LIFE OF PI
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Delightful, rousing tale D1
Grey Cup coverage B1
CENTRAL ALBERTA’S DAILY NEWSPAPER
BREAKING NEWS ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM
FRIDAY, NOV. 23, 2012
Banking on Black Friday LOCAL RETAILERS OFFER DEEP DISCOUNTS, PATTERNED AFTER U.S. SALES FRENZY BY HARLEY RICHARDS ADVOCATE BUSINESS EDITOR
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Tip Top Tailors store manager Allan Wilhelm expecting a big day today at his Parkland Mall location.
Black Friday’s shadow is spreading. Recognized in the United States as the unofficial kickoff to the Christmas retail season, the day after American Thanksgiving has become our southern neighbours’ busiest shopping day of the year. Canadian stores have taken note, with many now copying their U.S. counterparts by opening early and offering deep discounts.
Reality TV woos Lacombe, Penhold
Red Deer retailers are no exception. Many were advertising special hours and prices for today, including the Bay in Bower Place Shopping Centre. It was scheduled to open its doors at 7 a.m. “We have probably a dozen tenants that are going to be open somewhere between 7 and 8,� said John Rooke, the mall’s general manager, on Thursday. “I think it’s just one of those things that had a cachet in the States for many years, and it was only a matter of time before it came across the bor-
der here.â€? Rooke said local interest in Black Friday has been led by stores with corporate connections to the U.S. Among these was AĂŠropostale, which Rooke believes was the only tenant in Bower mall to open early postThanksgiving last year. “It was just amazing,â€? said store manager Terri-Jo Martin. “We did just as much on Black Friday as we did on Boxing Day.â€?
Please see BLACK on Page A2
‘I REALLY WANTED MY CHARACTER TO BE INDEPENDENT, SUCCESSFUL AND KIND OF NOT NEED A MAN TO SAVE HER.’ — DR. AMBER WHITFORD, WHOSE ROMANCE NOVEL IS A FINALIST IN A HARLEQUIN CONTEST
BY RANDY FIEDLER ADVOCATE STAFF Reality TV producers will visit Lacombe and Penhold next month to explain a series about residents managing municipal services to save money. Force Four Entertainment staff will be in the Penhold Regional Multiplex gymnasium at 7 p.m. on Dec. 4 and the Lacombe Memorial Centre’s County Room at 7 p.m. on Dec. 5 for town hall meetings. “People get upset in our country about the waste and the way things are managed,� Nicole Lawson, the company’s director of development, said from Vancouver. “And if you had a shot at it, what could you save?�
Please see TV on Page A2
Wildrose MLA sought funds from college boss
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Dr. Amber Whitford of Red Deer is a finalist in the Harlequin Romance writing contest So You Think You Can Write! The obstetrician gynecologist and surgeon set out to create a strong central character, based on her medical background.
Strong, successful – and in love
BY ADVOCATE STAFF
RED DEER SURGEON AND WRITER HOPES SHE HAS THE RIGHT FORMULA TO BE A ROMANCE NOVELIST – AND A HARLEQUIN CONTEST WINNER BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF A nurse falling in love and into the arms of a doctor with a tortured soul and bedroom eyes may be the standard in medical romance novels. But Dr. Amber Whitford wanted more for the heroine of her book, In Defense of the Past. “I really wanted my medical romance
Please see MLA on Page A2
PLEASE
WEATHER
INDEX
Mainly cloudy. High -2. Low -7
Five sections Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A3 Business. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C3,C4 Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A5-A7 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D1-D5 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D4 Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . D1-D3 Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B1-B8
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She even had the perfect name for her lead character — Kate. “Out of my residency program, there was 15 of us and three were named Kate.� Whitford, who is one of the three finalists in the Harlequin and Mills & Boon contest So You Think You Can Write!, didn’t start writing her book to enter it into the contest.
Please see LOVE on Page A2
ALBERTA
TV MAGAZINE INSIDE TODAY
TRUSTEE UNDER FIRE FOR REMARKS ABOUT GAY STUDENTS
ADVOCATE VIEW
An Alberta school trustee is being roundly criticized for suggesting gay students can avoid bullying by being less open about their sexual orientation. A3
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novel to have the female as the physician. I really wanted my character to be independent, successful and kind of not need a man to save her. More a character who chose to have a partner in her life,� said the Red Deer obstetrician gynecologist and surgeon. “I’ve been very fortunate in my life to work and be friends with many fabulous female physicians. It was easy to take everything I loved about them and incorporate them into a heroine.�
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A Wildrose MLA sought campaign donations from the president of Olds College in early January. Rob Anderson, the MLA for Airdrie-Chestermere, invited college president Tom Thompson to attend a fundraising dinner with party leader Danielle Smith and other Wildrose Party candidates in Airdrie in February.
*Limited time discount only available on the MSRP on cash purchase of the following select new and unregistered 2012 gas models remaining in dealership inventory: Jetta / Passat 2.5L / Passat 3.6L / Routan with respective discounts of $3,000/$3,500/$5,000/$6,000. Cash discount varies by model. Golf R excluded. **Limited time lease off er available through Volkswagen Finance, on approved credit, based on a new and unregistered 2013 Jetta 2.0L base model with 5-speed manual transmission. $1,395 freight and PDI included in monthly payment. $0 down payment. $220 security deposit and ďŹ rst monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation: $6,048. 60,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometres. †Base MSRP of a new and unregistered 2012 Jetta 2.0L base model with 5-speed manual transmission is $16,412, including $1,395 freight and PDI, $4/tire recycling levy and $6.25 AMVIC fee. License, insurance, registration, any dealer or other charges, options and applicable taxes are extra. Vehicle may not be exactly as shown. Dealer may sell/lease for less. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. ††Receive up to $500 towards Volkswagen Original accessories, with the lease or purchase of select new and unregistered 2013 models. Off er excludes Beetle, CC, Eos and Touareg. Certain conditions apply. No cash value. Excludes labour and tires. Off ers end November 30, 2012 and are subject to change or cancellation without notice. 2012 Jetta Highline 2.5L and 2012 Passat Highline 2.5L shown. Models shown for illustrative purposes only. Visit vw.ca or your Volkswagen dealer for details. “Volkswagenâ€?, the Volkswagen logo, “Jettaâ€?, “Passatâ€? and “Routanâ€? are registered trademarks of Volkswagen AG. “Volksfestâ€? is a trademark of Volkswagen AG. MotorTrendÂŽ magazine is a registered trademark of Source Interlink Magazines, LLC. Š 2012 Volkswagen Canada.
A2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
HITTING THE TRAILS
David Schermers enjoys an afternoon ski at River Bend Golf and Recreation Area on Thursday afternoon. Skiers in Red Deer can expect early season ski conditions at the site with good coverage on the lower trails along the driving range and Discovery Canyon Area while the perimeter trail and upper trails have some areas that are very thin. Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
STORIES FROM A1
BLACK: ‘Biggest weekend’ That prompted Aéropostale to advance its opening time from 8 a.m. last year to 7 a.m. today. Everything, except cosmetics and fragrances, is marked down 60 per cent; and customers receive a $30 gift for every $100 they spend. At Parkland Mall, Tip Top Tailors also promoted Black Friday last year. Manager Allan Wilhelm admitted he wasn’t expecting much of a response when he put up the signs, but was rewarded with a huge customer turnout. “We found it to be our biggest weekend of the year.” This year, Tip Top is offering a minimum of 30 per cent off on its merchandise, with casual wear marked down 40 per cent and many items being sold on a two-for-one basis. The store was to open at 9 a.m. this morning, a half hour earlier than normal. Wilhelm said he was so busy on Black Friday last year that he didn’t have a chance to see what other stores in Parkland Mall were doing. Krista Dunstan, the mall’s marketing director, doesn’t know if any other retailers marked the date with their own promotions. But a number have jumped aboard the bandwagon this year. “It seems like it’s growing in momentum,” she said, noting the prevalence of Black Friday ads this year. These included promotions by the Gary Moe Auto Group, which was offering special deals at its Mazda, Hyundai and Volkswagen dealerships. Its “Black Friday Blowout” kicked off on Thursday and was scheduled to continue until Saturday. General manager Dean Moe said auto dealers help fuel the Black Friday frenzy in the U.S. “They’re big on it in the States, for sure.” Dunstan believes local retailers are developing an appetite for this new sales initiative and expects their enthusiasm to grow. Rooke agrees. “I think it’s safe to say that it’s not going away and it’s something that we will definitely look at being more involved with next year, from a campaign perspective.” Martin is keen to see Black Friday grow in prominence here — provided it doesn’t get to the extremes that it has at some American stores. “I hope we don’t do the whole midnight opening.” hrichards@reddeeradvocate.com
LOVE: Took friend’s advice Having read romances since she was 16, Whitford imagined she would eventually send it to Harlequin, get rejected and just move on. “My plan was just to print copies at Staples and mail them to my friends,” said the 32-year-old with a laugh. When Whitford started writing last year, she didn’t think it would take too long.
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She was familiar with the elements of the plot. She went with the adage “write what you know” and decided on a medical romance. She said the “alpha male” was easy to create and she took what she liked most about the Harlequin heroes she’s read. But two-thirds of the way through, on the advice of her longtime best friend and fellow romance junky, she did some major editing. “I thought it would be much easier,” Whitford said about the process to pull together her tale. “I had to go through it and cut a whole bunch and restart. She set me back on a better path.” In the end, her novel had pathos and passion. In Defense of the Past, surgeon Kate Spence is being sued for malpractice along with her colleague and former beau. The lawyer hired to defend them is the man who shattered her heart years ago and he’s out to win her back. The top 25 contest finalists were chosen by public online voting and editors added three more to make it 28. The second round of online voting at soyouthinkyoucanwrite.com of the top three finalists ends on Tuesday. The winner will be announced on Nov. 29 and will be offered a series contract and their book will be published in print and as an eBook. Whitford said she’s received plenty of support in the form of votes from labour and delivery nurses. Patients who found out about In Defense of the Past since the media started asking questions have also offered their encouragement. “I have gotten what I call the appropriate amount of teasing from some of my male surgical colleagues. But they have promised me they’ll vote as long as I make my next book about their various specialties.” Whitford moved to Red Deer with her husband Dr. Kyle McKenzie, a pediatrician, in 2011. She said it’s a great small city, easy to get around the community with all the amenities at hand. “Red Deer is half way between Yellowknife and Calgary in my mind. I’m from Yellowknife and my husband is from Calgary. It’s either an hour-and-ahalf drive to get on the plane to go home or it’s an hour-and-a-half drive to his parents.” On the job, Whitford is busy delivering five to eight babies a week at Red Deer Regional Hospital Centre. She said writing a romance was as much fun as reading them. Making time to write meant juggling activities around her medical duties. “My work and my patients come first but doing other activities outside of medicine is what makes you a better doctor because it keeps you more wellrounded and if it keeps you happier, I think you’re better in the office and better in the workplace.” And it has been fun to see people’s reaction to “the adult moments” in her romance novel. “It makes my mother blush.” szielinski@reddeeradvocate.com
TV: ‘Cans of worms’ Producers will explain what they’re after, followed by question and answer sessions.
TONIGHT
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
HIGH -2
LOW -7
HIGH -1
HIGH -8
HIGH -2
Increasing cloudiness.
A mix of sun and cloud.
Cloudy, 40 per cent chance of flurries.
Sunny.
Ponoka, Innisfail, Stettler: Mainly cloudy. High -2, low -7. Nordegg: Clearing. High 1, low -7. Edmonton : Mainly cloudy. High -7, low -9. Banff: Mainly cloudy. High -1, low -4.
LET
NGS! I V A S R O IN F
2012 CHEVY CRUZE LS
Lethbridge: Cloudy. High 5, low -1.
Fort McMurray: Cloudy. High -12, low -16.
E V RO H C N O T KE WHEA
TONIGHT’S HIGHS/LOWS
Calgary: Mainly cloudy. High 4, low -3.
Grande Prairie: Mainly cloudy. High -9, low -17.
“The fundraiser dinner will ensure that we are able to raise the funds necessary to run a successful upcoming campaign in our riding,” reads the letter dated Jan. 18, 2012. The form letter gave options to buy tickets for the event and to make a donation to the Wildrose Airdrie-Chestermere Constituency Association. In Alberta, it is against the law for municipalities, colleges, universities and technical institutions to make any political donations to any political party or expense these related costs for reimbursement. Olds College has followed this in their own administrative policy in place since 2005. In a memo from the college’s vice-president of advancement, Jordan Cleland said: “I don’t think we are obliged to reply as the letter is an unsolicited fundraising overture.”
PI
Numbers are unofficial
Manily cloudy.
REGIONAL OUTLOOK
MLA: Form letter ignored
Pick 3: 361.
WEATHER LOCAL TODAY
“We’re looking for adventurous communities and 20 to 25 adventurous families who are up to this challenge,” said Lawson. He said that what residents save in funding town services, they keep. Although it will have a “light tone and we can’t do anything illegal,” said Lawson, the unnamed show wants to “open up the gamut of cans of worms. Everything is on the table right now.” The series is about “taxes in general” and not “making people look bad.” “We want everybody to walk away feeling better for participating.” Blaine Dushanek of the Lacombe Taxpayers’ Association said the company’s attention is “awesome” whether Lacombe gets featured or not. “It’s how mayor and council are treating the taxpayer. The show coming to town will have a good chance to make people realize the taxpayer has some power.” Lacombe Mayor Steve Christie said previously he opposes the program and the city wouldn’t participate, a position Dushanek called “dictatorial.” “There may be some insights to the council and mayor and administration to find out that some services could be carried out by the public.” Ken McCarthy, who led a fight against Penhold’s 4.75 per cent tax increase with a petition last summer, said the producers coming “is going to be all positive.” “We’ve given quite a shakeup to the town hall and they’re going to have to pay attention. That’s why the TV show wants to do something on us.” The two communities are among a dozen Canadian municipalities to be shortlisted and the first to meet company representatives. The company hasn’t determined when a final decision will be made. Force Four Entertainment made Village on a Diet for CBC, Family Cook Off for Food Network and Million Dollar Neighborhood for the Oprah Winfrey Network. Questions or concerns about the program can be answered by contacting Force Four development producer Tara-Lee Novak by calling 604-669-4424 or by emailing tv@forcefour.com. rfiedler@reddeeradvocate.com
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Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Chaos erupts over Redford’s sister’s activities WILDROSE DEMANDS ANSWERS BY THE CANADIAN PRESS EDMONTON — The Alberta legislature erupted in shouts and insults during question period Thursday after the Wildrose party demanded action on allegations Premier Alison Redford’s sister broke election financing laws and may have assisted in health-care queue jumping. “All people should be responsible for their crimes!” Wildrose critic Shayne Saskiw told the house, bringing shouts from the Progressive Conservatives and accusations the crime remark broke the rules of debate decorum. It was the culmination of what has been a month of rancorous back and forth accusations and insults in the chamber between the Tories and their opponents.
Speaker Gene Zwozdesky said he’d had enough. “Unbelievable! Unbelievable!” said Zwozdesky. “Better decorum is expected not only from each one of you, but it’s expected by the constituents you represent. “Questions below the belt or accusations against members who haven’t had the chance to explain themselves in this house or elsewhere or in the courts are totally inappropriate.” Premier Redford was not in the house at the time. Zwozdesky’s rebuke came after Saskiw and Wildrose Leader Danielle Smith continued their attack on the controversy surrounding Lynn Redford. On Monday, the Wildrose released documents acquired under freedom of information legislation that showed Lynn Redford had taxpayers reimburse her for $3,400 in expense claims to attend and host functions for Redford’s PC party.
The money went to travel, accommodation, flowers, liquor, and even bug spray for a barbecue. She also billed taxpayers for $141 to sign up and attend an Alberta Liberal party general meeting. The expenses date back to 2005 and end in 2008 — the same year Alison Redford won a seat in the legislature and was appointed justice minister. On Tuesday, the Wildrose provided information from legislature debates and health documents they say show Lynn Redford may have been one of the government’s designated “go-to” persons to get politicians and other VIPs preferential health care ahead of others in line. Lynn Redford has declined to speak to reporters. Retired judge John Vertes has already been tasked by the premier to look into the queue-jumping allegations, and begins his hearings in Edmonton on Dec. 2. The Wildrose has urged
Vertes to call Lynn Redford as a witness. But Saskiw told the house Thursday the problem may go deeper. “Given that the premier’s sister was referred to as the go-to fixer for politicians dealing with wait-time inquiries — partially because of her ‘good genes,’ will this government tell us when the premier or her staff personally became aware of any incidents of political fixing and queue-jumping? Or will they continue to hide and protect the government family?” Deputy premier Thomas Lukaszuk said there will be no preferential treatment for Lynn Redford or for anyone else. “It is rather unfortunate that we’ve stooped to this level in this chamber, where we actually point out relationships of individuals and to insinuate that in any way that is going to be of assistance to that person,” Lukaszuk added.
“I think Albertans in general find that somewhat offensive.” Lynn Redford continues to work as a vice-president in charge of special projects for Alberta Health Services, or AHS, which runs the day-today operations of the system. The spending and queuejumping questions revolve around the time she worked as an executive for the nowdefunct Calgary Health region. That region and all other regions were collapsed into the one AHS superboard in 2009. Premier Redford declined Wednesday to comment on her sister’s case, but said it will be handled as necessary by the independent chief electoral officer and the coming Vertes inquiry. Redford also criticized Smith for writing a letter to Vertes to get Lynn Redford called as a witness, saying that the letter tramples on the independence of the inquiry.
Trustee apologizes for suggesting gay students ‘be less open’ BY THE CANADIAN PRESS EDMONTON — An Alberta school trustee is being roundly criticized for suggesting gay students can avoid bullying by being less open about their sexual orientation. Dale Schaffrick, trustee for the Pembina Hills school division northwest of Edmonton, made the comment during a policy debate at the fall meeting of the Alberta School Boards Association earlier this week. Schaffrick, a farmer from Barrhead, refused Thursday to explain his position and simply said he’s sorry for the words he used. “They were inappropriate and offensive and I apologize for that.” Reaction has been swift and fierce on the Internet. One man named Alex posted a message on Twitter: “actlessgay how about actlessredneck.” Another chimed in with “Dear Dale Schaffrick, can you please ‘act less bigoted?’ Or better yet, just resign.” Even Alberta Education Minister Jeff Johnson fired off some tweets. “As a parent I would never ask my child to hide who they are,” he wrote. “Education Act is clear — all kids deserve a safe welcoming place to go to school no matter what they wear or how visible they are.”
Later, talking with reporters, Johnson said all trustees in the province are expected to do everything they can to protect children. He wouldn’t say whether he thinks Schaffrick should resign. Schaffrick said he has received some “unpleasant” phone calls, but wouldn’t elaborate on the backlash. Jacquie Hansen, president of the Alberta School Boards Association, said she’s disappointed by Schaffrick’s remark but it’s sad to see him being hounded for it. She said Schaffrick made the comment Monday while trustees debated a proposal that called for all schools in the province to protect gay students and staff from discrimination. The motion came from Edmonton Public Schools, which approved such a policy last year. After about 45-minutes of “passionate” discussion, members voted to shut down the debate, Hansen said. Some 62 per cent of trustees then voted to reject the proposal. She said the majority of trustees didn’t want a policy that protects only gay students from discrimination. “The feeling in the room was we’d rather have a policy for all kids and that bullying shouldn’t be tolerated no matter who you are or what you have to deal with in your world.” She said trustees voted earlier in the day to ac-
cept another motion that promotes “equality of opportunity, dignity and respect” for all. “Unfortunately, this is being seen as anti-gay and that’s not what this is about,” Hansen said. “This is about policy and this is how to best protect our kids.”
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WISE BUYERS READ THE LEGAL COPY: Vehicles may be shown with optional features. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offers. Offers may be cancelled at any time without notice. Dealer order or transfer may be required as inventory may vary by dealer. See your Lincoln Dealer for complete details or call the Lincoln Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-387-9333. ††Lease a new 2013 Lincoln MKX AWD and get 0.99% annual percentage rate (APR) financing for up to 48 months on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest APR payment. Lease a vehicle with a value of $49,350 at 0.99% APR for up to 48 months with $8,239 down or equivalent trade in, monthly payment is $448, total lease obligation is $29,743 and optional buyout is $19,247. Offer includes Manufacturer Rebate of $1,500. Manufacturer Rebates can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford of Canada at either the time of factory order or delivery, but not both. Manufacturer Rebates are not combinable with any fleet consumer incentives. Offer includes freight and air tax of $1,700, but excludes variable charges of license, fuel fill charge, insurance, dealer PDI (if applicable), registration, PPSA, administration fees and charges, any environmental charges or fees, and all applicable taxes. Taxes payable on full amount of lease financing price after any price adjustment is deducted. Additional payments required for PPSA, registration, security deposit, NSF fees (where applicable), excess wear and tear, and late fees. Some conditions and mileage restrictions of 80,000km over 48 months apply. A charge of 16 cents per km over mileage restrictions applies, plus applicable taxes. 1Between November 1, 2012 and November 31, 2012, Security Deposit payment is waived on a lease of a new Lincoln model (Red Carpet leases, on approved credit from Ford Credit). Security Deposit may be required by Ford Credit based on customer credit terms and conditions. ‡‡Offer only valid from November 1, 2012 and November 31, 2012 (the “Offer Period”) to resident Canadians with a Costco membership on or before October 31, 2012. Use this $1,000CDN Costco member offer towards the purchase or lease of a new 2012/2013 Lincoln vehicle (each an “Eligible Vehicle”). The Eligible Vehicle must be delivered and/or factory-ordered from your participating Lincoln dealer within the Offer Period. Offer is only valid at participating dealers, is subject to vehicle availability, and may be cancelled or changed at any time without notice. Only one (1) offer may be applied towards the purchase or lease of one (1) Eligible Vehicle, up to a maximum of two (2) separate Eligible Vehicle sales per Costco Membership Number. Offer is transferable to persons domiciled with an eligible Costco member. This offer can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford Motor Company of Canada at either the time of factory order (if ordered within the Offer Period) or delivery, but not both. Offer is not combinable with any CPA/GPC or Daily Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfit Program or the Commercial Fleet Incentive Program (CFIP). Applicable taxes calculated before $1,000CDN offer is deducted. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offer, see dealer for details or call the Lincoln Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-387-9333. åSpecifications based on information available at the time of production. Comparison models are comparably priced base (gas, non-hybrid) models with over 1000 units sold in Canada, based on June 2012YTD vehicle registrations data for the Medium Premium Utility class by R. L. Polk. *Driver Assist features are supplemental and do not replace the driver’s judgment. †Some mobile phones and some digital media players may not be fully compatible with SYNC® - check www.syncmyride.com for a listing of mobile phones, media players, and features supported. Driving while distracted can result in loss of vehicle control, accident and injury. Certain MyLincoln Touch™ functions require compatible mobile devices. Some functions are not available while driving. Only use mobile phones and other devices, even with voice commands, when it is safe to do so. ©2012 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.
A4
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Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
In search of good ideas We’re looking for a few good ideas, in order to serve you better. Putting together a newspaper is like building a puzzle, day after day — except, of course, that no two people would assemble the various pieces the same way. The trick is to find a way to mesh your composite of the puzzle pieces with those of your audience. At the Advocate, we’re always looking for ways to make a stronger connection with you and your view of the puzzle. After all, newspapers must be, at their heart, community resources to survive. We must reflect the community, serve it and advocate on its behalf. We must also challenge the community to better itself. And we must entertain and invigorate our readers. As a package, it’s a mighty tall order of business, each and every day. Our success depends on our ability
OURVIEW JOHN STEWART to connect with readers, on a variety of levels, and fill your information needs. And if we are really intent on doing our jobs well, we must strive to be a tool to help you live your lives to the fullest. That means we offer you information about events and initiatives in the community. It means we tell you about trends, ideas and projects that will influence how tomorrow will unfold in Central Alberta. We tell you about the people who are important in the community, and why. And the events that similarly enrich our lives. We tell you about the people who diminish the value of our community, and the events in the community that have damaged our lives. You can’t im-
prove or remove the faults without examining them. We also strive to reflect the community back to itself, to examine its strengths and weaknesses, and to advocate, when necessary, to encourage the process of growth and prosperity. And we set out each day to put a smile on your face. The trick, of course, is that every reader is different. You have different needs, priorities, interests and means than your neighbour. And so, walking a fine line, we attempt to offer something for as many people as possible. How else can we reach a broad audience if we’re not as inclusive as resources and imagination allow? But sometimes being inclusive is so much spinning on icy roads: writing stories about subjects of marginal interest, in order to serve a small segment of our readership, in the end simply shuts out a broader group of
readers. So every day, we make tough choices about what we will cover, how we will cover it, and how we will display those items to attract your attention. And, quite honestly, we don’t always get it right: sometimes, the puzzle looks a little askew. So we would like to know what you think of the job we’re doing, and what we could do better. Send me a note on what we do wrong, what we do right, and what we could do differently. With your help, we’ll look for ways to put the puzzle pieces together to provide a little more clarity for your life. Send your emails to jstewart@reddeeradvocate.com, or send a note to: John Stewart, Red Deer Advocate, 2950 Bremner Ave., Red Deer, Alberta, T4R 1M9. John Stewart is the Advocate’s managing editor.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Stephan completely justified in condemning socialism Apparently city Coun. Chris Stephan’s well aimed missive at the leftist leanings of this paper’s editorial team has struck a nerve in the community. Letter writer Mike Falkenberg wonders if Stephan thinks we should mark socialists with a scarlet S and ship them off to re-education camps. Well, outstanding idea that it is, I’m afraid that would be taking a page out of the playbook of the socialist team, Mr. Falkenberg. In his haste to castigate Coun. Stephan for his fair criticism of the fallacy of arguing for ever more expansion of government, simply so they can have even more money to do even more things wrong than they already screw up, Mr. Falkenberg manages to unmask the socialist tendency towards ignorance of history. Firstly, Falkenberg seems to make the assertion that, historically, conservatives have had a routine hankering to round up political opponents and send them off to “re-education camps.” Sorry to burst yer little bubble, there Mike, but it was the Soviets, the Nazis, and the Communist Chinese — all socialists — who liked to pack their dissidents off to the camps. One hundred and fifty million of them. That’s not the kind of trick limited governments like Coun. Stephan and I believe in can pull off. And, just so you know, there’s a guy named Castro who still has jails full of people who have committed the heinous crime of being “anti-revolutionary.” I hear his island is a great vacation spot. You should go there and check it out. Falkenberg also asserts that capitalism caused the Great Depression, as well as the recent recession that still grips the U.S. and will likely cause further economic collapse in Europe. Wrong again, Mike! While the stock market crash of 1929 was a direct result of a capitalist free market, the Great Depression was the product of intense meddling in the economy by the Roosevelt administration. Virtually all historians agree that the Depression was extended by several years due to Roosevelt’s imposition of federal government influence into myriad sectors of the economy, resulting in reduced employment, savings, and re-investment. In the same vein, the most significant cause of the recent recession was the Clinton administration’s strong-arming of the banks via the Community Reinvestment Act. This single piece of legislation outweighs all other factors combined in bringing on the financial woes of 2008 onward. But, the election of the socialist Barack Obama has led to a repeat of the Roosevelt financial fiasco. Since taking office, the Obama administration has saddled the American people and economy with 68 pages of new federal regulations per day, with no sign of abatement. Think that helps create taxpaying jobs? Think there’s more than a dozen mating pairs of Bigfoot in Clearwater County? There’s a reason we get fed up with those who advocate more and more government, Mike. Mostly, it’s our money you want us to invest, and in things we often really don’t want. Worse, we end up paying far too much for ideas that don’t work, and when they don’t work, nobody but us lowly taxpayers are the ones shouldering the burden of failure. Yeah, I’m all for shipping socialists off to countries that have embraced socialism more than we. Shoot, I’ll pay half the airfare. I figure it’s way cheaper than having those folks around here. Bill Greenwood Red Deer
CENTRAL ALBERTA’S DAILY NEWSPAPER Published at 2950 Bremner Avenue, Red Deer, Alberta, T4R 1M9 by The Red Deer Advocate Ltd. Canadian Publications Agreement #336602 Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation Fred Gorman Publisher John Stewart Managing editor Richard Smalley Advertising director
Never let teachers strike BY MICHAEL ZWAAGSTRA SPECIAL TO THE ADVOCATE Question: Who is most negatively affected by teacher strikes? Answer: Students. Logical conclusion: Teacher strikes should not be permitted. It really is that simple. If student achievement is the top priority of our public education system, teacher strikes should never happen. No one can seriously argue that students benefit when teachers withdraw their services. Sadly, students often are punished in these labour disputes that have nothing to do with them. The current dispute between the Ontario government and teachers’ unions in that province is a case in point. Earlier this year, the McGuinty government introduced Bill 115, which froze teacher salaries and rolled back sick leave benefits. Unsurprisingly, teachers’ unions expressed dismay at this erosion of their collective bargaining rights. The Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation (OSSTF) recently ordered its members to withdraw from extracurricular duties and refuse supervision duties outside their classrooms. Since Bill 115 was passed into law several months ago, it is highly unlikely these actions are going to make the government change course. Thus, not only are service withdrawals harmful to students, they are futile. Along with damaging the professional reputation of teachers, withdrawing from extracurricular activities serves only to embolden the government to undertake more draconian restrictions of collective bargaining rights. To be clear, the McGuinty government isn’t exactly faultless in this matter. In fact, for the first nine year of its mandate the government did ev-
Scott Williamson Pre-press supervisor Mechelle Stewart Business manager Main switchboard 403-343-2400 Delivery/Circulation 403-314-4300 News News tips 403-314-4333 Sports line 403-343-2244 News fax 403-341-6560 E-mail: editorial@reddeeradvocate.com John Stewart, managing editor 403-314-4328 Carolyn Martindale, City editor 403-314-4326 Greg Meachem, Sports editor 403-314-4363 Harley Richards, Business editor
erything it could to favour teachers’ unions. Generous pay increases, improvements to benefits, and class size restrictions were only some of the policies that pleased union leaders. At first, it looked like a new era of labour peace had dawned on Ontario. However, a massive $15-billion deficit brought the provincial government to reality. In an effort to reign in its ballooning debt, the government commissioned economist Don Drummond to evaluate its spending practices and to recommend changes. Among other things, Drummond encouraged the government to cancel costly initiatives such as full day kindergarten and class size restrictions. Interestingly, Drummond recommended against salary caps since they were not a long-term solution for out-of-control spending practices. Instead of following Drummond’s advice, the government left full-day kindergarten and class size caps in place and went after the salaries and benefits of teachers. Teachers’ unions were understandably furious with the McGuinty government for seeking to roll back their previously negotiated pay increases. Unsurprisingly, the decade-long love affair between teachers’ unions and the McGuinty government quickly came to a crashing halt. Both the McGuinty government and the teachers’ unions can share the blame for the labour strife now engulfing Ontario’s public education system. The government created the problem by capitulating to the economic demands of teachers’ unions for almost a decade and then unilaterally rolling them back. The teachers’ unions’ escalation of the problem with threats of strike action and withdrawal from extracurricular activities has caught students in the middle of a political squabble. They lose
403-314-4337 Website: www.reddeeradvocate.com Advertising Main number: 403-314-4343 Fax: 403-342-4051 E-mail: advertising@reddeeradvocate.com Classified ads: 403-309-3300 Classified e-mail: classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com Alberta Press Council member The Red Deer Advocate is a sponsoring member of the Alberta Press Council, an independent body that promotes and protects the established freedoms of the press and advocates freedom of information. The Alberta Press Council upholds
valuable teaching time and miss out on typically enriching extracurricular activities. There’s a simple way to protect students from labour disputes between government and teachers’ unions: implement binding arbitration. That’s how teacher labour disputes are settled in Manitoba. Over 50 years ago the Manitoba Teachers’ Society voluntarily gave up the right to strike in exchange for binding arbitration of all unresolved labour issues. When school boards and teachers’ associations cannot agree on a collective agreement, an independent arbitration board makes the final decision. Strikes and other service withdrawals by teachers are not permitted, nor are lockouts by school boards. The result of this approach has been decades of relative peace. Parents in Manitoba do not worry about classes being arbitrarily cancelled or teachers unilaterally withdrawing from extracurricular activities. Furthermore, salaries and benefits of teachers in Manitoba are similar to those of teachers in other provinces. In fact, all Manitoba teachers can look forward to two per cent raises for each of the next two years while the salaries of teachers in many other provinces remain frozen. Removing the right to strike from teachers is in the best interests of all concerned. Instead of worrying about whether there will be school next week, parents can focus on helping their kids with their homework. Teacher strikes are bad for everyone and should be banned. Michael Zwaagstra is a research fellow with the Frontier Centre (fcpp.org), a high school social studies teacher, and co-author of the book What’s Wrong With Our Schools and How We Can Fix Them. This column was supplied by Troy Media (www.troymedia.com).
the public’s right to full, fair and accurate news reporting by considering complaints, within 60 days of publication, regarding the publication of news and the accuracy of facts used to support opinion. The council is comprised of public members and representatives of member newspapers. The Alberta Press Council’s address: PO Box 2576, Medicine Hat, AB, T1A 8G8. Phone 403-580-4104. Email: abpress@telus.net. Website: www.albertapresscouncil.ca. Publisher’s notice The Publisher reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy; to omit or discontinue any advertisement. The advertiser agrees that the Publisher shall not be
liable for damages arising out of error in advertisements beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by that portion of the advertisement in which the error occurs. Circulation Circulation 403-314-4300 Single copy prices (Monday to Thursday, and Saturday): $1.05 (GST included). Single copy (Friday): $1.31 (GST included). Home delivery (one month auto renew): $14.50 (GST included). Six months: $88 (GST included). One year: $165 (GST included). Prices outside of Red Deer may vary. For further information, please call 403314-4300.
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Senate kills proposed legislation on controversial MS treatment BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — The Conservatives have used their Senate majority to kill legislation that would have authorized a national strategy to deal with a controversial therapy for multiple sclerosis. Liberal senators say it’s shameful that Bill S-204 was squelched in committee. “This bill is dead, the Conservatives killed it,� said Sen. Jim Munson. “Before we even got to clause by clause in this bill, the Conservative senators shut down the debate. They refused to allow a bill to go to clause by clause and thus go in to the Senate to become law.� The Liberals said their Conservative opponents even refused to allow MS patients to testify about the effects of treatment for what is known as chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency or CCSVI. “They don’t want to hear from MS patients, to have them as witnesses before the committee,� said Sen. Jane Cordy, sponsor of
the bill. “This is shameful.� The Conservative senators argued this is a matter for science and medicine, not Parliament. “Since Day 1, the Conservative have played politics with MS patients,� Cordy said. “The Conservative senators on that committee threw the science away and have used politics, politics, politics.� Cordy says as many as 75,000 Canadians suffer from MS. The government has promised clinical trials of the therapy and a national register of patients, although neither the trials nor the registry have started. The bill would have required a national strategy and formal trials of what is known as liberation therapy. The treatment is based on a hypothesis from Italian vascular surgeon Dr. Paolo Zamboni, who theorizes that a narrowing of veins that drain blood from the brain may be linked to MS. Liberation therapy involves opening up blocked neck veins. The treatment is not offered in
Canada and some patients have travelled around the world to seek it out. Saskatchewan has budgeted $2.2 million to have 86 Saskatchewan patients take part in an American trial. The treatment has caused controversy. Some patients say their symptoms have been alleviated by the therapy. Some scientists, however, say they can’t find a link between MS and narrowed veins. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a warning about liberation therapy in May. It cautioned health-care professionals and patients that injuries and deaths have been associated with the experimental procedure. “Because there is no reliable evidence from controlled clinical trials that this procedure is effective in treating MS, FDA encourages rigorously conducted, properly targeted research to evaluate the relationship between CCSVI and MS,� William Maisel, a senior scientist with the agency, said in the alert.
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Court to weigh national security certificates in Harkat terror hearing BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will decide just how open the process should be when the federal government wants to deport a suspected terrorist from abroad. The high court agreed Thursday to hear a challenge of the national security certificate system, a rarely used means of removing non-citizens accused of being terrorists or spies. It will also review crucial issues related to evidence in the case of Algerian refugee Mohamed Harkat, arrested 10 years ago next month in Ottawa under a security certificate. The hearing, likely to take place in 2013, will come more than five years after the Conservative government retooled the certificate regime in an effort to make it consistent with the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Supreme Court will rule whether those reforms went far
enough. Harkat, 44, was taken into custody in December 2002 on suspicion of being an al-Qaida sleeper agent. He denies any involvement in terrorist activities. Harkat lives at home with wife Sophie, but wears an electronic tracking bracelet on his ankle, must check in with authorities regularly and cannot leave town without permission. The person named in a security certificate receives only a summary of the case against them — stripped of supporting information — which critics say makes the process wholly unfair. The validity of a certificate must be weighed by a Federal Court judge, who is allowed to see the secret evidence, and Harkat’s case has been tangled in various legal proceedings for almost a decade and counting. In April, the Federal Court of Appeal upheld the constitutionality of the security certificate system, but ruled that summaries of some 1990s conversations be ex-
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cluded from evidence against Harkat because the Canadian Security Intelligence Service destroyed the original recordings. The ruling left both sides unhappy and each asked for a hearing in the Supreme Court — an uncommon turn of events. As usual, the high court gave no reasons Thursday for its decision to hear the appeals. The court will delve into how information from intelligence agencies should be treated in certificate cases and when the general principle of an open court can give way to secret proceedings in the name of national security. “These are major, major issues,� said Norm Boxall, a lawyer for Harkat. “So it probably isn’t a surprise that it’s going to return to the Supreme Court of Canada for interpretation, guidance.� In an interview Thursday, Harkat said he puts “lots of hope and lots of faith� in the judiciary to ultimately declare the certificates incompatible with fundamental guarantees of fairness.
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Canadians shouldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t expect any â&#x20AC;&#x153;risky new spending schemesâ&#x20AC;? or tax increases in the next federal budget, as the Conservatives push ahead with plans to balance the budget by 2015, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said Thursday. Flaherty, speaking to a business audience, said the government plans to get back to a balanced budget â&#x20AC;&#x153;during the current parliamentary term and certainly before the next election.â&#x20AC;? He said the government will not reduce transfers to provinces and territories for education and healthcare, that makes up about one-third of the budget. Nor will the government touch spending to individuals like seniors, people with disabilities and children, another third of the budget, he added. So, Flaherty said, the government is left to focus on the final third of the budget â&#x20AC;&#x201D; program spending. The governmentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s latest deficit projections, released last week, show a deficit of $26 billion â&#x20AC;&#x201D; up $5 billion from the budget forecast last March, due to global economic weakness that has cut into commodity prices and tax revenues. The gloomy numbers prompted Ottawa to delay its hopes of balancing the books until 2016-2017, a year later than previously forecast, however both Flaherty and Prime Minister Stephen Harper have insisted the government can still balance
the budget by 2015. Budget consultations, will begin next week. Flaherty noted that Canada continues to outperform its peers in economic measures like job creation, but said there are still numerous challenges from outside its borders â&#x20AC;&#x201D; the most immediate of which being the U.S. looming â&#x20AC;&#x153;fiscal cliff,â&#x20AC;? a series of tax hikes and spending cuts set to take place in the new year if politicians canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t agree to an alterna-
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Couple becomes Alberta’s latest multi-millionaires BY THE CANADIAN PRESS LETHBRIDGE — A southern Alberta woman “wasn’t really making sense” when she called her husband to tell him they’d won more than $45.6 million in a Lotto 6-49 draw. Duane Thompson of Lethbridge says he wasn’t sure what his wife, Joanne, was trying to say when she called him at work and just kept repeating: “We won the lotto.” She says the number of zeros didn’t register in her brain when she took her Nov. 14 ticket to a self-checker at the Casino Lethbridge where she bought the ticket. But when the lottery clerk scanned the ducat for her, she realized just how big the win actually was. Thompson and her husband, Duane,
say they are stunned and humbled by their good fortune in winning the thirdlargest Lotto 6-49 in history. They plan to retire, look after their family and help out the causes they feel passionate about. One thing they know they won’t do is buy a new house. “We already live in our dream home, so I don’t think we’ll move,” said Joanne Thompson. Now that the shock has begun to wear off a bit, the couple are coming to grips with the reality of their windfall. “It’s a good thing, a blessing, but it’s also a responsibility.” The two largest Lotto 6-49 jackpots — $54.3 million in 2005 and $49.8 million in 2009 — were also purchased in Alberta
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Joanne and Duane Thompson are surrounded by family members as they pose with a giant cheque presented to them Thursday, in Lethbridge, after the couple won a Lotto 6/49 jackpot of over $45 million.
Redford to meet Marois as Alberta deals with pipeline concerns The premier of Alberta has a meeting planned on the touchy subject of interprovincial oil flows — and, this time, the meeting’s with a potentially combative customer in Quebec. Alison Redford has struggled with a pipeline controversy in the West, which has caused interprovincial tensions. Now she’ll discuss one in the East with Pauline Marois, premier of a Parti Quebecois government whose raison d’etre is to remove Quebec from Canada. Marois announced to reporters in Quebec City that she will meet with Redford at the start Thursday of a premiers’ conference in Halifax. She said she wants to know more about the Enbridge pipeline. “We will have an exchange on the details of the project,” Marois said. “The first thing I
have steered her government slightly away from its more activist positions, toward a more market-friendly stance, with a budget this week that shelved a number of her election promises while laying out plans for a balanced budget and debt repayment. Marois is promising to have constructive relations with her counterparts in this, her first interprovincial meeting, since she won the Sept. 4 provincial election. But she will make one thing clear: She’s no Jean Charest. The recently defeated premier, an ardent federalist who once as-
pired to be Canada’s prime minister, created the premiers’ organization that is staging this week’s meeting, called the Council of the Federation. Marois says she will remind her colleagues of
where her priorities lie, while remaining polite. “You know is I’ve always taken a very cordial approach with people I work with. The fundamental difference is I will remind my colleagues that we are a
sovereignist government that will defend Quebec’s interests, tooth and nail,” she said. “That doesn’t preclude having very good relations with the premiers of other provinces.”
