 11-11 with a 3.91 earned-run average, but he really turned on his game in the second half, winning eight of his last nine decisions from July 23 to Sept. 25. He said he never got to the point where he felt he had to miss an outing. “There were days where I’d come in after a start and my knee would be the size of your head,’’ Dickey said. “I would be like: ‘Well, we gotta get that out of there someway and [Blue Jays head athletic trainer] George Poulis was able to do it.’ “We were able to tee it up every fifth day. I mean, you gotta be able to do some of that when you pitch a lot of innings.’’
OTTAWA — Winnipeg skip Mike McEwen picked a tough year to make his long-awaited Tim Hortons Brier debut. The field is stacked for the upcoming Canadian men’s curling championship at TD Place in Ottawa. Reigning Olympic champion Brad Jacobs of Northern Ontario, twotime Brier champ Kevin Koe of Alberta, top-ranked Brad Gushue of Newfoundland and Labrador and four-time world champion Glenn Howard of Ontario are some of the headliners. Other contenders include defending champion Pat Simmons and his Team Canada rink, along with B.C.’s Jim Cotter, Quebec’s Jean-Michel Menard and Saskatchewan’s Steve Laycock. “There is probably six, seven or eight teams that have a legitimate shot,’’ McEwen said. Prince Edward Island’s Adam Casey and New Brunswick’s Mike Kennedy have also secured berths in the main draw, which begins tomorrow afternoon at the 10,000-seat venue. The 12th and final spot goes to the winner of a qualification round-robin between Nova Scotia’s Jamie Murphy, Bob Smallwood of the Yukon, Jamie Koe of the Northwest Territories and Nunavut’s Wade Kingdon. McEwen, 35, has been a powerhouse on the Grand Slam circuit for years and holds the No. 3 position on the Canadian Team Ranking System standings. Jacobs, meanwhile, settled for a second-place finish last year after dropping an extraend decision to Simmons in the final. The Sault Ste. Marie rink won the Brier in 2013 before taking Olympic gold the following year in Sochi, Russia. Menard won the Brier in 2006 while Kevin Koe was victorious in 2010 and 2014. Howard, a national champion in 1987, 1993, 2007 and 2012, will be making his record 16th appearance at the Brier. Gushue has been in top form this season and holds the No. 1 spot in the CTRS standings. The 2006 Olympic champion is hoping his 13th career Brier appearance will prove lucky and get him that elusive national title. The top four teams will qualify for the Page playoffs starting March 11. The medal games are set for March 13.
THE CANADIAN PRESS
THE CANADIAN PRESS
Olympians return for World Cup CANADA NAMES 12 GOLD MEDALLISTS TO SEPTEMBER ROSTER JONAS SIEGEL
THE CANADIAN PRESS
TORONTO — Hockey Canada is going back to a golden well for the 2016 World Cup. Twelve of the first 16 players named to the Canadian squad early Wednesday evening won gold at the most recent Winter Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia. Sidney Crosby, Jonathan Toews, Jamie Benn and Ryan Getzlaf front the returning forward group with Drew Doughty, Duncan Keith and Shea Weber are back to steady the Canadian back-end. Injured at the moment, but brilliant in Russia and the reigning Hart and Vezina Trophy winner, Carey Price returns as the favourite to assume the No. 1 spot in goal. “That’s a big stage,’’ Hockey Canada president Tom Renney said of the Olympics. “To be able to deliver on that stage under the circumstances is important. Certainly they have a leg up. That being said you still have to come back to your league and play properly and those guys have done that.’’ Injured in 2014, Lightning captain Steven Stamkos was one of four players in the first group named not to play for Canada in Sochi, joined by goaltenders Corey Crawford and Braden Holtby as well as Tyler Seguin, the Dallas Stars’ centre who has blossomed into one of the league’s most feared offensive players. Seguin seems poised to line
up alongside Benn, his Stars linemate, in the fall. It’s little wonder why Canada opted to bring back the core of that Sochi collection, mind-bendingly dominant under head coach Mike Babcock at the Olympics. A defensive gem that held the puck almost without interruption, the Canadians yielded only three goals all tournament while shutting out the Americans and Swedes in the semifinal and gold medal games. Jeff Carter, Patrice Bergeron, John Tavares and Marc-Edouard Vlasic also return from the goldwinning squad. Management weighed not only individual talents from that group, but how effectively they meshed with others in Sochi, notably on defence. Keith and Weber formed a dominant top pairing in Russia, backed up by Doughty and Vlasic, the steady San Jose Sharks’ defenceman. “We look at the Sochi group and I think that might’ve been the best defensive group put together for international competition,’’ Canada’s general manager Doug Armstrong said. Among those not named in the initial wave from the 2014 squad was Corey Perry, the Ducks’ winger who had only one point at the Olympics and struggled early for Anaheim this season, Avalanche speedster Matt Duchene and Blues’ defenceman Alex Pietrangelo. Perry has surged with 27 goals since the start of November
(entering play last night) and will be considered for the final roster, Armstrong said. “There’s a wealth of riches when you’re picking this team and now we had to separate 16 candies out of the barrel,’’ Armstrong said. “We’re gonna add seven more at the end.’’ The reigning Hart and Vezina Trophy winner, Price was named to the team despite not having played for the Canadiens since late November because of a lower-body injury. Armstrong consulted with Price and Canadiens ownership — via Montreal general manager and Canadian assistant general manager Marc Bergevin — to determine their comfort with the goaltender being named to the initial group. Crawford and Holtby are intriguing secondary options to Price, the former a two-time Stanley Cup champion in the midst of his best NHL season, the latter on track for a 50-win year. Canada’s management team has until June 1 to name the remaining seven players to its roster. “They only let us name 16, so it’s pretty easy,’’ Babcock said of naming the first group of players, speaking to reporters in Washington, D.C., ahead of the official announcement. “You take the 16 you think you should name and you name them. The hardest part is the part to come. Not the first 16. My wife could’ve done that. It’s the rest.’’
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
A19
Obituaries & In Memoriam JAMES (JIM) WILSON DEWAR
Thank You Thank you all for your condolences and a heartfelt thank you to those who attended the celebration of Patrick Desmond’s Life: the Prayers, the Holy Celebration of the Mass at Sacred Heart Cathedral, the interment at Hillside Cemetery, and the reception at Hotel 540. Thank you for your sharing, fellowship and extended eulogies. For all the beautiful sympathy cards, the holy sacrifice mass cards for Pat, the delicious food, the fruit baskets and beautiful flower arrangements. Your kindness will never be forgotten. A special thank you to Glen Peter and the staff of Schoening Funeral Chapel. With greatest love and gratitude thank you.
James (Jim) Wilson Dewar died peacefully at home in Kamloops on February 24th, 2016, aged 87 years. He is lovingly remembered by his wife Edna, children Gordon Dewar of Kamloops, Hilary Wahlstrom (Keith) of Salt Spring Island, Rona Tennant (Alan) of Calgary, Elaine Dewar (Shorty) of Saranac Lake, NY, grandchildren Michelle Carre (Matt), Lisa Tennant (Laura), Carl and Lina Wahlstrom, and great-grandchildren Lochlan and Smith Carre. He was predeceased by his brother Tom Dewar of Motherwell, Scotland. Jim was born on April 22, 1928 in Glasgow, Scotland, where he also spent his childhood. He graduated from the University of Glasgow’s School of Medicine in 1951. In 1952, he married the love of his life, Edna Chambers, after which he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps, serving in both Egypt and Cyprus. In 1956, he returned with a young family to the UK and practised family medicine in Southern England for seven years. In 1964, the family immigrated to Canada where they ultimately settled in Kamloops, with Jim joining the Irving Clinic in 1965. Jim loved his new homeland, exploring many parts of Canada in his trusty Westfalia. Although camping, hiking, reading, and getting involved in various causes for social justice brought him much joy, his main passion was music. During Jim’s years in Kamloops, he conducted the Bel Canto Chorale, played Noye in Britten’s Opera,”Noye’s Fludde” (for which he grew a beard in 1972 -and thereafter never shaved off!), and was founding president of the Kamloops Symphony Orchestra. With the KSO, he performed the solo harpsichord part of Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto #5, guest-conducted, and played timpani, generally supporting the local classical music scene. After a long and happy medical career with emphasis on geriatrics, nephrology, and family medicine, Jim gave up his practice in 1994 and retired to Chase in 1998. In 2013, Jim and Edna returned to Kamloops, where they could be closer to amenities and friends. The family would like to thank the exemplary staff at Kamloops Seniors’ Village who cared for Jim so well during the last two years of his life. A Celebration of Jim’s Life will take place at Schoening’s Funeral Home, 513 Seymour St., on Tuesday, March 8th, at 2:00 p.m. Should friends desire, donations made to the Alzheimer Society of British Columbia would be very much appreciated. (Alzheimer Society of BC, 300 - 828 West 8th Ave, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 1E2 or www.alzheimer.ca/en/Get-involved/ Ways-to-donate. ) Condolences may be expressed at www.schoeningfuneralservice.com.
Alice Desmond and Family
It is with heartfelt sadness that we announce the passing of Ione Zwarich on February 16, 2016 at the age of 76 years. She was born on March 8, 1939 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Ione is predeceased by her son Scotty Masecar and her parents. Ione will be lovingly remembered and forever missed by her husband Clarence, sister Lorraine (Wilf), brother Lloyd (Ellen) and her six children; Sandy (Leo), Debbie (Ken), Carol (Jim), Linda (Leon), Jeff (Carol) and David. Further cherishing her memory are many in laws, grandchildren, greatgrandchildren, nieces, nephews and special friends. A heartfelt thanks to Hospice House in Kelowna. Those wishing to do so may make a donation in Ione’s name to The Central Okanagan Hospice House (2035 Ethel Street, Kelowna, BC V1Y 2Z5). A Celebration of Life will be held in the chapel at Alternatives Funeral & Cremation Services (4417 29th Street, Vernon, BC) at 2:00pm Thursday, March 10, 2016. You are invited to leave a personal message of condolence at the family’s on-line obituary @ www.MyAlternatives. ca. Cremation arrangements entrusted to ALTERNATIVES FUNERAL & CREMATION SERVICES ® Vernon 250-558-0866 & Armstrong 250-546-7237
January 31, 1935 March 7, 2013
I m Sending a Dove to Heaven
With a parcel on its wings be careful when you open it it’s full of beautiful things Inside are a million kisses wrapped up in a million hugs to say how much I miss you and to send you all my love I hold you close within my heart and there you will remain to walk with me throughout my life until we meet again.
Marion and Family
Our Facilities
Schoening Funeral Service 250-374-1454
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Did you know that Schoening’s and First Memorial have both had an interior face lift? Both facilities are set up for your reception needs including full catering and varied reception menu for you to choose from. No set up, no clean up, and no shopping to do. Leave that to us.
THE LITTLE UNICORN
EMILIO MAGLIOCCHI 1928 – 2016
On Sunday, February 28th, 2016, Emilio Magliocchi passed away peacefully. Emilio was born October 5th, 1928 in Marano Marchesato, Cosenza, Italy. He was the son of the late Luigi and Luisa Magliocchi of Italy. At the age of 25 he made the long journey to Canada and resided in Prince Rupert, B.C. until 1968. He and his family then moved to Toronto, Ontario for 3 years and in 1971 decided to move and make Kamloops his home. Emilio had many jobs throughout his life. His last job being with the City of Kamloops, Parks and Recreation, although, he never really stopped working. He enjoyed gardening, woodworking, fixing and repairing anything that was broken. He enjoyed spending time with family and friends and he loved to play cards (especially winning) and never without a glass of his homemade wine. He is survived by his loving wife of 68 years Nelina. He leaves behind his caring daughter Luisa Cuzzetto, his daughter-in-law Giovanna and his grandchildren Emilio (Cassy), Amanda (Clint) Martin, Joe (Marietta), Michael, Sarah Cuzzetto and Nelina. His most precious greatgrandchildren Vallah, Thayodin, Lucia and Kenzie. Emilio also leaves behind his treasured siblings, his sister Carmela and brothers Gabriele, Mario (Rosa) of Toronto, his brother Giuseppe and sister Rafaela of Italy and his sister-in-law Francesca of Toronto. He also leaves many cherished nephews and nieces, too numerous to mention. He was predeceased by his brother Francesco of Prince Rupert and his youngest brother Roberto of Toronto. Emilio will once again be happily reunited with his loving son Luigi who passed away in 2005. The family would like to express their gratitude to Dr. Eccleston, Dr. Dong, and all the nurses and caregivers from The Hamlets. Thank you for taking such good care of him throughout the years! Prayers will be recited on Monday, March 7th at 7:00 p.m. at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church. The Reverend Father Paul Simms will celebrate the Mass of Christian Burial in the Church on Tuesday, March 8th at 11:00 a.m. Entombment will follow at Sage Valley Mausoleum. In lieu of flowers, should family or friends desire, donations to the Alzheimer Society of B.C. in memory of Emilio Magliocchi would be greatly appreciated. Condolences may be expressed at www.schoeningfuneralservice.com. Schoenings Funeral Service 250-374-1454
VIC BRADFORD
1939 – 2016
Schoenings Funeral Service 250-374-1454
250-554-2429
In Loving Memory of
ZWARICH, Ione
by Peggy Kociscin,Albuquerque, New Mexico
Ask DRAKE Drake Smith, MSW Funeral Director
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There lived a little unicorn (From when the earth was new), His coat so white it glistened, His eyes a sparkling blue.
To love meant to be happy, And yet it also brought him pain; For those he loved could hurt him Again.. and yet again.
In innocence and beauty, He danced through woods and streams. The animals danced with him, His heart aglow with dreams.
His mother held him lovingly And tried to ease his fears About the sadness life could bring... The lonely, bitter tears.
He laughed and played with rainbows, So happy all day through, He loved to kiss the flowers As their petals shone with dew.
She said, “Life is like a mountain, (And surely this is true) That we must climb as best we can. There’s no ‘around or ‘through.’” The unicorn tried tirelessly, And gave the climb his best; But he felt it was not good enough, He felt he’d failed the test.
He wandered through the meadows In the moon’s soft, silver light. He loved to gaze at all the stars That lightened up the night. He listened to the music Of the birds that graced the trees. He frolicked with the butterflies And raced the gentle breeze. But, as he grew and learned of life, The sparkle in his eye Grew misty as he realized Just what it means to cry. He learned that there are shadows In spite of shining sun. The more he grew, he found that life Was never always fun. For now he’d learn of feelings That come from deep within; No longer in the “dream world” Where (for so long) he’d been. His gentle heart desired But to know the pleasure of To give and to receive The very precious gift of love.
He could not understand it When he felt himself rejected – When all his gentle being asked Was but to be accepted. All this was just too much for him, He knew not what to do. That he was special as himself, Somehow, he never knew. His spirit crushed, he felt defeated, And lonely tears would start. Not understanding how to love, It simply broke his heart. But now he’s in a loving place Where all his pain has ceased, Where all accepted him and his love, Where all he knows is peace. A loving Being tells him, “You’re delightful as you are.” His spirit free, his brilliance now Outshines the brightest star!
Bereavement Publishing Inc. 5125 N. Union Blvd., Suite 4, Colorado Springs, CO 80918
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FAITH
All will be tested before meeting the Lord
E
nglish teacher Lisa Martin of Omaha, Neb. got a surprise earlier this year. The President of the United States, Barack Obama, was coming to her house. The first thing she did was call her husband and tell him to finish the dry-walling project they were in the middle of. She knew she couldn’t host such an important guest in a house full of gyp rock dust and unpainted walls. I heard another story about President Eisenhower, who dropped in unexpectedly on a man in Colorado. He answered the door in his undershirt. Later he said, “If I knew he was coming I would have been dressed properly.”
