langley advance march 8 2012

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Your community newspaper since 1931 Your source for breaking news, sports, and entertainment: www.langleyadvance.com Thursday, March 8, 2012 Audited circulation: 40,026 – 32 pages L a ng ley Advance Spring forward Daylight Savings Time starts Sunday Troy Landreville photos/Langley Advance Teachers showed their solidarity Wednesday afternoon at the Langley Events Centre. The group marched around the events centre to Fort Langley- Aldergrove MLA Rich Coleman’s office, where they attached wreaths in protest of his government legislating teachers back to work (below). Police and firefighters are marshalling resources against a Brookswood arsonist. by Matthew Claxton [email protected] Langley firefighters and residents are get- ting ready in case the Brookswood arsonist strikes again. In the last 30 days, four fires have been set, and police suspect they are linked to the same person or persons. The arsonist has thrice targeted Brookswood Baptist Church, torch- ing a construction trailer outside and twice break- ing in to attempt to set the building on fire. Sprinklers and firefight- ers kept the majority of the building intact and the church has remained open. Last weekend, early Sunday morning, a portable at Noel Booth Elementary was broken into and set on fire. One portable of a set of three was destroyed and two more suffered water dam- age. The Langley Township fire department is prepar- ing for any future arsons in the area. “We will make sure that the RCMP is involved immediately,” said assistant chief Bruce Ferguson. The department is also preparing a geographic profile, to try and deter- mine where the arsonist is likely to strike. These profiles are based on multiple fires, and can help the depart- ment prevent further incidents. Ferguson said that several years ago, the department was deal- ing with a serial arsonist in Aldergrove who was torching dumpsters, sev- eral times a night. continues on page A7… Crime Firebug still at large Local teachers sent a message to the B.C. government Wednesday. by Matthew Claxton [email protected] A mass rally Wednesday saw pink-clad teachers and supporters lay pink wreaths at the office of Fort Langley- Aldergrove MLA Rich Coleman to mark the death of public education in B.C. The Langley Teachers’ Association organized a rally along 200th Street that moved to the Langley Events Centre, where the Liberal MLA has his constituency office. The office was closed. “We’re going to lay those wreaths for him and leave a mes- sage for Rich Coleman, hope- fully one he hears,” Langley Teachers’ Association president Gail Chaddock- Costello told the crowd at the close of the rally. Teachers who waved signs, streamers, and BCTF flags on 200th Street on Wednesday mor- ning were cheered by honks from many of the passing cars. Debbie Yeo, a Topham ele- mentary teacher, said that class size and composition is the most important issue in the contract. She has 29 children in her Grade 4 class, including a number with special issues. Her fellow Topham teacher Kim Timoschyk teaches Grade 1. This year, Timoschyk has 18 students, two with autism, two who are ESL, and several more who have academic difficulties. Last year, she had the same composition of stu- dents but had 21 in her class. Teachers need more support for those children with special and different needs, Timoschyk said. “We’ve had a lot of support from the public,” said Yeo. “I don’t know if the message got across to the gov- ernment.” Arlana Coady, another Langley teacher, was wav- ing a sign a little farther down the street. She and her fellow teachers had talked to several people one-on-one about the issues, about class size and last year’s court decision on that issue. “I think we’ve made some people more aware,” she said. Keith Honeywell, a band teacher at Surrey’s Johnston Heights Secondary, brought his trumpet and performed songs, including When the Saints Go Marching In. The provincial government maintains that public sector employees accept its net zero mandate of no pay increases. On the first day of this week’s three-day strike, Education Minister George Abbott was critical of teachers’ tactics. “Last week, I introduced Bill 22, which sets a cooling off period and suspends the teachers’ union strike action while calling on the assist- ance of a mediator. It also imple- ments the $165-million Learning Improvement Fund and other measures that will play a funda- mental role in the future of edu- cation in our province,” he said. “Unfortunately, before Bill 22 was even tabled, the British Columbia Teachers’ Federation was moving to escalate their strike. The union has since ramped up the rhetoric and distorted what Bill 22 seeks to accomplish.” The Labour Relations Board ruled that teachers could strike three days this week and one day per week after that. Teachers are expected to be in class Thursday. Friday in the Langley District is a Professional Day and spring break starts next week when students will be out of class. Education Striking teachers rally at LEC MORE PHOTOS ONLINE WWW.LANGLEYADVANCE.COM WWW.LANGLEYADVANCE.COM Matthew Claxton/Langley Advance Surrey teacher Keith Honeywell joined Langley teachers for a protest on the final day of a three-day strike Wednesday. MADE BY TOYOTA. CUSTOMIZED BY YOU. 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Langley Advance March 8 2012

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Page 1: Langley Advance March 8 2012

Y o u r c o m m u n i t y n e w s p a p e r s i n c e 1 9 3 1

Your source for breaking news, sports, and entertainment: www.langleyadvance.comThursday, March 8, 2012 Audited circulation: 40,026 – 32 pages

LangleyAdvanceSpring forward

Daylight Savings Time starts Sunday

Troy Landreville photos/Langley Advance

Teachers showed their solidarity Wednesday afternoon at the Langley Events Centre. The group marched around the events centre to Fort Langley-Aldergrove MLA Rich Coleman’s office, where they attached wreaths in protest of his government legislating teachers back to work (below).

Police and firefightersare marshallingresources against aBrookswood arsonist.by Matthew [email protected]

Langley firefightersand residents are get-ting ready in case theBrookswood arsoniststrikes again.

In the last 30 days, fourfires have been set, andpolice suspect they arelinked to the same personor persons.

The arsonist has thricetargeted BrookswoodBaptist Church, torch-ing a construction traileroutside and twice break-ing in to attempt to setthe building on fire.Sprinklers and firefight-ers kept the majority ofthe building intact andthe church has remainedopen.

Last weekend, earlySunday morning, aportable at Noel BoothElementary was brokeninto and set on fire. Oneportable of a set of threewas destroyed and twomore suffered water dam-age.

The Langley Townshipfire department is prepar-ing for any future arsonsin the area.

“We will make surethat the RCMP isinvolved immediately,”said assistant chief BruceFerguson.

The department is alsopreparing a geographicprofile, to try and deter-mine where the arsonistis likely to strike.

These profiles arebased on multiple fires,and can help the depart-ment prevent furtherincidents.

Ferguson said thatseveral years ago, thedepartment was deal-ing with a serial arsonistin Aldergrove who wastorching dumpsters, sev-eral times a night.

continues on page A7…

Crime

Firebugstill atlarge

Local teachers sent amessage to the B.C.government Wednesday.by Matthew [email protected]

A mass rally Wednesdaysaw pink-clad teachers andsupporters lay pink wreathsat the office of Fort Langley-Aldergrove MLA Rich Coleman tomark the death of public educationin B.C.

The Langley Teachers’Association organized a rally along200th Street that moved to theLangley Events Centre, where theLiberal MLA has his constituencyoffice. The office was closed.

“We’re going to lay thosewreaths for him and leave a mes-sage for Rich Coleman, hope-fully one hehears,” LangleyTeachers’Associationpresident GailChaddock-Costello toldthe crowd atthe close of therally.

Teachers whowaved signs,streamers, andBCTF flags on200th Street on Wednesday mor-ning were cheered by honks frommany of the passing cars.

Debbie Yeo, a Topham ele-mentary teacher, said that classsize and composition is the most

important issue in the contract.She has 29 children in her Grade4 class, including a number withspecial issues.

Her fellow Topham teacher KimTimoschyk teaches Grade 1. Thisyear, Timoschyk has 18 students,two with autism, two who areESL, and several more who haveacademic difficulties. Last year, shehad the same composition of stu-dents but had 21 in her class.

Teachers needmore support forthose childrenwith special anddifferent needs,Timoschyk said.

“We’ve had a lotof support fromthe public,” saidYeo. “I don’t knowif the message gotacross to the gov-ernment.”

Arlana Coady,another Langley teacher, was wav-ing a sign a little farther down thestreet.

She and her fellow teachers hadtalked to several people one-on-oneabout the issues, about class size

and last year’s court decision onthat issue.

“I think we’ve made somepeople more aware,” she said.

Keith Honeywell, a bandteacher at Surrey’s JohnstonHeights Secondary, brought histrumpet and performed songs,including When the Saints GoMarching In.

The provincial governmentmaintains that public sectoremployees accept its net zero

mandate of no pay increases.On the first day of this week’s

three-day strike, Education MinisterGeorge Abbott was critical ofteachers’ tactics.

“Last week, I introduced Bill 22,which sets a cooling off period andsuspends the teachers’ union strikeaction while calling on the assist-ance of a mediator. It also imple-ments the $165-million LearningImprovement Fund and othermeasures that will play a funda-mental role in the future of edu-cation in our province,” he said.“Unfortunately, before Bill 22 waseven tabled, the British ColumbiaTeachers’ Federation was movingto escalate their strike. The unionhas since ramped up the rhetoricand distorted what Bill 22 seeks toaccomplish.”

The Labour Relations Board ruledthat teachers could strike threedays this week and one day perweek after that.

Teachers are expected to be inclass Thursday.

Friday in the Langley District is aProfessional Day and spring breakstarts next week when studentswill be out of class.

Education

Striking teachers rally at LEC

MOREPHOTOSONLINE

WWW.LANGLEYADVANCE.COMWWW.LANGLEYADVANCE.COM

Matthew Claxton/Langley Advance

Surrey teacher Keith Honeywell joinedLangley teachers for a protest on the finalday of a three-day strike Wednesday.

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Page 3: Langley Advance March 8 2012

LangleyAdvance | Thu r sday , Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A3UpFrontLangleyAdvance

What’sonline

Sports

Gold coachesA Fraser Valley U16 female

hockey team, led by a Langley-based coaching staff, punchedits golden ticket in Vernon lastweekend.

Fraser Valley beat VancouverSquamish 5-2 in the gold medalfinal at the BC Winter Games.

The team, with assistantcoaches Sarah Beattie fromLangley and Sarah Potomakfrom Aldergrove, and man-aged by Langley resident CarolWorsfold, consisted of play-ers from Mission, Abbotsford,Chilliwack, Surrey, and Tri-Cities.

• More online

Fraser Valley celebrated its gold-medalvictory at the BC Winter Games.

News

Meetings plannedA new series of joint com-

mittee meetings are intended tosmooth communication betweenthe Langley School District, theCity, and the Township.

• More online

News

Drug shortageWork is being done to avoid

disruptions during a Canada-wide shortage of certain medica-tions used primarily in hospi-tals, Health Minister Michael deJong said.

Drug manufacturer SandozCanada, which is a key sup-plier of the country’s injectabledrugs, has temporarily sus-pended manufacturing and/orreduced the amounts producedof a number of its products dueto operational issues.

• More online

LangleyAdvance.com

Clickfor community

Two men with three loadedguns were arrested at aLangley hotel last week.by Matthew [email protected]

A tip from the public led to thearrest of two armed men, nowsuspected in a string of 18 breakand enters, Langley police say.

On March 2, someone noticedthat the two men checking in atthe Super 8 Motel in the 6700block of Glover Road seemedsuspicious.

When police checked the

men’s names, one of them sentup a red flag. The man waswanted on an outstanding arrestwarrant, said Cpl. Holly Marks,spokesperson for the LangleyRCMP.

While police were headeddown to the hotel, they weretipped off with more informa-tion. The men appeared to bearmed, and they were unloadinga variety of items from a vehicleinto a hotel room.

The Street Enforcement Unitof the local Mounties took overthe incident, and set up a per-imeter around the hotel. Theythen called in help from theEmergency Response Team,

Police Dog Services, and theUniformed Gang Task Force. TheAir 2 helicopter hovered over-head to offer support.

When police were ready theycontacted the two men in theirroom.

The suspects refused to leave,and a two-hour standoff tookplace. Finally, the men walkedout and were arrested withoutincident.

Search warrants for the hotelroom and the vehicle turned up250 items, now linked to 18 ormore break and enters. Threeloaded handguns were found inthe room.

One of the men initially gave

police a fake name, but whenhis real identity was learned theRCMP discovered that he wasalso wanted on an arrest war-rant.

Dave Yaroslawsky, a 29-year-old Surrey man, and IvanJohnson, a 33-year-old fromNew Westminster, have nowbeen charged with possessinga prohibited firearm, a string offive more gun-related charges,and with possession of stolenproperty.

Johnson has been chargedwith personation for allegedlygiving police a false name.

Both men remained in custodythis week.

Crime

B&E suspects in custody after standoff

A popular restaurant willsoon call Langley home.by Heather [email protected]

The Cactus Club is plantingitself in Langley.

The B.C.-based club chain willopen in a new building at 200thStreet and the Langley Bypass.

Langley City council gave itsapproval at its March 5 meeting.

“This project could havegone anywhere in the LowerMainland,” Councillor TedSchaffer commented.

The two-storey building thatused to be home to auto shops,a computer firm, industrial busi-nesses and even the campaignoffice for Langley MP MarkWarawa during elections ismaking way for a new single-storey development by RockcliffeEstates Ltd.

The development is 21,550square feet, including 7,300 forthe club which will seat about185 people as well as patio spacefor 122 and a covered space forpeople waiting to enter.

The project will have threeretail units east of the restaurant.

“It’s going to be high-end fash-ion,” said Gharaei.

She explained that municipalzoning requires the retail unitsto be at least 4,000 square feetin this area so only high-endbusinesses can afford to set upshop in such a space.

The project has been designed

to integrate with the existingpower centre, Riocan LangleyCentre.

There will be one right in/rightout entry point on the bypassand access through the powercentre.

The new facility’s design picksup on elements of the powercentre to integrate the look ofthe area.

The project had to take intoconsideration the drainage andditch that runs along the northside of the property. Landscapearchitect Meredith Mitchell said

they will be creating a featurecorner at 200th and the bypass.

As well the project will includefeatures to lessen traffic noise,such as a water feature, tallerplanters, and vegetation.

The Cactus Club also hasestablishments in Vancouver,Burnaby, Coquitlam, Delta,West Vancouver, Kelowna,Nanaimo, North Vancouver,Richmond, Victoria, Surrey andAbbotsford, as well as Calgaryand Edmonton.

The subject property was ori-ginally developed in the 1970s

under a Land Use Contract.The contract permited a num-

ber of quasi-industrial land usesthat the City no longer consid-ered appropriate for this highprofile site while more recentcommercial uses allowed in theC2 Service Commercial Zone arerestricted or not permitted at all.

City council has to rescind theland use constract, a develop-ment method used years ago butno longer used today, to allowthe commercial zoning of thearea to apply to this 1.9 acresite.

Development

Council approves Cactus Club bid

Heather Colpitts/Langley Advance

City council approved the development Monday evening and on Tuesday, the demolition was well underway for the complex.

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Page 4: Langley Advance March 8 2012

Two groups of drunkenteenagers brawled astwo party buses met inBrookswood Saturday.

by Matthew [email protected]

Some Brookswood teensapparently decided theyhad to fight for their rightto party on Saturday.

Several teens weretreated for minor injur-ies after the occupants oftwo party buses spilledout and brawled near theMcDonalds outlet closeto 200th Street and 40thAvenue at about 11:30p.m.

Pepper spray was usedand teens were struck withbottles during the fight,said Cpl. Holly Marks,spokesperson for theLangley RCMP.

Officers arrived andbroke up the fight, but noone was arrested.

Several teens weretreated for minor injuriesat the scene. The only per-son taken to hospital wassuffering from excessiveconsumption of alcohol.

Police couldn’t deter-mine exactly why the fightstarted.

“Nobody would admitanything,” Marks said.

This is not the first partybus related incident inLangley involving teensand drinking.

In 2010, a firm calledVancouver Party Buswas subject to a series ofinspections and had mostof its vehicles yanked offthe road after an incidentthat injured two teens.

Two girls, 16 and 17,fell out of a moving busat the intersection of theLangley Bypass and FraserHighway. Most of theteens aboard the bus hadbeen drinking.

Teens

Bus ridersturn violent

An Aldergrove man wants toreplace noisy propane cannonswith silent falcons.

by Matthew [email protected]

Aldergrove’s Terry Sheldon is notthe first rural Langley resident toworry about the noise of propanecannons.

But he does think he has a solu-tion to the problem.

Sheldon spoke to the Townshipcouncil Monday to suggest bringingin falcons to scare birds away fromberry farms.

The predatory birds would bedeployed to scare away crows from

the fields, Sheldon suggested. Heand a partner own a number ofbirds in Cuba, and Sheldon visits theisland and works with them severaltimes a year.

He told the Langley Advance that hisplan is not to have his falcons killthe crows.

“They’re not birds of prey,”Sheldon said. “They are in the wild,but ours are tamed.”

The falcons are used in Cuba tokeep birds away from hotels, hesaid.

Falconry has been used as analternative method of bird controlin several areas. Last year, theVancouver International Airporttested using falcons as part of itsprogram to keep bird populationsnear the runways down. Thousands

of birds are shot every year near theairport to reduce the number of birdstrikes on airplanes.

The propane cannons fire everyfew minutes to deter crows from eat-ing berries before they can be pickedfor human consumption.

Sheldon and many others havecomplained about the cannons overthe years, saying they disturb sleep,reduce property values, and frightendomestic animals such as horses.

However, banning cannons hasnever been possible as they areprotected under provincial “rightto farm” legislation, which can’t beoverridden by local governments.

After hearing from Sheldon,Councillor Kim Richter planned torefer the idea to Township staff fora report.

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Page 5: Langley Advance March 8 2012

Organizers hope to create theworld’s largest living flag inLangley.

by Ronda [email protected]

Doesn’t everyone dream of break-ing a Guinness World Record? To doso, while being patriotic, surely is aworthy goal. At least Linda Bellamythinks so.

Bellamy, a Langley resident, ishoping to break the record for “liv-ing flags” by having more than25,000 people take part in her pro-ject on Canada Day.

Living flags are made up of indi-viduals standing in alignment, whileholding up coloured paper. From thesky, they appear to be a giant flag.

The community’s flag will beready at 2:12 p.m. on July 1.

