TERRACE STANDARD COMMUNITY. The Terrace Standard, Wednesday, September 18, 2002 - BI INSIDE SECTION B COMMUNITY ENNIFER LANG EVENTS B2 638-7283 Exhibit Hall 2002 ————— Fall Fair winners OPEN CLASSES 1, Cut Flowers Most points: Trudy Rafuse 2. Decorative Arrangements Most points: Kathy Tycho Special prize: Kathy Tycha Most points Div. 1 and 2: Kathy Tycho 3, Container Grown Plants Mast points: Mary Jepsen Div. 4. Fruits Most points: Martin Holz- bauer Second most points: Rod Cameron 5, Vegetables Most points: Roxanne Rid- ler Second most points: Lisa Hamer 6. Home Produce (Farm) Mast points: Pat Weissner 6.C Wine Best fruit wine: Pat Weissner Best overall wine: Pat Weissner Most points: James Place 7. Home Preserves Most . points: Kathleen Pedro 7. B Jams and Jelly Most points: Kathleen Pedro Second most points: Jeannette Ewald 9, C Pickles and Relishes Most points:-Patly“Tackes ma Second most points: Jamie | Spyksma and Val Preston 8. Home Baking Breads Most points: Pedro Second most points: Rox- anne Ridler Cakes Kathleen Most points: Barb Pottin- ger Second most points: Val Preston and Roxanne Rid- ler Cookies and Squares Most points: Barg Pottin- ger Second most points: Kath- leen Pedro Pies and Tarts Most points: Barb Pottin- ger Second most points: Ellen Bentham Candy Most points: Tianna Pedro 9. Textiles Crochet Most points: Marie Mail- loux Second most points: Jean Hamer Embroidery Most points: Charlotte Ca- meron Second Most points: Joan Roy Hand Knitting Most points: Lorraine Rid- ler Second most points: Penny Holosko New From Old Mast points: Charlotte Ca- meron Quilting Best quilt: #122 - Kathleen Pedro Sewing Most points: Donna Mail- loux Best garment: Donna Mailloux , 10. Displays Special prize: Penny Ho- losko 11, Arts and Crafts Drawings and Paintings Most points: Kussi Thom- sen Dolls and Toys Most points: Charlatte Ca- “mefoii Holiday Items - Most points: Terry Bed- well Wool Most points: Trudy Rafuse Special Open Most points: Angie McRae and Pauline Hil! Second most points: Twyla Schmidt Woodwork Special prize: Pedro Victor 12. Photography Marybeth Esau and Kath- leen Pedro CHILDREN’S DIVISIONS 13. Horticulture 7 and under Most points: Angela Guer- reira Second most points: Renee Ewald and Miranda Tuininga Ages 8-12 , Most points: Andrea Pedro Second most points: Tian- na Pedro Ages 13-18 Most points: Laura Braam 14, Baking 7 and under Most points: Daniel Pedro Second most points: Julia Pedro Ages 8-12 Mest points: Andrea Pedro Second most points: Laura Haw 15. Conservation and Education 12 and under | Most" points Andrea Pedro Second most points: Sa- mantha Taekema. . Special prizes — Conor Wreggit, Kaylyn Mailloux, Tianna Pedro, Andrea Pedro, Graham Webb. 16. Arts and Crafts 7 and under Most points: Miranda Tui- ninga Second most points: Da- niel Pedro Ages 8-12 Mast points: Kaylyn Mail- loux . Second most points: Eliza- beth Esau Ages 12-18 Most points: Laura Braam Second most points: Casey Braam Drawings and Paintings Most paints: Carmen Dur- and Second most points: Sarah Webb Sewing Most points: Rachael Mul- ler Other special prizes Clanne McKinnon, Breanne Vande Velde, Jessica Smith, Tianna Pedro, Denise Vande Velde, Rachel Haliski Junior Photography Most points: Leanne Voogd Second most points: Cait- lin Preston SALT BLOCK CONTEST 1, Barb Adams 2. Trudy Rafuse 3, Jocelyn Benoit SCARECROW 1. Emily Peters 2. William Place 3. Jessica Williams B.C, ASSOCIATION, OF AGRICULTURE FAIRS AND EXHIBITOR AWARDS Best Sewn Teddy Bear 1. Marcy Butler 2. Rachael Muller Best Bird House 1. Harold Braam 2. Victor Pedro 3, Maria Braam Watch for the livestock results next week, uw Make some noise HERE ARE some of the local women joining to- gether for Friday's Take Back the Night rally. From left: Lili Wale, Liza Haldane, Raye Stens- gaard and Anne Peltier. The evant, organized by the Terrace Women’s Centre, begins as a ga- thering at the art gallery at 7 p.m. Participants then walk unescorted through downtown streets to highlight the issue of women's saftey. This year could be louder than ever -- participants are asked to bring noisemakers and pots and pans. Travelling film fest returns By JENNIFER LANG AN ACCLAIMED Inuit movie shot in Canada’s arctic is one of six movies coming to Terrace this fall as part of a travelling film festival