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want to be able to do is understand exactly what Alberta would like in this particular case. (And) ask a certain number of questions because obviously, and (provincial Environment Minister Daniel Breton) said it, this could have an impact on our environment. So we have a right to raise some questions.” The plan would reverse the flow of an existing pipeline to bring Canadian oil, to Canadian customers in the eastern half of the country. The project is being reviewed by the National Energy Board. And Quebec’s environment minister, who until recently was a staunch environmental activist, has expressed alarm about the project and said Quebec wants to launch its own review. That minister quickly tempered some of his remarks. Marois appears to
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At least 22 injured after bus, transport truck collide BY THE CANADIAN PRESS KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Single lane traffic finally began moving on the Coquihalla Highway, just south of Kamloops, B.C., shortly after 5 a.m., nearly 11 hours after a major chain reaction crash shut down the northbound lanes of the route.
HIGHWAY CRASH IN B.C. RCMP say the crash occurred just before 6:30 Wednesday night when a tour bus hit a jackknifed transport truck, and another semi-trailer and at least two cars rammed the wreckage.
But witness Guillaume Allard says the incident actually began when the first big rig clipped an SUV, and the semi driver was out of his truck and talking with the other driver when he was hit by the north-
bound bus. Allard says a logging truck then slammed into the back of the bus, carrying that vehicle and the truck driver at least 15 metres down the very slushy and icy highway. Allard believes the truck driver suffered at least a broken leg but RCMP say all
other injuries — including those among the estimated 35 seniors aboard the tour bus — were minor, although B.C. Ambulance reports 22 people were treated at the scene and five have critical injuries. Mounties say further details about the collision are expected to be released later today.
ALBERTA
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New number touted to reduce 911 nuisance calls THE CANADIAN PRESS
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Tougher sentence for funeral home owner LETHBRIDGE — An Appeal Court has toughened the sentence for a southern Alberta funeral home operater who defrauded clients. Ralph Zentner of the Cornerstone Funeral Home in Lethbridge pleaded guilty earlier this year to overcharging for caskets and cremation containers. He was given a conditional discharge and ordered to do community service. The Crown appealed the sentence and the Alberta Court of Appeal has now fined Zentner $5,000. The appeal judges said the original sentence allowed Zentner to break even financially, but the fine imposes some actual punishment. Zentner had his licence taken away by the Alberta Funeral Services Regulatory Board a few months ago and he can’t reapply until March 2014. The Crown dropped eight other charges when Zentner pleaded guilty last January.
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Boy reportedly chokes on blind cord, dies CALGARY — An autopsy is scheduled after a two-year-old boy in Calgary reportedly strangled on a window blind cord. Emergency crews found the toddler was not breathing when they arrived at a residence in the city’s Discovery Ridge neighbourhood around noon Wednesday. Police set up traffic roadblocks to allow an ambulance carrying the child to get to hospital as quickly as possible, but he died soon after arriving The youngster’s name has not been released and officials say they’re still investigating the circumstances surrounding the death. Ryan Collyer, an emergency services spokesman, says the death is tragic and caregivers must ensure that drapery cords don’t become a choking hazard for small children. There have been between 25 and 30 blind cord strangulations in Canada since 1986.
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EDMONTON — Police in Edmonton are promoting a telephone number they hope will cut down on the number of people who call 911 for tips on how to cook a turkey or prepare their taxes. The 377 number is aimed at directing cellphone users to information they’re seeking instead of making nuisance 911 calls that tie up the emergency response system. Const. Michael Rott, who studied the problem in August, says he found about 70 per cent of the incoming 911 calls were misdials or so-called accidental pocket dials. Police say they’re promoting 377 because it was only in the last two months that all cellphone providers agreed to have the number direct callers to a nonemergency line. The number for landline users is 780-423-4567.
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Less Fuel. More Power. Great Value is a comparison between the 2013 and the 2012 Chrysler Canada product lineups. 40 MPG or greater claim (7.0 L/100 km) based on 2012 EnerGuide highway fuel consumption estimates. Government of Canada test methods used. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on powertrain, driving habits and other factors. See dealer for additional EnerGuide details. Wise customers read the fine print: •, *, ♦, ‡ The Wonderful Ride Holiday Event offers are limited time offers which apply to retail deliveries of selected new and unused models purchased from participating dealers on or after November 1, 2012. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Offers subject to change and may be extended without notice. See participating dealers for complete details and conditions. •$17,598 Purchase Price applies to 2013 Chrysler 200 LX (24H) only and includes $3,600 Consumer Cash Discount. Pricing includes freight ($1,500-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees, other dealer charges and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. *Consumer Cash Discounts are offered on select 2012/2013 vehicles which are deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. Amounts vary by vehicle. See your dealer for complete details. ♦Holiday Bonus Cash up to $1,000 is available on most new 2012/2013 models, excluding the following: Chrysler 200 LX, Dodge Caliber, Dart, Grand Caravan CVP, Journey CVP/SE, Avenger, Viper, Jeep Compass Sport 4x2 & 4x4, Patriot Sport 4x2 & 4x4, Wrangler 2 Dr Sport, Grand Cherokee SRT8, Ram 1500 Reg Cab & ST & SXT Trucks, Ram Cab & Chassis, Ram Cargo Van, FIAT 500 Abarth and 2012 FIAT 500 Pop models. Bonus Cash will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. See your retailer for complete details. ‡4.49% purchase financing for up to 96 months available on the new 2013 Chrysler 200 LX (24H) model to qualified customers on approved credit through Royal Bank of Canada and Scotiabank. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. See your dealer for complete details. Example: 2013 Chrysler 200 LX (24H) with a Purchase Price of $17,598 (including applicable Consumer Cash Discount) financed at 4.49% over 96 months with $0 down payment, equals 208 bi-weekly payments of $101 with a cost of borrowing of $3,364 and a total obligation of $20,962. Pricing includes freight ($1,500-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees, other dealer charges and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. §2013 Chrysler 200 Limited shown. Price including applicable Consumer Cash Discount: $34,520. Pricing includes freight ($1,500-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees, other dealer charges and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. ¤Based on 2012 EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide ratings published by Natural Resources Canada. Transport Canada test methods used. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on powertrain, driving habits and other factors. 2013 Chrysler 200 LX – Hwy: 6.7 L/100 km and City: 9.9 L/100 km. ≥Based on 2012 Ward’s Upper Middle Sedan segmentation. TMThe SiriusXM logo is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc. ®Jeep is a registered trademark of Chrysler Group LLC.
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» SEE MORE ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM WHL ◆ B2 SCOREBOARD ◆ B4 Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Greg Meachem, Sports Editor, 403-314-4363 Sports line 403-343-2244 Fax 403-341-6560 sports@reddeeradvocate.com
Owens wins CFL’s top award VERSATILE RECEIVER WINS OUTSTANDING PLAYER AWARD HENRIK LUNDQVIST
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
LUNQVIST PLAYING TO RAISE MONEY
TORONTO — Chad Owens has come full circle. In 2008, Owens was injured and out of football, unsure about his future. On Thursday night, the Toronto Argonauts speedy receiver was named the CFL’s outstanding player. “Four years ago I had no real idea what the CFL was,” said Owens, who accepted the trophy with his nine-year-old son, Chad Jr., who completed his first year of football as a defensive player. “Everything that happened to me prior in my career, it all happened for this moment. “In 2008 did I see this? No. But this off-season did I see this? Yes. You always have to believe you have a chance and I truly did. I’m just so thankful it came true.” Owens, 30, affectionately dubbed The Flyin’ Hawaiian, got the nod over Calgary Stampeders running back Jon Cornish in voting by the Football Reporters of Canada and the eight CFL head coaches. Owens received 41 of the 57 available ballots. The five-foot-eight, 180-pound Owens led the CFL in receiving (94 catches for 1,328 yards and six TDs), return yards (2,510) and all-purpose yards (leaguerecord 3,863). Owens is a big reason why Toronto will make its first Grey Cup appearance since ’04 when it faces Cornish and the Stampeders in the 100th anniversary of the CFL’s title game Sunday at Rogers Centre. After an outstanding career at the University of Hawaii, Owens was drafted in the sixth round of the 2005 NFL draft by
Henrik Lundqvist finally found a game to play. It won’t be under the bright lights of Madison Square Garden or in front of a hostile crowd in Philadelphia. But it will be meaningful and rewarding in a unique way. Like players and fans all across North America and the world, the NY Rangers goalie misses the NHL. His thirst to get back on the ice will be quenched Saturday night as he joins other hockey stars in giving back to people who were ravaged by Hurricane Sandy. Lundqvist will step on the ice in stormdamaged Atlantic City, N.J., in lending a helping hand to those recovering.
Friday
● College volleyball: NAIT at RDC, women at 6 p.m., men to follow. ● Minor soccer: Red Deer City Soccer Association boys U10-U18 tournament, games from 6 to 11 p.m., Collicutt Centre. ● WHL: Lethbridge at Red Deer, 7:30 p.m., Centrium. ● Midget AA hockey: Red Deer Elks at Red Deer Pro Stitch, 7:45 p.m., Arena. ● Chinook senior hockey: Sylvan Lake at Bentley, 8 p.m. ● AJHL: Brooks at Olds, 8 p.m.
Saturday
● Minor soccer: Red Deer City Soccer Association boys U10U18 tournament, games from 8 a.m.to 10:15 p.m., Collicutt Centre. ● Minor midget AAA hockey: Airdrie/Cochrane at Red Deer Northstar, 11:30 a.m., Arena. ● Bantam AA hockey: Foothills at Red Deer Ramada, 12:30 p.m., Kin City A.; Lethbridge at Red Deer Steel Kings, 5:30 p.m., Kin City A; Wheatland at Sylvan Lake, 8:15 p.m. ● Major bantam hockey: Lethbridge at Red Deer White, 2 p.m., Arena. ● Major midget female hockey: Southeast at Red Deer, 4:30 p.m., Kin City B.
GIVE US A CALL The Advocate invites its readers to help cover the sporting news in Central Alberta. We would like to hear from you if you see something worthy of coverage. And we would appreciate hearing from you if you see something inaccurate in our pages. We strive for complete, accurate coverage of Central Alberta and are happy to correct any errors we may commit. Call 403-343-2244 with information and results, or email to sports@ reddeeradvocate.com.
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Toronto Argonauts receiver Chad Owens poses with his son Chad Jr. and the trophy for Most Outstanding Player during the CFL awards show in Toronto Thursday.
Jacksonville. But after bouncing between the Jaguars (twice) and Tampa Bay Buccaneers he signed with the Arena Football League’s Colorado Crush. Owens, a married father of three, ripped up his knee in ’08 with the Crush, then the league folded. He joined the Montreal Alouettes in ’09 but after spending most of the season on the practice roster was dealt to Toronto on June 24, 2010 for a 2011 fourth-round draft pick. Owens took off with the Argos, being named the league’s top specialteams player in 2010 and is the only player in pro football history to surpass 3,000 all-purpose yards in three straight seasons. “This means hard work, perseverance, dedication, passion if you do all those things dreams can come true,” he said. “You can attain your goals no matter how high or unachievable they may seem. “I’ve got plenty of motivation from my family already but I want to go out there and be the best every time I step on to the field. That’s why you play, you don’t play to be second place.” Owens heaped lavish praise upon Cornish. “Jon had a great year, I really appreciate the way you play,” Owens said. “Everyone should look at that as an example of how you play the game. “You definitely represent Canadians, just an awesome job. Cornish said Owens was a deserving winner. “The thing is he came into the league as a returned and they gave him a chance to be a receiver,” Cornish said. “And he has run with it.”
Please see CFL on Page B4
Jets get basted by Patriots at home BRADY THROWS FOR THREE AND RUNS FOR ONE TOUCHDOWN IN U.S. THANKGIVING GAME BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Patriots 49 Jets 19 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Tom Brady and the New England Patriots put this game — and the New York Jets’ ugly season — away early. At least it was competitive for a quarter. By halftime, it was a big-time laugher. Brady threw three touchdown passes and ran for a score as the Patriots thoroughly embarrassed the Jets with a 35-point second quarter in a 49-19 victory Thursday night. After a scoreless opening quarter, the Patriots (8-3) went on a touchdown spree despite holding the ball for only 2:14 as they took advantage of several mistakes by Rex Ryan’s hapless Jets (4-7). Their 35 second-quarter points tied for the fourth-most in a quarter in NFL history. Fans were chanting for Tim Tebow to play before the second quarter of this Thanksgiving showdown was over, and booing as the team left the MetLife Stadium field at halftime. New England, which beat Indianapolis 59-24 on Sunday, scored four touchdowns in just over 6 minutes — including three in a jaw-dropping 52-second span — helping Bill Belichick become the eighth coach in NFL history with 200 career victories, including the playoffs.
Please see NFL on Page B4
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
New England Patriots strong safety Steve Gregory is tackled by New York Jets running back Bilal Powell after intercepting a pass during an NFL football game on Thursday in East Rutherford, N.J.
Ray will lead Argonauts to Grey Cup win The 100th Grey Cup game is a former Eskimo GM Eric Tillman dream scenario for the CFL be- (aka Santa Claus) traded Ray to cause the East Division champi- Toronto shortly before Christon is none other than the Toron- mas of last year. This trade anto Argonauts, a team that has swers every question about why been largely ignored Tillman is a former in Hogtown for many Eskimo GM and it years. The Argos will gave the Argos the be the home team one crucial missing in a packed home ingredient in their stadium that rarely quest for a Grey Cup. sees a full house for Every team needs football, even when a quarterback and the Buffalo Bills play Toronto got a future their annual game at Hall of Famer with Rogers Center. a lot of tread left on This is a weekend his tires. where the Toronto The other quarterArgonauts and the back in the Grey Cup JIM CFL will be front equation is Calgary’s SUTHERLAND page news in a city Kevin Glenn, a veterwhere that is a very an who has enjoyed rare occurrence coma long career in the parable to David Suleague with little zuki supporting an oil pipeline. fanfare and no Grey Cup apThe reason for the Argos’ pearances on his resume. Glenn success can be summed up in was very unlucky in 2007 when two words: Ricky Ray. The Ar- he broke his arm on a late-game gonauts tried to compete with- drive in the Eastern Final and out a legitimate quarterback was unable to start in the Grey for several years and paid the Cup. Most people, including me, price in the win column. Last agree that Glenn would have year they finished seventh in an been a huge factor in the 2007 eight-team league and had little Grey Cup and likely would have hope for the 2012 season until won the game against Saskatch-
OFFSIDE
ewan. Glenn will start at quarterback against Toronto because designated Calgary starter Drew Tate broke a bone in his wrist during the semifinal game against Saskatchewan, so Glenn will get to play in the biggest game of his career because of somebody else’s injury. That is karma baby. Both teams are playing their best football of the entire season as they head into the Grey Cup and that makes this game very difficult to predict for me. Both teams picked up lateseason additions to their front four with veteran defensive end Anwar Stewart returning to Calgary after a long career in Montreal and eccentric interior D-lineman Adriano Belli back in Toronto. Both players have added an x-factor to their respective defences that has fired up their teammates. One of the reasons for Glenn’s success is his offensive coordinator, Dave Dickenson, an extremely talented coach who will match wits with former Calgary defensive coordinator and current Argo coach Chris Jones on Sunday. Dickenson
completely destroyed the vaunted Lion defence with several big play calls last weekend and will attempt to exploit the Argos in the same manner. Jones is also a very good coach, so it will be very interesting to watch the chess game between these two talented coaches. This is a very tough game to call for me. Calgary has been very strong on both sides of the ball while Toronto has found its mojo on offense with the Chads (Owen and Kackert) and better O-line protection for Ricky Ray to work his magic. Kevin Glenn has a quick release and many receiver choices, including a late-season star named Maurice Price. Plus he can hand off the ball to talented tailback Jon Cornish. I stated that this game is very tough to call, but I believe that the oldest North American pro sports franchise still using its original name (Argonauts since 1873) will win the 100th Grey Cup. Call it home-field advantage, an intangible that has not been a big part of Argo football for a very long time. Jim Sutherland is a Red Deer freelance writer
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Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Pair of rookies have bright future BY GREG MEACHEM ADVOCATE SPORTS EDITOR
DAINE TODD
WHERE ARE THEY NOW? Red Deer native Daine Todd broke into the WHL in 2003 as a 16-year-old with the Medicine Hat Tigers and scored two goals and added eight assists in his 30-game rookie season. He played a total of 129 regularseason contests with the Tigers over the next two years — scoring 24 goals and collecting 75 points in the process — but appeared in only five regular-season games in 2006-07 due to injury. However, he was back in gear for the playoffs and scored seven goals and garnered 15 points in 22 playoff games to help the Tigers capture the WHL championship. The five-foot-10, 168pound centre was back in Medicine Hat in 200708 as a 20-year-old and sniped 25 goals and contributed 40 assists. Todd is currently in his fourth season with the University of New Brunswick Reds.
WHO’S HOT
For the Red Deer Rebels and stud rookies Conner Bleackley and Haydn Fleury, it’s not about ‘what have you done for me lately’, but rather ‘what will you do for me down the road.’ The pair of 2011 bantam draft picks represent the future of the Rebels, although both have already contributed while showing plenty of promise during their first full season in the Western Hockey League. “No question, there’s so much potential with both of them. They are two great prospects,” Rebels GM/head coach Brent Sutter said on Thursday at the Centrium, where he put his Haydn Fleury c h a r g e s through a practice session in preparation for tonight’s home game versus the Lethbridge Hurricanes. “They’re both big kids, big strong guys who have skill sets to go with their size. Those are two guys you really want to build your team around. That was all part of the process when we were out looking at younger players to acquire this season . . . was to get players to fit with those two guys in the future.” Bleackley and Fleury, chosen in the first and second rounds, respectively, of last year’s bantam draft, will compete in the 2013 World Under 17 Challenge running Dec. 29 to Jan. 4 in Drummondville and Victoriaville, Que. Both players stood out during summer camps for their respective U17 Challenge squads — Bleackley with Team Pacific (Alberta/B.C.) and Fleury with Team West (Manitoba/Saskatch-
ewan). That both were selected to play in the international tournament was hardly a surprise. “It’s going to be a fun Christmas season, for sure,” said Bleackley, who was with Team Alberta for the 2011 Western Canada U16 Challenge but will be facing international competition for the first time. “I haven’t played against the European competition yet and obviously this is this is a huge event with the chance to play against those teams,” he added. Said Fleury, who this season has scored twice and contributed seven assists in 26 games: “It should be a good experience to play against the top players in Canada and the rest of the world.” Fleury has international experience, having played with a Notre Dame, Sask., midget AAA team during summer and winter tours of Russia and Austria last year. “The teams we faced played with lots of speed and transition. I expect it will be the same in Quebec,” he said. Bleackley, a budding power forward with a heavy shot, has scored four goals and collected 10 points in 26 outings this season. He’s satisfied with his play, which he senses is improving along with the overall performance of the team. “The team has gotten a lot better since the start of the year and I’ve been getting better too,” he said. “We’re starting to roll with Brent behind the bench and I think there’s more of that to come.” The fact Sutter and new associate coach Jeff Truitt have instituted a more offensive game plan over the past week is just fine with Bleackley. “Everybody is just more engaged (offensively), that’s the way we’ve been playing,” he said. “We’ve outscored the opposition 12-2 in the last three games. I think that’s the way we have to play to be successful.” Fleury, a strong skater with
Photo contributed
Rebels 2011 first-round draft pick Conner Bleackley has been a solid power forward for the team this season and is a key piece of the Rebels’ future. the ability to carry the puck, agreed with his teammate. “It’s been really good. He (Sutter) wants to play with lots of speed and he wants the Dmen getting up the ice quick and scoring goals,” said Fleury. “I enjoy getting in on the offence.” Fleury has rarely resembled a rookie this season and in fact has been among the Rebels’ best rearguards on a regular basis. “It’s been good. Playing with (20-year-old Brandon) Underwood has really helped my game. He keeps it simple back there,” said Fleury. “We’re also learning under new coaches. Jesse (former bench boss Wallin) was great and now (Truitt) seems like a really good coach.” For the pair of Red Deer rookies, the opportunity to play in the World U17 Challenge
comes with the bonus of getting into the Hockey Canada development stream. If they continue to progress on schedule, both will be candidates for the Canadian national junior team in two to three years. “They both had outstanding summer camps and they’re among the top players in their age group,” said Sutter. ● Defenceman Kayle Doetzel, who suffered a broken jaw on Oct. 2 at Prince Albert and hasn’t played since, was cleared for contact this week and may be in the Rebels lineup on Saturday when the Moose Jaw Warriors — featuring future Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman Morgan Rielly — will visit the Centrium. Doetzel is listed as day-today. gmeachem@reddeeradvocate. com
Up tempo style has Rebels looking good
THEY SAID IT
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“I was scared in the (Blades’) medical room. I thought I was going to lose my hand. I didn’t think I’d be able to do this (grips left hand) again. My hand was hanging by a thread.” — Saskatoon Blades RW Jesse Astles, who suffered a badlycut wrist when referee Chad Williams fell on him during a fight between Astles and Swift Current Broncos rookie Griffin Mumby.
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Scouting report Rebels vs. Lethbridge Hurricanes Tonight, 7:30 p.m., Centrium The Hurricanes have lost four straight — including both ends of home-and-home with the Calgary Hitmen this week — and are 5-5-0-0 in their last 10 outings. Lethbridge possesses a 13-12-1-1 record and is tied with Red Deer for third spot in the Central Division and fourth place in the Eastern Conference . . . C Russell Maxwell leads all Hurricanes scorers with 14 goals and 25 points. Lethbridge, despite the absence of an actual offensive star, has scoring depth. D Daniel Johnson has 19 points (6-13), C Brady Ramsay has 18 (6-12) and C Jay Merkley (12-4) and RW Jamal Watson (7-9) each have 16. In addition, C Sam Mckechnie has sniped 10 goals . . . G Ty Rimmer has been a workhorse and the backbone of the team, having started 26 of 27 games. He sits 12th in the league with a 2.75 goals-against average and has a .919 save percentage . . . Rookie C Reid Duke has been named to Team Pacific for the 2013 World Under 17 Challenge. Injuries: Lethbridge — LW Graham Hood (upper body, 2-4 weeks), C Michael Sofillas (upper body, indefinite). Red Deer — D Kayle Doetzel (upper body, day-today). Special teams: Lethbridge — Power play 15.5 per cent, 19th overall; penalty kill 78.4 per cent, 13th. Red Deer — Power play 17.9 per cent, 15th overall; penalty kill 85.7 per cent, third.
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Portland Winterhawks C Brendan Leipsic is on fire. The 18-year-old Winnipeg native is riding an 11-game point streak dating back to Oct. 28. He’s potted nine goals and added 17 assists during that span and sits eighth in league scoring with 32 points (12-20) in 20 games.
Rightly or wrongly, Brent Sutter has long tor Gregg Drinnan: “I’m not too sure. Brent been regarded as a coach who prefers to said they were playing younger guys . . . I put defence ahead of offence. likely wouldn’t have played Saturday (in a But here he is, just over a week into his 2-1 victory over the visiting Swift Current second gig as the Red Deer Rebels bench Broncos). boss, directing a team that has adopted a “I was doing my best and I worked hard. rather aggressive style of play. In Red Deer, I did everything “The guys seem to be enjoythey asked. I took on a leadering the up tempo and attack ship role . . . things just didn’t game,” said Sutter, who has work out.” watched his club outscore opInglis was in the Blazers lineponents 12-2 and ring up a 3-0 up on Wednesday as Kamloops record since he replaced Jesse fell victim to the goaltending of Wallin as head coach last week. Regina rookie netminder Teagan “And yet they’ve been very Sachor and dropped a 2-1 overwell taught how to play the detime decision to the visiting Pats. fensive side of the game, no Inglis, 20, insisted he’s excited question about that. They’ve to be part of the Kamloops orbeen a well-coached team on ganization and will certainly be that side of it. given every opportunity to sucGREG “Now they need some conficeed with the Blazers, his fourth MEACHEM dence in regards to wanting the WHL club. puck and being more offensive. “It’s pretty simple — we want It’s a mindset and I’ve said this him to be a good teammate,” before — your best defence is alBlazers general manager Craig ways your best offence, but it works the oth- Bonner told Steve Ewen of the Vancouver er way, too. When you have the puck more Province. you spend less time in your own zone.” Bonner is also hoping that Inglis will To that end, Sutter and new associate at least help replace overage winger Jorcoach Jeff Truitt have instituted a number dan DePape, who recently retired from of attack plays into practice sessions. the game when informed that he needed “No question, we’ve been working on a season-ending shoulder surgery. lot of different drills and different offen“We want him to play the way he plays, sive plays,” said Sutter. hard whistle to whistle,” added Bonner. “We want to be a team that’s going all “We don’t want him to be a distraction. of the time, with pressure on the puck all “We have chatted. We’ve been very clear over the ice. We want to be a pressure-type about what the expectations are here.” team. That’s just the way that myself and ● There’s absolutely nothing special Jeff want us to play. We want to be more up about the Brandon Wheat Kings’ specialty tempo and more of a high energy, exciting teams this season. type of team.” Heading into tonight’s game against the To this point, who can argue with the visiting Prince Albert Raiders, the Wheat plan? The Rebels are winning and looking Kings’ power play is 16th in the league with good while doing so. a success rate of 17.9 per cent, while the “It’s always nice when you win, but you club’s penalty kill is dead last among the 22 have to keep things in perspective, too,” WHL teams at 69.2 per cent. Sutter cautioned. “The reality is we have a “We’ve continued to work on it,” head lot of work to do. But it’s certainly gratifying coach Dwayne Gylywoychuk told Rob Hento see the guys get rewarded for their work derson of the Brandon Sun. ethic over the last three games, for the way “We’re trying some different personnel they played. It’s great for their confidence.” on it and I think it’s just a matter of we’ve ● Charles Inglis seems mystified as to got to outwork the opposition. We’ve got to the reason(s) he was dealt from the Rebels execute our bread-and-butter plays, plays to the Kamloops Blazers earlier this week. that we work at all the time. And we’ve got Asked what happened in Red Deer, he to get some shots and some people to the replied to Kamloops Daily News sports edi- net and sometimes just find the hard-work-
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012 B3
Queens rusty in loss to Griffins BY DANNY RODE ADVOCATE STAFF
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Red Deer College Queen Nikki Connor carries the puck behind her own net with Grant MacEwan player Megan Grbavac following during second period action at the Arena in Red Deer on Thursday.
Kings get win over Trojans, Queens struggle in loss RDC BASKETBALL Kings 85 Trojans 64 CALGARY — The RDC Kings first game as the No. 1 team in the country went about as planned. The Kings controlled play at both ends of the court and pulled out an 85-64 victory over the SAIT Trojans in Alberta Colleges Men’s Basketball League action Thursday. “It was a bit of a scrappy game and they battled hard as they had nothing to lose, but that’s fine as we need games where teams are forcing us to play,” said Kings head coach Clayton Pottinger. “We need to face some adversity, and despite the score it was closer than it looked.” Rob Pierce led the Kings with 20 point and 15 rebounds while Sam Lolik added 17 points and 11 boards and Ashaunti Hogan 17 points. Defensively the Kings were solid. “But they do struggle to score as they don’t have much height, so we put pressure on their perimeter players and took that away from them,” said Pottinger.
Trojans 63 Queens 42 It was a familiar scenario for Queens head coach Mike Woollard. The Queens played a solid first half before turnovers did them in as they dropped a 63-42 decision to the Trojans. “We once again had more turnovers than points,” said Woollard. “There’s really no reason for that. We have to get back to work on our offence and ball movement and getting people open. Hopefully we’ll fix that.” The Queens, who were outshot 75-45, trailed 26-20 at the half before trailing 42-28 after three quarters. “The fourth quarter we started scoring, but we also had to put on a press which gave them some easy baskets,” said Woollard. Carly Hoar led the Queens with 10 points while former Queen Sara Astorga had 14 for the Trojans. RDC hosts SAIT Saturday with the women tipping off at 6 p.m. with the men to follow.
STAMPEDERS MASCOT TORONTO — The CFL and Calgary Stampeders have reached a compromise on Quick Six. The league announced Thursday the Stampeders horse mascot and rider Karyn Drake will be on the sidelines at Rogers Centre on Sunday when Calgary faces the Toronto Argonauts in the 100th Grey Cup. But Quick Six won’t
be able to gallop up and down the sidelines when Calgary scores due to a lack of available space and safety concerns. Drake and Quick Six charges down the sidelines at McMahon Stadium when the Stampeders score a touchdown. The compromise comes after league and Stampeders officials met to discuss concerns the
mascot wouldn’t be allowed to make the trip to Toronto. The Stampeders arrived in Toronto Tuesday to begin preparations for the Grey Cup but Quick Six and Drake remained in Alberta. “But the CFL is happy to announce that one of Canadian football’s fine traditions — Calgary’s touchdown horse will be part of Grey Cup history once again,” the league said in a statement.
Griffins 4 Queens 0 The RDC Queens had a built-in excuse when they hosted the Grant MacEwan Griffins at the Arena Thursday. They were off for two weeks while the Griffins played a pair of exhibition games during their break. But no-one was using the break as an excuse following a dismal effort in a 4-0 loss to the Griffins in Alberta colleges Women’s Hockey League play. “We had a good week of practice and I thought we were ready to go and early on it looked OK as it was back and forth and we dominated at times in the first period,” said Queens head coach Trevor Keeper. “But after the period we talked to the girls about letting them hang around and in the third they started to play with more confidence. “I really believed we’d find our legs after the first period, but it didn’t happen.” The Griffins, who were steady for most of the game, finally got to Queens netminder Camille Trautman in the final 20 minutes. Nicole Loewen broke a scoreless tie three minutes into the period, rifling a shot past Trautman from the right circle, which went in off the post. Megan Grabavec made it 2-0 at 9:22 on a breakaway with Bashaw native Ashley Holt connecting at 13:53 and Kailey Curran at 17:47. “We didn’t see that coming,” said Keeper. “But once they did cash in we started to cheat out of the zone and some girls took too long of a shift and we ended up paying for it.” Queens captain Rachael Hoppins also didn’t the result coming. “It was tough being off for two weeks, but we had good practices and I thought we were ready, but after a
solid start we went downhill. I think they got in our heads a bit and then we sat back. I know we’re way better than they are, but . . .” The Queens were playing without two of their top rearguards in Carlee Ness (back) and Natasha Stebner, who took one shift before leaving with the ‘flu. “It’s big missing those two, and we had to move a forward back, but no excuse they have to fill in and we have smart enough players that they can adapt to any position,” said Keeper. Still Nikki Leonard, who played defence in midget, has been up front this season. “Those are two solid defencemen to be missing, but we should be able to do it,” said Hoppins, who also didn’t like what she saw from the offence. “Our shots just weren’t quality shots,” she said. “She (Morgan Glover) made two or there big saves, but overall we had a lot of flimsy shots at her.” “We didn’t focus enough to bury some of our shots,” said Keeper. The Griffins came into the game last in the league with a 1-5-0 record with RDC first at 5-1-0. The Queens only loss was to NAIT at home. They turned around and beat NAIT 9-3 in Edmonton the following day. Hoppins believes they can forget about Thursday’s performance when they face the Griffins in Edmonton tonight. “That first loss was a learning experience, as it wasn’t a good game at all, and we all knew it. “We forgot about it right away and went back at them. We have to do the same here.” The Queens finished with 26 shots on Glover while Trautman faced 25. RDC’s next home action is next Thursday against NAIT. drode@reddeeradvocate.com
BANTAM AA HOCKEY The Red Deer bantam AA hockey Ramada Chiefs opened an invitational tournament in Denver Thursday with a 1-0 win over Boulder,
Colo. Bronson Spearing notched the Ramada goal, with Justin Travis earning the shutout against Boulder, the
three-time national AA champions and heavy favourites to take top honours in the tournament.
MENS BASKETBALL Rob Swainson dropped in 13 points and Chad Aitkins added 12 as Bulldog Metal downed the Sylvan Storm 57-49 in Central Alberta Senior Men’s Bas-
ketball Association play. Cyler Peters had 16 points and Patrick McElliott nine for the Storm.
Cougars start well at girls’ volleyball provincials HIGH SCHOOL The Notre Dame Cougars got off to a solid start at the provincial 4A girls’ volleyball championships at Chinook High in Lethbridge Thursday. The Cougars, who are ranked fifth and in the B Pool, beat Grande Prairie 25-20, 25-19 and Jasper Place 23-25, 27-25, 15-7. Meanwhile on the boys’ side, the Hunting Hills Lightning, who are ranked fourth and in the A Pool, lost 25-20, 21-25, 8-15 to top-ranked Harry Ainlay of Edmonton and 20-25, 23-25 to secondranked Chinook. ● The host Rimbey Spartans dropped both matches during the opening day of 2A girls’ action. The Spartans lost 2125, 9-25 to Peace River
and 9-25, 12-25 to Vauxhall. Meanwhile, St. Dominic of Rocky Mountain House defeated Christ the King of Leduc 25-20, 20-25, 15-6 and lost 20-25, 15-25 to Spirit River. Three Hills lost twice —18-25, 25-20, 11-15 to Christ the King and 1525, 20-25 to Magrath. S t r a t h c o n a Tweedsmuir downed Vauxhall 2-1 and Mayerthorpe 2-0 while Spirit River defeated Vegreville 2-0. Vegreville downed Magrath 2-0 and Mayerthorpe stopped Bearspaw 2-1. ● In 2A boys’ play in Kitscoty, the Central Alberta Christian High School Knights split their opening two matches, losing 25-23, 25-
27, 13-15 to J.H. Picard of Edmonton and beating LaCrete 25-16, 25-22. ● Both Central Alberta teams won their only match in 3A girls action in Camrose. The Lacombe Rams downed Holy Rosary of Lloydminster 25-14, 25-14 and Camrose stopped St. Paul 25-15, 25-15. Play continues in all levels today and finishes Saturday.
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Red Deer Minor Baseball Association w w w. re d d e e r m i n o r b a s e b a l l . c o m RDMBA would like to acknowledge the sponsors who made the 2012 baseball season possible for about 300 players. The contributions of coaches, umpires, parents, dedicated volunteers and of course, the sponsors, are sincerely appreciated and we look forward to working with you again next year. RDMBA encourages parents to become involved in our organization. You can reach us by email at info@reddeerminorbaseball.com or phone 403.346.5075. A great way to start would be to attend the upcoming AGM. Everyone is welcome and encouraged to attend.
Thank You
RDMBA 2012 Rep Division Sponsors
Pro Collision CARSTAR Servus Credit Union Red Deer Sportsworld
Boston Pizza Dairy Queen North Star
Dick’s Auto & Truck Repair Gord’s First Line Sports Sportsworld
Friday, Nov. 23 7:30 pm
Monday, December 10 @ 7:15 pm
2013 COACH APPLICATIONS (Rep Division)
Due January 15, 2013 Application forms can be found on the website.
RDMBA 2012 Rec Division Sponsors Sutter Fund Grand Central Stitchin’ Red Deer Lock & Safe Play It Again Sports Copies Now Marshall Construction
D&M Alignment Red Deer Overdoor Red Deer Advocate Bettenson’s Sand & Gravel Ace Truck Rentals Alberta Industrial Metals
Red Deer Rebels vs Moose Jaw Warriors
National Transmission A&W Village Mall Triple A Electric Tommy Guns The Next Shift Hockey Camp
Saturday, Nov. 24 7:30 pm Enmax Centrium Tickets at ticketmaster 42095K23
Kinex Arena (Upstairs Mtg Rm) Everyone welcome to attend.
1.855.985.5000
42050K20-23
ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
Red Deer Rebels vs Lethbridge Hurricanes
B4
SCOREBOARD
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Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
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WHL EASTERN CONFERENCE East Division GP W LOTLSOL GF Prince Albert 25 16 7 0 2 78 Regina 26 11 12 1 2 72 Brandon 24 10 11 2 1 75 Swift Current 26 9 12 3 2 71 Moose Jaw 24 8 10 3 3 64 Saskatoon 22 10 11 0 1 66
GA 72 82 94 74 78 80
Pt 34 25 23 23 22 21
Central Division GP W LOTLSOL Calgary 24 16 5 1 2 Edmonton 23 14 5 2 2 Lethbridge 27 13 12 1 1 Red Deer 26 13 11 1 1 Medicine Hat 26 11 14 1 0 Kootenay 21 7 13 1 0
GA 70 57 79 78 88 72
Pt 35 32 28 28 23 15
GF 78 77 83 69 89 55
WESTERN CONFERENCE B.C. Division GP W LOTLSOL GF GA Kamloops 26 19 5 1 1 101 66 Kelowna 22 12 8 1 1 81 56 Victoria 23 12 11 0 0 67 77 Prince George 23 8 11 1 3 64 87 Vancouver 23 7 16 0 0 68 100
U.S. Division GP W LOTLSOL GF GA Pt Portland 23 18 4 1 0 104 49 37 Tri-City 24 15 7 1 1 75 60 32 Spokane 23 16 7 0 0 88 64 32 Seattle 23 11 11 1 0 74 85 23 Everett 26 9 15 0 2 62 93 20 Note: Two points for a team winning in overtime or shootout; the team losing in overtime or shootout receives one which is registered in the OTL or SOL columns. Tuesday’s results Edmonton 2 Swift Current 1 Calgary 3 Lethbridge 2 Red Deer 4 Medicine Hat 0 Prince George 4 Regina 3 (SO) Victoria 5 Saskatoon 2
Friday’s games Kootenay at Portland, 4 p.m. Prince Albert at Brandon, 6:30 p.m. Medicine Hat at Calgary, 7 p.m. Moose Jaw at Edmonton, 7 p.m. Saskatoon at Kamloops, 8 p.m. Regina at Kelowna, 8:05 p.m. Lethbridge at Red Deer, 7:30 p.m. Spokane at Tri-City, 8:05 p.m. Prince George at Victoria, 8:05 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 24 Medicine Hat at Edmonton, 7 p.m. Kootenay at Everett, 8:05 p.m. Vancouver at Kamloops, 8 p.m. Saskatoon at Kelowna, 8:05 p.m. Brandon at Prince Albert, 7 p.m. Moose Jaw at Red Deer, 7:30 p.m. Portland at Seattle, 8:05 p.m. Tri-City at Spokane, 8:05 p.m. Prince George at Victoria, 8:05 p.m.
Wednesday’s results Calgary 3 Lethbridge 2 Regina 2 Kamloops 1 (OT) Prince Albert 3 Moose Jaw 2 Portland 3 Vancouver 0 Seattle 7 Kootenay 4 Spokane 3 Everett 1
Pt 40 26 24 20 14
Thursday’s games No Games Scheduled.
Sunday, Nov. 25 Kelowna at Everett, 6:05 p.m.
Football Pct .909 .600 .400 .100
PF 327 210 219 164
PA 211 260 311 289
St. Louis
Sunday’s Games Denver at Kansas City, 11 a.m. Minnesota at Chicago, 11 a.m. Oakland at Cincinnati, 11 a.m. Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 11 a.m. Buffalo at Indianapolis, 11 a.m. Tennessee at Jacksonville, 11 a.m. Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 11 a.m. Seattle at Miami, 11 a.m. Baltimore at San Diego, 2:05 p.m. St. Louis at Arizona, 2:25 p.m. San Francisco at New Orleans, 2:25 p.m. Green Bay at N.Y. Giants, 6:20 p.m.
Houston Indianapolis Tennessee Jacksonville
Baltimore Pittsburgh Cincinnati Cleveland
W 8 6 5 2
North L T 2 0 4 0 5 0 8 0
Pct .800 .600 .500 .200
PF 267 217 248 189
PA 206 190 237 234
Sunday, Nov. 25 100th Grey Cup At Toronto Calgary vs. Toronto, 4 p.m.