“Each person will hold up a pieceof poster board above their head,”said Bellamy.

The poster board will later bedonated to local schools for use inart classes.

She expects that the 25,000 people

will take up almost the entire 2.5acres in front of the grandstandsat the McLeod Athletic Park ovalduring the Township of Langley’sCanada Day event.

Why undertake such a massiveproject? Bellamy replied, “I’m doingit as a patriotic event to celebratebeing Canadian, singing happybirthday to Canada and to break theGuinness World Record.”

Previous years’ attendance at theCanada Day celebration has beenapproximately 50,000. Bellamyshould be able to draw enoughindividuals in red and white to the

grandstands to break the current21,726 living flag record, set byHong Kong Polytechnic University.

With Canada Day still a fewmonths away, Bellamy is looking forcommitments from attendees andvolunteers in two ways:

First, you can “Like” theLangley Living Flag Facebookpage at www.facebook.com/events/162143403901911/ and con-firm you will be attending.

Second, if you know a group ororganization that would like to getinvolved, contact Bellamy at [email protected].

Patriotism

Flag fans need a horde of helpers

Wade Perrin/Vancouver Province

Students hit slopesElexa Barajas and her brother Juan Carlos Barajas preparing to skiat North Vancouver’s Mount Seymour. The Langley students tookadvantage of the teachers’ strike to do some Monday skiing.

LivingFlags, likethis oneat theVictorialegislaturein 2010,celebrateCanadaDay.

Debra BrashGlacier Media

For the recordPeople looking to donate non-perishable food, as

well as diapers and toiletries earmarked for local fam-ilies being helped out by Best Babies, Christian LifeAssembly, and Southgate Church, can do so by email-ing Kim Snow at [email protected].

Snow will make sure the goods are distributed tothe needy families in the community.

The email address in the article published in theLangley Advance on March 6 [‘Angels’ serve commun-ity year round] was incorrect.

L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A5

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Page 6: Langley Advance March 8 2012

Langley City council is expectedto approve a pesticide ban at anupcoming meeting.

by Heather [email protected]

The Canadian Cancer Society hasplanted a seed with Langley City councilwhich is now looking at banning cos-metic pesticides.

The cancer society’s Christina Beckattended the March 5 council meeting toask elected officials to ban the chemicalson private and public lands.

“It only makes sense for the City topractice what it’s asking of its residents,”she said.

The City would be joining about 39other B.C. municipalities that havebrought in bans. About one third of theminclude public lands.

“Seventy per cent of Canadians supportcosmetic pesticide bans,” she said.

Beck noted that the chemicals don’trespect fences or property lines, and thatthe pesticides have significant healthimpacts for people. The cancer society iscampaigning for pesticide bans as part ofits efforts with preventable cancers.

“Children are at the greatest risk,” Becksaid. “They roll around on the ground.And they’re often putting things in theirmouths.”

She presented research that showedthat costs for pest control and propertymanagement without chemicals rise forthe first two years after pesticides areused but after that, the costs are lowerthan using chemicals.

Some places, including Langley City,

use integrated pest management (IPM)where biological methods are preferredand pesticides are used as a last resort.

Communities that have brought in thebylaw have seen what Beck considers abenefit to the local economy – an increasein the number of landscaping firms.

Beck said cosmetic pesticides oftensolve the problem but have broaderimpacts, killing beneficial bugs.

“They often hit a lot of other things aswell,” she said.

Beck noted that the society isn’t askingfor bans for public health or safety uses,but for cosmetic uses.

The society recommended that LangleyCity amend its draft bylaw to restrict theuse and so people can’t give permissionfor others to use cosmetic pesticides onprivate property.

Council has given preliminary approvalto the bylaw and will make amendmentsbefore final reading.

Staff will come back with some esti-mates for what this will cost for Citylands. Councillor Dave Hall said it defeatsthe point if the City is not covered by thesame rules as homeowners and continuesto use chemicals.

The banned chemicals and productswould be based on lists created by thefederal and provincial governments.

Staff estimate it will cost about $3,000to create educational material for resi-dents and another $60,000 to go withoutpesticides on City property.

Fines range from $100-$2,500 and/orjail time of up to six months if people ref-use to follow the bylaw.

The bylaw was suggested by the City’sParks and Recreation Committee andwould not apply to commercial siteswhich come under provincial law.

Health

City may ban bug killersA6 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E

Page 7: Langley Advance March 8 2012

…continued from page A1Their profile showed he was work-

ing east to west in a particular patternor route. Once one fire was reported,firefighters would fan out and start soak-ing any other dumpsters on the possibleroute, as well as calling in the RCMP.

However, the arsonist was nevercaught. Most firebugs start fires thatwon’t become noticeable for four or fiveminutes, and by the time the alarms areringing, they’re gone, Ferguson said.

The department also has other meas-ures they’ll be taking to try and helppolice locate the suspect.

The school district will be on guard,and as of mid-week, a security guard wasstill stationed at Noel Booth Elementaryto keep watch over the site.

The Langley City fire department iskeeping an eye on the situation. So farall the fires have been about a mile tothe south of the City, but if they see anysuspicious fires, they’ll call in the policeimmediately, said Chief Rory Thompson.

Dale Ball, head of the BrookswoodVillage Merchants Association, said wordhas gone out to all the members to bevigilant.

“That’s about all we can do,” he said.Langley RCMP have assigned the

Serious Crime unit to work on the case,and they have also advised residents toavoid storing any flammable garbage ordebris outside their houses.

Arsonists are hard to catch, not onlybecause they are often gone by the time afire is noticed, but because the fires don’tleave much physical evidence.

So far, all the arsons in the Brookswoodarea have taken place early Sunday mor-nings, between 3 and 5 a.m.

There was a recent, quite differ-ent arson attempt last month in theWilloughby neighbourhood. At 8 a.m.on Feb. 4, someone threw a flammableliquid into the window of a condo show-home under construction.

The liquid hit a drywall dryer andcaused a small fire.

Fires started early Sunday mornings

A portableat Noel

BoothElementary

wasdestroyed

by asuspicious

fire on theweekend.

Langley Advancefiles

L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A7

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Page 8: Langley Advance March 8 2012

Letters to the editor . . . may be edited for clarity, length, or legal reasons. Anonymous letters will not be considered for publication,however names may be withheld from print upon request. Letters may be published on the Internet, in print, or both. Publication of letters by TheLangley Advance should not be construed as endorsement of or agreement with the views expressed. Copyright in letters and other materialssubmitted voluntarily to the Publisher and accepted for publication remains with the author, but the Publisher and its licensees may freely reproducethem in print, electronic, or other forms.

Our View

Information isunsettling us

As purveyors of news, we should be thelast people in the world to suggest that somenews is too distressing.

But the financial news seems to haveits own, special disturbing undertone thatmakes us want to sit in the corner with ourhands over our eyes and our ears thoroughlyplugged.

It’s the endless yo-yo factor that repels us.On Tuesday stock markets around the

world fell sharply. Why? Well, according tothe pundits, it was because of more prob-lems with the Greek debt crisis, which couldalso cause a Europe-wide crisis, which couldcause a world-wide crisis.

So why did markets panic just oneTuesday? And more importantly, why hadthey been so cheerful and positive for thepast two or three months?

There have always been panics, boomsand busts, bull and bear markets, ever sincethere have been financial markets. But itseems our present financial overlords – theoligarchy of bankers, bond traders, and min-istries of finance that massage the flow ofmoney around the world – have gone mad.

The news about Greece has not been goodfor a long time. It has been either bad or verybad. In the long term, everyone thinks thingswill get worse before they get better.

Yet traders seem to be grasping for anystraw of good news as we recover from theworst recession in a generation. So stocksgo up and up and up, and then down. Fast.We’ve seen stocks recover almost all the wayto their pre-recession heights. Which likelymeans they have a long way to fall whenthings turn very bad again. Neither the headyrises nor the sharp plummets seem to bebased on reality; it’s all fear and hope.

We’ll survive, of course. But maybe we’dget along better with a little less minute-by-minute coverage. The people running theeconomy seem to have lost their ability tothink ahead more than 10 minutes.

– M.C.

LangleyAdvance | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A8

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Opinion

This is the story of three (imaginary) chil-dren, Alice, Bobby, and Charlie.

All three of them are Grade 1 students, andtheir teacher has been asked which of them isthe calmest, most mature and responsible.

That’s no problem for our fake teacher. Alicecan sit quietly for the longest, needs the leastattention, and acts out infrequently. You couldleave her alone with sharp scissorsand model airplane glue, and knowshe’d be fine when you got back.

Bobby is middling. He can sitquietly, he can do his work well,but not all the time. He fidgets abit. He needs a bit more help.

But Charlie is clearly the leastmature of the three. He can’t sitstill. He talks too loudly, out of turn. You can’tleave him alone with a piece of tissue paper.

What’s the difference? Is it that Alice is agirl, or that she and Bobby are naturally moremature for their ages? Or is it that Alice wasborn in January, Bobby in June, and Charlie inDecember?

A new study by UBC researchers shows adisturbing trend to drug kids may be based onage, not a realistic assessment of their medicalneeds. It will rightly throw a spotlight on theongoing debate over whether attention deficithyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is over-diag-nosed and over-medicated.

Boys born in December in British Columbiaare 30 per cent more likely to be diagnosedwith ADHD than their peers born in January.For girls, the difference is 70 per cent. AndDecember-born boys are 41 per cent more like-ly to be medicated than those born in January;girls 77 per cent more likely.

Why?Well, they’re younger. The authors of the

study suggest that’s the key difference. The

kids who act less mature? They’re literally lessmature. At an age when brain development israpid, we shouldn’t be surprised that 10 or 11or 12 months makes a world of difference.

But in a classroom, that translates into moreattention required from the teachers, moretalks with parents.

Teachers can’t diagnose, can’t prescribedrugs. And parents can’t, either. But which kidis going to be hauled off to the doctor due totrouble in class or low grades?

We shouldn’t be too surprised by this, con-sidering that a similar effect has been knownin athletics for decades, where January-Marchkids are more likely to excel. Why? Becausethey’re bigger and stronger.

What can we do about thismess? Heck if I know.

Some kids are clearly beingdiagnosed and prescribed notbecause there’s anything wrongwith them, but because they’rebeing compared unfairly to olderchildren.

We can work on that. We canuse fairer comparisons. We can take age withingrade into account, at least partly.

However, we’re unlikely to upend our entiresystem of year-based classroom education.Because the system is just not designed tonurture every unique snowflake of a child(because there is not enough money in theworld to do that). It is a quasi-industrial pro-cess that was invented more than a centuryago to give kids basic literacy and numeracy,and to teach them to sit down and shut up,to prepare them for life as factory workers orclerks.

We’ve added a lot of extra stuff to schoolsover the years. We now ask them to combinechild care, education, and moral and physicaldevelopment. But the system still demandsthat its components (the kids) can keep still,or it won’t function.

We used to use the strap to keep order, andwe decided that was wrong. Now we usedrugs. Is that right?

Visit Matthew Claxton’s blog at http://tinyurl.com/7mwo2qjat www.langleyadvance.com

Opinion

Toomany kids getting drugged

You can’t leavehim alonewith a piece oftissue paper.

Matthew [email protected]

Painful truth

Increase property taxes

Hike fares

Raise development and business fees

Toll all bridges and tunnels

All of the above

None of the above

4.55 %

18.18 %

20.45%

6.82 %

2.27 %

47.73 %

Your View

What’s your position on the teachers’ three-daywalkout?

Vote at… www.langleyadvance.com

Last week’s question…How should TransLink raise the hundreds of millions of dollars itsays it needs?

Advance Poll…

Page 9: Langley Advance March 8 2012

LangleyAdvance | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A9Opinion

Dear Editor,Cellphone distractions are

the most underrated formulafor disaster. And with morethan three billion cellphoneson the planet right now, it isdestined only to get worse.

As if it isn’t already stupidenough to drive a multi-ton,moving vehicle without aseatbelt on, which basicallyonly puts yourself (and ourhealth care system’s finan-ces) in danger, now we allhave to concern ourselveswith somebody else’s deca-dence, ignorance, and espe-cially inexperience, whichputs the rest of us in harm’sway along with these fools.

Even if I am a bit guiltyof it too, but honestly, whoamong us isn’t?

I have been driving for

more than 30 years, but ifRCMP officer Holly Marks’snumbers are correct, anddistracted driving by cell-phone really does contrib-ute to 45 per cent of allcar crashes in the LowerMainland, then this situa-tion is multiple times thethreat to us that drunk driv-ing is. Because not every-body drinks, and distracteddriving is more random,rampant, and likely to occurany time of day.

So now I have a sugges-tion.

How about, just like theydo to drunk drivers, policeimpound the deadly weaponof the number one mostdangerous kind, especiallyfor those with “N” or “L”classifications.

Taking the cellphoneaway from half a dozenteenagers, especially fortexting, even if it is only fora few days, will instantlyget the message out there.Maybe even change theiranswering message in themeantime to, “Sorry I can’ttake your call right now,because my cellphone is adanger to the public.”

Or require “them” to takea cellphone safety classto get it back. It will havean immediate impact onthis threat, especially oncethis goes viral on “their”Twitters and thousand-plus-friend Facebook pages.

And forget about thefines. That obviously isn’tworking. Those may be littlemore than a money grab tosome, especially those whocan afford it, and not muchof a deterrent to the spend-thrift, entitled scofflaws oftoday.

And that can be appliedto the rest of us crack-berryaddicts, too.

But take away any teen-age text-junkie’s fix foreven a few hours, and itwill have them climbing thewalls, “Jonesing” for theirnext fix. Only then, at least,we won’t have to read allabout it on page three, orgo visit each other in I.C.U.in the meantime, whilewe shop around for donormatches, and start diggingout the body bags and cem-etery plots.

So go ahead, Tweet thatone, you twits!

But please, pull over first.Danny A. Halmo, Langley

Traffic safety

Text-junkies dangerous on roads

TransLink

Mayors safe to raise taxesDear Editor,

So the Mayors’ Council can make another decision aboutfunding for TransLink.

It’s a good thing for TransLink, as almost all of the may-ors on the council have recently been elected or re-electedfor three-year terms, so they can approve anything theywant right now without fear of retribution at an election.

Debbie Atkinson, Langley

Voting

Writers right to complainDear Editor,

Of the 20 or so per cent of Township voters who votedin the November elections, more than 50 per cent of us didnot vote for the current mayor and council, most of the let-ters to the editor complaining about our council and mayorare from this group.

Win Bromley, Langley Township

Dear Editor,A large area of agricul-

tural land has recentlybeen granted approvalto be removed from theAgricultural Land Reserve(ALR) for the purpose of aresidential housing develop-ment [All university planspass 6-3, Feb. 16, LangleyAdvance].

The land, at 22415 72ndAve., is prime agriculturalland with excellent soil andhas been used as a viablefarm operation in the past.

The Salmon River is aproductive spawning riverfor salmon and other fish.

There are no other hous-ing developments close tothe property, and there isno supporting infrastructurethere.

The majority of neighbor-ing farmers – including acurrent Langley Townshipcouncilor – and local riverprotection groups stronglyoppose this developmentproposal.

Why has the Agricultural

Land Commission (ALC)given this proposal condi-tional approval?

If this development pro-ceeds as planned, will otherlocal farmers and ruralproperty owners in thearea come forward expect-ing approval for their ALRremoval applications?

The potential damage tothe pristine Salmon River,neighbouring wetlands,and wildlife habitat couldbe extensive if this type ofdevelopment and other simi-lar proposals to follow areapproved.

Has there been a changein the ALC policies whichwould allow this type ofdevelopment to go forwardinstead of protecting thevaluable agricultural landand conservation areas inour province?Bruce Hutchison, Langley Field

Naturalists

Agriculture

Wall proposal on excellent soil

Agriculture

Development unbelievableDear Editor,

It seems unbelievable that the ALR and the ALC wouldpermit development such as the Wall proposal in LangleyTownship [All university plans pass 6-3, Feb. 16, LangleyAdvance] on any usable or arable farmland, whether it isbeing used or farmed at the present time.

This seems to be completely outside the mandate of bothgovernment-appointed protectors of agricultural land.

And it is also in opposition to the Metro VancouverRegional Plan, in which Langley Township signed an agree-ment.

Bays Blackhall, Langley Township

For more lettersto the editor visit...www.langleyadvance.com

03

08

57

52

Teachers taking a standWhat does legislationmean for students?& -*++ B#EE#=? #? @";36$

>"$% 5=4 6;">C$#=? ?6D$%>2==E A6C4

& ?= #B:4=!6B6?$% 5=4%$";6?$% F#$2 %:6>#CE?66;%

& EC4364 >EC%%6% 5=4.4C;6% (1*) ?6D$ A6C4

& >=?$#?"6; >=?,#>$@6$F66? 3=!64?B6?$C?; $6C>264%

A message from the Langley Teachers’ Association

Show your support07=" >C? 26E: A="4 G#;% @A "43#?3 A="4%>2==E @=C4;' A="4 8<9' C?; $26 B#?#%$64 =5 6;">C$#=? $= 5"?;%>2==E% C?; 46%:6>$ $6C>264%/

of British Columbians say it’simportant for teachers to havea contract that establishes

JTNPCFP BNRS@C@L P?@OCIC?@JD JHPK RJ ARGCAHA@HAQNS ?M SNLHBRS JIHON@IJD R@O IKN ARGCAHAnumber of special needs students perclassroom.

82%

Teachers taking a standWhat does legislationmean for students?& -*++ B#EE#=? #? @";36$

>"$% 5=4 6;">C$#=? ?6D$%>2==E A6C4

& ?= #B:4=!6B6?$% 5=4%$";6?$% F#$2 %:6>#CE?66;%

& EC4364 >EC%%6% 5=4.4C;6% (1*) ?6D$ A6C4

& >=?$#?"6; >=?,#>$@6$F66? 3=!64?B6?$C?; $6C>264%

A message from the Langley Teachers’ Association

Show your support07=" >C? 26E: A="4 G#;% @A "43#?3 A="4%>2==E @=C4;' A="4 8<9' C?; $26 B#?#%$64 =5 6;">C$#=? $= 5"?;%>2==E% C?; 46%:6>$ $6C>264%/

of British Columbians say it’simportant for teachers to havea contract that establishes

JTNPCFP BNRS@C@L P?@OCIC?@JD JHPK RJ ARGCAHA@HAQNS ?M SNLHBRS JIHON@IJD R@O IKN ARGCAHAnumber of special needs students perclassroom.

