Red Deer Advocate, August 31, 2015

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MCLELLAND BRINGS GRIT TO REBELS CAMP

PLEIN AIR PAINT OUT PAGE C1

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Red Deer Advocate MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

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Award-winning teacher continues to give back CANADIAN FAMILY GREAT TEACHER AWARD BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF

much of September,” Proctor said on Friday. He said by Sunday the Red Deer area should improve due to a cold front off the B.C. coast moving inland and crossing west central Alberta. But that won’t be enough to solve the problem, he said. “What really has to happen is fall has to get here for (firefighters) to start to get a handle on things and some decent amount of moisture onto those fires. For that to happen, we have to slot ourselves into the pattern none of us want to talk about at this time of year where we start looking at some rain and potentially some snowfall.” The air quality health index on Friday was forecast to reach a maximum of eight on a scale of 10 in the Red Deer area.

It’s no surprise that an inspiring Red Deer Public teacher wants the money she won for being a top teacher to go towards developing a ‘maker space’ at her school. École Barrie Wilson Elementary School teacher Amanda Wilson was one of three teachers to recently win the 2015 Canadian Family Great Teacher Award. Each won $2,500 for school programming and supplies. The ninth annual awards program by the online magazine Canadian Family recognizes outstanding elementary and secondary school educators from across the country. Twelve semi-finalists were chosen by a panel of judges from among hundreds of nominees. Online voting determined the winners with Wilson receiving the most votes, more than 71,000, during the monthlong contest. Wilson said her winnings will be put toward a maker space which could include toys, like Lego, and tools, like a 3D printer, for students to make things, to play, to be creative. “We’re hoping to start this year. It’s quite expensive to buy all the things that a really good maker space would have. We’re going to put this money towards it and hopefully we can add to it as we grow and budget for it,” said Wilson, 30, of Red Deer. She teaches a Grade 4/5 split class in a double classroom space with another teacher with a Grade 3/ 4 split class in the new school that opened September 2014. The room has a foldable wall to divide the space, but the two teachers prefer to keep it open. “It’s been really cool. There’s been lots of collaboration between her and I, and with other staff. The kids also have a lot of opportunity to collaborate with each other which has been really interesting and a huge learning experience for all of us.” She said her school focuses on project-based learning and researching real world issues instead of just textbook learning. “It’s really exciting to teach that way when the kids are so excited to learn about things they want to learn about.” She was nominated for the award by a parent whose child was in Wilson’s class when she taught at Mountview Elementary School as well as at Barrie Wilson. Barrie Wilson principal Chris Good said Wilson is one of those teachers that does a lot of research into best practices and spends time building relationships with her students. “She just has a really engaging classroom. The kids love to be in her room. The parents are excited to have their kids in her room,” Good said. “I can speak as a parent too. My son was actually in her class last year,” the principal said. Wilson said she was very humbled to receive the award.

Please see SMOKE on Page A2

Please see TEACHER on Page A2

Photo by ASHLI BARRETT/Advocate staff

Marinolo Tababan tries to avoid a Ricardo Revilla punch during one of 13 friendly boxing matches at the grand opening of the Red Deer and District Boxing Club Saturday evening. The club has moved to a new facility at Unit 5, 4940 5th Ave. and is open from 7-9 p.m. Monday through Thursday for potential members to attend training sessions. The Red Deer and District Boxing Club has turned out a large handful of top-notch fighters, including twins Lester and Lowie Cudillo, who have competed throughout Western Canada and won the majority of their tournaments and various awards during their short careers. Amateur standout Brian Samuel, who won a bronze medal in the 2013 Canadian senior national championships and has now embarked on a pro career, still coaches at the not-for-profit club and leads the workouts most nights. Head coach Dennis Ejack recently retired as the vice-president of Boxing Alberta and is assisted by numerous volunteers. The club’s emphasis is on fun, safety and good sportsmanship and prospective members who are not interested in stepping into the ring are still welcome as workouts will be tailored to various needs.

Early fall would clear smoke from Central Alberta skies BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF An early fall is what Albertans need for smokefree skies, according to Environment Canada. Smoke has been streaming into Southern and Central Alberta from Washington State and a few fires in Southern British Columbia for about five days and will likely continue for another month as the wait continues for precipitation to douse the flames. Brian Proctor, warning preparedness meteorologist, said September is generally dry, but seasonal transition could occur to bring about fall precipitation. “It can happen in September. It more typically happens in October. So what I’m suggesting is we have the potential to be plagued with smoke for

Aldrich takes over as Advocate managing editor BY ADVOCATE STAFF The Red Deer Advocate has a new managing editor. Josh Aldrich officially takes over the top spot in the editorial department today from longtime managing editor John Stewart, who is retiring at the end of September. Stewart has been in the post for six and a half years and an important member of the Advocate newsroom for more than 36 years. Aldrich, 32, should be a familiar face to Advocate readers, having spent six combined years in various roles at the Josh Aldrich paper. “It is an honour to be given this opportunity to lead a talented group of journalists and editors,” he said. “I

WEATHER Increasing cloudiness. High 19. Low 7

FORECAST ON A2

INDEX Four sections Business. . . . . . . . . . . . . C2,C3 Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A5 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . .D1,D2 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D4 Entertainment . . . . . . . . C5,C6 Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B1-B6

have learned much from John and the experienced group we have in the department. My goal is to continue to put out the best product we can on a daily basis to keep our readers across Central Alberta informed of all the news and information that is important in their day-to-day lives.” As the new managing editor, Aldrich says there will be some changes to the Advocate, but he has no plans to turn the paper on its head. One of the big adjustments he has already overseen is the re-imagining of the Friday Forward publication. “We do what we do extremely well,” he said. “With an experienced, dedicated staff, we are the undisputed source for local news in Central Alberta.” A graduate of the Grant MacEwan College journalism program in 2002, he has had stops as a reporter and editor at the St. Paul Journal, the Meridian Booster in Lloydminster, the Nanaimo Daily News and is now in his second stint at the Advocate. At each step along the way, he and the papers he has worked for have earned numerous industry

awards. It’s a standard at the Advocate that he will strive to continue. “I’m thrilled that Josh will be leading the news team at the Advocate,” said Advocate publisher Mary Kemmis. “His knowledge of the area and connections to our community will ensure that the Advocate continues to be Central Alberta’s most trusted source of local news and information.” Despite living all over the province while growing up and as an adult — with a stint in B.C. and one in Ontario thrown in — he has always been drawn back to this region. “There is not much more I could ask for out of a community than what is afforded here in Red Deer — from its location, to its opportunities and most of all the people,” said Aldrich. “I got into the business to tell the story of those I am covering and to be a voice for the people. Now, more than ever, it is a banner that is increasingly important for newspapers to carry.”

Cleanup begins after severe windstorm in B.C. A vicious windstorm on Saturday knocked down trees and caused thousands of people to lose power. Story on PAGE A5

PLEASE

RECYCLE


A2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015

Unleashing imagination, brick by brick BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF Out of piles of Lego came helicopters, birds, jets, a space ship, a dragon, and a hot air balloon built by youngsters at Bower Place shopping centre on Saturday. Bower Place’s Wild West Club for Kids kickoff event featured Canada’s only Lego-certified builder and attracted enthusiastic Lego fans on Friday and Saturday. Thomas Puzey, 11, of Red Deer, took home one of three prizes awarded following one of Saturday’s Lego building contests. Twenty contestants were given 30 minutes to build something for the theme ‘it flies.’ “At first I was going to build a duck, but changed it to a chicken because there wasn’t enough pieces,” said Puzey who decided to make both a chicken and a chick. “The chick just hatched so the chicken was teaching the chick how to fly,” said Puzey who has been building with Lego for years. Lego-certified professional Robin Sather said the fear was that video games and the digital world would finish tactile toys. But Lego is more popular than ever. “There’s nothing that beats having those little plastic bricks, those little creations that you made with your own hands. Nothing really replaces that,” said Sather who offered encouraging words to contestants on Saturday as they pieced together Lego bricks. “People sometimes talk about the demise of creativity and imagination. No, it’s alive and well. With some kids, you need to scrape off a few layers to get them to access it. But once they’ve started, they’re good to go.” The small, plastic bricks bounced and clattered together as little hands sorted through Lego piles to find just the right pieces. When the last bricks were in place, some children couldn’t help but play with their flying machines by waiving them in the air. “I always encourage story building. Not just build a truck — tell a story. It helps them add detail and more interest to a creation,” said Sather, 50, of Abbotsford, B.C. Sather heads Brickville Designworks and has specialized in creating amazing LEGO models and running Lego-based events full-time for seven years. “I’ve been playing with Lego since I was a little kid. Professionally, I’m been doing it for almost for 12 years.”

Photo by ASHLI BARRETT/Advocate staff

Lego Certified Professional Robin Sather begins work on a Lego replica of the Bower Place sign at the mall’s centre court during the Lego build event kicking off the Wild West Club for kids on Friday afternoon. He’s known for creating a giant Lego Egyptian sphinx, about 2.5-metre tall. On Friday and Saturday, Sather spent about 10 hours building a 1.2-metre tall Lego wall with the Bower Place horse logo that a few Wild West Club for Kids members got to demolish Saturday night. “I think of them as sandcastles. You enjoy our sandcastle for the day. The tide is going to come in

and wash it away and you’re going to have fresh sand the next day. A whole new castle. A whole new adventure,” Sather said. For more Lego information visit www.brickville. ca and for Wild West Club for Kids go to www.bowerplace.com. szielinski@reddeeradvocate.com

STORY FROM PAGE A1

TEACHER: Surreal “I’m truly surrounded by greatness in this building every day. To be the person picked out to be nominated is pretty surreal.” Wilson is teaching at the school named after her father, a retired teacher. Her mother was also a teacher. “I tried to fight the teacher gene a little bit. While I was going to school I coached gymnastics and I realized I really loved coaching gymnastics and I realized that basically was teaching — just sports. I decided that was kind of my passion and went back to get my education degree.” szielinski@reddeeradvocate.com

SMOKE: Forecast A score between seven and 10 is considered a high health risk. At 5 p.m. the health risk hit four, or moderate. Proctor said within the large-scale smoke plumes very strong, localized concentrations can occur. “There can be variations in smoke concentration just like there can be variations in temperature distribution across a community,” Proctor said. On Aug. 24, Central Zone of Alberta Health Services issued air quality advisory. Residents were warned that they could experience temporary eye and throat irritation and shortness of breath from prolonged exposure to smoky air. The very young, very old, or those with pre-existing respiratory or cardiovascular illnesses, such as angina, heart conditions, asthma or emphysema, were at higher risk

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Ecole Barrie Wilson grade 4/5 teacher Amanda Wilson is back in the classroom this week preparing for the beginning of the school year. Wilson is a recipient of the 2015 Canadian Family Great Teacher Award. for complications. Dr. Deena Hinshaw, medical officer of health for AHS Central Zone, said the advisory will remain in effect until air quality improves based on current conditions and the forecast. During the week Red Deer Regional Hospital Centre emergency department did not see a significant increase in the number of patients with respiratory conditions.

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“Our hope is by providing advice we’re preventing serious illness in people who would be the most sensitive to those impacts,” Hinshaw said. Air quality in many areas of Alberta is updated regularly on the Alberta Environment and Parks at www.airquality.alberta.ca. Air quality information is also available toll-free at 1-877-247-7333. szielinski@reddeeradvocate.com

PIKE WHEATON

WEATHER LOCAL TODAY

TONIGHT

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

HIGH 19

LOW 7

HIGH 20

HIGH 13

HIGH 13

Increasing cloudiness

Partly cloudy.

Sunny. Low 7.

40% showers. Low 2.

Showers. Low 4.

REGIONAL OUTLOOK

Olds, Sundre: today, increasing cloudiness. High 19. Low 4 Rocky, Nordegg: today, 30% showers. High 18. Low 3. Banff: today, mix of sun and cloud. High 16. Low 7. Jasper: today, mix of sun and cloud. High

16. Low 6. Lethbridge: today, mainly sunny. High 19. Low 10. Edmonton: today, mainly sunny. High 23. Low 9. Grande Prairie: today, sunny. High 18. Low 8. Fort McMurray: today, sunny. High 23. Low 9.

WINDCHILL/SUNLIGHT

FORT MCMURRAY

23/9 GRANDE PRAIRIE

18/8

EDMONTON

23/9

Vehicles In Stock.

JASPER

16/6

RED DEER

19/7 BANFF

16/7 UV:5 Extreme: 11 or higher Very high: 8 to 10 High: 6 to 7 Moderate: 3 to 5 Low: Less than 2 Sunset tonight: 8:25 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday: 6:46 a.m.

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CALGARY

19/8

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Calgary: today, increasing cloudiness. High 19. Low 8.

TONIGHT’S HIGHS/LOWS

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RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015 A3

Build a wall with Canada? HOW U.S. DEBATE ABOUT MEXICO PUTS FOCUS ON AMERICA’S OTHER BORDER

WASHINGTON — The Canadian border got dragged into the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign on Sunday, with a prominent candidate appearing to entertain the notion of building a giant wall on the 49th parallel. The idea was raised in a talk-show interview with Republican contender Scott Walker, who after being pressed twice by the interviewer appeared to agree it was worth considering. “Some people have asked us about that in New Hampshire. They raised some very legitimate concerns, including some law-enforcement folks that brought that up to me at one of our town-hall meetings about a week and a half ago,” the Wisconsin governor said during an interview with NBC’s “Meet The Press.” “So that is a legitimate issue for us to look at.” Walker didn’t dwell on the issue. He quickly steered the conversation to the Middle East, rebuilding the military, and national security. The exchange about Canada never even made it to air, and was edited out of the interview highlights that ran on “Meet The Press” and was simply posted on NBC’s

website. The context for the conversation is the heated U.S. debate about the Mexican border. Occasionally, the debate will fleetingly touch upon the northern frontier. On those rare occasions that the Canadian border does come up it’s likelier to be raised, as was the case Sunday, by political commentators than by the presidential candidates themselves. That’s because the Canadian border makes a handy polemical tool — a pointy needle for pundits seeking to puncture the conservative logic on the other border. A textbook example was a piece in Politico magazine last fall headlined, “Fear Canada: The real terrorist threat next door.” Its first 18 paragraphs were about Mexico. Before it even mentioned the word ”Canada,” it sought to demolish a Republican talkingpoint about ISIL terrorists supposedly sneaking across the Rio Grande. That’s what Sunday’s exchange was about. In a week when Walker himself raised the terrorists-from-the-south theme, and amid a Republican primary in which the poll-leader, Donald Trump, wants to deport 11 million illegal migrants and build what he calls the Great Wall of Trump, an interview-

er asked: Why Mexico and not Canada? It was the interviewer who twice raised the Canadian border. NBC host Chuck Todd challenged Walker to explain the focus on the south and, in doing so, he referenced terrorists coming from Canada. It’s unclear whether he was referring to the repeatedly debunked canard about the 9-11 hijackers. The most famous incident of a terrorist crossing from Canada was failed millennium bomber Ahmed Ressam, although several American political figures over the years have repeated the erroneous claim about the 9-11 hijackers coming from the north. Todd asked the governor: “The most famous incident that we had of terrorists coming over our border was on our northern border. Why aren’t you talking about securing the northern border?” Walker replied that he favoured securing borders in general but said the more rampant current problem was on the southern border. Todd pressed him again, prompting Walker to mention the northern frontier, in passing. It was reminiscent of an exchange a few days earlier. Once again, it was a media personality who raised Canada as a point of comparison while chiding

Police chiefs want power to seize mail

MS BIKE TOUR

BY THE CANADIAN PRESS

Photo by ASHLI BARRETT/Advocate staff

Cyclists put their pedals-to-pavement early Saturday morning for the 21st annual MS Bike Tour. The event saw riders bike up to 160 km throughout Central Alberta over the course of Saturday and Sunday in support of the Multiple Sclerosis Society.

OTTAWA — Canada’s police chiefs want legal authority to seize mail in transit to stem the flow of illicit drugs, fake medicine and weapons through the postal system. In a recently passed resolution, the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police say contraband is being sent through the mail “with impunity” because the law forbids officers from swooping in until a parcel arrives at its destination. This poses a “significant challenge” for police, who must find “alternative ways to work within or around” the system to apprehend criminals, the chiefs say. The resolution calls on the government to amend the legislation governing Canada Post to provide police with the ability to obtain a judge’s approval to “seize, detain or retain parcels or

Harper should take break to help Fahmy: NDP, Liberals BY THE CANADIAN PRESS MONTREAL — Stephen Harper’s political opponents are calling on the prime minister to take time off the campaign trail and concentrate on securing the release of jailed Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy. An Egyptian court sentenced Fahmy to three years in prison on Saturday and the foreign affairs critics for both the New Democrats and the Liberals lashed out at Harper for failing to intervene earlier in the case. They both called on him once again to phone Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to personally demand the Al-Jazeera journalist’s release. “Very concretely, we are asking Stephen Harper to put aside the election campaign for a moment and call President al-Sisi directly and ask him to send Mr. Fahmy home,” NDP Foreign Affairs Critic Paul Dewar told The Canadian Press. Liberal Foreign Affairs Critic Marc Garneau told The Canadian Press Harper should contact al-Sisi and “register Canada’s strongest disapproval, and in fact to make it very clear that

the relationship between Canada and Egypt, which has been a good one, is in jeopardy if Mr. Fahmy has to go back to jail.” Fahmy faced widely denounced terror charges and spent more than a year in prison before a successful appeal of an earlier conviction resulted in a retrial that culminated in Saturday’s verdict, where Fahmy was sentenced for failing to register with the country’s journalist syndicate, bringing in equipment without security approval, and broadcasting “false news” on AlJazeera. Both Dewar and Garneau accused Harper of failing to take strong action in the Fahmy case. Garneau said it was “very clear” the Harper government’s response was “inadequate” considering Fahmy’s colleague at Al-Jazeera, Peter Greste, was successfully deported to his native Australia because of “direct intervention” on the part of Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott. Dewar said Harper’s Conservatives, in contrast with the Australian prime minister, decided to “stand on the sidelines and really not step up and do their job.”

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letters” in the mail stream. Canada Post delivered more than nine billion parcels and letters to some 15 million addresses in Canada last year. International mail flows through large plants in the Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal areas. A November 2012 report the RCMP prepared for the chiefs’ organized crime committee revealed that firearms, grenades, a rocket launcher, stun guns, dangerous chemicals and drugs including cocaine, heroin and marijuana were sent through the mail. “These items represent a significant threat to postal workers and Canadians,” say the chiefs, who passed the resolution this month at their annual conference in Quebec City. “It is imperative that Canada Post and the law enforcement community develop ways to effectively work together to stop the transmittal of contraband through the postal system.”

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a conservative about the other border. The why-not-Canada question was posed in that case by the most famous Spanish-language journalist in the U.S., prominent Trump nemesis Jorge Ramos. The anchor on the Univision network, who was momentarily expelled from a news conference after he confronted Trump, raised it in an interview with a Fox News host. He asked Sean Hannity: “You’re going to do it at the border with Mexico, but how about the 5,000 miles between the U.S. and Canada?” The conservative TV host replied: “I would do it up there, too. I would do it up there, too.” That kind of chatter — as idle as it might be — can make Canadians jittery given that more than one-third of Canada’s Gross Domestic Product involves trade with the U.S., and that the tightened border after the 9-11 attacks caused a ripple-effect that still hasn’t completely subsided. Canada’s defence minister weighed in when asked about Walker’s remarks Sunday, although he said he hadn’t yet heard them. In response, Jason Kenney said Canada would protect what he called the largest bilateral trading relationship in economic history and outlined security steps already taken.

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COMMENT

A4

MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

Nurturing our health If a home is not cleaned and cared for, it will become rundown and less habitable or even unlivable. It’s no different with our broader surroundings, from the immediate environment to the entire planet. If we disconnect from the natural world, we become disconnected from who we are — to the detriment of our health and the health of the ecosystems on which our wellbeing and survival depend. Understanding that we’re part of nature DAVID and acting on SUZUKI that understanding makes us healthier and happier, and encourages us to care for the natural systems around us. A growing body of science confirms this, including two recent studies that explore the ways nature benefits human health. A Toronto-based study, published in Nature and co-authored by a team including University of Chicago psychologists Omid Kardan and Marc Berman and David Suzuki Foundation

SCIENCE

scientist Faisal Moola, examined the relationship between urban trees and human health. According to Neighborhood greenspace and health in a large urban center, people living in areas with many trees, especially large trees, report feeling healthier than people in areas with fewer trees. The other study, published in Ecosystem Services and co-authored by scientists from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, reviewed a range of previous research to explore “observed and potential connections among nature, biodiversity, ecosystem services and human health and well-being.” The authors of Exploring connections among nature, biodiversity, ecosystem services, and human health and well-being concluded, “the significance of biodiversity to human welfare is immense.” According to the Toronto study, adding 10 or more trees to a city block offered benefits to individuals equivalent to earning $10,000 more a year, moving to a neighbourhood with $10,000 higher median income or being seven years younger. As well as selfreporting of health and well-being, the study also found reduced rates of heart conditions, cancer, mental health problems and diabetes in areas with more trees. The NOAA study delved even deeper into specific physical and mental

health outcomes, finding that people living in areas with abundant green space live longer and experience lower rates of “anxiety and depression (especially), upper respiratory tract infections, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD), severe intestinal complaints, and infectious disease of the intestine” than people deprived of nature. The researchers concluded that increased exposure to nature “can have positive effects on mental/psychological health, healing, heart rate, concentration, levels of stress, blood pressure, behavior, and other health factors.” They also found that, although evaluating nature according to the services it provides to humans “may lead to a human-centric view of the biosphere,” preserving these ecosystems and natural biodiversity for our own benefit will improve ecosystem health and the natural services other species need to survive and thrive. As noted in a Toronto Star article, the Toronto research also found that, “within cities, urban tree lines often follow the fault lines of social, economic, political and ecological disparity.” In other words, protecting and increasing green spaces and improving access to them is a social justice as well as a health issue. This isn’t news to anyone who gets outside regularly. People who spend at

least 30 minutes a day in nature for 30 consecutive days as part of the David Suzuki Foundation’s annual 30X30 Nature Challenge report numerous benefits, including improved mood and vitality and a greater interest in the natural world. It’s why the Foundation is launching the Back to School Superhero Challenge on Sept. 21 to encourage kids, families, students and teachers to get outdoors, learn about environmental issues and make a difference. Science is giving us a better understanding of the many ways preserving, caring for and restoring natural spaces can improve the lives of humans and other beings — and how connecting with nature increases our desire to protect and reduce our negative impacts on our surroundings. Earth is our only home. But it’s more than that. We’re a part of the natural systems that make up our planet and its atmosphere, and what we do to the Earth, we do to ourselves — as I conveyed in my book The Sacred Balance: Rediscovering Our Place in Nature. It’s our duty to care for our immediate environment and all of the planet. Doing so will make us healthier and happier. Scientist, author and broadcaster David Suzuki wrote this column with Ian Hanington. Learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.

programs have been reduced? ● Who was endangered the privacy of Canadians with Bill C-51? ● Who has limited access to government information and also eliminated the long form census? ● Who has muzzled our scientists by reducing their funding, eliminating their projects or firing them? ● Who delayed the repatriation of

Omar Khadr, a child soldier, as long as possible? ● Who has damaged Canada’s foreign image by favouring Israel over the Palestinians, lost a non-permanent seat on the Security Council of the UN, and promised empty climate change policies? ● Who has not promoted the diversification of Canada’s economy and re-

search and development aggressively enough, leaving Canada at the mercy of world oil prices? ● Who has refused to stimulate the economy with deficit spending on infrastructure to create jobs at times of high unemployment? Answer: S.H. Ray Kowalski Sylvan Lake

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

A long list of questions about leadership failure I have designed an easy Canada quiz for Jim Sutherland after reading his comment column (Red Deer Advocate, Monday, Aug. 24, 2015). Hint: there is only one correct answer. ● Who prorogated Parliament in 2008 to avoid a motion of non-confidence and precipitated a constitutional crisis? ● Who tried to govern Canada through the Prime Minister’s Office telling MPs and Senators what to say and how to vote? ● Who was unaware of what his PMO staff were doing, especially as it relates to the Mike Duffy scandal? ● Who favours the rich in Canada on issues such as taxes, income splitting, pensions, child care, and family allowances? ● Who has failed to implement the Kelowna Accord, fostered the Idle No More Movement, refused an inquiry into missing and murdered Aboriginal women, and received censure from the UN and other groups for his treatment of our Aboriginals? ● Who has challenged the rulings of our independent judiciary (the Supreme Court) and attacked our Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin? ● Who passes laws retroactively to cover RCMP mistakes? ● Who has cut funding to the arts, culture and the CBC? ● Who has caused the delay or cancellation of new pipelines by refusing to address the issue of climate change adequately? ● Who refuses to meet with the provincial premiers on issues vital to Canadians? ● Who has damaged our Canadian military by not replacing our CF-18s and not telling Canadians the real cost of the F-35s, allowing the navy to erode to levels below that of Bangladesh, replacing our Sea King helicopters too slowly, and mistreating our veterans? ● Who has used huge omnibus bills to sneak all nature of unrelated laws through Parliament? ● Who has cut funding to women’s groups? ● Who has reduced foreign aid, especially to Africa? ● Who has passed minimum sentencing laws, requiring the building of more prisons at a time when the crime rate has gone down and rehabilitation

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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 Mary Kemmis Publisher Josh Aldrich Managing editor Wendy Moore Advertising sales manager

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CANADA

A5

MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

IN

BRIEF Environmental damage expected to be minor after barge tips vehicles in Victoria

Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS

A sidewalk that was lifted by the roots of a tree uprooted during Saturday’s windstorm is seen as residents watch city workers remove another tree that fell on a house, in Vancouver, B.C., on Sunday. BC Hydro says it could take until Monday morning to restore power to some areas of southwestern British Columbia after a windstorm tore through the region during the weekend, leaving an estimated 500,000 customers without power.

