Nanaimo Daily News, November 21, 2015

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WHAT’S INSIDE Today’s issue

ANDY BLATCHFORD THE CANADIAN PRESS

GOP opponents condemn Trump Republican presidential rivals rushed Friday to condemn Donald Trump’s support for a government database to track Muslims in the United States. » Nation&World, 14

Crossword 23, 25, 26 Comics ................. 23-24 Markets ......................... 24 Sudoku ......................... 24 Classified ..................... 27 Obituaries ................... 27

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

No surplus: Liberals say federal deficit to hit $3B

Tracy Samra spent much of Friday, her second day on the job, in meetings with senior managers and will continue that work into next week. » News, 5

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Interim manager gets her feet wet

Local news ............... 3-8 Editorials/letters ........ 6 B.C. news ........................ 9 Nation & World ........ 11 Sports ............................ 18 Scoreboard ................ 22

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OTTAWA — The Trudeau government says the federal books inherited from the Conservatives will drive the country billions of dollars deeper in the hole than expected — downgrading, perhaps, the Liberals’ pre-election fiscal vows into aspirational goals. The government’s gloomy forecasts Friday prompted opposition critics to ask which parts of the platform are the Liberals planning to ditch to meet their promises? After releasing the update, Finance Minister Bill Morneau maintained the government will fulfil its pledge to balance the books four years from now — before the next election — despite the weaker economic environment and the steeper fiscal obstacles. To get there, the government will have to contend with an updated fiscal baseline about $6 billion lower per year than the forecasts contained in the Conservatives’ April budget, the fresh Finance Department numbers showed. For example, the $2.4-billion surplus for 2015-16 — including the $1 billion set aside for contingencies — projected in April by the Tories is now expected to be a $3-billion deficit. Morneau, however, wasn’t as clear when asked whether the Liberals’ projected annual deficits in the coming years could swell above the $10-billion cap. The party made the promise on their way to victory in last month’s election campaign. “I think it would be too soon for me to answer your question and to give you specifics,” Morneau told reporters when asked whether the grimmer outlook could increase the party’s annual projected shortfalls above the $10-billion mark. The Liberals had promised to run annual deficits of just under $10 billion over the next two years with a shortfall of about $5.7 billion in the third year before balancing the books in time for the next election.

Minister of Finance Bill Morneau as he delivered a fiscal update during a news conference in Ottawa on Friday. [THE CANADIAN PRESS]

Morneau said the figures released Friday are a starting point and he insisted the government intends to keep its campaign commitments. “We aspire to meet all those goals,” said Morneau, a rookie politician who pointed out it was only his 16th day as finance minister. His department’s latest forecasts do not account for the big-ticket spending promises in the Liberal platform, nor do they factor in the potential benefits the government expects from its plan to roll out stimulus such as infrastructure. During the election campaign, Justin Trudeau’s Liberals vowed to kick-start the economy and create jobs through tax cuts for the middle-income earners and by pouring billions into infrastructure. Now in government, the Liberals noted Friday that economic conditions have deteri-

orated since the Tories’ April budget because of higher expenses and lower revenues. Government officials blamed the more-negative outlook on stubbornly low commodity prices, global uncertainty and the very weak performance by the United States economy to start the year. “Risks to the Canadian outlook remain tilted to the downside,” the update said, adding that monthly economic growth has picked up again in recent months after a contraction over the first two quarters of 2015, which is considered a technical recession. In reaction to the updated numbers, Conservative MP Maxime Bernier said the Liberals will likely be forced to adjust their plan — by running bigger-than-expected deficits, cutting programs or hiking taxes. “What cuts will they have to make from their electoral promises?” Bernier asked.

NATIONAL

Syria refugee plan costs could hit $1.2B STEPHANIE LEVITZ THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — How the Liberal government intends to bring thousands of Syrian refugees to Canada by year’s end will become clear Tuesday with the rollout of the plan for the largest rapid resettlement program in the country’s history. Federal ministers would not divulge any elements of the proposal Friday or comment on a document obtained by The Canadian Press that suggests the cost of the program could hit $1.2 billion, far more than the $250 million the Liberals budgeted in their platform to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees. The document lays out costs over the next six years and says $876.7 million would be needed in 2015-2016 alone. Some of that would be covered by $16.6 million

announced by the previous Conservative government during the election and $100 million coming out of an existing pool of funds to respond to international crises. What’s not clear from the undated document is whether any of those funds are going to help the settlement agencies, provinces or cities which will bear the burden of the longer-term integration of refugees. Immigration Minister John McCallum said Friday that in recent days he’s spoken to dozens of mayors and the premiers of all 13 provinces and territories. A call with big city mayors is schedule for Monday, the same day Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is to meet the premiers. “In all cases, I have said the same thing. I have said that, yes, we are determined to bring refugees here quickly, but we are also

determined to do it right in terms of security and in terms of health,” McCallum said. Among the major concerns is where they are all going to live. While the military plans to temporarily house some and the government is actively seeking other options, the people coming will need permanent homes. Conservative Immigration critic Michelle Rempel said she hopes the details revealed Tuesday are robust and answer all the questions non-governmental organizations, provinces and Canadians have about how exactly this program is going to run. NDP Immigration critic Jenny Kwan said the government owes it to Canadians and to the refugees to handle this right. “We’ll be watching closely to make sure the Liberals stick to their promise to Canadians,” she said in a statement.


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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

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Ketchup on your steak? Folks have some bizarre uses for the much-ballyhooed condiment

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s a reporter it’s my job to reveal any bias, so here it is: I love ketchup on just about everything. I see myself as somewhat of a connoisseur, but I do have my limits though. I’ve got a fairly strict ketchup policy in terms of what’s acceptable and what’s unacceptable. Some of my favourite foods to eat with ketchup include hot dogs, french Aaron fries, corn dogs, Hinks hamburgers, Reporting meatloaf, shepherd’s pie, scrambled eggs, breakfast sausages, hash browns, grilled cheese, and my all time favourite, steak. That’s right, steak. It doesn’t matter if you’re the best chef in the world working with the finest cut of beef. I will unapologetically dip that steak into ketchup before every bite. I receive a lot of flak for it, people consider it weird, or that I’m ruining steak. If dipping my steak into ketchup means I have an unrefined pallet, then so be it. I know people who mix ketchup with kraft dinner or put it on top of poutine; now that’s where I draw the line. Ketchup doesn’t have any business in any sort of pasta dish and as for poutine, why would you do that to a poutine?

◆ NANAIMO

Man dies after being struck by automobile A 28-year-old Nanaimo man has died after being struck by a vehicle at approximately 3:30 a.m. on Friday. Police say the man was hit by a car as he was crossing Highway 19,

“I’m not offended by what people put on their food, it’s all preference.” John Vassilopoulos, restaurant owner

I decided to chat with an experienced steak chef in town to get his take on ketchup. He didn’t agree with my preference for ketchup and steak, but he said he wouldn’t be offended if he saw me gobbling down on the winning combo. “I’m not offended by what people put on their food, it’s all preference. I’ve done some weird things in my day before, I’m the kid that would dip his french fries in his milkshake,” said John Vassilopoulos, owner of Bold Knight Restaurant. “We’ve been doing this for 39 years and very rarely do I have people ask for anything on our steaks here because of the way we season it. I may go through a bottle of HP Sauce, maybe once a month. The way I’ve been cooking steaks through the years there’s no need for ketchup.” Vassilopoulos said there isn’t anything unusual he eats with ketchup, but one of his favourites is the golden grilled cheese and ketchup. I put the call out to my friends, asking them if they add ketchup to anything that could be considered strange. Even I was repulsed with some of the responses. My friends like to eat their ketchup with corn, cottage cheese, chicken fingers, ham and

just north of the Woodgrove Centre shopping mall. Police closed the north lanes on both Highway 19 and 19A Friday morning. A 30-year-old Parksville man was behind the wheel of an older-model Nissan Sentra when the collision occurred. He and a woman passenger stayed at the scene and attempted emergency first-aid until

turkey, mashed potatoes, and ketchup and peanut butter sandwiches. Gross. Then you have your ketchup haters, like our sports editor Scott McKenzie and Comox Valley Record editor, Terry Farrell. They both said the only place ketchup belongs is in the trash. I’m sorry boys, but you’re just not living life to the fullest. VIU culinary chairwoman and culinary arts instructor Debbie Shore has one of the most experienced palates in Nanaimo. She’s cooked alongside some of Canada’s best European-trained chefs and achieved many firsts in Canada for women chefs. She’s worked in Canada’s most respected hotels and spent a year in Geneva. She leads the VIU culinary program, churning out top professional chefs annually. “Personally, I think all food put in front of a person should be tasted before adding any condiment or seasoning,” Shore said. “That said, I like ketchup. No, actually, I love ketchup.” Take that, ketchup haters. “My chef that I apprenticed with, the culinary Olympic team captain, loved ketchup. I prefer the Save-onFoods brands over Heinz. It’s a sauce that has a consistent red colour, is good with everything from fries to samosas. It’s useful in a homemade barbeque sauce, cocktail sauce and for making a spicy ginger beef sauce, so I’m a supporter,” she said. Though she likes it, she wouldn’t make a meal of it considering it’s basically sugar, salt and vinegar with a bit of tomato paste to dissolve into.

