Lethbridge is a City that cares Simple Fitness - Real World Results HOW TO PREVENT YOUR TEEN FROM “SEXTING” 2009 Dodge Grand Caravan SE 41174411 Stk #139322 • 94313 kms Finance Specialist Credit challenged? Discharged from Bankruptcy? Judgements? Late payments? No credit? New to the Country? Call Jodie at 403-317-7968 or 1-800-626-0869 Zip. Zero. Nada. A Reading from the Letter of Twitter Guy to the Ephesians Trending Topics Condensed for your reading pleasure, here are a few of the topics that kept Lethbridge suitably outraged this week: #3 – Baby’s First iPhone Lethbridge Journal - ZERO! That’s how many responses we got to several questions posted for this issue’s The Wall. It’s becoming a regular occurrence. Here’s a list of issues we’ve asked for opinions on over the past month that have received no response: the city’s snow removal efforts, proposed fracking on the west side, the Duck Dynasty fiasco and whether or not Alberta should legalize marijuana. Now, in all fairness, I should point out that we got five “likes” on Facebook and one “favourite” on Twitter for the marijuana question. But no comments. Which begs the question: why no comments? Is it too much effort to click reply and type a response? Is sharing opinions and thoughts via social media passe? Are these issues which no one cares about? And if it’s the latter, which issues DO you care about, Lethbridge? We want to know: what issues would actually move you to respond? Drop us a line via our Facebook page, on Twitter or at editor@lethbridgejournal.com. We look forward to hearing what our readers are passionate about. Let’s get responding! A study released last week by non-profit organization MediaSmarts has found nearly 25 per cent of Grade 4 students surveyed have their own personal cell phones. The results were largely unsurprising to parents - who have to pay the damn bill - but shocked researchers, who did not anticipate that children under 10 would require anything B more complex than two cans on Behold! The ancestor of texting somebody in the same F a string to communicate. The room as you. study declined to comment on L whether or not the little bastards are grateful for how good they have it. r i #2 – Say What You Will About Arcade Fire, They Don’t Th Urinate in Public S c Canadian pop singer Justin “First You, Then Your Mom” Bieber is in trouble once b again, following a run-in with Miami Police that clogged up news feeds across the Th internet. Following the incident - which involved drag racing sports cars, copious L amounts of drugs, and not nearly enough frontal nudity for his fans - Canadian A Prime Minister Stephen Harper has become personally involved. A longtime fan, t Harper immediately prorogued Parliament and promised on Tumblr he would fly to s see Justin “as soon as I am finished watching the new episodes of BBC’s Sherlock.” “ Aides close to the PM say that he will devote several days to rehabilitating the Biebs t through the power of music, before departing to Toronto to teach Rob Ford how to b replace crack with love. r “ a #1 – The Circle of S Life b s Father of the Pride and Th Lethbridge MP Jim “Finger b Guns” Hillyer is facing a rare h challenge from inside his own a party, as businessman and former journalist Doug McArthur announced his intention to seek the Conservative nomination late last week. Hillyer, who largely Jim Hillyer, pictured. Politicians often sleep for up to 20 hours campaigned on a platform of a day. refusing to show up to events or answer any questions, has declined to comment on the announcement - though neighbours DID report a recent increase in profanity coming from his office after the press meeting. If McArthur is successful in expelling Hillyer from the Pride during the next election, scientists say that all the best food and mates will be his until he too is unseated by a challenger and eaten. James Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal 2 LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com Model Baron Hobbies 403-320-5775 41183523 Specializing in: Plastic Models, Model Trains, Die Cast, Rockets, Radio Control Planes, Cars and Helicopters #116 - 104 13th St. N., Lethbridg e www.modelbaron.com By Gregory Humber For the Lethbridge Journal Lethbridge is a city that cares - when a crisis happens to its residents or an area, the citizens rally together. Nowhere is this more apparent than the Save Chinatown campaign. This past summer several buildings - the Manie Opera Society and the Bow on Tong - were closed due to structural concerns. This event displaced Albert Leong, who owns the buildings and has lived at the Bow on Tong his entire life. The Lethbridge Historical Society got a report that Albert Leong was displaced and the buildings where in danger. After further investigation, the organization wanted to save these buildings, according to Kelti Boissonneault of the society. “The Manie Opera Society is the first building and the oldest to be built in Chinatown in 1907, and the Bow on Tong was built in 1918. We want to save these buildings as historical resources,” says Boissonneault. “There is only half a block left on one side of the street, there are only three buildings left in Chinatown. The Manie Opera Society, the Bow on Tong and the Chinese Free Mason building at end of the street. We are down to the wire on saving these last couple,” Boissonneault continues. The Chinatown area has a sordid past - the area had a lot of bars, brothels and rooming houses. There were only about a hundred Chinese settlers, and they were forced to live in the area. They were not allowed outside that district, and could only do a set number of jobs, according to Boissonneault. “The area is now cleaned up and now Chinatown is one of those areas we should be proud of,” says Boissonneault. The provincial and the municipal governments donated $85,000 when the damage to the buildings was discovered. The money went to stabilizing them and preventing a shift in the structure which might cause more damage, according to Boissonneault. “There is still more money available through the provincial government with matching grants. We have to raise a certain amount of money and the government will match it once the buildings are designated as a historical resource. The City of Lethbridge is working on that,” says Boissonneault. The historical society cannot ask for money from non-profit societies or charitable foundations because the buildings are privately owned. They had to find ways to get creative and that’s where the Desert Wind Belly Dancers came in to help raise money, according to Boissonneault. Not only was Albert Leong displaced, the Desert Wind Belly Dancers also lost their studio at the Manie Opera Society. “It was someone from the city who sent me an e-mail that the Lethbridge Historical Society was having a meeting about Chinatown. So I called up the troop and said we are going to that meeting. That is how we met the society, we are fiercely optimistic,” says Jenn Flemming Baker, Desert Wind Belly Dancer. Chelsie Grenier McNabb, founder of the Desert Wind Belly Dancers, says there was no doubt her organization would help. “We came up with the idea of a variety show to draw awareness, and over the past three months we gathered together various acts and Jenn and I picked the ones who we wanted. Anybody we reached out to shown tons of support. These buildings have the history of the Chinese people, but everyone in the community has been impacted by these buildings,” she says. The variety show is planned for February 8 at the Yates Memorial Theatre and tickets are $25. The event will feature an aerialist, object manipulators, a Kung Fu demonstration, as well various other acts. There will also be food and a silent auction, according McNabb. “The band Loose Kannons are writing a song for the event and sales of the song will go to saving Chinatown,” says McNabb. For Albert Leong, the efforts of his community are astounding. “I am humbled by the response from the people - I could not afford to fix it myself. It is one of the oldest buildings in Lethbridge; I hope it will be around for next fifty years,” he says. “I hope to be back there soon.” If you are interested in the variety show or want to make a donation, visit Facebook at SAVECHINATOWNLETHBRIDGE or e-mail LHS. Heritage2013@GMAIL.COM. Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca 3 FROM OUR DESK Editor’s Note Lisa Doerksen Editor Here at the Journal, it’s our pleasure to be the voice of the community. We pride ourselves on being a place where readers can share their thoughts, feelings, joys and frustrations. We have a great cross-section of local writers - columnists who are regular folks like you or me, and who happily share from their lives, experiences and hearts. They get us thinking, make us smile and - occasionally - get a rise out of us. It’s great to be the publication that provides an opportunity for anyone to make their voice heard. For those who don’t have the time or inclination to put together a regular column, we try to provide opportunities to share snapshots or brief opinions, like through The Wall or Tweets of the Week. The Wall, particularly, offers readers a chance to share their opinion on a local issue by responding to the questions posted on our Facebook and Twitter feeds. But lately, we’ve noticed a lack of responses, even on some notably controversial topics like the proposed fracking operations on the west side. It’s left us a little confused - we know fracking, for example, is a hot topic and one people are fired up about. So why no responses? We’ve posed the same question on page two, where The Wall usually runs. And we’d love to hear from you. What topics would actually move you to respond? Let us know! And while you’re formulating your response, please enjoy this issue’s offerings provided by our fantastic community writers. This issue we kick off Fitness Friday on page five with Peter Lee offering some good advice to help us stick with those fitness goals we all set at the beginning of the year. And we thank Tiffany Weston for her thought-provoking piece on page seven about her personal journey to learn what love really should look like. We’ve also got Virtuous Woman Exposed on page 12 with a very sobering piece for anyone with teenagers and Pat G. is on her soapbox again on page 15. We love Pat’s soapbox! ON TAP THIS ISSUE: Fitness Friday! This NEW column, featuring tips from a personal trainer, comes to you every issue courtesy of Peter Lee. His first column is on page five. VWX is back with a thought-provoking piece all you parents of teenagers must read. Check it out on page 12. ON TAP FOR FEB. 14 ISSUE: The Helen Schuler Coulee Centre is busy planning its grand opening. Get all the details right here! Is published bi-weekly by Alta Newspaper Group, Limited Partnership 504 7th Street South Lethbridge, AB T1J 2H1 Phone 403-320-8936 Fax 403-320-8956 Email: editor@lethbridgejournal.com www.lethbridgejournal.ca EDITOR Lisa Doerksen DESIGN & LAYOUT Art-Rageous Advertising LTD. Jack Price Nikki Van Eden Nicole Twiss Brian Price By Jason Salt Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal Over the holidays, my family decided to take part in the free family skate events before and after Christmas. It was a great idea for the kids at that time, however for myself, I had quite an unfortunate dilemma when none of the Lethbridge skating rinks had skate rental services available. I had to sit in the bleachers to watch my daughters skate. I missed out on this family skate event and could not fully enjoy the experience with my daughters. Personally, I was very disappointed and wondered why there were no skate rental services at the rinks. Where I am from (British Columbia), skate rentals and skate sharpening are a common, mandatory service at all skating rinks. I question, why doesn’t Lethbridge have this service? Is Lethbridge really that far behind the times? Well it’s Valentine’s Day, so of course we will have the funniest and most entertaining tweets to hit the Internet regarding this (in)famous holiday! PUBLISHER Coleen Campbell Where are the skates? I have mentioned this issue to my many Twitter social media network connections, and later found out that a local sports shop (Bert & Mac’s Source for Sports) has a skate ADVERTISING Brian Hancock Dale Johnson Bev Segouin Falon Brovold Bruce Friesen Alvin Mainzer Paul Fogtmann Shane Knudsvig Annie Walbner Crystal Levenne rental and sharpening service. I thought that was great, but why not have a service within a skate rink rather than all the way downtown? I have approached numerous people on social media and local organizations such as The City of Lethbridge, The Lethbridge Journal, Lethbridge Sports Council and Bert & Mac’s Source for Sports with the idea of proposing a contract or agreement to have a skate rental kiosk established at the local Lethbridge rinks. I would like to organize and help this proposal to become a reality. If the supporters for this idea want this to happen, I encourage other people to please let the Lethbridge community hear your voice. Together we can have a healthier lifestyle here in Lethbridge. Who knows where this will go? Perhaps we could set a prime example to other local communities that sport and fitness programs require rental services to become merged with the organizations to make these community programs work. Let us prevent any other unfortunate people from missing out on community sport events and opportunities. ADVERTISING TERMS & CONDITIONS: The following terms and conditions apply to all advertising and other material is printed by and distributed by The Lethbridge Journal. All copy and type arrangements are subject to the approval of the publisher on behalf to The Lethbridge Journal, who has the right to refuse any advertisement or insertion. The advertiser agrees that the liability of The Lethbridge Journal or its employees for damages of costs arising out of error in printing or insertion of advertisement or any other materials is limited to the actual amount paid for the space used by that portion of the advertisement containing the error or the actual cost paid to have the advertisement or any other material inserted in The Lethbridge Journal. Notice of error is required before the second insertion. The 4 LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com Lethbridge Journal will not be liable for any other claims of damages from not printing or non-insertion of any advertisement of other materials. DISCLAIMER: The contents of this newspaper are protected by copyright and may be used only for personal, non-commercial purposes. All other rights are reserved and commercial use is prohibited. To make any use of this material you must first obtain the permission of the publisher and owner of the copyright. For further information, phone 403-328-4418. All views and opinions expressed in the submitted columns, reviews and articles published herein are solely those of the contributing writers and do not necessarily represent those of the Lethbridge Journal. ONLINE @Rock106: A teen from California posted a pic of her blueberry muffin looking like her dog. It went viral instantly. _________________________________________________ @tylerjstewart7: New DC comics superhero inspired by Cree activist? Engaging students to help decide her powers and character? AWESOME. _________________________________________________ @pmharper: Our gov’t is helping to ensure that chemical weapons are never again used against the Syrian people. _________________________________________________ @CTVDarrell:: MUST SEE: More bad lip reading of the NFL. You can thank me later. http://youtu.be/rRqKYXcL-2U _________________________________________________ @lethsnews: MP Jim Hillyer says he will run in the next “election.” If history proves right it will be more of a walk or light skip. #yql _________________________________________________ @CTVKaellaCarr: Taber RCMP investigating compliant of possible animal cruelty after dead dog found with head & body injuries. Anyone w/ info call police. _________________________________________________ @scott_mcgregor: I feel like the Oilers are like The Mighty Ducks (movie). All they need is a fat kid and a knuckle puck and everything will turn around. _________________________________________________ @CBCCalgary: Flood damage costs reach $19M in Banff National Park. _________________________________________________ GlobalEdmonton: NYC 9/11 museum opens to public in May. _________________________________________________ @chuchiface: First time eating at DQ. Simple Fitness - Real World Results By Peter Lee Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal This is the month where most people start a new fitness program and this is awesome. With new and exciting goals they have specific things they want to accomplish. Some want to lose weight, some want to gain some muscle and everyone wants to tone up. Starting an exercise program is the easy part, sticking to it is the challenge. You can go into any gym in January and it’s packed, mostly with new people looking like they have no idea what they are doing. Then by February people are getting weeded out more and