Clean-up begins in wake of severe B.C. windstorm THOUSANDS STILL WITHOUT POWER BY THE CANADIAN PRESS VANCOUVER — Emergency crews were working to clean up the aftermath of a vicious windstorm that tore through southwestern British Columbia on Saturday, bringing trees and branches crashing down onto power lines and cars and leaving an estimated 500,000 people without power. BC Hydro said it could take until Monday morning to restore power to some areas. Eighty-kilometre-an-hour winds buffeted the Lower Mainland, at one point toppling a tree onto a woman in her 40s who was walking with her daughter in Surrey. The RCMP described the woman’s injuries as life-threatening. The bulk of the outages occurred in the Greater Vancouver Area, and BC Hydro said that as of 10 a.m. Sunday about 180,000 customers were still waiting for the power to be restored. The area’s 911 line was overwhelmed with inquiries about power outages, prompting officials to ask residents to call only in the event of an urgent emergency. Metro Vancouver Regional District’s emergency program co-ordinator Rod Tulett said the district’s emergency procedures performed extremely well so far. He described Saturday’s gales as the backup system’s biggest test since the district was caught off-guard by a windstorm in 2006 that battered the Lower Mainland and uprooted numerous trees in Vancouver’s Stanley Park. “After the big windstorm a lot of our facilities received significant upgrades in their backup-power capability,” said Tulett. “We learned from that.” The City of Vancouver reported receiving more

than a thousand weather-related calls regarding debris, damage and flooding. “The impacts of BCStorm2015 include downed trees and power lines, flooding, property damage and widespread loss of power to city facilities and traffic lights at major intersections,” said a city news release. The Greater Vancouver Zoo also suffered extensive damage in the storm, reported the facility’s general manager Jody Henderson. Powerful winds caused a number of major fences to come down, most notably the barricade surrounding the grizzly bear enclosure. “We followed our normal emergency protocol. ... Everyone was contained into a building,” said Henderson. “At no time did our grizzly bear get out.” BC Hydro estimated it could be as late as 12:30 a.m. on Monday before power would be restored to a number of municipalities across the region. Residents took to social media with a mix of both praise and condemnation for the utility and its response to the outages, with much of the vitriol directed toward BC Hydro’s website only working sporadically. Strong winds also swept through Rock Creek in the southern interior, where a 44-square-kilometre wildfire destroyed 30 homes earlier this month. The storm triggered wind warnings from Environment Canada, forced the temporary closure of Stanley Park, and slowed ferry service between Victoria and the mainland. The cost of the extensive property damage and the bill for cleaning up the huge mess have yet to be tallied. BC Hydro said in a release that crews are addressing public safety issues first and “aim to get power back for highest density areas in order to get as many customers back as possible.”

VICTORIA — British Columbia’s environment ministry says it expects the ecological damage to be minor after a barge tipped and dumped scrap cars into Victoria’s inner harbour. Emergency program director Graham Knox says regulations require fuel to be removed from vehicles before loading but it’s impossible to clean them completely. He says a sheen of hydrocarbons can be seen in the water but a large boom has been wrapped around the accident site to contain the fuel. Knox says the U.S. company that recycles the cars, Schnitzer Steel, is responsible for clean-up and has hired the Western Canada Marine Response Corporation. He says an assessment could take days but all the debris will need to be removed from the water because it can pose an entangling risk to wildlife and displace habitat. It’s not yet known what caused the barge to tilt and spill at least 20 scrap vehicles into the water on Friday afternoon.

Search continues in Nova Scotia for evidence in murder of physics student TRURO, N.S. — Police investigating the slaying of a Dalhousie University physics student in Halifax say they are focusing their search efforts on a property in Truro, N.S. Police say the property (off Marshland Drive) is part of the same search warrant officers have been acting on since Tuesday. They say officers will be conducting searches in the Truro area from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. this weekend. On Thursday evening, searchers found an unspecified number of items of “potential interest” in Lower Truro. Police wouldn’t reveal any information about the objects, but said they were being analyzed. They said based on preliminary analysis, investigators believe they are connected to the death of 22-year-old Taylor Samson, whose remains have not been found. William Michael Sandeson, a varsity track athlete who was about to start classes at Dalhousie University’s medical school, was charged with first-degree murder four days after Samson was reported missing earlier this month. A profile on Dalhousie University’s website lists Sandeson’s hometown as Truro.

15-year-old in Regina faces gun charges after police believe boy, 12, was shot REGINA — A 15-year-old boy in Regina faces numerous gun-related charges after police say another, younger boy was likely shot. Police say they were called about a firearms offence on Saturday afternoon, and when they arrived they say they found a 12-year-old boy with what appeared to be a gunshot wound to the abdomen. He was rushed to hospital but police say his injuries aren’t considered life-threatening. The older boy has been charged with careless use or storage of a firearm, possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose, possession of a prohibited weapon and breach of an undertaking. He can’t be named due to his age and will appear in court Monday morning. Police are not saying what type of gun was involved.

Documents show pressure for student loan program to curb write-offs BY THE CANADIAN PRESS

in 2012-2013, 162,000 borrowers had their debts written off for a combined value of $308 million. About 90 per cent of those debts had passed the six-year legal statute for collection, mainly because the borrowers couldn’t be located, the briefing note said. The reason? Many of those files had out-of-date contact information and the CRA wasn’t allowed to ask other departments for help because of privacy laws. Treusch’s response to Shugart’s letter noted another part of the problem was that ESDC’s repayment assistance plan was working too well. The assistance plan, along with other changes, meant that default rates had dropped — to 13 per cent in 2012-13 from 28 per cent in 2003-04 — and collection rates had gone up — the CRA collected more than $198 million in 2013-2014, up 4.5 per cent from the previous fiscal year. A copy of the letter and the associated briefing note were obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act. The decline in the number of defaults has meant the remaining debts are for borrowers who are unwilling to pay, can’t be located, or aren’t interested in repayment assistance programs, said CRA spokesman Philippe Brideau. Collecting these debts, he

OTTAWA — Hundreds of thousands of university and college students walking onto campuses this week with help from federal loans could find themselves targeted harder than ever to repay billions of dollars in loans and grants. Employment and Social Development Canada, which oversees the Canada Student Loans program, has set more aggressive collection targets after feeling pressure from its political masters to stem the rising amount of student debt the government must write off each year, an amount that topped $300 million just two years ago. The push to increase collection results — and the detailed work plan to do so — are outlined in internal government documents from last fall. The government annually has to write off some of the $16 billion owing in student loans for a number of reasons: a debtor may file for bankruptcy, the debt itself passes a six-year legal limit on collection, or the debtor can’t be found. The amount of writeoffs were high enough that the Conservative government wanted ESDC to “improve recoveries and reduce the writeoff” of loans, the then-deputy minister at ESDC wrote to his counterpart at the Canada Revenue Agency in an October 2014 letter. The Canada Revenue Agency is responsible for collecting loans in default and can do so by withholding income tax refunds to cover the outstanding amount, or referring cases to the attorney general for legal action, which could lead to garnisheeing wages or seizing assets. The letter from thendeputy minister Ian Shugart asked the CRA for a more detailed plan to improve collection and “reassure my minister that all reasonable efforts are being made to increase recoveries and reduce (loan) writeoff amounts.” A Nov. 17, 2014, briefing GREAT THINGS note to CRA commissioner Andrew Treusch said that

said, has been more time consuming and costly than anticipated. The two departments are now sharing information more freely, and have had several executive meetings to work on collecting outstanding debts and “preventing abuse” in the system, said Marie-France Faucher, a spokeswoman for ESDC. Faucher said ESDC has also set “more aggressive targets” for collection as part of the strategy. To meet those targets, the CRA can now request information directly from borrowers, rather than having to ask ESDC officials to do so, and officials from the two departments have met regularly to figure out how things can be improved, Faucher said. The head of one of the country’s largest postsecondary student associations said the documents suggest the federal government appears more interested in image control than dealing with the issue of student debt. “We’re seeing a government that is more concerned about the public image that comes with these numbers rather than the reality that perhaps these numbers are indicative of a pretty big crisis that needs immediate address,” said Bilan Arte, national chairperson for the Canadian Federation of Students.

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SPORTS

B1

MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

Apple doesn’t fall far from the tree REBELS CAMP INVITE JACK MCCLELLAND LIKES TO PLAY A GRITTY GAME LIKE HIS DAD, FORMER NHLER KEVIN BY GREG MEACHEM ADVOCATE SPORTS EDITOR Like father, like son. Jack McClelland may never perform in the NHL like his father, Kevin, but he prefers to play the same style as the former Edmonton Oilers tough guy and four-time Stanley Cup champion. MORE FROM “I like to play a REBELS CAMP B2 physical game, bring some toughness,” the younger McClelland said Sunday, following the first main camp scrimmage of the Red Deer Rebels training camp at the Centrium. “I like to fight a bit and play a gritty, fourth-line style.” McClelland was invited to the Rebels camp for a reason — GM/head coach Brent Sutter is hopeful that the six-foot-three, 203-pound winger can supply some bottom-six sandpaper to his up-front units during the 2015-16 Western Hockey League season. The 19-year-old has at least an inkling of what the major junior game is about, having suited up with the Vancouver Giants for six games early last season. “I feel that I’m a little ahead this season, the (WHL) experience from last year kind of helped with knowing the speed coming into this camp,” he said. “Going into Vancouver, I didn’t know too much about how quick the game speed Jack was. Coming into this McClelland camp, I was more aware of it.” McClelland, who returned to his hometown of Wichita, Kan., after being

Photo by ASHLI BARRETT/Advocate staff

Goaltender Trevor Martin makes a save on Tanner Sidaway during Team Black’s on ice session during Red Deer Rebels training camp Saturday afternoon. released by the Giants in November, rejoined the junior A Thunder of the Western States Hockey League and put up 43 points (13g,30a) while racking up 67 penalty minutes in 31 games. The rugged forward has lived in Wichita since 2010, when his dad was hired as coach of the ECHL Thunder. The elder McClelland has never coached his son, nor has he passed on much of his hockey knowledge, expect for tips on how to survive as a role player. “He’s not really a dad who likes to coach (his son), I don’t learn too much from him,” said McClelland. “The only

aspect he teaches me is how to fight, how to go in . . . other than that, not too much. But I like to feel that I’m the same type of player he was.” With the Rebels slated to host the Memorial Cup tournament next May, McClelland knows that he’s been offered the absolute best opportunity of his junior career. And he knows exactly what is expected of him. His age shouldn’t work against him which would be the case in most years, as the Rebels will ice an older team this season. He knows he can’t pretend to be the type of player he isn’t through the remainder of training camp and

the exhibition season, if in fact he gets that far. “I’m going to have to know my role if I’m going to make the team,” said McClelland. “They want a fourth-line guy, a guy who’s not going to play too many minutes and can bring toughness. I feel that’s what I can bring. “I know my role so I’m not going to be expecting too much more than that. I know what I’m getting here.” Sutter likes McClelland’s bloodlines, his skating ability and his willingness to fill a specific post.

Please see REBELS on Page B2

Blue Jays finish off sweep of Tigers BY THE CANADIAN PRESS Blue Jays 9 Tigers 2 TORONTO — When Mark Buehrle won a World Series with the Chicago White Sox in 2005, he constantly felt like no matter the deficit they’d win the game. The 2015 Toronto Blue Jays are similar, only with a super-sized offence. “Here, shoot, if we don’t score eight runs, we had a bad day,” Buehrle said after a 9-2 win against the Detroit Tigers on Sunday afternoon at Rogers Centre. “We’re confident. We’re coming to the field every day thinking we’re going to win.” The Blue Jays have reason to feel that way. After sweeping the Tigers, they’re 21-5 in August and lead the American League East by 1 ½ games over the New York Yankees. On Sunday, Toronto provided everything that has become commonplace since a flurry of pre-trade-deadline moves: an offensive onslaught, strong pitching and reliable defence in front of a sellout crowd. Russell Martin and Kevin Pillar each hit a two-run home

run, Josh Donaldson and Edwin Encar- point. It gave everybody a shot in the nacion each had a solo shot, and the arm.” Blue Jays added to their major-league While Tulowitzki has struggled at best run production. the plate, his defence remains a major “If this isn’t the feel of a champi- upgrade over Jose Reyes. Tulowitzki onship team, I don’t know what is,” doubled Sunday after Gibbons moved Martin said. “I feel him down from like we’re great ofleadoff spot to ‘IF THIS ISN’T THE FEEL OF the fensively, we’re fifth in the order. A CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM, I Revere went 0 for great on defence, we’re pitching 4 with a walk in DON’T KNOW WHAT IS.’ great, our bullpen the No. 1 hole, but has depth. I like — RUSSELL MARTIN that didn’t stunt what we have goBLUE JAYS CATCHER the Blue Jays’ proing right now.” duction at all. It’s hard not to In a lineup that like what the Blue Jays have going. has become a modern-day murderer’s They’ve been dominant in the month row, Encarnacion continued his torrid since acquiring shortstop Troy Tulow- hitting by going 2 for 3 with his 30th itzki, ace David Price, outfielder Ben home run of the season. He extended Revere and relievers La Troy Hawkins his hitting streak to 25 games and is and Mark Lowe. Confidence is at an three short of Shawn Green’s franchise all-time high, something manager John record set in 1999. Gibbons credits those trades for. Encarnacion is hitting .409 with 11 “With the trades: Tulowitzki, Price, home runs and 35 RBIs in that time. Hawkins, Lowe, Revere, (infielder His first-inning home run gave him Cliff) Pennington, we just took off after 35 RBIs in August, setting a Blue Jays they happened,” Gibbons said. “I don’t record for any month, and he has an know how it could but the addition of extra-base hit in eight straight games. those guys that has pushed us to this Pitching with a lead almost all after-

noon, Buehrle (14-6) cruised through six-plus innings, allowing one earned run on five hits. The lefty didn’t feel well but gutted through another solid start. “It’s getting that time of year, and I battle through every start I go out there,” Buehrle said. “I’m still going out there trying to give us a chance to win. We’re still scoring runs. When these guys are out there scoring that many runs, it makes it a lot easier.” The Blue Jays have scored 718 runs, the most in the majors. Almost a month ago Buehrle said the Blue Jays felt like, “Whose butt are we gonna kick today?” That hasn’t changed. “It still feels the same way,” he said. “These guys are swinging the bat right now and scoring runs. It just seems like everything we’re doing, we’re doing right.” After his team was out-scored 296, Tigers manager Brad Ausmus, like many others, was impressed by the Blue Jays’ power. “We ran into the best offensive team in the league,” Ausmus said. “They can put up runs in a hurry.”

Drouin wins gold to cap Canada’s best ever showing at worlds BY THE CANADIAN PRESS BEIJING — In the days leading up to the world track and field championships, Derek Drouin played the words over and over in his head, like a song on repeat: You can win this. And when the competition got tense Sunday night, and seemingly the entire Bird’s Nest stadium was pulling for Chinese hero Zhang Guowei, Drouin said them again. The 25-year-old from Corunna, Ont., was true to his word, winning gold in high jump at the world championships with a quiet confidence that ran through virtually every member of this young and talented Canadian team. “I definitely was telling myself that if there was ever an opportunity this was it. I really felt like I was the one to beat, I felt like this was my championship to lose based on how people had been jumping coming in versus the last couple of meets that I had,” Drouin said. “And when it finally happened, it was just a relief.” The medal was No. 8 for the Canadian team to cap a thrilling best-ever showing. “We came here to kick ass,” said Athletics Canada head coach Peter Eriksson. “We kicked ass.” Canada’s previous best performance was five medals two years ago in Moscow, Russia. The Canadians had

Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Canada’s Derek Drouin clears the bar in the men’s high jump final at the World Athletics Championships at the Bird’s Nest stadium in Beijing, Sunday. never won two gold — Canada’s other one this week came from pole vaulter Shawn Barber. And the last time Canada won more medals in either a world championships or Olympics was at the 1932 Games, where the Canadians captured nine. Drouin arrived in Beijing with the

fifth-best jump in the world this year, and on the heels of a victory at the Pan American Games. The edge-of-your-seat event was decided in a rare jumpoff. Drouin, Ukraine’s Bohdan Bondarenko and China’s Zhang Guowei all jumped clean up to 2.36 metres, at which all

Greg Meachem, Sports Editor, 403-314-4363 E-mail gmeachem@reddeeradvocate.com

>>>>

three of them missed. The bar was lowered back to 2.34. Drouin was the only one to clear it, guaranteeing gold. Bondarenko and Zhang shared silver; there was no bronze medal awarded. “In the jump-off, it was a terrible situation to be in, terribly stressful,” Drouin said. “And obviously no-one’s going for you. I maybe would have started a clap if I thought that people were going to jump on board. It’s the advantage of home soil. “I’ve always felt that the mental game has always been a strong aspect for me, and luckily in a jump-off that’s basically all it comes down to, and I was able to use that to my advantage tonight.” Drouin, the bronze medallist at both the 2012 London Olympics and 2013 world championships, is known for his calm demeanour. All around him Sunday night was mayhem and a bit of madness. Zhang played up to the raucous crowd, posing like a crane in “Karate Kid” after every successful jump. Colourful Italian Gianmarco Tamberi competed with a half-shorn face — he had a moustache and beard on just one half of his face. When the 4x400-metre relays started, the jumpers had to hastily take their jumps between the runners on track.

Please see WORLDS on Page B2

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B2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015

Foskey feeling right at home BY GREG MEACHEM ADVOCATE SPORTS EDITOR He’s a long way from his Texas dwelling, but Jace Foskey is feeling right at home in the Red Deer Rebels rookie camp. “Camp has been fantastic. The rink is amazing. It’s been a beautiful experience so far,” the 15-yearold defenceman said Sunday, following the second of two scrimmages on the opening day of the Rebels training camp rookie sessions. “I’ve been trying not to be too nervous. I’ve been trying to do as well as I can.” Foskey suited up with the Dallas, Tex., under-16 team last season, scoring once, adding three helpers and accumulating 54 penalty minutes in 24 regular-season and playoff games. Jace Foskey He was selected by the Rebels in the seventh round of this year’s WHL bantam draft on May 7, a bona fide steal in the eyes of GM/head coach Brent Sutter and assistant GM/director of player personnel Shaun Sutter, considering most top-end American prospects tend to focus on securing U.S. college scholarships. “We think Jace is the best defenceman in the western United States,” Shaun Sutter said on the day of the draft.

“He’s a player we can see wearing our jersey one day.” Brent Sutter, also on draft day, was confident that Foskey would indeed suit up with the Rebels as early as next year. “He’s pretty excited. I also talked to his parents and they’re very excited,” said Sutter. “We had him ranked as one of the top two defencemen in the U.S.,

so we’re pretty excited about getting him. Our scout in Dallas coached him and he knows the family really well.” Sutter was referring to Lucas Reid, an assistant coach with the Dallas U16 squad and a Rebels scout. “I paid a lot of attention to the (WHL) draft,” said Foskey. “Our assistant coach works for the Rebels and it was just great to have him there to teach me and help me develop. “I feel that I’m a two-way player with the ability to get up the ice and still get back to stop scoring chances.” Foskey likened the pace of Sunday’s rookie camp scrimmages to that of the U16 tier 1 elite level he played at last season. “Tier one in Texas is almost exactly like this,” he said. While Foskey hasn’t committed to playing for the Rebels at some point, he won’t be suiting up for any WHL preseason games this fall in order to preserve his NCAA eligibility. So far, he’s been courted by two American schools — Miami of Ohio and Wisconsin. Still, he’d be pumped to be held over for Wednesday’s Black and White game. “To be promoted up with the main camp players would be great. That way, I could get the whole (camp) experience,” said the six-foot-one, 175-pound rearguard. “And I’m definitely interested in playing in the WHL down the road. This is a fantastic organization.” gmeachem@reddeeradvocate.com

Natural talent helps Vanderhoek to national ranking In terms of experience Ian Vanderhoek is still in the infante stages of his development in throwing the javelin. But thanks to a great arm and God-given natural talent the 19-year-old native of Bentley is one of the top junior athletes in the country. Vanderhoek didn’t know much about javelin until Grade 11 at Central Alberta Christian High School in Lacombe. DANNY “We were at (track and RODE field) practice for the discus and they brought out a javelin as well and I gave it a try,” he explained. “I also competed in the high jump, long jump and shot put at the time.” But he was a natural at the javelin. He qualified out of the Central Alberta zone to attend the provincial high school championships and finished third in the shot put and second in the intermediate boys javelin, bettering the old provincial record. “The guy who beat me also broke the record, but it was good,” added Vanderhoek, whose dad (James) encouraged him to contact Athletics Alberta and continue on with the sport. “I didn’t have a coach, although I did spend one day training with Red Deer Titans coach Darren Posyluzny, and he helped a lot,” continued Vanderhoek. “But I really didn’t have any technique. I did have a strong arm and it came natural to me. Vanderhoek qualified for the Western Games during the summer of 2013 and from there qualified for the Legion nationals in Langley, B.C., where he finished second with an Alberta youth (15-17 year-old) record toss of 61.48-metres with the 700-gram javelin. He was ranked No. 1 in Alberta and second in Canada. The following year proved to be a disaster as he tore the meniscus in his knee, had surgery, and as a result missed the high school and summer season. “I attended one meet in Sherwood Park with a leg brace, but overall I was out for four months,” he said. But the injury was a small set-back for the sixfoot, 180-pound Vanderhoek. He attended Ambrose College in Calgary in the fall of 2014 and decided to try out for their men’s basketball team, which played in the Alberta Colleges Athletic League. “I was a walk-on and made it as a point guard,” he explained. “I played volleyball and basketball in high school and thought about trying for the volleyball team as well, but didn’t have the time.” He was also still involved in track and field and the javelin. He joined the Calgary Track and Field Club and started working with coach Paul Sze.

LOCAL SPORT

REBELS: Hockey mindset “His dad played pro hockey, so he comes from a hockey mindset,” said the Rebels boss. “Just in the short time he’s been here, I can see that he skates well and that he’s a big kid. “We’re always looking for guys who can skate and if they have size as well, that’s great. Now we just have to see how he handles the pace when we get him into games. There has to be an element of physicality with him to play on our team because a player like that is not going to play in your top six forwards, but he can certainly be a good role player for us.” Training camp resumes this morning and concludes with Wednesday’s 7 p.m. Black and White intrasquad game. The Rebels open preseason play Friday at St. Albert against the Edmonton Oil Kings. ● Wyatt Johnson, who will attend the Anaheim Ducks rookie camp in September — one of eight Rebels going to NHL camps — scored twice Sunday as Team Black downed Team White 3-1. Michael Spacek also tallied for the winners. Ivan Nikoloshin notched the lone goal for Team White. gmeachem@reddeeradvocate.com

WORLDS: Patient Through it all, Drouin remained his calm, stoic self. “Tell you what, he was the best jumper out there tonight, no question about it, it would have been a travesty if he had lost,” said his coach Jeff Huntoon. The victory comes after a frustrating

“He was a very good coach. He fixed my form, rebuilding it. Before all I used was my arm and surprisingly I did well. I use my body more now and it makes the flow nicer.” Vanderhoek finished third in the CALTAF Classic, which left him one spot short of qualifying for the Western Canada Games in Fort McMurray. “It was iffy if I’d get a chance to go but one of the guys ahead of changed what he was doing and so they took three javelin throwers ... I was fortunate.” He also made the most of it, finishing ahead of the other Alberta athletes and behind a B.C. and Manitoba competitor to place third with a personal best toss of 56.77m with the 800g javelin. “I wanted to peak at that time and it was the perfect time to do it,” he said. “I was relaxed and just wanting to do my best and it worked out.” As a result he is ranked No. 1 in Alberta in the junior division and fifth in Canada.

season for the Canadian, who jumped a national-record 2.40 metres in April 2014. It appeared the sky was the limit. But try as he might, Drouin couldn’t match that lofty height, and couldn’t figure out why. “I’m not so sure he wasn’t ready to jump that again, but it was just the emotion of it, and the continuous questions of it. And then you get in your own head a little bit. “For him, it was (frustrating). And that’s a shame, isn’t it? The sixth best jump in the history of the world (2.40), and he got a little frustrated. And you could see the emotions as the season went on, yeah, it got a little tough.” So the plan going into this season was to avoid peaking too early. Having to wait and wonder though tested Drouin’s patience. “I went about a month and a half without even clearing 2.30. . . trying to peak at the end of the season, and I got to the point where I just wanted the season to be done and forget about world championships,” Drouin said. “But luckily I was patient and things finally worked out and things clicked and when they clicked they really clicked. I felt like I was in a good place the last month or so coming into here.” Canada now heads into the Olympic year with numerous medal threats. The team had three silvers here, from Damian Warner in the decathlon, Brianne Theisen-Eaton in the heptathlon, and Melissa Bishop in the 800 metres. Canada had three bronze from Andre De Grasse in the 100 metres, the men’s 4x100 relay, and Ben Thorne in the men’s 20-kilometre race walk. Also, Eriksson said that normally about 31 per cent of the team advances out of the preliminary round. This week saw 61 per cent move on. What was obvious throughout the meet was a sense of quiet confidence, from star sprinter De Grasse to Warner to Bishop, to Canada’s race walk squad, that pervaded this team. Every medallist talked about a belief in: why not me?

Vanderhoek will attend RDC this year, taking commerce. He will continue to weight train and work on the javelin as much as possible. What he isn’t going to do is try out for the Kings basketball team. “It crossed my mind, but that’s the next level ... it would be tough,” he said. Vanderhoek will also be getting married in November and won’t get the chance to travel to Calgary to train with Sze. “However. I will be sending him video of my sessions and he can critique them and get back to me,” he explained. Vanderhoek will attend RDC for two years then transfer to the University of Alberta. As for the javelin he would like to continue to train and attend the national championships. Danny Rode is a retired Advocate reporter who can be reached at drode@reddeeradvocate.com. His work can also be seen at www.rdc.ab.ca/athleticsblog

Buccaneers’ season ends with semifinal loss to Monarchs FOOTBALL FORT MCMURRAY — The Central Alberta Buccaneers knew they’d be in tough while attempting to upset the Fort McMurray Monarchs and punch their ticket to the Alberta Football League final. They were correct. The Bucs were hammered 43-7 by the Monarchs in a semifinal contest Saturday, their inability to stop running back Melvin Abankwah proving big-time costly. Abankwah ran through and around the Buccaneers defenders while scoring three touchdowns. “You have to just use your eyes

when you’re going through holes and that’s what I did today,” the Monarchs back told Fort McMurray radio station mix 103.7fm. “I just read the holes and hit it, right to the end zone.” The Monarchs will take on the host Calgary Gators in the AFL championship contest this Saturday. The Gators downed the St. Albert Stars in the other semifinal. “Our running game was very effective today,” said Monarchs head coach Dave Spence. “And (Quarterback) Carson Williams threw the ball very well and hit the receivers when he needed to hit them. “Obviously the Gators will be a formidable opponent next weekend and we’ll have to overcome some things and meet some challenges.”

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STORIES FROM PAGE B1

Photo contributed

Ian Vanderhoek throws while competing at the Western Canada Games in Fort McMurray. The Bentley native has used a natural talent for throwing to rise up the ranking and is now one of the top javelin athletes in Canada.


RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015 B3

Mitchell leads Stamps to rout of Bombers BY THE CANADIAN PRESS Stampeders 36 Blue Bombers 8 WINNIPEG — Jamar Wall provided the spark the Calgary Stampeders were looking for in a 36-8 rout of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers on Saturday. Ahead 8-3 at halftime, Wall intercepted Blue Bombers quarterback Robert Marve and ran 29 yards for a touchdown at 1:10 of the third quarter. “That was the play,” said Calgary quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell, who was 19-of-26 for 314 yards, two touchdowns and one interception. “You come out in the second half, you’re looking for good field position. The defence did a great job picking us up right there at the beginning of the second half with a pick six. It let us go out there and play freely.” Stampeders backup quarterback Bryant Moniz scored on a two-yard run four minutes later and a two-point convert stretched the lead to 23-3. Calgary’s fourth straight victory improved its record to 7-2, while the Bombers lost their third straight game and fell to 3-6. “I had a key on the quarterback,” said Wall. “I trusted it and took advantage of it. It was a game-changer right out of the half. A momentum-shifter. “We just kept the foot on the pedal. We believe that we can cover anyone. We believe our D-line can beat anyone. With that confidence alone, and the things we run with (Rich Stubler’s) defence, sky’s the limit.” Marve completed 12-of-20 pass attempts for 94 yards with two interceptions and no touchdowns in his second pro start. He was replaced by Brian Brohm with eight minutes left in the game. “It was a frustrating day at work,” said Marve, who was sacked five times. He cited a lack of “explosion plays” and no rhythm as the reason for the offence’s poor showing. Winnipeg’s of-

fence managed just 136 net yards. Marve said he’d like to start against the Saskatchewan Roughriders in the Week 11 Labour Day game, but will accept what head coach Mike O’Shea decides. “We’ll have to see,” said O’Shea, when asked if Marve will start Sept. 6. An interception by Calgary’s Keon Raymond led to a seven-yard TD run by Tory Harrison. It was the Stampeders’ second touchdown off a Winnipeg turnover in front of an announced crowd of 27,148 at Investors Group Field. Calgary receiver Jeff Fuller used one hand to pull in a 23-yard touchdown reception and grabbed a twopoint convert pass. Teammate Eric Rogers also caught a two-point convert and finished with seven catches for 152 yards. His streak of a touchdown in consecutive games ended at six. “As long as we win, as long as everybody’s making plays, it doesn’t matter about individual streaks,” said Rogers. “I’ll start a new one next week.” Stampeders kicker Rene Paredes made field goals from 11 and 27 yards and was good on two convert attempts. Lirim Hajrullahu booted field goals from 32 and 36 yards for the Blue Bombers and Calgary conceded a safety for Winnipeg points. Bombers linebacker Derek Jones blocked a Rob Maver punt and the ball was recovered by Bombers defensive back Lin-J Shell. The turnover led to Hajrullahu’s 32-yarder as time expired in the first quarter. Winnipeg was missing injured veteran centre Dominic Picard. He was replaced by Matthias Goossen. Some Bomber fans had boos for their team and some started leaving the game early. “That’s painful,” said O’Shea. “As a group, they understand how important these fans are to us. They keep coming out and it’s tough to expect them to keep coming out when we put a second half together like that.”

TITAN TACKLED

Photo by ASHLI BARRETT/Advocate Staff

Nic Galenzoski of the Red Deer Titans is tackled to the ground by his Airdrie Highlanders opponent during Calgary Rugby Union men’s second division action Saturday at Titans Park. The Titans won the game by forfeit against the Highlanders, due to injuries causing a shortage of players on the team. Earlier in the day, the Titans third division men buried their Airdrie guests 64-31 after leading 19-14 at halftime. Both Red Deer teams have qualified for the playoffs.

Redblacks hand Roughriders ninth straight loss BY THE CANADIAN PRESS

RDC SOCCER The Red Deer College Queens ran over Edmonton Kings University College Eagles 8-1 Sunday to earn a split of two weekend ACAC women’s soccer preseason outings at Camrose. Nicole Friedl scored four minutes into Sunday’s contest and the Queens never looked back, getting two more markers from each of Kassidy Lefteruk and Keisha Perry and additional tallies courtesy of Kaitlin D’Arcy, Krysten Strand (penalty) and Angela Vanderberg, who buried the rebound of a long range, heavy shot by Olivia Orman. An own goal accounted for the Eagles scoring.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS Mark Shapiro worked his way up from the bottom in Cleveland’s front office, becoming one of baseball’s most respected executives. He’ll start at the top in Toronto. Shapiro, who has spent the past five years overseeing the Indians organization, is leaving Cleveland to become president and CEO of the Toronto Blue Jays, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press on Sunday night. Shapiro, who has been with Cleveland since 1992, will replace Paul Beeston, Toronto’s CEO and president who is retiring. The teams will make

Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS

Ottawa Redblacks’ Ernest Jackson, right, fights for posession with Saskatchewan Roughriders’ Jeff Knox during CFL action in Ottawa on Sunday. Another Riders’ fumble late in the third quarter was converted into points on a one-yard run from Ottawa quarterback Henry Burris 35 seconds into the fourth quarter. Milo then converted his fifth touchdown of the day and the Redblacks were cruising with a 35-10 lead. Paul McCallum kicked a 28-yard field goal with less than seven minutes to play, cutting the Saskatchewan deficit to 35-13. The Redblacks defence recorded 10 sacks. They also forced two fumbles and intercepted one pass. “It was a team effort on our deThe Queens fell 2-0 to the host Augustana Vikings Saturday. “We had a squad of 15 for this match and never really looked like a coherent group on the field,” said RDC coach Dave Colley. “There were moments when the girls played well and threatened the Augustana goal, but two preventable goals scored after player errors saw the tie lost. “Everyone tried to make a difference, but these efforts were too individual in nature. This showed that we have good players, it was just a matter of channeling that enthusiasm and drive into a more united team effort. The post game talk addressed the main issues and eyes turned towards Sunday.” the announcement Monday, said the person who spoke on condition of anonymity because the sides were still working through some final details. CBSSports.com first reported the deal. It’s not clear if Shapiro will begin his new job immediately or wait until the end of this season. Coincidentally, the Indians, who have won five straight games to move back into the AL wild-card picture, will open a series on Monday in Toronto. Shapiro’s departure is a blow to the Indians, who haven’t won the World Series since 1948 yet have managed to stay relatively competitive despite a low payroll.

fence and coach (Mark) Nelson called the game really well and the defence played very well,” said Justin Capicciotti, who led the charge with three sacks and six tackles. “That’s the best time, when you’re up and you know you get to pass rush because you know they have to throw the ball. You get to go after the quar-

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Redblacks 35 Roughriders 13 OTTAWA — Jeremiah Johnson took full advantage when opportunity came calling. Johnson scored three rushing touchdowns as the Redblacks downed the Saskatchewan Roughriders 35-13 on Sunday, three days after Ottawa released international running back Chevon Walker, who he replaced in the starting lineup. “I did what I was supposed to do. This is nothing different for me,” said Johnson, who has now doubled his number of rushing touchdowns this season to six. “The organization gave me an opportunity and I’m ecstatic with my performance. “Those guys up front did a tremendous job. They went out there and hit everybody in the mouth and I just made the necessary plays to make things happen.” The Roughriders, who had their second lowest point total in a game this season, fell to 0-9. They scored just five points in a 35-5 loss to the Edmonton Eskimos on July 31. After a tight first half that had Ottawa (5-4) in front 14-10, the game took a huge turn in favour of the Redblacks over a span of three minutes and 44 seconds from the end of the third quarter and into the fourth. Ottawa scored 21 points in that span to take a 35-10 lead and control of the game. It started with 3:09 to play in the third quarter when Johnson scored a one-yard touchdown run that once converted by Chris Milo, gave the Redblacks a 21-10 lead. On the ensuing series, Ottawa recovered a Saskatchewan fumble and Johnson scampered in from 36 yards out on the next play for another score and a 28-10 lead.

terback.” The Redblacks scored on their opening two drives to take a 14-0 lead while allowing the Riders to just five offensive plays over their first two series. Ottawa covered 89 yards in five plays on the opening drive of the game that ended with a 37-yard touchdown pass from Burris to Maurice Price. The conversion by Milo gave the Redblacks a 7-0 lead. After forcing the Roughriders into a two-and-out situation, Ottawa moved the ball 78 yards in just under three minutes and took a 14-0 lead on a seven-yard touchdown run from Johnson. The rest of the half featured only punts for the Redblacks as the Roughriders possessed the only offensive punch before the break. They got punt singles of 48 and 70 yards from Ray Early and a nine-yard touchdown pass from Brett Smith to Naaman Roosevelt. Smith then carries the ball in himself on the two-point conversion to complete the eight-point scoring drive. “We talked about winning the penalty battle and we talked about winning the turnover battle. That was the tale of two teams right there,” Roughriders coach Corey Chamblin explained. “We came out in the second half and just played losing football in all three phases. (Ottawa) played good football, don’t get me wrong, but we just didn’t have it and we weren’t together. We looked more like individuals than a team in the second half.” The Redblacks head into their second and final bye week of the season while the Roughriders host the Winnipeg Blue Bombers Sept. 6.


SCOREBOARD Baseball

MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

Local Sports

Major League Baseball American League East Division W L Pct Toronto 74 56 .569 New York 72 57 .558 Tampa Bay 64 66 .492 Baltimore 63 67 .485 Boston 60 70 .462

GB — 1 1/2 10 11 14

Kansas City Minnesota Cleveland Chicago Detroit

Central Division W L Pct 80 50 .615 67 63 .515 63 66 .488 61 68 .473 60 70 .462

GB — 13 16 1/2 18 1/2 20

Houston Texas Los Angeles Seattle Oakland

West Division W L Pct 72 59 .550 68 61 .527 65 65 .500 61 70 .466 57 74 .435

GB — 3 6 1/2 11 15

Saturday’s Games Toronto 15, Detroit 1 Boston 3, N.Y. Mets 1 Kansas City 6, Tampa Bay 3 Houston 4, Minnesota 1 Cleveland 8, L.A. Angels 3 N.Y. Yankees 3, Atlanta 1 Seattle 7, Chicago White Sox 6 Texas 4, Baltimore 3 Oakland 3, Arizona 2

St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Milwaukee Cincinnati

Los Angeles San Francisco Arizona San Diego Colorado

Central Division W L Pct 84 46 .646 79 50 .612 74 55 .574 55 75 .423 53 76 .411 West Division W L Pct 72 57 .558 69 61 .531 63 67 .485 63 67 .485 52 76 .406

GB — 4 1/2 9 1/2 29 30 1/2 GB — 3 9 9 19

1/2 1/2 1/2 1/2

Saturday’s Games Boston 3, N.Y. Mets 1 St. Louis 6, San Francisco 0 Pittsburgh 4, Colorado 3 Washington 5, Miami 1 Philadelphia 4, San Diego 3 Cincinnati 12, Milwaukee 9 N.Y. Yankees 3, Atlanta 1 Oakland 3, Arizona 2 L.A. Dodgers 5, Chicago Cubs 2 Sunday’s Games N.Y. Mets 5, Boston 4 Colorado 5, Pittsburgh 0 Washington 7, Miami 4 N.Y. Yankees 20, Atlanta 6 San Diego 9, Philadelphia 4 Milwaukee 4, Cincinnati 1 St. Louis 7, San Francisco 5 Oakland 7, Arizona 4, 11 innings Chicago Cubs 2, L.A. Dodgers 0

Sunday’s Games Toronto 9, Detroit 2 N.Y. Mets 5, Boston 4 Tampa Bay 3, Kansas City 2 Cleveland 9, L.A. Angels 2 N.Y. Yankees 20, Atlanta 6 Minnesota 7, Houston 5 Chicago White Sox 6, Seattle 5, 11 innings Texas 6, Baltimore 0 Oakland 7, Arizona 4, 11 innings Monday’s Games Tampa Bay (Archer 11-10) at Baltimore (W.Chen 8-6), 5:05 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar 11-7) at Toronto (Price 13-4), 5:07 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Nova 5-6) at Boston (E.Rodriguez 7-5), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (Nuno 0-1) at Houston (Keuchel 15-6), 6:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Santiago 7-8) at Oakland (Doubront 1-1), 8:05 p.m. Texas (Lewis 14-6) at San Diego (T.Ross 9-9), 8:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 5:05 p.m. Cleveland at Toronto, 5:07 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 5:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 6:10 p.m. Detroit at Kansas City, 6:10 p.m. Seattle at Houston, 6:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Oakland, 8:05 p.m. Texas at San Diego, 8:10 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS G AB R H Pct. MiCabrera Det 93 338 55 121 .358 Brantley Cle 116 449 60 146 .325 Kipnis Cle 113 451 74 144 .319 Fielder Tex 125 487 58 154 .316 Bogaerts Bos 125 486 59 153 .315 NCruz Sea 128 497 77 156 .314 Altuve Hou 123 504 65 158 .313 LCain KC 115 449 80 140 .312 Hosmer KC 127 482 80 150 .311 Kinsler Det 128 515 83 157 .305 Home Runs NCruz, Seattle, 39; Donaldson, Toronto, 36; CDavis, Baltimore, 35; JMartinez, Detroit, 34; Pujols, Los Angeles, 34; Trout, Los Angeles, 33; Bautista, Toronto, 31; Teixeira, New York, 31. Runs Batted In Donaldson, Toronto, 106; CDavis, Baltimore, 92; Encarnacion, Toronto, 91; KMorales, Kansas City, 90; Bautista, Toronto, 88; JMartinez, Detroit, 87; NCruz, Seattle, 82; BMcCann, New York, 82. Pitching Keuchel, Houston, 15-6; FHernandez, Seattle, 15-8; Eovaldi, New York, 14-2; Buehrle, Toronto, 14-6; Lewis, Texas, 14-6; McHugh, Houston, 14-7; Hutchison, Toronto, 13-2.

New York Washington Atlanta Miami Philadelphia

B4

National League East Division W L Pct 72 58 .554 66 63 .512 54 76 .415 52 79 .397 52 79 .397

GB — 5 1/2 18 20 1/2 20 1/2

Monday’s Games Miami (Narveson 1-1) at Atlanta (Foltynewicz 4-6), 5:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Eickhoff 1-1) at N.Y. Mets (B.Colon 11-11), 5:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Lorenzen 3-8) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 6-6), 6:05 p.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez 9-7) at St. Louis (Lackey 11-8), 6:15 p.m. Arizona (Ray 3-10) at Colorado (Bettis 6-4), 6:40 p.m. San Francisco (Peavy 4-6) at L.A. Dodgers (B.Anderson 8-8), 8:10 p.m. Texas (Lewis 14-6) at San Diego (T.Ross 9-9), 8:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Arizona at Colorado, 1:10 p.m., 1st game Miami at Atlanta, 5:10 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 5:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, 6:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 6:10 p.m. Washington at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m. Arizona at Colorado, 6:40 p.m., 2nd game San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10 p.m. Texas at San Diego, 8:10 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS G AB R H Pct. DGordon Mia 114 485 64 161 .332 Harper Was 122 420 90 139 .331 Goldschmidt Ari 129 464 83 151 .325 Pollock Ari 125 489 90 156 .319 Posey SF 121 448 63 142 .317 Votto Cin 127 443 76 138 .312 Panik SF 97 375 56 116 .309 LeMahieu Col 123 460 70 142 .309 YEscobar Was 112 428 59 132 .308 McCutchen Pit 126 456 75 139 .305 Home Runs CaGonzalez, Colorado, 31; Harper, Washington, 31; Arenado, Colorado, 30; Frazier, Cincinnati, 30; Stanton, Miami, 27; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 26; Rizzo, Chicago, 26. Runs Batted In Goldschmidt, Arizona, 96; Arenado, Colorado, 93; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 85; Kemp, San Diego, 80; Posey, San Francisco, 80; Bryant, Chicago, 79; Rizzo, Chicago, 78. Pitching Arrieta, Chicago, 17-6; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 16-6; Wacha, St. Louis, 15-4; GCole, Pittsburgh, 157; Greinke, Los Angeles, 14-3; CMartinez, St. Louis, 13-6; deGrom, New York, 12-7.

Boxberger (32). HRs—Tampa Bay, Guyer (6), Kiermaier (7). Los Ang. 000 001 010 — 2 9 1 Cleveland 200 042 01x — 9 10 0 Weaver, J.Alvarez (7), C.Ramos (8) and C.Perez; Tomlin, McAllister (8), A.Adams (9) and R.Perez. W—Tomlin 3-1. L—Weaver 6-10. HRs—Los Angeles, Green (1). Cleveland, Almonte (3). Seattle 220 000 010 00 — 5 12 3 Chicago 100 200 101 01 — 6 14 1 (11 innings) Olmos, Guaipe (6), Rasmussen (8), Ca.Smith (8), D.Rollins (10) and J.Hicks; Quintana, M.Albers (5), Duke (7), N.Jones (8), Dav.Robertson (10) and Soto, Flowers. W—Dav.Robertson 6-3. L—D.Rollins 0-1. HRs—Seattle, Seager (21), A.Jackson (8). Chicago, Me.Cabrera (9). Houston 000 000 005 — 5 12 0 Minnesota 100 002 40x — 7 8 0 McCullers, Qualls (7), O.Perez (7), Velasquez (8) and Conger; E.Santana, Fien (8), O’Rourke (9), May (9) and Herrmann. W—E.Santana 3-4. L— McCullers 5-5. HRs—Houston, Carter (18), Altuve (11). Minnesota, Nunez (4), Sano (13).

Hamilton Toronto Ottawa Montreal

CFL East Division W L T 6 3 0 6 3 0 5 4 0 4 5 0

PF 315 238 193 191

PA 182 245 241 171

Pt 12 12 10 8

INTERLEAGUE Boston 000 002 200 — 4 9 1 New York 010 003 10x — 5 11 0 Miley, Ross Jr. (7), Hembree (7) and Swihart; Syndergaard, Robles (7), Clippard (7), Familia (9) and Recker. W—Clippard 2-0. L—Ross Jr. 0-2. Sv— Familia (35). HRs—Boston, Ortiz (28). New York 034 010 930 — 20 21 1 Atlanta 002 003 100 — 6 12 0 Eovaldi, Warren (6), Shreve (6), Pinder (7), Mitchell (9) and B.McCann, J.Murphy; Teheran, Marimon (5), Detwiler (7), Moylan (7), Brigham (7), E.Jackson (9) and Pierzynski, Bethancourt. W—Eovaldi 14-2. L—Teheran 9-7. HRs—New York, Ellsbury (7), Headley (10), Drew (16). Atlanta, Ad.Garcia (7). Oakland 002 100 100 03 — 718 1 Arizona 021 000 001 00 — 412 1 (11 innings) Chavez, Mujica (6), Fe.Rodriguez (7), Doolittle (8), Pomeranz (9), Venditte (10) and Phegley; Webster, Collmenter (6), Mat.Reynolds (7), D.Hernandez (8), Bracho (9), Ziegler (10), Schugel (11) and Saltalamacchia, W.Castillo. W—Venditte 1-2. L—Ziegler 0-2. HRs—Oakland, Vogt (18). Arizona, D.Peralta (14). NATIONAL LEAGUE Colorado 000 302 000 — 5 7 1 Pittsburgh 000 000 000 — 0 4 2 J.De La Rosa, Oberg (7), Friedrich (8), Ja.Diaz (8), Axford (9) and Garneau; Morton, Bastardo (7), Blanton (9) and Cervelli. W—J.De La Rosa 8-6. L—Morton 8-6. San Diego 201 001 131 — 9 16 0 Phila. 010 000 021 — 4 10 0 Shields, Despaigne (8) and De.Norris, Hedges; Asher, Neris (6), Loewen (8), De Fratus (8) and Rupp. W—Shields 10-6. L—Asher 0-1. HRs—San Diego, Kemp (16), Upton (24), Solarte (11). Philadelphia, Rupp (8). Miami 300 100 000 — 4 10 0 Wash. 002 032 00x — 7 13 0 B.Hand, Cordier (5), Ellington (7), Barraclough (8) and Mathis; Strasburg, Fister (5), Rivero (7), Storen (8), Papelbon (9) and W.Ramos. W—Fister 5-7. L—B.Hand 4-4. Sv—Papelbon (22). HRs—Miami, Bour (14), Dietrich (10). Washington, Werth (5), C.Robinson (7).

Sunday’s Major League Linescores

Cincinnati 010 000 000 — 1 8 0 Milwaukee 101 000 02x — 4 9 0 Jo.Lamb, LeCure (7), Ju.Diaz (8) and B.Pena; W.Peralta, W.Smith (8), Jeffress (8), Fr.Rodriguez (9) and Maldonado. W—W.Peralta 5-8. L—Jo.Lamb 0-3. Sv—Fr.Rodriguez (31). HRs—Milwaukee, Braun (24).

AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 000 001 100 — 2 7 0 Toronto 220 200 03x — 9 11 1 Simon, VerHagen (6), B.Rondon (8), B.Hardy (8) and J.McCann; Buehrle, Lowe (7), Aa.Sanchez (8), Schultz (9) and Ru.Martin. W—Buehrle 14-6. L—Simon 11-9. HRs—Toronto, Donaldson (36), Encarnacion (30), Pillar (9), Ru.Martin (17).

St. Louis 301 101 010 — 7 13 0 San Fran. 200 002 010 — 5 12 0 Jai.Garcia, Cishek (7), Broxton (8), Siegrist (9) and Molina; Heston, Kontos (4), Lopez (6), Strickland (7), Broadway (8), Osich (8), Casilla (9) and Posey. W—Jai.Garcia 7-4. L—Heston 11-8. Sv—Siegrist (6). HRs—St. Louis, M.Carpenter (20), Moss (2), Mar.Reynolds (12).

Kan. City 002 000 000 — 2 7 1 Tampa Bay 101 001 00x — 3 9 1 D.Duffy, Hochevar (6), C.Young (8) and Butera; Karns, Cedeno (6), Colome (7), Boxberger (9) and Rivera. W—Cedeno 3-1. L—Hochevar 1-1. Sv—

Chicago 200 000 000 — 2 13 1 Los Ang. 000 000 000 — 0 0 0 Arrieta and M.Montero; A.Wood, Nicasio (7), Howell (8), Baez (9) and Grandal. W—Arrieta 17-6. L—A. Wood 9-9. HRs—Chicago, Bryant (21).

Calgary Edmonton Winnipeg B.C. Saskatchewan

GP 9 9 8 8 9

West Division W L T 7 2 0 6 3 0 3 6 0 3 5 0 0 9 0

PF 255 238 166 179 218

PA 188 165 273 234 294

Pt 14 12 6 6 0

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing — Calgary: Harrison 15-60, Parker 2-30, Brown 5-29, Moniz 1-1, Mitchell 1-0; Winnipeg: Marve 3-28, Thomas 3-18, Marshall 9-17, Veltung 1-9, Brohm 1-2. Receiving — Calgary: Rogers 7-152, Fuller 4-56, Durant 2-44, Wilson 4-25, Parker 1-20, McDaniel 1-12, Harrison 1-7, Cote 1-5; Winnipeg: Denmark 6-50, Moore 5-35, Thomas 1-9, Gordon 1-7. Passing — Calgary: Mitchell 19-26, 314 yards, 2 TDs, 1 ints, Tate 2-2-17-0-0; Winnipeg: Marve 1220-94-0-2, Brohm 1-5-7-0-0. Sunday’s summary Redblacks 35 Roughriders 13 First Quarter Ott- TD Maurice Shaw 37 pass from Henry Burris (Chris Milo convert) 12:47 Ott- TD Jeremiah Johnson 7 run (Milo convert) 8:07 Ssk- Single Ray Early 48 1:39 Second Quarter Ssk- Single Early 48 14:40 Ssk- TD Naaman Roosevelt 9 pass from Brett Smith (Smith rush convert) 12:24 Third Quarter Ott- TD Johnson 1 run (Milo convert) 3:09 Ott- TD Johnson 35 run (Milo convert) 0:57 Fourth Quarter Ott- TD Burris 1 run (Milo conver) 14:25 Ssk- FG Paul McCallum 28 6:37 Saskatchewan1 9 0 3 — 13 Ottawa 14 0 14 7 — 35 Attendance — 24,468. at Ottawa.

WEEK 10 Bye: B.C. Friday’s result Edmonton 38 Toronto 15 Thursday’s result Montreal 26 Hamilton 23 Saturday’s game Calgary 36 Winnipeg 6 Sunday’s game Ottawa 35 Saskatchewan 13 WEEK 11 Bye: Ottawa Thursday, Sept. 3 B.C. at Montreal, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 6 Winnipeg at Saskatchewan, 2 p.m. Monday, Sept. 7 Toronto at Hamilton, 11 a.m. Edmonton at Calgary, 2:30 p.m.

Stampeders 36, Blue Bombers 8 First Quarter Cal- TD Tory Harrison 7 pass from Bo Levi Mitchell (Mitchell to Eric Rodgers for two-point convert) 7:37 Wpg- FG Lirim Harjullahu 32 0:00 Second Quarter No scoring Third Quarter Cal- TD Jamar Wall 29 interception return (Rene Paredes convert) 13:50 Cal- TD Bryant Moniz 1 run (Mitchell to Jeff Fuller for two-point convert) 9:26 Wpg- FG Hajrullahu 36 4:37 Fourth Quarter Cal- Fuller 23 pass from Mitchell (Paredes convert) 14:04 Cal- FG Paredes 27 8:44 Wpg- Safety Cal- FG Paredes 12 0:27 Calgary 8 0 15 13 — 36 Winnipeg 3 0 3 2 — 6 Attendance — 27,148 at Winnipeg.

TEAM STATISTICS Sask Ott First downs 17 24 Yards rushing 69 108 Yards passing 233 269 Total offence 302 377 Team losses 75 26 Net offence 227 351 Passes made-tried 18-28 19-33 Total return yards 12 7 Interceptions-yards by 1-2 1-8 Fumbles-lost 2-2 2-2 Sacks by 0 10 Punts-average 8-48.0 7-40.1 Penalties-yards 18-135 14-125 Time of possession 31:48 28:12 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing — Sask: Sunseri 2-33, Smith 4-25, Messam 3-6, Miller 2-4, Demski 2-1; Ott: Johnson 12-92, Jackson 1-12, Burris 3-4. Receiving — Sask: Dressler 3-86, Roosevelt 4-46, Carroll 3-33, Smith 3-33, Bagg 3-16, Miller 1-14, Demski 1-5; Ott: Jackson 5-77, Price 2-51, Sinopoli 4-43, Johnson 3-25, Williams 2-22, Ellingson 1-19, Macdonell 1-19, Lavoie 1-13. Passing — Sask: Sunseri 12-18, 165 yards, 0 TDs, 0 ints, Smith 6-10-68-1-1; Cal: Burris 19-33-269-1-1.

TEAM STATISTICS First downs Yards rushing Yards passing Total offence Team losses Net offence Passes made-tried Total return yards Interceptions-yards by Fumbles-lost Sacks by Punts-average Penalties-yards Time of possession

Canadian Football League Scoring Leaders TD C FG S Pt J.Medlock, Ham 0 33 19 4 94 G.Shaw, Edm 0 19 21 8 90 B.Bede, Mtl 0 11 22 6 83 R. Paredesm Cgy 0 12 18 4 70 R.Leone, BC 0 12 15 6 63 L. Hajrullahu, Wpg 0 9 16 5 62 P.McCallum, Sask 0 10 16 1 59 R.Pfeffer, Tor 0 11 12 2 49 x-E.Rogers, Cgy 7 3 0 0 46 D.Alvarado, Ott 0 4 11 0 37 T.Gurley, Tor 6 0 0 0 36 A.Harris, BC 6 0 0 0 36 x-Je.Johnson, Ott 6 2 0 0 32

Saturday’s summary

Cal 23 120 331 395 56 395 28-21 226 2-79 1-1 5 6-41.8 14-107 29:51

Wpg 10 74 101 136 39 136 25-13 156 1-13 0-0 3 10-47.6 16-129 30:09

Tuesday

● WHL: Red Deer Rebels training camp at the Centrium — Main camp 8-8:45 a.m. and 9-9:45 a.m.; rookies 10-11:30 a.m.; pro skate noon-1:30 p.m.; main camp 4:30-6 p.m.