first responders arrived. The victim was pronounced dead at the scene. Police say alcohol and speed are not considered to be a factor. The Nissan was towed for a mechanical inspection. The deceased man was wearing dark, non-reflective clothing. — DAILY NEWS

National Geographic did some digging on ketchup and found the word comes from the Hokkien Chinese word kê-tsiap, which is the name of a sauce derived from fermented fish. Ketchup was first made with mushrooms, mussels, walnuts, oysters or other foods. Tomatoes weren’t used for ketchup until the early 1800s. According to the website lifehacker, there are plenty of alternative uses for the sauce. The website says ketchup makes a good shiner for silverware, can correct green highlights in bleached hair, and of course, is good as fake blood.

When quizzed about ketchup Shore was able to recall an unusual use for the condiment. “I once had a student who had ‘done some time,’ who fermented it into some sort of alcoholic beverage,” she said. Ketchup booze? I think I’ll pass. Aaron.Hinks @nanaimodailynews.com 250-729-4242

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

NANAIMO

Number of families in poverty has ‘worsened’ DARRELL BELLAART DAILY NEWS

Child poverty indicators are on the rise in Nanaimo, according to a coalition of caregivers and others who share a goal to provide best possible options for children. The proportion of Nanaimo families in poverty “worsened” by 11.3 per cent, according to the 2015 State of the Child Report for Nanaimo, unveiled Friday by the Greater Nanaimo Early Years Partnership. The umbrella organization includes 43 agencies that focus on prenatal care to children six and under. Although 30 per cent of families enjoy annual incomes of $80,000 or more, the proportion earning less than $20,000 rose to 15.7 per cent, from 11.3 per cent, based on census data and information obtained from Statistics Canada and BC Stats.

“A geographic disparity that exists in our communities is highlighted in this report,” said Dr. Paul Hasselback, Island Health chief medical officer for the Central Island. The report area covers Greater Nanaimo taking in Cedar to Lantzville and Gabriola Island, and comprises a population base of 107,000. It covers the period 2006 to 2013, but because some data was unavailable, adjustments were made to provide the “best information available,” Hasselback said. Child poverty exists in every neighbourhood. But poverty is below the provincial average of 18 per cent in north Nanaimo and Cedar, while south Nanaimo, downtown and Townsite are highest, at around 30 per cent. The number of families headed by a single parent is up seven per cent.

As income shrinks, housing eats up what’s left: Fifty-two per cent of renters and spend more than 30 per cent on housing. For homeowners, the ratio is 23 per cent. The report, released at the Nanaimo Child Development Centre, shows how such agencies are caught in the funding squeeze. The facility has more than 250 people on its waiting list, with some waiting up to 10 months. It’s not all bad: The average Nanaimo family income rose 13.3 per cent to $67,417 in 2013, but during that period the cost to feed a family of four rose to $948, a 33 per cent increase from 2007. Darrell.Bellaart @nanaimodailynews.com 240-729-4235

Left to right: Greater Nanaimo Early Years Partnership chairwoman Amber Bruner; Dr. Paul Hasselback, chief medical health officer; Pam McAdam with the Nanaimo Child Development Centre; City of Nanaimo social planner John Horn as a new report on child poverty was released Friday . [DARRELL BELLAART/DAILY NEWS]

COURTS

Child porn suspect dies in Gabriola blaze DARRELL BELLAART DAILY NEWS

The man killed in a house fire on Gabriola Island Monday was scheduled to appear in court that day on a child pornography possession charge. BC Coroners Service has confirmed the body found in a rental house on Keith Drive was that of the tenant, Wayne Barry McFetridge, 64. He faced a single charge of possession of child pornography. The Gabriola Fire Department arrived on scene at 5:30 a.m. After the fire was extinguished, the body was found in living space on the second floor. Cause of the fire has not been determined, which has fuelled speculation in the community arson was involved. Gabriola fire chief Rick Jackson said he immediately handed the investiga-

tion over to the RCMP and the BC Coroners Service, but he dismisses the arson theory. “People say all kinds of stupid things here,” Jackson said. “But RCMP went into full-on mode looking into that (and) that’s why they’ve had such an intensive investigation.” Jackson said there is no evidence to support the arson theory. “On this island, the popular word is if you haven’t heard a rumour by noon, start one. This guy wasn’t very popular. He was facing charges.” Jackson said the man was a smoker “and people say he was an alcoholic, (so) I tend to lean more toward an unfortunate accident.” In September, McFetridge was charged with one count of possession of child pornography.

FIRST NATIONS

Atleo to head speaker series DAILY NEWS

Healing wounds between Canada’s First Nations and non-First Nations populations is the focus of a series kicking off next week in Nanaimo. Chief Shawn Atleo will deliver Vancouver Island University’s inaugural presentation of the Indigenous Speakers Series on Nov. 26. The series is being presented in partnership with The Laurier Institution and hosted by CBC Radio One’s Ideas program. Its focus is on topics related to reconciliation and engagement with Canada’s indigenous peoples. Atleo is a hereditary chief of the Ahousaht First Nation, served as VIU’s first chancellor from 2008 to 2014, and was appointed by Premier Christy Clark

to the role of Shqwi qwal for Indigenous Dialogue at VIU. Atleo has also served as Chief of the Assembly of First Nations. Atleo’s talk will be followed by an audience question-and-answer session hosted by CBC Radio. “We are thrilled to present the inaugural Indigenous Speaker Series event,” said Dr. Ralph Nilson, VIU’s president. “Delivering this important speakers series exemplifies these values and the importance VIU places on reconciliation with Canada’s First Nations peoples.” The series, which will be held each year in Nanaimo, was announced in June to mark the release of the final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Atleo’s presentation begins at 7 p.m. in VIU’s Malaspina Theatre.


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

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NEWS 5

NANAIMO

NANAIMO

Samra eager for fresh start in role as city’s interim manager

Not every councillor is happy with hiring process

Optimism abounds as preparations begin for challenges as Nanaimo’s top bureaucrat SPENCER ANDERSON DAILY NEWS

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s the Daily News crew arrived for an interview interim city manager Tracy Samra Friday, she suggested it take place outside city hall to enjoy the fresh air. The phrase ‘fresh air’ has also been applied to Samra by those hoping the new top bureaucrat will help cool tensions and shepherd change amid a trying political period for the city. Samra spent much of Friday, her second day on the job, in meetings with senior managers and will continue that work into next week. She said she has been asking them to outline the challenges they see, as well as opportunities to make progress. Her work will also include getting to know the organization, which employs several hundred people. Samra said one of the main challenges outlined by staff is improving communication “and working with mayor and council to clearly articulate what their strategic priorities are. Staff want to know what (council’s) vision is and where we’re going,” she said. Samra said there is also lot of “optimism” within the civil service, which she said includes a team of younger managers with new ideas. But atop of every city manager’s list is dealing with council, which in Nanaimo has been described by some of its own members as “not functioning.” Samra’s predecessor Ted Swabey, who had worked at the city for more than two decades, also left in part due to disagreements with the current council’s priorities. He is set to take over as chief administrative officer of Maple Ridge. The criticism has also come from outside sources, including Chamber

SPENCER ANDERSON DAILY NEWS

Nanaimo interim city manager Tracy Samra at city hall on Friday. [AARON HINKS/DAILY NEWS]

“The one priority I do have, and I received that from the mayor, is to move forward on the core review.” Tracy Samra, interim city manager

of Commerce CEO Kim Smythe, who recently took council to task for a confrontational, nasty tone at meetings, repeated failure to make quorum and for a lack of progress on key files. Samra, the first First Nations person and woman to take on the city

manager role, said she hopes to play a role improving the situation. “I’m coming in with my eyes wide open,” she said. “I know that there are definite communication and relationship challenges on mayor and council, so I am going to take it step by step, meet with each of the council members and see what I can do to get their trust and respect in this process and help them do what they’re supposed to do. “It is daunting, because there’s a quagmire that I’m wading into, I’m just hoping using different kinds of techniques and different approaches, maybe we can get out of it and make some movement.”