more, and by March, the gym is back to just the regulars. It’s sad to see but I understand why gyms and fitness in general can be intimidating. You feel like you are being judged by everyone in the gym, it feels like everyone’s looking at you and it can be quite an uncomfortable experience. To top it off you have no idea what exercises to do, or how to use any of the crazy machines they have so you stick to the basics: the treadmill. You get bored of just using the treadmill every day and don’t notice much is changing anyway so you start to make excuses why you can’t go to the gym anymore. We need to make fitness - and living a healthy lifestyle - easy. It doesn’t have to be a complicated thing. Most people make it more complicated than it needs to be! You can go to any bookstore and find over 4,000 different books on diets and exercise. We need to cut through all the white noise and follow simple steps. We need to make small, simple changes in our lives to create the body we want. You don’t need a drastic diet plan where all you eat is cucumbers. Calorie restriction is the worst idea ever! You also don’t need a crazy workout plan where you workout for hours and hours each day, seven days a week. These types of meal and workout plans are a recipe for disaster because there is no way a person could follow this type of plan for an extended period of time. To make longlasting changes we need to make simple changes towards a healthy lifestyle. If you don’t know how to live a healthy lifestyle I would recommend you get help from a professional who knows how and has gotten people results in the past. Take nutritional and fitness advice from people who look the way you want to look - not from your out-of-shape neighbor or brotherin-law! Every edition I will be offering a free tip to help you live a healthy lifestyle; this week it’s eat a protein source with every meal and snack. Some great ideas for protein are eggs, lean meats like chicken breast and lean cuts of beef, almonds, cottage cheese or yogurt. Protein is awesome because it helps you feel full longer and is very satisfying. It also helps to repair muscle tissue and shed weight. You should consume one gram of protein per pound of bodyweight you have per day. If you find it hard to consume this much consider using a whey protein powder supplement. It’s a great snack! If you have any questions or need help achieving your fitness goals feel free to contact me by e-mail at modbodyla@gmail. com or visit me on the web at modbody.ca. We offer in-home personal training as well as online coaching. Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca 5 COMMUNITY Campbell’s Corner Big name. . . big interview By Mark Campbell Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal Whenever a big name music act comes to town I always make a request for an interview. Now and then for reasons unknown but I’m not complaining, they actually say yes to me. Such was the case for rising country super stars The Band Perry and Jim Cuddy from Blue Rodeo. Actually, Jim Cuddy has been unbelievably gracious over the years and has acquiesced to my request every time he’s been in All New have arrived! Lethbridge. This year was no different. Jim and his Blue Rodeo co-founder Greg Keelor were just named to the Order of Canada and Jim says while he’s been fortunate to win many music awards in his career, the Order of Canada is particularly special and he is quite honored. Jim is a huge hockey fan and I asked him about Canada’s Olympic team selection. He says the one guy he wishes was on the team was Martin St. Louis but when you look at the roster, it’s a pretty amazing group of players. I loved The Band Perry. I asked them if they’d be willing to do a couple of bits with me and they were on board. They played along with me when I introduced them as Katy Perry and later sang a rousing rendition of “I’m A Little Tea Pot” for my fake upcoming children’s album. Canada has really embraced The Band Perry and siblings Kim, Reid and Neil love playing here. In fact they do an instrumental version of O Canada as part of their act. They are going to be busy for a while. Their “We Are Pioneers” World tour continues, they’ve just announced they’re doing 20 shows with current country superstar Blake Shelton and you can see them on the Super Bowl pre-game show. Powerful Fuel Efficient Mercedes turbo diesel Chassis Model 24R 41182072 Speaking of the Super Bowl, former Global Lethbridge sports anchor Jamie Thomas who’s now with Sportsnet is in New Jersey covering his first ever Super Bowl. Lethbridge Musical Theatre just had their annual banquet where the awards for excellence on stage and off are handed out. They’re called the Lemmys. Director of this year’s production of Peter Pan Deonie Jensen tells me that this year’s winners are: Backstage: Joshua Doberstien; Backstage rookie: Helena Vedres-Kuzminski On stage: Dave Ranson; On stage rookie: Stephanie Wickham. Congratulations on your terrific work. Coming to the Yates in April is the musical Spamalot Henk Indenbosch 711 - 2nd Ave. “A” North, Lethbridge, AB (Hwy #3; Stafford Drive Off-Ramp) Now Looking For: 1-866-329-3933 • 403-329-3933 41183453 www.eldoradorv.com (1) Cook (1) Server (1) Kitchen Helper For our Coaldale Location • 1814 - 20 Avenue Fax Resumé to 403-381-1356 or email anup.ghai@hotmail.com put on by the almost-new theatre company Hatrix and Danceworks. I asked director Brian Quinn about his reason for wanting to put this one on: “My choice of Spamalot is quite obvious. I was and still am a huge Monty Python fan. I have the complete works of Now For Something Completely Different, The Holy Grail, Baron Munchausen, and Life of Brian on DVD. I also have Fawlty Towers with John Cleese. Still, I think Holy Grail is my favorite of them all. Spamalot was a must! The music is clever and the script is hilarious. Monty Python fans will be able to relate to the mostly off-beat British humor; the coconuts used to make the horse sounds, the debate whether a swallow can carry a coconut, the Black Knight valiantly fighting King Arthur even after having his arms and legs cut off!! Knights that say Ni!! Killer bunnies!! French Taunting!! From start to finish the show is a hoot! It won Best Broadway Musical for 2005.” The cast includes George Gallant, Tony Deys, Jocelyn Haub, Devon Brayne, and a “slew” of U of L drama students and veterans of Lethbridge Musical Theatre. Bente Hansen is musical director. She’s formed an orchestra of some of Lethbridge’s best musicians: Paul Walker, Joan Rogers, Josh Davies, Tom Staples, James Oldenburg, Paul Holden, Brad Brouwer, Adam Mason, Jesse Plessis, Colleen Klassen, and Aaron Collier. The show runs April 15-20 and tickets are on sale now. Some of you may remember the old Lethbridge Health & Fitness Centre. It was run by a good friend of mine, Doug Hodgins, back in the 80s. Doug moved out to Vancouver and became a very successful financial planner. Now he’s written a book called Millionaire Down the Road which chronicles the remarkable life and investment journey of Doug’s father Rankin Hodgins. Rankin started investing at the age of 57 and eventually managed to create a $9 million portfolio even though he had a very modest annual income. The story is told in a very personal and heartwarming way and while his investment philosophy may not be for everyone, it’s a fun read. You can find out more at www.millionairedowntheroad.com I was talking to my dad last week about the Lethbridge Family History Centre. I told him I thought I’d go over there and maybe learn a little more about our family history. He said, “Gynecology is an interesting subject.” “You do mean genealogy right?” “Oh ya, genealogy.” I had a pretty good chuckle. 