Baltimore 000 000 000 — 0 3 1 Texas 201 001 02x — 6 11 0 Mi.Gonzalez, Jas.Garcia (6), McFarland (6), Britton (8) and Wieters; D.Holland and Gimenez. W—D. Holland 2-1. L—Mi.Gonzalez 9-11.

Football GP 9 9 9 9

Today

● WHL: Red Deer Rebels training camp at the Centrium — Main camp 8-8:45 a.m.; rookies 9-10:30 a.m.; main camp 10:45-11:30 a.m.; pro skate noon-1:30 p.m.; rookies 3-4:30 p.m.; main camp 5-6:30 p.m. ● Junior golf: McLennan Ross Junior Tour championship at Wolf Creek. ● College men’s hockey: RDC Kings training camp, 3 p.m. start, Penhold Regional Multiplex.

B.Banks, Ham V.Hazelton, Tor Ke.Lawrence, Edm K.Stafford, Edm x-C.Marshall, Wpg x-A.Collie, BC x-K.Elliott, Tor

5 5 5 5 4 4 4

0 0 0 0 4 2 2

0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0

National Football League AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct Buffalo 2 1 0 .667 New England 2 1 0 .667 N.Y. Jets 2 1 0 .667 Miami 1 2 0 .333 South W L T Pct Houston 2 1 0 .667 Indianapolis 1 2 0 .333 Jacksonville 1 2 0 .333 Tennessee 1 2 0 .333 North W L T Pct Cincinnati 2 1 0 .667 Baltimore 1 2 0 .333 Cleveland 1 2 0 .333 Pittsburgh 1 3 0 .250 West W L T Pct Denver 3 0 0 1.000 Kansas City 3 0 0 1.000 San Diego 2 1 0 .667 Oakland 1 2 0 .333

30 30 30 30 28 26 26

PF 78 54 61 53

PA 54 62 63 67

PF 60 45 52 61

PA 37 73 65 79

PF 55 60 58 67

PA 45 98 38 99

PF 55 82 54 53

PA 42 42 42 53

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Philadelphia 3 0 0 1.000 115 Washington 3 0 0 1.000 72 N.Y. Giants 1 2 0 .333 50 Dallas 0 3 0 .000 27 South W L T Pct PF Carolina 2 1 0 .667 72 Atlanta 1 2 0 .333 62 Tampa Bay 1 2 0 .333 48 New Orleans 0 3 0 .000 64 North W L T Pct PF Minnesota 4 0 0 1.000 88 Chicago 2 1 0 .667 60 Detroit 2 1 0 .667 62 Green Bay 1 2 0 .333 67 West W L T Pct PF San Francisco 1 2 0 .333 45 Seattle 1 2 0 .333 49 Arizona 1 2 0 .333 68 St. Louis 0 3 0 .000 31

PA 53 47 63 68 PA 71 67 68 83 PA 45 42 41 74 PA 48 51 79 69

Saturday’s Games Buffalo 43, Pittsburgh 19 Minnesota 28, Dallas 14 Cleveland 31, Tampa Bay 7 Miami 13, Atlanta 9 N.Y. Jets 28, N.Y. Giants 18 Cincinnati 21, Chicago 10 Washington 31, Baltimore 13 Seattle 16, San Diego 15 Philadelphia 39, Green Bay 26 Indianapolis 24, St. Louis 14 Denver 19, San Francisco 12 Sunday’s Games Houston 27, New Orleans 13 Arizona 30, Oakland 23

Wednesday

● WHL: Red Deer Rebels training camp at the Centrium — Team Black pre-game skate 8:30-9:15 a.m.; Team White pregame skate 9:30-10:15 a.m.; Black vs. White game, 7 p.m.

Friday

● High school football: Lacombe Rams at Lindsay Thurber Raiders, 4:30 p.m., Great Chief Park; Hunting Hills Lightning at Notre Dame Cougars, 7:30 p.m., Great Chief Park. ● Midget AAA hockey: Red Deer Optimist Chiefs tryouts, 5-6:30 p.m., Arena.

Sunday

● Midget AAA hockey: Red Deer Optimist Chiefs tryouts, 2:45-6:15 p.m., Arena.

Golf The Barclays Sunday At Plainfield Country Club Edison, N.J. Purse: $8.25 million Yardage: 7,012; Par: 70 Final Jason Day, $1,485,000 Henrik Stenson, $891,000 Bubba Watson, $561,000 Zac Blair, $363,000 Zach Johnson, $363,000 Sangmoon Bae, $276,375 Ryan Palmer, $276,375 Dan Summerhays, $276,375 Jason Bohn, $231,000 Dustin Johnson, $231,000 Jim Furyk, $198,000 Bryce Molder, $198,000 Steven Bowditch, $159,500 Jim Herman, $159,500 Hideki Matsuyama, $159,500 Tony Finau, $127,875 Spencer Levin, $127,875 Justin Rose, $127,875 Justin Thomas, $127,875 Kevin Kisner, $96,113 Russell Knox, $96,113 Kevin Na, $96,113 Pat Perez, $96,113 Kevin Chappell, $66,825 Luke Donald, $66,825 Carlos Ortiz, $66,825 Rory Sabbatini, $66,825 Brendon Todd, $66,825 Mark Wilson, $66,825 Jason Gore, $46,933 Brian Harman, $46,933 Webb Simpson, $46,933 Jason Dufner, $46,933 Harris English, $46,933 Danny Lee, $46,933 George McNeill, $46,933 Cameron Tringale, $46,933 Camilo Villegas, $46,933 Paul Casey, $33,000 Stewart Cink, $33,000 Morgan Hoffmann, $33,000 Matt Kuchar, $33,000 Shawn Stefani, $33,000 Robert Streb, $33,000 David Hearn, $24,156 J.J. Henry, $24,156 Sean O’Hair, $24,156 John Senden, $24,156 Johnson Wagner, $24,156 Phil Mickelson, $20,295 Scott Pinckney, $20,295 Hudson Swafford, $20,295 Bill Haas, $19,008 Matt Jones, $19,008 Troy Merritt, $19,008 Kevin Streelman, $19,008 Nick Taylor, $19,008 James Hahn, $18,233 J.B. Holmes, $18,233 Charles Howell III, $18,233 Lee Westwood, $18,233 Ken Duke, $17,573 Charley Hoffman, $17,573 Scott Piercy, $17,573 Patrick Reed, $17,573 Ryo Ishikawa, $17,078 Vijay Singh, $17,078 Ben Martin, $16,830 Jeff Overton, $16,583 Jimmy Walker, $16,583 Fabian Gomez, $16,335 Russell Henley, $16,170

68-68-63-62 68-66-67-66 65-68-67-69 69-68-67-66 69-65-67-69 69-67-63-72 69-67-65-70 67-70-68-66 71-64-72-65 70-70-67-65 68-69-69-67 66-71-67-69 71-67-72-64 69-69-69-67 69-69-67-69 65-69-71-70 65-71-67-72 77-65-63-70 71-69-68-67 67-71-65-73 66-71-67-72 69-69-67-71 68-69-70-69 72-68-70-67 73-68-65-71 73-68-62-74 71-70-67-69 70-70-66-71 72-68-69-68 71-69-70-68 71-68-71-68 71-68-73-66 66-68-69-75 74-68-66-70 66-71-71-70 71-70-68-69 66-71-69-72 65-70-70-73 66-76-69-68 67-73-67-72 70-68-70-71 71-70-66-72 71-67-70-71 68-68-70-73 70-69-73-68 70-72-69-69 68-68-70-74 69-70-74-67 67-71-73-69 68-71-69-73 70-71-69-71 68-68-71-74 71-70-67-74 67-72-72-71 71-71-69-71 70-71-70-71 67-73-69-73 69-72-68-74 70-71-73-69 70-69-71-73 68-73-73-69 71-70-68-75 69-71-72-72 73-69-68-74 68-69-75-72 68-74-68-75 70-70-72-73 69-70-72-75 69-72-71-75 72-69-71-75 71-71-69-78 73-69-76-72

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

261 267 269 270 270 271 271 271 272 272 273 273 274 274 274 275 275 275 275 276 276 276 276 277 277 277 277 277 277 278 278 278 278 278 278 278 278 278 279 279 279 279 279 279 280 280 280 280 280 281 281 281 282 282 282 282 282 283 283 283 283 284 284 284 284 285 285 286 287 287 289 290

Yokohama Tire LPGA Classic Sunday At RTJ Golf Trail (Capitol Hill-The Senator) Prattville, Ala. Purse: $1.3 million Yardage: 6,599; Par: 72 Final a-amateur Kris Tamulis, $195,000 71-68-67-65 — Yani Tseng, $103,575 70-64-71-67 — Austin Ernst, $103,575 70-65-68-69 — Sydnee Michaels, $60,800 67-70-70-67 — Lexi Thompson, $60,800 69-67-69-69 — Stacy Lewis, $40,753 70-68-72-66 — Jaye Marie Green, $40,753 71-67-71-67 — Wei-Ling Hsu, $32,537 69-70-74-64 — Nannette Hill, $26,840 71-70-69-68 — Julieta Granada, $26,840 68-68-71-71 —

271 272 272 274 274 276 276 277 278 278

Sei Young Kim, $26,840 69-70-67-72 — 278 Alena Sharp, $23,005 71-72-69-67 — 279 Shanshan Feng, $18,273 72-70-70-68 — 280 Hyo Joo Kim, $18,273 68-72-72-68 — 280 Hee Young Park, $18,273 73-69-69-69 — 280 Brooke M. Henderson, $18,27371-70-70-69— 280 Xi Yu Lin, $18,273 70-71-68-71 — 280 Tiffany Joh, $18,273 67-70-71-72 — 280 Brittany Lang, $18,273 65-73-69-73 — 280 Ariya Jutanugarn, $14,592 68-73-73-67 — 281 Angela Stanford, $14,592 72-71-69-69 — 281 Jing Yan, $14,592 72-70-68-71 — 281 Brittany Lincicome, $12,335 74-69-73-66 — 282 Jodi Ewart Shadoff, $12,335 73-68-73-68 — 282 Sarah Jane Smith, $12,335 73-73-66-70 — 282 Cydney Clanton, $12,335 72-67-73-70 — 282 Anna Nordqvist, $12,335 72-70-69-71 — 282 Minjee Lee, $12,335 72-70-69-71 — 282 Min Lee, $9,728 74-72-69-68 — 283 Kim Kaufman, $9,728 71-75-69-68 — 283 Candie Kung, $9,728 69-73-71-70 — 283 Christina Kim, $9,728 72-69-71-71 — 283 Ryann O’Toole, $9,728 67-71-73-72 — 283 Sadena A Parks, $9,728 71-69-69-74 — 283 Jee Young Lee, $7,603 74-70-73-67 — 284 Victoria Elizabeth, $7,603 71-73-71-69 — 284 Sakura Yokomine, $7,603 71-68-75-70 — 284 Laetitia Beck, $7,603 73-73-67-71 — 284 Haru Nomura, $7,603 72-69-71-72 — 284 Mi Hyang Lee, $7,603 71-69-72-72 — 284 Sophia Popov, $5,841 74-72-73-66 — 285 Brooke Pancake, $5,841 72-72-72-69 — 285 Moriya Jutanugarn, $5,841 73-71-71-70 — 285 Giulia Sergas, $5,841 72-72-70-71 — 285 Caroline Masson, $5,841 73-73-67-72 — 285 Ally McDonald, $5,841 70-72-70-73 — 285 Kelly Tan, $5,841 72-68-72-73 — 285 Felicity Johnson, $4,798 74-68-75-69 — 286 a-Emma Talley 74-71-71-70 — 286 Yueer Cindy Feng, $4,798 72-73-71-70 — 286 Chella Choi, $4,798 74-70-71-71 — 286 Nontaya Srisawang, $4,075 72-74-72-69 — 287 Ji Young Oh, $4,075 70-75-72-70 — 287 Mina Harigae, $4,075 72-73-71-71 — 287 Jeong Eun Lee, $4,075 72-73-70-72 — 287 P.K. Kongkraphan, $4,075 74-70-70-73 — 287 Min Seo Kwak, $4,075 71-72-71-73 — 287 Jackie Stoelting, $4,075 69-72-72-74 — 287 Thidapa Suwannapura, $3,484 72-74-73-69 — 288 Ashleigh Simon, $3,484 71-70-76-71 — 288 Simin Feng, $3,287 68-72-76-73 — 289 Dori Carter, $3,155 70-76-75-69 — 290 Dewi Claire Schreefel, $3,155 72-72-75-71 — 290 Carlie Yadloczky, $3,155 69-74-70-77 — 290 Jane Rah, $2,991 71-74-74-72 — 291 Haeji Kang, $2,991 72-74-70-75 — 291 Belen Mozo, $2,859 74-72-75-71 — 292 Paula Reto, $2,859 76-69-71-76 — 292 Emma de Groot, $2,695 73-73-75-72 — 293 Kelly W Shon, $2,695 73-73-72-75 — 293 a-Janie Jackson 69-75-74-75 — 293 Karlin Beck, $2,695 72-70-75-76 — 293 Katherine Kirk, $2,597 69-77-73-76 — 295 Lisa Ferrero, $2,563 73-72-74-77 — 296 Ashli Bunch, $2,530 74-72-76-77 — 299 Dick’s Sporting Goods Open Sunday At En-Joie Golf Club Endicott, N.Y. Purse: $1.9 million Yardage: 6,969; Par: 72 Final Jeff Maggert, $285,000 Paul Goydos, $167,200 David Frost, $96,900 Corey Pavin, $96,900 Peter Senior, $96,900 Jerry Smith, $96,900 Ian Woosnam, $96,900 Scott Dunlap, $52,250 Bob Friend, $52,250 John Huston, $52,250 Larry Mize, $52,250 Michael Allen, $36,480 Stephen Ames, $36,480 Joe Durant, $36,480 Lee Janzen, $36,480 Rod Spittle, $36,480 Jose Coceres, $28,500 Fred Funk, $28,500 Kevin Sutherland, $28,500 Brad Bryant, $21,692 Bernhard Langer, $21,692 Lance Ten Broeck, $21,692 Duffy Waldorf, $21,692 Scott McCarron, $21,692 Willie Wood, $21,692

68-68-66 66-70-68 71-71-64 71-66-69 68-73-65 71-68-67 67-69-70 71-68-68 68-70-69 67-68-72 72-67-68 69-73-66 72-64-72 74-66-68 69-69-70 68-66-74 70-68-71 72-70-67 69-71-69 71-68-71 71-71-68 73-69-68 72-68-70 71-64-75 68-69-73

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

202 204 206 206 206 206 206 207 207 207 207 208 208 208 208 208 209 209 209 210 210 210 210 210 210

Soccer Major League Soccer EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts D.C. United 13 10 5 44 New York 12 7 6 42 Columbus 11 8 8 41 Toronto FC 11 10 4 37 New England 10 9 7 37 Orlando City 7 12 8 29 Montreal 8 11 4 28 New York City FC 7 13 7 28 Chicago 7 13 6 27 Philadelphia 7 14 6 27

GF 35 43 45 44 35 33 30 38 31 33

GA 34 28 44 42 36 47 34 46 38 44

WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Los Angeles 13 8 7 46 49 33 Vancouver 14 10 3 45 38 28 FC Dallas 12 8 5 41 35 30 Sporting Kansas City11 7 7 40 40 35 Portland 11 9 7 40 29 32 Seattle 12 13 2 38 32 30 San Jose 11 10 5 38 32 29 Houston 9 10 8 35 35 34 Colorado 8 9 9 33 25 27 Real Salt Lake 8 11 8 32 29 40 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday’s Games Toronto FC 2, Montreal 1 Columbus 2, New York City FC 1 New England 1, Philadelphia 0 Orlando City 1, Chicago 1, tie Colorado 2, Sporting Kansas City 1 Houston 2, Vancouver 0 FC Dallas 2, Real Salt Lake 0 Sunday’s Games Seattle 2, Portland 1 New York 3, D.C. United 0 Saturday, Sept. 5 Orlando City at New England, 5:30 p.m. Chicago at Montreal, 6 p.m. Toronto FC at Seattle, 8 p.m. Philadelphia at San Jose, 8:30 p.m.

English Premier League GP W D L GF GA Pts Manchester City 4 4 0 0 10 0 12 Crystal Palace 4 3 0 1 8 5 9 Leicester City 4 2 2 0 8 5 8 Swansea 4 2 2 0 7 4 8 Man. United 4 2 1 1 3 2 7 Arsenal 4 2 1 1 3 3 7 Liverpool 4 2 1 1 2 3 7 West Ham 4 2 0 2 9 6 6 Everton 4 1 2 1 5 4 5 Southampton 4 1 2 1 5 5 5 Bournemouth 4 1 1 2 5 6 4 Aston Villa 4 1 1 2 4 5 4 Chelsea 4 1 1 2 6 9 4 Norwich 4 1 1 2 5 8 4 West Brom 4 1 1 2 3 6 4 Tottenham 4 0 3 1 3 4 3 Watford 4 0 3 1 2 4 3 Stoke 4 0 2 2 3 5 2 Newcastle 4 0 2 2 2 5 2 Sunderland 4 0 2 2 6 10 2 Saturday, Aug. 29 Newcastle 0, Arsenal 1 Aston Villa 2, Sunderland 2 Bournemouth 1, Leicester City 1 Chelsea 1, Crystal Palace 2 Liverpool 0, West Ham 3 Manchester City 2, Watford 0 Stoke 0, West Brom 1 Tottenham 0, Everton 0 Sunday, Aug. 30 Southampton 3, Norwich 0 Swansea 2, Manchester United 1 Saturday, Sept. 12 Everton vs. Chelsea, 1145 GMT Arsenal vs. Stoke, 1400 GMT Crystal Palace vs. Manchester City, 1400 GMT Norwich vs. Bournemouth, 1400 GMT Watford vs. Swansea, 1400 GMT West Brom vs. Southampton, 1400 GMT Manchester United vs. Liverpool, 1630 GMT

Sunday, Sept. 6 FC Dallas at Columbus, 5 p.m.

Sunday, Sept. 13 Sunderland vs. Tottenham, 1230 GMT Leicester City vs. Aston Villa, 1500 GMT

East, TE Adam Schiltz, G Marcus Reed, OT Anthony Dima, CBs Kenneth Penny and Aaron Hester, OL Charles Tuaau, DE Vaughn Martin and WRs Kenny Cook, Jeret Smith and L’Damian Washington. MIAMI DOLPHINS — Released C J.D. Walton, TEs Gerell Robinson, DT Calvin Barnett, G Bryant Browning, WRs LaRon Byrd, Tyler McDonald and Kevin Cone, DE Ray Drew, DE Kendall Montgomery, CB Sammy Seamster and S Phillip Thomas. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Released RB Joe Banyard, TE Brandon Bostick, CBs Jalil carter and Justin Coleman, WRs DaVaris Daniels and Jordan Leslie, T Sephen Goodin, LB Josh Kaddu, DE Caesar Rayford, DT Chrishon Rose, CB DeMarcus Van Dyke.

NEW YORK JETS — Waived CB/KR Javier Arenas, OL James Brewer, C Dalton Freeman, LB Bryan Johnson, TE Matt LaCosse, CBs Curtis Brown and Keith Lewis and WRs DeVier Posey, T.J. Graham, Saalim Hakim, Austin Hill and Jonathon Rumph. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Released CB Marc Anthony; S Brandan Bishop; OL Mike Coccia, Kevin Graf and Jared Wheeler; DEs Alfy Hill and Jeremy Towns; WRs Mike Johnson, G.J. Kinne and Josh Reese; LB Dasman McCullum; and Justin Tukes. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Released CB Manny Asprilla, DL Cameron Botticelli, WR Titus Davis, RB Jahwan Edwards, LB Curtis Grant, T Forrestal Hickman, TE David Paulson, QB Chase Rettig, DL Luther Robinson and TE Logan Stokes. Waived/ injured LB Brock Hekking.

Transactions Sunday’s Sports Transactions BASEBALL American League MINNESOTA TWINS — Sent OF Aaron Hicks to Rochester (IL) for a rehab assignment. SEATTLE MARINERS — Optioned LHP Mike Montgomery to Tacoma (PCL). Recalled RHP Mayckol Guaipe to Tacoma. TEXAS RANGERS — Sent C Carlos Corporan to Round Rock (PCL) for a rehab assignment. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Traded RHP Addison Reed to the N.Y. Mets for RHPs Miller Diaz and Matt Koch. Assigned Diaz to Visalia (Cal) and Koch to Mobile (SL). Optioned RHP Jhoulys Chacin and

LHP Andrew Chafin to Reno (PCL). Called up RHPs Allen Webster and A.J. Schugel from Reno (PCL) and RHP Silvino Bracho from Mobile (SL). NEW YORK METS — Recalled INF Wilfredo Tovar from Las Vegas (PCL). Optioned RHP Logan Verrett to Las Vegas (PCL). SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Sent OF Angel Pagan to San Jose (Cal) for a rehab assignment. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Sent 2B Dan Uggla to Hagerstown (SAL) for a rehab assignment. FOOTBALL National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS — Waived LB Boris Anyama, WR Marquez Clark, RB Michael Ford, WR John Harris, DT Warren Herring, NT Derrick Hopkins, OT Matt Huffer, CB Michael Lee, G Eric Lefeld, LB

Terrell Manning, DE Sam Meredith, and C Valerian Ume-Ezeoke. Placed T Lamar Holmes on the PUP list. Released TE Mickey Shuler. CAROLINA PANTHERS — Terminated the contract of OT Tony Hills. Waived DE Steve Miller, LB Kevin Reddick, TE Dallas Walker, FB Lee Ward, P Matt Wile and WRs Paul Browning and Avius Capers. CHICAGO BEARS — Terminated the contracts of CB Tim Jennings and RB Daniel Thomas. Placed S Ryan Mundy on injured reserve and WR Kevin White on the reserve/PUP list. Waived DB Malcolm Bronson, TEs Kevin Greene and Chris Pantale, T Cameron Jefferson, WR Jeremy Kelley, CB Al Louis-Jean, LS Rick Lovato, WR Levi Norwood and DE Olsen Pierre. Waived/injured WR John Chiles. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Waived LS Andrew


RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015 B5

Day does it again with runaway win PGA TOUR BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS EDISON, N.J. — The toughest challenge Jason Day faced Sunday at The Barclays was convincing his peers that golf really isn’t this easy. He’s just making it look that way. Fresh off his first major at the PGA Championship, the 27-year-old Australian powered and putted his way to another blowout against a world-class field, capping off an explosive weekend at Plainfield with an 8-under 62 for a six-shot victory over Henrik Stenson. It was his third victory in his last four starts dating to another close call at the British Open, where he left a 30-foot birdie putt short on the final hole at St. Andrews and missed out on a playoff by one shot. In his mind, that’s where it all changed. “Ever since then, I just felt a lot more calm on the golf course,” he said. “I felt like it was my time. Mentally I felt like, ’You paid your dues, now it’s time to go out and win tournaments.’ I’m not going to say in the future it’s going to be like this all the time, because it’s very difficult to win.” Day shot 63-62 on the weekend and finished at 19-under 261. He won two weeks ago at Whistling Straits by three shots over Jordan Spieth with a record score to par at 20-under 268. And the week after St. Andrews, he won the Canadian Open by one shot over Bubba Watson at 17-under 271. “Jason is full of confidence, just heating it up, making birdies,” said Stenson, who pulled within two shots at one point and closed with a 66. “It would have taken something really special to challenge him today the way he’s playing at the moment.” Watson, who birdied the 18th hole for a 69 to finish third, was standing on the 15th hole when he said he turned to caddie Ted Scott and told him, “I’m

Maggert wins fourth of the year to take Schwab Cup lead CHAMPIONS TOUR BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ENDICOTT, N.Y. — Jeff Maggert won the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open on Sunday for his fourth Champions Tour victory of the year, closing with a 6-under 66 to beat Paul Goydos by two strokes. Maggert took the lead in the Charles Schwab Cup standings, 119 points ahead of Colin Montgomerie. Montgomerie skipped the tournament because of commitments in Europe. Maggert finished at 14-under 202 at En-Joie Golf Club. He won the Regions Tradition in May and the U.S. Senior Open in July, both major championships, and took the Shaw Charity Classic three weeks ago in Canada. The Texan’s second straight 68 on Saturday put him in good position for another win, and he took advantage in a big way with six birdies in a bogeyfree round. Goydos shot a 68. Corey Pavin (69), David Frost (64), Peter Senior (65), Jerry Smith (67) and Ian Woosnam (70) tied for third at 10 under. Bernhard Langer, the winner last year and third in the Schwab Cup, failed to earn any points. He tied for 20th at 6 under after a 68. The victory was worth $285,000 and boosted the 51-year-old Maggert’s earnings for the year to $2,094,976. Second-round leader Rod Spittle (74) of Canada, bidding for his second career victory, couldn’t keep the magic going that had placed him atop the leaderboard after rounds of 68 and 66. Fifty-year-old Scott McCarron (75), who had a 64 on the second round and was tied for second with John Huston to start the day, faltered in his fourth Champions Tour event. He made only two birdies and a triple-bogey 7 at the 15th hole put a damper on his day. As usual, the ninth edition of this tournament came down to the closing holes.

Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jason Day, of Australia, celebrates on the 18th green after winning The Barclays golf tournament Sunday, in Edison, N.J. Day finished 19 under with a 261 total. playing good the last few months, and Jason Day is playing a thousand times better.” Better than anyone? The victory, his fourth on the PGA Tour this year, moved him to No. 1 in the FedEx Cup and assures that Day will be among the top five who have a clear shot at the $10 million bonus at the Tour Championship. More compelling is another race to No. 1. Day remains at No. 3 in the world, but now enters the picture with Spieth and Rory McIlroy for golf supremacy. All three will have a mathematical chance to get to No. 1 at the Deutsche Bank Championship next week at the TPC Boston. As long as he has dreamed of being

No. 1, Day is trying to forget about it. “Right now I’m trying to focus on getting some rest and going into next week, trying to play that golf course, which I absolutely love,” he said. “All positive stuff.” Stenson gave it a good shot. He made birdies on the 13th and 14th holes to get within two shots, and Day hit a tee shot well to the right in the trees in the group behind on No. 13. There was just enough of an opening for Day to pound a gap wedge over the trees and onto the green, and then he effectively ended the tournament. He holed a 30-foot birdie across the green on the par-3 14th, and rolled in a birdie from 35 feet on the 15th to stretch his lead to five shots. The top 100 in the FedEx Cup ad-

Tamulis gets long awaited first LPGA win in Alabama BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PRATTVILLE, Ala. — Kris Tamulis counted down from 29 to 1 during her final-day trek at the Yokohama Tire LPGA Classic. One was definitely the most important number for the 34-year-old player. Tamulis played 29 holes Sunday in the twice-delayed tournament before securing victory No. 1 in the 186th attempt of her LPGA Tour career. She finished a third-round 67 and closed with a 65 to beat Yani Tseng and Austin Ernst by a stroke. The former Florida State player had a 17-under 271 total on The Senator Course and didn’t show the strain of being in contention with so little margin for error. “It was amazing,” Tamulis said. “I was definitely not expecting this today.” Tseng had rounds of 71 and 67, and Ernst shot 68-69 with the weather clearing up after delays totalling nearly 7 hours the previous two days. Both parred the final hole with a chance to force a playoff. Hamilton’s Alena Sharp finished in 12th place at 9 under while Brooke Henderson of Smiths Falls, Ont., tied for 13th at 8 under. Tamulis birdied four of the first six holes in the final round before finally making her only bogey of the last three rounds. She hadn’t finished better than fourth on the tour. Tamulis was all smiles at the end. She made a short birdie putt on the 17th hole, cheerfully telling two fans “28 of 29 completed today.” Then, a long birdie putt, hit seemingly perfectly on line, stopped inches shy of the final hole. Still smiling, she told her caddie Thomas Frank the ball needed just “a little more oomph,” then chatted with the teenager carrying the score placard. Frank’s Houston home was destroyed in a fire in April. Tamulis had about 45 minutes to sweat the win out. Tseng and Ernst both had makeable birdie putts on 18, on opposite sides of the pin. Ernst’s attempt went to the left. Tseng came closer, falling to her knees when her putt lipped out. “When they both missed I was just shocked,” said Tamulis, who chatted with volunteers and had a snack in air-

Yani Tseng reacts after missing a birdie putt on the 18th green that would have tied her for the lead and force a playoff during the Yokohama Tire LPGA Classic, Sunday, in Prattville, Ala. Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

conditioned comfort instead of watching or practicing for a possible playoff. A friend kept her updated. Tamulis had been fourth last year in Prattville and earlier this year at the Meijer LPGA Classic. She didn’t make the cut at last week’s Canadian Pacific Women’s Open after posting two 73 rounds. Her rounds in Alabama steadily improved from 71 to 68 to 67 and finally 65. It was her first win since Florida State but she had a pair of runners-up finishes in 2004 on the Symetra Tour. Tamulis said she was trying to ignore the leaderboard, focusing instead on that countdown from 29 holes with playing partners Sei Young Kim and Wei-Ling Hsu. “The last time I actually saw where it was at was by accident on No. 9,” she said. “Then I felt really good and I was just out there trying to have a good time. My goal was to come in here have a decent week, play well and secure my spots in Asia.” She also wanted to ensure she made

Hoyer leads Texans past Saints in preseason NFL BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TEXANS 27 SAINTS 13 NEW ORLEANS — Brian Hoyer led scoring drives on two of his first three series since being named Houston’s starting quarterback, and the Texans went on to a 27-13 preseason victory over the New Orleans Saints on Sunday. All three Texans quarterbacks led scoring drives. Ryan Mallett, who was upset this past week upon learning he’d be the backup, threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to Jaelen Strong. In the fourth quarter, Tom Savage hit

vance to the next playoff event at the TPC Boston. PGA Tour rookie Zac Blair was among eight players who played their way into the top 100, and he did it in a big way. He closed with a 66 and tied for fourth, moving him from No. 106 to No. 35. Camilo Villegas at No. 123 appeared to be playing his way out of another week when he made three straight bogeys early on the back nine. Facing elimination if he failed to make par on the 18th, he got up-and-down by making a par putt from just inside 10 feet. “As bad as I putted today, I think I made the hardest putt today,” Villegas said. The Barclays did not end well for Stewart Cink and Canadian Nick Taylor. Cink needed a par on the final hole to advance, pulled his tee shot left into high grass and missed a 15-foot par putt for a 72. He finished at No. 102 in the FedEx Cup. Taylor, of Abbotsford, B.C., took a double bogey on the 14th hole and then missed a 7-foot birdie putt on the final hole that would have sent him to Boston. David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., was the top Canadian after shooting 2-under 68 to finish in a tie for 45th place. Day has no such worries. He is in free flight, even though his week began with some doubt. He was moving a box from under his motor home when he felt a twinge in his back, and Day pulled out of the pro-am to rest his back and have tests to check on the structural being of his back. He still felt some pain on Thursday, but the heat helped over the weekend. And nothing was hotter than his putter. He began the back nine with a 30-foot birdie putt on No. 10 to keep his margin, and it never looked as though anyone else was going to win. “It’s been a special summer for me, and it’s not over,” Day said. “To be able to play the way I did over the weekend is fantastic. Today was just phenomenal golf.”

Chandler Worthy for a 6-yard score. Hoyer was 7 of 11 for 82 yards. Mallett 9 of 17 for 77 yards, and Savage 5 of 7 for 58 yards. The Saints (0-3) outgained the Texans (2-1), 393 yards to 292 yards, with New Orleans reserve running back Edwin Baker scoring on a 45-yard run. New Orleans’ first two trips inside Houston’s 20 produced only three points. The Saints also committed 11 penalties for 148 yards. Drew Brees marched the Saints 75 yards for a field goal on his lone series, completing his first four passes for 40 yards before his last two fell incomplete inside the 20. CARDINALS 30, RAIDERS 23 OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Marion Grice scored on an 11-yard run with 31

seconds left and Arizona beat Oakland in a game where both first-team offences struggled. The Raiders (1-2) got five field goals from Sebastian Janikowski in the first half but didn’t get into the end zone until Matt McGloin led an 83-yard drive late in the fourth quarter. He capped it with a 4-yard TD pass to Kris Durham with 2:18 left and Oakland tied it when McGloin connected with Brice Butler on the 2-point conversion. Logan Thomas answered by leading the winning drive with help from a 38-yard pass to Ifeanyi Momah. Carson Palmer threw two interceptions and was sacked three times in a rough first half for the Cardinals (1-2).

the field in her hometown of Naples, Florida, for the season finale, the CME Group Tour Championship. Her expression matched the smiley face magnet affixed to her visor, given to her a couple of years ago by an elderly scorekeeper in Phoenix. Tseng is a 26-year-old Taiwanese player who ranked No. 1 for 109 weeks early in her career. She came close to snapping an 85-event winless streak dating to the 2012 Kia Classic, making a long birdie putt on No. 16. This was Tseng’s second runner-up finish of the year. “I don’t know where that emotion came from,” she said. “I just feel that I’m so ready to win.” Tseng said she enjoyed feeling “that pressure, that nerves on the last few holes or on the last group.” Ernst was seeking her second tour win. Sydnee Michaels finished with a 67, finishing in a fourth-place tie with 2011 winner Lexi Thompson. Thompson closed with a 69 and was in the 60s all four rounds.

CATALINA SWIM CLUB Red Deer Catalina Swim Club standout Rebecca Smith, one of 10 girls aged 15-18 selected to represent Canada in the world junior championship in Singapore, helped the national squad win three team medals. Smith was a member of the goldmedal winning 4x100 metre mixed relay team and also won silver in the 4x200m free relay and bronze in the 4x100m free relay. She also advanced to the semifinals in the individual 50m freestyle and 50m backstroke events. “This championship was one of the fastest recorded with 53 records broken throughout the week. Many faces seen in the pool in Singapore this week will be definite players in Rio and years to come” says RDCSC coach Mandi Smith. Coach Smith attended the meet as a member of the Swimming Canada Staff.


B6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015

Dixon snatches title from Montoya INDYCAR BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Scott Dixon, of New Zealand, celebrates atop his car after winning the IndyCar Grand Prix of Sonoma auto race and IndyCar championship Sunday, in Sonoma, Calif. to lose. And he did. Team Penske was in trouble from the midway point of the race when Montoya hit teammate Will Power. It sent the Colombian to pit lane for repairs and he was mired in the middle of the pack for the bulk of the race. Although he picked off a few positions, his break came eight laps from the end when Sebastien Bourdais spun Graham Rahal. Needing to get to fifth to win the title, he moved up one spot to seventh when he passed Rahal. He got up to sixth when Bourdais was penalized, then had five laps to close a 3.5-second deficit on Ryan Briscoe to move to fifth. Montoya made a hard charge, ultimately slicing Briscoe’s lead to 1.6 seconds, but he ran out of time to grab that final spot. He was pragmatic after the race.

Tokyo wins Little League title with stunning comeback BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — With more than 42,000 fans cheering against them, the Tokyo players found themselves down eight runs in the first inning of the Little League championship game against Lewisberry, Pennsylvania. That brought out manager Junji Hidaka’s inner Yogi Berra and sparked a record rally that saw the Kitasua Little League pound out 22 hits in an 18-11 comeback victory in a battle of undefeated teams. “I told the players it doesn’t end until it ends,” Hidaka said through a translator. Tokyo responded with seven runs in the second, four in the third inning and five in the sixth. Masafuji Nishijima had four hits and six RBIs, and Shingo Tomita hit two of Tokyo’s five home runs. Tokyo’s third pitcher, Nobuyuki Kawashima, held Lewisberry in check most of the game, giving up just one run and two hits over five innings. “Today my fastball wasn’t going fast enough,” said the 12-year-old, who lived for four years in California, and speaks fluent English. “I knew my breaking ball had to be on the corner, down low, where the batters can’t reach too far or it just gets them offbalance.” It was the 10th title for Japan, second behind Taiwan’s record 17. It’s the third title for the Kitasuna Little League team, which also took home championship pennants in 2001 and 2012. Tokyo had given up a total of 10 runs in its other tournament games, but Lewisberry scored 10 times and sent 14 batters to the plate in the bottom of the first after falling behind 2-0. Lewisberry knocked out starting pitcher Daiki Fukuyama before an out was recorded in the first. Dylan Rodenhaber made his first hit of the tournament count, hitting the ball over the right-field fence for a grand slam. Jaden Henline added a three-run homer, a shot that went deep into the shrubbery in straightaway centre field. The Red Land Little League, which draws players from several central Pennsylvania towns around Lewisberry, scored three more times sending what amounted to a hometown crowd of more than 42,000 fans into a frenzy. Fans of the Lewisberry team helped set a tournament attendance record of 499,964, well over the previous mark of 414,905 set in 2011 when a team from Keystone, Pennsylvania, was in the tournament. Tokyo responded after their manager’s pep talk. Yugo Aoki hit a three-run homer in the top of the second, which was followed with solo shots from twin brothers Kengo and Shingo Tomita. Daiki Fukuyama added a two-run double up the middle to bring the Japanese back within a run. Shingo Tomita tied it at 10 in the third inning with a solo home run to left field. Three batters later, Masafuji Nishijima hit a three-run homer to make it 13-10. “They just put the bat on the ball,” Lewisberry manager Tom Peifer said. “They hit pitches I’ve never seen kids, especially 12-year-olds, hit.”

“It doesn’t matter what happened,” Montoya said. “We had a few ways to win the championship and we just threw it away. We didn’t close it.” His biggest disappoint, it seemed, was from the race being worth double points. It was one of two events this season worth double points — the Indianapolis 500, won by Montoya, was the other. “When you do this and you put double points on the last race, it doesn’t matter what you’ve done all year,” Montoya said. Power, the season champion last year, was devastated for Team Penske. The organization had three shots at the title Sunday as Montoya, Power and Helio Castroneves were among the six drivers mathematically still in contention. “I feel so gutted for the team to not win on a draw there,” said Power, who

complained that race control had too much of an effect on the race with long yellow flag periods. Rahal, who was wrecked last week at Pocono Raceway to have his deficit pushed from nine points to Montoya to 34 headed into the finale, had an off day as he struggled with the handling of his car most of the race. The hit from Bourdais dropped him to an 18th-place finish and he fell from second to fourth in the final standings. “Today was a bad day to have our worst day,” he said. Wilson was honoured before the race with a tribute video, a moment of silence and the playing of “God Save the Queen,” England’s national anthem. Oriol Servia flew in from London overnight Wednesday to drive Wilson’s car, a request made by Wilson’s family. He finished 12th.

Man United loses 2-1 at Swansea exposing problems in attack, goal BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SOCCER

MANCHESTER, England — Manchester United’s early-season problems at both ends of the pitch were exposed in a 2-1 loss at Swansea on Sunday that ended its unbeaten start in the Premier League. On the day Manchester City spent more than 50 million pounds ($77 million) on another attacking player, its cross-town rival again showed a lack of cutting edge up front to turn dominance and good build-up play into goals. United was comfortable and perhaps should have been more than 1-0 ahead, through Juan Mata’s 49thminute strike, when Swansea launched its comeback with two goals in five minutes from Andre Ayew and Bafetimbi Gomis. Gomis’ winner in the 66th minute capped a brilliant, sweeping team move but should have been kept out by goalkeeper Sergio Romero, who failed to stop a low shot at his near post. Romero is only playing because United’s first-choice goalkeeper, David de Gea, isn’t being picked while he is linked with a move to Real Madrid. With Europe’s summer transfer window closing in England on Tuesday, United has two days to resolve its goalkeeper situation and decide whether to sign a new striker to help out Wayne Rooney, who is yet to score in the Premier League since April. “I have enjoyed our football,” United manager Louis van Gaal said, “but you need the result and we lost again.” Swansea has no such problems up front. Gomis, who scored for the fourth straight game this season, and summer signing Ayew have netted all seven of

the team’s goals in the league and that combination is the reason why Swansea is fourth in the standings after four games. United has lost three straight games to Swansea and fell five points behind Man City, which has won all four of its games. In Sunday’s other match, Southampton claimed its first win of the season by beating Norwich 3-0 thanks to Graziano Pelle’s goal and a double from Dusan Tadic. Norwich played with 10 men from the 31st minute, when Steven Whittaker was sent off for two bookings with the score at 0-0. United caused Swansea many problems early in the first half, with Mata shooting wide twice, Rooney misjudging an attempted lob after being played through and Memphis Depay having a free kick saved. The opening goal arrived when left back Luke Shaw’s cross squirmed through to the back post where Mata beat Ashley Williams to the ball and sidefooted a rising shot high into the net. It is only United’s third goal in four games. Swansea manager Garry Monk changed his team’s shape, went to a diamond in midfield, and Ayew inspired the fightback. First he met Gylfi Sigurdsson’s cross with a downward header inside the near post in the 61st, then supplied Gomis with a brilliant outside-of-the-foot pass. The striker got between United’s two centre backs and rolled his finish underneath Romero, who had barely been tested in the opening three games of the season.

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SONOMA, Calif. — A heartbreaking week. A jaw-dropping final few laps. A tiebreaking finale. A familiar face hoisting the championship trophy. Scott Dixon captured his fourth IndyCar championship Sunday by winning the season finale to snatch the title from Juan Pablo Montoya. Montoya led the standings from the season-opener until the final lap of the year. But in a race worth double points, Dixon dominated and overcame a 47-point deficit to tie Montoya in the standings. The title went to the New Zealander based on number of wins: Sunday was Dixon’s third of the season, while Montoya had two. “There was still a chance, and that’s what we were hoping for,” Dixon said. “I still can’t believe it. We were such a long shot.” Dixon and team owner Chip Ganassi celebrated by leaping from the championship stage to crowd surf. It was one of the few uplifting moments at the end of a sombre week following the death of Justin Wilson. Wilson was struck in the head by a piece of debris from another car last Sunday at Pocono Raceway and died a day later from his injuries. Dixon was one of the many supporters who remained in Pennsylvania to stay with Wilson’s family at the hospital. “We all raced with heavy hearts this weekend,” Dixon said. “It’s been a very tough week. It’s such a small community. But Justin would have wanted us to go out and race, and today I gave it my all from when the green flag dropped. Much love to the Wilson family.” The victory was the 100th for Chip Ganassi Racing, while a Team Penske driver failed to win a championship in the finale for the ninth time since 2002. It also marked Chevrolet’s fourth consecutive manufacturer championship since the company returned to IndyCar in 2012. “I’m shocked,” Ganassi said. “We knew we had a car to be at the front, and then a lot of other things had to happen. And they happened.” Indeed, Dixon was third in the standings as he began the race and everyone assumed it was Montoya’s title

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MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

Capturing the colourful scenery Story and Photos by ASHLI BARRETT/Advocate staff Wildfire smoke and hazy conditions drained Central Alberta of colour for the last week, washing out brilliant blue daytime skies and otherwise scenic landscapes. For a few hours on Saturday, however, a total of 14 artists looked to bring a little of that colour and summertime vibrance back as they gathered at the Parkland Garden Centre for the Red Deer Plein Air Paint Out and Wet Painting Sale. The event encouraged artists — some who

travelled from as far away as Calgary — to move outside of the confines of their studios and paint “en plein air,” a French term meaning in the open air. Painting outdoors is a growing trend amongst artists, challenging them to work with constantly changing light, weather and bugs to view nature as it is. Surrounding themselves with the flowers, trees and shrubbery at the garden centre, artists created a number of vibrant and colourful pieces using acrylic, oil and watercolour paints. Red Deerians could watch the artists as they worked, as well as purchase and vote for their favourite artworks towards the end of the event.

ABOVE; Luella Gilchrist sets up her makeshift outdoor studio amongst the various plants and flowers for sale at the garden centre. RIGHT; Wendy Johnsen works on a scenic pathway scene next to a garden during the Plein Air Paint Out and Wet Painting Sale, Saturday at the Parkland Garden Centre.

ABOVE LEFT; Luella Gilchrist uses a pallet knife to create texture on her piece. ABOVE; Local artist Carol Lynn Gilchrist works on a number of watercolour pieces. BELOW RIGHT; A passerby takes pause to admire the artwork of Wendy Johnsen Saturday during the Plein Air Paint Out and Wet Painting Sale Saturday at the Parkland Garden Centre. BELOW LEFT; Julie DeBoer paints a set of wagon wheels atop a hill, surrounded by trees and shrubbery. LEFT; Larry Reese, a local artist and instructor at Red Deer College, works on garden landscape.

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BUSINESS

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MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

Toxic taint TESTS IN ALBERTA INDUSTRIAL HEARTLAND REVEAL AIR-QUALITY CONCERNS BY THE CANADIAN PRESS EDMONTON — New air-quality tests in one of Canada’s largest petrochemical processing regions have revealed more evidence of short-lived but concentrated plumes of toxic chemicals. The tests by a Nobel-prize-winning lab at University of California Irvine echo previous results scientists have recorded for known carcinogens in the area northeast of Edmonton. “It is a snapshot, but it’s no fluke,” said Donald Blake, who heads the lab. Researchers visited what’s called Alberta’s Industrial Heartland — home to more than 40 petrochemical companies — in July 2012. They collected 96 samples of air nearby and in upwind rural areas. The results vary widely, although the majority are well under Alberta’s limits. But for July 8-12 of that year researchers found three days that had brief, dramatic spikes in levels of benzene, a known carcinogen for which there is no safe level. One sample reached 11 parts per billion, one was 24 ppb and a third was 156 ppb. “These are the kinds of numbers we don’t see in Los Angeles,” said Blake. Alberta’s recommended level is nine ppb averaged over an hour. The monitor of air quality in the region reports benzene exceeded that level only once during all of 2012. Blake suggested the short-term spikes may have been lost when averaged over an hour. “If this is something that is blowing at somebody’s house, and they’re getting five to 20 parts per billion of benzene at them all the time ... that starts to worry me.” It’s the third time his lab has come to the Industrial Heartland. Visits in 2008 and 2010 resulted in a peer-reviewed and published study in 2013 that found smog-causing chemicals at levels comparable to — and occasionally many times higher than — some of the world’s largest cities and industrial complexes. At least 10 of the chemicals found in the plumes were either known or suspected carcinogens.

FILE PHOTO BY THE CANADIAN PRESS

A dump truck works near the Syncrude oil sands extraction facility near the town of Fort McMurray. New air-quality tests in one of Canada’s largest petrochemical processing regions have revealed more evidence of spikes in concentrated plumes of toxic chemicals. Researchers also found blood cancers in men in the three counties surrounding the heartland to be consistently higher over the years 1997-2006 than for neighbouring counties. No link was proven. The 2012 results have not been published. They were released to The Canadian Press upon the news agency’s request. Warren Kindzierski, a professor in the University of Alberta’s public Health department, called the results interesting, but said more data is needed to confirm whether transient puffs of tainted air are slipping by monitors. There’s a good statistical chance the high results could be an error, he suggested. “They’ve got some good data here. I think the evidence is not all there yet.” Monitoring plumes is tricky, said Kindzierski, who’s been working with the Fort McKay First Nation near the oilsands to set up a program.

BitGold looks to take gold savings mainstream BY THE CANADIAN PRESS CALGARY — Want to buy gold as a savings alternative? Well, you guessed it, there’s an app for that. Josh Crumb, co-founder of BitGold, says he created the software that automatically links buyers to bullion dealers and storage companies because he wanted to make it easier for people to own gold as a hedge against inflation and as a store of value. “It’s just so much easier, like everything else, to do it from your mobile phone,” said Crumb. The system charges a one per cent fee to exchange cash into gold and back but storage is free. It also allows users to transfer their gold value to a prepaid credit card, so they can actually buy a cup of coffee with their gold holdings, said Crumb. “It gives the ability without having to go to coin shops and shave off some flakes of gold to buy something.” Crumb said he and co-founder Roy Sebag were inspired by the possibilities of Bitcoin, which allows global financial transactions without going through banking systems. Like Bitcoin, BitGold allows free transfers between users, including an international money-transfer option that is in the works. But the key difference, says Crumb, is that Bitcoin will never be a store of value while gold already is. “We said, let’s do everything Bitcoin is promising to do, but let’s actually be able to do it by having a real currency.” The Toronto-based company began offering its service to the public in May and had already racked up more than 168,000 global users by the end of July, with about $7 million in transactions. Crumb said the system should be popular with the fringe gold bugs who foresee the imminent collapse

‘WE SAID, LET’S DO EVERYTHING BITCOIN IS PROMISING TO DO, BUT LET’S ACTUALLY BE ABLE TO DO IT BY HAVING A REAL CURRENCY.’ — JOSH CRUMB CO-FOUNDER OF BITGOLD

of the U.S. dollar and a rise in gold, but he wants to appeal to a wider base who will use it as a form of savings account. “You don’t buy gold to get rich like you’re buying Apple Stock, you buy gold to protect your savings.” Most BitGold customers are in their forties or older, said Crumb, but he is seeing younger buyers who have never bought gold before. “We are expanding the market because we’re taking so much friction out of it.” But many financial advisers disagree that gold should be considered a prudent place to store wealth. “The message of gold as a hedge against inflation is something that people sort of accepted as a given, but I think in the last 20 years it really hasn’t been true,” said Ted Rechtshaffen, president and CEO of TriDelta Financial. He said gold has had volatile swings in value in recent years, while inflation has actually stayed quite low. Rechtshaffen acknowledged that gold could be a good investment in countries where you can’t trust your currency or government, but for Canadians it doesn’t make much sense.

Please see BITGOLD on Page C3

“They’ve been doing it for three or four years and it is not easy.” A spokeswoman for Alberta Environment said air-quality guidelines followed by the Heartland’s monitor are set by a group including the government, environmentalists and industry. The spokeswoman, who was provided with the data from the California lab, declined to comment on its findings. “It would be difficult to provide a comment to this latest data that has not yet been made publicly available or provided to us directly by (the university).” Premier Rachel Notley didn’t hold back when she commented as the NDP environment critic on the same lab’s 2013 paper. “A better response would be to take it very, very seriously and immediately commit to doing a review of the comprehensiveness and efficacy of the airquality testing that’s going on,” she said at the time.

IN

BRIEF Nexen Energy collecting required information to re-start pipelines CALGARY — Nexen Energy says it is “preparing to comply” with requirements from the Alberta Energy Regulator following the agency’s order that the company cease operations of 95 pipelines in the province. A news release Saturday from the company says it’s working to collect the information and documentation the regulator needs, and is looking forward to continuing to work with the regulator to resolve the issue. The regulator issued the order late Friday due to what it called non-compliance surrounding pipeline maintenance and monitoring in its Long Lake oilsands project. On July 15, a pipeline at the project southeast of Fort McMurray, Alta., leaked about five million litres of a mixture of bitumen, produced water and sand into muskeg. Alberta Energy Regulator spokesman Bob Curran said Friday that the shut pipelines carry several products including crude oil, natural gas, salt water, fresh water and emulsion. The company’s news release doesn’t say when it hopes to have the pipelines running again, but says it will provide additional information when it becomes available. “Nexen considers regulatory compliance to be of the utmost importance in our operations,” the company’s news release stated. “Our top priority is the safety of our employees, the public and the environment.” Nexen said in the news release that it started an internal audit of its pipeline integrity management system in early July and that it “voluntarily selfdisclosed all non-compliances” to the regulator last Tuesday.

Financial downsides to social media Social media may be a great way to get and share information but it might be harmful to your financial well-being. The age of social media began in 2004 with the launch of Facebook. People began sharing personal information with friends and acquaintances on everything from home life, work, stress and even personal finances. Canadians are big users of social media, particularly the younger Millenial generation (those born between the early 1980s and early 2000s). A recent study by Forum Research, for instance, found that Facebook is the top social media network in Canada followed by Linkedin, TwittTALBOT ter and Instagram. BOGGS Canadians visit Facebook about nine times each week. The network is popular among youth and 75 per cent of the people using it earn between $80,000 and $100,000. Linkedin is used by Canadians about twice a week on average. It’s most popular with the middle-aged (45-54 years of age) and 46 per cent who use it are high income earners making between $100,000 and $250,000. Twitter is used about five times a week with 31 per cent of users earning $80,000 or more and Canadians visit Instagram about six times each week. Eighteen

MONEYWISE

per cent of those using it earn less than $20,000 and 18 per cent earn between $80,000 and $100,000. ““There is no question that social communication has made Canadians comfortable sharing personal details with their social networks and personal finances are no exception,” says Rob Serra, Regional Director with Investors Group. “While there can be benefits to learning and seeking the advice of others, there can be downsides to the openness of these forums that can lead Canadians into making bad decisions or down a path that could lead to debt.” Some of the dangers of social media are that people can fall prey to the desire to “keep up with the Jones’” and become the recipients of poor investment advice. “Talking openly with friends about money can have its benefits,” says Serra. “A friend who has specific personal finance goals may set a good example and encourage you to identify your own goals and take the right steps towards achieving them. On the flip side of the coin conversations can have its negatives like jealousy, trying to keep up and over spending.” Friends, for example, can make suggestions that don’t necessarily fit with your personal situation. They might tell you about their new BMW or about some investment winners that they recently made. This could make you want what they have and purchase something you can’t afford or make an investment without knowing about it or how much they paid for it. A survey in the United States has found that mon-

ey can strain a friendship. One in five Americans admitted that they have experienced financial pressure to keep up with their friends. “Friends can make suggestions that don’t quite fit with your personal financial situation,” Serra says. “Situations are unique to the individual and therefore require a professional financial plan tailored to their individual needs and circumstances.” Serra offers some suggestions about having conversations and getting information on financial matters through social media. The first is to remember who is reading what you post. In addition to close friends it could include colleagues, family and acquaintances and posted information is difficult to retract. Your friends are not experts. While they may provide some insight, a financial adviser has the knowledge and expertise to help you develop a plan that includes competing priorities and can identify ways you can best manage your assets. Your spending and savings should reflect your financial position. “Set up a personal financial plan and corresponding budget that is directly related to your income, obligations and goals,” Serra advises. “If you feel you a paling in comparison to your friends’ ability to spend and save, talk with a financial adviser about where changes can be made.” Talbot Boggs is a Toronto-based business communications professional who has worked with national news organizations, magazines and corporations in the finance, retail, manufacturing and other industrial sectors.


RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015 C3

D I L B E R T

General Mills sets ambitious goal for emissions cut GREENHOUSE GASES

GOLDEN VALLEY, Minn. — General Mills has set an ambitious goal of reducing its greenhouse gas emissions 28 per cent by 2025 — not just within its own operations but from farm to fork to landfill. CEO Ken Powell, in outlining the plan to The Associated Press ahead of the company’s official announcement Monday, said General Mills is compelled to act because climate change ultimately will be bad for business. General Mills will invest more than $100 million in energy efficiency and clean energy within its own facilities worldwide, and partner with suppliers to foster more sustainable agricultural practices, including sourcing products from an additional 250,000 acres of organic production globally by 2020. “We think that human-caused greenhouse gas causes climate change and climate volatility and that’s going to stress the agricultural supply chain, which is very important to us,” Powell said in an interview at company headquarters in suburban Minneapolis. “Obviously we depend on that for our business, and we all depend on that for the food we eat.” Other major food companies have greenhouse gas goals, but General Mills officials said they know of no other major player that has targeted its entire chain — from raw material suppliers to consumers. The company estimates that 92 per cent of greenhouse gases associated with that chain come from entities it doesn’t control. With annual sales of nearly $19 billion, General Mills is one of the world’s largest food companies, with brands like General Mills cereals, Yoplait yogurt, Pillsbury and Betty Crocker products, Progresso soups, Haagen-Dazs ice cream and Green Giant vegetables. Because of its size, General Mills can exert a strong influence over its suppliers and hopes other companies will follow the example, Powell said. But he said the company also knows that climate change, sustainability and the safety of the food supply are increasingly on consumers’ minds, and that they want to see action. “They’re setting a big audacious goal, which is going to be good for the

business long-term,” said Eric Olson, senior vice-president with Business for Social Responsibility, a non-profit that works with more than 250 companies on sustainability and social justice strategies and helped General Mills develop its plan. Other major global food companies such as Unilever, Mars and Nestle have set greenhouse gas reduction targets for their own operations. But General Mills’ plan is unique because it extends all the way up the supply chain, Olson said. General Mills doesn’t plan to threaten to cut suppliers off if they don’t make improvements. Many of them already are working on reducing their carbon footprints, and the plan is to partner with them to find ways to accelerate that progress, Powell said. Within General Mills’ operations, targets can be achieved through better energy efficiency within its manufacturing plants, switching to more energy efficient vehicles and smarter logistics, Powell said. Packaging that uses less cardboard and plastic will also help. Getting partners to make changes will be a bigger challenge, he acknowledged. Expanded organic acreage and promoting agricultural innovations are part of the solution, said Jerry Lynch, the company’s chief sustainability officer. Organic agriculture promotes soil that helps farms better endure droughts, heavy rains and pests, pulling more carbon from the air and putting it into the ground in the process. Better dietary and manure management practices in the dairy industry are other opportunities, Powell said, given that cows emit huge amounts of methane, a more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide. Olson said the plan will give General Mills “a better supply chain — a supply chain that’s better able to respond to the shocks we expect to come with climate change and other changes in the weather.”

LNG industry will increase fracking earthquakes: expert BY THE CANADIAN PRESS VANCOUVER — If the liquefied natural gas industry proceeds as the British Columbia government hopes, there could be five times as many fracking-caused earthquakes, warns one expert. But the company that would provide gas to a major LNG terminal — the same company found responsible for a 4.4 magnitude tremor last year — claims it won’t ramp up drilling. Progress Energy said it doesn’t need to increase the number of wells it drills each year to supply Pacific NorthWest LNG’s planned liquefaction and export terminal near Prince Rupert. “Our upstream drilling activity will remain relatively consistent with current levels over the life of the LNG project or may even decline and therefore pose no incremental risk,” said spokeswoman Stacie Dley in an email. The company paused its operations after a 4.6 magnitude quake in northeast B.C. on Aug. 17. The B.C. Oil and Gas Commission is investigating and has not established its cause. The commission has, however, confirmed that Progress Energy triggered a 4.4 magnitude tremor last August — among the largest caused by the industry in Canada. The $36-billion Pacific NorthWest LNG project is a cornerstone of the B.C. Liberals’ efforts to build a new natural gas export industry to Asia. It has been approved by the province but remains under federal review. David Hughes, a geoscientist who worked for the Geological Survey of Canada for 32 years, recently analyzed B.C.’s LNG plans for the Canadian Cen-

Doubts about China sap investor confidence BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — The fear that gripped financial markets this month is a stark one: That China’s economy might be slipping into a decline that could persist for years. But the world’s second-largest economy isn’t collapsing — certainly not yet, anyway. What’s really in freefall is confidence in its leaders, once seen as wielding near-mythic power to keep their economy growing at a propulsive pace. Global stock markets have sunk — and gyrated — as investors have wrestled with their doubts. The Dow Jones industrial average has lost nearly 1,000 points since China’s surprise move to devalue its currency Aug. 11. That step, in part an effort to align the yuan with market forces, was also seen by investors as a desperate bid to fuel exports in a faltering economy. “The incredible faith in the Chinese policymakers has been shaken,” says Ruchir Sharma, head of Morgan Stanley’s emerging markets equity team. For all its woes, China still outruns every other major economy. For 2015, while the nearly healthy U.S. economy will expand perhaps 2.5 per cent, even most pessimistic analysts predict that China’s will grow at least 5 per cent . Yet its growth has decelerated for four straight years. And a series of bungled decisions have escalated doubts about Beijing’s economic stewardship. The skepticism is rising just as China is pursuing one of the most daunting transitions in modern economic history — from overheated growth, driven by exports and often-wasteful investment, toward slower and sturdier growth fueled by spending from an emerging middle class. The leadership’s miscues have multiplied, starting with its handling of the stock market. To try to cushion the pain from a slower economy, the government deployed state-run media to promote stocks for inexperienced individual investors. The hope was that Chinese companies could issue shares into a rising market and use the proceeds to finance growth and shrink their heavy debt levels. Untethered from economic reality, Chinese stocks took wing. The Shanghai Composite Index rocketed 150 per cent in the year through mid-June, propelled in part by individuals who poured money in, often on borrowed funds, confident that their government wouldn’t steer them wrong. On June 12, the bubble burst: Shanghai stocks have since tumbled 37 per cent, though they remain 47 per cent above where they were a year ago. Beijing, abandoning a pledge to let market forces play a bigger role in the economy, tried futilely to stop the freefall. It suspended trading in many companies, restricted the use of borrowed money for

some trades and banned big investors from selling their stakes for six months. “The bubble pops, and they intervene and it doesn’t work,” says Derek Scissors, resident scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. Beijing suddenly looked like something less than omnipotent. Then, on Aug. 11, China devalued the yuan. The government said the move was a nod to reality: Investors were signalling that the currency was overvalued. And the United States and the International Monetary Fund had long urged China to let market forces play a bigger role in the yuan’s exchange rate. Yet the decision surprised investors and aroused suspicions that it was a bid to drive up exports, which tumbled more than 8 per cent in July from a year earlier. (A lower-valued yuan gives Chinese goods a competitive edge overseas.) And Beijing has since sent confusing signals, sometimes intervening to keep the yuan from falling too fast. The episode led investors to take a more skeptical look at the Chinese economy. China’s economic statistics have always been dubious. Premier Li Keqiang once acknowledged that its growth figures were “man-made” and unreliable. The official unemployment rate is laughable: It’s remained between 4 per cent and 4.25 per cent — and almost always precisely 4.1 per cent — every quarter for the past five years, according to Trading Economics. Some analysts have sought alternative ways to gauge China’s economic performance — electricity consumption and freight shipments, for example. The London firm Consensus Economics asked several economists to provide alternative forecasts based on unconventional measures. They predicted that China’s economy would grow 5.3 per cent in the year ending in the fourth quarter of 2015, well below conventional forecasts near 7 per cent. Morgan Stanley’s Sharma suggests that the economy is growing 5 per cent “at best” this year. Still, compared with other major economies, that’s a brisk pace. And there’s some evidence that China has managed to begin transitioning toward growth based on consumption and services. Retail sales, for example, rose 10.5 per cent in July from a year earlier despite the economy’s overall deceleration. And from January through March, U.S. services exports to China rose 8 per cent even as manufacturing exports fell 9 per cent. China’s authorities, though, are pursuing a transition on a magnitude never seen before. And their recent stumbles have prompted a more critical appraisal of the policymakers’ earlier decisions. After the global financial crisis in 2008, for instance, they enacted a stimulus program — spending on roads and other infrastructure and ordering state-owned banks to lend freely.

tre for Policy Alternatives. In order to meet the province’s highest estimate of five terminals delivering 82 million tonnes of LNG a year, drilling would have to increase fivefold by 2020 — up to 2,100 wells per year, he said. “If five terminals get built, get ready for some unavoidable seismic activity. I don’t think there’s any way you can stop it,” he said. “It’s just the cost of doing business.” Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, involves injecting high-pressure fluid into wells to crack rock and release natural gas. The process can trigger seismic events but most are not felt above ground. Progress Energy said it doesn’t need to drill greater numbers of wells each year because they can last decades. But Hughes said the structures decline quickly, with production falling up to 70 per cent after three years, and 288 new wells must be built each year to maintain current output. The Oil and Gas Commission recorded 193 fracking-caused quakes between August 2013 and October 2014 in the Montney Trend, a siltstone formation stretching from near Dawson Creek to the Rocky Mountain foothills. Of about 7,500 fracking operations, only 11 triggered events felt at the surface. None caused injuries or damage. Asked how B.C. would reduce the quake risk caused by LNG, Natural Gas Development Minister Rich Coleman said it has brought in regulations, monitoring and prevention measures. Operators must immediately stop drilling if seismic activity exceeds 4.0 magnitude. They can only resume once the commission has approved a mitigation plan that could include reducing drilling volumes or pressure.

STORY FROM PAGE C2

BITGOLD: Is not essential for anything “I’m not saying gold is a bad investment, but gold as an alternative to cash or as a hedge against inflation, I just don’t buy it.” Danielle Park, a partner and portfolio manager at Venable Park Investment Counsel Inc., has outlined her skepticism of gold on her blog. “Gold makes no sense to me as an investment. It pays nothing, it is not essential for anything in our economy and, as an analyst I have no way of assessing its fair value,” wrote Park. She says investors should be especially wary of taking gold-buying advice from those selling it. “If you are taking your buy advice from those who are paid to sell you the investment products, you are putting yourself and your capital in harm’s way.”

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HEALTH

C4

MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

More education for opiod prescribing urged BY THE CANADIAN PRESS

Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS

Prescription pills containing oxycodone and acetaminophen are shown in this photo. Canadian physicians should be subject to mandatory continuing medical education in the appropriate prescribing of opioids - medications whose use has now become almost routine for treating chronic pain, the Canadian Medical Association’s annual meeting in Halifax was told. “Most of the time, this approach is employed by well-intentioned but weak-willed and underinformed physicians who have lost control of the patient-doctor relationship.” Regulators like his Nova Scotia college can help physicians by pointing out how their prescribing practices stack up against those of other doctors in their province, based on a prescription monitoring program, he said. Nova Scotia is one of the few jurisdictions in Canada with such a program, which allows doctors to check on a patient’s real-time medication history. Dr. Mary Lynch, a professor of anesthesia, psychiatry and pharmacology at Dalhousie University in Halifax, said opioids are an essential tool in managing pain, especially for those with cancer or for acute pain from injury or diseases that cause tissue damage such as rheumatoid arthritis. Using the drugs to get acute pain under control is also crucial for prevent-

Doctors group looking at intensive course to train doctors in assisted death BY THE CANADIAN PRESS Doctors who are willing to assist in a patient’s death once the act becomes legal early next year will need to be trained because they’ve never been taught the procedures for ending a life, the Canadian Medical Association says. “There’s a lot of complexity in this for Canadian doctors and it’s the first time really any of us can remember that (we) have been forced to undertake an entirely new procedure or new intervention without any training or experience,” Dr. Jeff Blackmer, vicepresident of medical professionalism, told a media briefing Tuesday during the CMA’s annual meeting in Halifax. Blackmer said the 80,000-member doctors’ organization is considering an intensive two-day course for physicians “who have never had to learn this, who have not taken it in medical school or residency.” Physicians who choose not to participate in assisted death may be offered an online course so they can counsel patients who want to pursue help in dying. Those who are willing to provide the service would continue to take courses over the years, he said. “We want to make sure people are trained and have the competencies to do this,” Blackmer said. On Feb. 6 of this year, the Supreme Court of Canada struck down the law banning doctors from assisting a patient to die or from performing euthanasia. The court stayed its decision for a year to give the federal government time to draft and pass replacement legislation. If no such law is passed, doctors can legally begin helping patients who meet certain criteria to end their lives. Outgoing CMA president Dr. Chris Simpson said time is growing short for regulators to determine how the service would be provided and how doctors would decide whether a given patient is eligible for assisted death under the Supreme Court’s ruling. “We don’t want to arrive at Feb. 6 with everybody saying, ’Well, assisted dying in Canada is legal. Does anybody know how to do it? Does anybody know who qualifies?”’ Simpson said. “That is a situation I think we all agree cannot happen.” Simpson said the CMA is lobbying for replacement legislation with national standards, rather than a patchwork of provincial and territorial regulations that wouldn’t serve patients

‘WE DON’T WANT TO ARRIVE AT FEB. 6 WITH EVERYBODY SAYING, ’WELL, ASSISTED DYING IN CANADA IS LEGAL. DOES ANYBODY KNOW HOW TO DO IT? DOES ANYBODY KNOW WHO QUALIFIES?.’ — DR. CHRIS SIMPSON OUTGOING CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT

across the country equally. “At the end of the day, regardless of who wins the election, the law that banned assisted suicide is no longer in effect as of February and so governments are going to have to deal with this,” he said. “The question is whether or not we’re going to deal with it in a rational and professional way that serves the needs of Canadians or whether we’re just going to leave it to chance.” The CMA recently invited its members to participate in an online survey about assisted death. Of 1,407 members who responded, 29 per cent said they would consider providing the service, 63 per cent said they would not, and eight per cent said they weren’t sure, the CMA reported. Delegates discussing the issue during a session at the Halifax meeting on Tuesday expressed a number of concerns, including whether doctors against the practice on moral or religious grounds would be required to refer a patient to a willing physician. In the end, they favoured a recommendation to provide patients with information about the option, including how to access the service, Blackmer said. “My concern remains more in the rural and remote communities, where there may only be one or two GPs, and if they are both unwilling to participate, I think that’s when we’re going to have to look at what some solutions are,” he said, noting that the Netherlands has a mobile clinic that goes from community to community to provide assisted dying. “The geography of Canada obviously is somewhat limiting in that respect, but we plan to examine some of those models and see what may apply here in Canada.”

ing patients from going on to develop chronic pain and to promote healing, she said. But in the case of chronic pain, Lynch said patients can often benefit from a comprehensive treatment plan that also includes physiotherapy and other non-pharmacological interventions. However, not all patients have access to such programs, leading doctors to rely on opioids to alleviate their suffering and improve their quality of life. Lynch said up until about 2010, the use of opioids in Canada and the U.S. had been increasing, but she suggests their use has been falling as awareness of the drugs’ risks has increased among physicians and the public. There are now reports of patients being unable to access the medications when they legitimately need them, she said. “Now we may need to be concerned that the pendulum has maybe swung too far the other away.”

Lynch, who’s also director of research at the Pain Management Unit at the QEII Health Sciences Centre, would like to see a national opioid strategy in Canada. But she said it’s important when developing policies to remember there’s a specific sub-population of people who use the drugs to get high or who have become addicted to the narcotics. “There is massive ignorance about the complexities of addiction, there is inadequate access to care for addiction for many people. There is massive ignorance about the assessment and treatment of pain. We are not teaching it in our medical schools adequately,” she said. “So the solution is to get better care for pain and better care for addiction — not to demonize a drug or a class of drugs and try to identify simplistic solutions like increasing the regulation of those drugs, which is what two consecutive health ministers have wanted to do.”

University clears doctor who made wind pipes with stem cells of scientific misconduct BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SWEDEN

LONDON — Sweden’s Karolinska Institute says a leading stem cell scientist accused of unethical behaviour has been cleared of scientific misconduct though he sometimes acted without due care. In a statement released on Friday, the university said complaints levelled against Dr. Paolo Macchiarini — who has created wind pipes using patients’ stem cells — did not qualify as scientific misconduct, overturning a previous investigation in May which found him guilty. After examining further documents submitted by Macchiarini, Karolinska’s vice-chancellor Anders Hamsten concluded there were flaws in Macchiarini’s work “but nothing that can be considered scientific misconduct.” The previous investigation had claimed, among other things, that Macchiarini “selectively described” certain minor problems in patients while omitting serious complications. “To have been falsely accused of serious misconduct is every researcher’s nightmare,” Macchiarini said in an email.

He said the accusations were extremely damaging to him and the field of regenerative medicine; the Swedish Research Council froze his grants in June. Macchiarini has been instructed to submit corrected information to the journals that published some of his work to clarify the mistakes identified by the university’s inquiry. Macchiarini said he would speak with Karolinska about immediately ensuring the reinstatement of his research grants. He and colleagues have developed a novel technique of seeding either donated or synthetic wind pipes with stem cells of patients to prevent rejection and are now expanding their work to include other organs. “I feel it is extremely important that public confidence is restored in this field now,” he said. “It is only through the trust of present patients willing to take part in experimental surgeries that patients of the future will have a chance to benefit.”

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Canadian physicians should be subject to mandatory continuing medical education in the appropriate prescribing of opioids — medications whose use has now become almost routine for treating chronic pain, the Canadian Medical Association’s annual meeting in Halifax was told Monday. Dr. Douglas Grant, registrar of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia, told an educational session on the drugs that excessive prescribing of opioids like oxycodone, fentanyl and hydromorphone for patients with chronic, non-cancer pain has become “an enormous problem.” “With respect to opioids, there’s been in my view a general loss of awareness, a growing casual attitude about the risk of these medicines,” Grant said. As doctors have become increasingly comfortable with prescribing opioids over the last two decades or so, he believes they’ve become less aware and concerned about their potential dangers, including the increasingly common risk of overdose death. At the same time, there’s been a shift in patients expecting to be not only treated for pain, but to be painfree, he said. “That’s created a positive feedback loop which I think has led to the present rates of high prescribing,” said Grant, noting that Canada has the second-highest per capita usage of prescription opioids in the world, after the United States. “I really think we’re at a point now where we have to consider mandatory CME (continuing medical education) about prescribing.” Doctors must have a number of continuing education credits each year to be considered medically competent and to remain in good standing with their professional colleges. “So the question we have to ask ourselves is: how do we get the toothpaste back in the tube?” Grant doesn’t believe excessive opioid prescribing arises from “malignant” doctors who are knowingly contributing to the widespread legitimate and illicit use of the drugs, but from physicians who take too casual an approach to prescribing the potent painkillers. “What I frequently see is undisciplined, unstructured and arbitrary use of these medications,” he said, pulling no punches in his address to delegatecolleagues attending the session.


ENTERTAINMENT

C5

MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

Awakenings author Oliver Sacks dies at 82 BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Photo by ADVOCATE NEWS SERVICES

Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley, — shown here — 37, is joining forces on the Catch a Fire tour with Stephen “Ragga” Marley, 43

The sound of reggae’s 2nd generation: Stephen and Damian Marley BY ROGER CATLIN SPECIAL TO THE ADVOCATE More than 30 years after the death of their father, the sons of Bob Marley continue to tour and draw crowds to the sounds of reggae. In a year that has marked the 70th anniversary of their father’s birth, Stephen “Ragga” Marley, 43, and Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley, 37, are joining forces on the Catch a Fire tour. Stephen, the second-eldest son of Bob Marley and Rita Marley, began performing with his brother Ziggy and sisters in the Melody Makers. Damian, Marley’s youngest son, and the only child he had with former Miss World Cindy Breakspeare, also had a musical group as a youth. Both have won Grammys for albums. Stephen is still putting together Revelation Part II: The Root of Life, a sequel to his 2011 Grammy-winner, that he has previewed with two singles, Rock Stone, featuring Capleton and Sizzla, and Ghetto Boy, featuring Bounty Killer and Cobra. Damian is working on his 2016 release and is about to issue a single with reggae and soca hitmaker Bunji Garlin. We caught up with the Marley brothers separately just before the tour began — one in Miami and the other on a bus en route to Miami. Their responses to a similar set of questions were edited and rearranged. Q: How have you marked the 70th anniversary of your father? Stephen: We had a big show in Jamaica, a free concert for the people. It was very nice. Then we did the Hollywood Bowl with me and Ziggy and the Skatalites and Inner Circle that was in tribute to my dad as well. That was a sold-out concert. Very good vibe. Very great vibe. Q: You both carry your father’s legacy — and also continue to perform a lot of his music?

Damian: Every night, every time we get a gig, we always do one or two of his songs. And a lot of my songs will sample a lot of his verses or his choruses. So when I do my songs, I’m doing his songs a lot of the time. Stephen: I am a seed from that fruit. So it is only right that you taste a little of his flavor in me. He is a shepherd. I am a sheep in a pasture. Q: Both of you freely mix music from other genres to your reggae. Stephen: We’re fans of all kinds of music. My dad was similar. When he was here, he was listening to Fats Domino. You’d hear him listen to everybody, whatever was up. We got that from him, just being open to music and just enjoying music. Q: Hip-hop and reggae go together especially well, it seems. Stephen: Hip-hop is an offspring of reggae. Reggae music comes from the ghetto; hip-hop comes from the ghetto. So there are kind of parallel lives as well. Q: Your father didn’t live long enough to see the decriminalization of marijuana that’s occurring in several states. Stephen: It’s a positive move, man. My father was very much an advocate of the legalization of marijuana and the use of the herbs, not just for smoking, but everything that hemp has to offer: medicinal, the fiber itself. So we’re proud to be able to reach this stage, educating people about marijuana and just being front-runners for the legalization of this plant and educating people about the plant. Not just smoking, but the plant. Damian: One of the things that we’re concerned about is we’re just hoping that with the changing of the laws, the original farmers and growers and people who made a living off the herb will still be able to feed their families and corporations not come in and ruin it. It’s a people’s thing, and we’d love it to remain that way.

Straight Outta Compton leads box office for three consecutive weekends BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — The Christian drama War Room made a surprise bid for the box-office lead, Zac Efron’s music drama We Are Your Friends bombed spectacularly and the N.W.A biopic Straight Outta Compton keeps chugging along. Universal’s Straight Outta Compton topped the box office for the thirdstraight week with $13.2 million at North American theatres over the weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday. The film, which has now made $134.1 million in total, has continued to dominate August moviegoing. It joins Jurassic World as the only movies to lead the box office three consecutive weeks this summer. The late August weekend held scant competition for Straight Outta Compton, but War Room nearly matched it. The Sony TriStar release took in $11 million by appealing to faith-based audiences, an often powerful but underserved demographic at the multiplex. War Room is about an African-American family who perseveres through prayer. “We knew that we were going to get a lot of love, we just didn’t expect quite this much love,” said Rory Bruer, head of distribution for Sony. “This is a genre that we’re very much committed to.” The film, directed by Alex Kendrick, is the highest opening yet for Affirm Films, a production company that has had previous success with low-budget films that pull in Christian audiences through grassroots marketing.

So the success of War Room wasn’t overly surprising. Faith-based films have regularly performed well at the box office, and “War Room” capitalized on an especially quiet movie weekend. But thoroughness of the flop of We Are Your Friends was unusual. The Warner Bros. release, an electronic dance music drama, wasn’t expected to do especially well. But the Efron-led film opened with just $1.8 million on 2,333 screens (more than twice the number for War Room). That makes it one of the lowest weekend openings ever for a film that played so widely. “August can be a land of opportunity or it can be your worst nightmare,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for box-office firm Rentrak. Whereas We Are Your Friends got lost in the shuffle of a traditionally quiet period for the movie business, Dergarabedian said, War Room used its late-summer, little-competition release date to its advantage. War Room, Dergarabedian said, further proves the box-office strength of faith-based moviegoers: “They are looking for content. If you build it, they will come.” No Escape, the Thailand thriller starring Owen Wilson and Lake Bell, opened with $8.3 million for the Weinstein Co. In its fifth weekend, Paramount’s Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation earned $8.3 million to bring its North American total to $170.4 million. With another low-key weekend looming over Labor Day, Hollywood’s summer is slowing to a crawl. Overall business on the weekend was down 21.4 per cent from last year, according

to Rentrak. Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theatres, according to Rentrak. Where available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday: 1. Straight Outta Compton, $13.2 million. 2. War Room, $11 million. 3. Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation, $8.3 million. 4. No Escape, $8.3 million. 5. Sinister 2, $4.7 million. 6. Man From U.N.C.L.E., $4.4 million. 7. Hitman: Agent 47, $3.9 million. 8. The Gift, $3.1 million. 9. Jurassic World, $3.1 million. 10. Ant-Man, $3.1 million.