EDUCATION

District talks demolition of historic old Harewood school DAILY NEWS

The demolition of the closed Harewood Elementary School at the cost of $589,000 is under discussion in the Nanaimo-Ladysmith school district. Tearing down the building, which was its 100 years old last year, is the second-highest priority on the district’s latest five-year capital plan recently submitted to the Ministry of Education.

With a lot of asbestos in the old structure, the district has safety issues with the building, said School board chairman Steve Rae. “Nobody is interested in this property while the building is still on it,” he said. “It’s a significant cost to demolish it and we’ve had some discussions with the ministry on finding the funding for it, but we have had no commitments at this time to help us.”

Harewood Elementary School is the oldest building in the school district. It was built in 1914 but closed in 2004 as part of the efforts by the school board to deal with declining enrolment and increased costs. Due to its deteriorating condition, the school has been declared not safe for the public to enter and is considered an eyesore by many residents within the community.

For now, Samra will continue getting to know her new vocational home. “I don’t plan on making any major changes until I’ve had a chance to orient myself, until mayor and council has been clear on what their instructions are for me,” she said. “The one priority I do have, and I received that from the mayor, is to move forward on the core review, so I’m going to be doing that, but there’s no immediate changes pending.” Spencer.Anderson@ nanaimodailynews.com 250-729-4255

An interim city manager has been chosen and already there is controversy — not over the candidate, but the way the way the appointment was made. Residents on social media are reacting to an online post from a local businessman that suggests a majority of council voted to appoint and interim manager without interviewing approximately 22 candidates whose names had been submitted or suggested. Some have expressed dismay over the apparent leak of information from the in-camera meeting, where the hiring decision was made. Others appeared disappointed over a perceived lack of process in selecting a replacement for former city manager Ted Swabey. “I think all I’m prepared to say was I had some disappointment with the process,” said Coun. Ian Thorpe, who stressed his disappointment was not with the successful candidate, Tracy Samra. “I did expect the process of hiring to be a little more lengthy . . . and others did not agree with me,” Thorpe said. But Coun. Gord Fuller said council was faced with a tight deadline. Swabey’s last day was last Friday, and an interim replacement was needed, he said. Fuller also said it soon became apparent that Samra was the favoured choice of a majority on council and said conducting interviews for all candidates would have taken at least a couple of weeks. “It’s not the ideal way to hire someone,” he said. “And I can guarantee that when we hire a permanent city manager that a more robust (process) will be used.”

The “Great” INTERNATIONAL WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP BATHTUB “RACE” & NANAIMO MARINE FESTIVAL

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373 Franklyn Street, Nanaimo, BC V9R 2X5 Tel: 250-753-7223 Fax: 250-753-7244 www.bathtubbing.com email: mail@bathtubbing.com

NOTICE OF THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF THE LOYAL NANAIMO BATHTUB SOCIETY

Notice is hereby given that the Annual General Meeting of the Loyal Nanaimo Bathtub Society (LNBS) will be held on Wednesday, December 2, 2015 at the offices of the LNBS, 373 Franklyn Street in the City of Nanaimo, in the Province of British Columbia, at 6:30 pm, local time for all business that shall come forward at such an Annual General Meeting. Visitors and new members are welcome to attend.


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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

EDITORIAL

Long-form census data loss caused much damage H ow much reliable data has been lost since the Harper government killed the census, and what is the cost? No one, well hardly anyone, likes to do paperwork. Make it mandatory — as in do it or else — and even fewer of us will do it happily. And yet a surprising number of Canadians are applauding the return of the long-form census for 2016. And they should because it’s a very good thing for the country overall, even if the heavy-handed mandatory nature offends many of us. Why? Because you don’t have to be a statistician or social scientist

to know that bad data equals bad decisions. That’s what Canadian policy-makers at all levels were left with when the Harper government killed the census. The rationale at the time was that it’s too invasive and infringes on our privacy rights. It may do that, but those relatively minor problems pale in comparison to the benefits of the good data the long-form census has provided in the past and now, thankfully, will provide in the future. Quite simply, the long-form census is the best tool we have to make evidence-based, people-centric public policy decisions. Canada Pension Plan, employment insurance, Old

Information about us

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Nanaimo Daily News is published by Black Press Ltd., B1, 2575 McCullough Rd., Nanaimo, B.C. V9S 5W5. The Daily News and its predecessor the Daily Free Press have been serving Nanaimo and area since 1874. Publisher/Subscriptions: Andrea Rosato-Taylor 250-729-4248 Managing Editor: Philip Wolf 250-729-4240

Age Security, public transit, public health investment, education and social services — these are just a few of the areas benefiting from the best possible data. Lack of information means deteriorating data, and inadequate data means bad decisions. Where will school populations grow? What does demographic data for a certain area mean about health spending? What is the current status of the wage gap between men and women? What do we know about poverty now and in the future in specific areas? Where are labour shortfalls most acute, suggesting those areas need training and education investment?

There is really no credible, logical argument against the benefits of better data. And yet a sizable percentage of us remain adamantly opposed to the mandatory census, which explains why the Harper government’s decision was unpopular in the academic, science and public policy world, but quite the opposite in the land of broader public opinion. But the results don’t lie. The response rate for the mandatory long-form census before it was killed was 93.5 per cent. The current version is shorter, more expensive, goes to more people and was voluntary, yet it could only

boast a 68.6-per-cent response rate when it was last employed in 2011. The last long-form census was taken in 2006. The new government and Statistics Canada confirm it will happen again in 2016. Regardless, the sad result of this misplaced decision is all the data we would have had for the decade in between is gone. We don’t get another chance at it. That’s tragic. — THE CANADIAN PRESS (HAMILTON SPECTATOR)

» We want to hear from you. Send comments on this editorial to yourletters@nanaimodailynews.com.

Profits at ICBC not filtering down to drivers Brian Coombs Another View

The Daily News is a member of the B.C. Press Council.

Editorial comment The editorials that appear as ‘Our View’ represent the stance of the Nanaimo Daily News. They are unsigned because they do not necessarily represent the personal views of the writers. If you have comment regarding our position, we invite you to submit a letter to the editor. To discuss the editorial policies of the newspaper, please contact Managing Editor Philip Wolf.

Complaint resolution If talking with the managing editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about a story we publish, contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, accompanied by documentation, must be sent within 45 days of the article’s publication to: B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. Visit their website at www. bcpresscouncil.org.

W

e defeated the ICBC monster. Well, sort of. The corporation recently asked for a 6.7 per cent increase in basic rates, but after a huge public outcry, dropped that number to 5.5 per cent. It felt kind of like a victory, but why? Now traffic accidents are down, fatalities are down too, but the corporation feels that it needs to increase the rates, like it did last year, and the year before and the year before that. Of course, having the province suck more than $1 billion from the company in the past couple of years to throw into the black hole of general revenue hasn’t helped the corporation to make ends meet—other than the $4 billion ICBC has made in profits since the 1990s. Yes, you heard right: profits. For much of its existence, the public never heard about ICBC profits because the corporation either reduced rates, sent back a “road safety dividend” check, or spent that cash making roads safer. As a matter of fact, between 1996 and 2001, ICBC rates were actually frozen, while the corporation spent hundreds of millions on making roads better throughout the province. And all that worked showed. There was a drop in collision fatalities (13 per cent) and injuries (16 per cent).