CHRIS KEMPLING
You gotta have
FAITH
No one wants to meet an extremely important person looking like a slob. We want to look our best. In the Old Testament book of Esther, a beautiful young Jewess, Esther, is selected for the harem of King Xerxes of Persia. But the girls of the harem weren’t presented to him as soon as they arrived. They had to undergo 12 months of “beauty treatments”
before they were even eligible for a royal audience. In Christian theology, the Church (i.e. the collective name for all believers) is described as a bride and Jesus the bridegroom. The prophet Isaiah says, “As a bridegroom rejoices over his bride, so will your God rejoice over you.” But, as every bride knows, the preparations for the special day (and special night) are very particular. Everything must be perfect. There is probably no other day in a young woman’s life when so much care is devoted to being entirely without blemish, in body and dress. There will come a time in every believer’s life when they will be ushered into the presence of the king of kings, the lord of glory. But some Christian
religious traditions teach that some may require a time of purification first, like Esther, before they are worthy to stand in the presence. In Catholic tradition, this purification period is called purgatory. When I was a Protestant, purgatory was almost never mentioned, except in passing as something somewhat bizarre that Catholics believed. When Christians died, they went to heaven — no waiting, no period of purification. But in the apostle Paul’s letter to the corinthians, he suggests that some believers will need to be cleansed by fire of actions or behaviours unworthy of a true believer before they enter the gates of heaven. Paul writes, “I laid a foundation as an expert builder and
someone else is building on it. “But each one should be careful how he builds. If any man builds on this foundation using gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay or straw, his work will be shown for what it is because the day will bring it to light. “It will be revealed with fire and the fire will test the quality of each man’s work. “If what he has built survives, he will receive his reward. If it is burned up, he will suffer loss; he himself will be saved but only as one escaping through the flames.” Clearly, Paul is speaking metaphorically. The building he is referring to is the believer’s lifetime of Christian practice and behaviour. “Wood, hay or straw” materials that would be burned up in a fire are behaviours,
thoughts or actions unworthy of a true believer. Turning away from someone in need, sinning intentionally, failing to help when it was in your power to do so or behaving vengefully toward an enemy are examples. “Gold, silver or precious stone” behaviours are those most compassionate, most loving, most selfsacrificing, most Godhonouring. These buildings will stand the test of fire. The day is a reference to judgment day, when all people, believers and unbelievers will be judged for their actions on Earth. Those who fail to exercise their God-given gifts or are miserly in their Christian practice may be saved, but they will not receive a place of honour at the table of the Lord. There are many
references in scripture to the refining process, which, by definition, means using fire to remove impurities from a precious metal. An angel speaking to the prophet Daniel says in the end times “many will be purified, made spotless and refined.” God, speaking through the prophet Zechariah, said, “I will refine them like silver, and test them like gold.” When God speaks of refining, it means a process of purification of his people so they will be without blemish, without a spot of unholiness. Just how long this purification process lasts is not clear and in the timelessness of eternity, immaterial. I am confident, however, every believer will be tested by the fire of God before being permitted into his holy presence.
Kamloops ALLIANCE CHURCH
SERVICE TIMES Saturday at 6:30pm Sunday at 10am 163 Oriole Rd. Kamloops, B.C. www.gcchurch.ca
Doing Life Together!
HOPE FOUND HERE! Sundays at 10:30 am Free Methodist Church
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COMMUNITY CHURCH • 344 POPLAR A Place To Belong A Place To Worship A Place To Serve
Sunday Service - 11:00 a.m. Children’s Church - 11:45 a.m. 250-554-1611
www.kamloopsalliance.com
Visit us at www.kamsa.ca
UKRAINIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS
Unitarian Universalist
1044- 8TH STREET ~ 250.376.9209
Vespers
at 6:00 pm Saturday, Mar 5th
Divine Liturgy at 10:00 am Sunday, Mar 6th
The Parish Priest is Rev. Fr. Roman Trynoha SERVICES ARE IN ENGLISH
Fellowship of Kamloops Valleyview Hall 2288 Park Dr.
Worship Services Meditation Discussion Circles Sundays at 10:00 a.m. For full schedule, visit www.uukam.bc.ca
Freedom of religious thought
PRAY TODAY
This year’s World Day of Prayer will be held today at St. Paul’s Cathedral, 360 Nicola St., at 1 p.m. and at St. John Vianney, 2826 Bank St., at 7 p.m. This year’s prayer, Receive Children, Receive Me, was written by the World Day of Prayer Committee of Cuba. Everyone is invited. Additional information is available online at wicc.org/world-day-of-prayer/.
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
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NATIONAL NEWS
Push back on carbon price gains steam as first ministers meet working groups that will examine four policy areas — including carbon pricing — over the next six months. The federal government has been quietly insisting for weeks a national carbon price, as promised in the Liberal platform, will be imposed from above if provinces are unable to agree on their own system for pricing greenhouse gas emissions. That unwavering stance could provide some drama in a first ministers’ meeting that is now clearly focused on process rather than immediate results. Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger, who like
Wall faces re-election this spring, said there’s a common understanding among the premiers that action on climate change can and should take many paths. “The do-nothing option is not there,’’ said Selinger, citing floods and other impacts of a changing climate already underway. “It costs you billions of dollars to do nothing. So you might as well make a decision to do things that are going to grow your economy, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and do it in a way that’s flexible.’’ The first ministers meeting has taken on
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VANCOUVER — Several premiers are pushing back against federal resolve to put a price on carbon emissions as they sat down yesterday with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to discuss climate policy. However, the dissent didn’t appear to dampen the mood, with all the participants agreeing the talks are necessary and more collective policy action is required. “Listen, I don’t think anyone has done enough,’’ said Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil on the way into the scheduled five-hour meeting. “But I think we need to recognize that there’s more than one way to deal with the carbon issue.’’ McNeil said after spending heavily on hydro-electric transmission, Atlantic Canada has effectively built a carbon price into electricity rates that are the highest in Canada. Yukon Premier Darrell Pasloski is also against imposing any additional costs on fossil fuel consumers in Canada’s North, as are his counterparts in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut. “Our position now is more aligned with Yukon and Nunavut in being against any
carbon pricing scheme that would penalize northerners by raising our cost of living,’’ Shaun Best, a spokesman for Northwest Territories Premier Bob McLeod, said in an email from Yellowknife. Brad Wall, the Saskatchewan premier who’s been leading a lonely charge against a federally imposed carbon tax, strolled into the meeting almost unmolested by the media horde camped in the halls of the Vancouver Convention Centre. Wall cleared the air late Wednesday by saying Saskatchewan would participate “constructively’’ in proposed
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Celebrate family with multi-generational travel
F
amilies want to travel together. Why? Because special times together create powerful bonds money can’t buy. Today’s world demands a fast pace to squeeze everything in. Often, both parents work. Kids are active in sports, clubs and activities. Teens have afterschool jobs, busy social calendars and everyone is glued to their cellphone. Family time is at a premium. At the same time, baby boomers are healthier and wealthier than previous generations and value travel and family. Many families are geographically challenged, living far from each other.
KATE ASHBY
CRUISING Reconnecting through travel is a wonderful way to keep family ties strong and maintain relationships across generations. Multi-generational travel is largely driven by grandparents who enjoy an active lifestyle and want to share experiences with their kids and grandchildren. There are many great destinations for multigenerational
travel at any budget. Orchestrating a trip for multiple ages and interests requires research, communication and planning. Cruise lovers know cruising is a highvalue vacation, so it has naturally become a favourite for multigenerational travel. When you book a cruise, almost everything is taken care of. Nobody has to drive, shop for groceries, cook, do dishes, laundry or make the beds. Every family member can truly relax, join in the activities and enjoy the holiday. Cruising allows togetherness as well as independence. Each family unit occupies a different stateroom, which can vary in cost and luxury and may be side-byside or on different
CHINESE RESTAURANT
levels of the ship. With the multitude of on-board recreational options and age-specific kids clubs, everyone can happily go off in many directions doing different activities or nothing at all. At the end of the day, families can meet at formal mealtimes and catch up on the day’s events. Onboard programs and facilities for families continue to expand. Here are a few interesting evolutions: • Ships are catering to multi-generational families. In addition to creating better spaces for kids, lines are paying more attention to adult-only areas in an effort to woo extended families. • Family staterooms and suites are within reach of more families. Many cruise lines, building new ships, have designed their vessels to incorporate more fam-
ily accommodations. Norwegian, Royal Caribbean, Carnival and Disney all have cabins that sleep five or six passengers now. • While many lines previously grouped all teens (ages 13 to 17) together, most new ships are giving tweens (ages 12 to 14) their own facilities. Teen-only programs incorporate a range of ship-wide options, from spa treatments to shore excursions. • Bigger ships offer more space, more activities and features that would have seemed unthinkable several years ago. Where rock walls and miniature golf once seemed an extravagance, families now have access to bowling alleys, elaborate water parks with massive slides, rope courses, bumper cars, surfing simulators, outdoor movies, aqua theatres, robotic bartenders and much more.
• Entertainment has also reached a new level. Families can opt for a DreamWorks experience on Royal Caribbean (Quantum of the Seas, launching May 2016, Anthem of the Seas, Oasis of the Seas, Allure of the Seas, Freedom of the Seas, Liberty of the Seas, Mariner of the Seas and Voyager of the Seas), during which they’ll get to meet characters like Shrek and Po (the Kung Fu Panda). Likewise, Norwegian offers Nickelodeon-themed cruises on Norwegian Breakaway, Norwegian Epic, Norwegian Gem, Norwegian Getaway and Norwegian Jewel. Carnival has added Seuss at Sea to several ships. • Newer ships like Norwegian Breakaway, Norwegian Getaway, Regal and Royal Princess have more outdoor casual dining options and outdoor play areas have been
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added to all kids clubs on Royal and Regal Princess. If you’d like to picnic on a freshly mowed lawn, take an elevator to the top deck on one of the newer Celebrity ships. • When you’re traveling with the whole family, set dining times and show times can be tough. Ships are accommodating families with more flexible dining times and specialty menus for tykes are offered in a variety of dining venues. Where once it was a struggle to find ships that were multigenerational friendly, the challenge today is wading through the bevy of activities, cabin types, kids clubs and bells and whistles newer ships offer. Although you know your family’s tastes and preferences best, travel agents are your best resource when researching and booking a cruise for a multi-generational family. Travel agencies have insight into the best cruise lines and family-friendly ships, cabin arrangements, amenities on-board and, sometimes, access to pricing that beats booking direct. Speaking with a travel agent can save you time and money. There is nothing to lose because cruise research and booking services are free. They can also coordinate flights for each family from different cities across the world. It’s important to find a cruise package that appeals to the majority of family members and remains within everyone’s budget. Get inspired and start planning the family vacation of a lifetime.
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Turtles and gators and worms, oh my! Take a trip to Tampa, where Florida wildlife is on full display MARGARET DEEFHOLTS
TRAVEL WRITERS’ TALES
S
ome things are evocative of childhood. Do you remember combing the beach looking for pretty shells, sand dollars and tiny crabs while mewling seagulls wheeled overhead? That’s what I’m doing today — trolling the shallows off a little island in Tampa Bay, in the company of a group of eco-tourists led by James, a volunteer marine-life expert from the Florida Aquarium. And, just like kids on a school field trip, we crowd James’ elbow, peering at minuscule fish, thread-like black worms and translucent shiny crustaceans with bulging eyes. James identifies each one as they crawl across his hands. As we clamber back on the boat, a light heat haze lies over the bay, but the waters, a pale aquamarine, are clear and so shallow I feel almost as though I’m looking through a pane of glass at the ocean floor. Manta rays, like swift dark clouds, glide just under the surface and stingrays, blending in with the colour of the sand below, lie in wait for their prey. As we throttle up to full speed, the wind, tangy with saltspray, whips against my face and I hang onto my hat. We slow down to look at a group of pelicans, digni-
fied as an assembly of university professors. Farther along, snowy egrets pick their way daintily along mud-flat beaches, pecking fastidiously at their breakfast of algae and, off to one side, a shoal of porpoises, leap and frolic in the sun-speckled waters. Weedon Island is a 1,000-acre bird sanctuary and, as we head into one of its mangrove-fringed lagoons, thick sea-grasses brush against the keel. James cuts the motor, jumps off the bow and wades through knee-deep water, dragging the boat behind him. “Take a look there,” he says, pointing. I raise my binoculars and zoom in on a family of roseate spoonbills, their feathers bright pink against the foliage. On the opposite bank, a white ibis poses obligingly for my camera, and as I shade my eyes against the sun, a blue heron soars splendidly into flight above the tree line. Back on land, a shout from James draws the group to the edge of the dock. He is holding up a crab — a beautiful creature with blue claws and an orangy-brown and blue speckled shell. “Bad-tempered little critters,” he says. “You wouldn’t want them to take a nip at your fingers — they can do serious damage. “Pitty we can’t have it for lunch. Blue crab is delicious!” He chucks it regretfully back into the water and the crab beats a hasty retreat —
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MARGARET DEEFHOLTS PHOTOS Wildlife in Florida includes alligators, pelicans, egrets, ibis, blue crab and turtles. Travel Writers’ Tales’ Margaret Deefholts took a trip to the Tampa area to go on a bit of a safari.
which is what I am inclined to do the following morning. What was I thinking of when I agreed to a canoeing trip down the alligatorinfested Hillsborough River? I don’t swim and the thought of a frail canoe being the only thing between me and the jaws of a snapping gator makes me quail. But, it’s too late to chicken out now. Joe Faulk, owner of Canoe Escape Inc., helps me don a lifejacket and assures me that in all his many years of
operation he hasn’t had a fatality yet. As it turns out, it is a tranquil glide through a bottle-green world of swamp cypress forests, with trailing fronds of flowering creepers and marsh grasses, fringing the water’s edge. A speckled black and white limpkin settles to feed at the water’s edge. “Lucky shot,” says Joe as I lower my camera. “They are an endangered species, and rarely seen around here.” He manoeuvres the
Theatre at the Coast Skagit Tulip Festival Whistler Spring Getaway Motown & Paint Your Wagon in Seattle Calgary Stampede Barkerville & Sun Peaks Resort Leavenworth Summer Theatre Cruises Catalina Island & Coastal Cruise Experience Norwegian Cruise Line Whitehorse & Glacier Bay Cruise The Yukon with a 7 day cruise on Noordam Greenland & Bafn Island Cruise Baltic Cruise on MS Koningsdam
canoe past half-submerged driftwood, some of it serving as sun decks for families of black turtles. While it is too early in the day for mom and pop alligators to be out in their backyards, their progeny — small and cute (yes cute!) green gators — lie torpid as logs, twinned by their reflections in the clear water. The river, sinuous and smooth, smells of wet bark and marsh mud, and we skim past several large bass swimming just below the surface of the water.
Apr Apr Apr Jun July July Aug
6 10 18 9 7 17 2
5 days 3 days 5 days 4 days 5 days 5 days 3 days
Apr Apr July Aug Aug Aug
25 28 5 3 3 30
11 days 8 days 9 days 19 days 14 days 21 days
Normally the colour of tea (stained by tannic acid leached from rotting swamp vegetation) the Hillsborough River through this stretch is so shallow that even a midget — let alone someone of my generous proportions — would have a hard time drowning in it. I leave Tampa Bay reluctantly. It has been an all-too short visit — and an all-too fleeting glimpse into the wonders of Tampa’s wetlands, its waters and the creatures that call it home.