6 LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com “Valuable Beyond Measure” By Tiffany Weston Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal I was soooo nervous on my first day, and with good reason since they stuck me with the most handicapped-looking person I’d ever seen! I felt my stomach drop out from under me when they introduced this young man to me as the person I was going to have orientation with that week. Instead of talking he made awful-sounding animal cries and groans. He had drool running down the front of his face, and more snot than I would have thought humanly possible. He could walk, but only with assistance from someone else, and every time you were near enough to help him he would try to cop a feel of whatever he could reach!!! It was my bad fortune, or so I thought, to have to learn to change his adult diaper. He needed to be fed but when he’d open his mouth such a foul odor would come out that I would have to try not to gag. I learned later that this was a side effect of one of the medications he needed to be on. Every single day that week I came home crying. Every single day I wanted to quit but couldn’t. The fact is, disability is a reality of this world and I wasn’t ready to face it day in and day out. . . is anyone?? I started to look at the other workers and realized that they weren’t faking it. . . they really did care about these individuals. By the end of that week, my disdain had turned to pity and guilt. . . of course this guy was trying to feel a boob when he could - he was a normal 23-year-old male trapped in a body that wouldn’t let him live a normal life, satisfy any urges, or even let him talk to a girl he liked! If that were my son or brother how would I want a worker to treat him? I certainly wouldn’t want someone like me, someone who thought they were better than him, someone who was so busy trying not to breathe while she changed his diaper that she hadn’t given any thought as to how it felt to have to WEAR THE DIAPER or have some snooty teenager change it for him! I started the new week with a new attitude - I was grateful to not have the burden ‘these people’ had. And He could walk better when he was pushing something, so he got a job at the video store, pushing the cart to put rentals back on the shelves. His staff would help him by placing the video on the shelf and then he’d figure out where we had to go next. He was able to watch all the pretty girls he wanted while he worked and even got to smile at them when they said hello. I have a hard time listening to anyone cry about not being able to work when this guy could make a living! I realized that having a disability was not necessarily a burden, but could also be a gift. I was not any better, or worse off than anyone else in that building, we were all just people coming in for a day of work, regardless of whether we wore the title ‘support worker’ or ‘client.’ I marvel at how different I am years after that and wonder who I would be if he had never come into my life and taught me to love as God loves. I stayed in the field of rehabilitation and discovered that Lorna was right - I WAS good at it! I was actually downright PASSIONATE about advocating for disabled adults! Four years after starting there I had to quit to move to Lethbridge and I bawled like a baby on my last day of work. When I said goodbye to this man, I remember looking into the deep blue eyes that housed his soul and thinking, “You are so handsome!” That makes me laugh, because it wasn’t HIM who changed - it was me!!! How could my perception have changed so drastically in four years??? I’m pretty sure God had everything to do with it. And while He was busy teaching me to love others, I became someone I could love as well. Available at a fine supplement retailer near you. 41183372 41183519 With Valentines Day on the way, I thought I’d write a submission about how ridiculous the kids expectations are getting surrounding this holiday. I was informed after last year that my son was the only one in class that didn’t include treats with his valentines. . . MUST we keep upping the ante?! What they celebrate at school is really friendship anyway, so why not save it for Friendship Day and quit trying to take over what I see as an adult holiday? But instead of wanking, I decided to put something loving, positive, and a bit ‘off the beaten path’ out there. Here goes: This is not a traditional love story, but more about seeing someone the way God sees them - worthy of love and valuable beyond measure. A little more than 10 years ago I was living in High River and working at a drop-in day care which I loved. The problem was, the hours were not dependable and it was forcing me to look elsewhere - and there wasn’t much out there! I was being stalked by a lady named Lorna who kept insisting that I would be great working for her at the AIM Society, which supports adults with developmental disabilities. The problem was, I had really never met anyone with a disability and quite frankly I was a bit of a stuck-up snob. I was only 19 and didn’t know how I was supposed to act when confronted with someone who didn’t know how to talk, or was in a wheel chair, or stemming on the floor. . . and to be honest some of them scared me! I thought it was very odd that this lady seemed to think she knew something about me that I didn’t, and that I was SURE was not there! She told me ,one day to let her believe in me until I could believe in myself. . . and I thought she was CRAZY! I know now that God was working through her to shape my character into how I was meant to be. The day came when desperation hit and I had to take her up on her offer of a job. because I had it so much better, I decided to do what I could to make their lives easier or more enjoyable. As time went on though, I realized that I was still behaving differently than most of the other workers there. . . why were their relationships with their clients so much different than mine? By this time, I really was giving my ‘all’ and feeling quite proud of myself. People in the community would come up to me and say things like, “Oh I don’t know how you do what you do, you must be so patient. I could never do it.” And I’d give myself a big pat on the back for being such a wonderful person. I don’t know when exactly it happened, but somewhere along the line I started to feel different when people would approach me with that line. I started to feel indignant and heard the insult implicated in that statement. . . I must be soooo PATIENT?! Patience is what you have when you are enduring something that you really don’t want to. . . and I realized that I WANTED to. There was so much about this person to love, so much that was not apparent upon our first meeting! He was incredibly strong and loyal. He had a wicked sense of humor! You just had to wait long enough to know what he was communicating to catch on to it, and there is no one who would reward you with a brighter smile! He was caring and a hard worker. He did not deserve my pity. What he deserved was my respect. He had been dealt the most difficult cards and yet he wasn’t wallowing, refusing to walk because it was hard, throwing a temper tantrum because he could, watching TV all day because no one would expect him to get a job. . . he took the skills he had and made the very best of it. Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca 7 FEBRUARY 2014 WHAT’S UP EVENTS CALENDAR Submit your events to events@lethbridgejournal.com at least two weeks ahead & we will do our best to include them in an upcoming calendar. Please include: Date, Title, Location, Time & any costs. Deadline for next calendar submission will be FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7th, 2014 by 3pm. To ensure your events are seen, contact ads@lethbridgejournal.com about advertising today! ADVERTISE YOUR NEXT EVENT BY SPONSORING THIS CALENDAR! CONTACT 403-320-8936 or email ads@lethbridgejournal.com SUNDAY MONDAY 2 9 Wildrose Country and Bluegrass Music Society Jam Sessions Claresholm Legion 1pm, public welcome The Fraternal Order of Eagles Breakfast Eagle Hall 631, 13 St. N. 9-11am, $ 5 Paw Society Annual Pool Tournament Shotz Billiard Club and Lounge 1pm, $25 reg. / proceeds go to charity - 403 732 5708 16 23 Hawaiian and Belly Dance Classes Southminster Hall 6:40pm, $ 15, 403 329 8456 Young Guns Tour Brett Kissel & One More Girl Average Joe’s Sports Bar 8:30pm, $25, www. thejoe.ca TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 3 4 10 11 17 18 24 de Grandmaison Oral History Project Lethbridge Public Library Downtown Community Meeting Room 7-9pm, 403-320-4994 25 New Media Film Series – Drive (USA/ Winding Renf/2011) Lethbridge Public Library Theatre Gallery 7-9:30pm, Free Admission 5 12 19 New Media Film Series - The Ides of March (USA/George Clooney/ 2011) Lethbridge Public Library Theater Gallery 7-9:30pm, Free admission Look for 2014 Best of the Best results, announced in today’s Suntimes edition! THURSDAY 26 6 Drop’n Beats Boys and Girls Club of Lethbridge 6-9pm, 403-382-8221 Alberta Genealogy Society Monthly Meeting Room 128, 909 -3rd Ave N 7pm, Guest speaker Nestor Martinez 13 20 Hedley Wild Live Tour EnMax Centre 7pm, tickets at enmaxcentre.ca Lecture Series Enduring Shades of Influence Galt Museum 7pm, 403 320 3898 27 *On 1 year contract 8 LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com ☛ Submit your events to events@lethbridgejournal.com at least two weeks ahead event For your clude: please in le •Date •Tit n •Locatio any costs •Time & and we will do our best to include them in an upcoming calendar. Deadline for next calendar submission will be Thursday,January 23rd, 2014 by 4pm. To ensure your events are seen, contact ads@lethbridgejournal.com about advertising today! FRIDAY SATURDAY The Fraternal Order of Eagles Crib Tournament Eagle Hall 12:30pm, $10 for 2person team, register prior 403 593 2979 Downtown Lethbridge First Friday Downtown Lethbridge All-day, visit downtownlethbridge. com 7 TGIF YMCA 1-4pm, 403-327-9622 21 1 15 2014 International Peace Pow Wow EnMax Centre All-day 22nd & 23rd, visit 329-7328 (SEAT) SOME THINGS GO OUT OF FASHION... 