That all changed in 2001. With a new government in power that promised tax break after tax break, the revenue had to be made up for somehow—and it was, through ICBC. So now the people of this province pay the second highest rate for coverage in the country without a corresponding increase in service from ICBC. The government just keeps trotting out the canard of “fraudulent and exaggerated claims,” as stated by Transportation Minister Todd Stone, as a reason for the increases. But finding out the actual numbers of fraudulent and exaggerated claims is pretty much impossible, according to the Insurance Bureau of Canada. “With the lack of transparency, anyone with an interest kind of wants to see where these cost pressures are coming from, why we’re going to be paying more for auto insurance, it’s difficult to actually look into because the data, it just isn’t there, it’s not provided,” said the bureau’s Celyeste Power in a recent interview on CKNW. There is no question that the increases in the province’s basic auto insurance over the years has been, and will continue to be an additional tax. And this tax is by definition regressive, as it is by far more oner-

ous to the poor and working class than those making six figures or more a year. As an example, if you are making $30,000 a year and barely making ends meet, an increase of even a few dollars will hurt. That is what makes this kind of taxation particularly insidious. As a normal tax, the citizen’s income and ability to pay are taken into account. These increases by ICBC (and other taxes such as the PST or GST) don’t. Then you have the very nature of the insurance business itself. It’s a fantastic business model. Take money in from a huge swath of the population, with only a very small percentage of that population having to use your service. When that service is used, regardless of how many years a person has been paying into it, expect a rate increase. Oh, and one other thing, this business model has no competition from other companies for its basic product. Maybe, like some of the provinces that have lower rates than we do, we could pressure the government to scrap ICBC altogether and bring in private insurers who have to compete. After all, competition in the business market is the hallmark of a free market economy. But the Consumers Association of Canada, after a recent investigation,

deemed private insurers to engage routinely in secret commissions to brokers who steered business their way — basing their recommendations on who payed the best commission rather than who gave the best deal. It also outlined a number of other offenses, along with the practice of only taking the clients that are virtually no risk. So how about something truly radical. Suppose the province started another tax, based on a person’s ability to pay, that went exclusively to road safety and maintenance and not general revenue? That would at least be more honest. While we are at it, perhaps the province could also stop looting ICBC and get insurance levels to a reasonable level? Taxes, (the non-regressive kind) would have to increase slightly, but we would all be paying less in the long run and have a guaranteed fund for road safety. Lastly, it is important to remember that when a government promises to reduce taxes, that never, ever means that they are going to be spending less money. It just means that they will be taking the money from another source—and that source is us. Brian Coombs is a columnist with the ‘Kootenay Advertiser.’


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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

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NEWS 7

VANCOUVER ISLAND

Alberni connection to ‘Planet of the Apes’ JACKIE CARMICHAEL ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS

A

n upcoming Hollywood hit movie has some Port Alberni muscle in it. Filmed on location in Ucluelet, Hidden Fortress is the latest installation in the Planet of the Apes franchise. Gordon “Soup” Campbell’s crane had an integral part in the production. “It gave us about two days of work which we normally wouldn’t have had for my crane and the rigger,” said Campbell. The task was positioning a semi-trailer and truck in brush alongside the road out by the landfill, he said. He got a sneak peak at one of the sets, an “abandoned processing plant” meticulously constructed at Wyndansea. “It was very well done, it looked like it had been there a hundred years,” he said. “They did a really good job on it. It reminded me of some of the old fish camps that used to be dotted up and down the coast.” Campbell, who also got some work when scenes for Insomnia were filmed in and around Port Alberni, expects to go to the new ape movie

Film commissioner Joan Miller, right, and colleague Tanya Price, in Ucluelet at the conclusion of filming for the latest Planet of the Apes movie, ‘Hidden Fortress.’ [JACKIE CARMICHAEL PHOTO]

when it shows in local theatres. “It’s not something we get very often around here, making movies, it’s pretty neat,” he said. Hundreds of thousands of dollars can be infused into a town in a matter of days, an undeniable economic boon, Campbell noted. “That’s money that’s well received in a small community,” he said.

A long-time contractor in business in the area since 1956, he’s somewhat familiar with the movie industry; a Toronto-based son works as an electrician in the film industry. As a contractor for the movie, Campbell adhered to the strict non-disclosure policy, as he would for any customer. “Once they’ve hired you and know

EDUCATION

New high school tops district’s five-year plan ROBERT BARRON DAILY NEWS

The construction of a new $66-million secondary school in the Nanaimo-Ladysmith school district tops the list on the district’s new five-year capital plan. But district officials state they are not expecting any funding for the new school, the number-one priority on the approximately $122-million capital plan for 2015-16, any time soon. School board chairman Steve Rae said district officials met with representatives from the Ministry of Education last week and were told that the main priorities for government funding at this time are projects dealing with safety issues in facilities and maintaining “existing assets.” Rae said new school projects, like the proposed new facility for 1,800 students that would be built on the Nanaimo District Secondary site, are not currently high on the ministry’s priority list. A spokesman for the ministry said Thursday that no decisions have yet to be made on any of the province’s school district’s capital plans, but acknowledged that building new schools is not a priority at this time. “I don’t think we’re any closer to getting this funding,” Rae said Every year, the district is required to submit a list to the ministry of what it considers its priority projects, and they are dealt with according to perceived need and funding that’s available. In 2008, the district’s new school board at the time decided to scuttle

RAE

an $87-million, government-approved facilities plan that included building a new high school. The plan included the closure of both the aging Nanaimo District and Woodlands secondary schools in 2012, and the construction of a new high school on the Woodlands site that would have been completed by now. The last time the district received funding from the ministry for a new school was in 2001 when Cinnabar Elementary School was constructed at a cost of $3.7 million. Robert.Barron @nanaimodailynews.com 250-729-4234 » We want to hear from you. Send comments on this story to yourletters@nanaimodailynews.com. Letters must include daytime phone number and hometown.

who you are, maybe they’ll be back and you can do something else for them,” he said. Like some 35 carpenters and 15 production assistants, Campbell didn’t confide that he was building sets for the movie; he was sworn to secrecy. Island North film commissioner Joan Miller said the film production now heads to the lower mainland for studio filming, but the after-effect lingers in local economic impact. “In order to support local communities when they do a film, they try to purchase locally,” Miller said. On the West Coast, that means a trickle-over-Sutton Pass effect for heavy equipment and car rental businesses in Port Alberni, she said. Miller said she can’t say enough about support from local municipal officials, the airport and the Alberni-Clayoquot Regional District. “They’re getting great feedback from production crews here, that kind of word-of-mouth goes a long way,” she said. “This is a film-friendly community, they’re always co-operative,” Miller said. A non-profit agency that doesn’t charge for its services, Island North Film Commission works with all the

on-the-ground logistics to facilitate film production here – with one question in mind. “How can we as a region make this a win-win for both the production company and the community?” she asked. In order to attract films out of Hollywood, even out of the Lower Mainland, there are advantages to be represented: everything from Vancouver Island’s 22,000 square miles of spectacular scenery – much of it unimpeded by traces of civilization – to free parking. “We’re competitive . . . we want them to come to our region, and spend all their per diem while they’re here,” Miller said. Federal and provincial parks, once somewhat aloof to the film industry, have realized that Hollywood can bring them what they need: free publicity with location shoots that will lure a second wave to visit. “People are more and more making decisions on where to travel based on what they’ve seen on the big screen,” said Miller. There were, earlier this month, more than six documentary crews on the ground on Vancouver Island, including several BBC documentaries.

Notice: Board Appointments The Regional District of Nanaimo is now accepting applications to the following advisory bodies:


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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

NANAIMO

City council votes to alter food truck restrictions SPENCER ANDERSON DAILY NEWS

Nanaimo city council has voted to loosen up restrictions on food truck vendors, although some on council signalled a desire for the policy changes to go further. Council unanimously backed the proposed changes in principle Monday night, which will for the first time allow vendors to operate on certain locations on city streets and city-owned parking lots. The changes, backed by local business groups, will also increase the number of park locations where food trucks and trailers can operate and proposes a simpler process for acquiring a license to operate the mobile eateries. The licence would also be transferable across various locations across the city. The policy shift comes after more than a year of research and consultation with food vendors and groups like the Greater Nanaimo Chamber of Commerce. Chamber CEO Kim Smythe has represented the local industry during talks.

Changes to food truck restrictions in Nanaimo will allow for vendors to operate in more locations throughout the city.