NEW YORK — Dr. Oliver Sacks, whose books like The Man Who Mistook His Wife For a Hat probed distant ranges of human experience by compassionately portraying people with severe and sometimes bizarre neurological conditions, has died. He was 82. Sacks died Sunday at his home in New York City, his assistant, Kate Edgar, said. Sacks had announced in February 2015 that he was terminally ill with a rare eye cancer that had spread to his liver. As a practicing neurologist, Sacks looked at some of his patients with a writer’s eye and found publishing gold. In his bestselling 1985 book, he described a man who really did mistake his wife’s face for his hat while visiting Sacks’ office, because his brain had difficulty interpreting what he saw. Another story in the book featured autistic twins who had trouble with ordinary math but who could perform other amazing calculations. Discover magazine ranked it among the 25 greatest science books of all time in 2006, declaring, “Legions of neuroscientists now probing the mysteries of the human brain cite this book as their greatest inspiration.” Sacks’ 1973 book, Awakenings, about hospital patients who’d spent decades in a kind of frozen state until Sacks tried a new treatment, led to a 1990 movie in which Sacks was portrayed by Robin Williams. It was nominated for three Academy Awards. Still another book, An Anthropologist on Mars: Seven Paradoxical Tales published in 1995, described cases like a painter who lost colour vision in a car accident but found new creative power in black-and-white. It also told of a 50-year-old man who suddenly regained sight after nearly a lifetime of blindness. The experience was a disaster; the man’s brain could not make sense of the visual world. It perceived the human face as a shifting mass of meaningless colours and textures. After a full and rich life as a blind person, he became “a very disabled and miserable partially sighted man,” Sacks recalled later. “When he went blind again, he was rather glad of it.” Despite the drama and unusual stories, his books were not literary freak shows. “Oliver Sacks humanizes illness ... he writes of body and mind, and from every one of his case studies there radiates a feeling of respect for the patient and for the illness,” Roald Hoffmann, a Nobel Prize-winning chemist, said in 2001. “What others consider unmitigated tragedy or dysfunction, Sacks sees, and makes us see, as a human being coping with dignity with a biological problem.” When Sacks received the prestigious Lewis Thomas Prize for science writing in 2002, the citation declared, “Sacks presses us to follow him into uncharted regions of human experience — and compels us to realize, once there, that we are confronting only ourselves.” In a 1998 interview with The Associated Press, Sacks said he tries to make “visits to other people, to other interiors, seeing the world through their eyes.” His 2007 book, Musicophilia, looked at the relationship between music and the brain, including its healing effect on people suffering from such diseases as Tourette’s syndrome, Parkinson’s, autism and Alzheimer’s. “Even with advanced dementia, when powers of memory and language are lost, people will respond to music,” he told the AP in 2008. Oliver Wolf Sacks was born in 1933 in London, son of husband-and-wife physicians. Both were skilled at recounting medical stories, and Sack’s own writing impulse “seems to have come directly from them,” he said in his 2015 memoir, “On the Move.” In childhood he was drawn to chemistry (his 2001 memoir is called, Uncle Tungsten: Memories of a Chemical Boyhood) and biology. Around age 11, fascinated by how ferns slowly unfurl, he set up a camera to take pictures every hour or so of a fern and then assembled a flip book to compress the process into a few seconds. “I became a doctor a little belatedly and a little reluctantly,” he told one interviewer. “In a sense, I was a naturalist first and I only came to individuals relatively late.”


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2950 Bremner Ave. Red Deer, AB T4R 1M9 Circulation 403-314-4300 DEADLINE IS 5 P.M. FOR NEXT DAY’S PAPER

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CLASSIFICATIONS

52

Coming Events

LABOUR DAY CLASSIFIED Hours & Deadlines Phones & Offices CLOSED Sept.7

In Loving Memory of PERRY LEE PULLYBLANK Nov. 28, 1965 - Aug. 31, 2014 Missed and loved so much every day Your Lovie, (Debbie), Dylan(Stephanie), Adam and Benjamin, Brothers Don(Kate), Tim(Debra), Mark(Tiff), Mark(Jen) & families

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54

Lost

LOST small medium haired white cat with orange patches on back in Mountview. 403-346-3856

KEYS found on the corner of Rogers & Ramsay Ave. Has 4 keys with fob. Call 403-346-9156 must identify.

60

Personals

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS 403-347-8650 COCAINE ANONYMOUS 403-396-8298

Restaurant/ Hotel

820

Trades

850

860

800

Oilfield

TRICAN is a global well service company with operations in Canada, USA, and Norway. If you are a motivated, service-oriented team player with excellent attention to detail and strong communication skills, we invite you to apply for the following positions:

Scan to See Current Openings

Fracturing Operators, Frac Sand B-Train Drivers

Responsibilities:

• Ensure that Trican’s safety program, Target Zero, is followed and is promoted to employees, customers partners and the public at all times. • Operate various large duty trucks over outdoor terrain and through all weather conditions. • Perform pre and post trip inspections and accurately ¿ll out all required forms. • Perform rig-in and rig-out of all equipment, for travel • Operate all equipment in safe and responsible manner • Attend pre-job safety meeting on location • Perform maintenance on units and auxiliary equipment • Complete required paperwork • Establish and maintain effective communication with colleagues • Consult with supervisor and crew regarding any operational de¿ciencies

Experience & Skills:

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Card Of Thanks

Over 2,000,000 hours St. John Ambulance volunteers provide Canadians with more than 2 million hours of community service each year.

820

Restaurant/ Hotel

JJAM Management (1987) JJAM Management (1987) JJAM Management (1987) SMALL RURAL MEAT Ltd., o/a Tim Horton’s Ltd., o/a Tim Horton’s Ltd., o/a Tim Horton’s SHOP in central AB Requires to work at these Requires to work at these Requires to work at these looking for F/T meat Red Deer, AB locations: Red Deer, AB locations: Red Deer, AB locations: cutter. 8 - 4:30, no week5111 22 St. 5111 22 St. 5111 22 St. ends. Knowledge of cutting 37444 HWY 2 S 37444 HWY 2 S 37444 HWY 2 S hanging carcasses 37543 HWY 2N 37543 HWY 2N 37543 HWY 2N needed. Rental house 700 3020 22 St. 700 3020 22 St. 700 3020 22 St. avail. within walking disFOOD ATTENDANT tance of meat shop at a Food Service Supervisor Manager/Food Services Req’d permanent shift very reasonable rate with Req’d permanent shift Permanent P/T, F/T shift. weekend day and evening paid utils. $21 to start with weekend day and evening Wknd, day, night & eves. both full and part time. both full and part time. Start date ASAP $19.23/hr. skill & exp. 403-843-4383 16 Vacancies, $10.25/hr. + 4 Vacancies, $13.75 /hr. + 40 hrs/week, + benefits , jkcmeats@hotmail.ca medical, dental, life and vibenefits. Start ASAP. 8 Vacancies, 3-5 yrs. exp., sion benefits. Start ASAP. Job description criminal record check req’d. Job description www.timhortons.com Req’d education some Truckers/ www.timhortons.com Education and experience secondary. Apply in Experience 1 yr. to less not req’d. person or fax resume to: Drivers than 2 yrs. Apply in person or fax 403-314-1303 For full job Apply in person or fax resume to: 403-314-1303 description visit www. CLASS 3 DRIVERS resume to: 403-314-1303 timhortons.com w/airbrake endorsement Something for Everyone needed immed. for waste & Start your career! Start your career! Everyday in Classifieds recycling automated & roll See Help Wanted See Help Wanted off trucks. Email resume Buying or Selling Classifieds TOO MUCH STUFF? with a min. of 2 references your home? Your place to SELL to: canpak@xplornet.ca Let Classifieds Check out Homes for Sale Your place to BUY help you sell it. in Classifieds

56

Found

KUN The family of Erin Kun wishes to extend a heartfelt thank you to all those who showed such kindness and love to our family during this difficult time. All the help, prayers and support are sincerely appreciated. Your kindness has impacted us tremendously and we are overwhelmed by your thoughtfulness. From the bottom of our hearts, thank you. - The family of Erin Kun (Marvin, June, Deborah, Alan, Anthony, and families, and on behalf of her children Andrew, Rachel, Caeden and Rebecca)

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LOST in Central School area F. black spayed tattooed cat, w/white paws & chin, crooked tail 403-596-8285 LOST SAPPHIRE diamond earring on Aug. 22 in Red Deer. Reward offered. James 403-348-1080

GETZ, ED 1941-2013 Your life was a blessing, your memory a treasure. You are loved beyond words, And missed beyond measure. Still missing and loving you Rose, Vance, Terry, Brenda and families.

820

Restaurant/ Hotel

50-70

KUN Erin Elizabeth Kun (Nov.6, 1978 - Aug. 3, 2015) was born on November 6, 1978 in Humboldt SK. She grew up on the family farm near Bruno, SK. After graduation from high school, Erin attended Canadian Pentecostal College in Saskatoon, SK and DeVry in Calgary, AB. She lived in British Columbia for a few years before making her home in Sylvan Lake, AB. Erin was blessed with four beautiful children: Andrew, Rachel, Caeden and Rebecca. Her children were her pride and joy and she was always excited and looked forward to having them all under one roof with her. She was so very proud of the individuals they were, all with their own unique personalities and talents. Erin’s love was evident for each of them in the way she talked about them, and embraced them with hugs and kisses - A love that will continue on in each of them and will be remembered and missed so much. Erin’s family was so very proud of her. Amidst the challenges she faced as a single mother, she persevered and excelled in a Business Office Skills Program. In her search for work following this achievement she found great satisfaction in employment that was more than just an office job. Erin was employed as a laborer with a local home builder, and truly enjoyed her job there doing physical labor, cleaning up and preparing the way for the next contractors at the job site. Erin will be lovingly and sorrowfully missed by her children: Andrew, Rachel, Caeden, and Rebecca Rush of Sylvan Lake, AB; father Marvin Kun of Bruno, SK; mother June Kun (nee Hunyadi) of Saskatoon, SK; siblings Deborah Nelson (Adam) and their children John, Logan and Marissa of Deep River ON; Alan Kun (Lisa (nee Bessette)) and their children Mason and Presley of Saskatoon, SK; Anthony Kun (Kimberly (nee Hering)) and their children Jordan and Ethan of Bruno, SK; and numerous aunts, uncles, cousins and friends who all loved her so much. She is predeceased by her maternal grandparents Helen Hunyadi (1990), George Hunyadi (2007) and paternal grandparents Andrew Kun (1992), Helen Kun (2008). Funeral service was held on Friday August 7, 2015 at the Alliance Community Church in Sylvan Lake, AB. Erin was laid to rest near the Kun Family Farm on Saturday August 8, 2015 at the Apostolic Christian Cemetery near Bruno, SK. Memorial donations may be made to a trust account for Erin’s children. Deposits can be made at any CIBC branch to “Trust account for children of Erin Kun - 00939-010-6824994”

D1

Red Deer Advocate

announcements Obituaries

Monday, Aug. 31, 2015

CLASSIFICATIONS 700-920

Hair Stylists

760

SYLVAN LAKE BARBER req’s P/T Stylist/Barber, Drop resume off or contact Sherry at 403-887-4022

Oilfield

800

• Valid Class 1 Driver’s licence is required, safe driving skills – current driver’s abstract required • Pressure pumping experience is preferred • High school diploma is an asset • Heavy lifting required, must be physically ¿t • Excellent communication skills, both written and verbal

What Makes Us Attractive:

• Values-driven organization • Full coverage bene¿ts program, Health spending account, RRSP matching program • Global technical leader within our industry • Focus on safety, training and development • Career advancement opportunities

Working Conditions:

• 15 days on/6 days off • On call 24-hours per day during days on • Willing to live near base of employment • Pre-employment medical testing required • Working in all weather conditions

464978J31

TO PLACE AN AD

Please forward your resume and a copy of a current driver’s abstract (in confidence) Fax: (403) 314-3332, Online: https://trican.hgcareers.com Please visit our website at www.trican.ca for additional information about our company COLTER ENERGY LP IS NOW HIRING

We thank all applicants, however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted

WELL TESTING: Supervisors Night Operators Operators

Have current Safety certificates including H2S Be prepared to work in remote locations for extended periods of time • Must be physically fit • Competitive wages, benefits and RRSP offered Please email resume with current driver’s abstract to: jbecker@colterenergy.ca •

wegotservices CLASSIFICATIONS 1000-1430

You can sell your guitar for a song... or put it in CLASSIFIEDS and we’ll sell it for you!

Announcements the informative choice! Classifieds 309-3300

Wonderful Things Come in Small Packages A Birth Announcement lets all your friends know she’s arrived...

309-3300

To Advertise Your Business or Service Here

Call Classifieds 403-309-3300 classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com

Accounting

1010

INDIVIDUAL & BUSINESS Accounting, 30 yrs. of exp. with oilfield service companies, other small businesses and individuals RW Smith, 346-9351

Cleaning

1070

GET your floors professionally refinished to high gloss 403-392-7847 Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!

Contractors

1100

BLACK CAT CONCRETE Garage/Patios/RV pads Sidewalks/Driveways Dean 403-505-2542 Looking for a place to live? Take a tour through the CLASSIFIEDS

Eavestroughing

1130

ROBUST CLEANING SERVICES Eavestroughs and gutters cleaned. Free quotes. 403-506-4822 Celebrate your life with a Classified ANNOUNCEMENT

1160

Entertainment

DANCE DJ SERVICES 587-679-8606

Handyman Services

1200

Massage Therapy

1280

FANTASY SPA

Elite Retreat, Finest in VIP Treatment.

10 - 2am Private back entry

403-341-4445

Misc. Services

1290

5* JUNK REMOVAL

Property clean up 505-4777

Moving & Storage

1300

Roofing

1370

PRECISE ROOFING LTD. 15 Yrs. Exp., Ref’s Avail. WCB covered, fully Licensed & Insured. 403-896-4869 QUALITY work at an affordable price. Joe’s Roofing. Re-roofing specialist. Fully insured. Insurance claims welcome. 10 yr. warranty on all work. 403-350-7602

Seniors’ Services

1372

HELPING HANDS

Home Supports for Seniors. Cooking, cleaning, companionship. At home BEAT THE RUSH! Book or facility. 403-346-7777 now for your home projects. MOVING? Boxes? Appls. Reno’s, flooring, painting, removal. 403-986-1315 Window small concrete/rock work, Something for Everyone Cleaning landscaping, small tree Everyday in Classifieds cutting, fencing & decking. Call James 403-341-0617 RESIDENTIAL. Painters/ Free Quotes. 403-506-4822 Massage

1420

Therapy

1280

BRIDGER CONST. LTD. We do it all! 403-302-8550

BODY BALANCING, Hot Stone. 403-352-8269

DALE’S Home Reno’s Free estimates for all your reno needs. 403-506-4301

CELEBRATIONS HAPPEN EVERY DAY IN CLASSIFIEDS

Decorators

1310

JG PAINTING, 25 yrs. exp. Free Est. 403-872-8888 Tired of Standing? Find something to sit on in Classifieds

Yard Care

1430

FALL cleanup. Tree/junk removal. Snow removal contracts welcome 403-358-1614


D2 RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015

860

BUSY Central Alberta Grain Trucking Company looking for Class 1 Drivers and/or Lease Operators. We offer lots of home time, benefits and a bonus program. Grain and super B exp. an asset but not necessary. If you have a clean commercial drivers abstract and would like to start making good money. fax or email resume and comm. abstract to 403-337-3758 or dtl@telus.net F/T TOW TRUCK drivers req’d. Minimum Class 5 with air and clean abstract. Exp. preferred. In person to Key Towing 4083-78 St. Cres. Red Deer.

Misc. Help

880

F/T DISPATCHER REQ’D. Knowledge of Red Deer and area is essential. Verbal and written communication skills are req’d. Send resume by fax to 403-346-0295

880

Misc. Help

ADULT EDUCATION AND TRAINING

FALL START GED Preparation Would you like to take the GED in your community? • • • • • • • • •

Red Deer Rocky Mtn. House Rimbey Caroline Sylvan Lake Innisfail Stettler Ponoka Lacombe Gov’t of Alberta Funding may be available. 403-340-1930 www.academicexpress.ca

Household Appliances

white sling leather upper shoes, antistress, Dora style, worn once. Reg. $129, asking $85. 403-227-2976 Central Alberta’s Largest Car Lot in Classifieds

EquipmentHeavy

LAZYBOY power recliner w/heat & massage controls. Like new. was $1600. $500. obo SOLD LOVESEAT, exc. cond. $200. obo. Call or text 403-348-3107

TRAILERS for sale or rent Job site, office, well site or storage. Skidded or wheeled. Call 347-7721.

WANTED

Antiques, furniture and estates. 342-2514

Misc. for Sale

RETIRED professional person req’d to be personal assistant for a blind lady. Ref’s req’d. 403-309-4554

BBQ grill on wheels Electric Patio Caddy brand 30” high. Like New. $60. 403-340-8199

ED HARDY shirts, 3 long sleeve, 1 short sleeve, Child’s size L and XL. $20 for all 4. 403-314-9603

Sales & Distributors

830

Firewood

1660

AFFORDABLE

Homestead Firewood

Spruce, Pine - Split. Avail. 7 days/wk. 403-304-6472

100 VHS movies, $75. 403-885-5020

COLLECTION of over 1,000 old buttons, $100. 403-885-5020

1680

1830

2 MAN tent in a bag, Sears $30; classic Coleman stove w/stand, 2 burner, windblock, well used, $50 ; Coleman single burner SOLD 403-227-2976

Recreation Vehicle Sales Associate We are looking to compliment our sales floor with an ambitious, energetic team player.

Collectors' Items

Experience in sales would be an asset but not required. If you are a fit for our team, have the right attitude and follow our core values, we would like to give you the opportunity to grow with us!

Travel Packages

For early morning delivery by 6:30 am Mon. - Sat. INGLEWOOD ORIOLE PARK ANDERS

wegot CLASSIFICATIONS

NOW RENTING 1 & 2 BDRM. APT’S. 2936 50th AVE. Red Deer Newer bldg. secure entry Houses/ w/onsite manager, Duplexes 3 appls., incl. heat & hot water, washer/dryer EASTVIEW 3 BDRM. hookup, infloor heating, a/c., house, recently reno’d, fin. car plug ins & balconies. bsmt., 4 appls., no pets. Call 403-343-7955 403-848-4618 SYLVAN: 4 fully furn. units avail. OCT 1. $1100. to Condos/ $1400. 403-880-0210.

3020

Townhouses

3030

SEIBEL PROPERTY 6 locations in Red Deer, 3 bdrms, 1 1/2 bath, appls, starting at $1100. For more info 403-347-7545 or 403-304-7576 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

4 Plexes/ 6 Plexes

3050

NORMANDEAU 2 Bdrm. 4-plex. 1.5 bath, 4 appls. $1100. No pets, N/S Quiet adults. 403-350-1717 SYLVAN LAKE, 2 bdrm. 4-plex, 4 appl., rent/$980, dd/$980, adults with ref., n/s, no pets. 403-358-8586

Suites

3060

2 BDRM. lrg. suite adult bldg, free laundry, very clean, quiet, Avail. Sept.1 $900/mo., S.D. $650. 403-304-5337 2 BDRM. N/S, no pets. $875 rent/d.d. 1 BDRM. N/S, no pets. $790 rent/d.d. 403-346-1458 ADULT 2 BDRM. spacious suites 3 appls., heat/water incld., ADULT ONLY BLDG, no pets, Oriole Park. 403-986-6889 AVAIL. IMMED. large 2 bdrm. in clean quiet adult building, near downtown Co-Op, no pets, 403-348-7445 GLENDALE reno’d 2 bdrm. apartments, avail. immed, rent $875 403-596-6000 LARGE, 1 & 2 BDRM. SUITES. 25+, adults only n/s, no pets 403-346-7111

MORRISROE MANOR 1 & 2 bdrm., Adult bldg. only, N/S, No pets. 403-596-2444

Misc. Help

1 & 2 bdrm. adult building, N/S. No pets. 403-596-2444

Rooms For Rent

3090

Avail Immed: 1 Lrg fully furn bdrm c/w gas fireplace - $300 dd $600/mth. Call 403-396-2468 COZY Furnished room, n/s, $575. 403-466-7979 S.E. House, working M. $475./mo. 403-341-4664

Warehouse Space

3140

DO YOU WANT YOUR AD TO BE READ BY

4010

HERE TO HELP & HERE TO SERVE Call GORD ING at RE/MAX real estate central alberta 403-341-9995 gord.ing@remax.net

Houses For Sale

4020

“COMING SOON” BY

SERGE’S HOMES

Duplex in Red Deer Close to Schools and Recreation Center. For More Info Call Bob 403-505-8050

TRY SERVING CENTRAL ALBERTA RURAL REGION

#402 5029-34 St. Red Deer 869 sq. ft. 1976 on great rented lot $30,000 Immed. possession ~~~~~~~~~~~ #62 Parkside Dr. Red Deer rented lot 1156 sq. ft. 1976 upgraded, peak roof $60,000 Immed. Poss. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ #812 6834-59 Ave. Red Deer 952 sq. ft. 1984 2-4pc. baths on rented lot $65,000 Immed. poss. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ #2 East Loop Joffre 1088 sq. ft. 2001 2x6 walls, 2-4pc. bath, rented lot. Quick poss. $70,000 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ #414 England Way Waskasoo Estates Red Deer County 1488 sq. ft. 1993 WOW has everything you need. $165,000 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 71 Newton Cres. Red Deer 1072 sq. ft. 1977 on own lot, bsmt., garage, 1 owner, immed. poss. $215,000 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ #6, 10046 Township Rd. 422 Raymond Shores 836 sq. ft. 2007 Park Model Lakefront, relaxation spot, immed. poss. $295,000 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tim McRae Maxwell Real Estate Solutions LTD. Red Deer, AB T4N 4C4 timmcrae@ maxwellrealty.ca Office 403-346-7755 cell 403-350-1562

FINANCIAL

CLASSIFICATIONS 4400-4430

4430

Money To Loan

wegot RISER HOMES

3190

PADS $450/mo. Brand new park in Lacombe. Spec Mobiles. 3 Bdrm., 2 bath. As Low as $75,000. Down payment $4000. Call at anytime. 403-588-8820

880

FACE-TO-FACE FUNDRAISERS REQUIRED You have the chance to impact those in your community.... You can make a difference with STARS Calendar sales! This position is for those who have a huge heart, articulate, goal oriented, and love meeting new people. Sell calendars D2D (door to door) in your community with the annual STARS Air Ambulance Calendar Campaign. $14/hour plus bonus Flexible Hours • Local Territory

ALTERNATIVE HOUSING

CONSOLIDATE All loans with rates from 2.1% business or personal loan bankruptcy or bad credit ok. Call 438-992-5916

Central Alberta LIFE

Mobile Lot

4090

Manufactured Homes

RISER HOMES

ACT NOW! Blackfalds Bungalow walkout backing onto valley view. A must see. This 2 bdrm. 2 bath has many upgrades. This weekend only $405.000. GST, legal fees and 4 appl. package included. LLOYD FIDDLER 403-391-9294

100,000 Potential Buyers???

Contact: 1.877.778.8288 or calendar@stars.ca or bdickson@stars.ca

No s! ion Collect

Realtors & Services

FOR LEASE

Help Save Lives... Be a STARS Fundraiser

880

4000-4190

RIVERSIDE LIGHT INDUSTRIAL 2400 sq. ft. large 55 x 85 compound 403-350-1777

STARS FOUNDATION

CALL:

CLASSIFICATIONS

THE NORDIC

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

309-3300

wegot

homes

FOR RENT • 3000-3200 WANTED • 3250-3390

A Star Makes Your Ad A Winner!

7134662H29-I11

3060

Suites

rentals

Please fax or email your resume to: ronanne.ashton@vellner.com Fax 403.340.8135 1890-49th Ave., Red Deer

Earn Extra Money

ADULT CARRIERS NEEDED

1900

TRAVEL ALBERTA Alberta offers SOMETHING for everyone. Make your travel plans now.

Come see what we are all about... you will not be disappointed!

For delivery of Flyers, Wednesday and Friday Misc. Help ONLY 2 DAYS A WEEK ANDERS BOWER HIGHLAND GREEN INGLEWOOD JOHNSTONE KENTWOOD RIVERSIDE MEADOWS PINES SUNNYBROOK SOUTHBROOKE WEST LAKE WEST PARK

1870

KISS Collectibles, includes special order watch, playing cards, pictures, Archie Kiss Book. All for $45. 403-314-9603

Along with daily, weekly, monthly and yearly training, you will enjoy an extensive group benefit plan, allowable holidays in the summer months, and an aggressive pay structure featuring an above industry commission plan, bonus program and multiple incentive programs.

ADULT or YOUTH CARRIERS NEEDED

1860

Sporting Goods

JOIN OUR TEAM!

Call Jamie at 403-314-4306

1760

RUBBERMAID storage B.C. Birch, Aspen, Spruce/Pine. Delivery avail. tubs, assorted larger sizes, clean, $5/ea, or all 6/$25; PH. Lyle 403-783-2275 bakers rack, like new FREE POPLAR logs. You 31”Wx17”Dx75”H, 5 glass pick up. Very close to Red shelves $90 403-755-2760 Deer. 403-392-8385. TEAPOT with creamer & sugar, salt & pepper in Garden Cottage house design. 7 pieces. Avon collectible. Supplies NEW $25. 403-347-5846 CRAFTSMAN lawnmower Kohler 7.0 HP rear bagger, like new $125 Cats 403-347-5873 403-350-1077 2 Siamese, 1 Balinese, 1 Burman kittens $50/ea; 403-887-3649

Our team at Vellner Leisure Products looks forward to you joining us.

Call Rick at 403- 314-4303

1720

LAZY Boy recliner, very good cond, green fabric, $200 403-346-3086

1630 1640

DANBY apartment size dishwasher, 19”Wx36”H on wheels, connects to standard kitchen faucet $200. 403-342-4774

Household Furnishings

NURSES’ uniforms, pants & tops. med. to large size. $5 each. (approx. 30) good shape. 403-347-2526

1710

F/T LABORER req., exp. with hydro-vac, backhoe, Tools and direct drill preferred. Must have valid dr. licence VARIETY of miscellaneous and ref. e-mail resume attn: tools, $20. 403-885-5020 jason@ttlocates@gmail.com

1580

For delivery of Flyers, Wednesday and Friday ONLY 2 DAYS A WEEK CLEARVIEW RIDGE CLEARVIEW TIMBERSTONE LANCASTER VANIER WOODLEA/ WASKASOO DEER PARK GRANDVIEW EASTVIEW MICHENER MOUNTAINVIEW ROSEDALE

1590

ACADEMIC Express LADIES Rieker, size 37

TO ORDER HOME wegot DELIVERY OF stuff THE ADVOCATE CLASSIFICATIONS CALL OUR 1500-1990 CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT Children's 403-314-4300 Items ADULT or YOUTH CARRIERS NEEDED

Clothing

7137121H31-I11

Truckers/ Drivers

GREAT STARTER HOME. BLACKFALDS 1200 sq. ft. bi-level walkout 3 bdrm. 2 bath, open floor plan, a must see! $355,000 Legal fees, GST, sod, tree and appls. incld. LLOYD FIDDLER 403-391-9294

Condos/ Townhouses

4040

wheels CLASSIFICATIONS 5000-5300

5050

Trucks

4x4

SIERRAS OF MICHENER SPACIOUS, MODERN, LIKE NEW, ONE BEDROOM, APPROXIMATE 776 sq. ft. CONDOMINIUM ON 2nd FLOOR WITH: -airconditioning -large walk-in wardrobe closet in bedroom, -modern bathroom -well appointed kitchen and dining area spacious utility room off of hallway -roomy coat closet hallway, -comfortable livingroom area, -external deck off of living room -Easy Access near main entrance-Parking -Storage Amenities Special Features PHONE 403.783. 6756 FOR VIEWING APPOINTMENT, Asking $239,000

2003 Chev S15 E/C, V6 auto, full load, $6500. Call Harold 403-350-6800

Central Alberta’s Largest Car Lot in Classifieds

TIRES, Michelin, 235/65R 16”, 2 tires for $75. 403-314-9603

Motorhomes

5100

1996 26’ PHOENIX 147,000 kms, sleeps 6, new tires, good working order $9100 403-704-3094

Tires, Parts Acces.