8 Save Chinatown Variety Show Yates Centre 6-7pm, silent auction, 7pm showtime, $ 25-$75 403 329 SEAT 14 PLEASE SUPPORT OUR EVENTS CALENDAR SPONSORS 22 BUT NOT THE MUSIC! Events are subject to change and not all prices are included, please contact vendor or event organizer for more information. The Fraternal Order of Eagles Steak Dinner Eagle Hall 5-7pm, $ 10 Charlie Russell, 50 years of living with the Great Bears in Person UofL, First Choice Saving PE250 2pm, $20 general, $15 students 41183521 28 41183522 New West Theater Presents Harvest Sterndale Bennett Theater Now- March 8th, specifc dates & showtimes, visit newwesttheatre.com Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca 9 HUMOR Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19) The constellation ARIES is currently undergoing scheduled maintenance in order to better serve you! We apologize (Credit: The Simpsons) for the inconvenience and expect full Horoscope functionality to be restored within 72 hours. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A pre-Spring-Cleaning-Cleaning around the house will reveal a great many secrets you thought long buried, some of which were better left that way. While you’ll probably have to face up to the stack of bills that has been growing in the shadows the entire time, you still have a chance to avoid the Mummy’s Curse by resealing the crawlspace and locking evil inside. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A bag mix-up after a sick workout session next week is going to leave you with no choice but to spend the rest of gym day in too-small yoga pants and a shirt that says “Milky Milky Coco Puffs.” The bag also contains a substantial amount of cash and a gun, so it would probably work in your favour to resolve this quickly and without the police. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your homemade Influenza vaccine is complete and ready for human testing. The fastest way to find a test subject is to advertise the position on Kijiji- you’ll be shocked and a little bit excited to find out what people will let you do to them for $20. LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Your calm demeanour and politeness made you easy to like, but stressful circumstances can make it hard to keep the front up. Like when your roommate accidentally gets high on fumes from cleaning the house and locks you in the crawlspace because they think you’re an evil mummy. (LRPS claims this exact thing happens an average of twice every six months in Lethbridge) VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) Despite months of saving, your ‘Travel Fund’ Piggy Bank holds only a meagre $0.71 and some rubber bands. While the value of rubber banding has skyrocketed relative to the Canadian dollar as of late, it just won’t be enough to get you inside Avicii’s Ibiza hotel room naked with a bottle of champagne. I did hear about this posting on Kijiji though… LIBRA (Sept 23-Oct 22) Somebody accidentally switched bags with you at the gym, and they’re out there stretching your favorite pair of Lululemons right this very second. Forget the gun and the money that were also in your bag - it took you literally YEARS to find pants that framed your butt so well, if they’re ruined you might not be responsible for what happens next. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21) Everything happens for a reason. For example, the reason you don’t remember much about January is because halfway through the month your hands were full and you tried to pull a plug from a wall outlet with your tongue. You would’ve been fine too, if not for that meddling electricity! SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dec 21) A recent spiritual or religious encounter has inspired you, enough to write down an account of the experience with an eye towards one day publishing it. “Chicken Soup for the Lethbridgian Soul” will be the biggest book the come out of this city since Anita Horrocks wrote “Breath of a Ghost.” CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Let go of all your negative emotions before you return to the Dagobah system to finish your training, lest your anger and fear corrupt you and turn you to the Dark Side of the Force. As a side note, remember not to pick up your lightsaber by the wrong end again. Robot hands are expensive. AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 18) You will meet the most incredible Virgo at the house of a local mad scientist, where you are both being injected with homemade drugs for money. If you survive, the bonds you forge together in that dank basement will last the rest of your lives (which sounds like a long time, but don’t hold your breath. No seriously, don’t hold your breath. If you do, the vaccine will kill you.) PISCES (Feb 19-Mar 20) A cosmic distortion will throw you off your game this week, when it swallows your significant other whole and erases them from your timeline. There’s just so much we don’t know about astrophysics. ENTERTAINMENT Video Vern’s Movie Reviews By Video Vern Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal What a slow start to the year with movie releases, I had to add in some Netflix television show picks this issue just to balance it all out. There is a new show out though that is better than any movie or show I’ve seen in awhile and that is True Detective on HBO. If you haven’t seen it yet, the first three episodes will be available by the time this issue is out and you can watch it on demand for free if you subscribe to HBO. I can’t believe how good it is, it follows two detectives switching from the mid 90’s where they worked on a murder case together, to 2012 where they are being interviewed about that case. You might think that sounds kind of boring, but take a show like CSI, make the story ten times better, make it uncensored with no commercials and throw in a couple of good actors like Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey, and that’s the show. Absolutely one of the best crime drama shows I’ve ever seen on television and there are still nine episodes left. and the kid are sitting in a car alone and still playing the part of grandpa and grandson which doesn’t make sense since they are both in on the joke, they should only be pretending around strangers. It would have been way funnier if they just stuck with the Jackass style. Heroes - It was taken off Netflix awhile ago, but it’s back now. This was one of my favourite shows back in the day and is still better than most of the garbage on now. Netflix Picks of the Month January 28, 2014 Bad Grandpa - The story centers on Johnny Knoxville’s classic character, 86-year-old Irving Zisman and his young grandson, Billy. The pair travels across the United States to return Billy to his father’s custody after his mother is arrested and jailed. Starring: Johnny Knoxville, Jackson Nicoll, Zia Harris. Review - I’ve always loved Johnny’s old man character from Jackass, the shoplifting scenes were hilarious. He does that again in this movie, which is sort of story-based with pranks on actual people thrown in. It’s funny enough, but sometimes the movie pretends to be a movie instead of a series of pranks like Jackass. For example, Johnny House of Cards - The second season starts in February so it’s probably a good idea to power through season one so you know what’s going on. If you watch all episodes in one day I will give you a gold star sticker. Party of Five - Just kidding, this show belonged in the toilet back when I was a teenager and still belongs there today. I think I watched ten minutes of an episode once, then went and threw up. 10 LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com Olympics in our own backyard Program & Communication Co-ordinator Lethbridge Sport Council Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal As the 2014 Olympic Games in Sochi approach, the media showers the world with inspiring commercials and campaigns to rally each country. The spinoff hype and expectations from Vancouver 2010 has carried over to the next crop of world class athletes! These athletes are the best in the world at their sport and many of them as youngsters had a dream and set goals to one day reach the Olympic Games! 