82%

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Page 11: Langley Advance March 8 2012

LangleyAdvance | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A11

BusinessA new policy sees the localreserve ready for theirclose-up and a share of filmindustry’s budget.

by Ronda [email protected]

TV and movie production isbig business in B.C. and Langleyis getting it’s fair share of thetraffic. So toois the KawntlenFirst Nation(KFN) reserve.

Recognizingthe potentialvolume of filmprojects to theircommunity, thechief and coun-cil of the KFNand the management of Seyem’Qwantlen Development Ltd.recently announced their owncommunity film production pol-icy.

“Consistent policies [betweenthe Langleys and KFN] makes iteasier for them [film productionteams] to deal with us,” notedBrandon Gabriel, of the Seyem’

Qwantlen Group of Companies.“We want it to be the samescenario dealing with us [asdealing with neighbouring com-munities].”

In 2011, 19 different filmcrews made use of KFN lands,six of the companies makingrepeat visits for a total of 25 pro-ductions.

The most commonly used loca-tions are the former Albion ferryterminal which, although notcurrently designated KFN land,

is maintained bythe band, and alarge parcel ofvacant land adja-cent to the KFNsports park.

“It [the vacantland] is used [byfilm crews] forparking and per-forming stunts

because it is wide open,” Gabrielsaid.

The intent of the new KFNfilm policy is to ensure that filmcrews know they have the samelevel of safety and professional-ism behind them as they wouldhave in any other community.

“Ever since the increasein [film] production in Fort

Langley, we’ve also seen anincrease here,” said Gabriel. “Ithas been pretty steady for fouror five years and is significant.”

Wondering if you’ve seen any-thing filmed on the First Nationreserve?

Shows like Fringe and WarnerBrothers’ Supernatural haveused the site, as have produc-

tions by Steven Spielberg,Disney, and others.

Information from Ida Chong,Minister of Community, Sportand Cultural Development con-firms that KFN is taking the rightsteps by welcoming film crewsto their community.

BC Film Commission data, pro-vided by the ministry, indicated

an increase of $167 million in2011 film and television expendi-tures in the province comparedto 2010.

British Columbia is thefourth-largest overall film andtelevision production centre inNorth America contributing overa billion dollars to the provincialeconomy annually.

Hollywood North

Kwantlen open their lands to film, TV crews

Locations like theinterior of The Churchof the Holy Redeemer(circa 1902) arepopular KwantlenFirst Nation sites forfilm productions.

Submitted

“Ever since theincrease in productionin Fort Langley, we’vealso seen an increasehere.”Brandon Gabriel

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Page 12: Langley Advance March 8 2012

It’s time for some naval gazingby our community leaders.

Langley’s mayors are againgearing up to share their visionfor the future at the next GreaterLangley Chamber of Commercedinner on Tuesday, March 20.

This will be the first time this

annual foreshadowing sessionwill involve both City MayorPeter Fassbender and newbieTownship Mayor Jack Froese.

This monthly meeting, asalways, is being held at theCoast Hotel, with networking at5 p.m. and dinner and speechesto follow starting at 6:30 p.m.

Tickets and information at604-530-6656, or [email protected].

Support for teachersA local business has applied

a unique twist to the currentteacher job action.

P&G Sausage, a deli andsausage maker located on theLangley Bypass, was offeringdeals to all public school teach-ers this week – while they wereout on a three-day strike.

“We’re supporting the teach-ers,” said P&G’s Chelsea Ealey.

The store is always looking forcauses to support in the com-munity, she said. Teachers weregiven a 15-per-cent discount dur-ing the three-day walkout.

Bargain hunter alertIf you don’t think Langley has

enough loonie stores, there’sanother one coming.

A Fortune 500 company calledDollar Tree Canada, which sellseverything for $1.25, is expectedto open a new, 13,000-square-foot store on Willowbrook Driveby the middle of next week.

Watch for it, with 4,300 storesin North America, this companyplans to hire up to 15 associatesfor the new store.

Big dividends comingAldergrove Credit Union

announced this week it is return-ing $1.5 million to its members.

Its dividend and patronagerebate program will see bigbucks returned to members, saidCEO Gus Hartl, who reportedanother “successful” year forthe financial group that oper-ates five banking branches, fourinsurance offices, and a financialplanning centre in the region.• More online at www.langleyadvance.com

A12 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | LangleyAdvance BusinessBusiness tidbits

Roxanne [email protected]

What’s inStore

Mayors share vision for Langley with business community

After-Hours Emergency Contact 604.543.6700

TownshipTownship PagePageFor theweek ofMarch 8, 2012 20338-65Avenue,Langley V2Y3J1 | 604.534.3211

dates to note

langley events centre

public notices public notices

Marina Park Boat LaunchTemporary ClosureThe boat launch at Marina Park in Fort Langley will be closed for theUniversity of the Fraser Valley Rowing Regatta.

Dates: Saturday, March 10, 8am - 2pmSaturday, March 17, 9am - 1pm

We apologize for any inconvenience.

Tab BucknerManager, Parks Operations604.532.3504

Parcel Tax Roll Review for 2012The 2012 Parcel Tax Roll Review in respect to frontage/parcelassessment will be held:

Date: Monday, March 26, 2012

Time: 10:30am

Place: Yorkson Creek Meeting Room, Civic FacilityAddress: 20338 - 65 Avenue

Those property owners affected have been notified by mail. Allcomplaints regarding the frontage assessment must be directed tothe Manager, Revenue and Tax Collection, at least 48 hours prior tothe sitting of the Parcel Tax Roll Review Panel. The frontage/parcelassessment is used in the calculation of the frontage/parcel tax forwater/sewer services that appears on the tax notice each year.

For more information contact:

Darlene FoxgordManager, Revenue and Tax Collection604.533.6005

Water Main FlushingAs part of our maintenance program, the municipal Water Departmentwill be flushing water mains in your area on the dates shown below.As a result of this flushing, you may notice changes in water pressureand there may be some discolouration or sediment in the water.However, this is a temporary condition and is not a health hazard.To avoid inconvenience, please check the water before doing laundry,and you may wish to keep water in the refrigerator for drinking andcooking.

Brookswood, Fernridge, and High Point:March 5 – April 11

Northwest Langley:March 5 – April 20

Aldergrove, Gloucester, and Salmon River Uplands:March 5 – April 24

Murrayville:April 12 – May 16

Willoughby:April 23 – May 31

Fort Langley, Forest Knolls, and MilnerApril 25 – May 23

Engineering Division604.532.7300

Building Permit Application ChangesChanges are being made to the building permit applicationrequirements for residential construction of single family homes.

Single family dwelling building permit applications that are submittedafter March 12, 2012 are now required to include both full sized andreduced size drawings.

Drawing submission requirements are now as follows:

• Three sets of drawings are required. One set is to be full sized andtwo sets are to reduced copies, submitted on 11"x17" paper.

• One set of full size drawings and one of the 11"x17" reducedsize drawings are to be signed and sealed (original stampand signature, not a photocopy) by the applicable registeredprofessionals (architects and engineers), the registered on-sitewaste water practitioner (for properties on septic systems), andthe design consultants when applicable.

• The second set of 11"x17" reduced size drawings is to be clear ofall stamps or seals.

• The full size set of drawings, signed and sealed by the applicableparties, will be returned to the applicant at the time the buildingpermit is issued, and is to be kept at the construction site.

• The Township will retain one of the reduced 11"x17" signed andsealed drawings at time the building permit is issued.

• The second set of 11"x17" drawings, which is clear of all stampsor seals, will be forwarded to BC Assessment for its records.

The full size drawings are to be available on the construction site atall times. Inspections will not be performed unless the drawings areavailable for the building inspector.

For more information contact:

Permit, Licence & Inspection Services604.533.6018

public open houseTownship of LangleyHeritage StrategyIn 2011, public consultation was initiated as part of the developmentof a Heritage Strategy for the Township. This process is now nearingcompletion and a final Draft Strategy has been prepared thatproposes a community vision for heritage resource managementfor the coming decade. It answers key questions about theexisting heritage management situation, defines key directions forconsideration, and proposes a framework for implementation thataligns with the Township’s broader goals of economic, environmental,and cultural sustainability. Nine goals have been identified with52 accompanying actions.

An open house has been scheduled to receive public input on theDraft Strategy. Residents and stakeholders in the community areencouraged to attend.

Date: Tuesday, March 13

Time: 4 - 8pm

Location: Milner Chapel Hall6716 – 216 Street

Additional information may be viewed on the Township website attol.ca/hs.

Elaine HorricksHeritage PlannerCommunity Development Division604.534.3211

The Langley Events Centre is located at 7888 - 200 StreetFor ticket information, contact Langley Events Centre

604.882.8800 • langleyeventscentre.com

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Wednesday, March 14 | 7 - 9pmRecreation, Culture, and Parks Advisory Committee

Civic FacilitySalmon River Committee RoomThursday, March 15 | 7 - 9pm

Agricultural Advisory CommitteeCivic Facility

Salmon River Committee RoomWednesday, March 21 | 7 - 9pm

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Page 13: Langley Advance March 8 2012

Thursday, March 8, 2012 • A13LangleyAdvance

Art show

Murrayville’s KathleenMcGiveron joins a dozenothers in Fort exhibit.

by Roxanne [email protected]

It doesn’t happen often, but22-year-old Murrayville artistKathleen McGiveron wentshopping for her latest stock of

art supplies at Home Depot.After all, where else would you

find all the ingredients necessaryto make a sculpture she’s calledLMFAO – in reference to Internetslang – with the realistic body of awoodpecker in flight formed out ofwire and topped off with a WoodyWoodpecker-style laughing head.

“The challenge arrived when Iventured down the wood aisle insearch of something to mount mysculpture to,” McGiveron said.

“All the wood was much toolarge and though it is easy enoughto cut it to shape, I did not enjoythe thought of purchasing materialI had no intention of using… As Iwas deciding on potential paths totake with this conflict, I noticed agentleman searching through a binof wood. Excited, I walked in thatdirection, and as I neared, a verti-cal based, white board came to myattention,” she said.

Best off all, she learned from oneof the hardware employees, it wasin a free bin. She was welcome tohelp herself.

“I noticed the employee thoughtit was strange I was so excited forthe board I had taken from theirbin – but I don’t care. I love whatI am doing; I’m being sustainable,so why should I have to explain?Besides, it’s more entertaining let-ting them ponder what the possi-bilities of my actions are.”

But, why was this artist – whousually creates with clay – so elat-ed by her newfound treasures?

Because she’s one of about adozen members of the Fort Gallerywho took on a challenge, under

the guise of the gallery’s currentexhibition – Hardware Show II – tocreate a piece of artwork with $40or less of merchandise purchasedat a hardware store.

Any free art supplies for her pro-ject were seen as bonuses.

Besides, proof of purchase hasto be posted beside the work ofart when it goes on display thisweek, and McGiveron was anxiousto boast her tally: $7.99 for fluor-escent pink spray paint, and $5.99on her large roll of wire.

The piece is a sculpted version ofa painting she created previouslycalled LOL, which is a painting invalues of red and blue that por-trays a stereotypical photograph ofa woodpecker flying whose real-ist body is replaced with WoodyWoodpecker’s head.

“I have mounted my wire ver-sion of my painted woodpeckeronto a board that has been spraypainted fluorescent pink to allow it

to stand out and be wall hanging,”McGiveron said.

“With my work I purposefullypry at the line between kitsch andart and transform traditional con-cepts and works into those that arecontemporary by infusingthem with aspects ofpopular culture.”

A relative newbieto the Fort Gallery,having only beena member forless than a year,McGiveron said shewas draw to the free-spirited fun encapsu-lated by the current show.

“When I heard about the con-cept, I was immediately drawn intothe spontaneity of the material useand the flexibility of concept,” shetold the Langley Advance.

“Having just gone through EmilyCarr University, I am accustomedto experimenting with different

materials, as well as creating sculp-ture. I first worked with wire in myfirst year at ECU, and found thematerial flexible to work with andinteresting for conveying conceptand drawing in air,” she explained.

“With wire, Iam inspired byAlexander Calderand the wire cir-cus he created in1927.”

McGiveron wasfirst drawn to jointhe Fort Gallerywhen she saw themembers’ work

displayed there and on its website.“The artists are warm and wel-

coming and work with contempor-ary issues that I find fascinating,”she said, particularly excited bythis most recent show.

The electric atmosphere at theFort Gallery was palpable threeyears ago, when 18 contemporary

artists – each with their own per-sonality and artistic style – put onthe first Hardware Show.

Essentially the group of theday, a majority of painters anda few working in three dimen-sions, stepped outside their com-fort zones to create what fellowmember and artist Kristin Krimmelcalled “creative” and “amazing.”

“It was this show that gaveme the idea to join the group,”Krimmel said. “I wanted to be partof that creative energy. I knewthat I would have to live up to theexpectations of this exceptionalgroup of artists. They were will-ing to explore and experiment,and that’s invaluable for a seriousartist. We need to step outside ofour norm to move forward and dis-cover new ways of thinking.”

A few years later, the gallery isrevisiting this unique challenge.

“Some artists have moved on,and new members have come tofill in the complement that makesup their numbers. This means thatthe idea pool will bring completelynew visions and the synergy willbe different. Be prepared for clev-erness, a great deal of humor, andinteresting contemporary worksthat step outside of the box,” saidgallery attendant Tim Fraser.

Currently working as a recep-tionist for the City of Langley, andcompleting courses with the goal ofbecoming a high school visual artsteacher, McGiveron longs to oneday teach all day long, and createart during the nights and summers.

“One day, I aspire to make mostof my wage as an artist.”

Towards this end, she is excitedto have her work displayed, even ifit’s not her normal genre.

McGiveron’s piece – along withthose of her fellow cooperativemembers – officially, went on dis-play March 7, and the show willcontinue until March 28, with anartists’ opening reception Friday,March 9, at 7 p.m.

• A few questions and answers with this artistavailable online at www.langleyadvance.com

Artist’s creativity ignited by hardware challenge

Murrayville artist Kathleen McGiveron created her piece, a woodpecker made of wire and mounted on board, for the HardwareShow II. The exhibition opens this week at the Fort Gallery, and involves art from several gallery members.

“When I heard aboutthe concept, I was

immediately drawn intothe spontaneity…”

Kathleen McGiveron

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He’s starring inAs You Like It.

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Page 14: Langley Advance March 8 2012

A local thespian studentbrings her passions fortheatre and children to theuniversity stage.by Ronda [email protected]

Tradition. If you’ve ever seenFiddler on the Roof, you knowthis is one of the primarythemes of the play.

But, tradition doesn’t meanyou can’t be creative now andthen.

Trinity Western University(TWU) presents Fiddler onthe Roof, March 13-31, givingstudents and the audience achance to experience traditionin a new way.

Like the majority of TWU’sproductions, the play is per-formed entirely by studentswith their professors filling theroles of directors.

Fourth year Theatre majorand Langley resident DanielleSpampinato plays Golde, themother figure in the performance.She has been acting literally since herinfanthood.

“I played baby Jesus when I was

three months old and I’ve been doingshows here and there ever since,”noted the actress.

Fiddler is a co-production of theTWU Music and Theatre departments,and celebrates the university’s 50thyear. The play was first performed forthe school’s 25th anniversary.

Unique this time around is the on-stage interaction of the band and cast.You won’t find the musicians hidingout in an orchestra pit in this play.

Instead, you’ll see them on the roof,or as part of the scene, dressed in cos-tume and bringing the sensations ofthe performance to life.

When asked about her favouritescene, Spampinato said, “The dreamsequence. Me and Jordan [Schuurman,who plays Tevye, Golde’s husband]get to scream and laugh our headsoff.”

Spampinato holds strong to herpassion for theatre’s ability to impactpeople’s lives. She noted that whilemost won’t simply take your spokenadvice, if you put it in a play, peoplewill listen.

She also enjoys the themethat the love between Golde andTevye essentially conquers all.

“She [Golde] sees his[Tevye’s] heart for his children,”Spampinato said.

The actress has her own deeplove for children. She feels it isno coincidence that she has beencast in mother roles in plays.

“It’s so ideal,” she commented.She hopes this love of theatre

and children will take her backto Bangladesh to work in schoolsthere, not long after graduation.She has spent two summers inthe region working in orphanagesand hopes to use playwriting and

acting skills as a tool to help children.Tickets for Fiddler on the Roof are

selling fast. To find out more visitwww.twu.ca/theatre.

Theatre

TWU stages timeless tale of family

Thursday, March 8, 2012 | LangleyAdvance LivingA14

Danielle Spampinato playsstubborn wife Golde tohusband Tevye, playedby Jordan Schuurman inTrinity Western Univeristy’sproduction of Fiddler on theRoof.

Jef Gibbons/TWU

Jef Gibbons/TWU

Their parents have their hands full with three daughters,played by Daniele Neve, Julie Casselman, and Nicole Prigge.

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4 Year 4.64 % 3.19 %

5 Year 5.24 % 3.19 %

7 Year 6.35 % 3.95 %

10 Year 6.75 % 3.95 %

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Page 15: Langley Advance March 8 2012

by Roxanne [email protected]

When it comes to theatre, the arts, andlife in general, Barb Coulter serves asan inspiration to her son Dylan.

The 22-year-old Fort Langley mandoesn’t want to follow her into the profession ofteaching, but he’s admired her on-stage and behindthe scenes work with community theatre as a long-time member of Langley Players – and on that frontaspired to be like her.

So, when Dylan was first thrust onto the stage asan actor in Grade 8, working on an Italian form ofcomedy and character improv, he fell in love.