5180

ash Extra C ise! & Exerc

For that new computer, a dream vacation or a new car

Call Joanne at 403- 314-4308

Routes Available in Your Neighborhood

CallDebbie at 403- 314-4307

7119052tfn

For CENTRAL ALBERTA LIFE 1 day a week INNISFAIL PENHOLD LACOMBE SYLVAN LAKE OLDS BLACKFALDS PONOKA

Red Deer Ponoka Sylvan Lake Lacombe

EVERY DOLLAR DONATED BRINGS US CLOSER TO FINDING A LOVING HOME FOR AN ANIMAL IN-NEED. PLEASE DONATE.

call: 403-314-4394 or email: carriers@reddeeradvocate.com

7109693H31

CARRIERS NEEDED

www.reddeerspca.com

Earn Extra Money

¯ ROUTES AVAILABLE IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

Red Deer Ponoka

Sylvan Lake Lacombe

call: 403-314-4394 or email:

carriers@reddeeradvocate.com

7119078TFN

For that new computer, a dream vacation or a new car


WORLD

D3

MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

Thousands mourn fallen firefighters WASHINGTON WILDFIRES BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WENATCHEE, Wash. — Several thousand people gathered Sunday to honour three U.S. Forest Service firefighters killed battling wildfires in Washington state. “They dedicated their lives to protecting our national forests and the people in the communities surrounding them,” Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell said in a eulogy. “And for that we should be grateful.” The memorial service for 20-yearold Tom Zbyszewski, 26-year-old Andrew Zajac, and 31-year-old Richard Wheeler took place in Wenatchee. That’s about 90 miles south of where they died Aug. 19 near Twisp in eastern Washington when flames consumed their crashed vehicle. More than 80 vehicles took part in a procession leading to the memorial service Sunday where more than 100 firefighters stood at attention. Dozens of civilians also took part, many holding U.S. flags and others with signs that said “You are heroes!” Tom Zbyszewski followed in his father’s footsteps as a firefighter. He was the youngest of the three who died, and a physics major at Whitman College with an acting bent. He was due to return to school in about a week. “Tom was the light of my life,” his father, Richard Zbyszewski, said in his eulogy. “My path I’m afraid will always be a little bit darker because I miss him so much.” Zajac was the son of a Methodist minister from Downers Grove, Illinois. He was in his second year as a professional wildland firefighter for the Forest Service and earned a master’s degree in biology last year from the University of South Dakota. Zajac and his wife, Jenn, were married last year after hiking the 2,650-mile Pacific Coast Trail together in 2013. Jenn, in a statement read by Zajec’s

Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A U.S. Forest Service truck passes as firefighters salute the arrival of a motorcade for a memorial service for three firefighters killed in a wildfire, Sunday, in Wenatchee, Wash. Richard Wheeler, Andrew Zajac and Thomas Zbyszewski died Aug. 19 in a fire near Twisp, Wash. mother, Mary, said, “Andrew was my calm and my strength; my belay (climbing) partner, my fishing buddy, my hiking companion, my love. Just under a year ago we made a promise until death do us part. I just never imaged it would come so soon. I’ll miss him forever.” Wheeler, “Wheels” as his friends called him during their eulogies, was a fourth-generation firefighter as well as an avid fisherman, hiker and hunter. This was Wheeler and his wife Celeste’s second year living in Wenatchee

after he graduated in 2013 from Grand Valley State University in Michigan. He was a seasonal worker with hopes of becoming a permanent wildland firefighter for the U.S. Forest Service. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee was out of the country, so his wife, Trudi Inslee, presented each of the families with state flags. The families also received Forest Service flags, small statues, and a Pulaski, a firefighting tool still in use today but also heavy with symbolism. When a person becomes a wildland firefighter, they are said to

“pick up the Pulaski.” “Without men like Tom and Richard and Andrew, we would not be able to protect and care for the lands they devoted their lives to,” Tidwell said. Daniel Lyon, who sustained burns on more than 60 per cent of his body in the fire that killed the three firefighters, on Sunday remained in serious condition at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, where he’s had two successful burn surgeries. A spokeswoman said the 25-year-old is scheduled to undergo another operation this week.

Police search for motive in ambush of Texas officer BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Malaysian protesters gather in the rain during a rally in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on Sunday. Big crowds of protesters returned to the streets of Kuala Lumpur on Sunday to demand the resignation of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak over a financial scandal, after the first day of the massive rally passed peacefully.

Defiant Malaysian prime minister rejects calls from protesters to quit BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Embattled Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak poured scorn on a huge twoday rally that brought together tens of thousands of yellow-shirted protesters demanding his resignation over a financial scandal. Large crowds of protesters camped overnight on the streets of Kuala Lumpur wearing yellow shirts of the Bersih movement — a coalition for clean and fair elections — even after authorities blocked the organizer’s website and banned yellow attire and the group’s logo. Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who has been spearheading calls for Najib’s resignation, made appeared at the rally with his wife for a second day, telling protesters that people power was needed to remove Najib and return the rule of law. Najib has been fighting for political survival after leaked documents in July showed he received some $700 million in his private accounts from entities linked to indebted state fund 1MDB. He later said the money was a donation from the Middle East, fired his critical deputy and four other Cabinet members as well as the attorney general investigating him. Police estimated the crowd size at 35,000, but Bersih says it swelled to 300,000 on Sunday from 200,000 on Saturday. Najibhas slammed the protests for tarnishing Malaysia’s image, and dismissed their size. “What is 20,000? We can gather hundreds of thousands,” he was quoted as saying by local media at a rural event in a northern state. “The rest of the

Malaysian population is with the government.” In his National Day message late Sunday, Najib said the government rejected street protests, saying they can disrupt public order and not the right way to show unhappiness in a democratic country. They “reflected a shallow mind and poor national spirit,” he said. Najib vowed not to bow to pressure. “Once the sails have been set, once the anchor has been raised, the captain and his crew would never change course,” he said. The rally was peaceful Saturday and lasted until midnight Sunday to usher in Malaysia’s 58th National Day. “This is a watershed moment. Malaysians are united in their anger at the mismanagement of this country. We are saying loudly that there should be a change in the leadership,” said protester Azrul Khalib, who slept on the street with his friends. He said he was aware that the rally will not bring change overnight, but he wants to be “part of efforts to build a new Malaysia.” Some used colored chalk to scrawl their demands on the street, writing slogans such as, “We want change,” and “We want clean and fair (elections).” Scores of police barricaded roads leading to the Independence Square, a national landmark that authorities declared off-limits to protesters. Previous two Bersih rallies, in 2011 and 2012, were dispersed by police using tear gas and water cannons. Analysts said the rally attracted a largely urban crowd with a smaller participation of ethnic Malays, which could be the reason why the Najib government allowed it to go on.

HOUSTON — The man charged with capital murder in the fatal shooting of a uniformed suburban Houston sheriff’s deputy had a lengthy criminal record going back a decade, but never spent more than short stints in jail. Shannon J. Miles, whose criminal record includes convictions for resisting arrest and disorderly conduct with a firearm, was to be arraigned Monday in the shooting of Darren Goforth, a 10-year veteran of the Harris County Sheriff’s Office. Miles’ arrest Saturday came less than 24 hours after authorities said he ambushed Goforth at a gas station. Sheriff Ron Hickman said the attack was “clearly unprovoked,” and there is no evidence that Goforth knew Miles. Investigators have no information from Miles that would shed light on his motive, Hickman said. “Our assumption is that he (Goforth) was a target because he wore a uniform,” the sheriff said. Miles’ criminal record begins in 2005, when he was convicted of criminal mischief, giving false information to police and resisting arrest, according to records. In 2006, he was convicted of disorderly conduct with a firearm and sentenced to a maximum of 15 days in jail. He was convicted of evading arrest in 2007, and his most re-

cent conviction came in 2009 for again resisting arrest. Records show that the 30-year-old Houston resident was sentenced to several short stints in jail, anywhere from 10 to 6 days. Court and jail records did not list an attorney for Miles and attempts to reach his family members on Sunday were unsuccessful. Goforth, 47, was pumping gas Friday night in a middle- to upper-middleclass suburban area northwest of Houston, when the gunman approached him from behind and fired multiple shots, continuing to fire after the deputy had fallen to the ground. The killing evoked strong emotions in the local law enforcement community, with Hickman linking it to heightened tension over the treatment of African-Americans by police. Goforth was white and Miles is black. The nationwide “Black Lives Matter” movement that formed after 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot and killed by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, has sought sweeping reforms of policing. Related protests erupted in Texas recently after a 28-year-old Chicago-area black woman, Sandra Bland, was found dead in a county jail northwest of Houston three days after her arrest on a traffic violation. Texas authorities said she committed suicide but her family is skeptical of that.

Activists say IS militants damage ancient Bel Temple in Syria BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BEIRUT — Islamic State militants in Syria severely damaged the Bel Temple, considered one of the greatest sites of the ancient world, in a massive explosion Sunday, activists said. The 2,000-year-old temple was part of the remains of the ancient caravan city of Palmyra in central Syria, seized by IS in May. The news of the latest destruction at Palmyra came just days after IS released propaganda images purportedly showing militants blowing up another Palmyra temple, the 2,000-year-old Baalshamin dedicated to the Phoenician god of storms and fertilizing rains. The U.N. cultural agency UNESCO, which has designated Palmyra as a world heritage site, called the destruction of the Baalshamin temple a war crime. Earlier this month, relatives and witnesses said that IS militants had beheaded Khaled al-Asaad, an 81-yearold antiquities scholar who devoted his life to understanding Palmyra.

The Islamic State group, which has imposed a violent interpretation of Islamic law across its self-declared “caliphate” straddling Syria and Iraq, says such ancient relics promote idolatry. It already has blown up several sites in neighbouring Iraq, and it is also believed to be selling looted antiquities. A Palmyra resident, who goes by the name of Nasser al-Thaer, said IS militants set off a huge blast at 1:45 p.m. Sunday. “It is total destruction,” he said of the scene of the explosion. “The bricks and columns are on the ground.” “It was an explosion the deaf would hear,” he added. The resident said only the outer wall surrounding the temple remains. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of activists in Syria, said the temple was damaged. It did not provide details. The temple, consecrated to the Semitic god Bel, had been well-preserved and was a source of much pride for Syrians. It was consecrated in 32 A.D.


D4 RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015 FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

HI & LOIS

PEANUTS

BLONDIE

HAGAR

BETTY

PICKLES

GARFIELD

LUANN Aug. 31 1981 — Clifford Robert Olson is charged with first-degree murder in the deaths of nine children, after RCMP make a deal to lead them to the bodies and other evidence, in exchange for a $100,000 trust fund for his wife and infant son. He will later be charged with killing 11 boys and girls aged nine to 18, and sentenced to life imprisonment. 1973 — Shell Canada announces plans to

build a $700-million oil extraction plant on Athabasca tar sands. 1971 — Peter Lougheed leads the Progressive Conservatives to victory in Alberta provincial election over the Social Credit government under Harry Strom. 1955 — A placard-carrying mob of Ukrainian nationalists punch and kick four RCMP plainclothes officers at Winnipeg airport, thinking they are part of a visiting delegation of Soviet farming experts. Mounties, Winnipeg city police and the railway police stop a potential riot. The Soviets put under protective guard.

ARGYLE SWEATER

RUBES

TODAY IN HISTORY

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


LIFESTYLE

D5

MONDAY, AUG. 31, 2015

Can’t convince partner to move south Dear Annie: I’m a clean-cut, middle-aged gay guy Although, since winters in Boston generally inliving in a midsized city in Florida. My partner of six clude a tremendous amount of snow, your partner years lives in Boston. may decide on his own that he’d like to move to We have a great long-distance relationship. He’s a warmer locale, in which case, your problem is a wonderful man, and we love each othsolved. Otherwise, please don’t insist on it. er. We’d like to marry and live together And of course, there is always the possomeday. sibility that moving in together would have Here’s the problem: He doesn’t want a negative effect. Some people do better in to move to Florida, and I’m a bit hesitant long-distance relationships. about moving to Boston. Have the two of you discussed all the My partner has lived in Boston his pros and cons? entire life and has a ton of friends there. Don’t be afraid to mention your conHis job, though lousy, has good benefits. cerns and talk about them in practical, But if I move there, it would be a hardhonest terms. ship unless we lived together, since I’m Does he understand the financial hardon disability. And then he’d be stuck ship moving would be for you? Would he paying most of the rent. I also hate bigsupport you without resenting it? Does he city traffic and crowds. And while I don’t have any interest in moving to Florida at a MITCHELL mind cold weather, I cannot deal with later date? Are you willing to wait? & SUGAR snow. We hope you can work out some type of I have told my partner that my town compromise, but please understand that has a booming economy and a lot of placwhat you have now could be the best you es are hiring. get. How can I convince him to move to Florida? Or Dear Annie: We have become a society with a should I move to Boston? — Florida Guy beggar’s mentality. While driving through our small Dear Florida: Pressuring someone to move to a town, I approached a red light. There stood people location where they don’t want to be is never a good with buckets asking for money to help send their idea. kids’ ecology class to Honduras.

ANNIE ANNIE

This is not the first time I have noticed such begging. I’ve seen kids ask for help to send the dance team to regionals, or to help the senior class have a great prom. When my kids were younger and their baseball team required money, they either sold candy or held car washes to raise funds. They didn’t stand on street corners and beg someone else to enable them to have a good time. Why do parents think it is OK to ask me to pay for their kid’s activities? I don’t know their kids. — Fed Up Dear Fed Up: We agree that there is entirely too much expectation that others will pay for unnecessary perks that kids ought to be earning for themselves. And it isn’t only school projects. Adults do this, too, often online. But asking and receiving are two different things. Many people don’t mind contributing, especially if they believe the cause is worthy. And if you don’t, keep your wallet closed and your windows rolled up. You are not obligated to participate in the fundraising. 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.

HOROSCOPE

POPULAR POLLINATORS

Monday, August 31 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: Van Morrison, 69; Debbie Gibson, 44; Richard Gere, 65 THOUGHT OF THE DAY: The stars favour keeping your emotions under control today. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: You are great fun to be around and love to get involved in the lives of family and friends. The next 12 months is the time to bring more harmony JOANNE and balance into your busy world. ARIES (March 21-April 19): MADELEINE You’re restless and keen for MOORE change. But are others ready for your ambitious Aries ideas? Don’t rush Rams — consultation and attention to detail will get you a lot further than being slapdash. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Attached Bulls — your partner is looking to you for some sensible advice. Singles - you’re attracting a few admirers, but make them prove themselves before you ride off into the romantic sunset. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t waste time talking about all the things you have to do. When it comes to tasks that need to be completed at home or work, just roll up your sleeves, put your head down and get on with it! CANCER (June 21-July 22): It’s a fabulous day to patch up a misunderstanding between you and a child, teenager or friend. But don’t jump to hasty conclusions Crabs — take your time and get all the relevant facts first. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The hard work you put into your family life now will pay off further down the track. But don’t just talk about what you plan to do - show your commitment by the actions that you take. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You could become impatient with some people’s lack of initiative and enthusiasm, but it’s not the time to push buttons. Plus be extra careful when sending messages via social media. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Your moods will fluctuate according to who you are with today Libra. A friend or work colleague is enthusiastic about a project but check the facts, figures and finances before you commit. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You tend to hide your true feelings, for fear of showing your vulnerabilities and revealing too much about yourself. But it’s time to discuss important matters with a relative or friend. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Making decisions based purely on logic means you’re only seeing half the picture. Learn to listen to the wisdom of your inner voice and your intuition will point you in the right direction. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You’re discovering creative solutions to pesky problems, as you discuss ideas and display your talents for all to see. Others are impatient for results, but take the time to talk things through. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Does life feel like all work and no play? Hang in there; the professional skills you polish now will pay off well in the future. Give yourself a special treat and remember to take baby steps. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Are you wasting your precious ideas? The Moon boosts creativity, and Saturn helps you turn abstract concepts into concrete reality. So grasp the opportunity to power ahead today Pisces. Joanne Madeline Moore is an internationally syndicated astrologer and columnist. Her column appears daily in the Advocate.

A honeybee is about to descend on a blackberry blossom growing near Langley, Wash. Hundreds of flowers, shrubs, trees and vines can be used to sustain pollinators. Take a walk around the neighborhood to determine which blooms are the most popular with bees and butterflies and then add similar varieties to your yard.

SUN SIGNS

Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Global warming doing damage to Alaska BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Global warming is carving measurable changes into Alaska, and President Barack Obama is about to see it. Obama leaves Monday for a three-day visit to the 49th state in which he will speak at a State Department climate change conference and become the first president to visit the Alaska Arctic. There, and in the sub-Arctic part of the state, he will see the damage caused by warming — damage that has been evident to scientists for years. More than 3.5 trillion tons of water have melted off of Alaska’s glaciers since 1959, when Alaska first became a state, studies show — enough to fill more than 1 billion Olympic-sized pools. The crucial, coast-hugging sea ice that protects villages from storms and makes hunting easier is dwindling in summer and is now absent each year a month longer than it was in the 1970s, other studies find. The Army Corps of Engineers identified 26 villages where erosion linked to sea ice loss threatens the communities’ very existence. Permafrost is thawing more often as the ground warms, so as the ground oozes, roads, pipelines and houses’ foundations tilt and shift — sometimes enough to cause homes to be abandoned. In far northern Barrow, the upper part of the ground is 7 degrees Fahrenheit (4 degrees Celsius) warmer than it was in the late 1950s and getting closer to the melt point in the summer, data shows. And scientists fear the thawing permafrost will unleash large amounts of trapped greenhouse gases and speed up worldwide warming. So far this year, more than 5.1 million acres (2.06 million hectares) in Alaska — an area the size of Connecticut and Rhode Island combined — have burned

Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRES

Smoke rises from the Bogus Creek Fire in the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge in southwest Alaska. Global warming is carving measurable changes into Alaska, and U.S. President Barack Obama is about to see it. Obama leaves Monday, for a three-day visit to the 49th state in which he will speak at a climate change conference and become the first president to visit the Alaska Arctic. in wildfires. In the first 10 years of statehood, Alaska averaged barely a quarter million acres (100,000 hectares) of wildfires yearly. The last 10 years have averaged 1.2 million acres (490.000 hectares). “The state is changing and changing rapidly,” said Fran Ulmer, chairwoman of the U.S. Arctic Research Commission and Alaska’s former lieutenant governor. And scientists say those things are happening — at least partly and probably mostly — because of another thing they can measure: Alaska’s temperature.

Alaska’s yearly average temperature has jumped 3.3 degrees F since 1959 and the winter average has spiked 5 degrees F (3 degrees C) since statehood, according to federal records. Last year was the hottest on record and so far this year Alaska is a full degree warmer than last year. Alaska “is sort of a bellwether,” said John Walsh, chief scientist of the International Arctic Research Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. “The changes are definitely happening and we’re out in front of the rest of the country.” And what happens in Alaska isn’t staying in Alaska, because weather changes in the Arctic trigger changes in the jet stream and reverberate down south, including the dreaded polar vortex escape that has brought sub-freezing temperatures to great expanses of North America in recent winters, said Martin Jeffries, an Arctic scientist for the U.S. Office of Naval Research. Warming’s effects seem to be speeding up. From 1959 to 1993, Alaska’s glaciers lost 57 billion tons of ice a year, but that jumped to almost 83 billion tons a year since 1994, according to Anthony Arendt, who co-authored a study on the subject this July. And while there may be many factors involved in glacier melt, all but about five of Alaska’s 25,000 glaciers are shrinking, said University of Alaska Fairbanks glacier expert Regine Hock. She’s adamant: “That’s related to climate change.” On the ocean, sea ice in the Arctic in the summer has shrunk by about one-third over three decades, leading to a loss of habitat for walrus and a threatened species listing for polar bears and their main prey, ringed seals. But in Alaska, what really hits hard is the loss of sea ice that’s connected to the coast. That’s the ice that protects villages from the worst of storms and allows both people and animals to hunt more at sea.


D6 RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, Aug. 31, 2015

WANTED 30 PEOPLE WITH HEARING LOSS 2VBMJmFE 1BSUJDJQBOUT /FFEFE GPS 5FDIOPMPHZ 'JFME Test

‘Never going to be the same’ SPLIT BY KATRINA, FAMILIES REBUILD SEPARATELY AND TOGETHER BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HOUSTON — Bunk beds dominate the narrow living room of Chevelle Washington’s modest three-bedroom brick townhouse apartment. A large box in the corner is piled high with kids’ shoes. The 51-year-old is raising six of her grandchildren. Her home is a refuge, a haven. It was that way back in her native New Orleans, too — never so much as on Aug. 29, 2005, when Hurricane Katrina struck. “I had 21 people at my house,� she says of that horrible night. “Because I had an up- and downstairs.� The water rushing through the city’s breached floodwalls climbed all 17 of those front stairs, stopping just below the porch. It had receded to the 11th step by the following day, when a uniformed man appeared in a motorized flatboat. As their anonymous saviour steered the craft into the lake that the Upper Ninth Ward had become, Washington burst into tears. “It ain’t never going to be the same no more,� she cried. Her youngest son, Steven, remembers how the man at the helm tried to comfort his mother. “You’re moving on to something better,� he said. An estimated 1.5 million Gulf Coast residents fled Katrina, scattering like wind-tossed seeds to all 50 states. Many thousands of them, like Chevelle Washington, have taken root where they landed. But for son Steven, the pull of home, of New Orleans, was too strong. A few months after Katrina, he returned to his ruined city, hoping to recapture that sense of belonging he couldn’t find in Texas. Standing on that 11th step recently, his mind wandered back to the day he and his family climbed into that boat. He was never really sure what the man meant by “something better.� A shortterm shelter? A bigger house? A safer city? Like so many families splintered by the storm, the Washingtons are still searching. ——— The storm did not “drown� New Orleans. But there’s no denying it is a changed city. The black population has dropped from nearly 67 per cent in 2000 to 59 per cent today; whites, once about onequarter of residents, now account for nearly a third. “The people who have not returned have been disproportionately AfricanAmerican, renters, low-income, single mothers and persons with disabilities,� says Lori Peek, an associate professor of sociology at Colorado State University and co-editor, with Weber, of the book, “Displaced: Life in the Katrina Diaspora.� Since the storm, rents in the Crescent City have skyrocketed — up 33 per cent for a one-bedroom apartment and 41 per cent for a two-bedroom. Following Katrina, officials demolished four of the city’s notorious projects, vowing to replace them with modern, mixed-income developments. Despite much progress, there are still about 3,200 fewer low-income, public housing apartments than before the storm. Most of the people living in those units were black. Like Linda Nellum. Revitalization had already pushed Nellum out of the murder-plagued Magnolia projects. Living in temporary Section 8 housing when Katrina hit, Nellum was evacuated to Houston. From Texas, she applied for return and was put on a waiting list. She’s still waiting. “Every now and then, you think about going home,� the 43-year-old says, a tear trickling down her cheek. She feels “trapped� in Houston. Chevelle Washington chooses to see it differently. ——— Growing up, sisters Chevelle and Champernell Washington never saw any reason to fear the landscape around them. But there was something different about that mid-summer’s day 10 years ago, says Champernell.

“You could just about smell it in the air,� she says. When the skies began to clear, Chevelle Washington thought all was well — until she opened the door to the garage below. A refrigerator and her grandson’s basinet swirled up toward her, “like trying to see who was going to get up the stairs first.� Steven, then 16, waded down the front steps and stared as shrimp and crawfish skipped past. When the rescue boat arrived the next day, Chevelle Washington was reluctant to get in, not wanting to split up the family. The boatman dropped them on a nearby street where, hours later, a military truck took them to the Superdome. The Washingtons managed to find space in the hometown Saints’ end zone. Surely, this dangerous, leakyroofed open latrine was not the “something better� they’d been promised. After a few days, the refugee family escaped New Orleans. Champernell had once lived in Houston. She’d loved the schools there, and there always seemed to be plenty of work. And so, she, Chevelle and other family members resettled in Texas. ——— In southwest Houston, the Washington clan has created a little slice of New Orleans. Chevelle lives just a couple of miles from Champernell and her two girls. About a 10-minute drive east, brother Rene’s restaurant, Sleepy’s Po Boys, offers fellow Katrina refugees a taste of home. Each has been back to New Orleans numerous times. Despite obvious progress, “It’s still that sense of death in the air,� says Champernell, 45, night manager at a hotel. Chevelle talked of a friend who moved her family back — only to have three of her boys killed in a drive-by shooting, victims of apparent mistaken identity. “I’m not ready to bury none of my kids,� says the former hotel maid, who now makes do largely on disability benefits for one of the children. Much as she loves her hometown, it’s not worth the risk. Besides, she says, “It would never be home again.� ——— It’s not that life in Houston was horrible, says Chevelle’s son Steven, who lives in a one-story apartment complex halfway between Treasure and Abundance streets in New Orleans. His new high school made room on the football team for the running back from New Orleans. But off the field, it seemed he was forever trying to dodge tensions — like the taunt “N-O!� that the Houston kids would shout whenever New Orleans refugees passed in the hallways. Bottom line, he was homesick. “I just couldn’t really do Houston,� he says. After an uncle moved back to New Orleans, Steven joined him. He ended up in a different school from the one he’d left, with different kids. He found jobs after graduation, most recently in the city’s vibrant restaurant industry. Yes, New Orleans is dangerous. But most of the time, Steven says, the victim “probably did something he had no business doing.� Ten years after climbing into that boat, he admits that he’s not satisfied with where he is in life. “Just making it,� he says. Last year, Steven had a baby girl, My’chel Marie. He sent her to live with his mother in Houston. Between shifts, he’s found time to take computer and business courses at Southern University New Orleans. His uncle has been talking about expanding, and Steven thinks he could run a restaurant. More and more, he’s thinking he’ll have to leave New Orleans. “Too many of the wrong young people are coming back,� he says. Although he says he has no regrets about coming back to New Orleans, his advice to other young people is: Unless you’re returning for a good job or to study, stay where you are.

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Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Chevelle Washington, right, sits in the hospital room of her sister, Chelette Price, in Houston on Aug. 13, 2015. One profound change wrought by Hurricane Katrina was the splitting of families as a mass evacuation from chaotic New Orleans sent thousands, including Washington’s family, to the safety of other cities.

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