1,800 young Alberta athletes will have the opportunity to compete at their own version of the Olympic Games but closer to home – the Alberta Winter Games in Canmore/Banff February 6 – 9! The Alberta Games sees top athletes ages 11 - 17 from eight regions of Alberta compete against each other. More than 2,500 athletes, coaches and officials will participate in 22 sports throughout the Banff and Canmore municipal region. Sports include: alpine skiing, archery, badminton, biathlon, boxing, cross country skiing, curling, fencing, figure skating, freestyle skiing, gymnastics, hockey, judo, ringette, speed skating, squash, synchronized swimming, volleyball and wrestling. Lethbridge hosted the Alberta Summer Games in 2012, and is preparing to host the 2015 55 Plus Alberta Winter Games. These multi-sport games bring so much excitement to the participants and the host city. The games will provide the opportunity for many of Canada’s future elite athletes to enjoy their first taste of competition at a provincial level. Contrary, this might also be the biggest games an athlete will ever play in. The experience can be the highlight of a youth’s life so far. Not only are they competing against the top athletes in their sport, but they also build lifelong friendships with teammates and competitors from across the province. I will be experiencing the Canmore/Banff Games first-hand as a Manager for Hockey – Zone 1. These will be my first Alberta Games and while I look forward to the entire experience, I’m not so sure I will enjoy sleeping on the Games mattresses. Athletes, coaches and managers stay in local schools, called an “Athlete Village.” Each team is assigned a classroom to sleep in, each participant is provided with a mattress (we bring our own pillow and sleeping bag), and we will be fed buffet-style at the “Food Centre.” The host community plans an evening of entertainment for the athletes which often consists of a Much Music Dance party. It is an experience these athletes, and all participants, will be speaking about for years to come. It really is a mini Olympics in our own back yard! Keep informed! Lethbridge Sport Council is on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. Make sure you check out our new website for the latest news and updates and sign up to receive our e-newsletter. For more information on sport in Lethbridge, Visit www.lethbridgesportcouncil.ca Canes promote reading Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal Three Lethbridge Hurricanes players visited Ken Van Cleave’s Grade 3-4 class at Sunnyside School recently to talk about their experiences as readers and how important reading is to them. They talked to students about the rigors of training, what it’s like to live with billet families and how and when they read. In the top, Lethbridge Hurricanes Lenny Hackman, Griffin Foulk and Macoy Erkamps watch a music video celebrating reading with the students. In the bottom photo, Henry Klassen and Hudson Procee, students at Sunnyside School, show their books to Hurricanes defenceman Griffin Foulk. Sunnyside School, located just minutes from North Lethbridge, has adopted a literacy focus, along with all schools in Palliser Regional Schools. Now Looking For: 41183454 By Amy Van Buskirk (1) Chef (1) Cook (1) Kitchen Helper For our Lethbridge Location • 310 - 5 Street South Fax Resumé to 403-381-1356 or email anup.ghai@hotmail.com Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca 11 Virtuous Woman Exposed Ooh’koonoosiin’: Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal How to Prevent your Teen from ‘Sexting’ Sexting’ is the new thing that everyone and no one is talking about. We are first generation parents to this spectacle and I think we have all been a bit blind sided by its presence. If you are asking, ‘what’s sexting?’ (I will not smack you - I will not smack you) it is defined as: “an act of sending sexually explicit materials through mobile phones or social media.” Now that you know what it is, do you know how many times a day your son or daughter is solicited to send or receive inappropriate photos or text messages? More than you will ever be able to comprehend without tearing your clothes in grief and throwing your Wi-Fi modem off a cliff. One minute your child is playing Angry Birds like a mad scientist, the next minute they’re caught up in scandal. It is not an easy thing to recover from as a parent, and as “whatever, its no big deal!” a teen can rebuttal; I don’t think they recover quickly from it either. This is a big deal parents. This isn’t just teens being teens, this is scary stuff. Not only are photos being sent from one teen to another, teens are getting hold of these private photos to exploit, bully and destroy one another. It’s sickening. If you were to ask your son or daughter about how common this is amongst his or her friends, you should not be surprised when they respond, “everyone does it.” Sad thing is, they are right. •Nearly 40 percent of all teenagers have posted or sent sexually suggestive messages. •22 percent of high-school-age teens (ages 14 to 17) have been involved in a form of nude sexting. •Among 14- to 24-year-olds who admit to sexting, 29 percent send these messages to people they have never met, but know from the Internet. Source: http://www.dosomething.org I understand that sexuality is a part of puberty and a very strong pull for our young men and women. It doesn’t help that our teens, through the media, receive a lot of mixed messages - thanks Miley Cyrus - but I know that us being silent and oblivious as parents isn’t helping them at all. It needs to be part of our daily talks with our kids. “Hi Johnny, how was your day, do want pizza or spaghetti for dinner, by the way about this sexting thing….” How to prevent sexting: 1. Monitor your child’s devices. You wouldn’t hand the keys to your 16-yearold and not ask them where they are going and who they are going with. Why do we blindly hand over phones to our kids who have access to the world and not monitor their activity? 2. Know your teen’s passwords. I know there has to be a balance between respecting our child’s privacy and protecting them. I feel that if it is already a set precedence that you have a right to check in every once and a while, then it’s not an invasion. If you’re hacking their friends Facebook account or reading every message every day, that’s border-line. 3. Do not let your teens take their phones to bed at night. This is a huge one, and I know all the arguments in the world. “I need it for an alarm,” (here’s an alarm clock) “What if a friend needs me,” (they will still NEED you tomorrow.) When we were younger, drama, bullying, and budding romances were subjected to the hallways at school and - if you were brave enough - a phone call or a jaunt to the park, but at the end of the day you went home, had dinner with your family, and went to bed. Now, kids are surrounded by their drama 24/7 and it isn’t healthy. No to mention the million studies showing how keeping phones and devices of any kind in the bedroom is bad for sleep and depression. 4. TALK, TALK, and TALK to your kids. Despite what the eye rolls will tell you, you are the biggest influence in your teen’s life. HELP your son or daughter 5. know how to respond whenever they are pressured. Once you’ve dealt with a few stalkers in college you learn quick how to brush them off. Our young teens are trying so hard to maintain their reputation that they don’t want to look stupid. Or in teen language an LG or LB. (Little Girl or Little Boy) Talk together and come up with a phrase or a line they can say when pressured that they feel comfortable saying. 6. Know your kids apps, know the sites they are on, know their friends and know your teen. In our home, we Google every new social app that is requested. Some with shocking reviews: Kik, for example, “a pedophile’s playground,” Snap Chat, “A sexter’s dream,” - need I say more? 7. Talk to their school, are they talking about it? Be an advocate. Your children’s school needs to be addressing this issue, a lot of it is happening in math class. 