Denver San Diego Oakland Kansas City
W 7 4 3 1
West L 3 6 7 9
Pct .700 .400 .300 .100
PF 301 232 208 152
PA 212 221 322 284
2012 season Canadian Football League Most Outstanding Players TORONTO — Award winners anounced Thursday for the year-end Canadian Football League: Most Oustanding Player Chad Owens, SB/KR, Toronto Argonauts Defensive Player J.C. Sherritt, LB, Edmonton Eskimos Canadian Player Jon Cornish, RB, Calgary Stampeders Special Teams Chris Williams, KR/WR, Hamilton Tiger-Cats Rookie Chris Matthews, WR, Winnipeg Blue Bombers Offensive Lineman Jovan Olafioye, OL, B.C. Lions
NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF N.Y. Giants 6 4 0 .600 267 Washington 5 6 0 .455 295 Dallas 5 6 0 .455 242 Philadelphia 3 7 0 .300 162
PA 216 285 262 252
Division Semifinals Byes: B.C., Montreal East Division Toronto 42 Edmonton 26 West Division Calgary 36 Saskatchewan 30 Division Finals East Division Toronto 27 Montreal 20 West Division Calgary 34 B.C. 29
National Football League AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF New England 8 3 0 .727 407 Buffalo 4 6 0 .400 230 Miami 4 6 0 .400 187 N.Y. Jets 4 7 0 .364 221
PA 244 299 205 290
South
L 1 4 6 9
T 0 0 0 0
W 10 6 4 1
CFL PLAYOFFS
T 0 0 0 0
Atlanta Tampa Bay New Orleans Carolina
W 9 6 5 2
South L T 1 0 4 0 5 0 8 0
Pct .900 .600 .500 .200
PF 270 287 287 184
PA 193 230 273 243
Green Bay Chicago Minnesota Detroit
W 7 7 6 4
North L T 3 0 3 0 4 0 7 0
Pct .700 .700 .600 .364
PF 263 249 238 267
PA 207 165 221 280
San Francisco Seattle Arizona
W 7 6 4
West L 2 4 6
Pct PF PA .750 245 134 .600 198 161 .400 163 196
STORIES FROM B1
CFL: Led the CFL The six-foot, 217-pound Cornish had a record-setting ’12 campaign of his own. He led the CFL with 1,457 rushing yards, the first Canadian to do so since Ottawa’s Orville Lee in 1988. Cornish, 28, also broke Norm Kwong’s 56-year-old record for most rushing yards in a season by a Canuck of 1,437. Cornish missed becoming the first Canadian in 34 years to be named the CFL’s outstanding player but didn’t leave empty-handed. The native of New Westminster, B.C., received 54 votes as top Canadian ahead of Montreal Alouettes linebacker Shea Emry, of Richmond, B.C. A grateful Cornish thanked a myriad of people including B.C. Lions tailback Andrew Harris — a Winnipeg native — Kwong, Calgary head coach John Hufnagel and his teammates but saved his final thank-you for his mother, Margarent, who is married to a woman. “I’d like to thank my two moms because who are you without family,” he said. “They are the two most important people in my life so having them there made the event that much more special. “It’s a tremendous honour and at this point in my career it’s the biggest accolade I’ve achieved and I’m definitely thankful.” Cornish especially appreciated Stampeders offensive lineman Dimitri Tsoumpas pulling him aside last year after the club released Joffrey Reynolds, Calgary’s all-time rushing leader, to get Cornish into the starting lineup. “He told me I had big shoes to fill and for me that really enlightened me because Joffrey Reynolds is a future Hall of Famer,” Cornish said. “I didn’t really understand I was taking his job . . . but the reality was that I took his job and I didn’t really appreciate that fact.” Emry, who had a career-best 87 tackles this season with seven sacks, was also a finalist for the top defensive player award, finishing behind Edmonton linebacker J.C. Sherritt. Ironically, the two were college teammates at Eastern Washington where Sherritt was a fullback and moved to middle linebacker after Emry left. Sherritt received 49 votes after recording a league-record 130 tackles along with three sacks and five interceptions. “I have to thank the CFL, it’s been a blessing for me,” he said. “I also have to thank my teammates because that defensive line protected me. “I share this award with them and it’s an honour, but this is all about a ring. I’ve always been about championships and will continue to be that way.” The other award winners were Hamilton receiver Chris Williams (special-teams); Lions offensive lineman Jovan Olafioye (lineman); Winnipeg receiver Chris Matthews (rookie) and Montreal receiver Brian Bratton (Tom Pate award, community service). The CFL awards are sponsored by Gibson’s Finest. CFL commissioner Mark Cohon honoured all players who’ve participated in the league, along with their families, presenting them the Commissioner’s Award for making significant contributions to the CFL. The five-foot-nine, 155-pound Williams — the CFL’s top rookie last season — received 56 votes after registering a league-record six return touchdowns in 2012 (five punts, one missed field goal). He was tops in punt returns (78 for 1,117 yards) and second in missed field goal returns (five for 256 yards) for a Hamilton team that missed the playoffs. “Wow, I can’t believe it, two years in a row,” Williams said. “I have to thank my teammates, they did a great job and made my job easy. “But we didn’t have the greatest year as a
T 1 0 0
3
6
1 .350 174 237
Thursday’s Games Houston 34, Detroit 31, OT Washington 38, Dallas 31 New England 49, N.Y. Jets 19
Monday’s Game Carolina at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 29 New Orleans at Atlanta, 6:20 p.m. NFL Odds (Favourites in capital letters; odds supplied by Western Canada Lottery) Spread O/U Sunday DENVER AT Kansas City 10.5 44.5 TENNESSEE at Jacksonville 2.5 43.5 Buffalo at INDIANAPOLIS 3.5 51.5 Oakland at CINCINNATI 8.5 48.5 Pittsburgh at Cleveland NA NA SEATTLE at Miami 2.5 37.5 ATLANTA at Tampa Bay 2.5 48.5 BALTIMORE at San Diego 0.5 47.5 St. Louis at ARIZONA 2.5 37.5 San Francisco at New Orleans NA NA Green Bay at NY GIANTS 2.5 49.5 Monday Carolina at PHILADELPHIA NA NA
team and we’re going to have to work on changing that.” Tim Brown of the B.C. Lions was the finalist. The second time was the charm for Olafioye, who received 37 votes after being the finalist to Montreal’s Josh Bourke for the 2011 top lineman award. This year, it was Bourke, 30, of Windsor, Ont., who settled for being the runnerup. But Olafioye was still stinging from B.C.’s West Division semifinal loss to Calgary. “I still have a real bitter taste in my mouth about the game,” he said. “I’d feel a lot better to be here with my teammates and celebrating this together.” The six-foot-five, 229-pound Matthews received 53 votes. He was Winnipeg’s leading receiver as a rookie, sixth overall, with 81 catches for 1,192 yards and seven TDs. “Winnipeg gave me the chance to showcase my talents and I want to thank them,” Matthews said. “But it didn’t come easily to me. “When I first started I was just trying to make the team, everything else kind of just fell into place. This means everything to me.” B.C. Lions defensive lineman Jabar Westerman, a native of Brampton, Ont., was the finalist.
NFL: Improved Julian Edelman returned a fumble for a touchdown and caught a 56-yard pass for a score before leaving with a head injury. Wes Welker and Shane Vereen had touchdown catches, Steve Gregory returned a fumble for a score, and Stevan Ridley ran for a touchdown. The Patriots improved to 19-0 in the second half of the season since 2010. They were 8-0 that year and last year, and are 3-0 this season after the midway point. Meanwhile, the Jets allowed their most points since giving up 52 to Miami in the 1995 season opener, and will likely have to win all of their remaining five games to even have an outside chance at the post-season. New England was without star tight end Rob Gronkowski, out a few weeks after breaking his left forearm in the win Sunday against Indianapolis. They didn’t need him — not with the Jets fumbling and bumbling around. Brady finished 18 of 28 for 323 yards before leaving with 2 minutes left in the game. He reached 3,000 yards passing for the 10th time, becoming one of six players to accomplish the feat. He also passed Dan Fouts for 10th place on the career passing list. Tight end Aaron Hernandez returned after missing three games with a sprained ankle and had two catches for 36 yards. New York’s Mark Sanchez was 26 of 36 for 301 yards with a touchdown and an interception. Tebow didn’t play at all — nursing sore ribs that made him questionable for the game — and stood on the sideline with a cap on throughout despite the occasional chants for him to get some snaps. It looked as though this one might be a close one as both teams missed opportunities to score in the opening quarter, including Stephen Gostkowski being wide left on a 39-yard field goal attempt. The Jets were hoping to boost their playoff hopes and keep some momentum going after a 27-13 victory at St. Louis last Sunday that snapped a three-game skid. But this one got ugly in a hurry. The Patriots jumped on a poor decision by Sanchez, who ruined a nice drive by keying in on Jeremy Kerley on second-and-6 from the 23. Gregory read the play the whole way for an easy interception. Brady then led the Patriots on a 15-play, 84-yard drive that was capped on Welker’s 3-yard touchdown catch on the first play of the second quarter.
National Basketball Association EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB New York 8 2 .800 — Brooklyn 6 4 .600 2 Philadelphia 7 5 .583 2 Boston 6 6 .500 3 Toronto 3 9 .250 6
Miami Atlanta Charlotte Orlando Washington
Milwaukee Indiana Chicago Cleveland Detroit
Southeast Division W L Pct 9 3 .750 6 4 .600 6 4 .600 4 7 .364 0 10 .000
GB — 2 2 4 1/2 8
Central Division W L Pct 6 4 .600 6 7 .462 5 6 .455 3 8 .273 2 10 .167
GB — 1 1/2 1 1/2 3 1/2 5
WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB Memphis 8 2 .800 — San Antonio 9 3 .750 — Dallas 7 6 .538 2 1/2 Houston 5 7 .417 4 New Orleans 3 7 .300 5 Northwest Division W L Pct Oklahoma City 9 3 .750 Denver 6 6 .500 Utah 6 6 .500 Minnesota 5 5 .500 Portland 5 6 .455
GB — 3 3 3 3 1/2
Pacific Division W L Pct 8 3 .727 7 5 .583
GB — 1 1/2
L.A. Clippers Golden State
L.A. Lakers Phoenix Sacramento
6 5 3
6 7 8
.500 .417 .273
2 1/2 3 1/2 5
Wednesday’s Games Cleveland 92, Philadelphia 83 Charlotte 98, Toronto 97 Indiana 115, New Orleans 107, OT Orlando 90, Detroit 74 Oklahoma City 117, L.A. Clippers 111, OT San Antonio 112, Boston 100 Atlanta 101, Washington 100, OT Miami 113, Milwaukee 106, OT Houston 93, Chicago 89 Denver 101, Minnesota 94 Dallas 114, New York 111 Phoenix 114, Portland 87 Sacramento 113, L.A. Lakers 97 Golden State 102, Brooklyn 93 Thursday’s Games No games scheduled Friday’s Games Atlanta at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Cleveland at Orlando, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Boston, 5:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Brooklyn, 5:30 p.m. Toronto at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. New York at Houston, 6 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Memphis, 6 p.m. San Antonio at Indiana, 6 p.m. Golden State at Denver, 7 p.m. New Orleans at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Sacramento at Utah, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Portland, 8 p.m. Saturday’s Games L.A. Clippers at Atlanta, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Washington, 5 p.m. Cleveland at Miami, 5:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Chicago at Milwaukee, 7 p.m. Utah at Sacramento, 8 p.m. Minnesota at Golden State, 8:30 p.m.
Transactions Thursday’s Sports Transactions FOOTBALL CAROLINA PANTHERS — Signed PK Graham Gano. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed FB Dominique Jones. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Signed WR Carlton Mitchell. Signed RB Will Ta’ufo’ou to the practice squad. Released DE Ryan Davis from the practice squad. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Activated OL Markus Zusevics from the non-football-injury list. Released WR Greg Salas. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — Signed T Jermarcus Hardrick to the practice squad.
NEW YORK GIANTS — Signed T Selvish Capers from the practice squad and G Stephen Goodin to the practice squad. NEW YORK JETS — Signed CB Donnie Fletcher, CB Darrin Walls and WR Jordan White from the practice squad. ST. LOUIS RAMS — Signed LB Jabara Williams to the practice squad. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Placed LS Mike Windt on injured reserve. Signed LS Kyle Nelson. Signed T Kevin Hughes to the practice squad. HOCKEY HAMILTON BULLDOGS — Signed D Mike Commodore to a professional tryout contract.
Milanovich leads Argos by example GREY CUP BY THE CANADIAN PRESS TORONTO — As his Toronto Argonauts filtered into a hotel restaurant for a media breakfast, Scott Milanovich was already hard at work. Sitting in a nearby chair, the tall Toronto coach was absorbed in his notes. The more time the better to plot the downfall of the Calgary Stampeders in Sunday’s Grey Cup. Milanovich had already warned his players there was work to do after meeting their media responsibilities. “The first thing I hear him say was ‘All right we need to get back and work on our first down install,”’ running back Chad Kackert said. “He’s really focused on the task at hand.” The 39-year-old rookie head coach, who also directs the Argo offence, comes across as calm, professional and very, very thorough. At Wednesday’s coaches’ news conference, Milanovich was unfailingly polite and showed John Hufnagel, his 61-year-old Calgary counterpart, nothing but respect — referring to him throughout as Coach Hufnagel or Coach Huf. He even prompted Hufnagel, who has hearing problems, by repeating questions as needed. Milanovich, who has won two Grey Cups as an assistant coach with the Montreal Alouettes, also showed a dry sense of humour and was self-deprecating, saying the Argos’ Grey Cup march was not about him. “My name being on that Cup is not important to me. I have two (championship) rings. I also lost one to this gentleman sitting next to me,” he said, referring to Hufnagel and the 2008 Grey Cup when Calgary beat Montreal 22-14. “What is important to me is for our players’ names to be on there. This is about them, this has never been about me.” Milanovich says Toronto’s championship quest is also about general manager Jim Barker, the community, the organization and growing the Argo brand. “I’m just fortunate and thankful that they gave me the opportunity to be a part of this,” he added. It was a speech that might not have sounded right coming out of some mouths. But it seemed a good match for Milanovich. When the topic came up, Milanovich acknowledged he could have better handled the off-season hiring of defensive co-ordinator Chris Jones — a close friend — from Hufnagel’s Stamps. “What had originated as Chris calling me to congratulate me (on getting the Toronto job) turned into more than that,” Milanovich said. The Argos were fined by the league for mishandling the hire. Milanovich made fun of his own quarterbacking career, mischievously noting that then-Cleveland Browns quarterback coach Hufnagel released him before his contract became guaranteed — and opened up about his upbringing. The son of a high school football coach in Pennsylvania, Milanovich appeared to almost tear up when recalling how he and his dad used to watch game film on a white bed sheet. His father taught him the game and it’s clear the message stuck. “His message to me was always about poise,” Milanovich said. “When you’re the quarterback and you’re a leader, everybody looks to you when things go badly or when things go well, to see how you’re going to react. “His mantra to me was always stay even-keeled. And I learned the same lesson from Tony Dungy when I was fortunate to have played for him in Tampa Bay.” Milanovich exudes calm, although his players say there is a sterner side. “For the most part, he’s very professional and treats us like men,” said receiver/returner Chad Owens. “But when he needs to step up and let us know that we’re messing up, he’s going to do that. “He’s a tremendous leader, he’s a winner and you can tell what kind of player he was by the way he coaches.” Said Kackert: “He’s a fair coach and he does a good job of staying focused on what needs to be done.” In a season that sometimes saw the Argos shoot themselves in the foot, Milanovich patiently answered question after question about costly penalties, although as the season wore on, it seemed clear he was clenching his teeth as he did so. He refused to throw players under the bus, taking the blame himself. “Clearly I didn’t have them ready to play tonight,” Milanovich said after a 36-10 loss to Saskatchewan on Oct. 8. “And I’ve got to do a better job of getting them ready to go, giving them the chance to be successful offensively.
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012 B5
Texans get OT win on Lions mistake BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Texans 34 Lions 31, OT DETROIT — Jim Schwartz threw a challenge flag when he didn’t need to and the Houston Texans made him regret it. Shayne Graham’s 32-yard field goal with 2:21 left in overtime lifted Houston to a 34-31 win over the Detroit Lions on Thursday after their coach broke an NFL rule by attempting to challenge a scoring play. “Obviously that’s a big break in the game for us,” Houston coach Gary Kubiak said. “But I think you make your breaks when you work your tail off.” Detroit kicker Jason Hanson had a chance to get Schwartz off the hook, but his 47-yard field goal attempt on the fifth possession of the extra period hit the right upright. Lions defensive end Kyle Vanden Bosch did, too, on the previous possession when he couldn’t intercept a pass Matt Schaub threw directly at him deep in Houston territory. Detroit might’ve won in regulation if its coach didn’t make a costly mistake. Schwartz threw a challenge flag when Houston’s Justin Forsett scored on an 81-yard touchdown run in the third quarter after two Lions tackled him. “Give him credit for continuing to play football,” Kubiak said. “We talk about that all the time. You don’t stop, you play.” Replays showed Forsett’s left knee and elbow hit the turf near midfield, and the automatic review that accompanies all scoring plays probably would have taken the TD off the board. But NFL rules say that throwing the challenge flag on a scoring play negates the review — and is an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty to boot. “It’s on me,” Schwartz could be seen saying to assistants and players on the sideline as he tapped his chest. “It’s on me.” Yes, it was. Forsett even acknowledged he shouldn’t have allowed to score. “I know now that I was down, but I didn’t think I was during the play,” he said. “I didn’t think my knee hit, and there was no whistle, so I kept going. “I wasn’t giving the touchdown back.” That score pulled Houston within three points. “I knew the rule — you can’t challenge on a turnover or a scoring play — but I was so mad that I overreacted,” said Schwartz, whose temper got the best of him during a postgame handshake last year with San Francisco coach Jim Harbaugh. “I had the flag in my hand before he even scored because he was obviously down.” Kubiak had no sympathy. “A rule’s a rule,” Kubiak said. “I know one thing: You’ve got to keep your flag tucked in your pocket.” Arian Foster ran for 102 yards and two scores, including a 1-yard run with 1:55 left in the fourth quarter to cap a 15-play, 97-yard drive that tied the game at 31. AFC South-leading Houston (10-1) took its first lead when Graham made up for missing a field goal earlier in OT after teammate Danieal Manning ripped the football away from Lions tight end Brandon Pettigrew at its 32 on the first drive of the extra
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Houston Texans running back Arian Foster falls into the end zone for a touchdown during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the Detroit Lions at Ford Field in Detroit, Thursday. period. The Texans have won five straight — two in a row in OT — and if a handful of teams lose they could be in the playoffs by the time they get back on the practice field after a long weekend. “Ten quarters in five days, it’s draining physically and mentally,” Texans defensive end J.J. Watt said. “But our team persevered.” And, the Lions wilted and blew a fourth-quarter lead during a second straight setback. Detroit (4-7) has lost three straight to make it extremely difficult to reach its goal of earning a spot in consecutive postseasons for the first time since the mid-1990s. And as if the Lions don’t have enough problems, defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh could be in trouble with the league again after his left cleat connected with Schaub’s groin area in the first quarter. “I really don’t have anything to say about that play or that person,” Schaub said. Suh was on his chest, taken down by an offensive lineman, when he extended his left foot below Schaub’s belt. It wasn’t clear on replays whether the kick was intentional, but Suh might struggle to get the benefit of
doubt and perhaps that’s why he didn’t stick around long enough to talk to reporters after the game. Last year on Thanksgiving, Suh was ejected for stomping on the right arm of Green Bay offensive lineman Evan Dietrich-Smith and was suspended for two games. He has been fined in previous seasons for roughing up quarterbacks: Cincinnati’s Andy Dalton, Chicago’s Jay Cutler and Cleveland’s Jake Delhomme. Schaub shook off the blow, stayed in the game, and was 29 of 48 for 315 yards with a 9-yard TD to Owen Daniels to tie the game at 14 late in the first half and an interception. Houston’s Andre Johnson had nine receptions for 188 yards. Watt had three sacks, one on Detroit’s first snap and the other two that helped the Texans stay within a TD late in the game. Detroit scored four go-ahead TDs, including on Joique Bell’s 23-yard run early in the fourth quarter, and had a 10-point lead midway through the third quarter. The Lions drove deep enough into Houston territory in the fourth to put Hanson in a position to give them another 10-point lead, but Watt forced them to punt each time with sacks on third downs.
Griffin shines in Redskins’ win over Cowboys
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Washington Redskins wide receiver Pierre Garcon looks back at Dallas Cowboys’ Mike Jenkins as he sprints for the end zone for a touchdown in the first half of an NFL football game, Thursday, in Arlington, Texas.
NFL
Redskins 38 Cowboys 31 ARLINGTON, Texas — Welcome back to Texas, RG3. Robert Griffin III threw for 311 yards and four touchdowns, helping the Washington Redskins beat the Dallas Cowboys 38-31 on Thursday. The Heisman Trophy winner from Baylor made the Cowboys look like an overmatched college team during the decisive second quarter in Griffin’s
first pro game in his home state. He got some help from his receivers, including a leaping grab and long run from Pierre Garcon and some nifty footwork in the end zone by Santana Moss. Tony Romo lost for the first time in six starts on Thanksgiving, despite a career-high 441 yards and three second-half touchdowns, including the longest of his career — an 85-yarder to Dez Bryant. Romo ran in a 2-point conversion
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games gave the Redskins a chance to get one more score before halftime when DeAngelo Hall returned it to the Dallas 33 with 30 seconds left. Out of timeouts at the Dallas 6 with 10 seconds left, the Redskins trusted Griffin to try to get a touchdown, and Moss kept both feet in while falling out of bounds for a 28-3 lead with 5 seconds left. Griffin completed 12 straight passes from the middle of the first quarter to the middle of the third and finished 20 of 28. It was hard to tell with his final numbers, but the Cowboys did manage to put some pressure on Griffin. They sacked him four times, forced him to sprint out of the pocket a number of times and delivered hard hits after several throws. The Dallas offence, playing most of the game without Miles Austin after he injured a hip early, never could answer in the decisive second quarter. The Cowboys had only two first downs while the Redskins were scoring four touchdowns. The Cowboys’ best possession came right after Griffin’s first big play, but Bryant fumbled in the open field at the end of what would have been a firstdown catch. DeJon Gomes returned the fumble to the Dallas 49, and Alfred Morris scored from the 1 for a 14-3 lead. Morris had 113 yards on 24 carries. After forcing a three-and-out on Washington’s first possession, Dallas quickly moved to the Redskins 11, but had to settle for a field goal when Austin couldn’t hang on to a third-down throw from Romo in the back of the end zone on a hit by London Fletcher. Austin took a hard fall and didn’t return. Fletcher, who also had an interception, extended his consecutive games streak to 235 and made his 190th straight start. He started the day tied with Tampa Bay’s Ronde Barber for most consecutive games, and his starting streak is the league’s longest for linebackers. He left the game later with an ankle injury.
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after a TD throw to Felix Jones and threw another scoring pass to Bryant to help Dallas close to 35-28 with 8:24 remaining after the Cowboys trailed 28-3 at halftime. “I thought we had a good chance,” Romo said. But Griffin answered — twice, actually. After Romo’s long touchdown to Bryant, Griffin threw his fourth scoring pass, a 29-yarder to Niles Paul. The rookie became the first Redskins quarterback to throw four touchdown passes in consecutive games. After the Cowboys pulled within a touchdown, Griffin drove them into scoring position again, calmly completing three passes for first downs and running 5 ½ minutes off the clock before Kai Forbath made it 38-28 on a 48-yard field goal. Dallas drove to a field goal, but DeAngelo Hall easily picked up the onside kick and ran untouched before sliding down short of the goal line, clinching Romo’s third loss in three career 400-yard games. It also was the Cowboys’ first loss to the Redskins in seven games on Thanksgiving. “That quarterback is obviously a very good player, and they use him well,” Cowboys coach Jason Garrett said. “It was challenging for us to slow those guys down. We didn’t do enough offensively to keep up with them in the first half.” The Cowboys (5-6) actually contained Griffin in the first quarter, getting a sack and forcing an intentional grounding penalty that gave them good enough field position for an easy drive to a 3-0 lead. Everything changed on Griffin’s first big NFL play in Texas. He hit Aldrick Robinson in stride for a 68-yard touchdown and a 7-3 lead to spark the first 28-point quarter in 13 years for the Redskins (5-6). Griffin’s next big throw wasn’t nearly as accurate, but Garcon somehow came down with it and outran the Dallas defence the final 45 yards on a 59-yard score for a 21-3 lead. Romo’s first interception in four
B6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Donald hits 65 to lead McIlroy
Tax increases could factor in baseball free agent negotiations BY RONALD BLUM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
— OAKLAND ATHLETICS GENERAL MANAGER BILLY BEANE
see his taxes rise from $3.45 million this year to $4.09 million next year under current law. If traded to the Blue Jays, that player’s 2013 tax would rise to $4.27 million. And if dealt to a California team, the tax would go up to $4.4 million. By moving money from salary into signing bonuses, players can sometimes lower their state tax bills. Shifting money into December this year could reduce federal taxes. “Tax measures are going to be discussed, but change most likely carries compromise on both sides,” Boras said. “One thing is clear based on the nation’s ballot totals: Many Amer-
icans are split on this subject.” In the end, most free agents choose teams based on where they want to play, not on lowering the tax cut on their income. “It’s a factor, maybe even a small factor,” agent Craig Landis said. “If there’s 50 variables, you can now make it a 51st. It’s not usually going to be the drive, but it’s something to consider.” And for teams, only the big spenders need worry. Beane’s Athletics, for instance, had the lowest payroll in the majors last season. “It’s probably not a situation I’ll have to face in Oakland too much,” he said.
DUBAI WORLD
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Luke Donald shot a 7-under 65 in the opening round of the Dubai World Champion on Thursday to lead Rory McIlroy and two others by one stroke, setting up a potential showdown between the world’s top two golfers at the season-ending tournament. Donald saved par on Nos. 1 and 4 by sinking an 8-footer and 15-footer, and some accurate up-and-down play helped him make four birdies in a stretch of six holes. Donald came within a few feet of the pin on the 10th and 11th for easy birdie putts and then barely missed an eagle on 14. “It was a nice, solid start,” said the Englishman, who overtook Tiger Woods for the No. 2 ranking following his win last week in Japan and made six of his seven birdies on the first 10 holes on Thursday. “It was very tidy. Just a lot of solid golf. I gave myself a lot of opportunities.” Donald fended off a challenge from McIlroy at the tournament last year to become the first player to clinch both the European and PGA Tour money titles. But since then, he has watched McIlroy match that feat this season and overtake him at the top of the rankings earlier in the year. “I’d love the challenge,” Donald said of facing McIlroy Sunday. “Rory is No. 1 in the world. And it will be fun for us. It will be fun for the fans and obviously fun for TV. “It would be a great way to end the year.” McIlroy struggled on the front nine, shooting only one birdie, but soon turned it around with a stretch of five
birdies in seven holes. He could have pulled even with Donald but hit his tee shot in the water on the 18th and had to settle for par. McIlroy is trying to emulate Westwood’s feat in 2009 in which he won the money title and the tournament. “I got off to a bit of a slow start but felt I was hitting the ball well enough to give myself opportunities for birdies. I just had to stay patient. I got it together on the back nine,” McIlroy said. “It’s a great way to start. Obviously, I’m confident heading into tomorrow.” Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano of Spain and Marc Warren of Scotland are also at 6 under. On a day when more than threequarters of the field shot under par, there were plenty of other big names in the mix. Lee Westwood, three-time major champion Padraig Harrington, 2010 PGA Championship winner Martin Kaymer and two others were at 5 under. Six players, including 2011 Masters champion Charl Schwartzel, were a further shot behind. “Played well. Gave myself some chances,” said Westwood, who has recently parted ways with his longtime caddy and moved to Florida to concentrate on the PGA Tour in 2013. “I missed four putts I really should have holed. I hit the ball close a lot and if you hit the ball close, then you are going to miss a few and make a few.” Fernandez-Castano, looking for his second victory of the season, holed six birdies on his back nine to draw level with Warren, the early clubhouse leader.
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Team executives and agents wandered into the Agave Sunset lounge at the resort where the general managers’ meetings were held in Indian Wells, Calif. Four of the six flat-screen televisions were showing election coverage, with the other two turned to sports. President Barack Obama’s victory over Mitt Romney was of as much interest to baseball’s money men as the game scores, given the millions of dollars routinely guaranteed in player contracts these days. As free agents negotiate deals this off-season, tax policy is an area that comes up along with the usual issues. Some players are wrangling for as much money as they can get before the end of the year to avoid a take hike in 2013. “Front-loading would make sense if at all possible as tax rates will definitely go up on January 1st on all high-income taxpayers,” agent Greg Genske said in an email. “The only question is HOW MUCH will the rates increase????” This much is known for now: Starting Jan. 1, there is an additional 0.9 per cent Medicare tax on wages above $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for married couples filing jointly under the federal Affordable Care Act, a rise to 2.35 per cent. In addition, the Bush tax cuts are scheduled to expire at the end of the year, which could raise the highest marginal federal tax rate from 35 per cent to 39.6 per cent — although a deal between Obama and Congress could change that. Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane figures agents will be on top of the changes — but the results of negotiations about the so-called fiscal cliff are unpredictable. “I think if you’re hopping around the potential of tax reform, you’re probably chasing your tail,” Beane said. “If they can predict when something’s going to happen, then they’re much further ahead than the lawmakers.” With baseball contracts worth as much as $275 million (Alex Rodriguez) and the major league minimum $480,000, tax policy affects every player who spends most of the season in the big leagues. All-Star shortstop Jose Reyes, who has a $10 million salary next year, was traded from the Miami Marlins to the Toronto Blue Jays. While Florida has no state income tax, Reyes remains a New York resident from his days with the Mets and had high taxes to begin with. Ontario’s provincial tax rises to 11.16 per cent — on top of a Canadian federal level as high as 29 per cent. Among states with big league teams, income tax rates go as high as 10.3 per cent in California and 8.82 per cent in New York. At the other end, Florida, Texas and Washington have no state income tax. The top rate in the District of Columbia is 8.95 per cent. “I like ours; we’re a no-tax state,” Seattle Mariners general manager Jack Zdurienck said. “When we sit down with players, that’s a huge benefit. I think any player out there that has an opportunity to play in a no-tax state gets benefits, enormous benefits. We hope that weighs in our favour.” According to an analysis done by a tax lawyer on the staff of agent Scott Boras, a player with a $10 million salary and average deductions who plays in Florida and is a resident of that state will
“I THINK IF YOU’RE HOPPING AROUND THE POTENTIAL OF TAX REFORM, YOU’RE PROBABLY CHASING YOUR TAIL. IF THEY CAN PREDICT WHEN SOMETHING’S GOING TO HAPPEN, THEN THEY’RE MUCH FURTHER AHEAD THAN THE LAWMAKERS.”
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012 B7
Humphries puts win streak on line at Whistler BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
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VANCOUVER — The tattoo on Kaillie Humphries’ hand is just one word but it says plenty. Believe. The tattoo also includes the date, numerically written, when she won two-man bobsled gold medal at the 2010 Winter Olympic in Whistler, the same track where she will compete in a World Cup this weekend. “It’s a slogan, but it’s also a word that I live by,” she said. “I want to remember that day and what it meant.” So far so good. Including this season and the 2011 campaign, she has driven to five straight two-man victories against the world’s best. One of those victories came in the same event last year. “(Being defending champion) definitely paints a big bull’s-eye target on my back,” she said this week before going to Whistler. “I’ve got a few of those already. I had one after (the 2010 Olympics) and I still will until (the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi). ... I seem to just paint a few on there, but at the same time, the biggest pressure I place is upon myself.” Humphries has won both of this season’s two-man World Cups, including Park City, Utah last weekend and Lake Placid a week earlier. Last season’s Whistler win, another World Cup in Calgary, and the 2011 world championships in Lake Placid are also part of the five consecutive victories. “She’s able to win seemingly at will at the moment,” said Canadian coach Tom De La Hunty. “She’s been a very consistent pilot.” “I think there’s a lot of things that have contributed to my success,” said Humphries, a 27-year-old Calgary native. “I’m a very driven, focused (and) passionate person.” Humphries’ drive for five has included two different athletes pulling the brake. This season rookie Chelsea Valois, 25, of Zenon Park, Sask., got the nod by posting the fastest push times at a national team selection camp. De La Hunty said Valois turned up “out of the blue” at the mid-September camp and impressed many. “We knew immediately we had a bit of a superstar,” said De La Hunty. Humphries is looking forward to seeing how she and Valois will fare against tough German and American rivals. “I’m really excited to be home,” said Humphries, who received driver training at Whistler. “I’m really excited for Chelsea to be home. I’m really excited for Chelsea to come back to a track that she knows (from training). Every week (in her case), it’s going to a brand
new place and brand new track. Travel is very different for her. She’s from a very small town in Saskatchewan, so she’s never really been abroad or travelled. All of those things are going to affect her this year.” Humphries’ belief in herself has helped her overcome considerable adversity. The former brakeman turned to driving full-time after a freak leg injury, which occurred after she tripped over a garden hose while warming up at the 2005 World Push Championships in Mexico, rendering her an alternate pusher at the 2006 Turin Games — a role that proved difficult because she “wasn’t the slowest girl there.” She also suffered a broken collarbone in a crash when she briefly attempted driving before returning to her brakeman role. Humphries, who has limited sponsorship and supplemental publicspeaking income that enables her to earn a modest living as a full-time bobsledder, credits her two sisters and a small Bobsleigh Canada support staff for her success. They help her re-focus when she gets a little tired and “scatterbrained.” Her other hardships were emotional, but also quite painful. The former ski racer, who turned to bobsled when she was 17, dealt with bullying while she was growing up. “You get the jello put in your butt at camps. You get the name-calling — and when I started, even, within bobsled,” she said. “I was the youngest by probably over 10 years. ... “You see a lot of kids, and society in general, that take everything to the extreme. I do it in my sport in day-today living, but people do it in personal lives — and there is just no place for it. ... I feel I’m finally at a point where I, hopefully, have a little bit of a voice, and I need to use it.” On the men’s side, top Canadian bobsled driver Lyndon Rush of Humboldt, Sask., will try to excel again at the site of his 2010 Olympic bronzemedal win. Last weekend, he crashed in Park City while enjoying a big lead in the two-man event. De La Hunty called Rush and former CFL star Jesse Lumsden, who placed 20th in Lake Placid, “a great team.” Noting their start times are among the fastest in the world, Lumsden said he and Rush have had trouble adjusting to a new sled, but suggested they can make the necessary adjustments to runners and other parts. “You can’t build a sled and expect it to be fast,” Lumsden said. “You’ve got to figure out all sorts of different things, because we’re dealing with hundredths of a second.”
Rush placed a disappointing 12th in four-man in Park City and seventh in Lake Placid. De La Hunty predicted Rush will have a strong weekend at Whistler. The coach is planning to shuffle his
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B8 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
McMaster QB Quinlan wins Hec Crighton Trophy BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
Johnson, who took the Peter Gorman Trophy as the nation’s top rookie. The CFL Player Awards, which are sponsored by Gibson’s Finest, were held at Koerner Hall at the Royal Conservatory of Music. The building was coincidentally McMaster’s original home in 1887 and the university is holding a celebration of its 125th anniversary there next week. Plesius, the first member of the Rouge et Or to win top defensive honours, was also the Quebec conference’s nominee in 2010. In his fourth campaign with Laval, the six-foot-one, 245-pound senior finished the regular season with a team-high 34.5 tackles. Like Quinlan, his thoughts quickly turned to the CIS final. “At the end of the day all I want really is a Vanier Cup. For me and my teammates, I want to finish my career at Laval on a good note. That’s the main goal for me,” Plesius said. “All I want this year is a Vanier Cup. This (award) doesn’t really matter to me.” The Laval native also had two quarterback sacks and two pass breakups in league play in helping the Laval defence rank first in the country against the run (57.8 yards per game), second in least points allowed (12.7) and third in total yards against (298.2). Plesius started his university career with the NCAA’s Baylor Bears before transferring to Laval, where he was selected 10th overall by the Tiger-Cats in last spring’s CFL Canadian College Draft. He was also invited to a mini-camp of the NFL’s Philadelphia Eagles last May. Also nominated were St. FX linebacker Brett Hubbeard, McMaster linebacker Aram Eisho and Calgary linebacker Mike Edem.
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TORONTO — Kyle Quinlan is the top player in Canadian university football, but the trophy he wants to cap his collegiate career is still one victory away. The fifth-year McMaster quarterback won the Hec Crighton Trophy on Thursday night at the CFL Player Awards, but his attention quickly turned to the 48th Vanier Cup, where his Marauders will go for their second straight national title against the Laval Rouge et Or. “The biggest prize is still out there,” Quinlan said of Friday’s rematch at Rogers Centre. “This is a great honour but individual awards are something that you look back on after the season. We have a good opportunity to still be playing football right now.” Although Friday’s game will definitely be Quinlan’s final game in the CIS, whether or not his career continues in the CFL is up in the air. Quarterbacks from north of the border often take longer to develop compared to their American counterparts and do not count against the league’s Canadian quota. Brad Sinopoli of the Calgary Stampeders was the only Canadian pivot on a CFL roster in 2012. “If you’re good enough they’re going to take you. That’s what I truly believe so you just have to get to that point where you are good enough despite your nationality,” said Quinlan, who attended CFL training camps with Hamilton and Montreal the last two years. “They’re going to hire whoever the best football player is, so I try to separate the nationality part of it and just try to get in there and prepare to help out a team.”
Quinlan was definitely the best football player in the CIS in 2012, tossing 19 touchdowns and just two interceptions. He finished second in passing yards per game (307.1), third in total passing yards (2,407) and second in completion percentage, with a new single-season OUA record of 68.9. Quinlan, who also led all quarterbacks with seven rushing TDs and tied for the CIS lead among pivots with 550 yards on the ground, is part of a McMaster program that is on a record 21-game winning streak heading into Friday’s championship. “I think Kyle may be the best CIS player ever. He is just such a big game player and always has been. The bigger the game, the better he plays,” said McMaster head coach Stefan Ptaszek, who was named coach of the year Wednesday. “He is also a great leader and that is just as important a part of him as his physical abilities. Athletes like Kyle Quinlan don’t come along very often.” The other nominees were Acadia quarterback Kyle Graves, Montreal running back Rotrand Sene and Calgary quarterback Eric Dzwilewski. A native of South Woodslee, Ont., Quinlan led the McMaster to an 8-0 regular season and is the fifth Marauder to win the Hec Crighton, following fellow quarterbacks Ben Chapdelaine (2001) and Phil Scarfone (1984) and running backs Jesse Lumsden (2004) and Kojo Aidoo (2000). The other award winners announced Thursday night were Laval linebacker Frederic Plesius, who captured the Presidents’ Trophy as defensive player of the year, McMaster defensive end Ben D’Aguilar, winner of the J.P. Metras Trophy as most outstanding lineman, and McGill wide receiver Shaquille
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SCIENCE ◆ C5,C6 FASHION ◆ C7,C8 Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Carolyn Martindale, City Editor, 403-314-4326 Fax 403-341-6560 E-mail editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
Red Deer City RCMP have photo radar set up in several locations around the city to monitor drivers. Enforcement is underway in school zones on 48th, 55th and Douglas Avenues and 39th Street. Enforcement is also underway at playground zones on Ellenwood Drive, 59th Avenue and Jewel and Allan Streets. Police are also checking out traffic corridors on 48th, 49th and 50th Avenues, Taylor Drive, and 49th Street. Enforcement will continue at these sites until Dec. 15. RCMP reserve the right to change locations without notice.
Education Act heralded ADDRESSES BULLYING, RAISES PERMITTED AGES FOR DROPPING OUT BY LAURA TESTER ADVOCATE STAFF The new Education Act is being hailed for addressing bullying, and raising the permitted ages for dropping out of school and accessing free public education. Speaking to news media in Red Deer on Wednesday, Premier Alison Redford said the act addresses parental roles, as well as the roles of student and parent councils. “We’re really proud of the work that’s being done with bullying,” said Redford. “It really broadly defines bullying and we know how unfortunate circumstances can be and how important it is to be able to do that.” The act speaks to teachers, school boards and parent councils working together on delivering better curriculum, she said. “It’s really foundational. You don’t pass an Education Act every year,” said Redford. “This is something you put in place be-
‘WE’RE REALLY PROUD OF THE WORK THAT’S BEING DONE WITH BULLYING. IT REALLY BROADLY DEFINES BULLYING AND WE KNOW HOW UNFORTUNATE CIRCUMSTANCES CAN BE AND HOW IMPORTANT IT IS TO BE ABLE TO DO THAT.’ — PREMIER ALISON REDFORD
cause you really do think it will define what the future of the province will look like and how you want to educate your kids, how you want your schools to be organized.” The Education Act replaces the School Act, which had been around for more than 20 years. It was passed in the legislature on Monday. Red Deer Public Schools officials are heralding the new Education Act for raising the mandatory age of attendance to 17 from 16 years old. It also increases the age at which students can still access free education, partic-
ularly if they want to complete high school. That age rose to 21 from 19. Chairman Lawrence Lee said that district officials always thought that the age of 16 was too low to allow teens to drop out. Increasing the age for free education is a great idea, he added. The public school district is working with Red Deer College on a potential pilot project where students up to 21 would be able to do programs like welding or robotics at the college.
Please see EDUCATION on Page C2
WEBCAM RECORDS BEAVER ACTIVITIES Ever wondered what a beaver does when it’s not being watched? Red Deer’s museum is offering people a chance to find out. The Ellis Bird Farm set up a webcam on a beaver lodge last summer and Myrna Pearman, and educator and conservationist, will share some of the highlights of the 2012 beaver activity. She will do that at the Red Deer Museum and Art Gallery, 4525 47A Ave., on Sunday from 2 to 3 p.m. as part of the museum’s Family Sundays. The charge for attending the event is included in either admission or membership.
SANTA STUFF AT MUSEUM Santa Claus has come to the Mountain View Museum in Olds. A special Santa Claus collection is on display until month’s end at the museum located at 5038 50th St. The display can be seen during museum hours of 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays. More information is available online at www. oldsmuseum.ca of by calling 403-556-8464.
CORRECTION A story about a civil court case that appeared in Wednesday’s Advocate had incorrect information. Legal action against the David Thompson Regional Health Authority was discontinued in August 2010.
Photo by RANDY FIEDLER/Advocate staff
George Lewis makes a donation as the Koininia Christian School choral group His Light performs at the Salvation Army kettle campaign kickoff at Bower Place Shopping Centre on Thursday.