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KTW friday
WHAT’S HAPPENING
THIS WEEKEND
To submit an item for THIS WEEKEND, email listings@ kamloopsthisweek.com.
MARCH 4, 2016
TODAY ▼ FRI., MARCH 4 COMMUNITY: • Front and Centre: Western Canada Theatre at 40 exhibit of costumes, props, videos and other elements, Kamloops Museum and Archives, 207 Seymour St. Display continues to March 26. • Excel class, 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m., North Kamloops Library, 693 Tranquille Rd. • Old Time Fiddlers dance, 7:30 p.m., Heritage House, 100 Lorne St., $6 for members, $7 for nonmembers. ART: • Out of Sight, Midnight Sun Camera Obscura, Live Stream: Optical Rendering and Isn’t that Punny!, Kamloops Art Gallery, 465 Victoria St. Gallery open Mondays to Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Admission free to gallery members, children under six, $5 for adults, $10 for families, $3 for students seven and older with student ID, for seniors age 62 and older and groups of 20 or more.
More than music
Juno Award-winning Canadian singer-songwriter Jann Arden says it’s a ‘small part’ of her life. Learn what else is important to her before her show in Kamloops • B3
TRAIN FOR BOOGIE (CLINICS BEGIN SOON)
All Levels • All People • All Welcome
THEATRE: • Vagina Monologues, 7:30 p.m., The Rex, 417 Seymour St. Tickets $15 for students and seniors, $20 regular admission. Tickets available at the venue.
Jann Arden is performing at Sagebrush Theatre on Monday, March 21.
See B6
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B2
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
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FINANCIAL MATTERS PAR T 2
Saving And Managing Money
DREAM BIG— THEN PLAN FOR IT Planning today can help put you on the right path towards the retirement lifestyle you want.
CONFIDENT YOU’RE ON TRACK? During the course of retirement planning, you may realize you are in a comfortable position with regard to your retirement plan. If you’re in this situation, consider these options: 1. Move your retirement date up and enjoy more years living your chosen retirement adventure. 2. Adjust your investment mix to help provide greater protection from risk as you transition into retirement. 3. Plan to enjoy a few more indulgences in your retirement. 4. Help out family members with their financial goals: set up a Registered Education Savings Plan for your grandchildren, or contribute to a down payment for a child’s home. You could also plan to leave a larger legacy to loved ones or to a favourite charity. If this is something you’d like to explore, you may be interested in specialized products that guarantee your beneficiaries will receive 100 per cent of your principal investment no matter what happens in the financial markets – while still letting you access your money at any time if your retirement costs more than you expect.
PREPARE FOR THE RETIREMENT YOU WANT With appropriate retirement planning, you can make choices that can lead you to a retirement lifestyle that makes you happy and that you can sustain long after you’ve stopped working. Schedule a meeting with your advisor to discuss the attached worksheet and how to turn decades of diligent working, saving and investing into income to support your retirement dreams.
BEING TAX-SAVVY HAS ADVANTAGES Keep these deductions and credits in your back pocket to help lower your tax bill.
NOBODY LIKES TO PAY MORE TAX than they have to—but when was the last time you checked to make sure you’re taking full advantage of all the tax-saving opportunities available to you? These come in two forms: Deductions that reduce your taxable income
WHEN DO YOU WANT TO RETIRE? Some people have a retirement date in mind from the moment they start their careers. Others don’t think much about retirement until they experience a defining moment or trigger: AGE. Landmark birthdays may get you thinking about retirement. HEALTH. Loved ones experiencing health issues may prompt you to retire and enjoy life to the fullest. FINANCES. Making your last mortgage or debt payment may put you in a good position to retire.
NEXT WEEK:
WORK. An early retirement offer may be an attractive incentive. On the other hand, a layoff or employer bankruptcy may take the decision out of your hands.
PART 2 OF BEING TAX SAVVY HAS ADVANTAGES
Of course, sometimes the trigger isn’t so well defined. It’s simply a matter of feeling “It’s time.”
© 2015 Manulife. The persons and situations depicted are fictional and their resemblance to anyone living or dead is purely coincidental. This media is for information purposes only and is not intended to provide specific financial, tax, legal, accounting or other advice and should not be relied upon in that regard. Many of the issues discussed will vary by province. Individuals should seek the advice of professionals to ensure that any action taken with respect to this information is appropriate to their specific situation. E & O E. Commissions, trailing commissions, management fees and expenses all may be associated with mutual fund investments. Please read the prospectus before investing. Mutual funds are not guaranteed, their values change frequently and past performance may not be repeated. Any amount that is allocated to a segregated fund is invested at the risk of the contractholder and may increase or decrease in value. Manulife, the Block Design, the Four Cubes Design, and Strong Reliable Trustworthy Forward-thinking are trademarks of The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company and are used by it, and by its affiliates under license. 2015
Investment planning makes Sense and Fee Based Financial Planning means: NO COMMISSIONS NO TRAILERS NO BIASES Helping you plan for your future, that’s our personal guarantee. - David & Caroline
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Credits that reduce your taxes payable This article describes some of the most common deductions and credits. Speak with your accountant or tax specialist about which ones apply to you and how you can minimize your family’s tax bill
DEDUCTIONS DO YOU MAKE RRSP CONTRIBUTIONS? When completing your tax return, contributions you made to your Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) can be deducted (up to your contribution limit).1 But they don’t have to be. RRSP deductions can be: Carried forward indefinitely (even after the RRSP is closed) Spread out over several years That means you can make a strategic decision about when to take the deduction – for example, deferring it to a future year when you anticipate your income will be higher.
DO YOU HAVE INVESTMENT EXPENSES? You can deduct fees paid to manage or administer your non-registered investments. You can also deduct interest paid on money borrowed to earn income from non-registered investments or from a business.2
ARE YOU PAYING FOR DAYCARE? You can deduct qualifying child care expenses paid so you or your spouse3 can earn income, go to school or conduct research. You can include amounts paid to a child who is age 18 or older to look after siblings who are age 16 or younger. Generally, only the spouse with the lower net income (even if it is zero) can claim these expenses. However, under certain circumstances the spouse with the higher income may be able to claim them, for example, if the lower-income spouse was enrolled in an educational program. 1
Your final RRSP contribution must be made by December 31 of the year you turn age 71.
2
The Income Tax Act (Canada) provides the basic criteria for interest deductibility. In Quebec, the deduction for investment expenses is limited to the amount of investment income earned during the year.
3
Throughout this article, “spouse” includes a spouse or common-law partner as these terms are defined in the Income Tax Act
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Caroline Knox, CFP
Certified Financial Planner Manulife Securities Investment Services Inc. 5 - 685 Tranquille Road Kamloops, B.C. V2B 3H7 Phone: 1-778-470-3100 Fax: 1-778-470-3101 Cell: 250-318-3694 Email: caroline.knox@dwpage.com
Ryan B. Puri, BBA
Account Representative Manulife Securities Investment Services Inc. 5 - 685 Tranquille Road Kamloops, B.C. V2B 3H7 Phone: 1-778-470-3100 Fax: 1-778-470-3101 Cell: 250-574-8921 Email: ryan.puri@dwpage.com
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
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B3
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Every day about family for Arden DALE BASS
Jann Arden is heading out from her home just outside Calgary for two shows in the Interior this month. She’ll be at the Vernon Performing Arts Centre on March 19 and at Sagebrush Theatre in Kamloops on March 21. Tickets for the Kamloops show are available at the Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-374-5483, kamloopslive.ca.
STAFF REPORTER
dale@kamloopsthisweek.com
H
4102 2016
ome is important to Jann Arden — be it her own home, the treehouse in the yard or her mom’s home just 50 feet up the road. In fact, in many ways home and what it means are more important to the singer-songwriter than music itself, something she described as “a small part of my life.” With 17 Top 10 singles, eight Juno Awards, as well as trophies from other music awards in the country and a star on Canada’s Walk of Fame, that attitude might seem strange. But, for Arden, every day is about family. “I don’t know what else is supposed to be important in my life,” she said. That focus has brought stress and heartache, laughter and joy — and a strong belief society needs to find a better way to care for its aging than what is now in place. Arden said one of the hardest days of her life came when her father moved into an assisted-living facility, something she and her mother had
I don’t “know what else is supposed to be important in my life.
”
— JANN ARDEN
worked hard to avoid, but which, after her dad had a heart attack, some strokes, complications from diabetes and advanced dementia, became the best decision. “For 10 years, we kept him home,” Arden said. “It’s doable. It’s hard work, but it’s doable — and it enriched my life.” Her father died last August — on her mother’s 79th birthday. Two days later, her mom was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Arden said she’s determined to keep her mom living in her own home for as long as she can, a task made easier through caregivers and a team of retirees who share days and overnights
with her mom. Doing this for her parents has made a difference in how Arden sees herself. “It fulfills me,” she said. “It’s my purpose. But it’s not easy. It’s maddening. It’s frustrating. Sometimes I feel like an asshole. “I can go, ‘Woe is me’ or I can roll my sleeves up and get to the job at hand. What would she do for me? I just don’t know how I could live with myself if I didn’t do this.” That’s not to pass judgment on others who don’t, Arden said, acknowledging she is lucky she can afford to hire people to help and to spend time with her mother rather than have to head to an office job.
Arden wishes the care-home industry in Canada would learn from Hogewey, a gated village in the Netherlands that is home to people with dementia. There’s a supermarket, a hair salon, a pub and a theatre where the residents are assisted by caregivers in regular clothing and the medical staff works with the caregivers to create a non-institutional environment. “They feel like they’re living a life,” Arden said. The mother she remembers — one who was a dental assistant, worked on a farm, sewed, did crafts, drove Arden and her brothers everywhere and created beautiful nature scenes with her embroidery and was a beautiful singer — is gone. “I’m resentful, yes, but I’m getting to know a new person,” Arden said. “And I’m so glad they got to see so much of my success.” The experiences
with her parents are having an impact on her music. Arden said they’ve made her a better writer, able to go deep into different emo-
tions, to take how she feels and “put pen to paper.” The treehouse, attached to her home by an elevated walkway, was created to be a refuge where she could write, she said, but she hasn’t used it much in recent months. Arden hopes to retreat to it a bit more, perhaps to finish the novel she’s been working on for quite some time or to work on a song she is co-writing
20 15 /20 16 se as on
with Alan Doyle. She’s also active on social media, sharing her feelings about anything from the length of the Grammy Awards show to the challenge of caring for parents with dementia. “Thank God my mom can’t go on the Internet,” Arden said, laughing at the idea of how mom might react to some of the things she posts. “I’m lucky to have her.”
Director Bruce Dunn | Music
FRINGE PERCUSSION Masterworks
Percussionists will be front and center for Shchedrin’s arrangement of the music from Bizet’s Carmen. SATURDAY, MARCH 12 7:30 pM SAGEBRUSH THEATRE Sponsored by:
Fringe percussion: Martin Fisk, Brian Nesselroad, Jonathan Bernard, Daniel Tones
Tickets: Kamloops Live! Box Office | 250-374-5483 | kamloopssymphony.com season sponsors
RON AND RAE FAWCETT Black
grants CMYK
Pantone
2016 POSTER
WINNER
OF
FOR THE WEEK OF SUNDAY, MARCH 6TH TO SATURDAY, MARCH 12TH 2016 Start times for morning, afternoon and evening sessions are shown. For individual class times, programs are available at Long & McQuade, Lee’s Music, at the Festival office at Accent Inns and at the door to any session.
MAR. 6TH MAR
MAR. 7TH
MAR. 8TH
MAR. 9TH
MAR. 10TH
MAR. 11TH
Junior Piano
Junior Piano
Junior Piano
Senior Piano
Senior Piano
Senior Piano
St.Andrew’s Presbyterian 1101 - 6th Ave. 1:30pm, 6:00pm
St.Andrew’s Presbyterian 1101 - 6th Ave. 9:00am, 1:30pm
St.Andrew’s Presbyterian 1101 - 6th Ave. 9:00am, 1:30pm, 6:00pm
St.Andrew’s Presbyterian 1101 - 6th Ave. 1:30pm, 6:00pm,
St.Andrew’s Presbyterian 1101 - 6th Ave. 9:00am, 1:30pm, 6:00pm,
St.Andrew’s Presbyterian 1101 - 6th Ave. 1:30pm
Entrance to individual sessions at all venues is $2 per person. The purchase of a $10.00 program allows the purchaser (one person) entrance to any competition venue and session. Honours Concert tickets Adult $10, Students $5 and Seniors $5. Lily Knight
Accompanied children under 6 years of age may attend any festival events at no additional cost.
2016 2014 Kamloops Festival of the of the Performing Arts Performing Arts
MAR. 12TH
Commitment to Practice Opportunity to Participate Passion to Perform
WWW.KFPA.CA • 778-921-1930 /KamloopsFestivalOfThePerformingArts
B4
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
X-Fest to bring Oz, Munsch to the park Outdoor theatre festival to return this summer X-Fest will again be a family-friendly theatrical event this year as it presents The Wizard of Oz and Munsch Upon A Time. Both are adaptations; Dusan Magdolen wrote the script for the L. Frank Balm classic and Debbie Patterson delved into the word of Robert Munsch’s books to create her script. Both will run on alternating days from July 11 to July 30 at Prince Charles Park. D A B S
E Q U I P
C U Z C O
S O N A R
P I A N O
A L L O C M A A T D E
F R E E T H R O W
A P A R T
M O A N
L A W I L A Z E R B B A W W O W H O W L E N O N T G U D I T S O M Y B A B L A D I E L D L O L H E C T O H I N G A D O S B A R M I Z E T O N
A G E S
P L A I D
N O T S O S B C T A A R D T O L O L L H E M G O A A I N L L S I B U T O P S S P S A Y T
E A V E E R O U B R E L T S H N I A N I K L N W A A M N E D E R R O A P
B A I O Z L E D P T R O O T A D L E M A O L S A S T E F S O S E A S
A I D E D U N C L E G O T E V E N
N S F R P L A A R E S A T T R I B B O N E R I E R E A L O C K A M O R L I E M I N D A C O K P A E A S M I S O T A R R H A L F O L O O N E X P E
I N A S L U M P
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DAVE EAGLES/KTW
TASTE OF ART
Red Collar Brewing’s sales and marketing manager JP Lancaster prepares for a new art exhibit that opened yesterday at the downtown brewery, located at 355 Lansdowne St. The 15-piece installation features artists’ conception of beer labels. Submissions were open to beer that is historical, brewed by Red Collar or fictional. This is the second exhibit put on by the local brewery, juried by its staff, and Lancaster said they will continue twice annually. Most of the works are for sale and they can be viewed in the tasting room until the end of June.
ANSWERS TO NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD ON PAGE B19
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FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
BIG
Prophecy launches tomorrow BRIEFS
Monte Creek Ranch Winery kicks off its Art in the Vineyard today from noon to 3 p.m. The weekly art sessions with Marc Brzustowski focus on different skills, starting with negative and positive shapes, line and contour drawing and ending with still-life drawing. Each session is $40 and participation is limited to 10 people. To register, email marc@ montecreekranch.com.
A Touch of Ireland
Class Act Theatre Society presents A Touch of Ireland, a one-act play filled with Irish songs, humour and fun, at the Brock Centre Theatre, 9B-1800 Tranquille Rd. The script was written by a society member and is set in
an Irish pub. It features some iconic Irish songs, including McNamara’s Band, Too Ra Loo Ra Loo Ra and When Irish Eyes are Smiling. Performances are on March 11 at 7:30 p.m., with a $12 admission, and March 12 and March 19 at 2 p.m., with admission by donation. Tickets are available at the Centre for Seniors Information in the Brock mall, by calling 778-470-6000 or at the door.