“I take inspiration from her, for if she can continuedoing theatre, even though she has a career as ateacher, then I know I will always be on stage as well– no matter what line of work I end up in,” Dylantold the Langley Advance.

“My goal though, is to work as an actor full time,and I won’t be giving that dream up any time soon,”he said.

Well, Dylan is getting his wish this week. The cur-tain goes up on his biggest role yet.

As a third-year student at the University of theFraser Valley, and as part of the Chilliwack campus’theatre program, he’s stepping into the lead role ofOrlando in the school’s upcoming production of theShakespeare comedy, As You Like It.

Was Dylan’s vision for his future always so clear?No, but it did become crystal pretty early on – inlarge part thanks to the support of his family.

“Being immersed in the arts from a young age gaveme a chance to explore what I was most interestedin. And though I dabbled in visual art and music,theatre was what I wanted to pursue,” said Coulter,who attended Grades 1 through 12 at Langley FineArts School, focusing much of his energies on theatre

for the last five years.After graduating and travelling some, Dylan

longed to return to theatre and applied to UFV’s the-atre program in 2009.

“Throughout my life my interest in theatre, andacting in particular, has continued to grow. My loveof the craft has turned into a passion and a desire tofind a career in theatre or film. And no matter whatavenue I find, if I could work as an actor for therest of my life, I would feel incredibly fortunate.”

In addition to the classes and hands-on experiencegained as part of the university theatre program,Dylan discovered what it’s like to be a workingactor this past summer. He worked at Barkerville asa one of 25 historical interpreters on the streets ofBarkerille Historic Town.

“The job there meant a lot of time in character,drawing visitors into conversations and activities,but there were also scenes interacting with otherinterpreters, a town tour, and a 15-minutemonologue we were responsible forwriting that talked about some aspectof Barkerville that we were interestedin,” he shared.

“During my time there, I learneda lot about the endurance that anactor needs to have for this kindof job, or any long run of a show. Iplan to return this summer,” Coultersaid, noting the experience allows himto continue his education while gaining workexperience in his craft.

People can catch Dylan in As You Like It,which opens Friday, March 9 at 7.30 p.m. at theChilliwack campus theatre and plays March 10, 15-17, and 22-24, with matinees March 18 and 25 at 2p.m. and March 8 and 14 at noon. For tickets andinformation contact 1-604-795-2814 or [email protected].

LangleyAdvance | Thursday, March 8, 2012Living A15

Fort Langley’s Dylan Coulter stepped into thelead role in the University of the Fraser Valley’supcoming production of As You Like It, oneof Shakespeare’s beloved romantic comedies.He plays the role of Orlando, positioned alongside Daniel Campbell (above) as Oliver, andRebeckah Brisco (right) as Rosalind.

Theatre

Aspiring Fort actor tackles biggest role yet as Orlando

“My goal… is to work asan actor full time, andI won’t be giving that

dream up any time soon.”Dylan Coulter

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LangleyAdvance | Thursday, March 8, 2012Living A17

familyfestivities• Eyes on Owls and Owl Prowl: Enjoy theseprograms March 10 at Campbell ValleyRegional park. Eyes on Owls runs noon to3 p.m. and features displays and a live barnowl as well as guided walks. Owl Prowl is7-9 p.m. when Langley Field Naturalistsmembers will conduct tours to see theseamazing noctural animals. Night eventappropriate for ages eight and older. $8/adults, $4.50/kids and seniors. Sign up inadvance with Metro Vancouver Parks, 604-432-6539.• Ceilidh: The next St. Andrew’s UnitedChurch down home kitchen party is 7 p.m.on March 15 (St. Patrick’s Day theme) at9025 Glover Rd. Enjoy an evening of tradi-tional music, song and dance for the wholefamily. Tickets: $5 including snacks. Info:www.standrewsfortlangley.ca.

musicnotes• Music at Midweek: Enjoy free perfor-mances Wednesdays at 12:15 p.m. at theKwantlen Polytechnic University auditorium.March 14 Kwantlen jazz combo; March 21Kwantlen woodwind ensembles.

onfilm• Green Wednesday: The monthly envi-ronmental-themed gathering featuresdocumentaries and discussion, and is atthe Kwantlen Polytechnic University cam-pus at 7 p.m. Admission by donation.Refreshments and door prizes. Register:604-599-3311 or [email protected] 14: Living Downstream.

librarybookingsPrograms are free, and pre-registration is required.

• Aldergrove Library26770 29th Ave. 604-856-6415The Purple Pirate: Join him for adventures

on the high seas. March 13, 2-2:45 p.m.Register in advance.Adult chess: Play March 12, 6:30-8:30 p.m.For those who know how to play. Free. Ifpossible, bring board and timer.• Muriel Arnason Library#130 20338 65th Ave. 604-532-3590Volunteer income tax program: Low incomeresidents (less than $25,000 annually) canget help fillling out their returns. Make anappointment. Help available Mondays, 5:30-7:30 p.m. until April 16 and on Thursdays10 a.m. to 1 p.m. until April 19.The Purple Pirate: Join him for adventures onthe high seas. March 15, 10:30-11:15 a.m.Register in advance.Crafts from around the world: Kids five andolder can take part 2:30 p.m. on March 20.Supplies provided.Henna: A free program for teens and adults,learn about Mehndi, painting designs on thebody. At 6 p.m.

• Murrayville Library22071 48th Ave. 604-533-0339The Purple Pirate: Join him for adventures onthe high seas. March 14, 10:30-11:15 a.m.Register in advance.

• Walnut Grove Library8889 Walnut Grove Dr. 604-882-0410International Women’s Day. Join the LangleyInternational Festival Society and the libraryfor international refreshments, henna art(sign up in advance), discussions, displayson successful Canadian women, and more6:30-8 p.m. on March 8.Teen cool games night. Play Cloud 9,Dominion, Carcassonne and UltimateWerewolf 6:30-8:30 on March 12. Pizza andrefreshments, and an MP3 player door prize.Free for ages 12-18. Sign up in advance.What’s What? listings are free. To be considered for publica-tion, items must be submitted at least 10 days prior to thepublication date. What’s What? appears in the Thursdayedition and n at www.langleyadvance.com.

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A18 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E

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Page 19: Langley Advance March 8 2012

Eighty Years AgoMarch 3, 1932

Langley Library Boardwas in debt for $64 for theyear. Its financial recordsrevealed donations so fartotalled $16.80, and $17 infines had been collected.Monthly rent was $40.

Seventy Years AgoMarch 5, 1942

For the second time in arow, Langley led the FraserValley, from New Westmin-ster to Boston Bar, in reach-ing its $160,000 VictoryLoan objective.Extension of electric lightand power lines in ruraldistricts of B.C. stopped forthe rest of the war.

Sixty Years AgoMarch 6, 1952

B.C. Tel installed 43 newtelephones in Glen Valley.Langley Ratepayers’ Asso-ciation demanded immedi-ate action by the provincialgovernment to stem risingcosts of education to muni-cipal taxpayers.

Fifty Years AgoMarch 8, 1962

Premier W.A.C. Bennett

responded to Oppositiondares that he call an elec-tion, by giving out broadhints that he might just dothat.

Forty Years AgoMarch 2, 1972

Bronze grave markers wereapproved by council for usein Langley Township cem-eteries. Only granite hadbeen approved previously,because of concerns thatmetal markers would be pit-ted by chemical fertilizersand pesticides used in theburial grounds.Langley’s Centennial Com-mittee agreed to give $600to the Langley 100th Birth-day Committee. The moneywas left over after Centen-nial activities.

Thirty Years AgoMarch 3, 1982

Langley School Boardsent a “strongly wordedmessage” to the Ministryof Education, protesting aprovincial demand that thelocal schools’ budget be cutby $897,000, which wouldresult in the loss of about57 teaching jobs.Langley New Democrats

prepared for the next prov-incial election campaign bynominating Garry Watkinsof Surrey as their candidate.

Twenty Years AgoMarch 4, 1992

Slow bookings, probablydue to a faltering economy,forced Langley Chamberof Commerce to cancel theannual Langley Home andRecreation Show.School trustees predicted lo-cal staff layoffs due to cutsin provincial funding.City council threw its sup-port behind the Lamontfamily’s quest to freeChristine Lamont from theBrazilian jail where shehad been imprisoned forkidnapping.A Langley rape victim wasangry that her attacker wasgranted 24 hours per monthof “unescorted temporaryabsence” from prison, fouryears into his jail term. Theman had broken into herbedroom while she slept,stabbed her several times,and raped her. He wascaught two months later,after she recognized himfrom his wedding photo-graph in a newspaper.

Ten Years AgoMarch 5, 2002

Lawyers for former Town-ship councillor and failed

mayoralty contender Hea-ther McMullan threatenedto sue the Township formoney owed them for fight-ing her defamation suit.Gregory Thomas had beenawarded $70,000 and courtcosts over defamatory com-ments McMullan had madeabout him, and Townshipcouncil had agreed to coverall of McMullan’s costs.Councillor Bob Long wasleading the charge to getCostco to build a store inthe 200th Street freewayinterchange.

March 8, 2002Unions and women’s advo-cates planned to celebrateInternational Women’sDay by renewing their callsfor Langley MLA LynnStephens’s resignation asWomen’s Equality Minis-ter, in response to claimsshe made in an interviewwith the Langley Advance thatwomen’s inequality wastheir own fault, and thatpoor people should simply“make more money.”Langley School Districtplaced most of the blamefor a $6.2-million budgetshortfall on the provincialgovernment’s decision toaward teachers a salaryincrease without providingdistricts with funding tooffset the raises.

1932: Library short $64

LangleyAdvance | Thursday, March 8, 2012Living A19

Looking back…Langley’s history, asrecorded in the files ofthe Langley Advance.

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Land Act:Notice of Intention to Apply for aDisposition of Crown Land

Take notice that Fort Langley Aviation LTD of24600 River Rd, Langley, BC, intends to makeapplication to the Province of British Columbia,for a Licence of occupation for Seaplane base/ boat moorage facility purposes coveringthat part of District Lot 829, Group2 NewWestminster District situated on ProvincialCrown land located at Bedford Channel, FortLangley, BC.

The Land File Number is 0268958. Commentson this application may be submitted in twoways:2) Online via the applications and Reasonsfor Decision Database website at: www.arfd.gov.bc.ca/ApplicationPosting/index.jsp wheredetails of this application, including maps canalso be found.2) By mail to the Senior Land Officer at 200- 10428 153 Street, Surrey, BC V3R 1E1.Comments will be received by the Ministry ofForests Lands and Natural Resource Operationsuntil April 7, 2012. Comments received after thisdate may not be considered.

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Page 20: Langley Advance March 8 2012

A20 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E

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Page 21: Langley Advance March 8 2012

Dear Anne:“I could really use some

advice on how to get themost out of my very limitedgarden. It is long, narrowand inside a retaining wall.Tomatoes do very well. I

have tried planting chives,cabbage, cucumber, mint,peppers, pumpkin, and car-rots. Pumpkins and carrotsusually don’t do very well.I really wish I could growthem.Do you have any sugges-

tions on how I should planmy garden this year?”

Julia Nygra, emailDear Julia,

Crop rotation wouldhelp immensely. Thisspring, try planting

each of your vegetables in adifferent spot from the placeit occupied last year.

This makes it harder forany pests to increase innumbers to the point theycause major trouble becausethey’ll have to go look-ing for food. Even a small

change would help.It would also be useful if

you got one or two bags oforganic compost to use astop dressing along the bedIf you want to try growingpumpkins again, a bag ofmanure would also be usefulto dig into their designatedspot. Pumpkins need veryrich soil.

But even with rich soil,you just don’t have enoughroom in your long, narrowgarden bed to grow bigpumpkins for Halloweencarving. But there are com-pact varieties of pumpkins,squash, and zucchini thatdon’t need nearly as muchspace.

Names of these bush vinevarieties include ‘SnackJack’ which produces bowl-ing ball size pumpkins,‘Table King Bush acorn’which produces small wintersquash and ‘Black BeautyZucchini.’

About your carrots: Iwonder how easy it is tocultivate the soil deeply inyour retaining wall bed. It’simportant to grow carrotsin loose soil where it’s easyfor their roots to penetrate.They hate clay. You’d pos-sibly be more successfulwith the ‘Danvers’ heirloomcarrot. This has short stubbyroots which tolerate difficultsituations well.

I should mention that if

there are stones or rocksin your soil, carrots oftendevelop forked, misshapenroots, which sometimes arequite hairy.

Another hazard is the car-rot rust fly.

The carrot variety Flyawayand also Resistafly are lessattractive to this fly thanother carrots.

Some crops take up verylittle space if you grow them

vertically and the soil attheir feet can be used forother plants such as greenonions or parsley.

Cucumbers do very wellclimbing a small trellis. It’salso possible to grow polebeans up an obelisk.

I’m sure one reason yourtomatoes grew so well isbecause concrete blocksare a heat sink – absorb-ing warmth from the sum-

mer sun in the daytimeand slowly releasing it atnight. If you like very hotpeppers such as jalapenosand cayenne, you might beinterested to know that theseare even easier to grow thansweet peppers and producemasses of fruit.

Before you get warmenough weather to set outtomatoes, you could trygrowing some cold-tolerant

fast-growing salad crops inthat place; arugula or rad-ishes perhaps.

Try to keep a very closewatch on the mint. It’sincredibly invasive. If it getsits roots between those bigconcrete retaining blocks itwill be very hard to controlits spread. Transplanting themint into a separate con-tainer might save you a lotof grief in the future.

Thursday, March 8, 2012 | LangleyAdvance LivingA21

Site planning

In the Gardenby Anne Marrison

Anne Marrison is happy to answer gardenquestions. Send them to [email protected]

Crop rotation is key to healthy, pest-free vegetable gardens

Awards festival

Music students get $11,750

Langley Community Music School (LCMS) dishedout almost $12,000 in scholarships, enablingyoung musicians to continue their studies.

More than 150 students participated in the 26thannual scholarship awards festival, which culminatedwith a concert and the presentation of the money, saidschool principal Susan Magnusson.

There were 97 awards presented to the students whoparticipated in the festival and those who’ve shown an“exceptional calibre of musicianship in their perform-ances during festival are recognized with scholarshipawards,” Magnusson explained.

• More online at www.langleyadvance.com

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Langley Gospel Hall4775 - 221st Street

ph 604-533-0870Family Gospel Hourevery Sunday 11:30 a.m.

Church of the ASCENSIONSundays at 11 a.m.George Preston Recreation Centre20699 42nd Avenue, Langley

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Page 22: Langley Advance March 8 2012

A22 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E

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Page 23: Langley Advance March 8 2012

LangleyAdvance | Thu r sday , Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A23Sports

by Brandon [email protected]

The Langley Rivermen’slosing skid came to ascreeching halt Sundayafternoon at the LangleyEvents Centre.

Langley’s junior Ahockey team closed out its2011/12 home schedulewith a 3-1 win over theAlberni Valley Bulldogs.

The win snappedLangley’s six-game slump.

Both teams were playingtheir third game in threedays and put on a goodshow for the fans.

It was the seventh meet-ing of the season betweenthe clubs, with theRivermen seeking revengeafter the Bulldogs upsetthem in overtime the previ-ous week.

In the first period, the’Dogs had sustained pres-sure in the Rivermen end,but Langley puckstop-

per James Barr was solidbetween the pipes.

The Rivermen openedthe scoring with a DerekSutliffe marker at the 8:31mark.

The Las Vegas nativegathered his own reboundand put a backhand behindBulldogs’ goaltender MattLarose for his14th goal of theseason.

Sutliffe’s goalwas the only tallyof the openingperiod and shotswere dead even at14 apiece.

The ’Men gotoff on the right foot tostart the second stanza asMike Tebbutt fired homea powerplay goal. DarnellDyck made the play hap-pen on a great cross-icepass to a wide openTebbutt, who put the puckhome with authority.

The Rivermen’s

Sebastien Pare made it a 3-0 game near the end of theperiod, on a goal Larosewould like to have back.

Pare wrapped the puckaround the goal beforeletting go a no-look shottowards the net that foundits way through Larose’slegs.

The Bulldogswere able to scorea powerplay goalwith just 10 secondsremaining in the mid-dle frame, courtesy ofWalker Hyland.

Hyland took a greatpass from youngsterEvan Tironese and

whipped home a snap shotpast Barr.

That ended up being thelast goal of the game as thethird period was scoreless.

Barr picked up the winand first star honours,facing 44 shots.

Larose was charged theloss. He stopped 34 pucks

fired his way.The win improved the

Rivermen’s record to 18-33-1-5, as they climbedout of the BCHL CoastalConference cellar, nowoccupied by the VictoriaGrizzlies.

The Rivermen are fourpoints back of the sixth-place Bulldogs in theCoastal Conference stand-

ings.The Langley juniors will

close out their season on athree-game Island road tripstarting Friday in Victoria.

Coquitlam Express 5,Rivermen 4

In a twisted version ofGroundhog Day, the ’Menonce again suffered a lossin a game that was decidedin its final moments.

For a third straight con-test, the opposition beatthe Rivermen in the latestages, and for a secondstraight time it was againstthe Coquitlam Express.

This was another 5-4final for the Express, whowon with less than 30 sec-onds to play in regulationtime.

continued on page A25…

Junior A hockey

Rivermen bump slumpAfter suffering a series of one-goal losses, Langley’s junior A hockey teamfinally found itself on the winning side of the ledger, after taming theAlberni Valley Bulldogs on Sunday afternoon.

Troy Landreville/Langley Advance

Langley Rivermen rookie Jackson Playfair celebrated with teammates including Mario Puskarich, left, after scoringhis team’s fourth goal of the game Saturday against the visiting Coquitlam Express. The celebration was short-lived. The Express found the net with under 30 seconds to play in regulation time to clip the Rivermen 5-4.

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The Walnut Grove Gators ranheadlong into a juggernaut duringSaturday night’s title game of theFraser Valley boys Triple Abasketball championships.

Playing in front of acapacity crowd inside theLangley Events Centre’s tri-ple gym, the Gators fell 75-57 to the No. 2 ranked teamin B.C., the Pitt MeadowsMarauders Air Force.