Kettle Campaign goal is $190,000 BY RANDY FIEDLER ADVOCATE STAFF The Salvation Army wants to raise $190,000 in this year’s Christmas Kettle campaign. “We raised $198,000 last year, our best year ever, and we’re hoping it’s not just a fluke,” said Major Larry Bridger, the Salvation Army’s local director and pastor. The campaign runs until Dec. 22. New this year is the ability to make a $5 donation by texting HOPE2010 to 45678. Donations can also be made
SALVATION ARMY online at www.fillthekettle.com of by calling 1-800-SAL ARMY (725-2769). Volunteers are still needed to staff the nine full-time and three part-time kettle locations. Sponsors for the Adopt-A-Family program are also needed. Bridger said recent news of frauds against the Salvation Army — one in Toronto for $2 million, the other in Ottawa for $250,000 — have no bearing locally. “Donations we receive all
stay in Red Deer. Everything is distributed locally.” The frauds shouldn’t stop Central Albertans from supporting the local effort, said Mayor Morris Flewwelling in his kickoff comments. “We sympathize with them and we want to make sure we are strong and healthy in our Salvation Army here.” Other events the Salvation Army plans this Christmas season include the annual Santa Shuffle, a nationwide five-km
fun run and one-km walk on Dec. 1. In Red Deer, the Santa Shuffle takes place at Rotary Park. As well, the Salvation Army will be visiting seniors in nursing homes and residences during December to sing carols and distribute gifts. And the service will again host a Christmas Day dinner at noon in the Salvation Army Church at 4837 54th St. For more information on all the church’s programs and to register for Christmas assistance, call 403-346-2251. rfiedler@reddeeradvocate.com
Blades hitting ice for hours, Poland next stop PLAY-ATHON IS A FUNDRAISER FOR THE TRIP BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF
GIVE US A CALL The Advocate invites its readers to help cover news in Central Alberta. We would like to hear from you if you see something worthy of coverage. And we would appreciate hearing from you if you see something inaccurate in our pages. We strive for complete, accurate coverage of Central Alberta and are happy to correct any errors we may commit. Call 403-314-4333.
Eight hours of straight hockey is just a warmup for one recreational team heading to Poland for a trip full of games. The team of 14 players and a coach will hit the ice from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Dec. 1 and play against a different team each hour. The play-athon is a fundraiser for the trip the team plans to Poland to play the sport they love with various teams and in schools throughout the European nation. Crystal Neumann is helping organize the trip and the game and said the team made up of men from around Alberta is eagerly anticipating going to Poland and sharing hockey with people of all ages. Neumann’s husband Karl is originally from Poland and emigrated to Canada seven years ago. Three years ago, Karl and his brotherin-law, Allister Koop, went to Poland and ended up watching a few hockey games there. “They don’t have a lot of hockey leagues or teams in Poland,” said Neumann. “Our friend there, he travels two hours to
Gdansk, Poland, to play in a league once a week.” After watching a few games in Poland, her husband and Koop started discussing how much fun it would be to bring a team from Canada over to play rec teams there. “That was a few years ago and we talked about it a little bit and a year ago we really started seriously considering it and planning and feeling it out and things have been falling into place,” said Neumann. “Our Polish friends were just so excited that someone from Canada would come over and watch them play and they thought it would be a fun thing to bring a team from Canada over.” The outdoor game is scheduled for Dec. 1 at the Pines outdoor rink, at 8 Page Ave., Neumann hopes the weather will be cooperative. Although everyone involved in the trip has already paid for their flights to and from Poland, they are fundraising to cover lodging, meals and other transportation expenses in Poland. On top of the play-athon’s eight hours against eight different teams, there will be a 50/50 draw and a concession selling hot chili, warm and cold beverages and homemade doughnuts.
The team arrives in Poland just in time to play against teams in Gdansk for the weekend. During the week, they are going to nearby towns and villages and have arranged to be involved in the phys-ed programs of two area schools. “Do some floor hockey games, drills and things like that,” said Neumann. “That will be a couple of days throughout the week.” The group is trying to arrange a few more games during the week, including an outdoor game or two. For the final weekend they are in Poland, they have three games scheduled for one Saturday. “I think we’re hoping to play at least eight teams on the two weekends and then a couple during the week,” said Neumann. “It’s going to be busy, but the guys have said they’re going over there to play hockey and they want to get as much in as they can.” The team is composed of 10 players from Red Deer and four, including Koop, from Lethbridge. The players are between the ages of 25 and 60. Anyone interested in sponsoring or supporting the Poland-bound hockey players can contact Neumann at 403-597-1526 or by email at crkoop@hotmail.com. mcrawford@reddeeradvocate.com
C2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Man denied bail A Red Deer man facing drugs and weapons charges was denied bail in Red Deer provincial court on Thursday. Brian Randall Buxton, 31, was arrested in late October by Red Deer City RCMP following up on surveillance of a house in Inglewood. Buxton and his coaccused, Summer Brook Kreiser, 29, of Sylvan Lake, both return to court on Nov. 29. Police arrested them during a traffic stop on Oct. 23. Charges include four counts each of possession of drugs for trafficking, along with additional charges of possession of property obtained by crime and possession of weapons for a dangerous purpose, including bear spray and a baseball bat. Buxton also faces trafficking and aggravated as-
STORY FROM PAGE C1
EDUCATION: Needs “Education is a constantly evolving system and the new act reflects the significance of local governance and its ability to be flexible to the diverse and unique needs that many of the communities in Alberta reflect,” said Lee, who was formally introduced by Red Deer North MLA Mary-Anne Jablonski during last week’s opening of Education Act talks in the legislature. Adriana LaGrange, chairwoman of Red Deer Catholic Regional Schools, said she’s impressed overall with the act because it highlights the strengths of the education system and it brings it in line with the 21st century. It’s the first legislation in Canada to formally recognize the role of parents as a child’s first and most important teacher. LaGrange also applauds the new act for giving schools boards and divisions more flexibility in doing the best for each and every child, including those with specialized needs. The act also focuses on schools being a safe place, including addressing bullying. Specifics on bullying will be addressed in supporting regulations. Those regulations will likely be developed over a couple of years, said LaGrange. The province says it needs time for both the
department and stakeholders to undertake extensive reviews necessary to align applicable policies, procedures and practices following the review of regulations. Larry Jacobs, superintendent for Wolf Creek Public Schools in Ponoka, supports the new framework around antisocial behaviour, which calls for school divisions, parents and others in the education system to be proactive about behaviours like bullying. Jacobs also applauded the move to allow school boards to have natural persons powers. Natural person powers provide school boards with the authority to do any legal thing a natural person may do except when specifically prohibited by the act
Air quality to be monitored The Lancaster reservoir will be home to an air quality monitoring station for at least four months. The Parkland Airshed Management Zone was approved for a development permit to establish a temporary site near the northeast corner of the Lancaster reservoir in Red Deer at Wednesday’s Municipal Planning Commission meeting. The David McCoy AGM trailer will remain at the site up until March 31, 2013, to help characterize the air quality at the reservoir. Depending on the results of the monitoring, the site may be a permanent replacement for the Riverside Drive site. A permanent air quality management station has been located at Riverside Drive near Three Mile Bend since 2000. With the relocation of the city’s Civic Yards to the Riverside Industrial Park and other growth in the park, the site is no longer suitable for use as a community health air quality monitoring site and a replacement site is being sought.
Outdoor rink considered Pucks could soon be flying again at an outdoor downtown hockey rink. City council will consider reinstating the Woodlea/Waskasoo outdoor snow bank or by regulations. Natural person powers give boards more administrative flexibility to deliver educational programming. Jacobs said that boards can now do anything except what will be prohibited under the Education Act. It will set out certain parameters within the weeks and months ahead, he added. He also likes that the age limit for access to publicly-funded education has been increased to include individuals younger than 21 as of Sept. 1. “We do have a lot of students who leave school and they go to work, and then they realize they want to go back to school. They would have had to pay quite an increase in fees.” It’s also nice for students who attend outreach schools, such as in
the case of some single mothers who may need to go to school longer, Jacobs said. ltester@reddeeradvocate.com
Family hit by fire helped The homeless family of Red Deer singer Randi Boulton has benefitted from the generosity of Delburne and area residents. Dave and Betty Boulton and their son William lost everything, including a family cat, when fire destroyed their farm home in the middle of the night on Sept. 25. The community rallied to hold a fundraiser for them and they recently received a cheque for $22,113.50 to tide them over until their home insurance coverage is worked out. “They lost everything and the process is taking longer than they expected,” said Chad Huseby of the Servus Credit Union Delburne branch. The family also received donations of clothing and household items immediately after the fire for the house they’re now renting in Elnora.
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Police have released a photo of a Red Deer girl who is missing. Sommer Currie, 16, was last seen in the Deer Park area of Red Deer on Nov. 16 at 9:50 p.m. The aboriginal female was last seen wearing a dark sweater, dark pants, red and back running shoes and had a black backpack in her possession. Police describe Currie as 1.52 metres (five foot two inches tall) and weighs 77 kg (170 pounds). She has brown hair and brown eyes. Sommer Currie Red Deer City RCMP are asking for the public’s assistance in locating Currie. If anyone has any information on her whereabouts, call the city RCMP at 403-343-5575.
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Police release photo of missing girl
A 40-year-old man charged after a fatal head-on crash northeast of Calgary returns to Airdrie provincial court on Nov. 29. Lloyd Louis Gerard, of Calgary, was scheduled to appear in Airdrie court on Thursday. RCMP were called to the scene of the crash on Hwy 9, a few kilometres south of Irricana, early in the morning on June 23 after a passerby called 911. They found a 51-year-old woman from Bieseker dead, but no one else around. Gerard is charged with dangerous driving causing death and failing to remain at the scene of a collision.
rink at its Monday meeting. The rink was one of five neighbourhood rinks shut down in an effort to save money last year. During the 2012 mid-year budget review, council reinstated the Fairview rink, leaving the Sunnybrook, Central School, Glendale and Woodlea/ Waskasoo rinks closed. Council will consider leaving the rink closed, immediately reinstating ice maintenance (snow bank rink for 2012-2013 and installation of end boards for 2013-2014) or wait until the 2013 operating budget deliberations to make a decision. The additional cost would be $3,830 annually.
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BRIEFS
Accused in crash faces charges
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sault charges laid earlier in the year.
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Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Harley Richards, Business Editor, 403-314-4337 E-mail editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
RDC excited to grow downtown HAS PLANS FOR CITY CENTRE STAGE BUILDING BY HARLEY RICHARDS ADVOCATE BUSINESS EDITOR Acquiring City Centre Stage will allow Red Deer College to better serve its students, as well as the business community and the city as a whole, says college president Joel Ward. RDC’s board of governors agreed Tuesday to buy the downtown theatre building for $1.6 million. Ward said on Thursday that these new facilities will allow the college to undertake a number of initiatives with wide-ranging benefits. Among these will be the hosting of a business speaker series, with high-profile presenters ad-
Gold Closed
dressing audiences in the building’s 300-seat auditorium. Jim Harris, the Canadian author of the best-seller Blindsided, will kick off the series this spring. Ward said the City Centre Stage building should also prove useful when the college’s Donald School of Business wants to assemble a large group of students, such as for a presentation by a local entrepreneur. “We didn’t have the capacity to do that before.” The facilities could also be used by companies and other organizations, said Ward. With its auditoriums and reception area, and classroom space nearby in the Millennium Centre, the college can now satisfy the requirements for large business gatherings. “For example, if Servus Credit Union wanted to have their provincial meeting, they
could have it here at the Donald School of Business in our new facility.” Other companies with offices in Calgary and Edmonton might see Red Deer as a good central location to meet, he suggested. “We think we can attract some conferences, and provide some of the companies in Red Deer the opportunity to use our facilities for training and professional development.” Ward also anticipates that the building will be used by RDC’s motion picture arts program, and by other performing arts organizations. “We’ll be running a Red Deer film festival once a year, showcasing obscure films that most people wouldn’t see in Red Deer, as well as previewing student work in the film production program.” Having City Centre Stage’s
smaller theatre rooms will also take pressure off RDC’s Arts Centre Mainstage, which is too big for many of the performances currently staged there, said Ward. That in turn will free up the 600-seat venue on the main campus for other events. The City Centre Stage building will be branded as an RDC facility, said Ward, with further naming rights possibly sold to a company to generate revenue. Increasing the Donald School of Business’s footprint downtown is a positive step, he added. “I think for us to be a successful business school, the closer we’re connected to the financial sector, to the banking sector, to the small to medium enterprise sector, the more valuable the experience is for our students.” hrichards@reddeeradvocate. com
BOWER PLAZA WORK
Retail sales climb again
Silver Closed
RIM shares jump 17% Shares in Research In Motion spiked dramatically Thursday after days of steady gains, but analysts were still guarded about the potential success of the BlackBerry maker’s new operating system. On a day when the U.S. markets were closed, shares in Research In Motion surged 17.3 per cent to close at $12, up $1.77, its best performance in months on the Toronto Stock Exchange. RIM’s new BlackBerry 10 operating system — which will be unveiled at a Jan. 30 event along with its new line of smartphones — is widely considered a make or break product launch for the Waterloo, Ont., smartphone maker.
Vehicle makers headed for good year Canada’s vehicle manufacturers are poised to have their most profitable year in a decade in 2012, according to the Conference Board of Canada. The Ottawabased economic forecaster estimates the industry will have $1.35 billion in pre-tax profits this year, its best year since 2002. “The industry will continue to benefit from brisk growth in vehicle sales, both this year and next,” said Michael Burt, director, industrial economic trends. Burt noted that while Canadian sales are set to surpass their pre-recession level this year, sales in the United States are not expected to return to 2007 volumes until 2014. “This increasing U.S. demand is expected to lead to a prolonged recovery in Canadian auto exports,” he said. Through the first eight months of 2012, Canadian automotive production rose almost 20 per cent compared with the same period last year, according to the Conference Board report. Sales in Canada surged 7.1 per cent between January and August of this year and are on track to reach 1.72 million vehicles — the most since 2002. — The Canadian Press
THE CANADIAN PRESS
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Work continues on the front of Dragon City Restaurant in Bower Plaza. The south Red Deer shopping centre has been undergoing major renovations for the past several months, with Pearl Rose Construction the contractor. Businesses in Bower Plaza have remained open during the work.
Homes slightly more affordable in Q3 BY THE CANADIAN PRESS The cost of home ownership became more affordable in the most recent quarter due to a modest decline in home prices and gains in Canadian household incomes, according to a Royal Bank study. RBC’s affordability index for a detached bungalow stood at 42 per cent of income nationally in the third quarter. That means an owner would need to spend 42 per cent of pretax annual income to pay for mortgage payments, utilities and property taxes — one percentage point lower than in the second quarter of 2012. That assumes an average home price of $362,100 and an average qualifying income of $78,100, but those measures varied widely from market to market. The index fell even more for two-storey homes, by 1.2 percentage points to 47.8 per cent and eased 0.6 percentage points to 28 per cent for condos. “The costs of owning a home at current market prices took a smaller bite of household budget in all major markets in Canada in the third quarter of 2012,” the report said. The bank, which publishes the index on a quarterly basis, says ultra-low interest rates have been the key factor in keeping affordability levels from reaching dangerous levels in recent years.
RBC INDEX Still, top government officials have warned that low interest rates are encouraging some buyers to spend beyond what they’ll be able to afford when rates inevitably rise. Household debt stands at a record 163 per cent of income. That means for every dollar Canadians earn, they owe $1.63 in debt. Despite the recent improvement in affordability, RBC said the amount of income to service home ownership costs continues to be higher than long-term averages. RBC notes that Canada’s housing market cooled further in the third quarter, partially because of the effects of a fourth round of rule changes to government-backed mortgage insurance. The new rules were brought it to deter those most vulnerable buyers, including those exposed to a sudden rise in interest rates. The bank expects the negative effect of the changes on home sales will ease by the end of the year and that resale activity will stabilize next year. The July-September quarter fully reversed the mild erosion in affordability that occurred during the first half of 2012, said RBC chief economist Craig Wright. “The broad affordability pic-
ture has been somewhat stationary over the last two years, alternating between periods of improvement and deterioration, resulting in an affordability trend that is, on net, essentially flat,” Wright said. Wright expects the Bank of Canada to begin raising its overnight lending rate for banks — which affects bank’s prime lending rates — from the current one per cent in the second half of next year, assuming the euro crisis remains in check and U.S fiscal issues are addressed. “This, along with the expected continued growth in household income, will lessen the risk of marked erosion in affordability,” he said. As is often the case, Vancouver’s extremely expensive real-estate skewed the national figures. “The cost of owning a home took a smaller bite out of household pocketbooks in the third quarter as home prices fell — most notably in the Vancouver area, though it remains the least affordable market in Canada by a wide margin,” explained Wright. The index in Vancouver stood at 83.2 per cent of income, followed by Toronto at 52.4 per cent, Montreal 40.2 per cent, Ottawa at 38.7 per cent, Calgary at 38.3 per cent and Edmonton at 31.1 per cent.
Rifco posts record second-quarter profit Rifco Inc. (TSXV: RFC) has posted record secondquarter results. The Red Deer-based company, which provides automobile loans through a national dealership network, reported on Thursday that it had revenues of $6 million and net income of $1 million for the three months ended Sept. 30. Both of these figures were records, as was Rifco’s loan originations for the quarter ($23.1 million) and
its finance receivables ($129.1 million). The company’s revenues for the same period in 2011 were $4 million and its net income was $441,000. Rifco’s earnings per share for the quarter were five cents, up from two cents. Rifco announced earlier this month that it’s arranged for a new $70-million secured revolving line of credit from Wells Fargo for a term of three years. It replaces a $10-million credit facility.
OTTAWA — Statistics Canada reported retail sales edged up in September, helped by improved sales of new cars, but fell short of expectations amid increasing signs of economic uncertainty. Sales were up 0.1 per cent to $39.1 billion in September, the third straight monthly increase, but well short of the 0.5 per cent consensus expectations of economists. “Indeed, sales growth has now cooled to a humble 1.8 per cent yearover-year as Canadian retailers face some stiff challenges,” BMO Capital Markets economist Robert Kavcic wrote in a note to clients. “In addition to cooling domestic consumer credit growth, this weekend’s likely stampede of shoppers south of the border will highlight the other challenges — a loonie near parity, more generous duty-free limits and more aggressive U.S. sale prices.” The weaker than expected retail sales results came as Statistics Canada also reported the number of people receiving regular employment insurance benefits in September was down by 5,700 at 525,900. However economist Erin Weir of the Progressive Economics Forum noted that the decrease wasn’t good news. “Unfortunately, the Labour Force Survey indicates that the number of unemployed workers is growing. “The drop in EI recipients means that more jobless workers are falling through the cracks,” Weir said. Earlier this week, Statistics Canada reported that wholesale sales fell 1.4 per cent to $48.8 billion in September, the third decline in four months. Retail sales were boosted by new car sales as Canadians continued what has been a strong year for car sales. Industry estimates put the automakers on pace for what could be a record year for sales. A report Thursday by the Conference Board of Canada, suggested the country’s auto industry is expected to post its third consecutive annual year of profitability this year and its best result since 2002.
Please see RETAIL on Page
C4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
MARKETS
STORY FROM PAGE C3
RETAIL: No life to Q3 GDP
COMPANIES OF LOCAL INTEREST Thursday’s stock prices supplied by RBC Dominion Securities of Red Deer. For information call 341-8883.
Shoppers . . . . . . . . . . . . 41.75 Tim Hortons . . . . . . . . . . 46.53 Wal-Mart . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68.89 WestJet Airlines . . . . . . . 19.08
MARKETS CLOSE TORONTO — The Toronto stock market closed higher Thursday after data showed that China’s manufacturing sector is back in expansion mode after 13 months of contraction. The S&P/TSX composite index gained 53.04 points to 12,153.1 while the TSX Venture Exchange was up 5.7 points to 1,248.36. The TSX also benefited from a sharp run-up from Research In Motion Ltd. (TSX:RIM). Its shares jumped $1.77 or 17.3 per cent to $12, its highest level since early May, on a heavy volume of 12.6 million shares. The surge came after National Bank (TSX:NA) analyst Kris Thompson hiked his target on RIM shares to US$15 from $12. RIM unveils its new line of smartphones Jan. 30. Earlier this week, analyst Peter Misek at Jefferies & Co. doubled his share target to US$10, saying he has been seeing better than expected support from carriers. Meanwhile, the Canadian dollar was lower in the wake of a disappointing read on September retail sales. The loonie was down 0.07 of a cent at 100.28 cents US as Statistics Canada reported that sales edged up just 0.1 per cent to $39.1 billion in September. Economists had expected retail sales to rise by 0.5 per cent during the month. New York markets were closed for the American Thanksgiving holiday. U.S. markets reopen Friday for a shortened session. HSBC Corp.’s purchasing managers’ index showed that China’s manufacturing sector came in at 50.4 in November, up from 49.5 in October. Any reading over 50 indicates expansion. The PMI index measures overall manufacturing activity by surveying numerous indicators including orders, employment and actual production. The HSBC reading was particularly good news for the global economy, which is still recovering slowly from the 2008 financial crisis and recession. It’s also a big positive for a primarily resource-based market such as the TSX. China, the world’s second-largest economy, has had a huge appetite for commodities, in turn raising prices for oil and metals and stock prices for energy and mining companies.
The base metals sector gained 1.24 cent with copper unchanged at US$3.51 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices had risen earlier in the wake of the Chinese report. Copper is viewed as an economic bellwether as it is used in so many applications and China is the world’s biggest consumer of the metal. First Quantum Minerals (TSX:FM) was ahead 35 cents to C$21.92 while Teck Resources (TSX:TCK.B) was up 82 cents to $32.59. Industrials were also higher with Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR) ahead $1.36 to $87.12. Financials also provided lift as CIBC (TSX:CM) rose 35 cents to $79.05. The energy sector was ahead 0.55 per cent while oil prices dipped after running up strongly in the past few days on concerns that fighting between Israel and Hamas could spread, jeopardizing shipments of oil from the Mideast. The January crude contract was off 26 cents to US$87.12 a barrel. Cenovus Energy (TSX:CVE) advanced 50 cents to C$33.62. The gold sector was off about 0.15 per cent as December bullion gained $1.30 to US$1,729.50 an ounce. Kinross Gold Corp. (TSX:K) faded eight cents to C$9.81. Traders were also focused on whether the White House can come to a deal with Congress on a budget to avoid automatic tax increases and spending cuts at the start of next year, a shock to the economy that would likely tip the U.S. back into recession. There have also been concerns about whether Greece will get its next batch of bailout cash. Greece is expected to finally get the approval for the release of the money it needs to avoid bankruptcy at a meeting in Brussels on Monday. In corporate news, SABMiller, the world’s second-largest brewer, has reported a 13 per cent increase in first-half profit driven by its acquisition of Australian brewer Foster’s. The brewer of brands including Peroni Nastro Azzurro, Miller Genuine Draft and Grolsch reported Thursday that net profit rose to $1.6 billion from $1.4 billion a year earlier. Group revenue was up 11 per cent to $17.5 billion.
Mining Barrick Gold . . . . . . . . . . 34.75 Cameco Corp. . . . . . . . . 16.84 First Quantum Minerals . 21.92 Goldcorp Inc. . . . . . . . . . 40.77 Hudbay Minerals. . . . . . . . 9.29 Inmet Corp.. . . . . . . . . . . 53.85 Kinross Gold Corp. . . . . . . 9.81 Potash Corp.. . . . . . . . . . 38.67 Sherritt Intl. . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.99 Teck Resources . . . . . . . 32.59 Energy Arc Energy . . . . . . . . . . . 24.53 Badger Daylighting Ltd. . 28.35 Baker Hughes. . . . . . . . . 41.33 Bonavista . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.90 Bonterra Energy . . . . . . . 41.20 Cdn. Nat. Res. . . . . . . . . 27.63 Cdn. Oil Sands Ltd. . . . . 20.68 Canyon Services Group. 10.02 Cenovous Energy Inc. . . 33.62 CWC Well Services . . . . 0.700 Encana Corp. . . . . . . . . . 21.10 Essential Energy. . . . . . . . 1.99 Exxon Mobil . . . . . . . . . . 88.01
Halliburton Co. . . . . . . . . 31.70 High Arctic . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.06 Husky Energy . . . . . . . . . 27.90 Imperial Oil . . . . . . . . . . . 43.53 IROC Services . . . . . . . . . 2.41 Nexen Inc . . . . . . . . . . . . 25.10 Pengrowth Energy . . . . . . 5.06 Penn West Energy . . . . . 10.76 Pinecrest Energy Inc. . . . . 1.79 Precision Drilling Corp . . . 7.17 Suncor Energy . . . . . . . . 33.31 Talisman Energy . . . . . . . 11.25 Trican Ltd.. . . . . . . . . . . . 11.75 Trinidad Energy . . . . . . . . 6.83 Vermilion Energy . . . . . . 49.18 Financials Bank of Montreal . . . . . . 58.54 Bank of N.S. . . . . . . . . . . 54.48 CIBC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79.05 Cdn. Western . . . . . . . . . 28.89 Carefusion . . . . . . . . . . . 27.66 Great West Life. . . . . . . . 23.49 IGM Financial . . . . . . . . . 40.08 Intact Financial Corp. . . . 63.19 Manulife Corp. . . . . . . . . 12.40 National Bank . . . . . . . . . 76.78 Rifco Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.36 Royal Bank . . . . . . . . . . . 57.81 Sun Life Fin. Inc.. . . . . . . 27.10 TD Bank . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80.99 MARKET HIGHLIGHTS TORONTO — Highlights at the close of Thursday at world financial market trading. Stocks: S&P/TSX Composite Index — 12,153.10 up 53.04 points TSX Venture Exchange — 1,248.36 up 5.70 points TSX 60 — 696.72 up 3.49 points Dow — Closed S&P 500 — Closed Nasdaq — Closed Currencies at close: Cdn — 100.28 cents US, down 0.07 of a cent Pound — C$1.5897, unchanged Euro — C$1.2844, up 1.16 cents Euro — US$1.2880, up 0.57 of a cent Oil futures: Closed (Jan. ’13 contract) Gold futures: Closed (December contract) Canadian Fine Silver Handy and Harman: Closed TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE TORONTO — The TSX Venture Exchange closed on Thursday at 1,248.36, up 5.70 points. The volume was at 4:20 p.m. ET is 107.09 million shares. ICE FUTURES CANADA WINNIPEG — Closing prices: Canola: Jan ’13 $0.80 lower $578.40; March ’13 $0.60 lower $576.20; May ’13 $0.10 lower $575.20; July ’13 $0.10 higher $572.20; Nov. ’13 $0.10 lower $526.20; Jan. ’14 $0.10 lower $528.90; March ’14 $0.10 lower $529.20; May ’14 $0.10 lower $529.20; July ’14 $0.10 lower $529.20; Nov. ’14 $0.10 lower $529.20; Jan ’15 $0.10 lower $529.20. Barley (Western): Dec. ’12 unchanged $250.00; March ’13 unchanged $253.00; May ’13 unchanged $254.00; July ’13 unchanged $254.50; Oct. ’13 unchanged $254.50; Dec ’13 unchanged $254.50; March ’14 unchanged $254.50; May ’14 unchanged $254.50; July ’14 unchanged $254.50; Oct. ’14 unchanged $254.50; Dec. ’14 unchanged $254.50. Thursday’s estimated volume of trade: 112,240 tonnes of canola; 0 tonnes of barley (Western Barley) Total: 112,240.
D I L B E R T
EU votes to ban shark finning BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BRUSSELS, Belgium — The European Union took a major step to protect sharks on Thursday, banning the brutal practice of hacking off their fins before throwing the fish back into the sea to die. The European Parliament voted by an overwhelming 566-47 margin to force all boats in EU waters and EUregistered vessels around the world to land sharks with their fins attached and prove the animal had not been thrown back finless. The practice of shark finning stems from the high price the body parts fetch in China for the shark fin soup, a specialty at high-class banquets, and the low value of the rest of the body. The consumption of fins has risen as China’s living standards have increased.
Fins can sell for as much as $700 a pound. The European Union has said that some 75 million sharks are killed for their fins only. Since the EU is the biggest exporter, the move should have a sizable impact on shark populations. The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that about one third of sharks and rays are threatened both in EU waters and around the globe. Uta Bellion of the Pew Environment Group said that “the parliament’s vote is a major milestone in ending the wasteful practice of shark finning.” EU nations are expected to back the rule soon. The EU had rules in place which included the loophole that fins and bodies could be landed in different port, making enforcement that no sharks were tossed back overboard next to impossible.
UNRESERVED SIGN SHOP 11,7727 Gaetz Ave., Red Deer, AB
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2012 @ 11 AM On-Line Bidding Available
30503K20,23
Econocraft 60 Laminator Model EPSL-602 S/n 300240, SwitchVox SMB AA60 w/Telephones, Ethernet, UPS, Fletcher Substrate Cutter (FSC) 65”,
Substrate Structure Storage Rack, Sign Shop Large Work Table, Modular Office Desks, Task Chairs, Front End Slat Wall Displays, Flat Screen TV, 3 Mac Computers, Small Tools & Misc Items Auctioneers Note: This is late model sign shop equipment. 10% Buyers Fee On-Line Bidding available. On-line Buyers Fee 15% Cash/C/Card Viewing: Tues Nov 27 10am – 4pm. Subject to Additions & Deletions
www.montgomeryauctions.com
Auctioneers & Sales Management Box 939, Blackfalds, AB
THE CANADIAN PRESS Pfizer Canada is cutting the price of Viagra, bringing the cost in line with generic versions of the erectile dysfunction drug. The price drop follows a ruling from the Supreme Court of Canada earlier this month that invalidated the Viagra patent held by the pharmaceutical giant. “We are committed to ensuring that Viagra patients can continue to have access to the original brand at a competitive price,” said spokeswoman Julie-Catherine Racine. For a package of four Viagra pills, with each pill at 100 milligrams, the new price is about $37, she said. The price had been about $49. The new prices are now in effect, she added. The Nov. 8 decision by the high court threw open Canada’s market for generic erectile dysfunction drugs. The Supreme Court, in an unanimous 7-0 ruling, annulled Pfizer’s Via-
gra patent, saying it tried to “game” the Canadian system. The high court sided with Teva Canada’s challenge of the legitimacy of the patent, paving the way for generic versions. The decision has big implications for users of erectile dysfunction drugs and the pharmaceutical industry because it allows companies to create generic versions, which are usually cheaper for consumers. Pfizer obtained the patent in 1998 after applying four years earlier. It was first challenged by the generic drug maker in 2007. Teva originally questioned Pfizer’s patent in Federal Court and the Federal Court of Appeal, but lost at both levels. The ruling wiped out Pfizer’s market dominance with Viagra. Its patent had been scheduled to expire in 2014. Hours after Teva won its appeal before the high court, it posted notice of its own generic version on its website — the first commercial challenge to Pfizer’s 14-year Viagra monopoly.
Enbridge plans $1.8-billion pipeline expansion between Alberta hubs THE CANADIAN PRESS Enbridge Inc. is planning a $1.8-billion expansion to a pipeline that runs between two major Alberta oil hubs in order to bring growing oilsands production to market. The project includes a new 91-centimetre pipeline between Edmonton and Hardisty, Alta., as well as additional tankage and terminal facilities. The new line will initially be able to carry 570,000 barrels per day, but has the potential to be expanded to 800,000 barrels. “The agreement with shippers on terms for the expansion continues our collaborative relationship, ensuring that we provide the facilities and services they need to maximize the value of their crude oil,” said Stephen Wuori, president of liquids pipelines at Enbridge. Construction could begin as early as the first quarter of 2014, with start-up targeted for mid2015. The proposed 179-kilometre pipeline will follow the route of En-
bridge’s existing line along that corridor, which the company says will minimize the environmental impact. Enbridge is the dominant crude shipper in the oilsands region, although rival TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) has been
growing its presence in that market. Many of regional Alberta pipelines end up in Edmonton. Hardisty, southeast of Edmonton, is where major Enbridge and TransCanada U.S.-bound pipelines start.
Anne M. Crossfield, CGA is now a partner in the Firm.
Anne has been with the Firm for five years and Norman Perry and Phil Cruickshank are pleased to welcome Anne as a partner. Anne brings to the Firm twenty years of experience she gained from public practice and industry, and a positive attitude which our existing clients and new clients will appreciate.
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2011 Genie TZ-34 Trailer Mtd Articulating Boom /Man Lift 3200 Lb Cap., Graphtec FC8000 160 Plotter Cutter, S/n 20081001 Roland Soljet Pro111 Print & Cut XC540, S/n ZY36328,
Pfizer cuts cost of Viagra to compete with generic pills after court ruling
DON MONTGOMERY ICCA Auctioneer (403) 885-5149 1-800-371-6963
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Diversified and Industrials Agrium Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 99.27 ATCO Ltd.. . . . . . . . . . . . 74.38 BCE Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42.12 Bombardier . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.07 Brookfield . . . . . . . . . . . . 34.07 Cdn. National Railway . . 87.12 Cdn. Pacific Railway. . . . 92.89 Cdn. Satellite . . . . . . . . . . 5.86 Cdn. Utilities . . . . . . . . . . 65.46 Capital Power Corp . . . . 21.84 Cervus Equipment Corp 19.40 Dow Chemical . . . . . . . . 28.82 Enbridge Inc. . . . . . . . . . 38.70 Finning Intl. Inc. . . . . . . . 22.95 Fortis Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 32.95 General Motors Co. . . . . 24.60 Parkland Fuel Corp. . . . . 17.80 Research in Motion. . . . . 12.00 SNC Lavalin Group. . . . . 41.05 Stantec Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 37.70 Telus Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . 64.69 Transalta Corp.. . . . . . . . 14.95 Transcanada. . . . . . . . . . 45.25 Consumer Brick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.31 Canadian Tire . . . . . . . . . 67.71 Gamehost . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.35 Loblaw Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . 32.95 Maple Leaf Foods. . . . . . 10.91 Rona Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.83
The board said in the first eight months of 2012, auto production rose almost 20 per cent compared to the same period last year, while sales during the same period were up 7.1 per cent and on track to reach 1.72 million vehicles — the highest levels since 2002. In September, the motor vehicle and parts dealers subsector was up 0.6 per cent as new car sales gained 0.9 per cent. Sales rose also 2.5 per cent at miscellaneous retailers, a category that includes used merchandise stores, office supply and stationery stores, and pet supply stores. However general merchandise store sales decreased 0.7 per cent, with department store sales off 0.9 per cent. Food and beverage store sales were
up 0.1 per cent, as sales at supermarkets and grocery stores were up 0.2 per cent and specialty food stores gained 1.4 per cent. Beer, wine and liquor store sales fell one per cent. Sales at electronics and appliance stores rose 0.8 per cent, while gasoline stations saw sales drop 0.6 per cent after two consecutive monthly increases. CIBC economist Emanuella Enenajor said the September retail sales will provide no life to the third-quarter gross domestic product. “September GDP growth could track no better than flat,” Enenajor wrote in a report. “Third-quarter growth now looks likely to track around 0.5 per cent annualized due to a dented trade sector, and the fourth-quarter now looks likely to come in around two per cent rather than the 2.5 per cent the Bank of Canada was looking for, owing to a weak handoff from September.” Sales rose in five provinces in September led by Alberta. Quebec’s sales were off 0.7 per cent in Quebec and Ontario’s were flat.
SCIENCE Midlife crisis ... in apes » SEE MORE ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM
C5
Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
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CITY OF RED DEER CAPITAL PROJECTS Borrowing Bylaws Red Deer City Council proposes to pass the following bylaws to provide for debenture borrowing in the amount of $10,712,000 to finance development and construction of capital projects listed below. The public may inspect the proposed bylaws at Legislative Services 2nd Floor of City Hall during regular office hours. BYLAW Number
Additional Capital Projects
NHC-(EHN) Northland DR Trunk – 30 Ave – Riverside Drive Riverside Dr Trunks NW Industrial Dev – On-site & Off-site Trunks 3377/A-2012 NHC (EHN) 30 Ave to River Outfall (Storm Offsite) - Storm Trunk to Pond Northwest Industrial NE 36, SE 36, 3459/A-2012 NE 25 (53-54) (Water Offsite) 53 Avenue N. of 3489/2012 Riverlands - Sani Trunk (53 Avenue N. of Riverlands - Sani Trunk) 3376/B-2012 (Sanitary Offsite)
File photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chimpanzees sit in an enclosure at the Chimpanzee Eden rehabilitation centre, in South Africa. A study of chimps and orangutans released this week finds the same pattern of changes in happiness through life as many studies find in people.
Borrowing Amount $4,429,000
$1,838,000 $850,000 $3,595,000
The electors may submit a separate petition with respect to each advertised bylaw calling for a vote of the electors to determine whether the proposed bylaw should be passed. The petition must meet the formal requirements of Sections 221-226 of the Municipal Government Act and be filed with the Manager, Legislative Services within 15 days after the last date the proposed bylaws are advertised.The last date of advertisement for these bylaws is November 23, 2012. Any petition will be public information. If you have any questions regarding the petition process or the use of the petition please contact the Manager, Legislative Services at 403-342-8132.
STUDY FINDS MIDLIFE CRISIS IN CHIMPS AND ORANGUTANS; MAY SHED LIGHT ON OUR EMOTIONAL LIVES BY MALCOLM RITTER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — Chimpanzees in a midlife crisis? It sounds like a setup for a joke. But there it is, in the title of a report published Monday in a scientific journal: “Evidence for a midlife crisis in great apes.” So what do these apes do? Buy red Ferraris? Leave their mates for some cute young bonobos? Uh, no. “I believe no ape has ever purchased a sports car,” said Andrew Oswald, an author of the study. But researchers report that captive chimps and orangutans do show the same low ebb in emotional well-being at midlife that some studies find in people. That suggests the human tendency toward midlife discontent may have been passed on through evolution, rather than resulting just from the hassles of modern life, said Oswald, a professor of economics at the University of Warwick in England who presented his work Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. A second study in the journal looks at a younger age group and finds that happiness in youth can lead to higher income a few years down the road. More on that later. Let’s get back to those apes. Several studies have concluded that happiness in human adults tends to follow a certain course between ages 20 and 70: It starts high and declines over the years to reach a low point in the late 40s, then turns around and rises to another peak at 70. On a graph, that’s a U-shaped pattern. Some researchers question whether that trend is real, but to Oswald the mystery is what causes it. “This is one of the great patterns of human life. We’re all going to slide along this U for good or ill,” he said. “So what explains it?” When he learned that others had been measuring well-being in apes, “it just seemed worth pursuing the hunch that the U might be more general than in humans,” he said. He and co-authors assembled data on 508 great apes from zoos and research centres in the U.S., Australia, Canada, Singapore and Japan. Caretakers and other observers had filled out a four-item questionnaire to assess well-being in the apes. The questions asked such things as the degree to which each animal was in a positive or negative mood, how much pleasure it got from social situations, and how successful it was in achieving goals. The raters were even asked how happy they would be if they were the animal for a week. Sounds wacky? Oswald and his co-authors say research suggests it’s a valid approach. And they found that the survey results produced that familiar U-shaped curve, adjusted to an ape’s shorter lifespan. “We find it for these creatures that don’t have a mortgage and don’t have to go to work and don’t have marriage and all the other stuff,” Oswald said. “It’s as though the U shape is deep in the biology of humans” rather than a result of uniquely human experiences.
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Lancaster Vanier East Neighbourhood Land Use Bylaw Amendment 3357/R-2012 City Council is considering amending the Land Use Bylaw by proposing to rezone 0.1196 ha (hectares) of land from PS (Public Service Institutional District) to R1G (Residential Small Lot) District within the Lancaster Vanier East Neighbourhood Area Structure Plan. This land was identified as a social care site in the Lancaster Vanier East Neighbourhood Area Structure Plan with an alternate use as R1G residential. The social care site (public service site) was advertised for one year, as per the City of Red Deer’s Neighbourhood Planning Guidelines and Standards and no interest was shown in developing the site. The site is now proposed to be rezoned to R1G (Residential Small Lots).
Development Officer Approvals
Proposed Amendment to Land Use Bylaw 3357/2006
On November 21, 2012, the Development Officer issued approval for the following applications: Permitted Use Oriole Park 1. D Hodgkinson – a 0.39 metre relaxation to the minimum rear yard, to an existing detached garage located at 6192 Orr Drive. Vanier Woods 2. True-Line Contracting Ltd. – a 0.70 metre relaxation to the minimum rear yard to a proposed single family dwelling and attached garage to be located at 175 Voisin Close.
Please see APES on Page C6
Discretionary Use Change District from: PS to R1G
Burnt Lake Business Park
Affected District: PS - Public Service District
Proposed Amendment Map: 18 / 2012 Bylaw: 3357 / R-2012 Date: Oct 15, 2012
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The proposed bylaws may be inspected at Legislative Services, 2nd Floor City Hall during regular office hours or for more details, contact City of Red Deer Planning Services at 403-406-8700. City Council will hear from any person claiming to be affected by the proposed bylaws at the Public Hearings on Monday, December 10, 2012 at 6:00 p.m. in Council Chambers, 2nd Floor of City Hall. If you want your letter or petition included on the Council agenda you must submit it to the Manager, Legislative Services by Tuesday, December 4, 2012. Otherwise you can simply tell Council your views at the Public Hearing. Council’s Procedure Bylaw indicates that each presentation is limited to 10 minutes. Any submission will be public information. If you have any questions regarding the use of this information please contact the Manager, Legislative Services at 403-342-8132.