Exhibition at TRU
Canadian dancer and cho-
You
Autobahn for All Sales Event
FINANCE FROM
2. What other hobbies or activities are you involved in? In my spare time I enjoy spending time with friends, sleeping, eating and living life. 3. How and why did you become involved with Big Brothers Big Sisters? I was introduced to the program during a presentation during my class and one of my friends, Ernie, also told me about it. I thought that this program would be awesome to be involved in. 4. What do you enjoy about the In-School Teen Mentoring Program? I enjoy spending time with my Little Buddy and having fun. I enjoy how the program helps a child and teaches me a few new things in the process. 5. What activities do you and your Little Buddy do? My Little Buddy and I play board games, hang out outside and play sports and games in the gym. 6. How is your friendship with your Little Buddy fitting into your life? My friendship with my Little Buddy has fit into my life perfectly. School days can be long, but on the day I visit my Little Buddy I am given a break and it gives me something exciting to do. 7. Why do you think other teens should volunteer in this program? I believe that other teens should join these types of programs, because it teaches you a lot. It’s also tons of fun to spend time with someone who looks up to you. Did you know that your donations fund the mentoring programs we provide? Clothing and linens may be donated at a Drop Box at the following locations: Canadian Tire Aberdeen and Northshore Sahali Centre Mall 945 West Columbia St. TRU McGill Student Housing Walmart 1055 Hillside Drive Petro Canada 301 Yellowhead Hwy.
Juniper Market 3-2049 Highland Pl. Dallas Market Fresh Foods 105-5170 Dallas Dr. Valleyview Square 2121 Trans Canada Hwy. Westsyde Chevron 2711 Westsyde Rd. Westsyde Service 3475 Westsyde Rd.
Northhills Mall 700 Tranquille Rd. Bowlertime/Dirty Jersey 1200 8th St. Parkcrest Store 2091 Parkcrest Ave. Value Village 444 Seymour Street
250-374-6134 • www.bbbskamloops.ca
FOR UP TO
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Art in the Vineyard
Ethan Simon
1. Where do you go to school and what grade are you in? I go to Merritt Secondary School and I am in grade 10.
A&E
reographer Margie Gillis will be a keynote speaker at The Body Eclectic: Exploring the Diversity of Bodily Being, a colloquium and exhibition at Thompson Rivers University from March 11 to March 13. Other participants include psychoanalyst and poet Robert Romanyshyn, who will also give a keynote address, Courtney Coyne-Jensen from Openhagen, Katrina Spade from Seattle, Lorna Roth of Concordia University, Amanda Boetzkes of the University of Guelph, Carolina Bergonzoni and Juli Rees from Vancouver, Matthew Rader from UBCOkanagan, Zoe Kreye of Emily Carr University of Art and Design, Debra Kessler and Andrea Hansen from Kamloops, and Tracy Penny Light, Terryl Atkins, Doug Ellis, Vincent Viezzer, Bruce Baugh and Jenna Woodrow from TRU. The exhibition, Under My Skin: A Splendor of Organs, will feature Vancouver artist Kristina Fiedrich. For more, go online to thebodyeclectic.ca.
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2016 Jetta
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MONTHLY LEASE
FROM THE EQUIVALENT OF
$
45 0.99% 48 at
WEEKLY
for
MONTHS†
WITH $1,198 DOWN
With features you’ll love, like: • TSI Turbocharged Engine • Available App-Connect • Standard Rearview Camera
Highline model shown
Exceptional exists for less than you think. See for yourself at vwoffers.ca. Offers end March 31.
Studio
*Limited time finance purchase offer available through Volkswagen Finance, on approved credit, based on a new and unregistered 2016 Jetta 1.4T Trendline (#163VF1) base model with 5-speed manual transmission with base MSRP of $17,600, including $1,605 freight and PDI, financed at 0% APR for 60 months equals 130 bi-weekly payments starting from $135. $0 down payment or equivalent trade-in due at signing. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation of $17,600. PPSA fee, license, insurance, registration, any dealer or other charges, options and applicable taxes are extra. **Up to $2,000 finance bonus cash available to be applied as a discount on MSRP on finance only (through Volkswagen Finance, on approved credit) of select new and unregistered 2016 Jetta 1.8T Highline, GLI and Hybrid models. Discount varies by model. †Lease payments of $195 on the Jetta must be made on a monthly basis and cannot be made weekly. Weekly equivalent payments shown for information only. Limited time lease offer available through Volkswagen Finance, on approved credit, based on a new and unregistered 2016 Jetta 1.4T Trendline (#163VF1) base model with 5-speed manual transmission. $1,605 freight and PDI included in monthly payment. 48-month term at 0.99% APR. $1,198 down payment, $250 security deposit and first monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation: $10,558. 64,000-kilometre allowance; charge of $0.15/km for excess kilometres. PPSA fee, license, insurance, registration, any dealer or other charges, options and applicable taxes are extra. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Offers end March 31, 2016 and are subject to change or cancellation without notice. Model shown: 2016 Jetta 1.8T Highline automatic transmission, $27,995. Vehicle shown for illustration purposes only and may include optional equipment. Visit vwoffers.ca or your Volkswagen dealer for details. “Volkswagen”, the Volkswagen logo, “Autobahn for All”, “Jetta”, “TSI”, “Highline” and “Trendline” are registered trademarks of Volkswagen AG. © 2016 Volkswagen Canada.
Kamloops author Coreena McBurnie launches her first young-adult novel, Prophecy, tomorrow at noon at Frankly Coffee, 437 Lansdowne St. McBurnie will read from the novel, one she said will be the first in a series of Antigone: The True Story series, set in Ancient Greece and based on the play Oedipus Rex by Sophocles.
B5
B6
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT From B1
Saturday, March 5
Dr. Randy Patch
is pleased to commence his third year of dental practice in association with Dr. Maureen Murray. In addition to restorative dentistry and dental surgery, he accepts referrals for consultations regarding dental medicine, dental surgery and sleep disorders. He is qualified to provide oral sleep appliances for treating appropriate patients diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea. For appointments or further information:
201 - 418 St. Paul Street
250.374.4818
New Patients Welcome! 2015-2016 Season
Music Director: Norris Berg
With Special Guest: Clinton Giovanni Denoni, Pianist
Beethoven, Grieg, & More! 7 pm Sat. March 5, 2016
Community: Front and Centre: Western Canada Theatre at 40 exhibit of cosLISTINGS@KAMLOOPSTHISWEEK.COM. tumes, props, videos Space permitting, they will appear in and other elements, KTW’s Friday edition and online at Kamloops Museum kamloopsthisweek.com. and Archives, 207 Seymour St. $20 regular admission. Info: ukuleleorchesDisplay continues Tickets available at the traofkamloops.com. to March 26. venue. • Nature’s Fare Music: Thompson Market presents a wellTuesday, March 8 Valley Orchestra ness day, 9 a.m. to 6 Community: Front presents Beethoven, p.m., 1350 Summit Dr. and Centre: Western Grieg and More! with • Digital photograCanada Theatre at guest pianist Clinton phy class, 10:15 a.m. 40 exhibit of cosDenoni, 7 p.m., Calvary tumes, props, videos to 11:45 a.m., North Community Church, Kamloops Library, 693 and other elements, 1205 Rogers Way. Tranquille Rd. Kamloops Museum Tickets $15, $5 for • Old Time Fiddlers and Archives, 207 children, $35 for famdance, 7:30 p.m., Seymour St. ily. Tickets available at Heritage House, 100 Display continues the door. Lorne St. to March 26. • Open house, Art: Out of Sight, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., Monday, March 7 Midnight Sun Camera Fraternal Order of Community: Open Obscura, Live Stream: Eagles, 755 Tranquille house, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., Optical Rendering Rd. Fraternal Order of and Isn’t That Punny!, Art: Out of Sight, Eagles, 755 Tranquille Kamloops Art Gallery, Midnight Sun Camera Rd. 465 Victoria St. Obscura, Live Stream: Art: Out of Sight, Gallery open Optical Rendering Midnight Sun Camera Mondays to Saturdays, and Isn’t That Punny!, Obscura, Live Stream: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Kamloops Art Gallery, Optical Rendering Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 465 Victoria St. and Isn’t That Punny!, 9 p.m. Gallery open Kamloops Art Gallery, Admission free to Mondays to Saturdays, 465 Victoria St. gallery members, chil10 a.m. to 5 p.m., dren under six, $5 for Gallery open Thursdays, 10 a.m. to adults, $10 for families, Mondays to Saturdays, 9 p.m. $3 for students seven 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Admission free to and older with student Thursdays, 10 a.m. to gallery members, chilID, for seniors age 62 9 p.m. dren under six, $5 for and older and groups Admission free to of 20 or more. adults, $10 for families, gallery members, chilMusic: Ukulele $3 for students seven dren under six, $5 for and older with student adults, $10 for families, Orchestra of Kamloops meets, 1:30 p.m., ID, for seniors age 62 $3 for students seven North Kamloops and older and groups and older with student Community Centre, of 20 or more. ID, for seniors age 62 M 730 Cottonwood Ave. 7p Theatre: Vagina » and older and groups 2 H1 Rc Info: ukuleleorchesMA20 or more. Monologues, 7:30 p.m., of » N kE sA traofkamloops.com. R The Rex, 417 Seymour FO Music: Ukulele St. Orchestra of Kamloops Wednesday, March 9 Tickets $15 for meets, 6:30 p.m., Plura Community: Front students and seniors, Hills United Church.
SEND EVENTS TO:
Adults: $15.00 Children: $5.00 Family: $35.00
are you up for it?
www.thompsonvalleyorchestra.ca
»M AR cH 3
»7 pM
20 films. Admission at the door: 10 days.
HA IDA GW AII :O NT HE ED GE OF TH EW OR LD
Featuring: Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 1, 1st mvt. Grieg Piano Concerto in A Minor, 3rd mvt.
loops loops
Kam Kam 2 Film Film fest fest 2016 Calvary Community Church
and Centre: Western Canada Theatre at 40 exhibit of costumes, props, videos and other elements, Kamloops Museum and Archives, 207 Seymour St. Display continues to March 26. • Basic computing class, 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., Kamloops Library, 465 Victoria St., 250-372-5145 and North Kamloops Library, 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m., 693 Tranquuille Rd., 250554-1124. • Games and Gab drop-in program for seniors, 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m., North Kamloops Library, 694 Tranquille Rd. Continues every Wednesday to June 22. Art: Out of Sight, Midnight Sun Camera Obscura, Live Stream: Optical Rendering and Isn’t That Punny!, Kamloops Art Gallery, 465 Victoria St. Gallery open Mondays to Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Admission free to gallery members, children under six, $5 for adults, $10 for families, $3 for students seven and older with student ID, for seniors age 62 and older and groups of 20 or more. Theatre: SuperZeroes, presented by Chimera Theatre, 7:30 p.m., Pavilion Theatre, 1025 Lorne St. a family-friendly show (ages eight and older) with superheroes, mistaken identities, hijinks and plenty of laughs. Tickets at Kamloops
Paramount Theatre T OuT L NIGH A ROyA
M H 8 » 6p » MARc
503 Victoria Street • 250-372-3911
Friday, March 4 to Thursday, March 10 Evening: Adult/Youth $8.50 - Senior/Child $6.50
YEARS YEARS
vIcTORIA » MARcH 6 » 2pM
Celebrating ♥ 20 Years
sON OF sAu L»
march 3–12, 2016 at the Paramount theatre
For more information visit www.kamloopsfilmfest.ca
tickets & Passes available online
MA RcH 10 »
sN OW TIM E!( 3D )»
ALL SEATS NOW COST $3.50 ON TUESDAYS!! • SUPER SAVER MATINEES • ALL AGES $6.00 3D SURCHARGE APPLIES TO ALL 3D FILMS
MA Rc H5
6pM
»1 2p M
KUNG FU PANDA 3 (G) CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO FRI, TUE 4:35; CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO SAT-SUN 4:20; STAR & STROLLERS SCREENING THURS 1:00 KUNG FU PANDA 3 3D (G) CC/DVS FRI, TUE 7:00; SAT 11:20, 1:50, 7:00; SUN 1:50, 7:00; MON, WED-THURS 6:35 ZOOTOPIA (G) NO PASSES FRI-SUN, TUE 4:45 ZOOTOPIA (G) NO PASSES FRI, TUE 7:25, 10:05; SAT 11:25, 2:05, 7:25, 10:05; SUN 2:05, 7:25, 10:05; MON, WED-THURS 7:05, 9:40 GODS OF EGYPT (PG) (VIOLENCE) CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO FRI, TUE 4:10; SAT-SUN 4:00 GODS OF EGYPT 3D (PG) (VIOLENCE) CC/DVS FRI, TUE 7:05, 10:00; SAT-SUN 1:00, 7:05, 10:00; MON, WED-THURS 6:30, 9:20 HOW TO BE SINGLE (14A) (COARSE LANGUAGE, SEXUAL CONTENT) CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO FRI,SUN,TUE 5:00, 7:40; SAT 2:20, 5:00, 7:40; MON,WED 6:40 THE REVENANT (14A) (VIOLENCE,SCENE OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE) CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO FRI-SUN, T UE 9:35; MON, WED-THURS 9:00
Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-3745483.
Thursday, March 10
Community: Front and Centre: Western Canada Theatre at 40 exhibit of costumes, props, videos and other elements, Kamloops Museum and Archives, 207 Seymour St. Display continues to March 26. • Android tablets and smartphones class, 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Kamloops Library, 465 Victoria St., 250-3725145. • Word processing class, 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., North Kamloops Library, 683 Tranquille Rd., 250-554-1124. Art: Out of Sight, Midnight Sun Camera Obscura, Live Stream: Optical Rendering and Isn’t That Punny!, Kamloops Art Gallery, 465 Victoria St. Gallery open Mondays to Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. • Chromesthesia, with the Kamloops Art Gallery and Barnacle Records, 290 Third Ave., to make art and listen to music. All materials provided. Theatre: SuperZeroes, presented by Chimera Theatre, 7:30 p.m., Pavilion Theatre, 1025 Lorne St. a family-friendly show (ages eight and older) with superheroes, mistaken identities, hijinks and plenty of laughs. Tickets at Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-3745483.