8. Explain the consequences to your child – colleges and businesses are reviewing applicant’s social networks, they can be criminally charged, it can destroy their reputation… etc. This is a new epidemic we call playing with fire. I always think that it would have been so much easier to be a cave-mother. “If you see a Sabertooth run!” or “Watch out for T-Rex,” now T-Rex and Sabertooth are disguised as fun, fulfilling, and free and it’s getting harder to guard our teens because they just don’t see the danger. Gathering Together By Katty-Jo Rabbit Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal In case you didn’t know, workshops are held at the Aboriginal Opportunities Employment Centre every last and first Wednesday of the month. All of the workshops are free and there is a lot of opportunity to participate if you’re free during that time. Usually they occur from 9 - noon, refreshments are provided and it is a good way to get informed on all the great programs and opportunities there are. So to provide an update and encourage all community member to join us, here is a brief over view of what is going on at the AOEC office. February 5 Trent Frank, Recruitment Officer for Lethbridge College will be presenting on how to apply to the Lethbridge College and providing an update on all the new programs available through Lethbridge College. February 12 is the big day of the 4th Annual Career and Resources Fair at the Lethbridge Lodge, everyone is welcome to attend, if you’re an employer looking to diversify your company then feel free to sign up for this event as there are still seats available. This event is open to everyone, as this is a great time to network and explore the options available in the Lethbridge community. This event will start at 10 a.m. and end at 2 p.m. 12 LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com February 19 Petty officer 2nd Class Stephan Morrison of the Bold Eagle program will be present to provide an overview on how to apply to the Military Recruit training program. He will also present information on the Culture Camp. And finally, February 26 will be a meet and greet for the Aboriginal Peoples support group, where individuals looking to connect with others are encouraged to come down to the AOEC office at 6:30 p.m. to enjoy some networking and program planning as this new group will be meeting every month on alternating Wednesdays from 6:30 p.m. - 8 p.m. This is a group is focused on providing additional supports to individuals who are in transition and wanting to do some selfassessment in relation to the Medicine wheel. So if you or someone you know is interested in participating in these great information sessions feel free to stop by and join us. AOEC is also a great way to connect with the other Aboriginal Professionals, with free coffee and employment supports; watch out for our next round of workshops; as we have scheduled for a presentation on traditional Blackfoot games and an overview of plant knowledge used by the Blackfoot. If you have any questions or would like to inquire, please call 403.320.7699 for more information. Keep up-to-date on what’s trending in the world of wedding planning, hit the hot spots in the local dining scene or keep in the know on staying fit with the Lethbridge Herald’s special publications! Watch for them daily in your Lethbridge Herald or visit mylh.ca special sections to view all of our special publications. 41183524 We have something for everyone! Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca 13 NHL’S ‘EAST’ DEFINITELY THE ‘LEAST’ By Bruce Penton Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal There’s no doubt this year that in the National Hockey League, East is least and West is best. A huge discrepancy in win-loss records was starkly apparent when the 30 NHL teams hit the mid-January point. As it stood, only four of the Eastern teams - Pittsburgh, Boston, Tampa Bay and Montreal - had more points than the eighth-place team in the powerful West. Funny thing is, when you think of the NHL and power, a number of Eastern Conference-related thoughts come quickly to mind: Sidney Crosby, Alex Ovechkin, and, thanks to the Toronto-centric announcers on the national sports channels, one would think the Leafs are a powerhouse, too. Sorry, Leaf Nation, they’re not. Still. The Leafs and their 53 points would be a sickly ninth in the Western Conference, where the eighth and final playoff spot was held down by Minnesota Wild and their 55 points. Eastern Conference-leading Pittsburgh had 70 points in mid-January, which would have put them third in the West, behind Anaheim and Chicago, both of whom had suffered only eight regulation-time losses in 49 games. St. Louis Blues also had a mere eight defeats. While the bulk of the NHL’s power lies in the West, it’s theoretically easier for a Western team to make the playoffs, since only six of the 14 teams will miss out. The East, which consists of 16 teams, disqualifies eight teams for post-season play. But when they start playing for keeps in April, watch for Pittsburgh or Boston to be as strong a Stanley Cup contender as the West representative. Why? Because of the extraordinary power in the West, where nine of the 14 teams were at .500 or better, the road to the Cup final will be a lot more strenuous for the team that finally survives. The Eastern rep in the final, by comparison, will have a relative breeze through the first three rounds. Only five of the East’s 16 teams were at .500 or better in mid-January. • Greg Cote of the Miami Herald: “Recent terrorist bombings in Russia have raised safety concerns about the upcoming Sochi Olympics, and increased security measures will be obvious. For example, downhill skiers will now slalom through metal detectors.” • Some memorable broadcasting hilarity from Jerry Coleman, who died recently at 89, snipped from Dwight Perry’s ‘From the Sidelines’ in the Seattle Times: — “They throw (Dave) Winfield out at second — and he’s safe.” — “Willie Davis is not as young as he used to be.” — “Winfield goes back to the wall, he hits his head on the wall and it rolls off! It’s rolling all the way back to second base. This is a terrible thing for the Padres.” • Comedy writer Alex Kaseberg: “This just in: Nancy Kerrigan will be a skating analyst for NBC during the Sochi Olympics; no word yet if Tonya Harding will be featured as a hard-hitting reporter.” • Blogger Torben Rolfsen, on Sidney Crosby beating Eddie Lack in the shootout on the day the Olympic team was announced: “I like to think of that as Canada 1 Sweden 0.” • Dwight Perry of the Seattle Times, before a recent football playoff game: “The weather forecast calls for a 100-per-cent chance of rain for the Seahawks-Saints playoff game. Or, as we call it in these parts, Saturday.” • Greg Cote again: “Marlins radio broadcasts switch from 790 The Ticket to WINZ940 next year. Fans who listen to Marlins games on radio are split. One said he liked the change, the other isn’t sure.” • Brad Dickson of the Omaha World-Herald: “After Peyton Manning shouted ‘Omaha!’ repeatedly during Sunday’s game, Omaha’s Chamber of Commerce expressed interest in hiring him for a promotion. The best news: We’d only have to close four libraries and six swimming pools to afford Manning.” • Dickson again: “President Obama welcomed the champion Miami Heat to the White House on Tuesday. Obama was excited to see LeBron James. It was the first time the president has met anyone more powerful than himself.” • RJ Currie of sportsdeke.com: “A Winnipeg psychic predicts the Blue Bombers will struggle in 2014. He also says Maria Sharapova will grunt, Blake Griffin will dunk, and the Cubs have always stunk.” • Another one from Currie: “Having the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders at the recent F1 race in Texas was so popular, word is organizers plan to do it again in 2014. Possible event title? Vroom with a View.” • Janice Hough of leftcoastsportsbabe.com: “The Chicago Cubs say that some of the reaction to their new mascot was “despicable.” Many Cubs fans think that adjective should be reserved for the team’s play on the field.” • Kaseberg again: “I don’t want to say the Carolina Panthers were poor sports, but after losing to the 49ers, they went in and taunted the locker room clean-up crew.” Care to comment? Email brucepenton2003@yahoo.ca Volunteer Lethbridge Gift Wrapping Volunteers Volunteer Lethbridge would like to acknowledge all of the volunteers who helped with the Gift Wrapping Program at Park Place Shopping Centre over the 2013 holiday season. Thanks to the dedication and hard work of ALL the gift wrapping volunteers, the program was a great success! There were over 140 volunteers from all walks of life who came together to help with the program. Collectively, they donated a total of 2199.25 volunteer hours. What an amazing accomplishment, not only for Volunteer Lethbridge and the volunteers, but for the community as a whole. Aside from contributing to a successful program, these volunteers helped to bring the community together by building a fun and positive experience for all to enjoy. Volunteer Lethbridge would like to thank the volunteers for wrapping up a great season! 