3. Canyon Technical Services Ltd – a dangerous goods occupancy for the storage of used motor oil to be located at 25 Burnt Basin Street. Fairview 4. J Rogoschewsky – a proposed secondary suite within an existing single family dwelling to be located at 7 Fairway Avenue. Garden Heights 5. B Trottier – a proposed secondary suite within an new single family dwelling to be located at 163 Garrison Circle. You may appeal Discretionary approvals to the Red Deer Subdivision & Development Appeal Board, Legislative Services, City Hall, prior to 4:30 p.m. on December 7, 2012. You may not appeal a Permitted Use unless it involves a relaxation, variation or misinterpretation of the Land Use Bylaw. Appeal forms (outlining appeal fees) are available at Legislative Services. For further information, please phone 403-342-8399.
C6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
STORY FROM PAGE C5
DISTANT DWARF PLANET
APES: Have social lives
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Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
This artist’s impression, provided by the European Southern Observatory and the journal Nature, shows the surface of the distant dwarf planet Makemake. This dwarf planet is about two-thirds of the size of Pluto, and travels around the sun in a distant path that lies beyond that of Pluto, but closer to the sun than Eris, the most massive known dwarf planet in the solar system. Astronomers say Pluto’s icy, more distant sister seems even more alien because they found it doesn’t have an atmosphere. Scientists measuring the light signature from Makemake conclude that it doesn’t have a global atmosphere. A study in Wednesday’s journal Nature said it still may have pockets of atmosphere from methane ice turning into gas. Makemake is one of our solar system’s distant dwarf planets beyond Neptune.
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Yes, apes do have social lives, so “it could still be something human-like that we share with our social cousins,” he said. “But our result does seem to push away the likelihood that it’s dominantly something to do with human life.” Oswald said it’s not clear what the evolutionary payoff might be from such discontent. Maybe it prods parents to be restless, “to help find new worlds for the next generation to breed,” he said. Frans de Waal, an authority in primate behaviour at Emory University, cautioned that when people judge the happiness of apes, there may be a “human bias.” But in an email he called the results “intuitively correct” and said the notion of biological influence over the human pattern is “an intriguing possibility.” Even happiness researcher Sonja Lyubomirsky of the University of California, Riverside, who thinks the U-shaped pattern in people is a statistical mirage, says she can’t write off the ape result the same way. “I’m not really sure what it means,” she said. “I am finding this very intriguing.” Maybe it will spur more thinking about what’s going on in both apes and humans, she said. Oswald is also an author of a second report in the journal that finds new evidence that being happy can help young people earn more money later on. Prior research had also reached that conclusion, but Lyubomirsky and University of Virginia psychology professor Shige Oishi called the new work the best evidence yet. “Wow,” Oishi said in an email. “This is a very strong paper” in its approach. Researchers drew on data from a huge sample of young Americans who were surveyed repeatedly. They were asked to rate their positive feelings such as happiness and hopefulness at age 16 and again at 18, and their satisfaction with life at 22. Researchers then compared their ratings with their income around age 29. The data came from nearly 15,000 participants at age 16, and at least 11,000 at the latter two ages. Higher income at age 29 was consistently linked to greater happiness at the earlier ages. The least happy 16-year-olds, for example, went on to average about $10,000 a year less than the happiest. That disparity shrank by about half when the researchers statistically removed the effect of other influences such as ethnicity, health and education. A happiness effect even appeared between siblings within their own families. What’s going on? Most likely, happiness raises productivity and helps a person work effectively with others, factors that promote success in the workplace, Oswald said. The study found that happier people were more likely to get a college degree and get hired and promoted. Ed Diener, an authority on happiness research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, said optimism probably plays a role because it helps people persist in their efforts and take on difficult goals. Since several studies, including his own, have now linked happiness to later income, that idea seems reliable, he said. Parents should recognize that “the psychological well-being of their children is important in how well the kids will do in simple dollar terms later on,” Oswald said. And unhappy people should realize that they might have to strive harder than others to focus on work and promotion rather than their unhappiness, he said. Malcolm Ritter can be followed at http://www.twitter. com/malcolmritter
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Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Trendy holiday wardrobe ideas ADDITIONS TO HELP WOMEN PARTY IN STYLE BY LAUREN LA ROSE THE CANADIAN PRESS No need to break the bank on several new outfits as you navigate the busy holiday social circuit. Whether youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re heading to cocktails, the office bash or a family gathering, a few fashionable additions can add some oomph to your festive wardrobe. â&#x20AC;&#x153;As much as we know that weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve got lots of different parties on our calendar for the holidays, we donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t always have to necessarily buy four different outfits,â&#x20AC;? said Julia Cyboran, editor-in-chief of Loulou magazine. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s all about how you style one main piece.â&#x20AC;?
THE STAPLE PIECE
ACCESSORIES In need of a lone standout statement piece? Or trying to select several eye-catching add-ons to amp up your party attire? On-trend accessories for the new season can help lend a touch of refinement or bolder strokes of colour, shimmer and shine to fashionably festive ensembles. Step in style: Whether your prefer pumps or favour flats, there are fashionable footwear options for fans of both styles.
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Gold cuff from Cocoa Jewelry, and an envelope clutch from Forever 21 ($19.80) are some of Julia Cyboran, editor-in-chief of LouLou Magazineâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s accessory picks highlighting some of the current trends for the holiday season. In the case of those seeking a little lift, Cyboran said the pointy-toed pump that dominated the fashion runways is emerging as a standout on the market. Pointy Mary Janes can add the sleek, pulledtogether sexy secretary look to any holiday outfit and later can be parlayed into a suit or pencil skirt for wear at the office, she noted. Cyboran said the peep-toe pump is also a perennial classic for any chic soiree, which, like its pointytoed counterpart, could be a investment piece with legs beyond the holidays. The smoking slipper left a fashionable footprint on fall style, and the loafer is also making the leap into the holiday fashion wardrobe. While typically denoted by a distinct rounded toe and piping trim detail, a variety of options are emerging as stylish standouts for the season. Cyboran suggested seeking out a slipper option with a â&#x20AC;&#x153;bit of edgeâ&#x20AC;? to it, whether thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a cap-toe, studded or metallic style â&#x20AC;&#x201D; a fun way to add character to any outfit. In the bag: Cyboran said the solid, structured
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Cyboran said the little black dress is the wardrobe essential for any holiday look. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s likely music to the ears of cost-conscious fashionistas who may already have an LBD tucked away in their closet or are able to scout out a new, affordable option. The seemingly season-less style staple has a chameleon-like ability to transform from upscale chic to laid back casual. Selecting the right style with its own intricate details such as pleating, embellished sleeves and a flattering silhouette can ensure it can work as a stand-alone garment, Cyboran noted. Going for glam: Looking to add a little luxe to your holiday look? Cyboran said teaming your dress with a faux fur topper along with some shimmering sequined booties can instantly infuse a glam touch. Comfort casual: Heading to cottage country or settling in at home for a more low-key holiday celebration? Cyboran suggests taking a robust, comfy warm knit worn with a belt over the dress, along with a pair of slouchy, low-cut boots for a more casual ensemble. Office party chic: If youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re pressed for time and need to make a wardrobe quick-change for the office shindig, Cyboran said a blazer with faux leather detailing partnered with a pair of pumps can easily help translate your outfit for after-hours.
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C8 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Some great gifts you can use NEW YORK — Have you ever said “thank you” through clenched teeth? The gift in that nicely wrapped box was so not what you wanted: comfy clothes instead of designer duds, or a kitchen gadget instead of a shiny piece of jewelry. Sometimes, though, the best gifts are the ones you use, and, frankly, most of us probably wear hoodies more than haute couture. With a closet full of beautiful boots and gravitydefying heels, flat-foot, furry Uggs weren’t at the top of celebrity stylist-designer Rachel Zoe’s shopping list. They were OK for other people — she might even have suggested them — but she didn’t see them fitting into her closet until someone gave her a pair. “Once you put them on, you can’t go back,” Zoe says. “In my house, it’s now the family at-home shoe. I wear them all the time. My son has 10 pairs and my husband has 10 pairs.” Bradford Shellhammer, founder of Fab.com, which sells unusual items like canvas carryalls screen-printed with images of designer handbags, says gifts fit into three categories: the things everyone knows you want, the bad surprises and the amazing things that make you wonder, “How did I live without it?” A. Mitra Morgan, founder and chief curator of decorative home-goods website Joss & Main, can’t imagine her busy life without the wallet-phone case wristlet her mother gave her last year. Morgan has almost unlimited access to the pretty things on so many gift lists. Her mother, however, thought her daily necessities were too scattered. She didn’t know it at the time, Morgan admits, but mom was right. Morgan received another love-it-later gift, this one from her husband. He gave her flat-bottomed pizza scissors. “Coming from my husband, this was at the level of receiving a vacuum. I thought, ‘Really, this is what we’ve come to?”’ Morgan says. “But it’s awesome!” Christine Frietchen, a shopping expert who is advising TJ Maxx and Marshall’s this year on their gift-giving programs, says a gift is something you wouldn’t get for yourself. And the best way to know you’ve given a successful gift, she says, is if the receiver becomes an evangelist for it. Adam Glassman, creative director at O, The Oprah magazine, was never at risk of buying the Patagonia fleece sweatpants his brother got for him a few years ago. “Never in my life did I think I’d need sweatpants, but I live in them,” he gushes. “When I come home from work, they are my go-to item. I wear them more than any other clothes in my closet.” The only gift he might treasure more is the Eddie Bauer silk long johns his other brother gave him, something else he didn’t think he needed or wanted. “Where was the Tom Ford, the Gucci?” Glassman says with a laugh. But after a few winters of layering the long johns under his more fashionable pieces, he’s now buying them as gifts for other people. Shellhammer says friends and family can’t ask for the items offered on Fab.com because the website sells things people don’t know exist. Items such as a shower curtain with a map of Paris (what enthusiastic traveller wouldn’t want one?) or a pug T-shirt for
your favourite dog lover. (Shellhammer predicts the Mountain Pug Tee will be a top seller this season. The entire shirt becomes the face of a pug, wrinkles, jowls and all.) And Shellhammer says it’s OK to be playful and show a little sense of humour when giving a gift. You’d be surprised how many positive comments the website has received about a hedgehog dish brush, he says. “It just gives you that crack of a smile.” Brian Berger says the Yumaki toothbrush his business partner gave him is a present he’ll always remember — and appreciate. And, it’s something he uses every day. His partner was trying to make a point as he and Berger recently launched a men’s undergarment and socks business called Mack Weldon that also is courting customers with the idea of “elevated basics,” Berger explains.
Some other gift ideas from the experts: ● Kitchen knives. ● Comfortable earbuds. ● Colorful tights and leggings. ● Berry bowls. ● Miniature flashlights that fit in pockets and purses. ● Pretty soaps. ● Personalized tote bags. A lot of people do skimp on themselves, especially in a season where they are spending so much money, so an upgrade of something mundane to luxurious — or at least more fun — can be a very thoughtful gift, says gift advisor Frietchen. “Have you ever had a really nice hairdryer, a REALLY good dryer? You think a hairdryer is a hairdryer until you have a good one in your hand. It can change your life,” Frietchen says.
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ENTERTAINMENT
COMICS ◆ D4 BOOKS ◆ D6,D7 Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Fax 403-341-6560 editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
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Steve Fisher, centre, will be joined by (clockwise from top left) Jenny Lester, Chris Stevens, Matt Hotte and Marc Ladouceur at the Hideout south of Red Deer on Sunday in a rare performance by the band Kluane Grass.
Musical serendipity THROWN TOGETHER AT A FESTIVAL, KLUANE GRASS MEMBERS FIND A SPECIAL BLUEGRASS CONNECTION BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF You know your band’s something special when a live recording of your very first concert is good enough to play on radio. Kluane Grass has been sparking with CKUA Radio listeners and other audiences since its first impromptu concert at a bluegrass festival in Whitehorse, Yukon, in June. The group’s guitarist and CKUA’s Fire on the Mountain host, Steve Fisher, recalled the powerhouse quintet was formed on request last summer from a variety of musicians with long and distinguished careers in Western Canadian bluegrass music. The organizer of the Kluane Bluegrass Festival needed a band to entertain at the end of a week of music workshops. He asked the available instructors: “Would you guys form a group and play a set?”
It sounded like a comfortable enough gig to Fisher, who had already played “at different times, in different places” with many other musicians at the festival. But the minute the Calgarian started jamming with banjo player Chris Stevens and bassist Jenny Lester (both from B.C.), as well as Edmonton mandolin player Marc Ladouceur and Virginia fiddler Merle Johnson, a special alchemy began brewing. “It all came together really well, and the response from the audience was phenomenal!” said Fisher of that very first concert that was recorded live. The ad-hoc band had created such as great vibe that all of the musicians decided they’d have to play together again sometime soon. The ‘sometime’ turned out to be this fall when Fisher got a chance to do a small Alberta tour that stops at The Hideout south of Red Deer, on Sunday. When other members of his usual
band, Restless Lester, weren’t available, Fisher called up the Kluane crew and most everybody was game to get together. Only the American fiddler had to be replaced, because of logistics, with Edmontonian Matt Hotte, who fit the group like another finger in a glove. Fisher believes Kluane Grass generates an energy on stage that jives well with toe-tapping bluegrass standards. Familiar tunes such as Freeborn Man, by Jimmy Martin, Down the Road, by Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs, Sea of Regret, by the Stanley Brothers, and I’m Blue, I’m Lonesome, by Bill Monroe, will likely be on the bill at The Hideout. The Kluane musicians also intend to perform some original tunes created by Lester. “Jenny is an excellent songwriter and has done some amazing songs along the traditional line,” said Fisher. One of her compositions, The River,
Mother Nature and Me, has become something of a Canadian classic. Fisher said his guitar students are always eager to learn to play the “beautiful” song. Like much of bluegrass music, it draws from images of nature. “There are certain common themes in bluegrass songs, and one of them features a young man, or sometimes woman, going to the big city to work because of hard times in the country,” said Fisher. The lyrics are “about how much they miss of the place they left behind — the hills, the trees, the air. . . . ” He isn’t sure what’s in the air for Kluane Grass, admitting the band hasn’t made any long-term plans yet. But he hopes more tours and perhaps even a recording project will be on the horizon. Tickets for the 7 p.m. show are $10 at the door. For more information, call 403-348-5319. lmichelin@reddeeradvocate.com
A cat and a kid you can believe in NEWCOMER SURAJ SHARMA BEAUTIFULLY RENDERS THE HEART, MIND AND SOUL OF THE TITLE CHARACTER IN LIFE OF PI Life of Pi Three and a half stars (out of 4) Rated: PG Hollywood labours with special effects to have us believe in monsters, space aliens and fantasy worlds, not always successfully. With Life of Pi, director Ang Lee has a simpler goal. He wants us to accept as real a computer-generated Bengal tiger by the odd name of Richard Parker. The request is simple; the effect is extraorPETER dinary. Other things may seem in HOWELL doubt in this delightful, rousing tale of a teen and a tiger on a Pacific Ocean adventure. Based on the Man Booker Prize-winning novel by Canada’s Yann Martel, the film leaves its options open and hopes that our minds will be, too. You may or may not leave a viewing of Life of Pi with an enhanced appreciation of mankind’s deli-
MOVIES
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Suraj Sharma stars as Pi Patel in Life of Pi, which features a remarkable computer-generated Bengal tiger. The film, like the book, asks you to keep your minds open. cate relationship with animals and nature. Your belief (or disbelief) in an all-powerful deity may be confirmed or quashed. Your definition of “truth” may need revising. But if you don’t believe in Richard Parker, and the role he plays in making Martel’s story leap from page to screen, then Lee will have failed. He and his team don’t leave anything to chance. The tiger is a seamless composite of a real animal (a feline named King) and a lot of magic pixels. It’s one of the most marvelous special effects in recent memory, all the more so because Lee insisted the animal not be the least bit cuddly. It is ferocious, as wild animals tend to be. No less impressive are such wonders as the school of flying fish that zooms past the lifeboat carrying Richard Parker and his human companion Pi (Suraj Sharma). The fish seem to land in our laps thanks to 3D, which for once doesn’t seem like a gimmick.
Claudio Miranda’s luminous camera, set to Mychael Danna’s intoxicating score, captures all manner of wild delights. The film opens with a montage of birds and beasts, from hummingbirds to zebras, leading into a story that links India with Canada. The montage inspires awe, as does a later scene with meerkats on a remote island. And don’t forget the elemental images: the sleepy fat clouds mirrored on an unbroken sea during days of calm; the raging of wind and water during stormy times. As splendid as all this nature photography is, it would seem like a National Geographic special without a good story to go along with it. And Martel’s shaggy cat tale finds excellent empathy in the hands of Lee and screenwriter David Magee (Finding Neverland).
Please see PI on Page D2
D2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Red Dawn: big yawn
WAS THIS FORGETTABLE REMAKE JUST RELEASED (FINALLY) TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF BUDDING STARDOM OF HEMSWORTH, HUTCHERSON?
At the BY BRUCE DEMARA SPECIAL TO THE ADVOCATE Red Dawn One-half star (out of four) Rated: PG Someday, hopefully soon, a film school somewhere will create a course called Remakes: Why Bother? Topping the list of ill-conceived retreads ought to be Red Dawn, a remake of the 1984 film of the same name. The original did a reasonable job of entertaining audiences and kick-starting the budding careers of its young stars, among them Patrick Swayze and Charlie Sheen. This version has had a more checkered history, shot in 2009, scheduled for release in November 2010, then put on the shelf due to the financial woes of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, until now. In the interim, its young stars’ faces have become recognizable, which may help explain the studio’s decision to finally release this sorry remake. The careers of Chris Hemsworth (Thor, The Avengers) and Josh Hutcherson (The Hunger Games and the upcoming sequel Catching Fire) aren’t exactly needy of Red Dawn’s added exposure. And it’s unlikely this remake will inject any stardust into the trajectories of the remainder of this barely memorable cast. It’s really that bad, starting with the premise, which in the original was ris-
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Josh Peck, left, Josh Hutcherson, centre, and Chris Hemsworth star Red Dawn. The film is built on a bad premise and just gets worse from there. ible — an invasion of the U.S. by the Soviet Union. By 1984, then-president Ronald Reagan had taken to calling the U.S.S.R. the “evil empire,” so the premise was at least conceivable to the ultra-paranoid patriot set. This time around, it’s nasty North Koreans parachuting into Spokane, Wash. North Koreans? Really? Oh yeah, there’s also some stern Russian “advisers” along for the ride. The opening pseudo news clip setup — the European debt crisis, a new North Korean leader, U.S. troops stationed abroad leaving “American shores unprotected” — is beyond ludicrous. But it gets worse because the film, helmed by first-time director Dan
Bradley — who’s had a lengthy career as stuntman and assistant director — is just really, really lame, right down to the communist symbols that adorn the revised Stars and Stripes. While it’s entirely believable — given Americans’ devotion to the right to bear arms — that a small band of teens, dubbed the Wolverines and led by Jed Ekert (Hemsworth), a Marine home on leave, could arm themselves to the teeth and carry on a guerrilla war against the invaders, the rest is undiluted dreck. “Even the tiniest flea can drive a big dog crazy,” is a sample of the homespun wisdom (and deplorably bad dialogue) to which the audience is subjected.
There’s some ho-hum sibling rivalry between Jed and younger brother Matt (Josh Peck), who stubbornly insists on rescuing his girlfriend, Erica (Isabel Lucas), who is virtually a blond cipher. Hutcherson, for one, has no character development to speak of and, like Connor Cruise (adopted son of Tom), almost no dialogue. Ostensible villain Captain Lo (played by Will Yun Lee) is about as menacing as a surly parking lot attendant. With forgettable characters and dismal dialogue and plotting, even action fans are going to find the new Red Dawn a major yawn. Bruce DeMara is a syndicated Toronto Star movie critic.
All attitude THE HITMAN CELEBRATES WWE’S ATTITUDE ERA, SAVOURS NEW VIDEO GAME SHOWCASING IT BY THE CANADIAN PRESS By one count, former pro wrestling star Bret (Hitman) Hart has been in 21 video games. But the 55-year-old Calgary native has a soft spot for WWE 13. That’s because the game features Hart and others in classic playable storylines from the socalled “Attitude Era” years starting in the late 1990s. For Hart, the mid-’80s and pro wrestling icon Hulk Hogan were “much more about cartoon characters.” A change was needed. “By the early ’90s when I was sort of in my prime, we started moving to the Attitude Era and I like to think that I kicked the doors open for the Attitude Era,” Hart said in an interview. “It was more about the wrestling,” he added. “It wasn’t so much about the characters, even though we were in a lot of ways much more interesting characters. “The titles really seemed to mean a lot to the wrestlers in that era. “Winning and losing and being on top was sort of critical.... Winning titles meant prestige and better pay. The top guys were making the best money. So there was a lot at stake. “I think all that played into that Attitude Era. I know for me probably in ’97, for sure, I had my greatest matches in the WWE. I was for sure in my prime, (doing) my best stuff.” Steve Austin, Shawn Michaels and the Undertaker, all of whom are in the video game, were all part of that. Hart beat the Undertaker in the 1997 Summer Slam, winning the title for the fifth time. “One of my favourite matches of all time,” he said. Hart notes how the Undertaker changed his wrestling style by that ’97 bout, upping the tempo and “doing all sorts of moves.” “Whereas in the beginning, he was kind of like Frankenstein, kind of moving around slow and ponderous in the ring, and was very methodical. But times changed and by the mid-’90s, Undertaker had revamped his whole character.” Austin had also changed his act. “I like to think I was carrying the flag for the
STORY FROM PAGE D1
PI: Devotion is put to test The film substitutes Montreal for the book’s Toronto, the place where a middle-aged Pi (Irrfan Khan, serene) is regaling a curious writer (Rafe Spall) with a saga the writer has heard “would make me believe in God.” Pi explains not only his mathematical name (it’s actually a romantic reference to a French swimming pool) but also his fame: how he came to Canada from India by way of a 227-day ordeal at sea, in the company of a Bengal tiger. Flashbacks show Pi’s idyllic early days as the child of a zookeeper (Adil Hussain) in Pondicherry, a distinctive place known as “the French part of India.” Young Pi (Ayush Tandon) is more than open to experiences both corporeal and spiri-
tual: he’s dangerously fascinated with the wild animals his father cares for and he embraces all manner of religion. When his Hindu father expresses dismay about his son’s beliefs, Pi argues that having multiple faiths means “we get to feel guilty before hundreds of gods instead of just one.” Devotion to any kind of deity is put to the test when the family decides to emigrate to Canada by ship, taking the zoo with it. A terrible storm leaves Pi adrift in a life-
whole company, where it wasn’t about the wrestlers being cartoon characters,” said Hart. “It was about the wrestlers being committed stars that were trying to get to the top.” The bottom line was the wrestlers weren’t onetrick ponies. “I don’t want to rag too much on Hulk Hogan but he’s pretty one-dimensional,” said Hart. “Very big guy. The great, magnificent body that he had — the 22-inch arms and all that kind of stuff. But after a while, after (The Ultimate) Warrior came, it was like, ‘Enough of the body-building, let’s go on with who can actually do a drop-kick and who can actually climb up on top and do stuff.’ “I think the wrestling really did change from these sort of dinosaurs to the guys who were really picking it up and doing the moves.” Hart, who had a stroke in 2002, still plays a role in the WWE although not as a full-on competitor. He says he has recovered well from the stroke, but has issues with his ankle and has a few other nagging injuries. “But for the most part, I’m pretty good,” he said. He has plenty of respect for today’s wrestlers “especially because it’s a much more drug-free environment.” “There’s a lot of innovators,” he said, citing Rey Mysterio, CM Punk and Daniel Bryan. “When I was done wrestling in 2000 — that’s when I got hurt and retired — I had just about run out of every move. I couldn’t think of anything else, at least at the time. “I remember thinking I’ve done everything I could possibly think of as far as endings to my matches, moves, counters to my moves, little add-ons to different sequences of moves, I always felt I had personally exhausted myself out.” Today’s top wrestlers have shown him differently. “They’ve really stepped up a lot. They might not be as big and as bulky as the wrestlers back in the ’80s were, but they’re every bit as hard-workers as this industry has seen. I think they’re working harder today than they’ve ever been working.” He’s also impressed with today’s video games. “I find that they’ve really raised the bar the last five years or so with the detail. The figures or characboat, alone except for a few terrified smaller animals (the law of the jungle soon takes hold) and one very large and ferocious tiger. The angry tabby is the aforementioned Richard Parker, and the life-ordeath task of 17-year-old Pi is to learn to share very limited space and resources with the beast. Much of the film concerns this fraught relationship, and it requires us to believe not only in
the realness of Richard Parker but in the mind, heart and soul of Pi, who is beautifully rendered by newcomer Suraj Sharma. Cautionary words from Pi’s father (“He’s an animal, not a playmate”) blend with his own observations (“My fear of him keeps me alert”) as he negotiates a living arrangement that acts as metaphor for the eternal man/animal divide.
ters all look pretty much the way I remember them.” The game also allows you to use the kind of ring psychology he used in his matches, he says. “In a lot of ways you can put together a real match and have as close to the real thing as you can get now in a video game.” The Attitude Era is just part of the game, which includes today’s wrestlers and the ability to create your own storyline. The WWE game is developed by Yuke’s Co. Ltd, a Japanese company with a long history of wrestling games. Rated T for Teen, WWE 13 is available for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and Nintendo Wii. It’s the most remarkable relationship the Taiwanese-born Lee has yet brought to screen, and this from a man who gave us the difficult unions of Brokeback Mountain, Sense and Sensibility and Lust, Caution. Like the book, Life of Pi leaves us puzzling over what we’ve seen and heard. But never for a moment do we doubt the film’s expressive storytelling, imagery and sense of wonder.
RON JAMES “gut-bustingly, knee-slappingly funny”
LIV
- Ottawa Citizen
E!
Coffee Time? It’s FREE
www.ronjames.ca www.shantero.com
Peter Howell is a syndicated Toronto Star movie critic.
TAKEN 2
- Edmonton Journal
“devastatingly funny”
- Globe & Mail
14A
Violence
1:10, 3:45, 7:15, 10:00
HERE COMES THE BOOM Violence
PG
1:00, 3:40, 7:00, 9:50
FERRIS BUELLERS DAY OFF (Nov. 28 only @ 7:05, 9:45)
CLOUD ATLAS
14A
Sexual Content, Violence, Coarse language 6:40
FUN SIZE
PG
Crude Content not recommended for young children 1:25, 4:00
ALEX CROSS Violence
14A 7:10, 9:45
SEVEN PSYCHOPATHS
18A
Gory Violence, Language May offend
9:35
PITCH PERFECT
PG
Crude Content, Language may offend Not recommended for Children 12:50, 3:35
FRANKENWEENIE 3D
PG 1:20, 7:25
FRANKENWEENIE 2D
PG 4:00
DREDD 3D
18A
Gory, Brutal Violence
9:55
THE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER
14A
1:05, 7:05 (Not playing on Nov. 28 @ 7:05)
“high wire act of hilarity”
LOOPER
14A
Violence, Coarse Language 3:30, 9:30 (Not playing on Nov. 28 @ 9:30)
TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE PG Coarse Language
6:55, 9:40
ICE AGE 4 3D
G 3:55, 7:20
RED DEER MEMORIAL CENTRE
From 7:00am until 3:00pm This Monday to Friday Check out our new look!
Red Deer – Gasoline Alley
The cover of the video game WWE 13, featuring Bret (Hitman) Hart. Hart says the game celebrates a great time in wrestling history.
ICE AGE 4 2D
G 1:15
BRAVE 2D
Thurs & Fri, December 13 & 14 - 8:00 pm Black Knight Ticket Centre: 403 755 6626 www.bkticketcentre.ca 42643K23
G 1:10, 3:50
TED
18A
Crude content, substance abuse
9:50
www.carnivalcinemas.net 5402-47 St. Red Deer MOVIE LINE 346-1300
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012 D3
Transgender storyline gets boost from Chaz Bono BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
DEGRASSI
TORONTO — A ground-breaking storyline on Degrassi gets a celebrity boost today when Chaz Bono drops by to offer some words of advice to a troubled transgender teen. Bono says he leapt at the chance to appear on the series when he learned of its Emmy-nominated plot surrounding Adam, a female-to-male transgender student. The celebrity advocate says he wishes there were such TV representations of transgender life when he was growing up, noting that he spent “years and years in pain and confusion.” “It permeated every aspect of my life, even more than I was aware,” Bono said of a prolonged identity struggle that saw him live as a lesbian for much of his adult life. “It’s not the kind of thing that you want to have to go through in your life, not understanding about yourself like I had to.” Bono, who was born Chastity Bono to celebrity parents Cher and Sonny Bono, pops up when Adam’s rock group WhisperHug competes in a battle of the bands contest. Turns out that Bono is one of the judges, and Adam approaches him for tips on how to cope with a painful struggle for acceptance. Plus there are girl troubles. Adam, played by actress Jordan Todosey, is reeling from the fact his
Christian girlfriend Becky says she can’t date him because of her strict parents. “Does it ever get easier with girls?” Adam asks Bono. “Not really. Love is messy and there’s obstacles in any relationship,” Bono replies. Degrassi airs on MuchMusic. Bono says he learned of the show when he ran into Degrassi producers at last year’s Emmy Awards. The drama was nominated for outstanding children’s program for an episode that delved into Adam’s struggles to live as a boy, even though he was born female. Degrassi writer Michael Grassi says they couldn’t resist wooing Bono for a guest spot, which was filmed last summer in Toronto. “The opportunity to have Chaz on the show is incredible, he’s such a great role model and for him to be on Degrassi is beyond exciting,” said Grassi, who penned Bono’s episode, the second part of a two-part series airing today. “It’s a nerve-wracking thing when you send something over to someone like Chaz who does so many great things,” he notes. “And he ended up loving it, which is great.” Grassi says much more is in store for Adam — the teen will eventually undergo hormone therapy and pos-
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Chaz Bono on the set of Degrassi. The storyline gets a celebrity boost today when Bono offers advice to a troubled transgender teen. sibly surgery to complete his gender transition. “He’s always doing little things to make himself more and more masculine,” Grassi notes of Adam’s gradual transformation so far. “In terms of testosterone, that’s a story that we’re really excited to tackle. We just want to find the perfect time for Adam to tackle testosterone and when it’s really right for his character.” Grassi acknowledges that such a step would be another milestone for Degrassi, which has previously tackled difficult subjects including teen pregnancy, substance abuse, bullying and homosexuality. “We’ve never steered away from controversy before and we tackle the issue like we’ve tackled many other is-
sues on Degrassi — through character and seeing how Adam deals with it emotionally.” Co-star and producer Stefan Brogren says he’s pleased to see Adam develop into a mature and increasingly confident character. And positive feedback from Degrassi fans has encouraged writers to push his story even further. “If it had been five years ago, I think we would have been a little nervous,” Brogren admits. “But I think because of people like Chaz, making it so aware, it’s given a lot of empowerment to a whole new generation.... Now’s the time for people to start talking about it and be aware of it.” Back-to-back episodes of Degrassi air today on MuchMusic.
Bachelor Brad picks Bianka BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Connecting Places, an exhibition by Galia Kwentny, is now on display at the Harris-Warke Gallery in Sunworks at 4924 Ross St. in Red Deer. The exhibit will be on display until Dec. 29. A reception will be held on Friday, Dec. 7, from 6 to 8 p.m.
EXHIBITS RED DEER GALLERIES
#1 MOVIE IN THE WORLD “A WILD TWIST ENDING THAT WILL LEAVE YOU BREATHLESS.” CHRIS PARENTE, KDVR-TV
VIOLENCE, DISTURBING CONTENT, NOT RECOMMENDED FOR YOUNG CHILDREN
NOW PLAYING
FACEBOOK.COM/EONEFILMS
YOUTUBE.COM/EONEFILMS
CHECK THEATRE DIRECTORY FOR LOCATIONS AND SHOWTIMES
flects impressionistic and aboriginal styles and speaks to her vision of sustained recovery and wellness. To be included in this listing, please email event details to editorial@reddeeradvocate.com, fax to 403-3416560, or phone 403-314-4325.
IN THE CLUBS THIS WEEK The Hideout welcomes Jimmy Rankin, Dec. 9. The Centrium will host The Tragically Hip with special guests the Arkells on Jan. 22. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. The show starts at 7:30 p.m. All ages show. Tickets go on sale from Livenation.com, Ticketmaster, and Rogers Wireless Box Office, and by phone at 1-855-985-5000. The Vat will host Rock For Santa — a benefit concert by Night At The Chelsea on Nov. 30. All proceeds go to support the Red Deer Food Bank. Wil, with roots/rock sounds, performs on Dec. 6 and Picture the Ocean on Dec. 22. Red Deer College presents Bill Bourne, Dec. 20. Red Deer Memorial Centre welcomes Ron James Live! on Dec. 13 and 14 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $51 (taxes included plus applicable charges). Visit www.ronjames. ca for info. Tickets for all three shows are on sale from Black Knight Inn at 403-755-6626 or 1-800-661-8793, www.bkticketcentre.ca. To have your establishment’s live bands included in this space, fax a list to Club Dates by 8 a.m. on Wednesday to 403-341-6560 or email editorial@reddeeradvocate.com.
GALAXY CINEMAS RED DEER 357-37400 HWY 2, RED DEER COUNTY 403-348-2357
SHOWTIMES FOR FRIDAY NOVEMBER 23, 2012 TO THURSDAY NOVEMBER 29, 2012 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA (PG) FRI 2:20; SAT-SUN 12:05, 2:20
5:05, 6:45, 7:15, 7:45, 9:35, 9:55, 10:25; MONTHURS 6:35, 7:00, 7:30, 9:15, 9:40, 10:10
HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 3D (PG) FRISAT 4:55, 7:10; SUN 4:55; MON-THURS 6:55
THE TWILIGHT SAGA: BREAKING DAWN PART 2 (PG) (DISTURBING CONTENT, VIOLENCE, NOT REC. FOR YOUNG CHILDREN) STAR & STROLLERS SCREENING, NO PASSES WED 1:00
RISE OF THE GUARDIANS (G) NO PASSES SAT-SUN 12:20; STAR & STROLLERS SCREENING, NO PASSES WED 1:00 RISE OF THE GUARDIANS 3D (G) NO PASSES FRI-SUN 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10:05; MON-THURS 7:05, 9:35
LIFE OF PI 3D (PG) NO PASSES FRI 2:55, 6:40, 10:00; SAT-SUN 11:40, 2:55, 6:40, 10:00; MON-THURS 6:30, 9:25
RED DAWN (14A) FRI 2:40, 5:20, 7:50, 10:20; SAT-SUN 11:45, 2:40, 5:20, 7:50, 10:20; MON-THURS 7:15, 10:00
SKYFALL (14A) (VIOLENCE) FRI 3:00, 3:25, 6:35, 7:00, 9:40, 10:15; SAT-SUN 11:50, 12:15, 3:00, 3:25, 6:35, 7:00, 9:40, 10:15; MONTHURS 6:45, 7:10, 9:55, 10:15
WRECK-IT RALPH 3D (G) FRI-SUN 2:25, 5:00, 7:30, 10:10; MON-THURS 6:50, 9:30
ARGO (14A) FRI-SUN 9:45; MON-THURS 9:20
WRECK-IT RALPH (G) SAT-SUN 11:55
FLIGHT (18A) (SUBSTANCE ABUSE) FRI 2:35, 6:50, 9:50; SAT 11:35, 2:35, 6:50, 9:50; SUN 11:35, 6:50, 9:50; MON-TUE,THURS 6:40, 9:50; WED 9:50
THE TWILIGHT SAGA: BREAKING DAWN PART 2 (PG) (DISTURBING CONTENT, VIOLENCE, NOT REC. FOR YOUNG CHILDREN) NO PASSES FRI 2:10, 2:50, 3:20, 5:05, 6:45, 7:15, 7:45, 9:35, 9:55, 10:25; SAT 11:30, 12:25, 2:10, 2:50, 3:20, 5:05, 6:45, 7:15, 7:45, 9:35, 9:55, 10:25; SUN 11:30, 12:00, 12:25, 2:10, 2:50, 3:20,
BON JOVI: INSIDE OUT () WED 7:30 THE FLINTSTONES () SAT 11:00 CFL 100TH GREY CUP LIVE ON THE BIG SCREEN () SUN 4:00
42948K23
Members Only Show and Sale: A Juried Exhibition will be on display at Kiwanis Gallery at Red Deer Public Library Downtown Branch from Nov. 27 to Jan. 1. Artwork is from emerging to professional artists in various media including acrylic, naked raku, hand-painted silk, watercolour, and more. Connecting Places by Galia Kwetny of Red Deer will be highlighted at Harris-Warke Gallery from Nov. 19 to Dec. 29. Kwetny, who was born in former Soviet Union, produces large paintings of coded landscapes or imaginary places with the energy and urgency evoked by memory through the use of dramatic colour and gesture. Rural Travel by Gail Scheuring will be featured at Gallery on Main in Lacombe from Nov. 17 to Dec. 17. Check out Scheuring’s examination of rural environments and wildlife. Phone 403-782-3402. oktober by Staff and Volunteers of Kerry Wood Nature Centre continues in the Marjorie Wood Gallery until Dec. 12. Alberta Sampler by Harvey Brink will be featured for the month of November at Café Pichilingue. Works by Erin Boake will be featured at the Velvet Olive Lounge for the month of November. MarkerTopia by Sheldon Rabbit Wheatley will be featured at The Hub for the month of November and offers print and card sales in addition to the exhibit. Beyond the Looking Glass: Photographs by Roberta Murray will be on display at Kiwanis Gallery from Oct. 17 to Nov. 25. The works explore a place where dreams and nightmares exist together and the distinction between truth and fiction becomes blurred. Profit and Ambition: The Canadian Fur Trade, 1779-1821 continues to Dec. 9 at the Red Deer Museum and Archives. This travelling exhibition produced by the Canadian Museum of Civilization traces the span of the North West Company from its formation in 1779 to the amalgamation with the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1821 through maps, documents and artifacts. Phone 403-309-8405. Indigenous Impressions by Claudine Fleury will be on display at The Hub during the month of December. Fleury is an artist of Metis heritage whose art re-
TORONTO — Bachelor Brad pledged his heart to nurse Bianka Kamber in an emotional televised marriage proposal that left both in tears. The first-ever edition of The Bachelor Canada wrapped on Wednesday with the beefy former football player handing a sparkling engagement ring to the 28-year-old from Mississauga, Ont. In doing so, he bid farewell to 24-yearold administrative assistant Whitney Lee, who floundered after meeting Smith’s family in the finale despite appearing to be the front-runner for most of the series. “B, this is by far the easiest decision I’ve ever had to make,” Smith said Photo by CP as he got down on one knee with the Bachelor Canada star and picturesque Barbaformer CFL wide receiver dos coastline behind Brad Smith has made his him. decision: Bianka Kamber. “Bianka Kamber will you marry me?” “Yes,” she said immediately, later letting out an exuberant “Whoo!” The proposal followed intense dates for both women in Smith’s hometown of Hudson, Que., where members of his family grilled each of them about their intentions. Kamber distinguished herself early on in the series by openly discussing the heartbreak of a past relationship with another athlete — NBA forward Kris Humphries. She gushed in the finale that she had fallen head over heels for Smith. “I’ve never ever felt so sure about something in my entire life,” Kamber said in a direct-to-camera address. “I followed my heart and followed my gut and wouldn’t have done it any other way.” She emerged over more than two dozen other contenders including a shapely Playboy bunny from Vancouver and a bubbly blond pastor from Sylvan Lake.
D4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012 FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
HI & LOIS
PEANUTS
BLONDIE
HAGAR
BETTY
PICKLES
GARFIELD
LUANN
1988 — Oiler Wayne Gretzky scores his 600th career NHL goal, in Edmonton. 1975 — CFL’s Edmonton Eskimos squeak by Montreal Alouettes 9-8 in 63rd Grey Cup game, played in Calgary. 1944 — Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King switches his conscrip-
tion policy, and announces that 16,000 home defence conscripts will be sent to England as reinforcements. Riots follow in Montreal and Quebec. 1904 — The third Olympic Games close in St. Louis, Mo. Canada did not send an official team, but Canadians bring back four golds, in golf (George Lyon), lacrosse (Winnipeg Shamrocks), soccer and the 56-pound weight throw (Etienne Desmarteau).