Information Valid for
Friday, March 4 to Thursday, March 10
www.cineplex.com
DEADPOOL (14A) (NUDITY,SEXUALLY SUGGESTIVE SCENES, COARSE LANGUAGE, VIOLENCE) CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO FRI, TUE 5:10, 7:50, 10:30; SAT 11:55, 2:30, 5:10, 7:50, 10:30; SUN 2:30, 5:10, 7:50, 10:30; MON, WED-THURS 6:55, 9:30 LONDON HAS FALLEN (14A) (FREQUENT VIOLENCE) CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO FRI, TUE 5:05, 7:45, 10:25; SAT 11:45, 2:25, 5:05, 7:45, 10:25; SUN 2:25, 5:05, 7:45, 10:25; MON, WED-THURS 7:00, 9:25 TRIPLE 9 (14A) (NUDITY,FREQUENT VIOLENCE, COARSE LANGUAGE) CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO FRI-SUN, TUE 10:20; MON, WED-THURS 9:15 EDDIE THE EAGLE (G) (SEXUAL LANGUAGE,VIOLENCE) CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO FRI, TUE 4:15, 6:55, 9:40; SAT-SUN 1:25, 4:05, 6:55, 9:40; MON, WED 6:45, 9:20; THURS 6:45, 9:55 WHISKEY TANGO FOXTROT (14A) (COARSE LANGUAGE) CLOSED CAPTION & DESCRIPTIVE VIDEO, NO PASSES FRI,TUE 4:50, 7:30, 10:15; SAT 11:40, 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:15; SUN 1:55, 4:50, 7:30, 10:15; MON, WED 7:10, 9:45; THURS 6:40, 9:15 WHISKEY TANGO FOXTROT (14A) (COARSE LANGUAGE) STAR & STROLLERS SCREENING, NO PASSES THURS 1:00 THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: MANON LESCAUT () SAT 9:55 PARANORMAN (PG) SAT 11:00 BOLSHOI BALLET: SPARTACUS () SUN 12:55 AAIC: RENOIR -- THE UNKNOWN ARTIST () THURS 7:30
Aberdeen Mall Cinemas | 1320 W. Trans Canada Hwy. | 250-377-8401
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
B7
COMMUNITY
KTW’s Jessica Klymchuk is wondering how many sets she’ll have to put in at the gym after eating a helping of French toast and syrup during the Y Strong Kids kickoff breakfast last week. She is part of KTW’s Press Time, exercising and fundraising for kids and youth programs at the YMCA-YWCA. DAVE EAGLES/KTW
Every bit helps for the kids JESSICA KLYMCHUK
STAFF REPORTER
jklymchuk@kamloopsthisweek.com
I
might be allergic to exercise. Unlike my Press Time team member Tara Holmes, I have always avoided physical activity like the plague. Let’s just say, as a kid I was more into reading books than scoring baskets. I hated P.E. class. I couldn’t throw, kick or catch a ball to save my life. The gymnasium was a torture chamber where I was forced to suffer through my worst nightmares — kids are so dramatic. As those of us who are athletically challenged do, I faked sickness and got the hell out of there any chance I could. This pattern continued into adulthood and I think I managed to go six years without
YMCA-YWCA
STRONG KIDS Kamloops This Week’s YMCA-YWCA Strong Kids Challenge team, Press Time, is holding a car wash tomorrow by donation at City Centre Auto Service, 963 Victoria St. Weather permitting, it will run noon to 3 p.m., with the funds supporting YWCA-YMCA programs for children and youth.
setting foot in a gym. When I finally did, I was pleased to see they had made some improvements by mounting TV screens in front of treadmills — what a brilliant idea. With this attitude, I surprised even myself when last year I decided to participate in the Y Strong Kids Challenge and commit to a workout schedule alongside my coworkers. Not only was I going to attempt pushups, but people I knew were going to witness it. It was going to
be motivating, I told myself. And it was. The whole point, at the end of the day, was to raise money so kids can access valuable YMCA-YWCA programs — camps, workshops, swimming lessons and leadership opportunities. I’ve always regretted not taking up a sport and learning to love fitness early on or spending a week at summer camp, but what about the kids who don’t even have a choice? Every kid deserves a chance. So, Press Time is
back again this year, committing alongside 12 other teams to raise $100,000 so 1,000 kids have access to the opportunities they deserve. Our trainer, Marlene Hibbs, has me pumping iron at the gym and I’m even getting up at the crack of dawn to get my workout in. Join us tomorrow for our second annual car was at City Centre Auto Service, 963 Victoria St. We’ll be scrubbing cars from noon to 3 p.m. and taking donations for the cause. We’ll also be selling raffle tickets, with some great prizes to win, including a oneyear family membership to the Y, Jann Arden and Blazers tickets and much more. If you can’t attend, you can make a donation online at http:// tinyurl.com/zwmxvfv. Every bit helps.
LIGHT FIXTURE
MUST MAKE ROOM FOR SPRING / SUMMER ARRIVALS!
REG PRICED R Green Tags - take additional REG PRICED R White Tags - take additional 50% OFF Tags - take additional 60% OFF Tags - take additional 70% OFF Tags
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250-372-0811 - 1140 VICTORIA STREET KAMLOOPSLIGHTING.COM
ENTER TO WIN A TRIP TO COMPLIMENTS OF THE LAMPOST NAME: LOOK FOR DETAILS IN UPCOMING ISSUES OF
PHONE:
Compliments of Kamloops This Week. No cash value - prizes as awarded. No purchase necessary. Winner will be required to complete a skill testing question. Only one entry per person per business. See contest rules for more info.
B8
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
COMMUNITY
Popsicle stick bridges to crumble tomorrow
CALL FOR
A FREE QUOTE
JESSICA WALLACE
250-819-8417 | bigvalley.db@gmail.com
www.bigvalleyroofing.ca
REGISTRATION OPEN FOR THE 2016 SEASON For more information or to register, please visit: www.kwsl.net
REGISTER NOW! Players needed and all skill levels welcome.
DRAFT REGISTRATION CLOSES MARCH 25TH. DRAFT DAY APRIL 4TH FOR ALL DIVISIONS. Must be 18 years old by January 1, 2016
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
C
onstructing a structurally sound bridge from the humble Popsicle stick and simple white glue takes work. But, for Normand Fortier, it’s exciting to watch it all crumble under the so-called bridge buster. “Some of those bridges are extremely, extremely strong,” he said. “They will support over 1,000 pounds.” As one of the organizers of the annual Popsicle Stick Bridge Contest held at Thompson Rivers University, Fortier has had the chance to watch many spans collapse under the pressure of the hydraulic bridge-breaking machine. Made with no more than 100 Popsicle sticks, elementary school kids and engineers alike have been putting forward submissions and competing for prizes for 13 years. Tomorrow, about 70 bridges will be tested to their breaking points in the plumbing lab of TRU’s trades building. Most fail with between 200 to 500 pounds of pressure applied, Fortier said, and he
KTW FILE PHOTO The annual Popsicle Stick Bridge Contest at Thompson Rivers University has seen structures withstand more than 1,000 pounds of pressure under the bridge buster. The competition returns on Saturday.
knows a good design when he sees one. “The best bridge is a very simple triangular shape,” he said. Fortier sees the competition as a way to get kids on campus and start thinking about their futures, possibly at TRU. It’s also a way to engage people in science and engineering. “It’s also a fun thing to do,”
he said, noting parents and children often collaborate on projects. “It’s a nice way to spend time with your kids.” The event — part of March’s engineering month in Canada — is a partnership between the university and the local chapter of professional engineers, who fund the contest. It has four competi-
tion categories: elementary school, secondary school, open and corporate (for engineering professionals only.) Spectators are invited to come out and watch, with festivities beginning at 9:30 a.m. and wrapping up around 3:30 p.m. For more information, go online to tru.ca/science/ news/annual/popsicle.html.
DO YOU HAVE AMAZING LOCAL PHOTOS?
WIN A $100 GIFT CARD TO A LOCAL KAMLOOPS BUSINESS
SATURDAY 9:30am-6:00pm SUNDAY 12:00pm-5:00pm
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We’re looking for your local photos to use in local publications This months theme is “SPRING INTO FUN” Deadline: March 31
ALL REG.PRICED FOOTWEAR UP TO
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To win submit your photos here: Runners Sole owner Wayne Richardson has been serving Kamloops and area for 14 years.
www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ photo-contest/ Photos must be at least 300dpi. One winner selected at the end of each month from all acceptable entries. Read terms and conditions online for details.
COMMUNITY
Q: Why was handicapped parking near Pratt’s Pharmacy moved from Third Avenue to Nicola Street? A: City of Kamloops assistant transportation engineer Liam Baker said it’s a side effect of adding another handicapped parking space. The area had only one space and Baker said many people had requested additional parking, prompting the city to add another spot. “The reason we had to move it was because there wasn’t enough space for both stalls to be on Third Avenue,” Baker said. Disabled parking spaces are bigger than regular stalls — one to 1.5 metres longer on the street and wider in private lots — to allow space for loading and unloading wheelchairs. When asked why there couldn’t be one space on Nicola Street and one on Third Avenue, Baker said the city wanted them next to each other for consistency.
uery
You supply the questions, we find the answers. Send us your query on all things Kamloops to editor@kamloopsthisweek.com.
B9
Ask the
EXPERT BERWICK ON THE PARK
ADVICE & INFORMATION
Q: I am moving this Spring from my home of 48 years to a retirement community. I have so much stuff and no idea where to begin. Please help!
K Q ? amloops
?
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
A: Don’t get stressed out by this impending move! Take a look at this task with 20/20/20/20 Vision. DAVE EAGLES/KTW The city recently moved handicapped parking near Pratt’s Pharmacy from Third Avenue to Nicola Street.
My job is to help residents settle into their new home with comfort and ease.
UNTIL MARCH 31ST 2016
2014 SUZUKI
BOULEVARD M50 800cc
1
ONL Y!
REG $8,999
00 SALE $6,999
MICHEL, MAINTENANCE MANAGER WORKING AT CHARTWELL SINCE 2010.
1
2015 SUZUKI
CHARTWELL.COM
5Y
WAR EAR RANT Y
GW-250
ONL Y!
5Y
WAR EAR RANT Y
REG $4,199
00 SALE $2,999
Make us part of your story. 628 Tranquille Road, Kamloops 778-376-2001
1 7 9 4 C K E L LY D O U G L A S R D » ( 250) 377- 4320
1)Get some boxes and a big felt marker, start in one room - think about your children or loved ones. Choose 20 items having sentimental value and importance to you and your family. Place them in the boxes and mark their names on them. 2) Choose 20 items you will feel good about donating to CHARITY. There are so many neighbourhood causes that need good quality used items. 3) Time to focus on you. Mark a box with NEED. Decide on 20 things that you absolutely NEED in your next living space. 4) In the last box, mark it with WANT. Choose 20 items you want to take. They may be sentimental and not practical, but they are still important to you. Well, you have already decided on 80 items - where they should go and what you will do with them. Congratulations you are on your way!
FREIGHT, PDI & TIRE LEVY EXTRA. ALL REBATES TO DEALER. BIKE MAY NOT BE EXACTLY AS SHOWN IN PHOTO. DL 30329
Limited Studios available
COMPLIMENTS OF Rivercity Cycle NAME: PHONE:
Conditions may apply.
Compliments of Kamloops This Week. No cash value - prizes as awarded. No purchase necessary. Winner will be required to complete a skill testing question. Only one entry per person per business. See contest rules for more info.
Erin Currie is your local Kamloops Senior Living Expert. If you have any questions, or would like to chat, please contact Erin at Berwick on the Park, (250) 377.7275 or email her at berwickonthepark@berwickrc.com
B10
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
COMMUNITY HONOUR ROLL
CRABFEST STEAK AND KING CRAB KING CRAB LEG DINNER KING CRAB AND PRAWN DUO CRAB STUFFED PRAWNS
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*ALL ENTREES SERVED ON A BED OF RICE WITH VEGETABLES.
1502 River Street • 250.372.1522
The only thing we overlook is the river
COMPLIMENTS OF Storms On The River
No Titan left behind Some names were left out when South Kamloops secondary sent out its latest honour-roll list. Here are the remaining names of students who are excelling at the high school on Ninth Avenue: Grade 8 Distinction & Effort Dallas, Rachel Academic & Effort Cantin, Dusan Crowley, Kelsey Academic Friesen, Justin Wroz, William Effort Copp, Brenden Hennessy, Zoey McGowan, Christine Grade 9 Academic & Effort Langevin, Delphine
NAME: PHONE:
Compliments of Kamloops This Week. No cash value - prizes as awarded. No purchase necessary. Winner will be required to complete a skill testing question. Only one entry per person per business. See contest rules for more info.
Academic Cooke, Tristan
Effort McGhee, Kendra Grade 10 Academic & Effort Albach, Charlotte Antoniak, Lucas Baldwin, Blake Barker, Sydney Betker, Andrew Cassidy, Tatum Castillo, Aiden Fawcett, Celia Grant, Joshua Ogilvie, Sophie Pinette, Ryan Rancier, Nathan Ratuski, Thomas Rogan, Lance Sarkor, Isaiah Shand, Micayla Stevenson, Aimee Swanton, Paije Toor, Ashley Vandermey, Michaela Wiederkehr, Levin
v
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Academic Chiba, Ben Crawford, Joel Fedosov, Ethan Guild, Doug Hansen, Tye McVittie, Robbie Moyer, Annika Muir, Dawson Nguyen, Julie Niemela, Halle O’Grady, Caelan Outerbridge, Kieran Reid, Nicola Robinson, Spencer Shakespeare, Megan Tremblay, Connor Walkley, Lauren Webster, Claudia Effort Brown, Jordan Grade 11 Distinction & Effort Giles, Kieran
Meyers, Kaitlyn Norris, Alyssa Effort Dallas, Christina Paetkau, Rhys Pfilger, Haley Reimer, Cole Richardson, Matthew Grade 12 Distinction & Effort Piazza, Nathan Reid, Katherine Roberts, Nathan Sandulescu, Ally Schmidt, Emily Smeaton, Liam Spice, Alex Stefanyk, Marina Sutherland, Makena Uden, Janell Vermey, Heather Williams, Karley Zander, Colleen
Changing lives. Building community.
L-R: Dean, School of Business and Economics Dr. Mike Henry; Warehouse Manager Phil Coates; Director of Development, School of Business and Economics Kim Torreggiani; Assistant Warehouse Manager Chris Johnson
The School of Business and Economics is pleased to announce a donation of $51,000 from Costco Wholesale Canada Ltd. This endowed award will support a student from the Kamloops area who is enrolled in the BBA program throughout their university degree. By choosing to give to Thompson Rivers University,
Ph: 250-374-7467• Fax: 250-374-1033 1365B Dalhousie Drive www.kamloopsthisweek.com
our donors are making a powerful difference... in our students’ lives, in our community, in our world.
Thank you, from TRU. MC120908
The all-new Kamloops This Week news app has everything you need to know about Kamloops at the touch of your finger. The free app combines all the news, sports, entertainment and opinion you find in KTW’s print edition and online at kamloopsthisweek.com and delivers it to go.
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
COMMUNITY
Some fraud is organized and orchestrated by a group of individuals, namely, staged accidents and stolen vehicle rings.
BBB issues list of top Canadian scams From fake tax calls to heartbreak hoaxes, the Better Business Bureau (BBB) has released the Top 10 scams in Canada in 2015. The timing of the release coincides with Fraud Prevention Month in March. In 2014, the BBB reported Canadians were scammed to the tune of roughly $71 million. Last year, that number came down by about $10 million, though the BBB said the data remains tainted by under-reporting. “The 61 million lost in 2015 is likely just five per cent of what was actually lost as victims often feel too ashamed to do anything about it,” said Mainland BC BBC president and CEO Danielle Primrose. “Scammers are finding new ways, new disguises to ply us with the same scams. The Canada Revenue Agency Scam is our No. 1 scam this year. It was the most reported scam by far and it took several forms in order to get your money. And it didn’t just happen around tax time — all year long, we received calls.” According to the Canadian AntiFraud Centre, more than 17,000 Canadians reported being affected in some way by the CRA scam. But it wasn’t the most lucrative scam for would-be thieves. That title goes to Catphishing, the name given to online dating scams. “Canadians are still giving away money in hopes of a new romantic relationship,” Primrose said. “Canadians lost more money to online romance scams than any other reported scam, by a margin of almost $10 million. When as many as 20 per cent of online profiles are believed to be fake, it’s an area where users really need to proceed with caution.” In 2015, the BBB introduced Scam Tracker, a tool that allows the
THE SCAMS 1. Top Extortion Scam: CRA Income Tax Scam; total loss, $2.9 million 2. Top Heartbreak Scam: Catfishing; total loss, $15.6 million 3. Top Prize Scam: Fake Lottery Winnings; total loss, $6.5 million 4. Top Financial Scam: Investment Fraud; total loss, $6 million 5. Top Employment Scam: Secret Shopper; total loss, $3.9 million 6. Top Subscription Scam: Free Trial Traps; total loss, $2.9 million 7. Top Imposter Scam: Spear Phishing; total loss, $5.8 million 8. Top Private Sale Scam: Overpayment/Refund; total loss, $5.3 million 9. Top Emergency Scam: Fake Relative Needs Cash; total loss, $1.9 million 10. Top Lending Scam: Advance Fee Loans; total loss, $989,634 public to upload and share their experiences with scams. Scam Tracker is a microsite with a heat map and search function that allows the user to find information on specific scams throughout North America. It can be found online at bbb.org/scamtracker/mbc/. In less than a year, Scam Tracker has logged more than 16,000 scams in North America, with more than 80 found in B.C. One of the key things people can do to prevent getting scammed is to regularly change their passwords to online accounts. With that in mind, BBB is launching BBB Password Day on March 15 to remind Canadians about the importance of protecting their online presence.