Ranked sixth in the province,Walnut Grove Secondary’s seniorboys were coming off an impres-sive 82-64 win over the No. 5-ranked Terry Fox Ravens, from

Port Coquitlam, in one of twosemifinals played Friday at theLEC.

The Marauders squeakedpast Surrey’s TamanawisWildcats 63-60 in the othersemifinal.

The Gators are now prepar-ing for the 2012 B.C. highschool boys’ Triple A basket-ball championships, whichrun March 13-17 at the LEC.

The Gators’ first game isWednesday, March 14 against thewinner of the Mt. Douglas Rams,Caledonia Kermodes match-up,which is taking place March 13.

High school boys basketball

Gators second in Valley; next up, provincial tourney at LECThe Pitt Meadows Marauders Air Force flew past host WalnutGrove in the Fraser Valley championship game.

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Troy Landreville photos/Langley Advance

With a horde of Pitt Meadows Marauderssupporters looking on, Walnut GroveGators guard Ethan McKean looked for away past Marauders guard Evan Wendtduring the Fraser Valley senior boyschampionship game Saturday at theLangley Events Centre. Above - Gators fanssupported the hometown team.

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Page 24: Langley Advance March 8 2012

A24 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E

Recreation, Culture, and Parks General Inquiries: 604.533.6086

ALDERGROVE KINSMENCOMMUNITY CENTRE26770 - 29 Avenue

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Page 25: Langley Advance March 8 2012

LangleyAdvance | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A25Sports

…continued from page A23The Express controlled

the first period.Rookie goaltender Nic

Renyard made his secondBCHL start for the ’Menand made a few key saveswithin the first few minutesof action.

Unfortunately for him,Coquitlam’s Brady Shawopened the scoring on aneat little redirect in tightfor his 29th of the year.

The Express then scoredon a goal that Renyardwould love to have a re-doon. Affiliate forward EricMargo fired a shot fromfar out that beat Renyardbetween the pads for a 2-0Express lead.

The Express threw a ton

of pucks towards the youngLangley ’keeper as theyhad 21 shots on goal afterthe first frame.

The second period was adifferent story for the homeside.

It was a much bettereffort as the ’Men’s topgoal-getter Mario Puskarichtallied back-to-back tallieson similar plays, streakingdown the left-wing andputting a pinpoint wristshot past Express goal-tender Cole Huggins for his28th and 29th markers ofthe season.

The lead did not last verylong as Coquitlam’s JustinGeorgeson capitalized ona powerplay to get theCoquitlam lead back at 3-2.

The third period was byfar the most entertaining ofthe three.

Langley’s Peter McMullentied the game on a beauti-ful rush down the right-wing, culminated by a lasershot that sailed beneath theblocker of Huggins to evenup the score.

The Express once againregained the lead a fewshifts after McMullan’stying tally, courtesy of AlexPetan on a nifty shot thatbeat Renyard on the shortside.

The Rivermen to theircredit did not panic asLangley rookie JacksonPlayfair tipped home apoint shot on a powerplayto send the home fans into

a frenzy, evening the scoreat 4-4.

Just when overtimelooked like a very goodpossibility, that unwantedgroundhog popped up hishead.

With 26 seconds to goin regulation, Coquitlam’sZach Hodder pounced ona loose puck to score, andlay the dagger into theRivermen.

• More online atwww.langleyadvance.com,

click on “Sports”

Express win in waning seconds – again

TWU won a closely contestedmatch against Saint Mary’s inthe game deciding fifth andsixth in the nation.

The Trinity Western UniversitySpartans are getting quite familiarwith placing fifth in Canada.

Fifth is where the Spartans endedup at the 2012 CIS women’s vol-leyball championships in Hamilton,after beating the Saint Mary’sHuskies Sunday at the Burridge

Gymnasium on the campus ofMcMaster University.

This marks the third time theSpartans have finished fifth at thenational tournament after winningthe consolation match in 2009, beat-ing York in the fifth place game, andin 2006, beating Alberta in the fifthplace game.

TWU finished third at last year’snational championship, defeatingAlberta in the bronze medal contest.

After winning the first set in fineform, the Spartans lost the secondset, after allowing Saint Mary’s to

earn five points in a row to end theset.

The Spartans then fought back totake the third and fourth sets by fourand five points, respectively.

TWU finished the 2011/12 seasonwith a 20-13 overall record and a 3-2record in the post-season.

After falling to Montreal in thenational quarter-final Friday, TrinityWestern beat both Queen’s and SaintMary’s to finish 2-1 at the CIS tour-nament.

• More online at www.langleyadvance.com,click on “Sports”

University women’s volleyball

Spartans finish fifth at CIS tourney

Minor soccer

Registrationat fingertips

For players ages fourto 17 interested in“The Beautiful Game,”September soccer registra-tion is now open.

Langley United YouthSoccer Association(LUYSA) has opened onlineregistration for boys andgirls soccer that runs fromSeptember to March.

Ages range from four(born 2008) to 17 (1995).

Players of all ability lev-els, including newcomers,are always welcome.

Parents interested in soc-cer for girls and boys whoare three years old (bornin 2009) should contactLUYSA for information.

In addition, there areprograms in spring (Aprilto June) and summer (Julyand August) for all ages ofboys and girls.

• • •LUYSA’s spring soccer

for boys and girls ages fourto 17 is filling up fast.

The program runs fromApril to June and newplayers are welcome.

Parents are urged toregister quickly before theirchildren’s age group fillsup.

For more information orto register online for allprograms, visit www.luysa.com.

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Page 26: Langley Advance March 8 2012

A26 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | LangleyAdvance Sports

by Troy [email protected]

Hockey fans in MapleRidge witnessed a Kodiakmauling Monday night.

The Aldergrove Kodiaksthrashed the RidgeMeadows Flames 8-2 atPlanet Ice Maple Ridge, inthe fourth game of theirbest-of-seven, openinground playoff series.

The win put the Kodiaksone step away from end-ing the Flames’ PacificInternational Junior HockeyLeague season.

“I think when we put ourbest foot forward, we’repretty tough to contendwith five-on-five,” Kodiaks’

head coach Tim Prestonsaid.

The Kodiaks – who fin-ished on top of the PIJHL’sHarold Brittain Conferencewith a 28-13-2-1 regularseason record – carried a3-1 lead in games into lastnight’s (March 7) contest atAldergrove Arena.

The potentially ser-ies-clinching contest wasplayed after the LangleyAdvance went to pressWednesday afternoon.

Wednesday morning,Preston told the Advance,“We don’t expect it to bean easy game. We expect itto be a war, to be a battle.We know they are going toplay hard.”

Ridge Meadows, whichplaced fourth in the HaroldBrittain with an 11-32-1-0 mark, had some hopeheading into Monday’scontest. The Flames werecoming off a 5-2 win ingame three of the series,played last Friday, March2, at Planet Ice.

But the Kodiaks didn’tgive the Flames a chance tobreathe.

Aldergrove led 3-0 afterthe first period and wereup 5-0 until the 9:57 markof the middle frame, whenMatthew Bissett got thehome team on the board.

Ridge Meadows’ KeaganHunter scored early in thefinal frame, but after that

it was all Kodiaks withThomas Hardy scoringtwice to complete his hattrick and Ryan Procyshyncapping the scoring with2:07 to play in regulation.

Hardy, who ended uptied for the PIJHL’s regularseason scoring title with 73points, led Aldergrove withthree goals and one assist.

Also scoring forAldergrove was BrandonPotomak, Stephen Ryan,Procyshyn, Daniel Higgs,and Scott McHaffie.

“We came at them prettyhard and set the tone early,and I think their guys gotfrustrated and let theiremotions get the best ofthem,” Preston said.

Discipline was a factor.The Kodiaks went 4-10with the man advantagewhile the Flames werescoreless on four power-play opportunities.

The stat that jumps offthe scoresheet is the shotstotal in the third period:29-1 in favour of theKodiaks.

Helping inflate thoseshot totals was the Flamesamassing 64 minutes inpenalties in the third per-iod alone.

The Kodiaks didn’t pickup a single penalty minutein the final frame.

All three of the Kodiaks’third-period goals came onthe powerplay.

“Our [the coaches’] mes-sage is to be very, verydisciplined,” Preston said.“Our focus is on the winand the team rather thaneach individual player.”

Junior B hockey

Kodiaks’ blowout puts Flames on verge of elimination

Langley CribbageLeague

March 1 scoresHarmsworth 22, Willoughby 14Murrayville 19, Fort Langley 17Langley 25, Milner 11League standings

Harmsworth 192, Langley 170,Murrayville 166, F. Langley 147,Willoughby 133*, Milner 128*(one game at hand)

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2008 FORD RANGER SPORT

Luxury vehicle, low kms, auto, A/C, powerwindows & locks, MP3, OnStar and much more.Stk# 96532

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Need a 7 passenger SUV with 6 cyl, and a real 4x4control? Want a great buy?.Stk# 97281

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Act fast… Replacement over $30,000. Featuring air conditioning, power windows,power door locks, power seat and more. Great on fuel. Engine shuts down at the

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Page 27: Langley Advance March 8 2012

PANDHER FARMSRequires 2 F/T Farm Workersfor 2 farm locations in Langley.Duties include: Harvesting &general labour. $10/hr. Noexp. req’d. Accomodationavail. Knowledge of Punjabi isan asset.Fax resume: 604-524-1375

1160 In Memoriam1160

BRUCE WARREN NORMANSadly Missed and Always

Remembered on hisBirthday, March 5:No morning dawn,nor night returns,But that I think of you.Those left behind are

very dear,But none replaces you.

Love, Mom and brother Robert

MARCH 23 to 25Executive Plaza Hotel405 North Road, Coquitlam

Gen. Admission $7 under 12 free✔ SHOP for all your

Bead & Jewellery supplies!✔ REGISTER for Jewellery Classes:www.FraserValleyBeadShow.ca

1030 Churches1030

Do you haveJesus or Religion?

Listen toRudy, The Rapper

www.richardoostra.comPass this message on!

1010 Announcements1010CRIMINAL RECORD?

Canadian criminal pardon sealsrecord. American waiver allows

legal entry.Why risk employment, business,

travel, licensing, deportation,peace of mind?

Free consultation1-800-347-2540

CHESS LESSONSExercise Your

Mental Muscles!Beginners & Intermediate

Ages 8+ $15/hrCall Stewart

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1085 Lost & Found1085FOUND - Feb 21, Female cat, vicof 146 & 64 Ave in Sry, beautiful,white, well cared for, tattoo, 11 yrsold. Please call 604-762-0945

1085 Lost & Found1085SET of KEYS

found 94B Ave & 204 St on Feb 1.Please call Langley Advance

604-534-8641

1031 Coming Events1031

175 tables of Bargains onDeluxe 20th Century Junque!

Sunday • MAR 18• 10am-3pmCroatian Cultural Centre

3250 Commercial Drive, Van.Info: 604 980-3159 • Adm: $5.00

All advertising published in this newspaper isaccepted on the premise that the merchandiseand services offered are accurately describedand willingly sold to buyers at the advertisedprices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions.Advertising that does not conform to thesestandards or that is deceptive or misleading,is never knowingly accepted. If any readerencounters non-compliance with these standardswe ask that you inform the Publisher of thisnewspaper and The Advertising StandardsCouncil of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: Thepublishers do not guarantee the insertion ofa particular advertisement on a specified date,or at all, although every effort will be made tomeet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, thepublishers do not accept liability for any lossor damage caused by an error or inaccuracy inthe printing of an advertisement beyond theamount paid for the space actually occupied bythe portion of the advertisement in which theerror occurred. Any corrections or changes willbe made in the next available issue. The LangleyAdvance will be responsible for only one incorrectinsertion with liability limited to that portion ofthe advertisement affected by the error. Requestfor adjustments or corrections on charges mustbe made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration.For best results please check your ad foraccuracy the first day it appears. Refundsmade only after 7 business days notice!

1232 Drivers1232

Bobell Express LtdBobell Express requiresprofessional Class 1 driversbased in Abbotsford BChauling bulk commodities.Minimum 2 years experiencepulling Super B with winterexperience. Must be able tocross border.■ Excellent wages &benefits■ Day Trips only

Please fax resume &driver’s abstract to:

604-607-7687 or email to:[email protected]

1235 Farm Workers1235GENERAL FARM WORKERS

required for FT, steady positionsat SunSelect Produce

Greenhouses in Aldergrove &Delta. Work incl prune, harvest,

pack and general cleanup.$9.64-10.25/hr. Email tosunselectproducejobs@

gmail.com

CONNECTING COMMUNITIESCONNECTING COMMUNITIES

INDEX

Community Notices ....................................1000Announcements ...............................................1119Employment..........................................................1200Education .................................................................1400Special Occasions...........................................1600Marketplace ..........................................................2000Children ......................................................................3000Pets & Livestock ...............................................3500Health............................................................................4000Travel & Recreation ......................................4500Business & Finance .......................................5000Legals ............................................................................5500Real Estate ..............................................................6000Rentals .........................................................................6500Personals ...................................................................7000Service Directory .............................................8000Transportation ....................................................9000

Classified Line Ad Deadlines

Tues. Newspaper - Mon. 11:00amTues. Newspaper - Mon. 11:00amThurs. Newspaper - Wed. 11:00amThurs. Newspaper - Wed. 11:00am

Classified Display Ad Deadlines

Tues. Newspaper - Thurs. 2:30pmTues. Newspaper - Thurs. 2:30pmThurs. Newspaper - Mon. 2:30pmThurs. Newspaper - Mon. 2:30pm

Email:Email: [email protected]@van.netFax: 604-444-3050Fax: 604-444-3050

Delivery: 604-534-6493

Sales Centre Hours:Sales Centre Hours:Mon. - Fri. 8:00am - 5:00pmMon. - Fri. 8:00am - 5:00pm

604-444-3000604-444-3000 jobscareersadvice working.com driving.ca househunting.calangleyadvance.com

Place yourad online24/7remembering.ca

TRAIN WITH BC’S LARGEST ANDMOST RESPECTED CAREER TRAINER!

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1240 GeneralEmployment1240

ROAD SMARTTRAINING INSTITUTETraffic Control, Flag Persons

SEE OUR AD IN THEEDUCATION SECTION #1410

604-881-2111www.roadsmarttraining.com

Now HiringFLAGPERSONS &

LANE CLOSURE TECHS• Must have reliable vehicle• Certification required• Union Wages & Benefits

Apply in person19689 Telegraph Trail, Langleyfax resume to 604-513-3661

or email:[email protected]

SALES ASSOCIATES • Full & Part TimeLooking to start or change your career?

Positions available at our Vancouver, Coquitlam,Surrey, Langley & Abbotsford locations. We offergreat hourly wage plus commission with room foradvancement. Excellent communication skills, neatappearance and great customer service skills required.Applicants must be available to work weekends.

Email resume specifying location preferred to:[email protected] or fax to: 604 437-1480

www.blackandlee.com

MANAGERSDOLLARAMA is expanding and looking for newManagers.The ideal candidates will have 2-3 yearssupervisory experience in a fast paced retailenvironment with demonstrated organization andcommunication skills.The successful individual will possess strongleadership and motivational skills. Otherresponsibilities include inventory control and workin compliance with all company procedures andpolicies. Merchandising experience is a necessity.Must have full availability.

Please send resumes to:[email protected]

Applications will not be taken at store level.

1240 GeneralEmployment1240

CIRCLE CONST. (Burnaby)seeking F/T Painter. Must havehigh school compl. & sev. yrs ofexperience. $21/hr. E-Res:[email protected]

Daytime Cleaning Person for Mur-rayville area, 4 days a week, 4 hrs/day, $12/hr, 604-825-2282

ELYK WOODCRAFTING LTDSry, F/T Lumber Handler. Heavylifting, highschool grad, Forkliftcert, $12/hr. Start ASAP. Emailresume to [email protected] orfax 604-576-1293

BUSY FRASER VALLEYMARINE SHOP is looking for anexperienced certified marine techand an apprentice with at least 1year of schooling.Please drop off resume in person to46108 Airport Road, Chilliwack BC

www.plea.ca

PLEA Community Services Societyis looking for individuals and familieswho can provide respite care intheir homes for youth aged 12 to18, who are attending a recoveryprogram for alcohol and/or drugaddiction. Qualified applicants mustbe available on weekends and havea home that can accommodate oneto two youth and meet all safetyrequirements. Training and supportis provided. If interested, please calla member of our Family RecruitingTeam at 604-708-2628.

RESPITECAREGIVERS

WAREHOUSEORDER SELECTORS

We are now accepting applications forthe position of part-time WarehouseOrder Selector, which will includetimely and accurate order pickingof grocery products in a safe, clean,team-based environment.

Successful applicants will be availablefor day, afternoon and weekend shifts,have reliable transportation (no publictransit available), possess proficientEnglish communication skills, andenjoy repetitive physical work thatrequires lifting 20-80lb cases ofgrocery products.

Starting wage is $12.95/hr. with anattractive incentive program andregular progressive increases every500-1000 hours worked. We offerflexible work schedules (will includea minimum of 1 weekend day), andan excellent training program isprovided.

As one of the largest employers in theFraser Valley, EV Logistics operatestwo distinct facilities - a 380,000 sq ftrefrigerated facility, and a 485,000 sqft dry goods building - both facilitiesare located in the GlouchesterIndustrial Park (at the 264th St. exitoff Hwy #1).

Apply on-line at www.evlogistics.com

1290 Sales1290

SALESSALESGOLD KEY LANGLEY

VOLKSWAGENLooking for a positive, energeticand professional person to joinour team. Previous VW experiencepreferred.

Please apply by email to:[email protected]

1293 Social Services1293

Call 604-708-2628www.plea.ca

Some great kids aged 12 to 18 who needa stable, caring home for a few months.Are you looking for the opportunity todo meaningful, fulfilling work? PLEACommunity Services is looking forqualified applicants who can providecare for youth in their home on afull-time basis or on weekends for respite.Training, support and remunerationare provided. Funding is available formodifications to better equip your home.A child at risk is waiting for an open door.Make it yours.