ARGYLE SWEATER
RUBES
TODAY IN HISTORY Nov. 23
TUNDRA
SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, every column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 through 9. SHERMAN‛S LAGOON
Solution
D5
LIFESTYLE
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Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Time to stop the disdain and anger Dear Annie: Several months ago, my 17-year-old son’s girlfriend had a baby. I was upset at first, but then realized that the couple was young and needed help. My house now looks like a daycare center. For the whole nine months, we were part of the pregnancy. I paid for the mother to have an additional ultrasound, purchased a heartbeat bear for her and threw her a wonderful baby shower. Her mother helped a little, but not much. Two days after the baby shower, she told my son he isn’t the father. He doesn’t believe it and is really hurt. When the baby was born, we were notified via text. My MITCHELL son filed for paternity, and the mother was given 20 days & SUGAR to respond. She didn’t. My son took his DNA test, and his exgirlfriend hired a lawyer. The mother of my grandson is 20 years old, and I believe she is scared of her mother. That woman kept her own children away from their biological father and controls everything about her children. She doesn’t allow her daughter to take the baby out of the house without a family member accompanying her. When the baby’s mother goes to work, she takes the baby with her. We cannot get any answers from them about why they won’t allow us to be part of our new grandchild’s life. It’s been two months, and we haven’t been able to see or hold him yet. What can we do? — Heartbroken Mamaw Dear Heartbroken: Your son has taken a DNA test, and right now, all you can do is wait for the results. If it turns out the baby is not his, please let it go, no matter how difficult that would be for you. However, if the baby is indeed your son’s child, he should seek legal counsel, file for joint custody and put a visitation and child support plan into effect as soon as possible. Dear Annie: I am a retired person in my 60s who has been successful as a parent, spouse, environmental activist, employee and now as a community volunteer. I have a simple plea: Please, America, be more tolerant, respectful and civil when you express your political and religious beliefs to friends and family. Just because someone does not share your exact interpretation of the Constitution or the Bible does not mean they are any less patriotic, ethical or spiritual than you. Remember, tolerance and willingness to compromise are founding principles of our wonderful country.— In Favor of Tolerance and Respect Dear In Favor: Amen to that. We don’t know why it has become so difficult for people to express themselves without resorting to disdain, anger and even violence, but it’s time to stop. The holiday season is a good time to remember the idea of peace and goodwill toward your fellow citizens. Dear Annie: I would like to respond to “Single Too Long,” the 45-year-old never-married man who can’t find the “right lady” who carries no baggage. At age 55, I am one such lady and have several others as friends. We are all highly educated engineers and, being able to support ourselves, did not have to settle for just any man. However, we were not often asked out, perhaps because our intelligence was intimidating, or because we were perceived as not being sufficiently needy. Men like to feel needed. My advice is to look within your own age group for women to date. Men seem to gravitate toward women at least 10 years their junior, which upsets women of their own age — who would be thrilled to date them. Second, Annie’s advice to go where the women are is spot-on. To male-deprived activities such as church and singing groups (which are always desperate for more tenors and basses), I would add group exercise classes such as Zumba and yoga. Men are welcomed into these classes, which offer great physical benefits regardless of the dating possibilities. — Schenectady, N.Y. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@ comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
ANNIE ANNIE
CHAMPIONS
Photo contributed
The Atom football Lacombe Explosion downed the Parkland Predators 30-22 in the tier three provincial championship game at Johnny Bright Sports Park in Edmonton on Saturday. The team won all eight of their regular season games, then beat the Red Deer Steelers in the Central Alberta League championship. They then beat the Calgary Pee Wee Stampeders in the provincial semifinals. The provincial championship was a cap off to an amazing season by the players and coaches.
HOROSCOPE Friday, Nov. 23 portant decision-making for CELEBRITIES BORN ON now. THIS DATE: Miley Cyrus, 20; CANCER (June 21-JuOded Fehr, 42; Vincent Cas- ly 22): Stability within your sel, 46 profession is not too apparTHOUGHT ent these days. OF THE DAY: Sudden possibilMars, the warities of advancerior planet, is in ment are likely a difficult aspect now. It makes to Uranus, the you feel empowplanet of surprisered, confident es. This combiand buoyant nation will bring even. Ensure some disruphowever that it tions throughout is really worth it the day. in the long-term. H A P P Y Take your time BIRTHDAY: in making your ASTRO If today is your final decision. DOYNA birthday, the upLEO (July coming year will 23-Aug. 22): test your limits At long last you in terms of your are starting to one-on-one relationships. It feel the freedom you longed will ask you: Do you know for. You are biting into the how to relate and how to be sweet-tasting feeling of bediplomatic towards a loved ing yourself, yet again. Your one? Do you know how to be increased vitality and your in a business partnership? self-expressiveness come What is your role as a mar- out alive. riage partner? A year full of VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. self-questioning will give you 22): Disorganization and inefthe right insights concerning fectiveness are such a waste these topics. of time to you. You don’t ARIES (March 21-April 19): A volatile atmosphere at work will shake your feathers. A sudden disruption is possible. It might change the course of your grade within your career. Or, you may feel restrained by the lack of freedom within your occupation: you crave more independence. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Plans are constantly changing yet, you have your feet well planted in the ground. Your relationships with others are both dreamy and realistic. Unquestionably, you enjoy this state of mind. You want to assert your freedom within this realm and expand your potentials. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Disruptions at work and in your everyday life seem unavoidable, and at times, exasperating. Nothing seems to work as planned as everything is ever-changing. Be easy on yourself, avoid im-
SUN SIGNS
function well under such circumstances. It is hard to sound convincing these days and to state your thoughts clearly when your mind is still playing tricks on you. Mediate and master the art of silence for now. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Pleasant surprises can appear in relation to a partnership. All of a sudden, the sense of freedom it brings along with it will amaze you and restore your inner harmony. Or, this energy could manifest such that you will get some unforeseen, yet delightful news from a sibling or an acquaintance. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Surprising events or unforeseen news you get today at work or relating to your well-being will not be welcomed. It will upset you and disrupt your routine. You will have to accommodate yourself accordingly and accept them as they are. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21): The philosophical Sagittarius will have to learn how to deal with oneself. Today’s lesson will be to not exceed in anything as you might deeply regret your actions later on. Upsetting circumstances affecting your
wellness and individuality might indispose you. Keep yourself busy: you’ll do better by yourself. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19): Anticipate instability within your own household. You might feel a bit disconnected with your own family right now. Or, it could be that you are searching more freedom within your domestic realm. Relocation is possible. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Surprising news relating to your past or something that has submerged suddenly to the surface will change the course of the day quite radically. It may be displeasing to you, yet, thanks to it, you will know which path to follow, which direction you’re heading to. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Today you will feel like getting rid of some of your old clothes, unflattering jewelry or, just some of your wearisome belongings. You will strongly wish to make new additions to your wardrobe; anything that will make you look your best. Astro Doyna is an internationally syndicated astrologer and columnist.
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D6
BOOKS
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Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Love Anthony sad but heroic tale BRAVE AND TOUCHING STORY ABOUT HOW WORLD LOOKS AT AUTISM Love Anthony By Lisa Genova $20.99 Pub by Gallery Books
Jimmy and Beth have been married 15 years when they break up. Now her girlfriends form Here is a new a girlie commitbook by the author tee and plan to of Still Alice and present themLeft Neglected. Both selves at the bar of those titles were where the new best sellers; the first girlfriend works. being a personal Not perhaps the look at Alzheimer’s best idea. disease and the secBeth, reond the story of a puted to be a brain injury and its neat freak, can aftermath. find nothing in This time, the her closet that subject is autism, is cute or suitand Anthony (of the able, except a title) is the autistic. black maternity PEGGY Some of this book dress. Her youngFREEMAN is of the ‘beach read’ est child is four genre (as in pretty years old! darn light) and in I know the our area it isn’t book is beach weather. fiction but it shouldn’t However, the story takes be farce. place on Nantucket, so that However, there may explain it. are others in this The story opens with Beth, book who hold the mother of three girls and story together. Olivia wife to Jimmy. Jimmy works is the mother of Annights and sleeps days. This thony and she has all day, in spite of a storm, Beth the dreams that any takes the dog and goes to mother has for her the mailbox, only to receive adorable but troubled a card addressed to her. It son. says, “Jimmy is sleeping with She and her husme, he Loves me.” A smash- band have impovering beginning. ished themselves to Beth boots Jimmy out and find help for Anthony finds solace with her girl- and, as often hapfriends, who all attend the pens, their marriage same book club. is suffering from the
BOOK REVIEW
pressure. Now, Anthony has died very suddenly at nine years of age and Olivia has come alone to stay at their place on Nantucket. She is reading the diary she wrote during his short life and trying to come to terms with her loss. As she re-reads her journals, we hear Anthony’s story from Olivia’s side. Beth, who has rediscovered her skill as a writer, begins to write a story that just seems to “come” to her. It is Anthony’s side of the story and very moving. The question that Olivia wrestles with, through thought and prayer, is this:
What was the reason for Anthony, why a life like his that seemed to serve no purpose and ended so suddenly? She can find no answers. Beth writes the story that comes to her and we learn how the world looked to Anthony. It’s a sad but heroic tale. Experts will tell us that children “on the spectrum of autism” do not all present in the same way. Everyone is not an Anthony. Parts of this book don’t bear close examination, but Anthony’s story is brave and touching. Peggy Freeman is a local freelance book reviewer.
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RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012 D7
‘Unfilmable’ books make their way to the big screen TORONTO — It would appear that labelling a book unfilmable is a surefire way to get a filmmaker’s attention. How else to explain the multitude of book-inspired features currently at the multiplex, a good number of them drawn from challenging literary works chock full of the very things popular cinema generally tries to avoid? Rambling storylines, monumental themes, complex structures, detours into wild fantasy and innumerable characters are proving little impediment to the perennial search for the next big blockbuster. This week, Yann Martel’s long-considered-unfilmable tale Life of Pi appears in theatres as a 3D spectacle, the painstaking work of Oscar-winning director Ang Lee. It follows the ambitious adaptations of David Mitchell’s literary puzzle Cloud Atlas and Salman Rushdie’s magical, historical tale Midnight’s Children. And next month, theatres welcome a big screen take on J.R.R. Tolkien’s fantasy-laden The Hobbit while January will see Jack Kerouac’s meandering Beat generation novel On the Road. As film critic and curator Jesse Wente notes: “A book is only unfilmable until someone makes a movie of it.” Whether that adaptation is a good film or not is another question entirely. Reaction has been mixed to the cinematic incarnations of the two-hourand-43-minute Cloud Atlas and the two-and-a-half-hour Midnight’s Children — each elaborate ventures that faced distinct challenges in wrestling their sweeping narratives into script form. Cloud Atlas co-writer-director Lana Wachowski admits that figuring out a plan often “seemed too impossible.” But her passion for the centuriesspanning book — really a collection of six tales crossing genres including historical drama, ’70s murder mystery, slick sci-fi adventure and dystopian thriller — instilled an against-all-odds determination she shared with co-writers-directors Larry Wachowski and Tom Tykwer. “The novel was the most exciting thing we’d read in a long, long time,” Wachowski gushed when the film screened at the Toronto International Film Festival back in September. “Sometimes we’d give up and (Tykwer) would go: ‘No, we must keep going!”’ The trio decided early on that getting Mitchell’s blessing was key to making the venture work. Then they set about reworking his tale entirely — chopping it into segments and rearranging the pieces into a single, fully integrated story. “The book feels a little more like an anthology and it’s a little bit more ac-
ceptable in literature to write a book like that,” says Lana Wachowski. “But for a movie we thought that it would be too hard to start over or start a new story an hour or so, an hour and a half into it with totally new characters.” Recognizing the different storytelling demands of film and literature is paramount to any adaptation, agrees Rushdie, who wrestled his own 600-page Midnight’s Children into a 120-page screenplay. The Booker Prize-winning writer says he and director Deepa Mehta made it clear from the get-go that the goal was to make a film — “not just a faithful adaptation of a literary text.” “It required a lot of sometimes very painful editing-out of elements in the book,” says Rushdie, who mixes magical realism and period drama in his sweeping take on India’s early days of independence. “Some of the characters in the book that I’m most fond of didn’t make it onto the screen. But in the end I thought, I’m enough of a movie person (to let them go). I just thought in the end the important thing is to make a film that works as a film. You don’t want people to be sitting there constantly saying, ‘Where’s that bit of the book?’ Or, ‘I didn’t think of this character in this way.’ ” While a book can retreat into introspection and philosophical musings, film requires dialogue and action to keep the plot chugging along. And so sometimes staying true to the spirit of a book means ripping the story apart. “For years, when I was a kid there was talk that you couldn’t do Philip K. Dick novels,” notes Wente, film programmer at the Toronto arthouse theatre TIFF Bell Lightbox. “But Blade Runner is an adaptation of a Philip K. Dick novel, but only in the loosest sense. The novel is called Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? It’s a different idea (but) both are classics in their own right.” Then there are the demands of Hollywood. The final instalments of the Twilight saga take bold liberties with the final Stephenie Meyer book — splitting it in two to double the box office payoff. And much is being made of a dramatic detour in Breaking Dawn — Part 2 — a wham-bam sequence that bloodies up what is otherwise a relatively staid climactic scene in the book to create a finale more befitting of a billion-dollar movie franchise. Such departures are to be expected when jumping between mediums, says Wente. “Not all the ideas from the page are going to work on screen and not all the ideas of the screen flow to the page. I think it’s the magic that occurs in the middle that makes it,” he says.
“Totally filmable books can end up as appalling movies and unfilmable books can win Oscars. And we’ve seen that.” An explosion of digital movie-making tools has allowed for even more “unfilmable” books — as well as comic books — to hit the big screen, he adds. “All sorts of what we now are calling populist cinema wasn’t possible 20 years ago, or at least wasn’t possible in the same way and with the same sort of vision,” says Wente. “In the last 15 years there’s been a dramatic change because of the digital technology. For many, many years, in fact much of my childhood, The Lord of the Rings was an unfilmable book — they made it as an animated cartoon, that was the only way that anyone had ever thought of doing it. And yet they’re now one of the biggest blockbusters of all time.” The computer generated imagery on display in Life of Pi certainly didn’t exist when the book came out in 2001. It’s a big reason its Saskatoon-based author says he had a hard time imagining how a film could be made from his Booker Prize-winning tale, about an Indian boy stranded on a lifeboat with a tiger in the middle of the Pacific. Plus, so much of the story unfolds through reflection, with the hero Pi
struggling with deep philosophical and spiritual questions — hardly the stuff of box office smashes. “Those are easy words to write on the page. But how would one bring them to life on the screen?” Martel writes in the forward to the behindthe-scenes book, The Making of Life of Pi. “The challenge seemed forbidding. Who would be crazy enough to try?” It took a decade for someone to work out a viable strategy, with would-be directors Alfonso Cuaron, M. Night Shyamalan and Jean-Pierre Jeunet among the casualties. When Lee took on the project, the Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon director brought ambitious plans with him: he would build a massive wave tank to recreate a swelling, open ocean; use real Bengal tigers that would be seamlessly integrated with computergenerated images and shoot it all 3D to simulate the mesmerizing depths of the Pacific. Lee’s choices included going with an entirely international cast of relative unknowns, reportedly replacing Tobey Maguire with Brit TV actor Rafe Spall because the Spider-Man star was too famous. Picking the wrong actor can torpedo an adaptation, says Erica Wagner, author and literary editor of The Times.
Do you have a Christmas story or Christmas memory... “Send it in to us!” The Advocate will be featuring many of these stories from Central Albertans in our special Season’s Greetings edition on Monday, December 17. Included this year will be stories from Central Alberta “Celebrities” Please keep your stories 500 words or less. Please send/drop off your story to:
My Favourite Christmas Story Attention: Special Section Email: specialsections@reddeeradvocate.com 2950 Bremner Avenue Red Deer, AB T4N 5G3 Deadline for submission is Wednesday, December 5, 2012. 41264K23
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Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Abortions drop five per cent during recession in U.S. Mammograms do little to curb late-stage breast cancers, says study BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mammograms have done surprisingly little to catch deadly breast cancers before they spread, a big U.S. study finds. At the same time, more than a million women have been treated for cancers that never would have threatened their lives, researchers estimate. Up to one-third of breast cancers, or 50,000 to 70,000 cases a year, don’t need treatment, the study suggests. It’s the most detailed look yet at overtreatment of breast cancer, and it adds fresh evidence that screening is not as helpful as many women believe. Mammograms are still worthwhile, because they do catch some deadly cancers and save lives, doctors stress. And some of them disagree with conclusions the new study reached. But it spotlights a reality that is tough for many Americans to accept: Some abnormalities that doctors call “cancer” are not a health threat or truly malignant. There is no good way to tell which ones are, so many women wind up getting treatments like surgery and chemotherapy that they don’t really need. Men have heard a similar message about PSA tests to screen for slowgrowing prostate cancer, but it’s relatively new to the debate over breast cancer screening. “We’re coming to learn that some cancers — many cancers, depending on the organ — weren’t destined to cause death,” said Dr. Barnett Kramer, a National Cancer Institute screening expert. However, “once a woman is diagnosed, it’s hard to say treatment is not necessary.” He had no role in the study, which was led by Dr. H. Gilbert Welch of Dartmouth Medical School and Dr. Archie Bleyer of St. Charles Health System and Oregon Health & Science University. Results are in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine. Breast cancer is the leading type of cancer and cause of cancer deaths in women worldwide. Nearly 1.4 million new cases are diagnosed each year. Other countries screen less aggressively than the U.S. does. In Britain, for example, mammograms are usually offered only every three years and a recent review there found similar signs of overtreatment. The dogma has been that screening finds cancer early, when it’s most curable. But screening is only worthwhile if it finds cancers destined to cause death, and if treating them early improves survival versus treating when or if they cause symptoms. Mammograms also are an imperfect screening tool — they often give false alarms, spurring biopsies and other tests that ultimately show no cancer was present. The new study looks at a different risk: Overdiagnosis, or finding cancer that is present but does not need treatment. Researchers used federal surveys on mammography and cancer registry statistics from 1976 through 2008 to track how many cancers were found early, while still confined to the breast, versus later, when they had spread to lymph nodes or more widely. The scientists assumed that the actual amount of disease — how many true cases exist — did not change or grew only a little during those three decades. Yet they found a big difference in the number and stage of cases discovered over time, as mammograms
came into wide use. Mammograms more than doubled the number of early-stage cancers detected — from 112 to 234 cases per 100,000 women. But late-stage cancers dropped just 8 per cent, from 102 to 94 cases per 100,000 women. The imbalance suggests a lot of overdiagnosis from mammograms, which now account for 60 per cent of cases that are found, Bleyer said.
43 states and two cities — those that have been sending in data without interruption for at least 10 years. The researchers found that abortions per 1,000 women of child-bearing age fell from about 16 in 2008 to roughly 15 in 2009. That translates to nearly 38,000 fewer abortions in one year. Mississippi had the lowest abortion rate, at 4 per 1,000 women of child-bearing age. The state also had only a couple of abortion providers, and has the nation’s highest teen birth rate. New York was highest, with abortion rates roughly eight times higher than Mississippi’s. New York is second only to California in number of abortion providers. Nationally since 2000, the number of reported abortions has dropped overall by about 6 per cent and the abortion rate has fallen 7 per cent, but the figures essentially levelled off for a few of those years.
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NEW YORK — U.S. abortions fell 5 per cent during the Great Recession in the biggest one-year decrease in at least a decade, according to government figures released Wednesday. The reason for the decline wasn’t clear, but some experts said it may be due to better use of birth control during tough economic times. Their theory is that some women believe they can’t afford to get pregnant. “They stick to straight and narrow ... and they are more careful about birth control,” said Elizabeth Ananat, a Duke University assistant professor of public policy and economics who has researched abortions. While many states have aggressively restricted access to abortion, most of those laws were adopted in the past two years and
are not believed to have played a role in the decline. Abortions have been dropping slightly over much of the past decade. But before this latest report, they seemed to have levelled off. The new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that both the number and rate of abortions fell 5 per cent in 2009, the most recent statistics available from most states. Nearly all states report abortion numbers to the federal government, but it’s voluntary. A few states — including California, which has the largest population and largest number of abortion providers — don’t send in data. Experts believe there are more than 1 million abortions performed nationwide each year, but because of the incomplete reporting, the CDC had reports of about 785,000 in 2009. For the sake of consistency, the CDC focused on the numbers from
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ON NOW AT YOUR ALBERTA BUICK GMC DEALERS. AlbertaGMC.com 1-800-GM-DRIVE. GMC is a brand of General Motors of Canada. x/‡/††/*Offers apply to the purchase of a 2013 Terrain FWD (TLF26 – 1SA), 2013 Acadia FWD (TR14526 – 3SA/ K05), 2013 Sierra Ext 4WD (TK10753 – 1SF/G80/K05) equipped as described. Freight included ($1,500). License, insurance, registration, PPSA, administration fees and taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Offer available to retail customers in Canada. See Dealer for details. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in Alberta Buick GMC Dealer Marketing Association area only. Dealer order or trade may be required. GMCL, Ally Credit, TD Auto Financing Services or Scotiabank may modify, extend or terminate this offer in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See Buick GMC dealer for details.‡0% Purchase financing offered on approved credit by TD Auto Financing Services/Ally Credit/Scotiabank for 48/60 months on new or demonstrator 2013 Terrain FWD/2013 Sierra Ext 4WD. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $10,000 at 0% APR, the monthly payment is $208.33/$166.67 for 48/60 months. Cost of borrowing is $0, total obligation is $10,000.00. Offer is unconditionally interest-free. Freight ($1,500) included. License, insurance, registration, PPSA, applicable taxes and fees not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Offers apply to qualified retail customers only. Limited time offer which may not be combined with certain other offers. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. †† 0.99%/1.99%/3.99% Purchase financing for 72 months on 2013 Sierra EXT 4WD/2013 Terrain FWD/2013 Acadia FWD on approved credit by TD Auto Financing Services/Ally Credit/ Scotiabank. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $10,000 at 0.99%/1.99%/3.99% for 72 months, the monthly payment is $143.11/$147.46/$156.41. Cost of borrowing is $304.06/$617.16/$1,261.25, total obligation is $10,304.06/$10,617.16/$11,261.25. Down payment and/or trade may be required. Monthly payments and cost of borrowing will also vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Biweekly payments based on a purchase price of $31,995/$29,995/$37,398 with $1,999/$2,899/$2,999 down on 2013 Sierra EXT 4WD/2013 Terrain FWD/2013 Acadia FWD, equipped as described. WBased on GM Testing in accordance with approved Transport Canada test methods. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. x $5,750 manufacturer to dealer delivery credit available on the 2013 Sierra EXT, for retail customers only. See your GM dealer for details. † To qualify for GMCL’s Cash For Clunkers incentive, you must: (1) turn in a 2006 or older MY vehicle that is in running condition and has been registered and properly insured in your name for the last 3 months (2) turn in a 2006 or older MY vehicle that is in running condition and has been registered and properly insured under a small business name for the last 3 months. GMCL will provide eligible consumers with a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) to be used towards the purchase/finance/lease of a new eligible 2012 or 2013 MY Chevrolet Colorado,GMC Canyon, Chevrolet Silverado, GMC Sierra, or Chevrolet Avalanche delivered between October 2, 2012 and January 2, 2013. Incentive ranges from $1500 to $3,000, depending on model purchased. Incentive may not be combined with certain other offers. By participating in the Cash For Clunkers program you will not be eligible for any trade-in value for your vehicle. See your participating GM dealer for additional program conditions and details. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate program in whole or in part at any time without notice.
403-309-3300 classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com Office/Phone Hours: 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Mon - Fri Fax: 403-341-4772
E1
CLASSIFIEDS Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
wegotads.ca
2950 Bremner Ave. Red Deer, AB T4R 1M9
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wegotservices
wegotstuff
CLASSIFICATIONS 700-920
CLASSIFICATIONS 1000-1430
CLASSIFICATIONS 1500-1940
Circulation 403-314-4300
wegotrentals
wegothomes
wegotwheels
CLASSIFICATIONS 3000-3390
CLASSIFICATIONS 4000-4310
CLASSIFICATIONS 5000-5240
DEADLINE IS 5 P.M. FOR NEXT DAY’S PAPER
announcements Obituaries
Obituaries
52
Coming Events
wegot
jobs
Obituaries WHAT’S HAPPENING
CLASSIFICATIONS
CLASSIFICATIONS
50-70
700-920
Arts & Crafts Shows
50
CRAFT SALE
Davenport Club House 2300 Danielle Street Sat. Nov. 24th, 10 -3 Some Freebies!! Looking for a place to live? Take a tour through the CLASSIFIEDS
“In Your Time of Need.... We Keep it Simple” #3, 4664 Riverside Dr., Red Deer
Over 2,000,000 hours St. John Ambulance volunteers provide Canadians with more than 2 million hours of community service each year.
403.342.1444
www.simplycremations.com
1508766 Alberta Ltd.
403•340•4040
52
Coming Events
CRAFT SALE
Fri. Nov. 23, 1-4 pm.
SENIOR LIVING ASPEN RIDGE 3100-22 St. You can sell your guitar for a song... or put it in CLASSIFIEDS and we’ll sell it for you!
EAST 40TH PUB presents
Sat/Sun Nov. 24 & 25 10 am - 4 pm Raku Ceramics, Watercolours, other Gift possibilities 1 mile West, 1 mile North Asplund Road & Hwy 20 Intersection ~ Watch For Signs ~ Call 403-748-2557 For more information CELEBRATIONS HAPPEN EVERY DAY IN CLASSIFIEDS
54
Various Artists
EAST 40TH PUB
presents DOIN-IT-WITH-DEW Mon. 7 pm -11 pm. Come for comedy and sing along with the oldies but goodies
Companions
58
S. Christian F. 51 searching for friendship first, leading to long term relationship with M. 48+ yrs of age. Varied interests. Tell me about yourself. Reply to Box 1023, c/o R. D. Advocate, 2950 Bremner Ave., Red Deer, AB T4R 1M9 Central Alberta’s Largest Car Lot in Classifieds
EAST 40 PUB
SM 42 N/S, non drinker, kind, honest, never married, regular job, wants to ESL Levels 5, 6 & 7 start a family, seeks F, Funding may be Available kind, decent, attractive, Enroll now for January Start natural with own transportation if out of Red Deer. Academy of Learning Reply with phone # to Box 403-347-6676 1017 c/o Red Deer AdvoGOOD MUSIC ALL NIGHT, cate 2950 Bremner Ave. OPEN JAM & DJ MUSIC. T4R 1M9 TUESDAYS & SATURDAYS @ BLUES JAM Sunday’s 5-9 p.m.
Red Deer Chamber Singers Presents
Personals
Arts & Crafts Shows
60
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS 403-347-8650
Renaissance Dessert Concert Nov. 29 at Westerner Park Doors Open 7 pm. Show starts 7:30 pm. Cost $25 Renaissance Feast Concert Nov. 30 Chalet at Westerner Park Doors Open 6 pm. Show starts 7 pm. Cost $65 Contact Diane 403-347-6567 for tickets
Celebrate your life with a Classified ANNOUNCEMENT
64
Bingos
RED DEER BINGO Centre 4946-53 Ave. (West of Superstore). Precall 12:00 & 6:00. Check TV Today!!!!
50
Annual
and
Market Show
www.parklandfuneralhome.com 36617B3-L28
Announcements Daily Classifieds 309-3300
Looking for a new pet? Check out Classifieds to find the purrfect pet.
Clerical
720
ALBERTA REGISTRY P/T CLERK NEEDED
Legal Assistant Experience in Real Estate and Corporate Commercial McElhaney Law office (403 ) 346 -2026
740
BOWER DENTAL CENTER
requires F/T RDA TO START IMMED. Candidates must be willing to work day or evening shifts & some Saturdays. Must be energetic and be able to work in a strong team setting . Top wages and benefits will be paid to the right applicant. New grads are welcome. Please drop off resumes Attention: Marina PERIOPARTNERS, Red Deer, AB requires an experienced, caring RDH for supportive periodontal therapy care and initial therapy for patients with moderate to advanced periodontal disease. We are periodontal specialists. This position is 4 days per week. Generous moving allowance paid when successful applicant establishes residency in Red Deer. Please phone Armelle (403) 314-5485, fax resume to (403) 314-5486 or email to reddeer@ periopartners.com
Janitorial
770
ARAMARK at (Dow Prentiss Plant) about 20-25 minutes out of Red Deer needs hardworking, reliable, honest person w/drivers license, to work 40/hrs. per week w/some weekends, daytime hrs. Starting wage $13/hr. Fax resume w/ref’s to 403-885-7006 Attn: Val Black
You can sell your guitar for a song... or put it in CLASSIFIEDS and we’ll sell it for you! Web Developer & Tech Support Agent - Software company based in Red Deer hiring two FT positions.To apply, please see www.visual-eyes.ca/en
Clerical
CCCSI is hiring sanitation workers for the afternoon and evening shifts. Get paid weekly, $14.22/hr. Call 403-348-8440 or fax 403-348-8463
720
GREAT ADMINISTRATIVE POSITION AVAILABLE NOW
EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT / RECEPTIONIST Description: Our Group operates several properties in Alberta in the Hotel & Entertainment Industry. The Head Office in Red Deer is currently looking for an Executive Assistant/Receptionist to provide support to the CEO as well as being a resource to the administrative/ accounting staff in the office. Key Responsibilities: • Maintain Calendar & emails • Coordinate meetings • Coordinate travel arrangements • Prepare correspondence as required • Process & Sort Mail • Process Bank Deposits • Answer Phones • Manage Front End Duties • Simply Accounting data entry • Enter Daily Sales • Manage Visa receipts • Data Entry as required This is a full time position with a competitive salary and benefits package. Hours will be Monday-Friday from 8:00 am to 5:00 pm, with a 1 hour lunch. Please email your resume and cover letter to winns@ willinns.com or Fax to 403-309-3505 2731313K23-25
Saturday, November 24th 10:00 am - 4:00 pm
Parkland Garden Centre
A non-perishable donation to the Red Deer Food Bank would be greatly appreciated. Watch for upcoming shows on Dec. 8 & 15
Location: 3 miles east of 30th Avenue on Hwy 11. Call 403.346.5613 for more information.
Caregivers/ Aides
710
LPNs and CAREWORKERS NEEDED SERVERS & COOKS NEEDED Send resume to Attention: Linda Robinson gmar@symphonyseniorliving.com or drop off in person at: 3100 - 22nd Street SENIOR LIVING In concert with your life
ASPEN RIDGE & INGLEWOOD
Taylor Dr. ˜ Red Deer “ONLY locally owned & operated Funeral Home in Red Deer”
P/T F. caregiver wanted for F quad. Must have own vehicle. 403-348-5456 or 505-7846
56
th
EAST 40th PUB
710
P/T maternity leave position which may develop into a permanent F/T by summer. YORKIE X Maltese puppy Experience in : MOVES, lost in College Heights VISTAS, CORES, AND area in Lacombe APPRES considered an 403-786-0018 asset. TOO MUCH STUFF? Attention to detail, fast Let Classifieds learning and good attitude req’d. help you sell it. Wage will be based on accreditation level. Please apply in person to: Tamara at: Found Vital Registry Services, 5406 43 St. Red Deer. BOY’S small bike found in We thank all applicants for Westpark. Identify to claim their interest, however only 403-346-6909 applicants selected for an interview will be contacted
Lost
Acoustic Friday’s Tired of Standing? Find something to sit on in Classifieds
Caregivers/ Aides
272989K21-30
OSBORNE 1950 - 2012 Mr. Stephen “Steve” Charles Osborne of Red Deer passed away at the Red Deer Hospice on Wednesday, November 21, 2012 at the age of 62 years. Steve was born in Sudbury, ON. He had served for a number of years in the armed forces then more recently worked 10 years for R e d D e e r Tr a n s i t b e f o r e retiring. Steve will be remembered for his pleasant personality, quick wit, love of music and especially for the time he spent with his grandson Mitchell. Steve is survived by his wife Heather Osborne; daughter Tammy Berg of Edmonton, son Sheldon Berg of Hamilton, Ontario; grandchildren Mitchell Berg of Edmonton and Kendra, Jacob and Kyler Berg of Hamilton, Ontario; sisters Christena Osborne of Chatham, Ontario and Bonnie (Mark) Ziegler of Victoria, British Columbia. Also to cherish Steve’s memory are brotherin-law’s Derrick (Myrna) Ironside of Medicine Hat, Alberta and Bruce (Joanne) Ironside of Surrey, British Columbia as well as nieces, nephews, good friend Teresa Osborne, extended family members and the many friends made over the years. A service to celebrate Steve’s life will be held at the Red Deer Legion (Branch #35), 2810 - Bremner Ave., Red Deer, AB, on Saturday, November 24, 2012 at 12:00 noon. Memorial donations may be directed to the Central Alberta Cancer Centre, P.O. Bag 5030, Red Deer, AB T4N 4E7 or to the Red Deer Hospice Society, 99 - Arnot Ave, Red Deer AB T4R 3S6. Condolences to Steve’s family may be emailed to meaningfulmemorials@yahoo.ca Bruce MacArthur, Funeral Director MEANINGFUL MEMORIALS Red Deer 587-876-4944
Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
271887K22,23
Unit 1, 6828 - 50th Ave., Red Deer, AB 403-341-5181 & 888-216-5111
PICKETTS WHITENETT Robert Hugh Clarence Edward ‘Ed’ ‘Stripes’ 1927-2012 Ed was born June 28, 1925 R o b e r t “ B o b ” , b e l o v e d in Holyoke, Massachusetts, (husband) of Eileen Picketts, U S A a n d p a s s e d a w a y passed away peacefully on peacefully at the age of 87 S a t u r d a y, N o v e m b e r 1 7 , years of age at the Red Deer 2012, at the age of 85 years. Regional Hospital on November Robert was born on May 19, 16, 2012. His career was as 1927 in Rimbey, AB. He was a school teacher, principal raised and went to school in and assistant superintendent Rimbey. At the age of 10, he in various communities in worked at Imperial Lumber Central and Northern Alberta, f o r $ . 1 0 / h r. , d i d m a n y Canada. Ed was a member deliveries as a truck driver. of the Masonic Fraternity He liked to play pool, golf serving in many local and and bowled. He moved to district offices as well as a Red Deer, where he married member of Eastern Star. Ed Eileen Martha Sakofsky on was a member of Al Azhar N o v e m b e r 1 5 , 1 9 5 0 i n Shriners, Calgary, Alberta Rimbey, AB. They had 3 girls and Al Shamal, Edmonton, and a set of twins; a girl Alberta. He was a past president a n d t h e i r s o n . M o v e d t o of the Battle River Shrine Ladysmith, B.C. in 1965 - Club, Camrose, Alberta and 1973, and then moved back the Red Deer Shrine Club, to Red Deer. He worked at R e d D e e r, A l b e r t a . E d ’ s Dietz Industries Ltd. until he enjoyment in the Shrine was retired. Robert is survived by clowning and was known as his wife of 62 years, Eileen, ‘Stripes’. He was president d a u g h t e r s ; K a r e n ( R i c k twice of the Pacific Northwest S t e w a r t ) A k r o n o f O h i o , Shrine Clown Association U.S.A., Gayle (Leo Johnson) a n d p r e s i d e n t o f t h e of Duncan, B.C., Wynelle International Shrine Clown (Lon Powers) of Kelowna, Association, Shriners International B.C., Lorna (Durno Begg) of in 2005 - 2006. Ed will be Crossfield, AB. and son, sadly missed by his wife Laverne Picketts of Bashaw, Doreen of Red Deer, Alberta; AB., eleven grandchildren, father-in-law Ron Holmes of eighteen great grandchildren, Trochu, Alberta; aunts; uncles; as well as many nieces and and cousins of Doreen’s and a nephews. He is also survived host of friends in Canada, USA by one sister, Bertha, two and Mexico. Ed requested no brothers; Russell and Leslie. funeral service and cremation He was predeceased by his w a s e n t r u s t e d t o P r a i r i e parents; William and Sarah Winds Funeral Home, Trochu, P i c k e t t s , t h r e e b r o t h e r s ; Alberta. Those who knew him William (Bill), Fredrick and everything was “Champion”. If Lawrence, one sister, Jessie, you wish, donations may be and great grandson, Jesse. A made to the Montreal Shrine Celebration of Life will be Hospital - I.S.C.A. Sneaker held at the Eventide Funeral Fund, 636 Fernhill, Victoria, Chapel 4820-45 Street Red BC, Canada V9A 4Y9 or a Deer, on Saturday, November charity of your choice in Ed’s 24, 2012 at 11:00 AM. In memory. lieu of flowers, memorial donations in Robert Picketts’ honor may be made directly to The Heart & Stroke Foundation #202, 5913 - 50 Card Of Thanks Avenue, Red Deer, Alberta, T4N 4C4 or to the Canadian CUPPLES Cancer Society 4730A Ross We would like to express our Street, Red Deer, Alberta, many thanks for all of the T4N 1X2. A private interment phone calls, cards, food and will be held at a later date. A flowers, they were all very huge thank you to Lynda & much appreciated. A special Steve Hodgkinson, Alice and t h a n k y o u a l s o t o R e v. Johnathan Lang, niece and Wayne Reid and Rev. Doug nephew, Joyce and Jack Maxwell, the Knox PresbyLee, and many of those that terian ladies, to the GenTex touched his heart. Special staff, both the honorary and thank you to the doctors, pallbearers, and to Aurora nurses & staff of RDGH for Landin for the wonderful eulotheir compassionate care. gy Condolences for the late of Wes’ life. We are so truly Robert Picketts may be for- blessed to have such caring w a r d e d t o t h e f a m i l y b y and supportive friends and visiting neighbors. www.eventidefuneralchapels.com Gwen and family. Arrangements entrusted to Rebekah Sealock EVENTIDE FUNERAL Funeral Directors CHAPEL & Services 4820 - 45th Street, Red Deer. Phone (403) 347-2222.
41893J20
MAGNUSON Madeline Madge Magnuson passed away on Monday, November 19, 2012 at the age of almost 84 years. She is lovingly remembered by her daughters, R o s e ( To m ) a n d V e r l a (Vern); four grandchildren, D o n n y, B u d d y ( M a r c i a ) , Brian and Tawny (Jason) as well as numerous other grandchildren. Madge loved her great-grand babies who b r o u g h t h e r l o t s o f j o y. Madge has gone to join her children, Sylvia, Leonard and Gloria. Madge enjoyed baking and making crafts for the local Farmer’s Markets. At Madge’s request no funeral services will be held. In lieu of flowers a donation in Madge’s memory may be made to the S.P.C.A, 4505 - 77th St., Red Deer, AB., T4N 5H3. A special thank you to the nurses on Unit 32, we hope they enjoyed the way she made them smile. “Madge was cheeky up until the end.”
THE Farm Studio 10th Annual Christmas Art Show & Sale
Dental
TO ADVERTISE YOUR SALE HERE — CALL 309-3300
Blackfalds HUGE WAREHOUSE SALE Blackfalds, South Railroad Ave. Sat. Nov. 24, 10-4. Hundreds of collectibles, furniture, thousands of boat/skidoo parts and accessories. 5hp Honda motor (brand new), props, skidoo covers etc. See Fri. Advocate for info.
309-3300 CLASSIFIEDS
Qualifications: • Complete understanding of accounting including: GL reconciliation, journal entries, data entry • Excellent telephone etiquette and ability to operate multi-line telephone system • Strong computer skills with knowledge of Microsoft Offi ce • Quick learner with the ability to multi-task • enjoy working with others in a team environment • Previous experience in the automotive industry preferred but not mandatory for the right candidate • Punctual, reliable and bondable This is a full time position with a competitive salary and benefi ts package within a fast paced automotive dealership. Please email your resume and cover letter to ssdc.7564@gmail.com or Fax to 403-346-5725. Thank you to all applicants, however only those qualified will be contacted for a formal interview.
217918K14-24
TO PLACE AN AD
E2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
CLINIC MANAGER ASSISTANT/ BILLING CLERK
Required for Rocky Medical Clinic Rocky Mtn. House, AB See website for full posting www.rockymedical.com Email resumes to: rockymed@telusplanet.net Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!
Oilfield
Journeyman Electrician or Electrical Technologist -
Must be highly motivated and able to work independently. VFD and PLC exp. would be an asset.
Trailer Technician -
must be highly motivated and able to work independently and with others. Knowledge of general home repairs req’d.
Solids Control Technician-
$2500 Bonus Every 100 days
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Oil & Gas Well Testing Supervisors, Night Foremen, Exp’d/inexp’d Junior Day/Night Operators. Must have H2S, First Aid, valid driver’s license. Pre-employment Drug screening Competitive Wages. Benefit Package Please submit resume with references to: apply@wespro.ca or by fax to (403) 783-8004 Only individuals selected for interviews will be contacted
* DEX Energy Services * req’s exp’d boiler hands. Special oilfield boiler ticket a MUST. Competitive wage and benefit pkg. email resume to humanresources@ dexproduction.com or fax 403-864-8284
800
Oilfield
Fluid Experts Ltd.
Fluid Experts of Red Deer is seeking experienced
Class 1 Operators
to haul clean fluids for the Oil & Gas Industry. Home every night, company benefits with exceptional pay structure. Must be able to work on their own with minimal supervision. Compensation based on experience. Fax resume w/all tickets and current drivers abstract to: 403-346-3112 or email to: roger@fluidexperts.com
Oilfield
800
Welding and Manufacturing Ltd.
Landcore Technologies Inc. located in Ponoka is currently seeking energetic, motivated team players for the following positions:
Drillers and Driller Assistants with a Class 1 driver’s license.
All candidates must be able to pass a pre-employment drug test. Safety tickets are an asset but we are willing to train the right candidate. We offer exceptional pay, excellent benefit package and a positive work environment. Please email resumes to info@landcore.ca or fax 403-783-2011. The right candidates will be contacted for an interview. Please no phone calls. LOCAL SERVICE CO. REQ’S EXP. VACUUM TRUCK OPERATOR Must have Class 3 licence w/air & all oilfield tickets. Fax resume w/drivers abstract to 403-886-4475
Bearspaw Petroleum Ltd is seeking an exp’d FLOORHAND and DERRICK HAND. Locally based, home every night!
.
With your long-term interests in mind, we provide you with ample opportunities to achieve your career goals. If you would like to be a part of our growing and dynamic team of professionals in your field, we are currently seeking:
INDUSTRIAL INSULATORS
Experience with Calcium Silicate, Mineral Wool, and Utilidor panels in a tank or vessel manufacturing facility a definite asset. These are full-time permanent shop positions with competitive starting Wages and benefits packages including Health, RRSP and Tool Allowance programs.