Kamloops woman wins top ABCFP honour The Association of BC Forest Professionals (ABCFP) has honoured six people — including one from Kamloops — who have made significant contributions to the profession and study of forestry. “We congratulate all of our award winners,” said Jonathan Lok, the ABCFP’s president. “They represent the best of our members. “Their expertise, dedication to the profession and passion for forestry is a reflection on us all and will inspire the next generation to do as well or surpass their efforts.” The highest honour the ABCFP can present to its members is the Distinguished Forest Professional
Award. It is only presented to members who make outstanding contributions — usually over a lifetime — to the profession. Kamloops’ Lorraine Maclauchlan was one of two recipients honoured in 2016. Maclauchlan, a sought-after public speaker, is well-known in Kamloops and around the province for her expertise in forest insects and how to mitigate the negative effects of insects on the forests. For her fellow forest professionals, she produces an annual booklet on the state of forest health in southern B.C. The booklet is an essential tool to anyone practising in the area.
Other types of fraud are less obvious. Fraud like this includes exaggerating the extent of an injury, misrepresenting a previous medical condition or slanting the situation when reporting a claim. It’s not unheard of for people to embellish their claim by including vehicle damage unrelated to the crash, or to claim they can’t work when they’re actually back on the job. These tactics may not make the news, but the costs add up and come out of all of our pockets – we all end up paying for those who cheat the system.
Fraudulent claims take a toll on B.C. drivers
While most B.C. drivers are honest when it comes to making insurance claims, there are a few that are hurting things for the rest of us in the province. Industry studies estimate that about 10 to 20 per cent of all insurance claims contain an element of fraud or exaggeration. Applying those estimates here means fraud is costing us up to $600 million per year, or more than $100 annually on every auto insurance policy. Fraud cheats everyone and comes in all shapes and sizes.
ICBC combats fraud with their Special Investigation Unit, which last year looked at more than 5,000 claims les. This includes a cyber unit that employs information publicly available on the internet and social media to investigate suspected fraudulent claims. They’re in the process of increasing their focus on investigations, including training and analytics technology that ags patterns and predictors of fraud. By stepping up efforts to reduce fraudulent and exaggerated claims, along with managing injury claims costs, ICBC is working to take pressure off rising insurance rates. Fraud. It cheats us all.
To learn more about auto insurance fraud, go to icbc.com/fraud
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FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
BUSINESS
Desire and drive: Is it enough?
M
uch has been written about the power of desire and drive. With sufficient desire and drive, it’s been suggested, you can accomplish anything. While both are important elements of any successful journey, they will only take you so far — and only for so long. At some point when progress bogs down or the journey takes an unexpected detour, your drive will diminish and your desire will fade. At those times, it will take more to keep you going. It will take discipline and dedication. The discipline to keep going in the face of adversity is what separates the exceptional performers from the rest of the pack.
JOHN GLENNON
Improving
YOU
When the road gets rocky and takes some unexpected twists and turns, you can sit by the side, make excuses, and watch others go by. Or you can push on despite the terrain. You are responsible for your own life and it’s up to you to choose to go for more — to push on regardless of the challenge. Ultimately, you must decide to which endeavours you are willing to dedicate your time and energy.
You must decide whether you’re willing to settle for what you think you can get or go for what you really want — even if that requires you to stretch outside your comfort zone. If you decide to go for more (and I hope you do), tell others to what you are committed. Let them know exactly what you’re going to accomplish and when you’re going to do it. The more people you tell, the better as the act of sharing your vision strengthens your resolve. Desire and drive will take you down many paths. But it’s discipline and dedication that will enable you to complete the journeys. John Glennon is with Sandler Training, which can be found online at glennon.sandler.com.
Memories
&
Milestones
HAPPY 60th ANNIVERSARY
Ron and Diana Wilkinson Love & Laughter from your family The Wilkinson’s and Day’s
Bergeron - Norwood They decided on forever and forever began when
Cheriese Lacey Bergeron
and Bradley Allan Norwood were married on October 10, 2015
Love and best wishes from Mama, Grant, Chanté, Matt, Beckett, Beau, Tyson and Dallas
Let us help you say
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Friday Edition Kamloops This Week • Full Colour Announcements • Bonus No Extra Charge for Colour
Call 250.374.7467
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FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
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prıces
ALL
the price on hundreds of items*.
CHECKOUT LANES OPEN GUARANTEED† 10AM - 6PM †
unless we are unable due to unforeseen technical difficulties.
Spend $225 and receive
2FREE
assorted varieties, 1 kg 20733617
PKG OF 3 Farmer’s Market™ English cucumber product of Mexico 20828461001
Kraft processed cheese slices 450 g 20778379011
6
98
PC® smokies
4 2
ea
Freybe fresh pepperoni assorted flavors, 500 g 20323265
98
ea
works out to be
1.66 ea.
98
ea
mini cupcakes selected varieties, 283/284 g 20368282
LIMIT 4
Rogers white sugar
5.98
4 kg
AFTER LIMIT
20171831
9
B13
2 lb CLAMSHELL strawberries product of U.S.A. or Mexico, no. 1 grade
up to $11.98 value 20069661001
Spend $225 or more before applicable taxes in a single transaction at any Real Canadian Superstore location and receive 2 free 2 lb strawberries. Excludes purchase 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. The retail value of up to $11.98 will be deducted from the total amount of your purchase before sales taxes are applied. Limit one coupon per family and/or customer account. No cash value. No copies. Coupon must be presented to the cashier at time of purchase. Valid from Friday, March 4th until closing Thursday, March 10th, 2016. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. No substitutions, refunds or exchanges on free item. 20568094 10000 01580 3 4
49
2
97
2
97
ea
ea
1
Dare Bear Paws cookies selected varieties, 140-270 g 20864443
ea
LIMIT 1
AFTER LIMIT
5.87
Kellogg’s family size kids cereal selected varieties, 515-650 g
20082184
97
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
3.47
3
88
1
97
4
97
NEW
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
7.29
Christie cookies
selected varieties, 280-300 g 20316365001
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ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
2.97
ea
LIMIT 2
AFTER LIMIT
6.97
AVAILABLE AT SELECT GARDEN CENTRE LOCATIONS.
Burpee seeds
1
79
from
7 gallon cedar
Primulas
16 20188507
4 in.
1
88
20951769
ea
26
ea
ea
Prices effective Friday, March 4 to Sunday, March 6, 2016 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. © 2016 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.
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kamloopsthisweek.com Announcements ...............001-099 Employment....................100-165 Service Guide ..................170-399 Pets/Farm ......................450-499 For Sale/Wanted..............500-599 Real Estate .....................600-699 Rentals ..........................700-799 Automotive .....................800-915 Legal Notices ................920-1000
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GUNS • KNIVES • MILITARIA ANTIQUES SHOW & SALE
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RUN TILL
RENTED
Saturday, March 19, 2016, 9am-5pm Sunday, March 20, 2016, 9am-3pm
Heritage Park 44140 Luckakuck Way Chilliwack, BC (Exit 116 off Highway 1) WE SUPPORT THE CANADIAN CANCER “KID’S CAMP” AND CKNW ORPHAN’S FUND General Admission: $5 • Parking by donation • ATM on site
Automotive
Automotive
7474406 POWERSPORTS PARTS
COUNTER PERSON
Parts Counter Person required for fast paced multi line dealership. If you enjoy the world of powersports this might be the job you’ve been looking for. We are looking for a self motivated and energetic individual who has the mechanical, & customer service skills to properly serve our customers. Requirements; basic computer knowledge, point of sale and general cashier skills, motorcycle brand and model awareness. This is an entry level position with an opportunity for growth and advancement.
Email resume to:
donrivercitycycle@shaw.ca
* RESTRICTIONS APPLY
Editor - Merritt Herald Merritt, BC Technical Inside Sales Representative Talius is an established and progressive market leader in the manufacturing of roll shutters and retractable screens throughout North America and the Caribbean. We have built our business with a focus on providing excellent customer service, quality and value to our clients. We are a growing company, and are now accepting resumes for the position of Technical Inside Sales Representative in our Salmon Arm facility. Our Inside Sales team provides technical advice, quotations, order processing, troubleshooting and installation support to our dealer network. A strong technical foundation is desired. Consideration will be given to enthusiastic, team-oriented applicants with an attention to detail and an ability to prioritize and multi-task in a fast paced environment. If you are interested in a rewarding career with a growing company, striving for customer service excellence, send your resume in confidence to: ATTN: Operations Manager Email: employment@talius.com or via fax 250-832-8577 We will contact any applicant considered for interviews. No telephone inquiries please. Visit talius.com to learn more about our products and services.
Coming Events
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upcoming event for our 1794 KELLY DOUGLAS RD KAMLOOPS, BC V2C 5S4 (250) 377-4320
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
School District No. 73 KAMLOOPS/THOMPSON School Bus Drivers, Chase BC School District No. 73 (Kamloops/Thompson) is currently accepting applications for a Relief School Bus Driver in Chase, BC.
go to
kamloopsthisweek.com and click on the calendar to place your event.
Career Opportunities 7372862
Truck Driver Training
Professional Truck Driver Program - Funding available for those who qualify!
CERTIFIED ICBC AIR BRAKE COURSE
March 4-6 • March 18-20
Air Brakes
TRAINING TRUCK DRIVERS FOR 27 YEARS!
16 Hour Course 20 Hour Course
call 250.828.5104 or visit
tru.ca/trades
Class 1, 2, 3 and B-Train Driver Training
The successful applicant must possess a valid Class 2 Drivers license with an Air endorsement and have three years proven previous driving experience. Applicants must be able to successfully complete the School District’s road test. Those individuals who have submitted an application in the last six (6) months will be considered and need not reapply. Applications should include, but are not limited to, the following information: • Work history • Indication of a valid Class 2 driver’s license • An Air Brake Endorsement • A recent driver’s abstract If you have the above qualifications, please submit written applications by 4:00 pm. on March 15, 2016 to: Dave Mell, Manager of Transportation School District No. 73 (Kamloops/Thompson) 710 McGill Rd Kamloops BC V2C 2A0 E-mail to Dmell@SD73.bc.ca or fax: (250) 372-3170.
Are you looking to grow your career in an environment where you have the freedom to produce, curate and edit content that is useful and interesting to a growing readership? Our award-winning community newspaper located in the beautiful Thompson-Okanagan is seeking an editor to lead a small, talented team of journalists. Provincial issues like the ongoing biosolids debate and public access to lakes are always simmering under the surface, and national and international lumber, mining and agriculture markets are very influential in this region. As editor, you have the opportunity to tell the stories that matter to the people of the Nicola Valley, many of whom continue to rely on the newspaper to keep them informed. The successful applicant will work with the newsroom’s generalassignment and sports reporters on story assignment and editing. The successful applicant will be responsible for producing six to eight stories per week, taking photographs to accompany those stories, writing columns and editorials, and editing the stories coming in from the reporter and columnists. The editor will also lay out the newspaper twice a week using Adobe InDesign and upload the paper and photo galleries to the newspaper’s website and post them on social media. The successful candidate will be community-oriented and have a serious interest in current events — locally, regionally, provincially, nationally and globally. This position is ideal for a candidate with at least two years of reporting experience wishing to gain editor experience in the everevolving world of journalism. Qualifications: The preferred candidate will be a self-starter with an accredited journalism degree who works efficiently on his or her own. The preferred candidate will also be highly organized and flexible in the hours she or he works in order to cover community events as they arise. The successful candidate will be committed to a high standard of writing and will be proficient in CP Style. Proficiency in InDesign and PhotoShop are required, as are strong layout skills. Applicants must have their own transportation. Please send your resume to: Theresa Arnold - Publisher publisher@merrittherald.com Merritt Herald - 2090 Granite Ave. P.O. Box 9 Merritt, BC V1K 1B8 Tel: (250) 378 4241 Fax: (250) 378 6818
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FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
B15
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Information
Drivers/Courier/ Trucking
Help Wanted
Hospitality
Work Wanted
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Help Wanted
I PAY Cash $$$ For All Scrap Vehicles! and $5 for auto batteries Call or Text Brendan 250-574-4679
Chef - Kitchen Manager. Fulltime. Min. of 2 years experience cooking Authentic, Mexican, Central American Cuisine. Must know how to make Pupusas and Tortillas. Spanish and English are a requirement. Wages negotiable. Send resume to: quilaskamloops@ gmail.com
HOME & YARD HANDYMAN If you need it done, Give us a call ! Steve 250-320-7774.
Denied Long-Term Disability Benefits or other insurance? If YES, call or email for FREE initial legal consultation and protect your right to compensation.
778-588-7049 Julie@LawyersWest.ca www.LawyersWest.ca
PERFECT Part-Time Opportunity
3 Days Per Week call 250-374-0462
Personals 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. SWM looking to meet lady between 60-70 years for outings, dinners, going for drives, dancing, spending time together, who is still young at heart. Non-smoker, social drinker. Reply to Box 1448 this paper. 1365-B Dalhousie Drive, Kamloops, BC V2C 5P6
Lost & Found Found: Laptop on Feb 12th near the Dirty Jersey on the North Shore. 250-376-3933. Lost 1940 blue metal airplane, 1950 suitcase record player w/green mac tack on it, Garrett Metal Detector,1990’s sports card Hockey, Baseball and Basketball. (250) 377-0919
Employment
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.
Education/Trade Schools HUNTER & FIREARMS
Courses. Next C.O.R.E. April 2nd & 3rd, Saturday and Sunday. P.A.L. March 5th, Saturday. Challenges, Testing ongoing daily. Professional outdoorsman & Master Instructor:
Bill
250-376-7970
INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT SCHOOL. Hands-On Tasks. Start Weekly. GPS Training! Funding & Housing Avail! Job Aid! Already a HEO? Get certification proof. Call 1-866-399-3853 or go to: iheschool.com
Help Wanted
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KTW requires door to door substitute carriers for all areas in the city. Vehicle is an asset Call 250-374-0462
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IN FIND IT THE CLASSIFIEDS
Sales
TRY A CLASSIFIED AD
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.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
250-374-0462
North Enderby Timber is hiring trades people for the positions of Industrial Millwright and Steel Fabricator. Sawmill experience is preferred. Please email resume to netimber@junction.net
Need extra $ $ $ Kamloops This Week is currently hiring Substitute Carriers for door-to-door deliveries. Call 250-374-0462 for more information.