featuring the best of the world’s cinema, _Atanarjuat: .The Fasi Runner — winner of the 2001 Palme D’Or at the - Cannes Film Festival and- six Genies ~ is the kind of movie that demands to be seen on a big screen. Shot on high definition digital video in the high arctic with an [nuit cast and crew, The Fast Runner is set 1,000 years ago, but it documents a way of life that existed until very re- cently. ‘The story brings an an- cient myth to life, as a shaman’s curse, a bitter ti- valry, murder and revenge destroy a tiny community. Prepare for breathtaking imagery. A naked man races across ice floes while fleeing for his life; characters swaddled in seal skins brave the deso- late climate or huddie for warmth and community in- side an igloo illuminated by the flickering light of an oil flame. It’s one of two Cana- dian movies included in this year’s Pacific Cine- matheque’s Travelling Picture Show, a film festi- val that introduces smali town movie buffs to films they simply wouldn't otherwise hear about -- or COLD FEET? Actor Natar Ungalaag stars as Atanarjuat in The Fast Runner, ona of six movies coming to Terrace this fall. get a chance to see on a big screen. The festival opens Monday night with Soft Shell Man (Un Crabe Dans Le Tete), Quebec-writer- director Andre Turpin’s surprising and strange co- ‘medy about what happens when a love-em-and- leave’em photographer loses his memory after a deep sea diving accident. with English subtitles but there is also some English dialogue. As in previous years, the Travelling Picture Show is sponsored locally by the Terrace and District Multicultural Association. The movies will be shown every other Monday at the Tillicum Twin Theatres at 7:15 p.m. Next up on Oct. 8 is /ta- The Fast Runner, the fourth film in the series, will be shown Nov. 4. David La Haye slars as a professional scuba diver/photographer wha finds his cayalier actions in love have conse- quences. The film is in French lian For Beginners, a 2000 Danish film directed by. Lone Sherfig, who became the first female director to film a mavie according to Dogma 95 principles. - Expect hand-held ca- meras, and ambient light and music as the film- maker sheds artificial techniques in attempt to draw her audience closer to the characters on screen. Mexican Director Al- fonso Cuaron’s And Your Mother Too, a road trip movie about two Mexico City teenagers, shows on Oct. 21. Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner, the fourth film in -the series, will be shown Nov. 4, followed by Jean- Luc Godard’s innovative 2001 film, fn Praise of Lave, on Nov, 18 The festival concludes Dec. 2 with a Swedish film, Together, a comedy that looks at life in com- mune set in 1975. Gardeners thanked for efforts Dozens recognized for doing their part to beautify the town WHETHER they simply mowed the grass to keep their boulevards tidy or went to the trouble of planting showy displays of floral blooms, they each ‘made a difference. _ About 40 local homes and businesses have re- ceived thank-you letters from the Greater Terrace Beautification Society, member Laurie Lindstrom Says. The cards recognize the recipients for contributing. to the beautification socie- ty’s goal of making Ter- race . Faced with fewer socie- _ty members and more work -- than ever. this summer ~. (due. tothe Communities in. Bloom’ contest), the ‘ soclety overhauled its an- DICK EUVERMAN'S marigolds are a bright spot on letter carriar Laurie Lindstrom’s postal route. nual garden contest. Instead of judging a list of nominees during a par- ticular week in the sum- mer, the society decided to take note of people and businesses who were put- ting in a consistent effort to beautify. "Many of the pert re- oe porting distinctive yards and businesses were Lind- strom’s colleagues — she’s a letter carrier with Cana- da Post. The towering yellow and orange marigolds lin- ing the driveway to Dick and Florence Euverman’s Horseshoe area home brighten up Lindstrom’s daily walk to their mail- box. Dick Euverman, who gradually replaced his love of fishing with a passion for gardening, says he has been working on his gar- den for the past.15 years, He finds it as exciting as fishing, he says. - At least with gardening he can count on receiving . something in return for his hard work, he. adds,”