Please Fax resume to 403-227-7796, or Email to hr@bilton.ca
720
Qualified applicants must have all necessary valid tickets for the position being applied for. Bearspaw offers a very competitive salary and benefits package along with a steady work schedule. Please submit resumes: Attn: Human Resources Emai: hr@ bearspawpet.com Fax: (403) 258-3197 or Mail to: Suite 5309, 333-96 Ave. NE Calgary, AB T3K 0S3
TANKMASTER RENTALS requires CLASS 1 BED TRUCK and TANK TRUCK Operators for Central Alberta. Competitive wages and benefits. m.morton@tankmaster.ca or fax 403-340-8818 Celebrate your life with a Classified ANNOUNCEMENT
Immediately. All applicants must have current H2S, Class 5 with Q Endorsement, First Aid We offer competitive wages & excellent benefits. Please include 2 work reference names and numbers Please fax resume to : 403-264-6725 Or email to: tannis@treelinewell.com No phone calls please.
TEAM Snubbing now hiring operators and helpers. Email: janderson@ teamsnubbing.com Looking for a place to live? Take a tour through the CLASSIFIEDS
TREELINE WELL SERVICES
Has Opening for all positions! Immediately. All applicants must have current H2S, Class 5 with Q Endorsement, First Aid We offer competitive wages & excellent benefits. Please include 2 work reference names and numbers Please fax resume to : 403-264-6725 Or email to: tannis@treelinewell.com No phone calls please. Tired of Standing? Find something to sit on in Classifieds
Restaurant/ Hotel
WE are looking for Rig Managers, Drillers, Derrick and Floor hands for the Red Deer area. Please contact Steve Tiffin at stiffin@galleonrigs.com or (403) 358-3350 fax (403) 358-3326
Professionals
810
ASSISTANT REQUIRED FOR MONTESSORI PRESCHOOL To start January 2013. Must have Level 2 or 3 Early Childhood Certification. Please fax applications to 403-342-0599 CELEBRATIONS HAPPEN EVERY DAY IN CLASSIFIEDS
820
NOW OPEN
Responsibilities will include recruiting, hiring, policy creation and management, contributing to employee retention and communication.
273268K23-25
We offer exceptional pay for exceptional people.
Copp’s Services is a leading provider of pile driving, helical piling and related services to the oil and gas and infrastructure industries.
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE/PAYROLL TECHNICIAN
Due to our rapid growth, we require a full time accounts payable/payroll technician to join our team. The successful candidate will be a very organized individual who has several years of experience and a high degree of accuracy. The person will be a team contributor and take pride in a job well done!
Responsibilities will include the processing of vendor invoices, weekly cheque runs and ongoing management of the vendor files. Payroll responsibilities will initially be time sheet entry with expectation of moving to payroll backup role.
Must have tickets and equipment experience. 403-348-1521 or 403-391-1695
800
Reporting to the Business Operations Manager, the Contracts Manager will be a dynamic self starter that will oversee and ensure the Company’s project contract(s) are completed and are in compliance with our clients’ requirements. This individual will work with the administration team and be responsible for ensuring the administration of project billing and document control for all project contracts. - This individual has a minimum of 7 years of contract administration and/or project management experience in an industrial services or construction background, preferably related to the oil & gas or energy sector. - This individual has an understanding of unit rate contracts and has experience in material procurement and project costing. You will have extensive knowledge and experience in various commercial contracts including understanding contract terms and conditions. - This individual will be responsible for contract management including client communication, project progress monitoring and reporting, change order control, payment applications, contract document control, supplier performance, and contract closeout. - This individual will work with the contract administration team providing leadership, input, and advice in creating and administering appropriate systems, procedures, and plans in helping the Company achieve continued growth. - Ethical business practices are of the utmost importance to the Company. This individual will share these ethical principles and have the ability to apply sound judgment in identifying and resolving contract disputes. - Post secondary education would be considered an asset however all candidates with aligning experience and values would be considered. - Excellent analytical, administrative, and organizational skills are a must. Excellent compensation program available to the selected candidate.... 273288K23-25
Please submit your resume to hr@coppsinc.ca
Assistant Manager, and 1st. Key starting wage 14/hr. plus monthly bonus, and health benefits. Also accepting for Full Time (40 hrs. a week) $12-$13 Part Time (20-30 hrs. a week) Apply in person or e-mail careers@metalsmiths.ca
Trades
850
ARROW PLUMBING SERVICES LTD. WANTED EXPERIENCED
3rd yr. - Journeyman Service Plumbers Better than competitive wages & benefits package. Ref’s req’d. Please fax resume to: 403-342-7894 Attn: Brad or call 403-343-6100
Oilfield
800
www.greathealth.org Cancer Diabetes DIET 350-9168
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
www.air-ristocrat.com Gary 403-302-7167
www.workopolis.com Red Deer Advocate - Job Search
BUILDERS
PET ADOPTION
www.homesreddeer.com Help-U-Sell Real Estate5483
www.laebon.com Laebon Homes 403-346-7273 www.albertanewhomes.com Stevenson Homes. Experience the Dream.
www.lonsdalegreen.com Lonsdale Green Apartments
www.ultralife.bulidingonabudjet.com MLM’ers attract new leads for FREE!
CLUBS & GROUPS
REAL ESTATE RENTALS www.homefinders.ca Phone 403-340-3333
Applicant Requirements: f Self-motivated f Willing to work flexible hours f Safety-focused
f Team oriented f Oil & Gas related experience is preferred f Clean drivers abstract
Why Canyon? f Dynamic and rapidly growing company f Premium compensation package f RRSP matching program
f Paid technical and leadership training f Career advancement opportunities f New equipment
SHOPPING We thank all applicants; however only those selected for an initial interview will be contacted.
www.fhtmca.com/derekwiens Online Mega Mall 403-597-1854
VACATIONS
www.writers-ink.net Club for writers - meets weekly
www.radkeoutfitting.com AB Horseback Vacations 403-340-3971
COMPUTER REPAIR
WEB DESIGN
www.albertacomputerhygiene.com
affordablewebsitesolution.ca
AB, Computer Hygiene Ltd. 896-7523
Design/hosting/email $65/mo.
How to apply:
19166TFD28
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Class 1 Drivers / Operators Nitrogen, Coiled Tubing, Cement & Acid, Fracturing Supervisors: Nitrogen, Coiled Tubing, Cement & Acid, Fracturing
www.reddeerspca.com Many Pets to Choose From
www.fantahomes.com 403-343-1083 or 403-588-9788 www.masonmartinhomes.com Mason Martin Homes 403-342-4544 www.truelinehomes.com True Line Homes 403-341-5933 www.jaradcharles.com BUILDER M.L.S
DAYSHIFT
CNC Operators DAYSHIFT
QC Person Nexus Engineering is Currently looking for C.N.C OPERATORS. DUTIES INCLUDE, Set up of Mazak C.N.C lathe and running production runs, min. 3 years experience. Also currently hiring a dayshift QC PERSON, Must be able to read measuring devices and blueprints for inspection of machined parts.
We offer competitive wages, benefits and a RRSP plan. Please forward resumes to resume@ nexusengineering.ca
Big Horn Electric and Controls Ltd.
Looking for a new pet? Check out Classifieds to find the purrfect pet.
CURRENTLY SEEKING
Heavy Duty Mechanic
CVIP license a must .Manufacturing and Hydraulic system experience an asset. Good hours, competitive wage & benefit package. Fax resume to: 403-309-3360. ESTABLISHED well known company looking for permanent f/t hourly tapers and p/t piece work tapers. Please fax resume to 403-782-0610 email: ben@tpil.ca
Exp’d Residential Framer Req’d. or 3rd. or 4th yr Apprentice.
F/T employment, top wages and benefits, biwkly pay, Own transportation req’d. Call 357-6985 after 6 p.m. or email dani_richert@yahoo .com EXPERIENCED repair person req’d for local truck company. Work involves all aspects of heavy truck and trailer repair and dismanteling. Must be physically fit. HD Mechanic or equivelant experience We offer competitive wages, benefits weekends off. Fax resume to 1-855-784-2330 or call 1-877-787-2501
McMullen’s Refrigeration & Heating is a well established business in Red Deer. We are a growing business looking for great people to add to our professional team. Customer service skills are required. These are the positions currently available and training will be provided, along with excellent wages and benefit packages: -Journeyman/Apprentice Refr. Technician -Refrigeration Sales and Service Manager -Plumber/Boiler Technician/Apprentice -Sheet Metal Estimator and Sales -Sheet Metal Journeyman/ Apprentice Please phone John @ 403-342-1155 or email john.hirney@ mcmullens.ca.
email: hr@canyontech.ca fax: (403) 356-1146 website: www.canyontech.ca
273151K23-25
BALLOON RIDES
CNC Operators
Central Alberta’s Largest Car Lot in Classifieds
If you’re looking for a career with a leading organization that promotes Integrity, Relationships, Innovation and Success, then we’re looking for you. Now hiring Canyon Champions for the following positions:
www.matchingbonus123.usana.com the best...just got better!!
•
AFTERNOON SHIFT
830
273008K25
www.dontforgetyourvitamins.net The greatest vitamins in the world
403.342.2923
Join our team of professionals! ELECTRICAL and INSTRUMENTATION JOURNEYMAN and APPRENTICES We are currently recruiting for: Central and Northern THE RUSTY PELICAN is Alberta. now accepting resumes for Required Safety a well experienced Certificates: F/T SERVER H2S Alive / First Aid Apply within: 2079-50 PST / Fall Protection. Ave. 2-4 pm. Mon.-Fri. Fax 403-347-1161 Phone Successful candidates will possess excellent written calls WILL NOT be accepted. and verbal communication skills. Sales & Oilfield experience is an asset. Distributors Qualified applicants are invited to fax or email their METALSMITHS resumes: Bower Mall Fax: 403-638-3688 Email: is looking for careers@bighornelectric.com
Canyon is the fastest growing fracturing company in North America. We deliver quality customized pressure pumping and service solutions to the oil and gas industry, improving our industry one job at a time.
www.liveyourlifebetter.com Lose weight naturally with Z-Trim
Hwy 2, West Side Gasoline Alley
HIRING * Gas station Manager * $25/hr, full time 1 person * The day to day operations of filling station and convenience store, managi n g s t a ff , w o r k i n g w i t h vendors and monitoring sales. * Completion of University ( Economics). Over 1 yr business experience. Leeoh Holdings Inc. o/a Rimbey Gas & Splash. Box 659 4630 50 Ave. • Rimbey, AB T0C 2J0 cookplus@naver.com Phone 403-843-2360
TO LIST YOUR WEBSITE CALL 403-309-3300 www.antlerhillelkranch.com Peak Performance VA 227-2449
Gary Moe Volkswagen
DAD’S PIZZA
or by
HEALTH & FITNESS
Vehicle maintenance, service, replace, fix, adjust systems and components, steering, brakes, suspension, transmission, electronics, electrical, engines and accessories. Apply in person with resume and Volkswagen certification to: Dave @
PART/FULL TIME COOK Apply at East 40th Pub. 3811 40th Ave.
hr@coppsinc.ca
ASSOCIATIONS
Two full time, permanent positions in Red Deer, AB From $29.75/hr to $33.00/hr
CHINESE FOOD Restaurant requires DISHWASHER, WAITER/WAITRESS & DELIVERY DRIVER Drop resume off in person to Red Star Restaurant 3731 50 Ave. Red Deer Phone 403-309-5566
Please submit your resume in confidence to ....
www.centralalbertahomebuilders.com Central AB Home Builders 403-346-5321 www.reddeer.cmha.ab.ca Canadian Mental Health Assoc. www.realcamping.ca LOVE camping and outdoors? www.diabetes.ca Canadian Diabetes Assoc. www.mycommunityinformation.com /cawos/index.html www.reddeerchamber.com Chamber of Commerce 403-347-4491
850
(Volkswagen Master Technician Required)
BLACKFALDS Motor Inn is looking for F/T permanent Food & Beverage Supervisor. $14.50 hourly. Must have at least 1 yr. exp. plus ProServe Certificate & VLT Responsible Certification. Apply in person between 9 am - 2 pm. Ask for Jenny. 403-885-4611
We offer exceptional pay for exceptional people.
Fax. 403-347-6401
Trades
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE TECHNICIANS
THE RANCH HOUSE has part time positions avail. for Hostess’ and Bus Persons. Call David 403-358-4100 for interview/appointment or fax resume 403-358-4116
CONTRACTS MANAGER
Due to our rapid growth, we require a full time Human Resources Administrator to join our team. The successful candidate will be a self-starting individual with several years’ of experience in a generalist role. The person will be a team contributor and take pride in a job well done!
820
RAMADA INN & SUITES req’s. ROOM ATTENDANTS. Exp. preferred. Also BREAKFAST ROOM ATTENDANTS, early morning shifts, flexibility req’d. Only serious inquiries apply. Rate $13.50/hr. Drop off resume at: 6853 - 66 St. Red Deer or fax 403-342-4433
The Company (Copp’s Services Inc.), is a progressive and growing industrial services company and is looking for a Contracts Manager to be an integral part of their team.
HUMAN RESOURCES ADMINISTRATOR
Restaurant/ Hotel
Boiler Hands.
Copp’s Services is a leading provider of pile driving, helical piling and related services to the oil and gas and infrastructure industries.
hr@coppsinc.ca
800
Snow Cat Operators
Oilfield
Please submit your resume in confidence to....
Oilfield
Has openings for
SERVICE RIG
designs, engineers and manufactures custom oilfield equipment for international clients. We operate seven manufacturing facilities in Innisfail, Alberta and employ over 175 people
800
Oilfield
TREELINE WELL SERVICES
Apprentice or Journeyman Mechanics Q-TEST INSPECTION LTD. Pile Drive Operators s now accepting applica- Pile Drive Assistants tions for CGSB Level II’s Field Supervisor and CEDOS
Work to start immediately Must be highly motivated & run through to spring break. Sub-contractors individual with previous also needed. Phone derrick or solids control 403-887-5630 or email exp. Must be capable of working independently and qtestltd@telus.net with others. LOCAL Oilfield Company To apply, send your seeking experienced resume via email to Wireline Tool Salesman. hr@apexoil.ca or fax Vehicle mileage paid as 403-314-3285 by well as commissions and December 1, 2012 benefits. Please forward resume to btopcanada Classifieds Your place to SELL @hotmail.com or fax Your place to BUY 403-340-8581 Attn: Manager
A RED DEER BASED Pressure Testing Company req’s. Operators for testing BOP’s throughout AB. Only those with Drilling rig exp. need apply. Fax resume & driver’s abstract to: 403-341-6213 or email mikeoapt@gmail.com Only those selected for interview will be contacted.
Clerical
800
COMPANY DRIVER Required for busy Red Deer based Hot Shot Company. Oilfield exp. preferred but willing to train the right individual. Fax resume to 403-342-2152
APEX OILFIELD SERVICES IS HIRING! Available positions are based out of Red Deer:
800
Oilfield
272136K28
800
Oilfield
273535K2325
790
273040K21-27
Medical
MICRON INDUSTRIES is a licensed inspection facility specializing in cryogenic tank repairs and is currently seeking a HD Mechanic, min 2nd yr apprentice. Trailer experience preferred. Weekdays 7:00-4:30. No eves or wknd work. Exc. working conditions. Benefits after 3 months. Fax resume to 403-346-2072 or email patty.micron@telus.net TOO MUCH STUFF? Let Classifieds help you sell it.
Shipper / Receiver
AES INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES LTD. looking for an energetic/ enthusiastic individual for our receiving department. Fax resume to 403-342-0233
RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012 E3
870
880
880
SPARTEK SYSTEMS INC
In Sylvan Lake, AB is seeking quailified individuals for WORK FOR THE EMPLOYER OF CHOICE IN THE SECURITY INDUSTRY! Securitas Canada is looking for new team members with the drive for success, deliver outstanding customer service and the ability to grow and develop. Police services are more interested in candidates who have previous security / law enforcement experience. Securitas is the place to work at if you are interested in working for the top employer in the security industry, developing yourself as a security specialist, taking benefit from our training and education as well as developing your own career plan. Would you like to make the society safer? Come join us at Securitas. No Experience required. We will train you!! No uniform costs!! Excellent Wages and Benefits!! Working with teams of Professionals!! Position located in Red Deer/Blackfalds (Please apply to the Edmonton Area) **YOU MUST APPLY AT WWW. SECURITASJOBS.CA OR YOUR APPLICATION WILL NOT BE RECEIVED** - Integrity - Vigilance Helpfulness Securitas Canada celebrates diversity and we welcome and encourage applications from the four designated groups; namely women, aboriginal people, visible minorities and persons with disabilities.
*MECHANICAL ENGINEER * ELECTRICAL ENGINEER * JOURNEYMAN MACHINIST SOFTWARE ENGINEER ELEC. REPAIR TECH QC INSPECTOR, AND ASSEMBLER
TANKMASTER RENTALS req’s FULL TIME
APPRENTICE MECHANIC
860
2012 BIG Horn Electric and Controls Ltd.
ELECTRICAL and INSTRUMENTATION JOURNEYMAN and APPRENTICES Required Safety Certificates: H2S Alive / First Aid PST / Fall Protection. Successful candidates will possess excellent written and verbal communication skills. Oilfield experience is an asset. Qualified applicants are invited to fax or email their resumes: Fax: 403-638-3688 Email: careers@bighornelectric.com
EASY! The easy way to find a buyer for items you want to sell is with a Red Deer Advocate want ad. Phone 309-3300.
Welding and Manufacturing Ltd.
With your long-term interests in mind, we provide you with ample opportunities to achieve your career goals. If you would like to be a part of our growing and dynamic team of professionals in your field, we are currently seeking:
HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC JOURNEYMAN
This is a full-time permanent shop position with competitive starting Wages and benefits packages including Health, RRSP and Tool Allowance programs. Please Fax resume to 403-227-7796, or Email to hr@bilton.ca
272840K19-25
Extensive experience with the maintenance and repair of mobile equipment such as forklift, genie lift, overhead cranes etc. a definite asset.
RIVERSIDE MEADOWS 59 & 60 St. ********** Please call Joanne at 403-314-4308
TIRED OF working for an idiot? Earn big money. Have free time. 1-250-764-4404
EXPERIENCED
Vacuum & Water Truck operators req’d. to start immed. CLASS 1 or 3 WITH Q All oilfield safety tickets req’d. Clean drivers abstract. Must comply with drug and alcohol policy. References Req’d. Exc. salary & benefits. Fax resume to: 403-742-5376 hartwell@telus.net F/T. Class 1 drivers to haul NGL butane Super B’s, must be over 25 yrs., EMAIL: dreaddriving@gmail.com
DO YOU WANT YOUR AD TO BE READ BY
880
Misc. Help
Gary Moe Volkswagen
SERVICE ADVISOR
Required Immediately Competitive plus renumeration Great Benefits We require a process driven person for this position. Please send resume to:
daveturnbull@ garymoe.com
ADULT or YOUTH CARRIERS NEEDED
100,000 Potential Buyers???
For delivery of Flyers, Express and Sunday Life in
TRY Central Alberta LIFE SERVING CENTRAL ALBERTA RURAL REGION
CALL 309-3300
DEER PARK Dempsey St. area $45/mo. ALSO Duston St. Donnelly Crsc., area Densmore Crs. Dale Close $270/mo. LANCASTER 1/2 of Lampard Crsc $65/mo. ALSO Lenon Close, Lacey Close, Landry Bend area $76/mo. ALSO Logan Close Lee St. & Lawrence Crsc. area $158/mo.
Pidherney’s is growing and requires experienced Class 1 drivers to work out of our NEW Blackfalds facility:
End Dump Drivers Truck and Wagon Drivers Super B Drivers Lowbed Drivers
MICHENER West of 40th Ave. North of Ross St. area $245.00/mo. Good for adult w/a small car . 273147K28
Top wages paid based on experience Assigned units Scheduled days off Valid safety tickets an asset
ONLY 4 DAYS A WEEK
Call Jamie 403-314-4306 for more info
Fax resume to Human Resources 403-845-5370 Or E-mail: hr@pidherneys.com
wegotservices 1000-1430
To Advertise Your Business or Service Here
Call Classifieds 403-309-3300 classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com
INDIVIDUAL & BUSINESS Accounting, 30 yrs. of exp. with oilfield service companies, other small businesses and individuals RW Smith, 346-9351
Contractors
1100
BRIAN’S DRYWALL Framing, drywall, taping, textured & t-bar ceilings, 36 yrs exp. Ref’s. 392-1980
Escorts
1165
BEAUTIFUL college girl ROXY 403-848-2300
EDEN
587-877-7399 10am- 2am EROTICAS PLAYMATES Girls of all ages www.eroticasplaymates.net 403-598-3049 Sinfully Sweet Seductive Beauties. 403-550-0732 mydiamondgirls.org
Fireplaces
1175
COUNTERTOPS
Wes Wiebe 403-302-1648 DALE’S Home Reno’s Free estimates for all your reno needs. 403-506-4301
TIM LLOYD. WETT certified. Inspections, installs, chimney sweeps & service 403-340-0513
1280
RENO’S, painting, door & window replacement. 403-346-9477
Massage Therapy
RMD RENOVATIONS Bsmt’s, flooring, decks, etc. Call Roger 403-348-1060
* NEW * Executive Touch. Relaxation massage for men. 5003A - Ross St. Mon-Fri 11am-6pm 348-5650
SIDING, Soffit, Fascia Prefering non- combustible fibre cement, canexel & smart board, Call Dean @ 302-9210.
Escorts
1165
*LEXUS* 403-392-0891 INDEPENDENT
CHINESE MASSAGE new owner, free parking, 4606 48 Ave. Open 7 a.m.9 p.m. 7 days a wk. Phone 403-986-1691
Massage Therapy
1280
VII MASSAGE
Feeling overwhelmed? Hard work day? Come in and let us pamper you. Pampering at its best. #7 7464 Gaetz Ave.(rear entrance if necessary) www.viimassage.biz In/Out Calls to Hotels 403-986-6686 Something for Everyone Everyday in Classifieds
Misc. Services
1290
5* JUNK REMOVAL
Property clean up 340-8666 CENTRAL PEST CONTROL LTD. Comm/res. Locally owned. 403-373-6182 cpest@shaw.ca FREE removal of all kinds of unwanted scrap metal. No household appliances 403-396-8629
IRONMAN Scrap Metal Recovery is picking up scrap again! Farm machinery, vehicles and industrial. Serving central Alberta. 403-318-4346
Moving & Storage
1300
BOXES? MOVING? SUPPLIES? 403-986-1315
Painters/ Decorators
1310
MOUNTVIEW 83 Advocate $435/mo. $5229/yr 1-1/2 hrs. per day
Barrett Dr. Bettenson St. Best Crsc./ Berry Ave. NGLEWOOD Ingram Close
SUNNYBROOK AREA
VANIER AREA Viscount Dr./ Violet Place Victor Close Vold Close Call Prodie @ 403- 314-4301 for more info
IS looking to fill the following positions in the: HINTON AND FOX CREEK LOCATION * Oilfield Construction Supervisors * Oilfield Construction Lead Hands * Stainless and Carbon Welders * B-Pressure Welders * Pipefitters * Experienced Pipeline Equipment Operators * Experienced oilfield labourers * Industrial Painters * 7-30 tonne Picker Truck Operator with Class 1 H2S Alive ( Enform), St. John (Red Cross) standard first aid) & in-house drug and alcohol tests are required. Please submit resume to hr@alstaroc.com or Fax to 780-865-5829 Quote job #66962 on resume LABOURER/OPERATIONS ASSISTANT - Tracking, Filing, Data Entry, Management Skills & experience, Proficient with Word, Excel. Excellent verbal & written communication skills Loading, unloading materials up to 100 lbs. Available day, evening, weekends and on call. Own Transportation. Email: custbulk@xplornet.com or Fax 403-340-2250
********************** TO ORDER HOME DELIVERY OF THE ADVOCATE CALL OUR CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT 314-4300
NEWSPAPER CARRIERS REQUIRED for Afternoon delivery in Bowden & Innisfail.
CIRCULATION
Call Karen for more info 403-314-4317
ADULT CARRIERS NEEDED For delivery of Red Deer Advocate by 6:30 a.m. Mon. through Fri. & 8:00. .am. on Saturday in LANCASTER AREA 77 papers $412/mo. ROSEDALE AREA 72 papers $386/mo. DEER PARK Dempsey St. area 79 papers $423/mo. ALSO Davison Dr. area 101 papers $541/mo. ALSO Clearview Ridge Timberlands area 59 papers $376/mo. Call Jamie 403-314-4306 for more info
CARRIERS REQUIRED to deliver the Central AB. Life Within the towns of Blackfalds Lacombe Ponoka Stettler Call Rick at 403-314-4303
Do You: - Want extra income - Possess a clean, valid drivers license - Have a friendly attitude - Enjoy customer service - Want part-time work (12 to 22 hours per week) As part of our customer service team, you will be dispatched in response to service concerns to delivery newspapers and flyers to customers or carriers. A delivery vehicle is provided. Hours of shifts are Monday through Friday 5 a.m. to 9 a.m. or longer, and/or afternoon shifts Monday to Friday 2 p.m. - 6 p.m.. Saturday and Sunday, 7 a.m.-11 a.m. or longer Submit resume, indicating “Service Runner Position”, along with your drivers abstract immediately to: careers@ reddeeradvocate.com or mail to: Human Resources 2950 Bremner Avenue Red Deer, AB. T4N 5G3 or fax to: 403-341-4772 We thank all applicants for their interest, however, only selected candidates will be contacted.
Community Support Worker Accepting registrations for 6 mo. Community Support Worker Program. Incld’s
880
Misc. Help
PHONE BOOKS
Earn extra money for Xmas by delivering the new Yellow Pages Phones books into Red Deer, Sylvan Lake, & Innisfail. Must have own vehicle. This is door to door delivery. Can start immediately, no selling involved, part time. Call 1-800-661-1910 SOURCE ADULT VIDEO requires mature P/T help 7 am-3 pm. weekends Fax resume to: 403-346-9099 or drop off to: 3301-Gaetz Avenue
Service Runner (Part Time)
SOUTH HILL 83 Advocate $435/mo. $5229/YR. 1 Hr. per day.
Misc. Help
X-Static is now accepting applications for P/T Experienced Door Personnel Apply in person, after 3 pm
BOWER AREA
Sherwood Cres.
ADULT CARRIERS NEEDED for early morning delivery of Red Deer Advocate 6 days per week in
DISPATCHER req’d. Knowledge of Red Deer and area is essential. Good communication, skills both verbal and written. Must have effective time management skills and able to multi task in a fast paced environment. Experience preferred, but will train suitable applicant. Send resume by fax to 403-346-0295
DOOR SECURITY
Ainsworth Crsc. Asmundsen Ave. Archibald Crsc. Arnold Close/ Amlee Close
MOUNTVIEW WEST LAKE Call Karen for more info 403-314-4317
880
Please contact QUITCY
at 403-314-4316 or email qmacaulay@ reddeeradvocate.com
SUBWAY All Red Deer Locations Hiring Immediately
Food Counter Attendants Are you looking for a career opportunity with excellent benefits, a mature working environment and opportunity to advance? If so, Subway has a position for you! Please apply online @ mysubwaycareer.com or Drop resume off in person at 180, 6900 Taylor Drive Or email to careers@rdsubway.com or Call us at 403-342-0203
Employment Training
900
OILFIELD SERVICES INC.
offers a variety of
SAFETY COURSES to meet your needs.
Standard First Aid , Confined Space Entry, H2S Alive and Fire Training are courses that we offer on a regular basis. As well, we offer a selection of online Training Courses. For more information check us out online at www.firemaster.ca or call us at 403 342 7500. You also can find us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter @firemasterofs.
SAFETY
TRAINING CENTRE OILFIELD TICKETS
Industries #1 Choice!
“Low Cost” Quality Training
403.341.4544 24 Hours Toll Free 1.888.533.4544
R H2S Alive (ENFORM) R First Aid/CPR R Confined Space R WHMIS & TDG R Ground Disturbance R (ENFORM) B.O.P. #204, 7819 - 50 Ave. (across from Totem)
NEWSPAPER CARRIERS REQUIRED for The Town of Olds No collecting! Packages come ready for delivery! Also for the afternoon in Town of Penhold! Also afternoon delivery in Town of Springbrook 1 day per wk. No collecting!! Please contact QUITCY
at 403-314-4316 or email qmacaulay@ reddeeradvocate.com
Employment Training
920
Career Planning
RED DEER WORKS Build A Resume That Works! APPLY ONLINE www.lokken.com/rdw.html Call: 403-348-8561 Email inford@lokken.com Career Programs are
FREE
for all Albertans
wegot
stuff CLASSIFICATIONS 1500-1990
Antiques & Art
1520
VINTAGE/ANTIQUE SALE Sat. Nov. 24, 9 - 3 @ Clearview Hall, 93 Cornett
900
GED, Career Planning & Work Experience. Funding may be avail. which incl. tuition, living allowance, and books. 403-340-1930 Academic Express Adult Education & Training www.academicexpress.ca
COUNTER Sales Person
Req. by sign company in Red Deer. We offer a clean vibrant environment to work in, w/benefits after 3 mo. Exp. in sign industry preferred but not necessary. Wage dependant upon exp. Please send resume by fax to 403-343-7171 or by e-mail to bart@cityscreen.ca CUSTOMER SERVICE A locally owned industrial supply company is looking for an energetic person for inside sales. E-mail resume to mark@ aesreddeer.com
880
LAUREL TRUDGEON Residential Painting and Colour Consultations. 403-342-7801. PAINTING BY DAVE Interior, Exterior, New Construction. Comm/Indust. 2 Journeyman w/over 50 yrs exp. %15 discount for seniors. Free estimates. All work guaranteed. 403-307-4798
Seniors’ Services
1372
ATT’N: SENIORS Are you looking for help on small reno’s or jobs, such as, new bathroom sink, toilets or trimming small trees. Call James 403- 341-0617
HELPING HANDS For Seniors. Cleaning, cooking, companionship in home or in facility. Call 403-346-7777 Better For Cheaper with a MASSAGE ABOVE ALL YARD maintenance, snow Low Price Guarantee. WALK-INS WELCOME helpinghandshomesupport.com 4709 Gaetz Ave. 346-1161 shovelling, 403-318-7625
Gentle Touch Massage 4919 50 St. New rear entry, lots of parking 403-341-4445
ANDERS AREA
Lancaster Drive Lindsay Ave. Langford Cres. Law Close/ Lewis Close
CLASSIFICATIONS
1010
FOR FLYERS, RED DEER SUNDAY LIFE AND EXPRESS ROUTES IN:
ADULT & YOUTH CARRIERS NEEDED for delivery of Flyers Red Deer Express & Red Deer Life Sunday in
ALSO
860
Accounting
CARRIERS NEEDED
LANCASTER AREA
DRIVEN TO EXCEL FROM START TO FINISH
• • • •
ORIOLE PK WEST Orr Dr. & Osler Cr ALSO Oberg, Orchid, Oscar Cr & Overand Place
DRIVERS-LONG HAUL. $1500 Sign-on! Join an industry leader! US Runs, 5-14 days out. Heyl Truck Lines 800-973-9161 www.heyl.net
LOCAL ACID Transport company looking for exp’d’ F/T Class 1 truck driver & pressure truck operator. Top wages and exc. benefit pkg. Fax resume and driver’s abstract to 403-346-3766
designs, engineers and manufactures custom oilfield equipment for international clients. We operate seven manufacturing facilities in Innisfail, Alberta and employ over 175 people.
Truckers/ Drivers
JOHNSTONE PARK Jacobs Close James, Johns St. & Jewell St.
Send resume to m.morton@tankmaster.ca or fax 403-340-8818
For complete job descriptions, please refer to our website at www.sparteksystems.com Truckers/ Applicants please forward Drivers resume to keri.lee@ sparteksystems.com BUSY CENTRAL AB or fax to 403-887-4050 company req’s exp’d. Class Please state which position 1 drivers to pull decks. you are applying for in your Assigned truck, exc. wages cover letter. and benefits pkg. Paid extras. Family orientated. Wabasca Area Resume and abstract fax 5 month term to 403-784-2330 or call 1-877-787-2501 Camp Job Mon,. - Fri,. 8 a m to 6 pm Started mid-Aug,
850
Trades
ADULT & Youth Carrier Needed For Delivery of Flyers, Express & Sunday Life in
Misc. Help
217865
850
Trades
Misc. Help
270636K9-27
850
Trades
Misc. Help
is expanding its facility to double production. We are currently seeking the following to join our team in Blackfalds for all shifts:
- Concrete Finishers - Carpenters/Woodworkers Top Wages paid based on experience. Full Benefits and Uniform Package included. Visit our website for more detailed job descriptions at www. eaglebuilders.ca. Applicants are able to apply online or fax resumes to Human Resources 403-885-5516 or e-mail: k.kooiker@eaglebuilders.ca.
272825K19-L30
850
Trades
Business Opportunities
E4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
MANTLE Clock, 1870 1920, black ebony wood w/hinged convex glass door over face, key to wind, $100. obo. Unique corner Bulova clock, solid dard wood, tiny shelf below the face, roman numerals, battery operated; Asking $50; 403-227-2976
Auctions
1530
Bud Haynes & Co. Auctioneers
Certified Appraisers 1966 Estates, Antiques, Firearms. Bay 5, 7429-49 Ave. 347-5855
BUD HAYNES
ANTIQUE AUCTION-Part 2 Sat. Dec. 1 @ 11 am Bay 4, 7429 49 Ave R.D. Ron & Late Clara Dancer of Calgary Collection. Selection of clocks incl. 2 Arthur Pequegnat clocks; Outstanding 9 pc carved Canadian Oak dining rm suite; Walnut O-G chest; Walnut vanity dresser; Oak secretary desk; Oak office chair; Walnut Duncan Phyffe dining table; Canadian Rocker; Mahogany rocker w/stool; Over 80 lamps; Gone With the Wind, Banquet & Aladdin lamps; Over 40 ant. telephones with 4-eleven digit, 6 candlestick, plus ant. phone parts; Golden oak table top gramophone; Beswick & Royal Doulton animals, Bunnyskins series; Goebel & Belleck Christmas ornaments & eggs; Ant. musical instruments incl. 7 violins; Cram top milk bottles with spoons; Extensive sad iron collection incl. 10 miniatures; Medalta; PREVIEW: 9 am until sale time. Check website for detailed catalogue!!! Ph: 403-347-5855 www.budhaynesauctions.com
Household Furnishings
1720
BED ALL NEW,
Queen Orthopedic, dble. pillow top, set, 15 yr. warr. Cost $1300. Sacrifice $325. 302-0582 Free Delivery BED: #1 King. extra thick orthopedic pillowtop, brand new, never used. 15 yr. warr. Cost $1995, sacrifice @ $545. 403-302-0582. OLDER wooden tv stand for large tv $75 obo 403-782-3031 SWIVEL, rocking occasional chair, very good cond, $95 403-343-3013 Wooden Wall Unit w/6 cubicles. Ideal for TV, radio, speakers, etc. $60. 403-314-2026
1760
Misc. for Sale
3 SOUP TO GO VENDING MACHINES, $30, 403-347-7489 BLANKET, dble. siize, 100% acrylic, washable, sea mist green, $25.; Wedding veil, 4 layered, fine net, shoulder length, $100. Wedding Head piece, lace petals, with tine pearls. $25. 403-227-2976 DOMESTIC sewing machine w/cabinet, $25, 403-343-2241 Galvanized garbage can, $12. Post maul, 8 lb. $12. Post hole auger, 6” $30. Metal wheel barrow, 6 cu.ft. $50. Metal ice fishing pick, $35. Metal cat trap w/handle, $20. 2 yellow tow ropes, 10’ long $12/ea. 1/ 4” tow cable, $12. Scoop shovel, aluminum, $12. 403-314-2026
1810
Pets & Supplies
2140
Horses
1830
Cats
5 FREE KITTENS,3 black, 2 grey,Blue Russian Tuxedo X, very cute, ready for good home/farm/acreage, good mousers, litter trained 403-886-4852 403-588-6505 SIAMESE ALSO BELANISE (3) KITTENS FOR SALE $60 each obo. 403-887-3649
1840
Dogs
LABRA DOODLE PUPS F 1 $700; F1 B $900 2 YR health Guaranteed. awesome bloodlines, ready now until Christmas Hold with deposit. Ph. 403-919-1370 306-792-2113 www.furfettishfarm.ca
1860
Sporting Goods
FOR RENT • 3000-3200 WANTED • 3250-3390
Houses/ Duplexes
3020
3 BDRM. home w/garage in quiet central location, 4586 Waskasoo Cres. New appls. paint & flrs. Dev. bsmt. $1600. + utils. Dec. 1. 403-343-1313 3 BDRM. main floor house, Avail. Dec. 1. $1150 + 2/3 utils., . 403-872-3400 AVAIL. Jan. 1, main flr, updated Westpark home, 4 bdrms, 1 1/2 baths, dbl. heated garage, bonus rm., w/ fireplace, fridge, stove, shared laundry. 1 yr. lease, no pets, n/s. $1550 rent /d.d ph. or text 403-391-2292 BEAUTIFULLY reno’d 3 bdrm, 1 bath, Grandview, $1400/mo. 403-302-3919 LOVELY Duplex ORR Dr. $1425 + utils., 2 bdrm. + den, 2 1/2 baths, no pets, Avail. Dec. 403-741-6309
1590
1650
BROWN EGGS AND LAMB now has free range pork : gourmet hams and sausage. Phone 403-782-4095
Firewood
1660
AFFORDABLE
Homestead Firewood
Spruce, Pine, Birch Spilt, Dry. 7 days/wk. 403-304-6472
★
Manufactured Homes
Now Offering Hotter, Cleaner BC Birch. All Types. P.U. / del. Lyle 403-783-2275
Health & Beauty
1700
*NEW!* Asian Relaxation Massage Downtown RD 587-377-1298 Open Mon.Fri. daily 11am - 6 pm.
Only
1720
3 PC Wall Unit w/9 shelves & centre cubical w/door. Nice for pictures, books, etc. $60. 403-314-2026
Deluxe 3 bdrm. 1 1/2 bath, bi-level townhouse, 5 appls, blinds, large balcony, no pets, n/s, $1195 or $1220 along the river. SD $1000. avail. Dec 1 403-304-7576 347-7545
Manufactured Homes
3040
Suites
3060
1 & 2 BDRM. APTS. Clean, quiet bldg. Call 318-0901.
YOU Looking?
2 & 3 bdrm. suites. Heat/water/parking incl., Large suites with yards Some with washer/dryer Call 403-342-2899 Balcony. No pets, 5 appl. NOW $1295 incl UTIL. Hearthstone 403-314-0099 LARGE, 1, 2 & 3 BDRM. SUITES. 25+, adults only n/s, no pets 403-346-7111
264155J1-K30
Renter’s Special
4160
FULLY SERVICED res & duplex lots in Lacombe. Builders terms or owner will J.V. with investors or subtrades who wish to become home builders. Great returns. Call 403-588-8820
MOBILE HOME PAD, in Red Deer Close to Gaetz, 2 car park, Shaw cable incl. Sharon 403-550-8777
2008 GMC Sierra 2500 4x4, 39000 kms $23888 348-8788 Sport & Import
wegot
wheels CLASSIFICATIONS 5000-5300
5030
Cars
2009 CAMRY XLE V6, loaded, leather, GPS, keyless locks, like new. $19,975. 403-782-3690
2007 PONTIAC G6 SE sedan. Lady driven ,loaded. 103,000 km. $7300. 403-348-9746
$
/month
HUGE DISPERSAL
SATURDAY, DEC. 1, 2012 @ 10AM MONTGOMERY AUCTION SALES CENTRE
wegot
Selected Large Items Will Be Sold on Bid Spotter.com See Pictures and more info at www.montgomeryauctions.com TERMS: CASH/CHEQUE/C/CARD SUBJECT TO ADDITIONS & DELETIONS 10% BUYERS FEE LUNCH AVAILABLE
Auctioneers & Sales Management DON MONTGOMERY ICCA Auctioneer 403-885-5149 • 1-800-371-6963 Box 939, Blackfalds, AB
273399K23,27
www.montgomeryauctions.com
5150
1999 POLARIS RANGER 6X6 one owner, low hours, 3500 warn winch, $7888 348-8788 Sport & Import
homes CLASSIFICATIONS 4000-4190
4020
4090
Manufactured Homes
MUST SELL By Owner $7,000. Sharon 403-550-8777
New Executive
3 bdrm. 2 bath HOME in Red Deer. Immediate possession 10 yr warranty. Own it for $1345/mo. OAC 403-346-3100, 347-5566
2007 FORD Fusion, SE, V6, black, excellent cond., original owner, A/C, PW, PL, 4 dr. 117,000 kms. $10,900. o.b.o. 403-314-4311
VIEW ALL OUR PRODUCTS At
www.garymoe.com
has relocated to
216751
5040
SUV's
2008 TOYOTA Highlander, Limited edit. in exc. cond., 1 owner, no pets, n/s, V6, a.t., 4WD, nav. system, JBL sound system, back up camera, sunroiof, keyless entry, trailer hitch, running boards, $19,900 to view call or text 403-340-9110
Auto Wreckers
Rent Spot
5050
Trucks
RED’S AUTO. Free Scrap Vehicle & Metal Removal. We travel. May pay cash for vehicle. 403-396-7519
Vehicles Wanted To Buy
Your Rental Key to Houses, Condos, Suites & More MAIN FLOOR HEWSON AVE.
Balcony. No pets, 5 appl. NOW $1295 incl UTIL.
3 bdrm. 2 bath, No pets. NOW $1475 incl UTIL.