EMPLOYMENT FEATURED EMPLOYMENTANNOUNCEMENTS

1300 Teachers/Instructors1300

NEW HORIZONMontessori School

www.nhmontessori.comHiring for LangleyTeachers for May 1Certified ECE with

Montessori preferred.Excellent salary and benefits.

Email resume to:[email protected]

Or call Aldona or Andy:604-513-3375

1310 Trades/Technical1310SHINEGUARD IND. (Vanc) hiringF/T Metal Restoration Supervisor.Sev. yrs of exp. & high schoolcompl. req’d. $28/hr. E-Res:[email protected]

Truck and TrailerRepairers

Global Agriculture Trans-L o a d i n g I n c . a w e l lestablished Trans-Loading/transportat ion companylocated at 11678 - 130thStreet, Surrey, B.C. requiresfull-time qualified Truck andTrailer Repairers. Main dutiesinclude: adjust, repair andreplace parts, components ofheavy duty truck systems, likeengines, chassis frame, cabetc. Will also be responsible torepair and maintain trailers.Minimum 4 years experienceincluding industry trainingcourse. Salary $ 25/hr.Fax resume to 604-580-2786

Featured Employment Continues on next page

Find yourdream

job online.

To list your employmentposting on working.com

call 604-444-3000

Celebrate the livesof loved ones with

your stories,photographs and

tributes onremembering.caTo remember a

special loved oneCall 604-444-3000

remembering.caStories, pictures and tributes to life.

PART-TIME PHOTOGRAPHERLocation: Tri-Cities, B.C.

Are you passionate about photography?The NOW Newspaper, serving Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, Port Moody,Anmore and Belcarra, has an opening for a part-time photographer. Wepublish twice a week in a suburban market with a population of morethan 220,000.We’re looking for a team player with exceptional photography skills and apositive attitude, a keen interest in community journalism and the desireto take on new tasks, such as shooting video and connecting with readersvia social media.The successful applicant will have experience shooting for a communityor daily newspaper — either as a staffer or a freelancer — as well astheir own equipment, a reliable vehicle and a willingness to go beyond thestandard few shots per assignment.Some advertising work will be required, as will weekly photo galleriesincluding up to 40 photos. The workweek will consist of three 7.5-hourdaytime shifts, from Tuesday through Thursday, with flexibility required toshoot evening assignments, as well as to switch days if required.To apply, send a cover letter, resume and six of your best photos (depictinga variety of styles, including spot news, feature, sports and portrait/personality) to Leneen Robb, Editor, The NOW, 201A 3430 BrightonAve., Burnaby, B.C., V5A 3H4 or [email protected] (with “jobapplication” in the subject line). Photos should be jpg format and aboutone megabyte in size each.The deadline to apply for this position is 5 p.m. on Friday, March 23.

We thank all applicants for their interest, but onlythose chosen for an interview will be contacted.

No phone calls, please.

L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A27

Page 28: Langley Advance March 8 2012

BLUE NOSE X American Pitbull,3 female, 1st shots & deworming,8 wks old, $750. 778-688-7289

ROAD SMART TRAINING INSTITUTE LTD.2 Day comprehensive, standardized training

curriculum for Traffic Control Persons, meetingthe current WCB requirements.

Visit us at www.roadsmarttraining.comFor further information or to register,

contact 604-881-2111

Be a Veterinary Assistant in just 6.5 months. Our clinicalprogram is taught by an Animal Health Technologist,Veterinarians, Vet Assistants & Veterinary Office Managers.

PROGRAM STARTS APRIL 10, 2012

Excellent potential for employment.Surrey 604-951-6644 Toll Free [email protected]

Want to work with animals and get paid to do it?

Veterinary Assistant Diploma Program

A - Security Officer Training.Classes avail in Abby. Full Jobplacement. 859-8860 to register.

FOODSAFE1 DAY COURSES – ONLY $62!

Langley: Mar 24 or Apr 14Surrey: Every Saturday!

Pitt Meadows: Mar 17 or Apr 14Also Bby • Van • Rcmd • CoqHealth Inspector Instructors!

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Tim Stephens' Astral Reflections Mar. 11 - Mar. 17, 2012★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Aries March 21 - April 19: This is your lastweek of weariness, obligations, restrictions andlow charisma. Be spiritual, charitable, and cleanup lingering threads with government and “headoffice.” Avoid new projects now through April 3.You’re heading into indecisiveness – or mistakes– in your work zone. (You, co-workers, or those onanother level, might misunderstand directions andcommunications, which can cause the mistakes; bealert, and ask if you feel confused.) Sunday/Mondaybring mystery, and lucky financial action. Be duteousTuesday to Friday: a possibly momentous careerdevelopment looms.Taurus April 20-May 20: It’s your last week ofwishing and hoping, of socializing and happiness,so enjoy it to the fullest. A major relationship mightstart this week, or you might stumble upon a majoropportunity, negotiate/litigate successfully, orrelocate. Yet another major phenomena – Mercuryretrograde, says don’t start anything new, normake any big commitments, un-doable changes,or promises now through April 3. But if you lookcarefully, that relationship, relocation, negotiation,etc., might be a form of correcting a past mistake.(Likely one that occurred in the past three months.)Gemini May 21-June 20: What is it? A past goodor bad deed coming due? Or a revision to a big stepyou took before (perhaps recently, since November2011)? Or something you’ve long wanted or plannedon? In any case, three things are happening now:1) indecision, mistakes and delays affect ongoingprojects, and will cripple brand new ones; 2) the past,past contacts, ideas, ventures, situations, tend torecur; and 3) almost every day this week, good fortuneaffects your financial, debt, investment, sexual, deephealth and research activities. Be optimistic and brave– by next week, you’ll celebrate.

Cancer June 21-July 22: Start nothing newbefore April 4. Until then, protect ongoing venturesfrom delays, mistakes and indecision – have a“Plan B” ready. Make lists before you shop, double-check addresses, dollar figures, etc. I’ve told you forseveral years that 2008 to 2023 will bring true love– this is one of the weeks this might occur, especiallySunday/Monday or Thursday/Friday. However, thisrelationship might have some connection to the past– e.g., introduced by a “long lost” friend or relative,or he/she’s connected to a job/career you once held,etc. A big wish can come true! Communicate.Leo July 23-Aug. 22: Start nothing brandnew before April 4. Protect ongoing projects andrelationships from misunderstandings,shortages anddelays (especially in financial, intimate, health, legal,travel, educational and cultural zones). Welcomeresurrected or returning ventures and people fromthe past – important success potential lies here. Youcould flow into major luck/success in career, work,earnings, possessions and money. (In all this, your“foundations” are key – property, home, family.Examine/improve these Sunday/Monday.) A formersweet, sensual person (or boss) might return.Virgo Aug. 23-Sept. 22: Start nothing newbefore April 4. Until then, protect ongoing projects,situations and relationships from mistakes, delaysand misunderstandings; and, this week, at least,welcome/resurrect links and ventures from thepast. Great happenings, splendid fortune, cancome from the past now (this Sunday to Friday)especially in legal, international, cultural, love,intellectual, educational, travel, romantic, creative,speculative and child-oriented zones. Be pro-active; try everything in these zones that has a“past connection.” E.g., a returning relationshipcould lead to marriage.

Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 22: Start nothing newbefore April 4, especially in relationships, litigation,negotiation, public interfacing, and work, health anddiet zones. Protect ongoing projects and links frommistakes, delays and misunderstandings.There is one“escape” from what seems like a dead-end: the past.This week, especially, people and projects returningfrom the past can be a huge blessing – primarily inreal estate, home, family, security, garden, investment,lifestyle, health and sexual zones. E.g., a home you’vealways wanted becomes available. Buy it! Someonemight return, offer intimacy.Scorpio Oct. 23-Nov. 21: Start nothing new beforeApril 4, especially in social, sexual, financial, group,health and lifestyle zones. A real success might comein the present week in relationships, relocation,partnering (in love or business) dealings with thepublic, negotiations, litigation, and communications,travel and paperwork – IF a past connection exists.E.g., beginning a new lawsuit, advertising campaignor relationship, will likely fail; but re-establishing arelationship or finishing a neglected application couldlead to great success. Communication important.Love, romance, joy exist!Sagittarius Nov. 22-Dec. 21: Until April 4, startnothing new. Instead, protect ongoing projects andrelationships from mistakes, misunderstandingsand delays. (E.g., your factory might run out ofsteel fittings halfway through a major order: soorder much more, or pay a premium for quickdelivery, etc.) Until April, past contacts andventures offer openings and success. An oldflame might return. The week ahead offers hugesuccess in earnings, work and health (and tosome degree in sensuality). A hidden (former) allycould be instrumental – or a government agency,institution. Remember, the “past!”

Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 19: I keep tellingyou a new future, new hopes and goals and a newsocial circle, will come to you (2009-2023) via thedifficulties that seem to beset you. (Moaning aboutyour losses would be like renovating your house, andwailing about the destruction of old walls, even thoughyou know the end product will be splendiferous. Youare being renovated, by life, by God.) You take a giantstep toward this future this week – by resurrectingthe past. Do so! Romance, a risk, a speculation, acreative accomplishment are involved. Legal, travel,cultural zones also benefit. Huge luck here.Aquarius Jan. 20-Feb. 18: Start nothing beforeApril 4. Protect ongoing projects from mistakes,delays, shortages and misunderstandings. Your“connections” to the past could prove very fruitfulthis week. A returning project, person or situationcan bring splendid luck in financial, sexual, health,research, management, real estate, family, home andgovernment-institution-corporate zones. Jump onanything “returning” here. (E.g., a house you deeplydesired now comes back on the market – seize it.)A former friend might appear; this isn’t really an oldflame. Indirectly, money/career receive a boost.Pisces Feb. 19-March 20: Start nothing new beforeApril 4. Until then, protect your ongoing interestsfrom false moves, misunderstandings, mistakes anddelays. Have a “Plan B.” Your energy and charismaremain high. Many, many strands from past actionscome together this week in an explosion of luck andsignificance. Don’t hesitate; do act – but preferablyon something from the past or connected to it. Themajor areas affected are relationships, money/earnings, possessions, important communicationsor travel connected to your career or social standing,and group affairs. A wish will come true.

[email protected]

FEATURED EMPLOYMENT EDUCATION

3507 Cats3507

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And we want you to bepart of our team.In 2013, Target stores will open all across Canada. And we’relooking to build a team of talented people who can deliver thekind of innovation and difference our brand is known for.There are opportunities to grow and lead in a range ofsectors. Current opportunities include Store Team Leaderpositions. So, if you’re looking for a fun, dynamic careerwhere goals are clear and results are always rewarded, wewant to hear from you.

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3508 Dogs3508

CKC REG lab retriver pups black& yellow. Field champion stock.Shots, dew claws removed,wormed, tattooed. 604-454-8643

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GORGEOUS PB ROTTI puppies,family raised, vet checked, 1stshots, Chwk 604-794-3505

Fila/Mastiff Guard Dog Pupsowners closest friend. Thieves

worst nightmare. All shots. Readynow! 604-817-5957

YORKIE ChihuahuaAdorable pups available for

March 17th! 3 males/2 females,long & short hair. Family raised.$600. email: [email protected]

3508 Dogs3508

SAVE A LIFE. Wonderful rescuedogs from Foreclosed UponPets. Spay/neutered, regularv a c c i n a t i o n s & r a b i e s ,microchipped. $449 adoption fee,avail at your local Petcetera stores.

SHIH TZU pups m/f tri coloured,born Dec 30, $600. [email protected]

STANDARD POODLE puppies, 1cream M, 1 brown M, ckc reg,www.beminepoodles.com Chwk.604-823-2467 or 604-302-1761

YORKIE PUPS male & female 1stshots, reg/tinnies. $500 - $600.Ph 604-792-6277

AUSTRALIANLABRADOODLES

We are taking deposits for ourApril litter. 25-33lbs, 15-19inches at the shoulder fullgrown. Non shedding, calm,perfect size if you live in acondo. Colors range from creamto red.cherryblossomlabradoodles.comfor more information. $2,500

Call: (250) 494-3107 or email:cherryblossomlabradoodles@

gmail.com

BERNESE Mountain DogPuppies. Vet checked

and ready for new homes.Langley. $1,200

Call: (778) 241-5504

MAREMMA Sheepdog 8 weeksPurebreed puppies need a

home! $250. Call (778) 888-3987 @viewadsonline@http://www.langleyadvance.com

PETS & LIVESTOCK

Take Your Pickfrom the

HOTTEST JOBS

A28 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E

Page 29: Langley Advance March 8 2012

CEDAR COURT &CEDAR LODGE

Clean 1 BR & 2 BR Apts.Mature oriented building nearGuildford Mall. Rent incl cable,heat, hot water. Prkg available.N/P. Resident Managers.604-584-5233 or 604-588-8850

www.cycloneholdings.ca

21ST CENTURY FLEA MARKET175 tables of Bargains

on Deluxe 20th Century Junque!SUN MAR 18 10-3

Croatian Cultural Center3250 Commercial Drive,604-980-3159 Adm: $5

2080 Garage Sale208020535 - 98TH AVE

Garage SaleSaturday March 10,

9 AM - 2 PMDerby Hills

20535-98th AveLangley

No early birds!Rain or Shine.

24C BD34:8 G134 34: 31A: J 4E55F: D9 E 6E8E6: 5EF:!

2: =EC FD@EF ?D?=8D<35 :H:8C 31A: CDI >D?E3:%

"#$%&!E?> B: 98::%

*-'-, '734 +H:$ 0E?6F:C#7-(" '))&,77).D?% & ;E3% /EA & /=A;I?% ,-EA & 7=A

GARAGE SALES6035 Mobile Homes6035

PRE OWNED - TO BE MOVED1985 Manco DW 24x56.2008 14x66 2 Bedroom.1982 Dartmouth 14x66, handy man special.2001 Landmark 14x66 with Tag.1985 Summit 24x48.

Brookswood Homes Ltd.604 530-9566

REAL ESTATE

6008 Condos/Townhouses6008

6008-08 Coquitlam6008-08

PT MOODY 2BR+DEN/2 BATHv/Spacious Condo in Suter BrookVillage. Lge balcony facing courtyd. The ‘jewel’ of the complex!$435K Rob Boies 604-341-3009

6008-10 Ladner/South Delta6008-10

2BDRM/2BTH "SAHALEE""Views" $669,000 1642 sq.ft.

Re/Max Select PropertiesCall: 604-868-2217

6008-30 Surrey6008-30

SUN MARCH 11, 2-4pm,#412-10082 132nd St, Surrey.Top floor, vaulted ceiling bright,spacious, open concept, 2 BR & 2full baths, reno’d, insuite laundry.Walk to amens/transit. $259,000.

Mala, Sutton 778-859-4458

6015 For Sale byOwner6015

uSELLaHOME.com673 Homes 62 businesses FSBO

Sell your home, only $99. 604-574-5243Mission NEW 3008sf 5br 3.5ba home, suite,6006sf lot $459K 615-5955 id5475Surrey Sullivan nr new, 3043sf 3br 2.5ba,suite potential $599K 598-9225 id5488

6020 Houses - Sale6020

6020-01 Real Estate6020-01★ WE BUY HOMES ★

Damaged Homes! Pretty Homes!Any Condition! No Fees! No Risk!Quick Cash! Convenient! Private!

( 604) 626-9647www.webuyhomesbc.com

●DIFFICULTY SELLING?●

Difficulty Making Payments?No Equity? Expired Listing? Penalty?We Take Over Payments! No Fees!www.GVCPS.ca / 604-812-3718

www.bcforeclosures.com6 BR home from $23,600 down$2,180/mo. 604-538-8888, Alain@ Sutton WC Realty W. Rock

6020-02 Abbotsford6020-02CENTRAL LOCATION

ABBOTFORDPrice Reduced

4 level split, 3 BR., 2 ½ baths,double att. garage, large dble.lot fully landscaped with largework/garden shed. Updatedthroughout incl. oak floor andpot lights in the kitchen, new ensuite, new window coverings,new paint inside and out, newroof and completed basementwith wet bar plus intercom/radio system up and down.Great for medium to largefamily – lots of room to installpool or play area in thebackyard. Good neighborswho have lived on this streetfor years – well looked afterproperties. $456,000 (thisprice includes all appliances)and some furniture negotiable.Please visit usellahome.comand key in #5458 to view theproperty.Call for appointment to view

604-855-7033 or cell.604-807-8441.

