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Avoid the clean-up and become the chef

Page 8

To thousands of Canadians, he is the star of the successful Aboriginal Peoples Television Network program Cooking with the Wolfman. When Windspeaker caught up with him recently, the Wolfman was just recovering from an emergency appendectomy before heading out from Toronto to fly to Edmonton to do a show at the famous Rising Star Cafe.

How did he get started in the culinary arts?

Avoid the clean-up and become the chef

Page 8

To thousands of Canadians, he is the star of the successful Aboriginal Peoples Television Network program Cooking with the Wolfman. When Windspeaker caught up with him recently, the Wolfman was just recovering from an emergency appendectomy before heading out from Toronto to fly to Edmonton to do a show at the famous Rising Star Cafe.

How did he get started in the culinary arts?

Avoid the clean-up and become the chef

Page 8

To thousands of Canadians, he is the star of the successful Aboriginal Peoples Television Network program Cooking with the Wolfman. When Windspeaker caught up with him recently, the Wolfman was just recovering from an emergency appendectomy before heading out from Toronto to fly to Edmonton to do a show at the famous Rising Star Cafe.

How did he get started in the culinary arts?

From volunteer to fire chief and still loving it

Page 7

If policing doesn't grab you, perhaps you like things a little hotter. Try your hand at becoming a professional firefighter.

Fire Chief Wayne Snitzler of the Westside Fire and Rescue Department in the town of Westbank in British Columbia's Okanagan region always knew he wanted to be a firefighter. His dad had been for 25 years before him. He virtually grew up in the fire hall, and so at age 19 in July 1979 while going to college, he started his official career as a volunteer firefighter in Surrey, B.C., a suburb of Vancouver.

From volunteer to fire chief and still loving it

Page 7

If policing doesn't grab you, perhaps you like things a little hotter. Try your hand at becoming a professional firefighter.

Fire Chief Wayne Snitzler of the Westside Fire and Rescue Department in the town of Westbank in British Columbia's Okanagan region always knew he wanted to be a firefighter. His dad had been for 25 years before him. He virtually grew up in the fire hall, and so at age 19 in July 1979 while going to college, he started his official career as a volunteer firefighter in Surrey, B.C., a suburb of Vancouver.

From volunteer to fire chief and still loving it

Page 7

If policing doesn't grab you, perhaps you like things a little hotter. Try your hand at becoming a professional firefighter.

Fire Chief Wayne Snitzler of the Westside Fire and Rescue Department in the town of Westbank in British Columbia's Okanagan region always knew he wanted to be a firefighter. His dad had been for 25 years before him. He virtually grew up in the fire hall, and so at age 19 in July 1979 while going to college, he started his official career as a volunteer firefighter in Surrey, B.C., a suburb of Vancouver.

From volunteer to fire chief and still loving it

Page 7

If policing doesn't grab you, perhaps you like things a little hotter. Try your hand at becoming a professional firefighter.

Fire Chief Wayne Snitzler of the Westside Fire and Rescue Department in the town of Westbank in British Columbia's Okanagan region always knew he wanted to be a firefighter. His dad had been for 25 years before him. He virtually grew up in the fire hall, and so at age 19 in July 1979 while going to college, he started his official career as a volunteer firefighter in Surrey, B.C., a suburb of Vancouver.