Hearthstone 403-314-0099
Hearthstone 403-314-0099
5200
A1 RED’S AUTO. Free scrap vehicle & metal removal. We travel. AMVIC approved. 403-396-7519 REMOVAL of unwanted cars, may pay cash for complete cars. 304-7585 WANTED FREE REMOVAL of unwanted cars and trucks, also wanted to buy lead batteries, call 403-396-8629
5240
THE Last Ride Auto Undertakers Deceased vehicle removal service 403-343-6377
YOUR old don’t wants could become someone else’s treasure. Sell it fast with an Advocate Want Ad. Phone 309-3300.
PUBLIC NOTICES
Public Notices
6010
Estate of Maline Rachel Schindel who died on May 28, 2012 If you have a claim against this estate, you must file your claim by December 30, 2012 and provide details of your claim with Patricia E.B. MacSween Barrister & Solicitor at
2 Bdrm. Apt. Lawford
5190
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND CLAIMANTS
2007 YUKON Denali AWD 151,500 kms, seats 7, white/tan, loaded, great cond, $23,900 347-2987
1 Mile North of Blackfalds,Ab, 2 Miles East On Lakeside Sargent Rd. Trailer w/S/O, 2004 Ford Focus Station Wagon, 2000 Chev 1500 LS 4x4 R/C Truck, 1999 Chevy Venture Van, WELDER – Miller Big Blue 302-P Diesel Portable Welder w/Trailer 10x52 OFFICE TRAILER, 12x12 SKIDDED BUILDING, QUANTITY WOOD WORKING EQUIPMENT & MECHANICAL, SMALL TOOLS, SELLING LARGE QUANTITY OF DIE CAST TOYS & WESTERN DISH WARE, COMMERCIAL STORAGE BUILDINGS, TENTS, TOOL BOXES, 1- Wilcor 4-Sections of Rolling File Storage System w/Tracking, COMPUTOR, INTERNET, MUSIC & SATELLITE Commercial FITNESS & GYM EQUIPMENT
2008 HONDA Odyssey, 107,000 kms., $18,900.
ATV's
NEW HOMES! 403.342.4544 MasonMartinHomes.com
Be the first tenants to move into our brand new building
5070
RETIRED gentleman req’s small suite w/no carpet (allergies) by Dec. 1. 2007 LINCOLN MARK LT 403-346-3592 4x4, lthr., nav., $26,888 348- 8788 Sport & Import
CALL CLASSIFIEDS 403-314-4397 TO ADVERTISE HERE
1530
2007 GMC Sierra SLE 1500 4x4 airbags with compressor, $19888 3488788 Sport & Import
403-598-3591
The
Starting at
2008 FORD F-350 LARIAT 4x4, turbo diesel, htd. lthr., sunroof, nav., $35,888, 348-8788 Sport & Import
Vans Buses
3270
IMMAC. retirement home in quiet neighborhood, no stairs, walk-in shower, 5 appls. 2 bdrm., murphy bed, sprinkler system, a/c, sunroom, r.v. parking stall in back yard. $275,000. 403-346-7920 for appt. to view
Email: info@timberstone.com timberstonevillage.com
in pet friendly park
2009 F250 HD 4x4 XLT Super crew, loaded, command start, great shape inside & out $10,900. 403-348-9746
Misc. Automotive
CALL: 403-302-7896
2 & 3 bedroom
www.lansdowne.ca
LACOMBE new park, animal friendly. Your mobile or ours. 2 or 3 bdrm. Excellent 1st time home buyers. 403-588-8820
FULL duplex, single title, 31 & 33 McIntosh Ave, Red Deer, 3 bdrm, 1 main bath and 3 appls. per unit, fenced yards, off street parking, close to schooll and arena, $369,000. For view app’t or for details call 403-352-6407 or 788-2901
Rents from $800 - $1375
FREE Cable
POWERLINE & BUCKET TRUCKS, CABLE PULLING TRAILER, POLE TRAILER, 1995 Ford F800 MD Digger Truck, 1990 IHC 4000 Series Bucket Truck, 2006 GMC Sierra 3500 Bucket Truck, 1997 Ford F350 Bucket Truck, 1986 Sherman Reilly Puller/Tensioner Trailer, 1990 Scona Pole Trailer, MOTORCYCLE & TENT TRAILER 1993 Honda Gold Wing Motorcycle, 2001 Excel Lees-ure Motorcycle Tent Trailer RV TRAILERS & VEHICLES 2005 Cherokee-Lite 28A 28’ Travel Trailer w/S/O, 2004 Prowler Regal 30BHSS 30’ Travel Trailer w/ S/O 1996 Dutchmen Aristo 270RKS 5th RV
Lots For Sale
3190
FREE Weekly list of properties for sale w/details, prices, address, owner’s phone #, etc. 342-7355 Help-U-Sell of Red Deer www.homesreddeer.com
• Great location • 6 appliances (fridge, stove, dishwasher, washer & dryer, microwave). • Balcony • Window Coverings • Adults only 21+ • No Pets
Sharon (403) 550-8777
Sharon (403) 550-8777
BRAND new 9900 sq. ft. ready for lease fall 2012 on Golden West Ave 358-3500
Houses For Sale
3060
5050
3140
4860 SQ. FT. dock level warehouse. Dock levelers on all overhead doors #130, 4770 Riverside Drive Phone Gordon 403-350-7619
You Looking?
Large 1 bdrm. adult suite. Heat/water/parking incl’d. Call 403-342-2899
Trucks
MINERAL Rights. All mines and minerals within or under including coal or gas on 160 acres within C o u n t y o f R e d D e e r. 403-346-3592
1 & 2 bedroom suites
20,000with Intro
849
4100
Riverside Apts.
2 bdrm., balcony. 3 appl., No pets. Only $995 + Elect. Hearthstone 403-314-0099
NOW RENTING
$
www.lansdowne.ca
Warehouse Space
Suites
2 Bdrm. Apt. Lawford
3130
Burnt Lake Industrial #310, Burnt Park Way. 12,960 sq. ft. on 2 acres 30 ft. ceilings, 4 - 5 ton cranes. 600v power. Phone Gordon 403-350-7619
Lot
$899/month Sharon 403-550-8777
Red Deers newest Apartment Homes
3040
Industrial
Newly Reno’d Mobile Mobile FREE Shaw Cable + more
19 WK. PULLETS for sale, brown & white 885-5095
400/month lot Rent incl. Cable
Antiques, furniture and estates. 342-2514
Riverfront Estates
2130
Poultry
$
WANTED
SOUTHWOOD PARK 3110-47TH Avenue, 2 & 3 bdrm. townhouses, generously sized, 1 1/2 baths, fenced yards, full bsmts. 403-347-7473, Sorry no pets. www.greatapartments.ca
Introducing... roducing...
1710 modular/mobile homes
WASHER/ dryer set, $125, 403-343-2241
Auctions
2000-2290
A MUST SEE!
APPLS. reconditioned lrg. selection, $150 + up, 6 mo. warr. Riverside Appliances 403-342-1042
Household Furnishings
CLASSIFICATIONS
with Laminate Flooring, new carpet, newly painted
GET HEALTHIER LOSE WEIGHT LIKE CRAZY And GAIN ENERGY mygreatshapetoday.com/ roseandwarren (403) 986-3974
Household Appliances
AGRICULTURAL
Newly Renovated Mobile Home
FIREWOOD 347-7211 bluegrassnursery.com FIREWOOD. Pine, Spruce, Poplar. Can deliver 1-4 cords. 403-844-0227
Suites
264152J1-K30
Farmers' Market
3030
309-3300 To Place Your Ad In The Red Deer Advocate Now!
Income Property
rentals
1870
CALL:
3120
wegot
1900
TRAILERS for sale or rent Job site, office, well site or storage. Skidded or wheeled. Call 347-7721.
3080
2190
1580
1630
Roommates Wanted
3090
1550
A Star Makes Your Ad A Winner!
3030
HORSES WANTED: NEED roommate Sm. acreage Kirsch Cl. 2 Bdrm. broke, un-broke, or un- Townhouse. Sm. Pet. Deck, on Hwy. 12 between Bentley wanted. 403-783-0303 5 appls. NOW $1295 + UTIL. & Gull Lake. 403-748-4491 Hearthstone 403-314-0099 WANTED: all types of horses. Processing locally Rooms KITSON CLOSE in Lacombe weekly. For Rent newer exec. 3 bdrm. 403-651-5912 bi-level townhouse 1447 FISH TANK sq. ft. 5 appls, 1 1/2 bath, CLEAN, quiet, responsible, Grain, Feed 60 gal. tank with black blinds, lg. balcony, fenced Furn. $525. 403-346-7546 stand, all accessories as in rear, front/rear parking, Hay well as a full stock of South ROOMS FOR RENT, no dogs, rent $1395 African Cichilds (including 1ST & 2nd cut hay close to uptown. Employed SD $1000. n/s Avail. Joffre babies), 3 cat fish & one person. Rent $425/mo, Dec. 1 area, NO RAIN, Alfalfa large plecostomos. s.d. $250, 403-350-4712 Timothy mixed. delivery 403-304-7576 / 347-7545 New Fluval 405 filter, canopy avail. 403-896-7105 with lights, & heater all Kyte/Kelloway Cres. Stores/ replaced within the last year. Lovely 3 level exec. Great Christmas Present!! Commercial 3 bdrm. townhouse Cost for everything if 5 appls, 1 1/2 bath, buying new would be over 1400 TO 2240 SQ. FT.† concrete patio, blinds, $1400. Asking $500. 4C, 6842 Gaetz Ave N front/rear parking, no dogs, 403-346-7778 n/s, rent $1395 SD $1000 Phone Gordon 403-350-7619 or 403-506-7117 Avail. Dec. 1. CLASSIFICATIONS 403-304-7576 or 347-7545
GARAGE door 7’H 8’W, Steelcraft, good shape, Main Flr. Hewson Ave. small window at top, all EXERCISE Ball, Profes3 bdrm. 2 bath, No pets. h a r d w a r e a n d s p r i n g s sional, Thera-band. Red. NOW $1475 incl UTIL. Building g o o d s h a p e $ 1 2 5 o b o Asking $35. 403-227-2976 Hearthstone 403-314-0099 403-347-2374 Supplies REDUCED! 4 BDRM. 2300 sq. ft.executive home 60% OFF brand new patio GE 1/2 H.P. 110 220 MO- Collectors' in Clearview. door. Gentek patio door TOR $100, 403-728-3375 Items PET FRIENDLY energy saving sealed unit foot and key locks. $850 HUGE garage sale. See C A P E C O D g l a s s e s , 5 appls. fenced yard. $2000 Blackfalds garage sale ad water goblet, wine glasses, + utils. Linda, 403-356-1170 Call 403-340-2777 in Advocate on Thurs. & desert dishes, new, all in SYLVAN, 2 units Dec. 15, Fri. Sale Nov. 24. boxes, $50/set, Nativity 2 bdrm. + hide-a-bed, incl., Children's set $100, c a l l cable, dishes, bedding, all NEW tempered glass fish 403-343-1112 Items utils. $1000 -$1500/mo, tank and stand $75; brass 403- 880-0210 3 PIECE wooden kitchen 5 pce. fireplace set, $50, $ 2 0 , Travel playset, fridge, stove and a l s o g r a t e UPPER Duplex. 3 bdrm, sink, $45; an exc. Christ- 403-728-3375 2 bath. 5 appls. & central Packages mas gift for your child, call Vac. Johnstone Crossing. SQUARE D 50 amp multi 403-347-7489 403-346-4314 TRAVEL ALBERTA breaker complete, $50m Alberta offers BL load crentre 100 amp SOMETHING Condos/ w/12 15 amp and 2 40 for everyone. Clothing amp breakes, $100, Townhouses Make your travel 403-728-3375 plans now. LADIES’ Silverado mink GE 1/2 H.P. 110 220 MO3 BDRM. 1 1/2 baths, 5 coat, exc. cond., Size 12, TOR $100, 403-728-3375 appls, fenced, garage, n/s, $195, 403-343-2241 no pets, avail. Dec. 1, Deer Park 403-391-1740
EquipmentHeavy
Condos/ Townhouses
2010 DODGE Power Wagon 2500 SLT 4x4, winch $26,888 348-8788 Sport & Import
Public Notices
4824 - 51 Street, Red Deer, AB. T4N 2A5
If you do not file by the date above, the estate property can lawfully be distributed without regard to any claim you may have. 273515K23,30
6010
AB STORAGE NOTICE OF DISPOSAL
Kirsch Close 2 Bdrm. Townhouse Sm. Pet. Deck, 5 appls. NOW $1295 + UTIL.
Hearthstone 403-314-0099
Riverside Apts. 2 bdrm., balcony. 3 appl., No pets. Only $995 + Elect.
Hearthstone 403-314-0099
Goods will be disposed of on November 29, 2012 by AB Storage at their discretion to satisfy outstanding balances for storage rental incurred by the following:
DARLENE JENSEN MICHAEL SMITH JON SMITH TYE KAYE NORMA WHITE VINA HOULE Dated in the City of Red Deer in the Province of Alberta, November 22, 2012.
AB STORAGE 203,37565 Hwy. 2 South Red Deer County, AB T4E 1E4
273433K22,23
1520
266327K30
Antiques & Art
E5
WORLD
» SEE MORE ONLINE AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM
Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Hamas cries victory as Gaza truce holds ISRAELI OFFICIALS FLY TO CAIRO FOR TALKS ON EASING BLOCKADE ON GAZA BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hamas leaders and thousands of flag-waving supporters declared victory over Israel on Gaza’s first day of calm under an Egyptian-brokered truce Thursday, as Israeli officials flew to Cairo for talks on easing a blockade on the battered Palestinian territory. Eight days of punishing Israeli airstrikes on Gaza and a barrage of Hamas rocket fire on Israel ended inconclusively. While Israel said it inflicted heavy damage on the militants, Gaza’s Hamas rulers claimed that Israel’s decision not to send in ground troops, as it had four years ago, was a sign of a new deterrent power. “Resistance fighters changed the rules of the game with the occupation (Israel), upset its calculations,” Gaza Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas, who attended the rally, said later in a televised speech. “The option of invading Gaza after this victory is gone and will never return.” At the same time, Haniyeh urged Gaza fighters to respect the truce and to “guard this deal as long as Israel respects it.” The mood in Israel was mixed. Some were grateful that quiet had been restored without a ground operation that could have cost the lives of more soldiers. Others — particularly those in southern Israel hit by rockets over the past 13 years — thought the operation was abandoned too quickly. Thousands of Israeli soldiers who had been sent to the border during the fighting withdrew Thursday, the military said. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the offensive’s aims of halting Gaza rocket fire and weakening Hamas were achieved. “I know there are citizens who were expecting a harsher response,” he said, adding that Israel is prepared to act if the cease-fire is violated. In a development that could complicate co-operation on the cease-fire, Israel on Thursday arrested an Arab-Israeli man connected to Hamas and Islamic Jihad on accusations he planted a bomb on a bus in Tel Aviv that wounded 27 people in the hours before the agreement was announced Wednesday, police said. A Palestinian militant cell based in the West Bank village of Beit Lakiya dispatched the man, who lived in the village of Taybeh in Israel, to put a bomb on the bus, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. He then got off and called his handlers, who remotely detonated the explosive by calling the phone, Rosenfeld said. “He admitted to carrying out the terrorist attack,” said Rosenfeld, who declined to name the man. Attacks by Israeli Arabs are rare, though they have happened in the past. Nevertheless, the cease-fire raised hopes of a new era between Israel and Hamas. A senior Israeli official and three aides arrived in Cairo late Thursday and were escorted to Egypt’s intelligence headquarters, according to Egyptian airport officials, presumably to hammer out the details of a deal that would include easing a blockade of the territory. The airport officials declined to be named because they were not authorized to give information to the media.
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A Hamas militant talks during a press conference in Gaza City, Thursday. Gazans are celebrating a cease-fire agreement reached with Israel to end eight days of the fiercest fighting in nearly four years constricting the Gaza Strip. The poster behind him reads: “Gaza won” and shows the picture of Ahmed Jabari,a Hamas leader assassinated on Nov.14, setting off the last round of fighting between Israel and Hamas. However, the vague language of the agreement announced Wednesday and deep hostility between the combatants made it far from certain the bloodshed would end or that either side will get everything it wants. Israel seeks an end to weapons smuggling into Gaza, while Hamas wants a complete lifting of the border blockade imposed in 2007, after the militant group’s takeover of Gaza. Israeli officials also made it clear that their position had not warmed toward Hamas, which they view as a terror group aligned with their archenemy Iran and pledged to the destruction of the Jewish state. “Without a doubt, Israel in the long run won’t be able to live with an Iranian proxy on its border,” Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman told Israel’s Channel 10. “As long as Hamas continues to incite against Israel and talk about destroying Israel they are not a neighbour that we can suffer in the long run. But everything in its time.” Israel launched the offensive Nov. 14 to halt renewed rocket fire from Gaza, unleashing some 1,500 airstrikes on Hamas-linked targets, while Hamas and other Gaza militants showered Israel with just as many rockets. The eight days of fighting killed 161 Palestinians, including 71 civilians. Six Israelis, two soldiers and four civilians, were killed and dozens others wound-
ed by rockets fired into residential neighbourhoods. Gazans celebrated the truce after a night of revelry. “Today is different, the morning coffee tastes different and I feel we are off to a new start,” said Ashraf Diaa, a 38-year-old engineer from Gaza City. Hundreds of masked Hamas fighters appeared in public for the first time since the offensive during a funeral for five of their comrades. The armed men displayed grenade launchers and assault rifles mounted atop more than 100 brand-new pickup trucks. The latest round of fighting brought the Islamists unprecedented political recognition, with foreign ministers from Turkey and several Arab states visiting — a sharp contrast to Hamas’ past isolation. Israel and the United States, even while formally sticking to a policy of shunning Hamas, also acknowledged its central role by engaging in indirect negotiations with them. Egypt emerged as the pivotal mediator, raising its stature as a regional power. Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi will now have to assume a more direct role as a referee between Israel and Hamas, at a time when he faces many domestic challenges, including reviving a faltering economy.
Syrian rebels capture key army base, strengthen hold on East SYRIAN CIVIL WAR BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BEIRUT — Syrian rebels strengthened their hold Thursday on an oilrich province bordering Iraq, activists said, capturing a key military base that was considered one of the last bastions for President Bashar Assad’s loyalists in the strategic region. The reported fall of the Mayadeen base, along with its stockpiles of artillery, caps a series of advances in Deir el-Zour including last week’s seizure of a military airport. The province borders on western Iraq. Syria’s rebels enjoy strong support with the Sunni tribes of Iraq’s west, and many Iraqis with combat experience from their own war are believed to have crossed to fight in their neighbour. Rebel fighters also say that weapons seized when bases fall have been essential to their transformation from ragtag brigades into forces capable of challenging Assad’s professional army. Activist groups and a local fighter told The Associated Press the Mayadeen base was taken in the morning hours, after a three-week siege. The fighter spoke on condition of anonymity because of security concerns. Violence also was reported in opposition strongholds around the capital Damascus and in the northern city of Aleppo, where government aircraft damaged one of the rebels’ key field hospitals. Rebels who have battled government forces for months to control Aleppo, Syria’s economic hub, scored a major victory several days ago when they overran the nearby base of the regime’s 46th Regiment. The unit was a pillar of the government’s Aleppo garrison and its fall cuts a major supply line. However, the regime has used its air power to dent rebel gains. Government aircraft late Wednesday flattened a building next to Dar al-Shifa hospital, killing 15 people and badly damaging one of the last remaining sources of medical help for civilians in the city, activists said. Once a private clinic run by a businessman said to be close to Assad, Dar al-Shifa became a field hospital run by volunteer doctors, nurses and aides united by their opposition to the regime. They gave medical care to both civilians and rebels. The facility has taken at least six direct shell hits in recent months, mostly affecting the upper floors. The seven-
story hospital is only 400 to 500 metres (yards) from the front line in a neighbourhood that is heavily shelled every day. The warplanes turned the building adjacent to the hospital into a pile of rubble and sprayed shrapnel and debris into Dar al-Shifa itself, activists said. Rami Abdul-Rahman, chief of the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said at least 11 fighters were killed in the raid, in addition to a doctor, a young girl and two children who were on the street. Another activist group, the Local Coordination Committees, confirmed the bombing and identified the doctor as Mohammad Qassem Agha. The group said 40 people died in airstrikes in Aleppo on Wednesday, but did not say how many died in the hospital strike. Videos posted online by activists showed the flattened building. Residents and rebels along with a doctor in green scrubs are seen picking through the rubble and overturned gurneys outside the hospital entrance. In one video, a man calls out to survivors under the rubble, while one of the survivors is heard crying for help from beneath a huge slab of concrete. In Damascus, two mortar shells struck the upscale neighbourhood of Mazzeh during the morning rush hour Thursday. An AP reporter said one of the shells set fire to a six-floor apartment in a residential building, seriously injuring one woman. The second mortar struck and damaged the first floor in a building across the street. Downtown Damascus — the seat of Assad’s power — has seen scores of car bombs and mortar attacks in recent months. Mazzeh, home to a number of foreign embassies as well as homes of wealth Syrians, including one exclusive compound housing members of the regime, has been targeted several times in the past few days. “This is a residential area and there are no military bases here. So why are they targeting civilians?” said Nizar Hamdi, a 38-year-old owner of a computer centre. Syrian TV showed a girl in school uniform who said the mortar fell as she was preparing herself to go out. “It was terrifying, I couldn’t go to school. People were screaming,” she said. The state-run SANA news agency also reported that a car bomb exploded in the Massaken Barzeh district of the capital, wounding another person.
The reports blamed “terrorists” for the attacks, a term the government uses for opposition fighters. Meanwhile, the military pounded opposition strongholds in the outskirts, activists said. In videos that were posted online by activists Thursday, mortar rounds and artillery shells can be heard landing in the suburb of Daraya. Plumes of black smoke are seen rising from behind rows of houses in a residential area and a fire engulfs a one of the buildings that was hit. With a population of about 200,000, Daraya is part of Rural Damascus, a province that includes the capital’s suburbs and farmland. It has been a stronghold of support for the rebels fighting the government since the start of the uprising, posing a particularly grave threat to Assad’s seat of power. In August, troops backed by tanks stormed the town after several days of siege, with hundreds reportedly killed. To the north, near the border with Turkey, fighting broke out in the city
of Ras al-Ayn on the Syrian side of the border between Kurdish and Arab rebel factions, according to an official at the mayor’s office in the nearby Turkish town of Ceylanpinar. He said two wounded rebels were brought over to Turkey for treatment, but he did not say to which faction they belonged. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with government rules. Kurdish and Arab groups co-operated to oust Syrian regime forces from the ethnically mixed area earlier this month, but they have since frequently clashed over control of the city. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which relies on reports from the ground, confirmed the infighting. Syria’s conflict erupted in March 2011 with an uprising against Assad’s regime, inspired by other Arab Spring revolts. The crisis has since morphed into a civil war, with scores of rebel groups across the country fighting government troops. More than 40,000 people have been killed in the 20 months of unrest, according to activists.
35 years at the Advocate? put that in n your pipe and n smoke it!
Congrats s o to career on a car reer older than some re of his co-workers!
Mike Shea Love, the Production Dept.
E6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Vehicles are piled up on Interstate 10 in southeast Texas on Thursday. The Texas Department of Public Safety says at least 80 people have been injured in a more than 140-vehicle pileup.
Two dead in massive Texas highway crash OVER 80 INJURED AS 140 VEHICLES COLLIDE IN DENSE FOG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BEAUMONT, Texas — Two people died and more than 80 were hurt Thursday when at least 140 vehicles collided on a Texas highway in dense fog, leaving trucks twisted on top of each other and authorities rushing to pull survivors from the wreckage. “It is catastrophic,” said Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Rod Carroll. “I’ve got cars on top of cars.” The Thanksgiving holiday morning crash happened on Interstate 10 about 80 miles (128 kilome-
tres) east of Houston. Carroll said 80 to 90 people were transported to hospitals, with 10 to 12 of those in serious to critical condition. He said 140 to 150 vehicles were involved in the pileup. Carroll said the fog was so thick that officers didn’t immediately realize they were dealing with multiple accidents. According to the Texas Department of Public Safety, a crash on the eastbound side of the highway led to other accidents in a dangerous chain reaction. There were multiple crashes on the other side of the highway as well.
DPS trooper Stephanie Davis told KFDM that two people were killed in an SUV crushed by a tractor trailer. She said at least 100 cars and trucks were involved in the accident. I-10’s eastbound lanes were re-opened Thursday evening after more than eight hours. Carroll said uninjured drivers tried to help as authorities sorted through the wreckage. “It’s just people helping people,” Carroll said. “The foremost thing in this holiday season is how other travellers were helping us when we were overwhelmed, sitting and holding, putting pressure on people that were injured.”
California port town building Islamist sect kills 18 as religious tensions ‘tsunami-resistant’ harbour BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CRESCENT CITY, Calif. — It doesn’t matter if the earth sways in Chile, Alaska or Japan, the formation of the sea floor along the U.S. West Coast generally aims any tsunami surges at the tiny California port town of Crescent City. Churning water rushes into the boat basin and then rushes out, lifting docks off their pilings, tearing boats loose and leaving the city’s main economic engine looking as if it has been bombed. That’s what happened in March 2011, when a Japanese earthquake sparked a tsunami that sank 11 boats, damaged 47 others and destroyed two-thirds of the harbour’s docks. Port officials are hoping that tsunami is among the last of many that have forced major repairs in Crescent City, a tiny commercial fishing village on California’s rugged northern coast. Officials are spending $54 million to build the West Coast’s first harbour able to withstand the kind of tsunami expected to hit once every 50 years — the same kind that hit in 2011, when the highest surge in the boat basin measured 8.1 feet (2.5 metres) and currents were estimated at 22 feet (6.7 metres) per second. Officials are building 244 new steel pilings that will be 30 inches (76 centimetres) in diameter and 70 feet (21 metres) long. Thirty feet (9 metres) or more will be sunk into bedrock. The dock nearest the entrance will be 16 feet (5 metres) long and 8 feet (2.4 metres) deep to dampen incoming waves.
The pilings will extend 18 feet (5.5 metres) above the water so that surges 7 ½ feet (2.3 metres) up and 7 ½ feet down will not rip docks loose. Crescent City was not the only West Coast port slammed by the tsunami, which was generated by a magnitude-9.0 earthquake in Japan. The waves ripped apart docks and sank boats in Santa Cruz, California, and did similar damage in Brookings, Oregon, just north of Crescent City. But their geographical location doesn’t make them as vulnerable to multiple tsunamis. “Normally, Crescent City takes the hit for all of us,” said Brookings harbourmaster Ted Fitzgerald. Since a tidal gauge was installed in the boat basin in 1934, this small port has been hit by 34 tsunamis, large and small. It typically suffers the most damage and the highest waves on the West Coast, said Lori Dengler, professor of geology at Humboldt State University. The sea floor funnels surges into the mouth of Crescent City’s harbour, and the harbour’s configuration magnifies them, experts say. A wave generated by an earthquake in Alaska on Good Friday, 1964, killed 11 people and wiped out 29 city blocks. That was 10 years before the boat basin was even built. When the waves hit in 2011, the port was still repairing damages from a tsunami that hit in 2006. Officials already had a plan for dealing with future tsunamis, said Ward Stover, owner of Stover En-
gineering in Crescent City, which put together the plan. With no tsunami building codes, Stover said the state of California and Crescent City decided to prepare for the kind of tsunami expected to hit every 50 years. They rejected as too expensive building a tidal gate to close off the mouth of the harbour or trying to survive a powerful tsunami like the one that hit in 1964. Instead, they planned to make the docks strong enough to ride out the most likely surges. “It’s tsunami-resistant, not tsunami-proof,” Stover said. Construction has been marked by one delay after another. Government funding was slow, and a custom-built drill bit for installing the extra-strength pilings deep in bedrock broke. So authorities switched to installing temporary docks the old-fashioned way, by pounding in the pilings, to get them through the winter. Many of the 60 commercial fishing boats based in Crescent City are still mooring in the outer harbour. Others have to make do without water or electricity. The March 2011 tsunami was a wake-up call for communities up and down the West Coast. Many improved tsunami evacuation plans and held mock evacuations. But some experts say the West Coast is still not taking the threat seriously enough. “Many ports on the West Coast are in denial as to their tsunami hazard,” said Costas Synolakis, professor of civil and environmental engineering and director of the Tsunami Research Center.
soar in Nigeria
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MAIDUGURI, Nigeria — Police on Thursday blamed a radical Islamist sect for attacks that witnesses say left 18 people dead over the past two days in Nigeria’s troubled north, part of a cycle of spiraling violence that is exacerbating religious tensions and that the government has been powerless to stop. Meanwhile, members of a largely Muslim community in the small village about 30 miles (50 kilometres) from Nigeria’s largest northern city of Kano turned against its Christian minority after a trader was accused of insulting the Prophet Muhammad, police said Thursday. Although police say nobody died in the violence, a witness reported seeing four dead bodies. Christians and Muslims have lived together peacefully across the country of 160 million for years, but the growing violence is creating a climate of religious distrust and local communities have lost faith in the government’s ability to protect them. Suspected members of the radical lslamist sect known as Boko Haram carried out three attacks Wednesday and Thursday in different parts of the northeastern city of Maiduguri, said Borno state police spokesman Gideon Jibrin. Jibrin declined to say how many people had been killed overall, but witnesses said 18 people died — including three children. Boko Haram did not immediately claim responsibility. The group is believed to be responsible for more than 740 deaths this year alone, according to an AP count, and is also blamed for attacks targeting mosques, churches, schools, phone masts and government buildings. Separately, Kano state police chief Ibrahim Idris said Thursday nobody died in the religious violence in a town in the state, but resident Sadiq Ahmed said he saw four dead bodies outside Christian-owned shops that had been set ablaze. Ahmed also said he saw a burned-down church.
ALBERTA SUPERRUN ASSOCIATION organizers of
2012
were proud to present a cheque to STARS for the amount of
$
15,000
Central Alberta Wishes You
Season’s Greetings This feature contains stories and messages
from the public as well as prominent members of our community. Watch for it in the:
Pictured (L to R): Wanda Freeborn, STARS Development Office - Events; Dick Wallace, President Alberta Superrun Assoc., Barbara Young, STARS Red Deer Volunteers Coordinator; Gerry Paquette, Treasurer - Alberta Superrun Association.
Monday, Dec. 17, Red Deer Advocate
Since its inception, Rock’n Red Deer® has donated a total of $107,000 to STARS Air Ambulance
Thank you Red Deer! See you in 2015
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RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012 E7
Tories target Justin Trudeau POLL SUGGESTS HIS POPULARITY KEEPS GROWING BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA, Ont. — Conservatives have launched their first concerted attack on Justin Trudeau — and a new poll may explain why. The Canadian Press Harris-Decima survey suggests the Liberal leadership frontrunner’s popularity is not the fleeting celebrity phenomenon that the skeptics had assumed. It’s actually increasing and has the potential to siphon off votes from all parties, including the Tories. The poll was released Thursday just as the Conservatives pounced on a two-yearold television interview to accuse Trudeau of being antiAlberta. Forty-two per cent of respondents said they’d be certain or likely to vote Liberal in the next election if Trudeau was at the helm — enough to form a comfortable Liberal majority government. That’s up from 36 per cent
in September and 33 per cent in June. The poll suggests Trudeau’s appeal is strongest in Atlantic Canada, where 60 per cent said they’d vote Liberal under his leadership, Quebec (48 per cent), British Columbia (43 per cent) and Ontario (41 per cent). But the party’s fortunes would improve markedly even in the Conservative stronghold of Alberta (30 per cent) and Manitoba and Saskatchewan (32 per cent). Trudeau’s appeal was consistent across urban and rural areas and among voters of all age groups. A Trudeau-led Liberal party would bleed support from all rival parties, according to the poll. Forty-eight per cent of current New Democrat supporters said they’d vote Liberal with Trudeau at the helm, 44 per cent of Greens, 21 per cent of Conservatives and 22 per cent of Bloc Quebecois supporters. The telephone poll of just over 1,000 Canadians was conducted Nov. 15-19 and is
considered accurate within plus or minus 3.1 percentage points, 19 times in 20. The survey was conducted before damaging quotes from Trudeau’s 2010 television interview surfaced Thursday in a Sun Media story. Within seconds, Tory MPs were fistbumping each other in the House of Commons as the story flashed over their smart phones. Minutes later, the Tories were handing out printed copies of the offending quotes to reporters outside the Commons. And Immigration Minister Jason Kenney, who hails from Calgary, was dispatched to express outrage over them. Trudeau’s campaign swiftly issued a statement accusing the Tories of using “outof-context statements made years ago in a long interview” to launch a desperate “smear campaign” aimed at reviving the faltering Conservative byelection campaign in Calgary Centre. In the interview, with the Tele-Quebec program Les
francs-tireurs, Trudeau said: “Canada isn’t doing well right now because it’s Albertans who control our community and socio-democratic agenda. It doesn’t work.” Asked if he thinks Canada is better served when there are more Quebecers than Albertans in charge, he said: “I’m a Liberal so, of course, I think so, yes. “Certainly, when we look at the great prime ministers of the 20th Century, those that really stood the test of time, they were MPs from Quebec .. This country, Canada, it belongs to us.” The resurrected Trudeau quotes piled on a gaffe a day earlier by Ottawa Liberal MP David McGuinty. He resigned his shadow cabinet post as natural resources critic after saying Alberta Tory MPs are “shills” for the oil industry and should go home. Both were gifts to the Conservatives, who are trying to hold on to Calgary Centre — a Tory riding for more than 40 years — in a byelection Mon-
day. Polls suggest it’s a tight contest, with Liberal Harvey Locke only a few points behind Conservative Joan Crockatt. Trudeau has repudiated McGuinty’s comments. But Kenney said the Montreal MP’s own comments two years ago show he actually shares the same anti-Alberta bias. “This is the worst kind of divisiveness, the worst kind of arrogance of the Liberal party and it brings back, for many westerners, the kind of arrogance of the National Energy Program, which of course devastated the western economy,” Kenney said. The NEP was imposed when Trudeau’s late father, Pierre Trudeau, was prime minister. Immediately after launching his leadership campaign last month, Justin Trudeau flew to Calgary to declare that the NEP was a mistake. The poll suggests none of Trudeau’s rivals for the Liberal leadership have anywhere near as much appeal for voters.
Hopes of economic progress fade without Harper at table: premiers BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Ingrid Katzberg holds a sign outside Provincial Court while attending a sentencing hearing for Robert Fawcett, who was accused of killing 56 sled dogs after the 2010 Olympics and pleaded guilty in August to a single count of causing unnecessary suffering to an animal, in North Vancouver, B.C., on Thursday.
Details of deaths heard at sentencing for man who killed sled dogs BY THE CANADIAN PRESS NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. — A man who pleaded guilty to the slaughter of dozens of sled dogs will not spend time in prison, a judge has ruled, concluding the man had the “best interests” of the dogs at heart when he culled the pack near Whistler after a slump in business following the 2010 Olympics. But while Judge Steve Merrick said he agreed with a psychiatrists’ assessment that Robert Fawcett’s actions were the result of mental instability, he noted: “(You) ought to have anticipated the possibility of the horrific circumstances that could result.” “It is beyond comprehension as to how this could have occurred,” said Merrick. The devastating aftermath from the April 2010 killing was laid bare in B.C. Supreme Court for the first time Thursday by Fawcett’s lawyer, who described how hard it was for his client to even listen to details of killing his beloved animals again in court. “I will never stop feeling guilty for the suffering that the dogs endured that day,” said defence lawyer Greg Diamond, quoting his client. “I feel like part of me died with those dogs.” Fawcett admitted in August to killing the dogs in a gruesome tableau over two days following a post-Olympic slump in sales. Court heard he felt forced into the decision when the owners of Howling Dog Tours put an “absolute freeze” on spending, aside from for food and the bare minimum of labour. At that point, Fawcett was working 150 hours over two weeks to care for the animals and watching their conditions deteriorate to the point where they were fighting and killing each other in their kennel. “In part, he accepted the burden because he felt he could do it compassionately and he did not want that burden placed on anyone else,” Diamond said. “He gained the fortitude to do it based largely on the vision the remaining dogs could have a happy life and it was for the greater good.” Fawcett huddled into himself with his arms crossed during the proceedings. Women in the gallery openly sobbed and at one point, there was an outburst
that was met with a sharp reprimand from the judge. Fawcett pleaded guilty to one count of causing unnecessary pain and suffering to animals, which relates specifically to the deaths of nine dogs. More than 50 dogs were exhumed from a mass grave in May 2011 as part of a massive forensic investigation by the B.C. SPCA. Court heard most of the dogs that were shot did not suffer. Animal euthanasia is legal in Canada. The defence supplied 30 character references to the judge that described the Fawcett’s “admirable dedication” to the dogs, as Diamond asked the court to consider probation but no jail time. He argued the sentence should be more related to rehabilitation, noting his client has suffered permanent mental damage and has become an “international pariah,” partly due to intense media scrutiny. He said his client has attempted suicide, has tattooed a ring of dogs around his arm to remember their lives and still shudders when he hears a dog bark. He said the one “silver-lining” that has resulted from the ordeal is legislative reforms that give B.C. some of the toughest animal cruelty laws in the country and set out guidelines related to the retirement of dogs. Earlier, the Crown also public urged perspective, noting that facts supercede emotions. Lawyer Nicole Gregoire asked for a sentence of three years probation with conditions, a $5,000 fine, and 200 hours community service. “We’re looking at a very unique set of circumstances,” Gregoire said. She too described how Fawcett suffered death threats, had a mental breakdown that sent him to an institution for two months and even had his young children and wife forced into hiding. The horrific incident became public January 2011 after a worker’s compensation claim for post-traumatic stress disorder was leaked. Besides probation, Merrick ordered Fawcett to pay a $1,500 fine, complete 200 hours community work service and may not participate in the sled dog industry or make decisions about euthanizing animals.
HALIFAX — Stephen Harper’s refusal to meet with the premiers dampens the chances of economic progress for provinces struggling with tepid growth and rising debt, several of the provincial leaders said ahead of Friday’s discussion in Halifax. Robert Ghiz, the premier of Prince Edward Island, said he would have welcomed the prime minister’s ideas at the table on how to improve the country’s “sluggish” economic growth. “There is a difference when he is here,” Ghiz said late Thursday after arriving in the port city. “Whether it’s skills development, university funding ... immigration, trade, all these things. There are federal ties in all those areas.” Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter, who is hosting the meeting, said it’s challenging for provinces to devise their spending plans without the prime minister’s input. “It’s difficult for us to know how we can best blend our own planning in with the funding of the federal government if we don’t know what their plans are,” Dexter said. The idea for such a gathering came up during the last premiers’ meeting in July, when they agreed to discuss how they could protect their provinces from a global economy in flux. That was before revised figures showing a higher federal deficit and growing concerns over the possibility of the U.S. economy going over its so-called fiscal cliff at the end of next month. The premiers invited Harper but he declined. His office has said he has met regularly with the premiers and the economy remains his prime concern. Harper’s absence from the meeting has also become fodder for opposition parties in the House of Commons this week, where they accused him of shirking his responsibilities. “Mr. Speaker, precisely what Canadians want from their leaders is not more meetings,” Harper said in response Thursday. “They want action from this particular government.” Still, that kind of response has not sat well with some, including Ontario
Premier Dalton McGuinty. “I think we’re all disappointed that we couldn’t get an opportunity to meet with the prime minister and to build a strong plan for economic growth together,” McGuinty said earlier this week. Quebec Premier Pauline Marois also criticized Harper for not attending, saying she couldn’t understand why he wouldn’t attend given his interest on the economy. Late Thursday, Marois and Alberta Premier Alison Redford had a separate meeting to discuss the possibility of shipping oil from the West. They agreed to explore the economic opportunities and possible environmental effects of the project. Glen Hodgson, chief economist at the Conference Board of Canada, said the premiers should avoid the divisions that have defined some of their past meetings and attempt to make progress on matters under their control, such as boosting immigration and knocking down interprovincial trade barriers. “What are provincial governments doing to deepen the skills of their workforce or to encourage more immigrants to work into the Canadian workplace and get rid of barriers between provinces?” he said. One highlight of the meeting is a presentation by Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, who will discuss the bank’s outlook for the global and Canadian economies as well as national inflation. Carney has said the U.S. fiscal cliff is the most imminent threat facing the Canadian economy, and he has also repeatedly warned that personal debt levels have reached record highs, posing a risk to the economy if consumers can’t afford to carry their debt when interest rates rise. Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger said he’ll be listening carefully to any guidance Carney can provide as he reviews his province’s finances. “We’ll be looking to him for what his specific ideas are,” Selinger said. The meeting comes a week after federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty released the government’s revised deficit projections that show a deficit of $26 billion — up $5 billion from the March budget forecast — as a result of global economic weakness carving into commodity prices and tax revenues.
Does your Group or Activity have an event you’d like listed this Christmas Break? 2012 CHRISTMAS ACTIVITY GUIDE If your event happens on or after Dec. 23, send it to:
specialsections @reddeeradvocate.com Distributed in the Sunday, Dec. 23 “Red Deer Life”
To Advertise, call Pam Beardsworth at
This Annual favorite features Games & Puzzles and a listing of activities for you and your family to take part in during this Holiday Break.
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E8 RED DEER ADVOCATE Friday, Nov. 23, 2012
GRAND OPENING NOVEMBER 28TH, 2012
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