14 LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com made to improve the OPINION Magrath and Scenic Drive It’s Just Me With Pat G. Support for Sochi Traffic turmoil Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal It’s soapbox time again, people. I have been much too nice for far too long. There are so many issues to choose from, I really don’t know where to start. For the time being, I will leave the Golden Key matter alone. There have been an ample number of letters and columns written regarding the oil drilling issue. I think it is time to wait until we all have much more factual information before we draw any hard conclusions. Instead, I would like to revisit an ongoing problem that just never seems to improve. Traffic flow! Or should I rephrase – traffic backup! More specifically, the main arteries on the south side of the city. The last time I addressed this subject, I challenged members of city council to drive south on Mayor Magrath Drive any day of the week starting around 3 p.m. It is obvious no one took up the challenge because no real attempts have been flow of traffic. I realize that I am in no way an expert when it comes to planning efficient ways to rectify the problem. I can, however, offer a few suggestions to the powers that be. First off, why not consider rerouting some of the southbound traffic; that would lessen the load on Mayor Magrath Drive. How about opening up 28 Street South, thereby providing access to the Costco/Wal-Mart area and all those other stores and restaurants at the south end of the city? As it is, the only people who make use of 28 Street South are those who live on or near the street. It must be nice to have your very own private access road. I was under the misguided impression that streets and avenues were provided for the convenience of all, not just a few. Secondly, and I know I am repeating myself, do something about the intersection of Mayor south. A horrendous bottleneck occurs where three southbound lanes are funnelled into two and then back to three after proceeding through the intersection. That problem could be solved by repositioning the traffic light and allowing the far right lane to proceed south, eliminating the congestion. There is ample green area for a turn lane onto Scenic Drive through part of the tourist information property. I realize there might be engineering problems to contend with and maybe a few disgruntled citizens to pacify, but I am sure with a little bit of effort, these things can be overcome. After all, we aren’t a one-horse town anymore. Let’s move into the 21st century – and let’s move the traffic. Until next time. . . Pat G. Daniel Braun, a local Canadian Tire dealer, signs a piece of a “We All Play for Canada” flag that’s being sent to Sochi to encourage Canadian Olympians to go for the gold. The flag is stitched together from over 490 pieces with signatures and personal messages from staff at stores across Canada. Canadian Tire’s sports marketing brand campaign, “We All Play for Canada” takes aim at rallying Canadians to get kids active. As Canadians, we are all united by play - it makes us stronger, happier, more creative and more tenacious as individuals, as communities and as a country. Whether it’s playing road hockey in the street, cheering on our Olympians or taking our kids to the park, we all play for something bigger than ourselves. Former staff invited to school birthday celebration Submitted to the Lethbridge Journal Former staff of Jennie Emery Elementary School in Coaldale are invited to join current staff and students for a 20th birthday party, from 10:30 to 11:45 a.m., Feb. 7 in the school gymnasium. Pat Hrynczuk, spokesperson for the event and a Grade 1 teacher who has worked at Jennie Emery since students first moved in on Feb. 7, 1994, says the event will include a brief program, displays of photos from the past two decades and time for former and current staff to reconnect and visit. “We have always had a really good team who care about kids and each other,” Hrynczuk says. “This school has always had a warm, inviting feeling, and we want to celebrate that spirit on our 20th birthday.” Former staff of the school are asked to RSVP by phoning 403-3452403. Jennie Emery Elementary serves about 470 students and children who attend early learning, kindergarten or Grade 1-4 programming. The school also has provides a before- and after-school PLAY program for children up to 12 years of age. The school is located at 1101 22 Avenue, Coaldale. The school was named for Mrs. Jennie Emery, whose teaching career spanned 41 years in southern Alberta. For many years, she maintained a presence at the school bearing her name, attending Christmas concerts and other events. Mrs. Emery passed away in October 2013 at the age of 102. Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca 15 Accounting and Office Essentials A new career is as easy as 1, 2, 3! FOR BUSINESS ER REGIST * ! W O N CAREER DEVELOPMENT PUBLIC WORKSHOPS Call us & register. Train for 11 weeks. The world is yours! Thought Patterns for Success New thinking to promote success. Call for next available dates. Career Directions Changing jobs? Returning to school? Call for next available dates. 2 Young 2 Retire Reinvent the 2nd stage of your career. Call for next available dates. 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Serving Southern Alberta for more than 20 Years HR Generalist (#41QC) ($55K/year) Candidate with energy, strong initiative and an interest in working in a true Generalist role sought! Must have experience with employment standards, performance & conflict management and recruiting. Journeyman Plant Millwright (#41MT) ($35-37 /hour) Do you have a journeyman millwright ticket? Are you willing to work rotating shifts? This indoor position in a food processing company is a good opportunity for you. The right people, the right seat. Ph: 403.382.3669 Fax: 403.382.3778 info@selectrecruiting.ca visit us at selectrecruiting.ca 3rd Class Power Engineers - We’ve met and screened some excellent 3rd Class Power Engineers in January. Many are willing to consider a 4th class role in order to be in Lethbridge. Account Manager - Local Professional with 10 years experience in Commercial/Ag banking ready to take on a new client relationship management role. Production Supervisor - Professional local candidate Equipment Service Manager (#41K5) – Medicine Hat ($70-90K /year) proficient in Lean manufacturing, process improvement and reliability is looking for a new challenge. Let us introduce you! Technical knowledge + leadership skills? Ideal candidate will have experience with Agriculture or Construction equipment in a service capacity. Heavy duty mechanics encouraged to apply. Accountant - This personable candidate has strong people Executive Assistant (#41PB) ($50-60K /year) Are you experienced and comfortable with an agriculture environment? The Executive Assistant position is for an agricultural business 25 minutes outside of Lethbridge. Ag industry experience mandatory, experience with livestock is a bonus. Customer Service Coordinator - 1 Year Contract (#41Q0) #236, 200 – 4th Ave. S. 2nd Level Lethbridge Centre Lethbridge, Alberta T1J 4C9 Check out these candidates, ready to work for you! Never take work home at night! Inbound customer service position in a professional office setting; must have excellent phone skills and previous customer service experience. No industry specific knowledge is needed; excellent (paid) training is provided. Visit our Job Board at www.selectrecruiting.ca for more information on these opportunities. CONFIDENTIALITY ASSURED management experience to match their financial strategy and analysis background. $70K+ salary range. Former Insurance Agent - An outgoing, dynamic person brings many years of experience in various skill sets, including hiring, interviewing, and payroll as well as conflict resolution, mediation and negotiation. DID YOU KNOW? You can register with Select People Solutions and be the first to hear of new job openings that suit you. Recruitment & Search 16 LETHBRIDGE JOURNAL • WEEK OF JANUARY 31, 2014 • www.lethbridgejournal.ca Have something to say? Send us an email to editor@lethbridgejournal.com HR Management
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