Currently, food truck operators cannot operate on city streets or parking lots. They are restricted to a handful of park locations and must attain a special parks licence use agreement in addition to a business licence. Under the new rules, only one licence is needed for each vendor. The city is also proposing a system

when licensed vendors can reserve parking lot or park locations in advance, or show up to claim street locations on a first-come, first serve basis. However, the proposed new system also came under criticism. Only five new street locations are proposed for food trucks close to downtown, including two on

Albert Street, one on Church Street, another on Front Street near the court house and a final location on Wallace Street by City Hall. Two more locations are proposed for the hospital area and Duke Point. Only one vendor would be able to occupy each location at a time. The policy also effectively locks food trucks outside of the downtown

core because of a proposed 25-metre ‘buffer’ from downtown restaurants. Coun. Gord Fuller said the proposals had positive elements, but indicated the proposed locations and restrictions were a concern. “I see this as very restrictive, not as flexible,” he said. Fuller also cited Smythe’s claims that food trucks do not take away customers from restaurants, but rather increase the market size. “So why make it so restrictive in our downtown core?” Fuller said. Others voiced similar concerns. “I think the appetite around the table — no pun intended — is to actually get a little more progressive and not have limitations,” said Coun. Bill Yoachim. That appetite may soon be sated. Council unanimously backed a motion from Coun. Diane Brennan to have city staff review additional location opportunities for food trucks. Spencer.Anderson @nanaimodailynews.com 250-729-4255

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A Port Alberni woman is in hospital in Victoria and her family is shaken and wondering why they were targeted after an incendiary device exploded at their Stuart Avenue home. Port Alberni RCMP were called to the rural residence just after 9 a.m. after receiving a report about an incendiary device that had detonated. “Preliminary investigation indicates that the injured woman located a package in the driveway of the home and brought it inside,” RCMP Inspector Mac Richards said. “While moving the package, an explosion occurred.” The package was filled with plastic shopping bags and yet-to-be-determined contents, Richards said. “The origin of this package and how or why it came to be at this home remain under investigation at this time,” he said. The woman’s husband, who did not want to be identified, said his wife was airlifted to Victoria. “She’s going to have hand problems,” he said. The husband and his father-inlaw were treated at West Coast General Hospital and released. He did not want to speak with the media any further about what happened. Three officers with the RCMP’s Emergency Disposal Unit arrived on the scene around 4 p.m. to speak with family members and survey the scene, which had been cordoned off for several hours.

RCMP officers outside a Port Alberni home where an incendiary device exploded on Friday afternoon. Two people were treated at West Coast General Hospital and released, and a woman was airlifted to hospital in Victoria with non life-threatening injuries [SUSAN QUINN/ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS]

Richards said this is the first time in the three years he has been in Port Alberni that he has had to deal with an incendiary device. “It’s not a common occurrence.” Anyone who locates a suspicious item of unknown origin is urged

not to disturb it and to contact police for assistance, he said. Anyone with information on this incident is asked to contact the Port Alberni RCMP at 250-723-2424 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or online at avcrimestoppers.ca.


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INVESTIGATION

UBC criticized for announcing suspension LAURA KANE THE CANADIAN PRESS

VANCOUVER — The University of British Columbia’s faculty association says the institute should not have publicly revealed that high-profile author Steven Galloway had been suspended over “serious allegations.” Association president Mark Mac Lean sent a memo to all faculty Friday saying the university released “confidential information” when it announced that Galloway was sus-

pended with pay as chairman of the creative writing program. “Unfortunately, this confidential information was released to the public by way of the posting of an internal memorandum from the dean of arts, and by various interviews granted to the media by members of the university administration,” the memo stated. Mac Lean said Galloway had a legal right to privacy regarding matters pertaining to his employment status

and an expectation of procedural fairness, natural justice and that the labour relations processes and practices at the university be followed. “We deeply regret that unspecified allegations and the fact of his suspension have been made public by the university and we will not be commenting further.” Dean of arts Gage Averill announced Galloway’s suspension on Wednesday in a memo posted to the university website. He did not dis-

close the nature of the allegations or the number of complainants. Averill gave several media interviews in which he said the university would soon announce the identity of an external investigator hired to probe the allegations. On Friday, managing director of public affairs Susan Danard said UBC would release no more information. “UBC is not doing media interviews at this time or providing further details via the media to maintain the

integrity of an impartial, independent investigation and to protect the rights of all parties involved,” she stated in an email. Chelsea Rooney, an author and graduate of the creative writing program, said she’s concerned that Mac Lean’s memo will serve to silence people involved in the investigation. “They will now feel afraid to share information, which is exactly how silence becomes abusive and damaging,” she said.

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10 B.C.

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

VANCOUVER

Climate change labels on way for gas pumps JEFF NAGEL BC LOCAL NEWS

Climate change warning labels for gas pump handles will come to at least a few gas stations in Metro Vancouver next year. Council in North Vancouver voted this week to make the labels, still to be designed, a mandatory condition of business licences for the six stations that exist in the city. The Union of B.C. Municipalities had already voted in September in favour of advocating for provincial legislation requiring all petroleum retailers to display warning labels. But North Vancouver City Mayor Darrell Mussatto said his council has given up waiting for a co-ordinated approach across B.C. to emerge from UBCM and the province. “They’re just taking too long,” he said. “This is something that’s not rocket science here. So we’re just taking the lead on it.” Mussatto hopes other cities in the region follow with their own local rules. He said North Van has legal advice that the nozzle topper labels can be an enforceable condition of the business licensing bylaw, although he acknowledged a court challenge by

A non-profit group proposed these gas pump warning labels but North Vancouver plans to come up with their own to caution drivers about climate change while also making constructive suggestions on cutting emissions.

petroleum companies is a possibility. Activists who have spearheaded the idea hope that the guilt-inducing labels inspired by those for tobacco

that directly confront drivers as they fuel up will prod more of them to choose lower emission ways to get around.

FISHERIES

The non-profit group Our Horizons has circulated suggested labels with stark imagery of global warming impacts.

One shows dead coral and warns “use of this fuel product contributes to ocean acidification which puts much marine life at risk of extinction.” Mussatto said North Vancouver will develop its own messaging that tries to strike a constructive tone. “We don’t want doom and gloom, that doesn’t work,” he said. “We want to point out that use of fossil fuels contributes to climate change, which is very important, so that will be a message on there.” But he said there will also be a second message at each pump that gives emission-reduction tips. Those could include fuel efficiency advice such as keeping tires properly inflated and not carrying excess weight in the vehicle, said Mussatto. A city report cautions that fear-based negative messages could backfire. It says other “positive can-do” messages could tell drivers about B.C.’s $5,000 incentive to buy an electrical vehicle, the Scrap-It program’s offer of a transit pass worth $1,360 if you “trade in your clunker”; and that “idling your vehicle for more than 10 seconds wastes more gas than restarting your engine.”

B.C.

Guides report slump in number Even the speed limit of steelhead in B.C. Interior rivers could result in a ticket ALICIA BRIDGES SMITHERS INTERIOR NEWS

Fishing guides are reporting a slump in the number of prized steelhead salmon biting in local rivers this year, reflecting a drop observed by scientists counting the number of fish entering the Skeena River to spawn. According to information from B.C.’s Wildlife Branch, 113.3 of what are called steelhead ‘index points’ were counted at the Skeena River Tyee Test Fishery in 2015. The Ministry uses a calculation based on that number to estimate the total number of fish entering the river annually. This year’s estimate was 27,580, which was lower than last year’s number of 31,821, but higher than the estimate of 25,541 in 2013. Senior fisheries biologist Mark Beere said this year’s numbers were not particularly low in the context of the fishery’s six decade history.

He said numbers in the recent past, since the late 1990s, had been high compared with the years before that, when commercial fishing was more prevalent. “The big picture is to recognize there were . . . 40 worse years in the past 60 but partly that was because the commercial fishery was so active,” he said. “Imagine in the past up to 1,200 commercial boats, each packing 1,200 feet of gillnet fishing up to six days a week or even more. “It truly was a wall, a gauntlet.” He said commercial fishing levels had since been scaled back due to a dive in sockeye numbers and concerns for weak stocks. Derek Botchford, who owns Frontier Farwest Lodge, which offers guided steelhead fishing on the Bulkley and Morice Rivers, said he had noticed the fish were not biting as vigorously in 2015 compared with previous years.