For sale by owner.No realtors

6020-20 Mission6020-20

MISSION MULTI family 10 legalrental homes on 6.5 acres, with$92,000 net income. $1,050,000www.saxvik.com 604-838-8692

6020 Houses - Sale6020

6020-34 Surrey6020-34FULLY RENO’D 3 BR Rancheron quiet cds. Mins from Highway1 access, Guildford Mall, Schls &transit. 8979 sq. ft. Lot. Listed$ 4 2 8 , 0 0 0 J i n B a g r y @604-644-0495 Re/max City Realty

6020-52 Other AreasBC6020-52

NEW - Open House onBOWEN ISLAND, Sunday!911 Elrond’s Ct., Bowen,

Sunday 1-3 pmMLS #V929464-$1,295,000Peter Courtney, Prudential

Sussex Realty 604-202-6544

6035 Mobile Homes60351975 - 12 x 68 Mobile Home,3 BR, 2 bth, $29,900, large lot forkids. Pets ok. Call 604-830-1960

6035 Mobile Homes60351979 - 14 X 70, 2 BR, dlx bath,fully renovated interior, $59,900,in the Grove MHP (jaccuzi/sauna/workout room/pool table, shuffleboard, 3 hole golf. 604-830-1960

LANGLEY. Great 2 BR mobile,$48,900. Pad rental: $460/mo. Noage restriction & 1 small pet ok.Lorraine Cauley, Royal LepageNorth Star, 604-889-4874

LANGLEY Park Like Settingnewly renod air cond, seniors 2BR double wide, ample decks/storage, 5 mins from shops &hospital. Electrical certified. Con-sider musical instruments as parttrade. $47,900. 604-534-2997

NEW SRI 1152 sq ft, 3 BR, dblwide $77,900. Full gyproc singlewide $66,900. Repossessions1974-2007. Call 604-830-1960

Sunday • March 11 • Noon to 3BROOKSWOOD ESTATE

Unit 23 - 3931 - 198 St, Langley2 BR single mobile, OWN lot,storage shed, 55 + Park. Pets OK.RV Parking. Maint fee $100/mo.$139,900. Agents ok. Open toOffers. By Owner. 604-309-5974

6050 Out Of TownProperty6050

USA PROPERTIES For Sale orlease. Com’l retail bldg in LyndenWA. 4000 Sq Ft all on one level.$349,000 US. Can also beleased. Terms negotiable.ANTIQUE & GIFT STORE indowntown Lynden WA. A veryprofitable business. $95,000 USplus inventory. MacDonoughReal Estate (360) [email protected]

6065 RecreationProperty6065

★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

Exclusive & Private Lake ShoreCottage, for all info:

www.cottageonlake.ca $329,000★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

6075 Sunshine Coast6075

Sunshine Coast 1 BR 30’ Trailer,near ferry, 55+ park. Licensedclubhouse/ exercise rm, 9 holegolf course, 2 decks, shed w/dfacil, priv yd. Inc all amen/heat.$12,000. 1-604-886-3836

RENTALS6508 Apt/Condos6508

ALDERGROVE - 1BR, centrallocation, refs, credit check, $660incl basic cable, avail immed.604-856-7390 or 778-549-3852

AMBER ROCHESTOR545 Rochester Ave, Coq

Close to Lougheed Mall,S.F.U. & Transportation.

office:604- 936-3907

AMBER (W)401 Westview St, Coq

Large Units.Near Lougheed Mall.

Transportation & S.F.U.

office: 604- 939-2136cell: 604-727-5178

ARBOUR GREENE552 Dansey Ave, Coq

Extra Large 2 Bedrooms.Close to Lougheed Mall &S.F.U.

office: 604- 939-4903cell: 778- 229-1358

CALYPSO COURT1030 - 5th Ave, New West

Near Transportation &Douglas College.

Well Managed Building.

office: 604- 524-8174cell: 604 354-9112

2080 Garage Sale2080

COTTONWOOD PLAZA555 Cottonwood Ave, Coq

Large units some with2nd bathroom or den.

On bus routes, close toS.F.U. & Lougheed Mall.

office: 604- 936-1225

JUNIPER COURT415 Westview St, Coq

Close to Lougheed Mall, allTransportation Connections,

Schools & S.F.U.

office: 604- 939-8905cell: 604- 916-0261

6508 Apt/Condos6508MURRAYVILLE 2 br , 3rd flr, 5appls, u/g pkg, storage locker, noelevator., nr amens Av now. N/P.$1000 + util. Jim 604-836-3879

DELTITA GARDENS8507 120th St, N. Delta

1 BR from $650. 2 BR from$750. 3 BR from $850.Incls heat, hot water & cable.Some suites with mtn views.

604 594-5211Baywest Management Corp.

PARK TERRACECall for Specials!

Spacious Bach, 1 BR, 2 BR& 3 BR Apts. Rent incls heat& hot water. Resident Mgr.

Call 604-530-0030www.cycloneholdings.ca

ROYAL CRESCENTESTATES

22588 Royal Crescent Ave,Maple Ridge

Large units. Close to GoldenEars Bridge. Great view of River

office: 604- 463-0857cell: 604- 375-1768

SKYLINE APARTMENTS1 BR & 2 BR. Cable incl’d.U/grd prkg. N/p. Resident Mgr.

Call 604-536-8499www.cycloneholdings.ca

SUSSEX PLACE APTS

Clean & affordable. Bach,1 BR & 2 BR. Near seniors’centre. Rents includes heat,hot water & cable.

Call 604-530-0932www.cycloneholdings.ca

6540 Houses - Rent6540ALDERGROVE 4 BR, 2 lvl, 2baths, w/d, $1200 + utils, Immed,Refs. 604-597-2771 bef 8pm

Are you tired of Renting?'RENT TO OWN' Homes PoorCredit Okay, Low Down PaymentWe can help! Call 604-857-3597

LANGLEY 3 BR, 2 baths, dblgarage, 5 appls, ns/np, $1400 +60% utils, Mar 15. 604-613-0605

4060 Metaphysical4060TRUE ADVICE! TRUE Clarity!

TRUE PSYCHICS!1-877-342-3032 or 1-900-528-6256

or mobile # 3563 (18+)$3.19/min.www.truepsychics.ca

3015 ChildcareAvailable3015

BROOKSWOOD LIC. FamilyDaycare has F/T openings availM-F. Reas. rates. 604-530-5457.

2115 Plants & Trees2115CEDAR HEDGING $1.00/foot&up. Dug in ready, installation &delivery avail 604-795-1999. Nowis the best time for planting!

2095 Lumber/BuildingSupplies2095

CONCRETE BLOCKS, 2.5’ x 2.5’x 5’. Full & 1/2 sizes. Landscape& retaining walls, etc. Call Salesfor pricing 604-240-3326

2060 For Sale -Miscellaneous2060

HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS.Best Price, Best Quality.

All Shapes & Colors Available.Call 1-866-652-6837

www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper

Own a home? Need Money?Get Mortgage Money Fast!

Quick, Easy, ConfidentialNo credit or income required

1st, 2nd, 3rd mortgages

Call 604-365-4244LENDER CONNECT MORTGAGE

Chris Baker - lenderconnect.ca

FIRST TIME HOME BUYERSINFORMATION HOTLINECall 604-343-4995 Ext 2011

5075 Mortgages5075

5060 Legal Services5060CRIMINAL RECORD?Money-back Guarantee

100,000+ Record removals since1 9 8 9 . C o n f i d e n t i a l , F a s tAffordable - A & BBB Rating.Assures employment and travelfreedom. Call for Free Infobooklet.

1-8-NOW-PARDON(1-866-972-7366)

www.RemoveYourRecord.com

*Annual starting revenue of $12,000-$120,000*Guaranteed cleaning contracts*Professional training provided

*Financing available*Ongoing support

*Low down payment requiredContact Coverall of BC

A Respected Worldwide Leader inFranchised Office Cleaning!

A Great JanitorialFranchise Opportunity

604.434.7744 • [email protected]

5040 Business Opps/Franchises5040

5035 FinancialServices5035

CUT YOUR Debt by up to 70%DEBT Forgiveness Program

Avoid Bankruptcy, StopsCreditor Calls. Much lowerPayments at 0% Interest.

We work for You,not Your Creditors.

Call 1-866-690-3328www.4pillars.ca

2020 Auctions2020

SPACEBOOKING

For: CAN AM AUCTIONSRep: VMcGinnis

Ad#: 1352913

6508 Apt/Condos6508LANGLEY 2 BR apt, 202/53A,close to shopping, incls heat & hotwater, quiet complex, no pets.$915. Call 604-539-0217.

Langley City 1 BR apt, $730, inclheat & h/w, clean, quiet, drug freebldg, n/p, ref's, 604 530-6384

LANGLEY CITY 3 BR, 2 bath,5 appls, upper unit in 4plex. N/P.Avail April 1. $1100/mo + utls.

Gary Hooge ★ 604-533-3491

MOVE IN BONUS $200 OFFYOUR 1ST MONTH’S RENT!!!!

COQ, 2 BR Condo, 'LarkinHouse' on Lincoln Ave, CornerUnit, lots of windows, 3rd Floor,low rise condo, 3 blocks from CoqCentre, 2.5 yrs old, 2 full baths, 6appliances, balc, walkin closet,approx 900sf, No Smoking, NoPets, avail Immediately, storage,sec gated u/g parking, 2 parkingstalls, Awesome amenities incls15000 sf Nakoma club, includingoutdoor pool, exercise room,clubhouse & close to CoquitlamCentre, Douglas College, shops,restaurants & other amenities.$1295/mo, min 1 yr lease, ref’srequired, call 604-931-4860please leave msg

MURRAYVILLE 1 br 5 appls, u/gpkg, storage locker, no elevator.Av now. No pets, near amens.$875 + utils. Jim @ 604-836-3879

MAPLE MANORAPARTMENTS

20117-56th Ave½ month FREE Rent

Move in Bonus1& 2 bedroom suites

$735-$850Includes: Heat & hotwater,Cable to channel 43, coinlaundry, onsite security

gated parking & playground604-534-0108

Linwood PlaceApartments

Downtown LANGLEY1st Month’s Rent is FREE!

1 & 2 BDRM’S starts @$675-$835/mo. Free

hotwater, heat, basic cable,weight/game room, prkg,

includes security.Please Call 604-530-6555★★★Must bring in this Adto receive 1st Month FREE!

KING ALBERT COURT1300 King Albert, Coq

Close to Transportation,Schools & S.F.U.

office: 604-937-7343cell: 778-829-3567

AUCTION CALENDAR

RentalsContinues on next page

FARM EQUIPMENT, COLLECTOR CARS, TRUCKSFEATURING 1926 MODEL T DOCTORS COUPE (frame off restored)Model T Parts including: 15 rebuilt blocks, rods, rims, and other various parts,1953 Dodge 1/2 Ton: restored ready for paint, 1949 Monarch 4dr (readyto be assembled), Farm Equipment Inc: IHC B275 Tractor,10 KVA Port.Generator, Smith 100 CFM Port. Compressor

PUBLIC AUCTION:MARCH 24th Saturday @ 10:00 AM 65A Ave. & 176 St. Surrey BC

MARCH 31st Saturday @ 9:00 AM80-100 CARS, LIGHT TRUCKS & RV’s

Industrial, Construction, Forklifts, Farm & Turf Equip.,Fleet Trucks & Trailers, Lumber, Boats, Tools

Industrial Smalls Welcome / Online Bidding Available6780 Glover Rd., Langley, BC

Phone: 604-534-0901 www.canamauctions.com

Check web for more...

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

8 0 0 . 5 5 1 . 5 5 7 8 W W W. B I G H O R N G O L F . C O MP A L M D E S E R T , C A L I F O R N I A

B I G H O R N i s a r e g i s t e r e d t r a d e m a r k o f B I G H O R N P r o p e r t i e s , I n c .

N c W T ] V Y Q \ W X O ] \ Q ^ W [ _ T W M P O R O Z R M P W Q R V X O Q V b c R [ [ X R O O T R X N R P

Y M [ N \ Q [ R S \ X \ X ^ R a Q R P \ R X T R O Z [ \ L R ` W M P [ \ _ R N W N ] R _ M [ [ R O N V N U \ ^ ] W P X

PALM RIDGE

217

4530 Travel Destination4530 Travel Destinations

ADVANCECLASSIFIEDS

604-444-3000

ADVANCECLASSIFIEDS

604-444-3000

ADVANCECLASSIFIEDS

604-444-3000

L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A29

Page 30: Langley Advance March 8 2012

8205 Paving/SealCoating8205

9105 AutoMiscellaneous9105

FREE Cash FREE Deliverywith $0 DOWN oac

AT AUTO CREDIT FASTNeed a vehicle?

Good or Bad Credit?Call Stephanie 1-877-792-0599

www.autocreditfast.caDLN 30309

9110 Collectibles &Classics9110

1969 FORD Falcon Futura 302CU in-automatic, fully restored,immac paint & body, numeroushigh performance options. Pic-tures at www.photobucket.com/69falcon $13,500. 604-307-0201

9125 Domestic9125

2001 Acura CLFully loaded 2001 Acura CL ingreat condition inside and out,and runs really well.• Black on black leather interior• Power everything (seats, mirrors,

windows, sunroof)• Heated front seats• 6 disc CD player with bose sound

system• Automatic transmission with

triptronic shifting• Comes with winter, and all

season tires; both in great shape• Air conditioning • 109,000 km• HID headlights • Dual exhaust

Asking $7,500Please call 604.316.4342

9129 Luxury Cars91292008 Mercedes-Benz C3504Matic Automatic 48,000 kmsPalladium silver, fully loaded,navigation, panoramic roof,

keyless go, sport pkg, premiumpkg, new tires, all wheel drive,AMG mags. Not veh shown in

photo. $32,000Call: (604) 618-6171

9145 Scrap CarRemoval9145

Dirty Bird

Cell: 778 233-5865

Scrap Car &Truck RemovalScrap Car Removal

CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES!No Wheels? No Problem!

FREE

AAA SCRAPCAR REMOVALMinimum $150 cash

paid for full sizedvehicles.

604-518-3673

• Auto • Trucks• Equipment Removal

We pay up to $300 cash

Aarrow Recycling

CALL RICK GOODCHILD604-551-9022

604-761-7175

9150 Services &Repairs9150

FREE RV DE-WINTERIZINGFREE 20 POINT INSPECTIONGO-WEST RV (604) 528-3900

9155 Sport Utilities/4x4’s/Trucks9155

1990 GMC Suburban, 4 WD,underdrive, blue, low k’s, wellkept, $6,000. Call 604-584-0324

1992 CHEV Suburban 350 V81500, 2 wd, 4sp, auto, aircare2yrs, $2950 obo, 604-985-3086

1992 DODGE Dakota pick-up,extra cab, auto, a/c, V6, aircared,r u n s g o o d $ 1 1 0 0 o b o .604-984-7574

1994 TOYOTA 4 Runner,Aircared to 2014, CD, newbattery, runs well/reg maintained.By Owner $3500. 604-230-4430

2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee Ltd.Silver Metallic. Like new. Flaw-less. Sunroof, leather, heatedseats. $7500 obo. 604-418-0449

9160 Sports &Imports9160

2001 HYUNDAI Elantra, 4 dr,new trans/brakes, ac, radio, runsgood, aesthetic body wrk needed,$3500 obo, 604-852-4802,604-309-8927, Abbotsford

30’ Converted Albion RiverGillnet Elisha

Is a thirty four foot ex-commercial fishing vessellovingly reconfigured to apleasure craft. For full detailsvisit www.bosuns.ca $18,500Call: (604) 551-2163 or email:[email protected].

9515 Boats9515

CHEVY UPLANDER 2005. V-6,auto, 7 pass., grey, A/C, powerlocks & windows, cruise, tilt, 93Kkm. Runs very well. $6,400.604-241-2530 or 604-375-2570

2009 MADZA 5, mini van, black,7 pass’ger, MINT cond, 45,000kkms, great on gas. No accid. Nosmoker. $16,000. 604-617-5348

9173 Vans9173

1992 VW Eurovan Westfalia,141,000 k, grt shape! $22,000obo, records 604-275-7808

2008 VW Passat Wagon, 2.0T,silver, loaded, auto, low kms,wrty, no accid, non smoker,alarm, immac, $20,800 obo,604-980-7675

2010 TOYOTA Corolla CE, auto,4 dr, 5800 kms, fully loaded,778-859-0985, 604-987-0437

2007 PT CRUISER. Hot deal!Auto, low kms, very clean. Creamexterior, grey interior. A/C. Magwheels. Spoiler. Aircared. Rearwiper. $7,299 obo. 778-242-2018

9160 Sports &Imports9160

2005 AUDI S4. Quattro (AWD).102,000 km. Blk leather. Incl 2 setof wheels & tires. 6 speed. Powereverything! Exc cond. $19,500.Call/text Rick @ 778-847-2975.

#1 FREE Scrap Vehicle RemovalAsk about $500 Credit!!!

$$ PAID for Some 604.683.2200

THE SCRAPPERSCRAP CAR &TRUCK REMOVALCASH FOR ALL VEHICLES

604-790-39002 HOUR SERVICE

AUTOMOTIVE

9129 Luxury Cars9129

2005 ASTON Martin DB9. 'JamesBond style car!' Silver metallic.23,000 km. 6.0, V12, 450 hp. Newtires. 1 owner. You deserve thebest! $87,980. 604-781-7614.

8315 Tree Services8315

SAVE UP to 70%TREE CARE

❏ Tree Removal ❏ Pruning❏ Stump Grinding & more.

I cut - you clean up.Over 15 years experience..

Free EstimatesJessie • 778-241-4275

8309 Tiling8309★ TILE & STONE ★

Supply & Install. 20 years exp.Please call Mike 778 888-2777

8255 Rubbish Removal8255DISPOSAL BINS: All bins are

$199 + dump fees. 604-306-8599www.disposalking.com

8250 Roofing8250GL Roofing cedar shake, asphaltshingle, flat roofs BBB WCB cleangutters $80. 24/7 604-240-5362

8240 Renovations &Home Improvement8240

BRIAN’SHOME MAINTENANCE❏ Yard Clean-up❏ Gutters❏ Pressure Washing❏ Windows❏ Painting

Call Today • 604-626-3611

A SEMI RETIRED CONTRACTORSpecializing in Renovations,

available for work 604-532-1710

HOME ADVANTAGEC o n t r a c t i n g L t d

For Free EstimatesCall Ryan 778.809.6677

Residential & CommercialRenovations

l icensed - Insured - WCB

[email protected]

D.L. RENOVATIONSHome Improvement Specialist

Quality workAffordable Pricing

David 604-626-735135 years experience

Blake and his Dad make a positivedifferenceinyourlifebyprovidingquality

workmanship delivered with integrity.

START TO FINISHCONTRACTING

• interior/exterior renovations •• rot repair and restoration • Decks •

• Fences • and much more •• free estimates •

Call Blake or Brian at:

604-816-1653Licensed, Insured, WCB

8240 Renovations &Home Improvement8240

HOT WATER TANKSGas, Plumbing & Drain Service.