Kamloops United Church seeks administra�ve manager responsible for day-to-day opera�on of the church and centre for community and spiritual discovery, in partnership with the Minister. The manager provides direct supervision to staff and support to volunteers. This full-�me posi�on comes with a benets package. Posiধon details at www.kamloopsunited.ca Pos�ng closes March 31, 2016 Apply by email at searchcommiħee@kamloopsunited.ca or by mail at KUC Search Commiħee 421 St Paul St, Kamloops, B.C. V2C 2J7
Includes Training. Call Dave for Home Inspection Franchise Presentation. 1.855.301.2233 www.bc.abuyerschoice.com
BIGGER circulation, BETTER value Every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday over 65,690 readers in over 31,000 homes and businesses receive Kamloops This Week and find it full of relevant, local news. Communicating with customers must be cost-effective. Our large circulation and reasonable ad rates mean your cost per reader is exceptionally affordable. Your ROI is high!
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kamloopsunited.ca
SAHALI
Rte 474 – Coppertree Crt, Trophy Crt. – 26p. Rte 476 – Tantalus Crt, Tinniswood Crt, 2018-2095 Tremerton Dr. – 55p. Rte 477 – Sunhill Crt, 1820-1880 Tremerton Dr. – 51p.
SUNRIVERS
Rte 877 – The Pointe – 13p. Rte 880 – Belmonte Ave, Crt, Dr, Lane, St, Terr & Way, Sillaro Dr, 2000-2028 Sun Rivers Dr, Visao Crt & Terr. – 30p.
Rte 479 – Tomlinson Crt, Tuxford Dr. – 57p. EXPANDING INTO Kamloops!
RUN TILL
CASUAL BUS DRIVERS School District No. 83 (North Okanagan-Shuswap) requires Casual Bus Drivers to work on a casual basis in All Areas. The work involves the operation of school buses used to transport students within the district and on field trips. Applicants will have a demonstrated safe driving history as presented by a Driver’s Abstract from the Motor Vehicle Branch. Practical working knowledge of school bus maintenance and repair requirements, along with the ability to deal in a friendly, courteous and effective manner with a variety of passenger situations is required. Drivers must also possess a good knowledge of the North Okanagan-Shuswap Area. The successful applicant will have a valid B.C. Class 2 Driver’s license with an air brake endorsement and at least one year work experience in the operations of passenger buses. The rate of pay is $24.79 per hour. Interested individuals are invited to submit their resume with full supporting documents (proof of qualificaions must accompany application), including three professional references and send to apply@sd83.bc.ca. We appreciate the interest of all applicants, but only those selected for interviews will be contacted.
7489381 Administraধve Manager Opportunity
HAS THE FOLLOWING DOOR TO DOOR DELIVERY ROUTES COMING AVAILABLE
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.
is looking for substitute distributors for door-to-door deliveries. Vehicle is required. For more information please call the Circulation Department at
Job wanted by Computer Programmer-Analyst /Office 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
THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF S.D. NO. 83 (North Okanagan-Shuswap)
RunRented ‘til
“Read All About It”
Kamloops This Week Run Till Rented
gives you endless possibilities...
Rte 483 – Breakenridge Crt, Cathedral Crt, Grenville Pl, 409594 Robson Dr. – 59p. Rte 486 – Garibaldi Dr. – 50p.
DALLAS/BARNHARTVALE Rte 750 – 5101-5299 Dallas Dr, Mary Pl, Nina Pl, Rachel Pl. – 31p
Rte 751 – 5310 Barnhartvale Dr, Bogetti Pl, Viking Dr, Wade Pl, 5485-5497 E.Trans.Can. Hwy, 53005599 Dallas Dr. – 62p. Rte 752 – 5600-5998 Dallas Dr, Harper Pl, Harper Rd. – 65p.
INTERESTED IN A ROUTE? FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL THE CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT 250-374-0462
$
53
00
Plus Tax
Max 3 Lines Max 12 Weeks
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Scheduled for 4 weeks at a time
(Must phone to reschedule)
Private parties only no businesses Some Restrictions Apply
B16
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
Businesses & Mind Body Spirit
Relax and unwind with a full body massage for appointment couples welcome (250) 682-1802
CLASSIFIEDS can help you reconnect! 250.374.7467
Health Products FREE Catalogue & DVD. 101 Years of Shaklee. Biodegradable hsehold products. Skincare/vitamins2503766607
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
Esthetics Services 7470753
Services
Fitness/Exercise
Home Improvements
Only 3 issues a week!
for a route near you!
Garden & Lawn
GREAT PRODUCT. SMART SERVICE.
Grassbusters Lawn and Yard Care. Now booking for the 2016 season. 250-319-9340.
Carpet - Hardwood Laminate - Vinyl Tile - Stone
Handypersons
WWW.NUFLOORS.CA info@nufloors.ca | 250.372.8141
RICKS’S SMALL HAUL
Landscaping
For all Deliveries & Dump Runs. Extra large dump trailers for rent. Dump Truck Long and Short Hauls!!
250-377-3457
CLASSIFIEDS
Merchandise for Sale
Merchandise for Sale
Pets
Computer Equipment
Heavy Duty Machinery
Misc. for Sale
WANTED! Newer MacBook Pro or MacBook Air 250-3711333
FNA-Steel Shipping Storage Containers. Used 20’40’45’53’ insulated containers. All sizes in stock. Prices starting under $2,000. Modifications possible doors, windows, walls etc., as office or living workshop etc., Ph Toll free 24 hours 1-866528-7108 or 1-778-298-3192 8am-5pm. Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com
Animals sold as “purebred stock” must be registrable in compliance with the Canadian Pedigree Act.
Firewood/Fuel
PETS For Sale?
ALL SEASON FIREWOOD. For delivery birch, fir & pine. Stock up now. Campfire wood. (250)377-3457.
for only $46.81/week, we will place your classified ad into Kamloops, Vernon & Salmon Arm.
Deliver Kamloops This Week
call 250-374-0462
Merchandise for Sale
TRI-CITY SPECIAL!
WE will pay you to exercise!
BIGGER circulation, BETTER value
(250)371-4949
classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com *some restrictions apply.
Merchandise for Sale
Appliances
Every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday over 65,690 readers in over 31,000 homes and businesses receive Kamloops This Week and find it full of relevant, local news. Communicating with customers must be cost-effective. Our large circulation and reasonable ad rates mean your cost per reader is exceptionally affordable. Your ROI is high!
Inglis Washer and Admiral Dryer. Excellent condition. $400. 250-554-1219.
$500 & Under Do you have an item for sale under $750? Did you know that you can place
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
your item in our classifieds for one week for FREE?
Call our Classified Department for details!
250-371-4949
Furniture 1940-50’s Duncan Phyfe table, 6-chairs, sideboard, 2leaves. $850/obo. 250-5541594.
CALL FOR A FREE ESTIMATE:
250-376-2689 YOUR BUSINESS HERE
Only $150/month
Run your 1x1 semi display classified in every issue of Kamloops This Week
Call 250-371-4949
250-371-4949
classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com
Esthetics Services
Misc Services
KAMLOOPS
Dustless Parkade & Lot Sweeper TM
2010 Chrysler Sebring #1501-2647 ................................$12,208 2010 Kia Soul #f14184B ................................... $10,816 2009 Toyota Corolla #E15079A ..................................... $7,396 2008 Nissan Versa #F15146B ..................................... $7,493 2009 Ford Escape #S15286A..................................$12,849 2009 Mitsubishi Lancer #F16104A .................................. $11,995 2011 Hyundai Accent #A15052A ................................... $5,284 2010 Hyundai Elantra #1509-2670 .................................. $7,995 2010 Hyundai Sonata #F16119A ..................................$12,995 2012 Hyundai Elantra #E16146A ..................................$13,495 2012 Hyundai Elantra #E16043A ..................................$13,995 2009 Jeep Patriot #1601-2694 ................................$14,990 2013 Hyundai Elantra #R15293A..................................$15,495
Tennant S20 Dustless Parkade or Lot Sweeper $110/hr call 250-318-2219 for Estimates.
Painting & Decorating Residential, Commercial, Interior/Exterior 25% Seniors Discount Fully insured Call Dennis 250-936-8842
Stucco/Siding
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
Pets & Livestock
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
Misc. for Sale 4 Goodyear winter tires. 235/55/R17, used 1 season $400. 250-377-3002.
Maytag side by side front load washer/dryer,white/bluew/gold trim HD. $600 250-682-2355 MISC4Sale: Camperette $300, Oak Table Chairs-$400, 2-Standard 8ft truck canopies $300/ea Call 250-320-5194 after 6pm or leave msg.
classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com
Teak dining room table w/6 chairs.$340. Golf clubs & cart $30. 250-579-8584
RUN TILL
Antiques / Vintage
Antiques / Vintage
&
SOLD Turn your stuff into
HARMONIE
7470560
antique collectables
Stainless steel toolbox for pick up $375., 25cu.ft stand up freezer $125 250-374-0339 Treadmill Free Spirit $200 Solid Oak table w/6chairs 68x42 w/2 12inch leaves $800 (250) 579-9483
RUN TILL
RENTED CLASSIFIEDS 250-374-7467
New Large Danier Leather Jacket paid $599 asking $225 never worn (250) 376-9031 Solid oak table $97, China Cabinet $119 Kitchen cabinet set $395 (250) 299-6477
Clean out your garage!
Kamloops BC call for availability 250-374-7467
Double Hospital bed, brand new w/pressure relieving mattress. $2,000. 250-376-2504.
Redwood dining room set, 8chairs, buffet & hutch. $4000/obo. 250-828-1983.
*some restrictions apply
ROLL ENDS AVAILABLE $5-$10/ ROLL 1365 B Dalhousie Drive
CA$H
* RESTRICTIONS APPLY
Misc. Wanted Buying Collector Coins, Accumulations, coin collections & Old money. US Canada & world coins. Plus anything made of gold or silver. Todd’s Coins. 250-864-3521 I can make House calls!
Musical Instruments
Huge selection of antiques & collectables!
* RESTRICTIONS APPLY
250-371-4949
We have China cabinets, hutches, sideboards, tables and chairs, coffee tables, lps and 45s,jukeboxes,liquor cabinets, wardrobes, rocking chairs, pianos, oil lamps, lanterns, wood stove, esso oil and gas cans, anvils, esso signs , guns, wall hangers, clocks, neon signs, yard decors, and much more!
Yamaha Clavinova (Organ). Like new. Original $7700. Asking $1500. 250-372-0041.
Misc. for Sale
Misc. for Sale
We buy and sell antiques!
2 3 2 B r i a r Av e
(250) 312-0831
-or-
1 2 5 1-1 2 t h S t (250) 554-3534
Kamloops, BC
Misc. Wanted
Misc. Wanted
TARPS! TARPS! “BEST PRICES IN TOWN!”
BLUE TARPS
10X8 weave (Medium Duty)
STARTING AT $$2.69 2.19 Box 67, 100 Mile House B.C. V0K 2E0
BEFORE YOU SELL: • ASPEN • BIRCH • COTTONWOOD • PINE • SPRUCE • FIR PULP LOGS Please call KATHERINE LEPPALA (250) 395-6218 (direct line) • (250) 395-0584 (cell) (250) 395-6201 (fax)
WHITE TARPS 10X10 weave (Heavy Duty)
STARTING AT $$3.99 4.49
BLACK TARPS 14X14 weave (Industrial Duty)
STARTING AT $$5.49 6.79
FOAM SHOP MATTRESS REPLACEMENTS SINGLE TO KING SIZE 2” TO 6” THICK - CUSTOM CUT OR CUSTOM ORDER MEMORY FOAM TOPPER PADS - 3LB DENSITY SINGLE TO KING SIZE - 2” & 3” THICK
778-765-4303
CUSHION REPLACEMENTS TORN OR TATTERED? SOFAS, CHAIRS, OTTOMANS, SNOWMOBILES SEATS, TRACTORS
YOU NEED IT - WE WILL CUT IT!
CAMPING FOAM, MEDICAL WEDGES & BOLSTERS, PILLOWS Batchelor Heights Big variety, furniture, curtains composter etc. 1070 Norview Rd, Sat March 5th, 8-1pm
SOUTH SHORE Estate Sale: Saturday, March 5th. 9am-1pm. 685 Columbia St. Vinyl, hshld, wine equip
RAYLEIGH Moving Out Sale. Everything Must Go! Sat & Sun 9-5. 4950 Spurraway Rd. 578-7449
WESTSYDE ESTATE SALE: Sat & Sun, March 5th&6th. 879 Bebek Road. 9:00am-3:00pm. Antiques and Collectables.
“ A CUT ABOVE THE REST” FIND US ON FACEBOOK
www.surplusherbys.com
248 TRANQUILLE RD, NORTH SHORE - KAMLOOPS 250376-2714 • OUT OF TOWN CALL 1-800-665-4533
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
Real Estate
Real Estate
Apt/Condos for Sale
Houses For Sale
Rentals
Rentals
Rentals
Transportation
Transportation
Apt/Condo for Rent
Senior Assisted Living
Townhouses
Cars - Domestic
Recreational/Sale
2011 Nissan Juke SL, AWD. Sunroof, winters, heated seats. $11,800. 250319-8240.
New Price $56.00+tax
2bdrm apartment Down Town Covered prk Private ent common laundry, n/p n/s $850 376-8131 /250-371-1623
CHECK US OUT
CHECK US OUT
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
For Sale By Owner
FULLY FURNISHED TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE This very bright, fully furnished, three bedroom/two bath corner unit townhouse in Big White ski resort offers your very own hot tub, 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. $199,900 (May consider a trade for an apartment in Kamloops. Call Don at 250682-3984 for more information.
ONLINE ONLINE Under the Real Estate Tab
Beautiful 2-Storey home in Valleyview 3bdrm, 3 1/2 bth Open-Concept Kitchen, Dining and Living Room; Large Office. SS Appl; Granite & Hardwood throughout. 2Car Garage. Fully landscaped Gas BBQ. Bareland Strata-includes Clubhouse & Secure RV parking. $459,900 (250) 3721706
Under the Real Estate Tab
RUN TILL
RENTED
Available spacious 1bdrm apts. Starting at $850/mo. The Sands Apartment. Centrally located. On-site Management. 250-828-1711.
FURN.2bed/bath,+den,1291sq ft., Ex-Landmark show suite, steps to TRU, view. 1 u/g park spot.$1700+util.Min 1yr leaseMay 1. NS/P. 250-319-1946 Nicola Towers Downtown Secure building w/prk, 2bdrm 3appl n/s, n/p $1000 372-7161
Northland Apartments
Rayleigh - Pulp mill stink free. 2002 Custom house, 5bdrms, 2-baths, two garages, wine cellar, red tiled roof etc. 1/2 acre lot. $448,000. 250-578-8681.
CLASSIFIEDS
Lease to own New 16 x 58 2bdrm 2bth mobile home in new mobile park. Trouble with financing? One or Two year term Call Gerry 250-371-1849
Rentals Apt/Condo for Rent
THOMPSON VILLA APARTMENTS 1 Bedroom Apartments $880 - $910
• Seniors Orientated • Close to the Hospital • Quiet Living Space • Underground Parking • Newly Renovated Suites • No Smoking
250-371-4949
520 Battle Street, Kamloops, BC, V2C 2M2 250-372-0510
Commercial/ Industrial
Commercial/ Industrial
RUN TILL
RENTED
$5300 PLUS TAX
3 LINES - 12 WEEKS
Add an extra line to your ad for $10 Must be pre-paid Scheduled for 4 weeks at a time Private parties only - no businesses Some Restrictions Apply
6976910 Independent and
assisted living, short term stay’s, 24 hour nursing care and respite.