Nov. 20-26 THE PEANUTS MOVIE (G) FRI 4:00; SAT 10:40, 1:10, 4:00; SUN 1:10, 4:00; TUE 3:50 THE PEANUTS MOVIE 3D (G) FRI 5:00, 7:30, 9:50; SAT-SUN 12:15, 2:40, 5:00, 7:30, 9:50; MON,WED 7:20, 9:40; TUE 4:50, 7:20, 9:40; THURS 7:20 SPECTRE (PG) FRI 3:30, 6:20, 7:00, 9:00, 9:40; SAT 10:00, 12:30, 3:30, 6:20, 7:00, 9:00, 9:40; SUN 12:30, 3:30, 6:20, 7:00, 9:00, 9:40; MON 6:10, 6:50, 9:00, 9:30; TUE 3:20, 6:10, 6:50, 9:00, 9:30; WED-THURS 6:50, 9:00 GOOSEBUMPS (PG) FRI 3:40; SAT-SUN 1:00, 3:40; TUE 3:30 BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG)FRI 3:50, 6:40, 9:45; SAT-SUN 12:40, 3:50, 6:40, 9:45; MON,WED 6:30, 9:35; TUE 3:40, 6:30, 9:35; THURS 9:35 THE 33 (PG) FRI-SAT 3:40, 7:10, 10:00; SUN 7:10, 10:00; MON,WED-THURS 7:00, 9:50; TUE 3:30, 7:00, 9:50 SECRET IN THEIR EYES (PG) FRI 4:10, 7:20, 9:55; SAT-SUN 1:40, 4:10, 7:20, 9:55; MON,WED-THURS 7:10, 9:45; TUE 4:00, 7:10, 9:45 SPOTLIGHT (14A)FRI 4:20, 6:50, 9:45; SAT 10:15, 1:20, 4:20, 6:50, 9:45; SUN 1:20, 4:20, 6:50, 9:50; MON,WED-THURS 6:40, 9:40; TUE 4:10, 6:40, 9:40 SUFFRAGETTE (PG) FRI-SAT 6:30, 10:10; SUN 12:50, 10:10; MON-THURS 6:20, 10:00 THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: LULU SAT 9:30 WWE SURVIVOR SERIES -- 2015 SUN 4:00 CREED (PG) NO PASSES WED-THURS 7:00, 10:00 KENNETH BRANAGH THEATRE COMPANY THE WINTER’S TALE THURS 7:00 • HOME ALONE SAT 11:00

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But he said those years were so good that visiting anglers had developed high expectations. “There’s enough fish where everybody goes out and catches a fish or two a day but it is lower comparatively (to) the past ten years.” Botchford said he was not alarmed by the drop, guessing it could be attributable to a flood in the region four years ago. Another fishing guide, Denise Maxwell from Maxwell Steelhead Guides, said the steelhead had been not only fewer but smaller this season. “There’s a few big ones around but most of them are normal or below normal size so it gets you wondering, what happened to the big fish?” said Maxwell. “Is it ocean survival or have those fish been caught in somebody’s nets?” She said the salmon migration passed through several commercial fisheries, including some in international waters.

BLACK PRESS

Police across B.C. are focusing on drivers travelling too fast for the road conditions this November. Many collisions in the fall and winter are a result of drivers continuing to drive at or above the speed limit when they really need to slow down. “Speed limits are maximums in ideal conditions and many drivers disregard this when the weather changes. The roads are often wet and slippery and visibility is poor due to fog and rain. Drivers need to make the necessary adjustments,” says Cpl. Ronda McEwen of BC RCMP Traffic Services. When road conditions are poor, drivers are expected to adjust their speed to reduce the risk of being involved in a collision. If you are involved in a collision and police are able to determine you were travelling at an unsafe speed for the road conditions you could be issued a violation ticket for speed relative to conditions, a $167 fine which

also carries 3 points; even if you were travelling at the posted speed limit. From October 1, 2014 to March 31, 2015, police across BC issued over 460 violation tickets to drivers travelling too fast for the road conditions. “Police are dedicated to improving road safety through a variety of enforcement tactics; please slow down if road conditions are poor,” said Insp. Ronald Russell, Officer in Charge of Enhanced Traffic Services Programs. Drivers need to slow down and take the time to look before acting. Be prepared for sudden stops and watch for pedestrians at marked and unmarked crosswalks. Police also remind drivers to ensure they have their head and tail lights on and working, most days warrant having your lights on at all times. Check your windshield wipers to ensure they are in good working order. Take the time to defrost your windows so they are all clear before heading out on the road.

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◆ COQUITLAM

Man charged after seizure of drugs, weapons, cash A 34-year-old Coquitlam man has been charged with six counts related to alleged drug trafficking. RCMP say charges against Jared Davidson include possession of stolen property and possession of a dangerous weapon. Police say Davidson had been a victim of several targeted home inva-

sions before his arrest last month but he did not co-operate with police. Mounties say the man was arrested after officers seized drugs, cash, weapons and stolen property from a house in the city east of Vancouver. Davidson has been released with conditions, including not to possess any mobile communication device, crossbow, prohibited or restricted weapons or ammunition. — THE CANADIAN PRESS


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TERRORISM

At least 20 dead in Mali as militants attack hotel Extremist group led by former al-Qaida commander claims responsibility BABA AHMED THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BAMAKO, Mali — Heavily armed Islamic extremists seized dozens of hostages Friday at a Radisson hotel, but Malian troops, backed by U.S. and French special forces, swarmed in to retake the building and free many of the terrified captives. At least 20 people, including one American, were killed along with two gunmen during the more than seven-hour siege, a Malian military commander said. An extremist group led by former al-Qaida commander Moktar Belmoktar claimed responsibility for the attack in the former French colony, and many in France saw it as a new assault on their country’s interests a week after the Paris attacks. While French President Francois Hollande did not link the violence at the Radisson Blu hotel with last week’s bloodshed in Paris, he declared that France would stand by the West African country. “Once again, terrorists want to make their barbaric presence felt everywhere, where they can kill, where they can massacre. So we should once again show our solidarity with our ally, Mali,” he said. Gunfire continued throughout the day at the hotel, which is popular with airline crews and other foreigners doing business in the capital of Bamako, but the shooting had stopped after dark. Officials would not confirm that the entire complex had been secured by nightfall, although the only activity was firefighters carrying bodies to waiting ambulances. Malian state television said late Friday night that the government had announced a 10-day state of emergency beginning at midnight as well as a three-day period of national mourning beginning Monday. Army Cmdr. Modibo Nama Traore said late Friday that 20 people had been killed, including an official with Mali’s gendarmerie. In addition, he said five people were

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

More VWs may have cheating software THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Volkswagen’s emissions cheating scandal widened Friday as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said that clandestine software allowing six-cylinder Volkswagen diesel engines to cheat on pollution tests is on more models than originally thought. The EPA and the California Air Resources Board said the German automaker acknowledged the software is on about 85,000 Volkswagen, Audi and Porsche vehicles with three-litre engines going back to the 2009 model year.

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TWENTY-SIXTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST Mali police walk outside one of the entrances to the Radisson Blu hotel’s conference center after an attack by gunmen on the hotel in Bamako, Mali on Friday. [AP PHOTO]

injured including two police officers. The U.S. State Department said one American was among the dead, though it did not identify the victim out of respect for the family. Though Traore had earlier said as many as 10 attackers were involved, he said Friday night that there may have been only two gunmen, both of whom were killed. A police officer at the hotel displayed photos of the two dead gunmen, their bodies riddled with bullets. The siege began when assailants shouting “God is great!” in Arabic burst into the complex and opened fire on the hotel guards, Traore said earlier on Friday. An employee who identified himself as Tamba Diarra said by phone amid the attack that the militants used grenades.

About 170 guests and employees were initially taken hostage, but some apparently escaped or hid in the sprawling, cream-andpink hotel that has 190 rooms and a spa, outdoor pool and ballroom. They included visitors from France, Belgium, Germany, China, India, Canada, Ivory Coast and Turkey. “It was more like a real terrorist attack,” said UN Mission spokesman Olivier Salgado. “The intention was clearly to kill, not to necessarily have people being hostage.” U.S. special forces assisted, said Col. Mark Cheadle of the U.S. Army’s Africa Command. All the Canadians known to have been in the hotel are safe, Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion said Friday. — WITH A FILE FROM THE CANADIAN PRESS

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Ex-Senate clerk grilled by lawyer for Duffy STEPHANIE LEVIT THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Senate officials never asked detailed questions about who or what services they were cutting cheques for, relying largely on senators themselves to explain how contracts supported their parliamentary functions, Sen. Mike Duffy’s criminal trial heard Friday. Former Senate finance clerk Nicole Proulx returned to the stand and was grilled by Duffy’s defence lawyer on whether she asked any questions about contracts Duffy and the Senate signed, or if she was concerned about the practice of contract dates being amended if they were submitted after the work was complete. There was a policy that contracts couldn’t

be backdated, Donald Bayne noted, yet evidence shows there was what amounted to an “administrative work-around” in place that just saw the date of work being changed so the contracts would conform. Proulx said the way contracting services were handled was one of many risks Senate officials highlighted previously and several memos were issued to remind senators that contract work could not be done before a contract was signed. She said she never personally sought to verify what services were actually being provided nor who was providing them, but court later heard that her colleague in the human resources department had raised questions about duties outlined in at least one of Duffy’s contracts.