Lic’d. 778-888-6893

ANVIL Plumbing & Heating#1 in Business since 1999Service and Renovations

Call JIM KIRK • 604-657-9700

8220 Plumbing8220$38/HR

CLOGGED drains, drips, garbs,installs & more, reliable! 24 hrEmergency service 778-888-9184

PIONEER PAVING 25 YRS EXPServing the Lower Mainland

Residential/Commercial/IndustrialFree Est 24 hr Answering 533-5253

ALLEN ASPHALT concrete, brick,drains, foundations, walls, mem-branes 604-618-2304/ 820-2187

8195 Painting/Wallpaper8195

www.InfiniPainting.comRes & Com. Book before Mar 31get 10% off . Call 604 514-0920

8185 Moving &Storage8185

RYAN’S MOVING. 604-782-3610$39/hr. Make an appt to view ourstorage facility with 1st month free

WARREN’S WORKfor Proper Home Maintenance

Inside & Outside PaintingPressure WashingWindows & Gutters

“A good job at a reasonable price”

Warren Munro 604-534-2162Since 1988

Dump Site Now Open• Broken Concrete Rocks

$22 per metric ton• Mud, Dirt, Sod, Clay

$22 per metric ton• Grass, Branches, Leaves, Weeds

$59 per ton

MEADOWS LANDSCAPE SUPPLYMEADOWS LANDSCAPE SUPPLY604-465-1311604-465-1311

8180 Home Services8180

8160 Lawn & Garden8160JIM’S MOWING

604-310-JIMS (5467)www.jimsmowing.ca

8125 Gutters8125

SEAMLESS GUTTERS!New Construction - Renovations.

Guaranteed. Great Rates!Call Paul • 604-897-2453

8055 Cleaning8055CLEANING SERVICES.

Starts at $25/hr. Min. 2 hrs.(778) 808-3582

8075 Drywall8075K. C. DRYWALL

Complete Drywall Services.604-533-2139 cel 604-417-1703

8080 Electrical8080

604-802-6722604-802-6722

• Electrical Contractor• Residential/Commercial• Advanced Lighting Control

Contact us for all your electricaland maintenance needs

Visit Our Website:www.Stonebridgeom.com

#15673 Black & White ElectricNew Homes, Additions, Reno’s,Pools. Call Pat 604-968-7335.

YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 ser-vice call. Insured. Lic # 89402.Fast same day service guar’d. Welove small jobs! 604-568-1899

8087 Excavating8087

• Mini Excavator(1’, 2’, 3’, 5’ Bucket Sizes)

• Small 4x4 Dump Truck• Bobcat • Back Fill

• Ditching• Driveways• Yard Levelling• Drainage

VERN’S EXCAVATING

CALL VERN604-856-8355 Cell: 604-309-9454

8105 Flooring/Refinishing8105

Hardwood FloorRefinishing

Repairs & StainingInstallation

Free EstimatesCentury Hardwood Floors

604-376-7224www.centuryhardwood.com

Hardwood FloorRefinishing

Repairs & StainingInstallation

Free EstimatesCentury Hardwood Floors

604-376-7224www.centuryhardwood.com

8125 Gutters8125

AARONS GUTTERS CLEANING& Repair. 2 storey home from $95.WCB BBB 24yr exp 604 655-7858

HOME SERVICES

HOME SERVICES

RENTALS

6605 Townhouses - Rent6605

Does your Cat or Dog need a “Pettable” Back Yard?

Why not call Ingrid @ WOODBINE TOWNHOUSES9252 Hazel St., Chilliwack

604-792-8317 or call toll-free 1-877-515-6696or email us [email protected]

We have it all!3 BR + 1 ½ Baths – 2 Levels 1,100 sq ft plus Back Yard

Kids Like our 2 Playgrounds! We are a Fenced, Gated, Quietand a Family Oriented Community.

Rent with us for $990 or $1,100 and we will give you a niceMove-In Incentive!

6620 Warehouse/Commercial6620

LANGLEY sm. business ware-house/office w/washrm, cln, dry,secure, $895/mo. 604-834-3289

6605 Townhouses -Rent6605

LANGLEY: 5255-208 St. 4 BRupdated townhouse, 1.5 baths,w/d, d/w, f/p, covered patio. Newfloors, paint, carpet & tiles. Smallfamily complex. By shops/schools. Backs onto park.$1425/mo. Available Now.604-939-2729, 778-285-009

6602 Suites/PartialHouses6602

LANGLEY 72/200. Newer 1 BR,own laundry. Avail now. $750incls utls. NS/NP. 778-892-2875

LANGLEY CITY 3 BR, over 1200sqft, 2 baths, gas f/p, own w/d,dog ok, $1300 + 50% hydro, inclscbl, net & local phone. storage, Nrschl, Immed. n/s. 604-539-9978

LANGLEY 48/200ST, updated3 BR upper, 2 bath, 5 appls, gasf/p, sundeck, garage. $1475 inclutils N/S & N/P. 604-612-1782

ALDERGROVE New 1 BR bsmt,$800 incls utils & cbl, inste w/d,N/s, N/p, gas f/p. 604-626-0536

ALDERGROVE, 2 BR grnd level,incls laundry & utils, N/s, N/p,avail immed. Call 604-855-8270

Aldergrove 2 BR glvl, bright,CDS, ns/np, $800-$850/mo inclsutils, shd wd, Apr 1, 604 857-4616

6602 Suites/PartialHouses6602

2 BR bsmst ste, priv laundry &heat, 210 & 80A Ave, $1,000/mo,avail now. Call 604-825-2281.

6540 Houses - Rent6540

LANGLEY CENTRAL 2 BR, 4appls, 980sf, storage. Nr amens.$1175. Avail Apr 1. 778-278-4890

MURRAYVILLE Older home onacreage, 2 BR, vegetable gardenarea, Apr 1, $800. 604-534-3101

WALNUT GROVE, 4 BR, cornerlot, cov deck, 2 ba, 2 gas f/p, n/s,small pet, nr schls & amen. Mar 1,$1750 + utils. 604-888-9016

WALNUT GROVE. 4 BR house,3 bath, all facilities. Rent $1750.Close all amens. 604-985-9258

3BDRM rancher AldergroveGood condition, on quiet street.

Small pets neg. $1350.Call 604-532-8633

SOUTH LANGLEY Brand New 2BR, 2 baths ste, on acreage, 7appls, $1500 incls all utils, net &cbl, n/s, cat ok. 604-374-4723

SRY 58/128 2BR in CDS, bigyard, lots of privacy, ns, np.$650/mo inc hyd. 604-572-4142

Willoughby 4 BR + den upr, 3baths, ns/np, 2300sf, SS 5 appls,dbl garage, a/c, alarm $2000 +utils, April 15th, 604-805-2345

WILLOUGHBY HTS, Spac 2 BR,cls to all ammens, n/s, $1150,1 BR $895, both ste’s incls utils,small pet ok, Apr 1. 604-530-7469

WILLOUGHBY NR 72/200 newer2BR lower suite, w/d, ns/np. Avnow. $985 inc util. 604-807-6565

Willoughby/Clayton, 1 BR + denbsmt, f/bath, ns/np, new paint/bright 1000sf, 5 appls, a/c, heatpump, $950 + 1/3 util, CDS, petneg. April 8th, 604-805-2345

2BDRM/1BTH 72 and 200 2 BRbsmnt, 1 BTH, incl cbl+int $900month +15% util. 604 355 3479

Allstar CollisionServices Ltd.

19574 – 60 Ave.,Surrey, B.C. V3S 8E2Ph: 604-539-2828Fx: 604-539-2830The right place for quality.

CraftsmanCollision Ltd.

#12-19335 Langley By Pass,Langley, B.C.Ph: 604-534-7434Fx: 604-534-3600Contact: Charile Neuburger17 Locations to Serve You.FREE Air Miles Travel Miles.

Gold KeyBody Shop

19545, No. 10 Hwy.,Langley, B.C.Ph: 604-534-7431Contact: Richard YoungFax your claim to:604-534-6910Factory trained technicians.Courtesy Cars Available.

KirmacCollisionServices

#104-19992 Fraser Hwy.,Langley, B.C.Ph: 604-533-9552Ask for Brian or Kevin#6-19875 96th Ave.,Walnut Grove, B.C.Ph: 604-513-2335Ask for Mike

PrestonCollision Centre

20091 Logan Ave., Langley, BC

V3A 4L5Ph: 604-532-4597Fx: 604-532-4589Contact: Curtis YardleyWe use water-based paints.

“Simply the Best”.

guide to

accreditedcollisionrepairs...

10277286

A30 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E

Page 31: Langley Advance March 8 2012

L A N G L E Y A D V A N C E | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012 | A31

PAPERTO INSERT DEALERTAG HERE

TMTheHyundainam

es,logos,productnames,feature

names,im

agesand

slogansare

trademarks

owned

byHyundaiA

utoCanada

Corp.†Finance

offersavailable

O.A.C.from

HyundaiFinancialS

ervicesbased

onanew

2012Elantra

L6-S

peedManual/E

lantraTouring

L5-S

peedManual/S

onataGL6-S

peedManual/S

antaFe

GL2.4

6-Speed

Manual/Veracruz

GLFW

DAuto

with

anannualfinance

rateof1.9%

/0%/0%

/0%/0%

for84/84/84/84/84months.B

i-weekly

paymentis

$102/$93/$134/$142/$186.Nodow

npaym

entisrequired.C

ostofBorrow

ingis$1,185/$0/$0/$0/$0.Finance

offersinclude

Delivery

andDestination

of$1,495/$1,495/$1,565/$1,760/$1,760.Registration,insurance,P

PSA

,fees,levies,charges,licensefees

andallapplicable

taxesare

excluded.Delivery

anddestination

chargeincludes

freight,P.D.E.,dealeradm

infees

andafulltank

ofgas.Financing

example:2012

Elantra

L6-S

peedfor

$17,344at

1.9%per

annumequals

$102bi-w

eeklyfor

84months

foratotalobligation

of$18,529.C

ashprice

is$17,344.C

ostof

Borrow

ingis$1,185.E

xample

priceincludes

Delivery

andDestination

of$1,495.R

egistration,insurance,PPSA

,fees,levies,charges,licensefees

andallapplicable

taxesare

excluded.Delivery

anddestination

chargeincludes

freight,P.D.E.,dealer

admin

feesand

afulltank

ofgas.†"

Pricesfor

models

shown:2012

Elantra

Limited/2012

Elantra

TouringGLS

Manual/2012

Sonata

Limited/2012

Santa

FeLim

ited3.5

AWD/2012

VeracruzGLS

AWD

is$24,194/$22,144/$31,464/$37,559/$41,759.D

eliveryand

Destination

chargesof

$1,495/$1,495/$1,565/$1,760/$1,760are

included.Registration,insurance,P

PSA

,fees,levies,charges,licensefees

andallapplicable

taxesare

excluded.Delivery

anddestination

chargeincludes

freight,P.D.E.,dealer

admin

feesand

afulltank

ofgas.!

Fuelconsumption

for2012

Elantra

L6-speed

manual(H

WY4.9L/100K

M;C

ity6.8L/100K

M)/2012

Elantra

TouringL(HW

Y6.4L/100K

M;C

ity8.9L/100K

M)/2012

Sonata

GL6-S

peed(HW

Y5.7L/100K

M;C

ity8.7L/100K

M)/2012

Santa

FeGL2.4L

6-Speed

ManualFW

D(HW

Y7.7L/100K

M,

City

11.0L/100KM)/2012

VeracruzGLFW

D(HW

Y8.5L/100K

M;C

ity12.7L/100K

M)are

basedon

Energuide.A

ctualfuelefficiencymay

varybased

ondriving

conditionsand

theaddition

ofcertainvehicle

accessories.Fueleconomyfigures

areused

forcomparison

purposesonly.‡Purchase

orleaseanew

2012ElantraTouring

L,GL,orG

LSand

youwillbe

entitledto

a$500

factoryto

Dealercredit.Factory

toDealercreditapplies

beforetaxes.◊Purchase

orleaseanew

2012Veracruz

GL,G

LS,orLimited

andyou

willbe

entitledto

$1,500factory

tocustom

ercredit.Factoryto

customercreditapplies

aftertaxes.‡◊Offers

cannotbecom

binedorused

inconjunction

with

anyotheravailable

credits.Offeris

non-transferableand

cannotbeassigned.N

ovehicle

trade-inrequired.Ω

Purchaseorlease

a2012

Elantra/E

lantraTouring/S

onata/Santa

Fe/Veracruzduring

theDouble

Savings

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youwillreceive

aPreferred

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anadaGas

Card

worth

$160(2012

Elantra)/$250

(2012ElantraTouring

andSonata)/$375

(2012Santa

Fe)/$540(2012

Veracruz).Based

onEnerguide

combined

fuelconsumption

ratingforthe

2012Elantra

Manual(5.9L/100km

)/ElantraTouring

Auto

(7.7L/100km)/S

onataAuto

(7.3L/100km)/S

antaFe

2.4LAuto

(9.0L/100km)/Veracruz

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(10.8L/100km)

at15,400km/year[yearly

averagedriving

distance(TransportC

anada’sProvincialLightVehicle

FleetStatistics,2012)],this

isequivalentto

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Elantra)/$0.25

(2012Elantra

Touringand

Sonata)/$0.30

(2012Santa

Fe)/$0.40(2012

Veracruz)perlitresavings

oneach

litreofgas

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atotalof800

Litres(2012

Elantra)/1,000

Litres(2012

Elantra

Touringand

Sonata)/1,250

Litres(2012

Santa

Fe)/1,350Litres

(2012Veracruz).

†"‡◊Ω

Offers

availablefor

alim

itedtim

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without

notice.See

dealerfor

complete

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may

sellforless.Inventory

islim

ited,dealerorder

may

berequired.#

Based

onNaturalR

esourceCanada’s

2012ecoE

nergyaw

ardfor

most

fuelefficientfull-size

car.††2012Elantra

Touringand

2012Veracruz

7year/120,000

kmwarranty

consistsof

5year/100,000km

Com

prehensiveLim

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coverageand

anadditional2

year/20,000kmcoverage

undertheHyundaiProtection

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yundai’sCom

prehensiveLim

itedWarranty

coveragecovers

mostvehicle

components

againstdefectsin

workm

anshipundernorm

aluseand

maintenance

conditions.Additionalcoverage

isin

accordanceto

theterm

sand

conditionsofthe

HyundaiProtection

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leasecontactyourlocaldealerforalldetails.

5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty HyundaiCanada.com

$ 1,500

FACTORY TO

CUSTOMERCREDIT◊

$ 500

FACTORY TO

DEALERCREDIT‡

ON SELECTED MODELSΩ

MONTHS0%84FINANCINGFOR UP TO

RIGHT NOWGET

GLS model shown

Limited model shownSONATAMost fuel-efficient full-size car#

2012

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT

$134†OWN IT

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

0%WITH

DOWNPAYMENT

$0AND

SELLING PRICE: $24,264"SONATA GL 6-SPEED.

DELIVERY & DESTINATIONINCLUDED.

HIGHWAY5.7L/100 KM50MPG!25

SAVE

UNTIL 2013 Ω

Powerful & efficient – the true definition of a cross-overSANTA FE2012

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT

$142†OWN IT

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

0%WITH

DOWNPAYMENT

$0AND

SELLING PRICE: $25,759"SANTA FE GL 2.4 6-SPEED.DELIVERY & DESTINATION

INCLUDED.HIGHWAY7.7L/100 KM37MPG!30

SAVE

UNTIL 2013 Ω

VERACRUZ2012

“It’s a seven-seater, mid-size SUV with serious cargoand people-carrying capacity.” – the Globe and Mail

BI-WEEKLY PAYMENTINCLUDES $1,500FACTORY TO

CUSTOMER CREDIT◊

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

$186† 0%OWN IT WITH

DOWNPAYMENT

$0AND

SELLING PRICE: $33,759"INCLUDES $1,500FACTORY TO

CUSTOMER CREDIT◊VERACRUZ GL FWD.

DELIVERY & DESTINATIONINCLUDED.

HIGHWAY8.5L/100 KM33MPG!40

UNTIL 2013 Ω

SAVE

Limited model shown

Limited model shown

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

$102† 1.9%OWN IT WITH

DOWNPAYMENT

$0AND

SELLING PRICE: $17,344"

ELANTRA L 6-SPEED.DELIVERY & DESTINATION

INCLUDED.

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SAVE

UNTIL 2013 Ω ELANTRASEDAN2012CANADIAN ANDNORTH AMERICAN CAR OF THE YEAR

ELANTRATOURINGSpirit & practicality in perfect balance

2012GLS model shown

SELLING PRICE: $16,794"INCLUDES $500 FACTORY

TO DEALER CREDIT‡ELANTRA TOURING

L 5-SPEED. DELIVERY &DESTINATION INCLUDED.

HIGHWAY6.4L/100 KM44MPG!

BI-WEEKLYPAYMENT INCLUDES

$500 FACTORYTO DEALER CREDIT‡

$93†OWN IT

FINANCING FOR84 MONTHS

0%WITH

DOWNPAYMENT

$0AND

25SAVE

UNTIL 2013 Ω

BONUS

BONUS

Langley Hyundai19459 Langley BypassSurrey, 604-539-8549

D#30331

Page 32: Langley Advance March 8 2012

LangleyAdvanceA32 | Thu r sday, Mar ch 8 , 2012

Jeff Stephenson is respected as one of the industry’sleading residential realtors in your area. He has soldmore homes over the past 40 years than any other realtorin the Fraser Valley. Only Jeff & his team can offer themost extensive marketing program in the businesstoday, and a flexible vendor opportunity program tosave you the most amount of money.

I guarantee results!Please call me anytime for aFREE marketevaluation.

YEAR AFTER YEAR, LANGLEY AND CLOVERDALE’S

TOP SELLING REALTOR**Based on MLS statistics over the past 40 years for the Fraser Valley

Jeff StephensonJeff StephensonA reputation built on results.

Call us today at

Langley/Cloverdale604-534-5070604-596-2606

Please visit my website at:

www.greyfriarsrealty.com

10278479

CONSIDER THE FACTS!#1 Selling Office in the entire Fraser Valley

for the past 15 years**

Our commisions are totally negotiable!

If I sell it myself, my commision is only 2½%of the selling price!

If you, the homeowner, wish to work your own open houses & at the same time you find a buyer,

I do the negotiating and the paperwork, etc., it’s only 1½%commission period! (Minimum $500000)

**Based on MLS statistics 13-25 sales people