N/Shore share 2bdrm apt. Quiet and clean. $400/mo inclds everything. 554-6761.
RUN TILL
Sahali 2bdrm Gordonhorn Gardens newly renovated, n/s, n/p $1200/mo. 250-579-8428
Bed & Breakfast BC Best Buy Classified’s Place your classified ad in over 71 Papers across BC. Call 250-371-4949 for more information
318-4321
ONLY $35.00(plus Tax) (250)371-4949
Antiques / Classics
North Shore $400 per/mo incl util & basic cable, np/ns 250-554-6877 / 250-377-1020
SOLD Turn your stuff into
CA$H
2BDRM daylight Brock. Private entr/parking. n/s/p. Ref’s. $1000/mo. 250-319-1911. 2bdrm North S n/p n/s working cple or student $1000 util incl Avail now (250) 376-0682
Auto Accessories/Parts 1-set of Nokian Winters on rims 235/75/R16. Used one season. Regular price new $1200 selling for $400. Call 250-851-1304.
Batchelor Heights 1bdrm ns/np mature person Avail now util/inter incl, refs, $625/mo. 250-376-8469
N/Shore 1100sq/ft, 2-baths Multi-use. Phone to view 250-579-0004, 250-371-1014.
Brock bright bachelor suite in nice home, April 1st one person f/s util incl share w/d n/p n/s $650 250-376-8908
Recreation ✰SHUSWAP LAKE!✰
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. Rents for $1500/week. FMI CALL 1-250-371-1333
RUN TILL
RENTED CLASSIFIEDS 250-374-7467
Semi furn 1bdrm. in Batchelor area private ent and driveway. n/s/n/p, ref req’d. $750 Util/int incld. 250-554-3863.
250-371-4949
* RESTRICTIONS APPLY
2005 Hyundai Tucson. 100k, 2.0L, 4cyl, auto, new A/C, pwr windows, roof rack, super cond., never winter driven. N/S. $6,750. 250-3191946.
Trucks & Vans
1990 Crown Victoria. 5L, V-8, auto. Good condition, runs good. $600. 250-376-6482. 2002 Honda Civic, base model. 244,000kms. Great running cond. $3200. 778-998-7164
2002 Nissan Altima. 4 door, auto. Fully loaded. Good condition. $5,500. Call to view. 250-376-4077. 2005 Honda Accord auto, 4dr, fully/ld, 2 sets of tires exc cond 210,000k $6000 250-851-0112 2005 Toyota Corolla 5 speed extra set of mounted tires /rims $4500.00 250-318-8870
2006 Mazda 3 Sedan Auto, Sunroof, good condition M&S tires 185,000k $5900 (250) 314-6745
2012 Road King, stock 103, ABS, Cruise, Full Size Tourpak, Rider Backrest, Custom Bars, No Scratches, 15,000 kms, $18,000.778-471-1089. 2014 Motorino XPH Electric Scooter bike. 850kms. No scrapes. $1400 250-574-9846
BIGGER circulation, BETTER value Every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday over 65,690 readers in over 31,000 homes and businesses receive Kamloops This Week and find it full of relevant, local news. Communicating with customers must be cost-effective. Our large circulation and reasonable ad rates mean your cost per reader is exceptionally affordable. Your ROI is high!
Brock 1Bdrm 1 person util incl, shard W/D N/S N/P April 1st. 750/mo 250-376-8908
2007 Chev Silverado 4x4 Z71 pkg fully loaded new summers on mags 2nd yr winter studded tires on own rims 188,000km $14,500obo (250) 320-1527.
2008 Ford Diesel 350 King Ranch Lariat Super Duty. 96,398kms. $30,000/obo. 250-828-1081. 92 Ford Ranger XLT 4x4 runs great, needs clutch. First $500 takes it. 250-371-1333
Boats 2007 Sea Doo Speed Boat, 4 Seater.$15,000obo Call 250320-5194 (after 6pm)or lv msg
10.5ft Okanagan Camper. Solar panels. Well maintained. $8,900/obo. 250-372-3437. 1989 Fleetwood AClass 120,000km slps 6, well kept, $8000obo (250) 579-9691
Erickson aluminum custom boat,new, 12’ one piece construction $3000 778-257-6079
Legal
Legal Notices WAREHOUSE LIEN ACT Attn: Glen Currie 506-629 Lansdowne Street Kamloops, BC V2C 1Y6
2008 Cadillac CTS Premium. 130,000kms. AWD, Great in the winter, BLK w/leather interior, CD, power windows, seats, mirrors, locks, heating/cooling seats. $13,800. 250-320-6900.
1990 Ford Flair 27’ Motorhome. 104,000kms. Good condition. $10,049. 250-851-2579. 2005, 38’ RV trailer 2 slides, sleeps 6, appl incld, fully loaded, $16,900. (778) 468-5050.
Brock 2bdrm carriage home $1300 incl util,heat,cable,parking N/SN/P refs mature single or couple 250-819-7345
Absolute gorgeous 03 Cadillac Deville one owner low kms $6900.00 obo 250-554-0580
Westsyde 2bdrms, 2-baths, close to all amenities. $1200/mo +util. 778-471-3886.
RUN TILL SOLD
2005 Sprinter 25’ w/slide 1995 F250 Ford diesel w/low mileage both in exc cond. asking $20,000 obo for both (250) 314-6661
INTO CA$H
2008 Fleetwood Mallard Trailer 23ft. like new, fully loaded. $15,000. 250-554-1035.
* RESTRICTIONS APPLY
9FT Okanagan Camper. F/S, bathroom. Good shape. $1,300/obo. 250-376-1841.
Lower Sahali 2bdrm +den 6min to TRU n/s, n/p $1300 1-250-459-7771 250-571-4852
1996 GMC Suburban 4x4 good shape runs great $2900obo Call (250) 571-2107
Off Road Vehicles Recreational/Sale 2006 VW Jetta TDI Highline, fully loaded, auto, sunroof. Very well maintained. 180,000kms, No accidents, very clean. $7,800/obo. 250-318-6257.
1983 GMC 2500 on propane. 350, auto. Running order. $1,000 +hitch. 250-376-7195.
Honda Big Red 3 Wheeler top shape $1650 250-554-0201
Suites, Upper
Townhouses
1365 DALHOUSIE DRIVE
2010 Harley Davidson Dyna Street-Bob. Black, stage 1, new tires. $11,000. 319-5336.
Welcoming Cumfy 1bedroom. Close to University, Hospital. Student or quiet person. Excellent Location. $495or$725 ns/np. Call (250) 299-6477
2bdrms, N/Shore. N/S, N/P. $900 inclds heat/hotwater. Ref’s required. 250-372-7695.
Scrap Car Removal
Sport Utility Vehicle
Cars - Domestic
North Shore. 1bdrm, F/S, W/D. N/S, N/P. Avail Immed. $800. 250-376-1072. Riverfront 1bdrm daylight level entry, util incl $650. Avail March 1st 250-579-9609.
Call: 250-371-4949
*Some conditions & restrictions apply. Private party only (no businesses).
110 TT Yamaha motorcycle excellent shape $1800 (250) 318-2219
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.
Aberdeen 1bdrm daylight util and int incl n/s, n/p $825. Avail Now (250) 851-9950
Commercial/ Industrial
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)
Motorcycles
1984 Volvo (Collector), auto, air. 181,000kms. No winter driving. $3,400. 250-587-6151
* RESTRICTIONS APPLY
Suites, Lower
*some restrictions apply call for details
Run until sold
1967 Ford Falcon Futura St.6 Auto 2dr all original runs good, $5,500 obo (250) 376-5722
250-371-4949
1bdrm n/p, n/s util inl for quiet single person cls to bus and shopping $850 250-372-0808
RUN UNTIL SOLD
lilacgardens1@gmail.com
Shared Accommodation
Retired male seeking roommate, N/Shore. Close to bus/shopping. $500. 376-0953
Now Renting CHANEL PLACE Brand new 1 and 2 Bdrm Apartments Downtown Kamloops 555 8th Avenue For more information visit: 3BBBGroup.ca
*Big storage rooms *Laundry Facilities *Close to park, shopping & bus stop
Transportation
Near TRU Room $325-per month util included. No Pets. 250-554-6877, 250-377-1020.
CALL 250-682-0312
NORTH SHORE *Bright, clean & Spacious 2&3 bedrooms
NO PETS
NORTH SHORE Utilities not included
Best Value In Town
250.377-7275 www.berwickretirement.com
IN private home, pleasant surroundings fully furnished working male pref.3near amenities behind sahali mall 10 min walk to TRU 374-0949 or 372-3339
1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Clean quiet buildings. Reasonable Rental Rates
TOWNHOUSES
PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED
1 Bedroom Suite Adult Oriented No Pets / No Smoking Elevators / Dishwashers Common Laundry $825 per month North Shore 250-376-1427
* RESTRICTIONS APPLY
Mobile Homes & Parks
B17
Turn your stuff
Unless you claim your 2010 GMC Sierra Vin# 1GT4K0B6XAF126894 and pay the towing and storage charges of $7,009.94 up to March 4, 2016, your vehicle will be sold for costs 14 days after the first publication of this notice. Sale date will be March 18, 2016 at our compound. MIKE’S AUTO TOWING 726 Carrier Street Kamloops, BC V2H 1G2
Sell your car
FAST!
250.374.7467
B18
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
WEEKLY WORD SEARCH
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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
BY LINCOLN PEIRCE
Answers ABSIDES ADHERENCE AQUARIUS ARIES ASTROLOGER BIRTHDAY CANCER CAPRICORN CAST CHART CONSTELLATION CUSP
GEMINI GRID HOROSCOPE HOUSE LEO LIBRA LUNAR MOON PERSONALITY PHASES PISCES PLANET
RULING SAGITTARIUS SCORPIO SIGN SOLAR SUN TAURUS TEMPERAMENT TRAITS UNDER VIRGO ZODIAC
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
BY JIM UNGER
K I T ’ N ’ C A R LY L E
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!
the EMPEROR
FATHERING • STRUCTURE • AUTHORITY • REGULATION
Kamloops Psychic Studio
PSYCHIC READER, HEALER & ADVISOR Palm • Tarot • Crystal Ball Call For An Appointment With Nina 7 Days a Week, 9am-9pm • #202-322 Victoria St. 236-425-4468 • kamloopspsychic@gmail.com
WORD SCRAMBLE
ANSWER 1:OPTOMETRIST ANSWER 2: EXAMINATION
HERE’S HOW IT WORKS:
Rearrange the letters to spell something pertaining to Vision Checkouts
T I R O P M O E T S T
YOU DESERVE TO BE COMPENSATED FOR HELPING SOMEONE THROUGH THEIR IMPAIRMENT OR CHRONIC ILLNESS!
N A O X M E I N T I A
ENTER TO WIN A TRIP TO
Contact me today! Contact Nellie Krombach for a free assessment or more information 250-674-2416 | nellie@enabledfinancial.ca
enabledfinancial.ca
LOOK FOR DETAILS IN UPCOMING ISSUES OF
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD
A R C T I C C I R C L E BY ALEX HALLATT
COURT JESTERS
B A BY B LU E S
SHOE
By Timothy Polin
ACROSS 1 Make less dangerous, in a way 7 Sleep-lab study 12 Some school edicts 16 Small invention 19 Eagle constellation 20 Signature Michael Jackson wear 21 Runway model? 23 Fly swatter? 25 “It seems to me …” 26 Attack order 27 Rationale 28 Trickle 30 “The Good Wife” figures: Abbr. 31 Confer 34 Drool from both sides of the mouth? 38 Screams bloody murder 40 Brought up 41 Narrow lead in baseball 42 Quaker of note? 45 In base 8 47 Sound near a spittoon 50 Brooding music genre 51 Tip of an épée? 53 Sci-fi film with a 2010 sequel 54 Brings in 56 Palindromic girl 57 “ 58 Busted timer? 60 Illicit sum 62 Anderson of “WKRP” 64 Historic siege site 65 Legendary siege site 66 Desi Arnaz? 70 Unsteady gait 74 Cutting edge 76 Karaoke-bar sight 77 Key of Brahms’s Symphony No. 4 79 Winning an Oscar for “Norma Rae”? 81 One of the Gabor sisters 84 Prompt 85 Actress Thomas 87 Reclined 88 Acrophobe’s term for a route through the mountains? 90 Encouraging word 91 Fire place? 92 Attended 93 Soothes 94 One of the Furies 97 Asian territory in Risk 99 Round after the quarters 101 Lament from an unlucky shrimper?
BY RICK KIRKMAN AND JERRY SCOTT
H AG A R T H E H O R R I B L E
BY CHRIS BROWNE
BY GARY BROOKINS AND SUSIE MACNELLY
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BOOGIE TRAINING FOR YOUTH All youth ages 10 - 18 train for $20 (1X PER WEEK) or $35 (2X PER WEEK)
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Families that play together Stay together! This is for the entire 8 week clinic
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Crossword Answers FOUND ON B4
53
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100 102 103 104 106 107 111 113 114 115 117 118 119
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Rio Grande city “Downton Abbey” daughter “Jeez!” Flummox De jure Showroom models Residents of 3-Down Trackpad alternative Lean on Astral lion Achieve success Rug dealer’s special? Prepares for a Mr. Universe competition, say “____ the day!” (cry repeated in Shakespeare) Settled the score Ghostly sound Apportion Say, “When I met the Dalai Lama last year,” say “Qué ____?” Sugar Goth-looking, in a way It’s hard to get across Morsel 1994 bomb based on an “S.N.L.” character Something to boost Bridge whiz Domineering Actress Thompson of “Creed” River along Avignon “Wanna play?” Anti bodies? Petitioned Whacked Kind of dye The Depression, for one Smoked deli purchase Popinjay
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59 61 63 67 68 69 71 72 73 75 78 79 80
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BY BIL AND JEFF KEANE
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BY VIC LEE
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PA R D O N M Y P L A N E T
DOWN 1 Applies gingerly 2 Outfit 3 World Heritage Site in the Andes 4 Oft-married Taylor 5 Keg contents 6 Archer’s battle weapon 7 Forever 8 Like lumberjack jackets 9 O.K. 10 Time for last-minute planning 11 Oxygen-dependent bacterium 12 Card-table cloth 13 Not fully independent 14 Piece corps, briefly? 15 Almost dislocate 16 Violation of Yom Kippur? 17 Batting .200, maybe 18 Queen ____ (pop-music nickname) 22 Don’t bother 24 Give a tongue-lashing 29 Veteran 32 A question of time 33 Is unacceptable 35 Virtual address 36 Père d’un prince 37 1961 space chimp 39 Improvise, in a way 42 Isolated 43 Echolocator 44 Softly 46 “Three Billy Goats Gruff” villain 48 Smash up 49 “You win!” 52 Stabilizer of a ship’s compass 53 “Use your head!” 54 CD-____ 55 Ground-beef contaminant 58 Mobile-home resident?
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Devotee Fallout from the 2000 election? “My bad!” Put off Short flight Nougaty treats Writing “30 and single” when it’s really “50 and married,” e.g.? Reduces to smithereens Cropped up Canadian smacker Morning condensate Chichi Cantina appetizers Go through
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BY JERRY SCOTT & JIM BORGMAN
105 108 109 110 112 114 116
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ZITS
B19
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BO OGIE LO VES
FAMILIES RUNNING
TOGETHER
NEW THIS YEAR
FOR MORE INFO VISIT WWW.RUNCLUB.CA OR EMAIL JO BERRY AT JOBERRY@TELUS.NET
B20
FRIDAY, March 4, 2016
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