The system for handling Senate office expenses and contracting was reviewed by independent auditors in 2009-2010 and cautions were raised about existing policies being “outdated, inadequate or non-existent” court heard. Those audits took place at the same time Duffy was signing the contracts that are now at the heart of his criminal trial on 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges. A key line of his defence is that he did nothing criminal in his handling of expenses and contracts and was playing by admittedly unclear rules. The trial resumes Monday with more testimony expected from Gerald Donohue, Duffy’s longtime friend.

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NEWS IN BRIEF The Canadian Press

Shadow cabinet for Tories named by Ambrose

◆ WINNIPEG

Manslaughter finding in samurai sword killing

KRISTY KIRKUP THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Interim Conservative Leader Rona Ambrose announced the members of her shadow cabinet Friday, including a defeated MP from Atlantic Canada who has been tapped to examine how party support unravelled in Eastern Canada. Ambrose and the Tories are seeking a way forward now that they are back to official Opposition status. Scott Armstrong, who lost to Liberal Bill Casey in the Nova Scotia riding of Cumberland-Colchester, will assist with Conservative efforts to rebuild support in the Atlantic provinces. The Conservatives and New Democrats were shut out on the East Coast when the Liberals swept Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island on Oct. 19. Armstrong will occasionally travel to Ottawa for shadow cabinet meetings, but he will be based in Atlantic Canada to listen to issues there. Longtime Conservative MP Lisa Raitt, who will serve as the party’s finance critic, says it’s important to include an East Coast perspective. “I think it makes a lot of sense to have a voice of Atlantic Canada . . . as part of what we are trying to do,” Raitt said. “You can’t ignore what happened east of Quebec.” Raitt also said she is looking forward to what the Conservatives can accomplish. “I think it is exciting,” she said. “We’re going to do our job. We were asked to do our jobs by Canadians to be official Opposition and we are going to do it.” In the days ahead, the Tories plan to press the new Liberal government for specifics on its plan to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees in less than six weeks. It will also continue to urge the government to rethink its plan to pull six Canadian CF-18s out of the U.S.-led coalition attacking militant positions in Iraq and Syria. “Once again, we are calling on the Liberal government to reverse its decision,” Ambrose said in a statement. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said he will not backtrack on the plan to pull the CF-18s, but he has promised an increase in the number of ground troops used to train local forces fighting the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Ambrose, who will also serve as critic for the status of women, has also created some new positions, including a critic for matters relating to maternal, child and newborn health. This will be tackled by Alberta MP Mike Lake.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

A woman lights a candle at the Place de la Republique in Paris after French artists and cultural figures called for people to mark a week since the start of the Paris attacks with an outpouring of ‘noise and light’ on Friday. [AP PHOTO]

Parisians pay tribute to dead a week after attack City’s mood subdued as many mark seven days since shootings JILL LAWLESS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A

week after their city was shaken to the core by a bloody series of attacks, Parisians turned out in their thousands Friday to pay tribute to the dead and express defiance at those who would try to challenge the French way of life. Many placed candles among flowers stacked outside the Paris attack sites, while others held hands and reflected on their city’s losses. Some chose to sing and dance, raising their glasses to the victims who one week earlier had been enjoying a Friday night out when the attackers struck. With France under a state of emergency, most demonstrations and large gatherings have been banned in Paris since the Nov. 13 attacks. A gathering at France’s oldest mosque to show inter-community solidarity was cancelled Friday because of security fears. But Parisians spontaneously came together outside the restaurants, cafes and concert hall hit in the attacks — as they have all week — to leave flowers, light candles or hold quiet vigils. “I’m still reeling, because these are the neighbourhoods where we young people go out a lot, places we know well,” said student Sophie Garcon as she looked at tributes left outside the Le Carillon bar, where gunmen sprayed automatic weapons fire. In all, 130 people died and more than 350 were injured when gunmen and suicide bombers attacked cafes and restaurants in Paris and the national soccer stadium. The attacks, claimed by the Islamic State group, were the deadliest violence in decades and have left the city profoundly shaken.

“In France, we have a tendency to think that we’re not a country at war because there’s not a war on our territory. But France is at war elsewhere in the world . . . and now it’s here, in the city of Paris.” Sophie Garcon, student

The army has deployed 6,500 soldiers to the Paris region to help protect streets, train stations and landmark tourist sites like the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre Museum. “There’s a feeling of insecurity, even though there are police everywhere,” Garcon said. “In France, we have a tendency to think that we’re not a country at war because there’s not a war on our territory. But France is at war elsewhere in the world . . . and now it’s here, in the city of Paris.” Khaled and Abdallah Saadi, whose two sisters were killed at the Belle Equipe bar, were among the mourners paying their respects there Friday. Halima and Hodda Saadi were celebrating Halima’s 36th birthday with friends and family when the gunmen struck, killing them and nine other people. The city’s mood was subdued Friday afternoon, the weather wet and grim. But French artists and cultural figures urged people to respond to the tragedy with an outpouring of “noise and light.”

Dozens of artists, writers, musicians and other cultural figures, including singer Charles Aznavour, journalist Anne Sinclair and former French Culture Minister Jack Lang, urged people to turn on their lights, light candles and play music at 9:20 p.m., around the time the attacks began on Nov. 13. In a letter published in the Huffington Post, they said the killers’ attack on “culture and freedom” should unite people of all races, faiths and backgrounds. They hoped the gesture would show “that culture will continue to shine out and to burnish the light of hope and fraternity.” That hope was echoed in many of the hand-written signs and notes left outside the attack sites: defiant messages of love, vows that the slaughter will not turn Parisians toward hatred and suspicion. On the Place de la Republique, which has become a focal point for commemorating the victims, some Parisians joined in a spontaneous dance. Outside the Bataclan music venue, where 89 people died, one woman played a piano while another sang along. At Le Carillon, a note posted on the wall by the bar’s owners offered “profound condolences” to those who lost loved ones, thanked people for their support, and urged unity. “Courage to you all. Let’s stay united in sorrow, but also in hope for happier — and always fraternal — days,” it said. » We want to hear from you. Send comments on this story to yourletters@nanaimodailynews.com. Letters must include daytime phone number and hometown.

A frightened Manitoba homeowner who killed a suspected late-night intruder with an antique samurai sword has been found guilty of manslaughter. Mitchell Whitbread, who is 28, went on trial earlier this month in The Pas. He was originally charged with second-degree murder, but jurors heard a week of evidence before returning their verdict last week on the reduced charge. Court heard how John Eyres, who was 31, was drunk when he began banging on the doors of Whitbread’s home. Whitbread’s lawyer says his client was alone and believed he might have been under attack when he grabbed the weapon and stepped outside. Whitbread testified in his own defence and that claimed Eyres suddenly lunged at him, which caused the fatal injury.

◆ CALGARY

Firm must stop drilling under Athabasca River The National Energy Board has ordered a subsidiary of TransCanada to immediately stop drilling under the Athabasca River in northeastern Alberta. Darin Barter, a spokesman for the federal regulator, says Nova Gas Transmission Ltd. released potentially toxic drilling fluid into the river in four separate incidents over the past month. The company was working on its McDermott Extension natural gas pipeline project about 75 kilometres northeast of Fort McMurray, Alta., at the time. In addition to the fluid spill, the NEB says the company also caused river bank erosion. The watchdog says it’s investigating how much drilling fluid was released as well as the chemical makeup of the substance.

◆ TORONTO

Tim Hortons shutters New York, Maine stores Turns out not everyone has time for Tim Hortons, especially in the United States. The coffee and doughnut chain took surprise measures this week when it pulled the plug on some restaurants in New York and Maine as part of a performance review. The closures sparked plenty of attention from local news outlets, which reported that employees said they were not given any notice and in some cases diners were kicked out of restaurants when the lights were turned off in the middle of the day. Tim Hortons declined to comment on how the stores were closed and would not say how many locations were affected. “We are supporting our restaurant owners in their transition and remain excited about the opportunities to expand the iconic Tim Hortons brand in the U.S.,” the company said in an email Friday.


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THIS SPECIAL FEATURE WILL APPEAR IN PRINT AND ONLINE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2015 Merry Christmas to the Wilson Family! Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons ________________________

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

POLITICS

Trump rivals decry call to register U.S. Muslims JULIE PACE AND JILL COLVIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Republican presidential rivals rushed Friday to condemn Donald Trump’s support for a government database to track Muslims in the United States, drawing a sharp distinction with the Republican front-runner on a proposal also deemed unconstitutional by legal experts. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush called the prospect of a registry “abhorrent.” Florida Sen. Marco Rubio said the idea was “unnecessary” and not something Americans would support. And Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who has largely avoided criticizing Trump throughout the 2016 campaign, said, “I’m not a fan of government registries of American citizens.” “The First Amendment protects religious liberty, and I’ve spent the past several decades defending the religious liberty of every American,” Cruz told reporters in Sioux City, Iowa. The rebukes came after Trump voiced support for a mandatory database for Muslims in the U.S. while campaigning Thursday in Iowa. The real estate mogul was asked by an NBC News reporter about the prospect of a database and whether Muslims would be required to be

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a town hall meeting at the Ben Johnson Arena on the Wofford College campus on Friday in Spartanburg, S.C. [AP PHOTO]

registered. In a video posted by the network, Trump said, “They have to be.” Asked whether Muslims would have to register at mosques, Trump said, “Different places. You sign up at different places. But it’s all about management.” On Friday, Trump said on Twitter

that he didn’t suggest creating a database but instead was answering a question from a reporter. However, he did not disavow the prospect of a registry on social media or at an event Friday morning. Trump has also voiced support for closing certain mosques as a way to contain the terror threat in the U.S.

His comments followed the attacks in Paris that killed 130 people and wounded hundreds more. The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility, elevating fears in the U.S. and prompting calls for new restrictions on refugees fleeing war-torn Syria. The U.S. House passed legislation this week essentially barring Syrian

and Iraqi refugees from the United States. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has slotted the bill for possible Senate consideration, though it’s unclear whether the chamber could get enough votes to override a threatened veto by President Barack Obama. The Republican candidates’ unified criticism of Trump was striking. His rivals have vacillated in their handling of other inflammatory comments from him, wary of alienating his supporters while increasingly concerned that he’s maintained his grip on the GOP race into the fall. Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton challenged all Republican candidates to disavow Trump’s comments. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders called Trump’s words “outrageous and bigoted.” “This is shocking rhetoric,” Clinton wrote on Twitter. “It should be denounced by all seeking to lead this country.” According to Yahoo, Trump also suggested he would consider warrantless searches, saying, “We’re going to have to do things that we never did before.” Trump was pressed on the database by NBC Thursday evening. Later that night, Trump told reporters he “never responded” to the questions from Yahoo and ignored follow-ups about his remarks to NBC.

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JUSTICE

Kent article criticized by journalism professor

Alberta not required to use French for laws KRISTY KIRKUP THE CANADIAN PRESS

Columnist became ‘useful idiot’ in using ‘spurious information’ BILL GRAVELAND THE CANADIAN PRESS

CALGARY — A journalism ethics expert says an article written about a former television reporter’s election campaign coming off the rails was based on “spurious information” and should never have been published. Jeffrey Dvorkin, director of the University of Toronto’s journalism program, testified Friday that the article appeared to be a deliberate attempt by columnist Don Martin to publicize his opinion that candidate Arthur Kent “was an election disaster waiting to happen.” “It doesn’t meet the standards of journalism at any level,” said Dvorkin, a former managing editor and chief journalist at CBC radio and former news ombudsman for National Public Radio in the United States. “I just think it was mean-spirited and does not have the interests of the public at heart.” Kent alleges in a lawsuit against Postmedia, the National Post and Martin that he was defamed during his unsuccessful campaign to win a

KENT

Calgary legislature seat for the Progressive Conservatives in the 2008 Alberta election. Kent became known as the “Scud Stud” for his reporting on Iraqi missile strikes for NBC during the Gulf War. The column at issue ran under the headline “Alberta’s ‘Scud Stud’ a ‘Dud’ on Campaign Trail.” It used unnamed sources to portray Kent as a loose cannon who was difficult for the party to deal with. It also said a number of his key campaign members were threatening to quit.

One of those sources, Kent campaign lawyer Kristine Robidoux, has already testified that she shared private emails with Martin that included complaints between the Tory campaign chairman and party brass about Kent not abiding by the rules. While she said the resulting article made her “physically ill,” she acknowledged under cross-examination that she was angry at Kent and was considering quitting the campaign because he seemed to be at odds with the PC party and leader Ed Stelmach. Dvorkin wrote a report on the column at the request of Kent’s legal team and was called by Kent’s side to testify. He said the use of anonymous sources made the article dubious. “It was based on spurious information that was fed to him by sources that were unreliable,” Dvorkin said. “What Don Martin did was he became basically a mouthpiece for those opponents of the Arthur Kent campaign. “He became their useful idiot.”

OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada says Alberta is not constitutionally required to enact its laws in both English and French. In a 6-3 split decision, the court ruled that the arguments in favour of bilingual legislation were inconsistent with the historical documents they relied on. The ruling ends a legal fight that has spanned more than a decade, beginning when Alberta’s Gilles Caron received a traffic ticket in 2003. Caron ended up merging his legal challenge with that of another driver, Pierre Boutet, who was also charged with a traffic offence. The majority of the Supreme Court found Caron and Boutet’s position would require the court to believe the status of legislative bilingualism in Alberta was fundamentally misunderstood by “virtually everyone” involved in the Commons debate when the province was created. “The legislative history post-1870 cannot support an inference regarding the 1870 order that is helpful to the appellants,” the court said. “Furthermore, the provincial judge’s legal conclusion based on these arguments is in error.

“The Trudeau government now should fund the Saskatchewan and Alberta governments to make sure that all the laws are now translated.” Robert Lepage, Lawyer for appellant

“There is simply no evidence that this joint administration was part of the implementation of a constitutional guarantee. The evidence is, in fact, entirely to the contrary.” Roger Lepage, a Saskatchewan lawyer who has handled Caron’s case from the start, said he was disappointed with the outcome. Lepage said he finds it unacceptable that Canada protected the anglophone minority in Quebec but chose not to protect the francophone minority outside Quebec. He urged the new Liberal government to act. “The Trudeau government now should fund the Saskatchewan and Alberta governments to make sure that all the laws are now translated.”

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start my day Five days a week I keteers: my with The Three Mus Me and a s, Nanaimo Daily New va – a winning ja Mug of my favorite Polnick Ed – combination.

paper. Our newly revised Daily News is competitive with any large city format, The Nanaimo Daily News now has: a smaller easy to handle size/ nal natio colourful and eye-catching front page, local, national and inter ghout the up-to-date news, articles of various interests, vibrant colour throu paper, an extensive entertainment section and the list goes on. single sitting. Allow more time to read the Daily News; it’s hard to finish in a ... and that speaks Even my “high tech” children have subscribed to the Daily News – Valerie Sahar volumes.

The Daily News has become a must read while sitting and enjoying my morning coffee. Your paper offers a Reader’s Digest condensed version of what is really going on in the world. It’s I’m a grateful Nanaimo Daily News subscriber, great to read and be informed of what’s happening in my neck of and this is my week: from Tuesday to Saturday the woods but to truly understand what is happening, why and mornings – coffee, comfy chair, Cat on my lap and the by whom, you really have to look at the world stage as presented News, now shorter and thicker so less disturbing to in your paper. And when it comes to the Sports pages, unlike my Cat. Sunday – coffee then church. Monday – coffee, local paper, the Nanaimo Daily News provides me with much comfy chair, Cat on lap, stare out the window. more coverage on the Canucks and the B.C. Lions with Stats, My Nanaimo Daily News informs, educates, entertains Scores and Storylines. – starts my day off bright, whatever the weather. I find Keep up the good work. – Wayne Garneau the changes positive, especially the new format and the all the local news and human interest articles, ads and I am such a newspaper lover – s ng rni mo entertainment information. I’m “old” and want my the l, fee newsprint, the smell, the to ing newspapers holdable and readable while relaxing in with some quiet time and someth k you! an Th my comfy chair, Cat on lap. Thank you n. tur anticipate with each page there is – Helen Brimacombe It’s in a lovely readable format, , ws ne ity un mm content and sections, co rts. around the world news and spo ugh Great job! – Susan Cornboro We have be when I was n e v e r e p a e n subscri the p aimo NEWS for o ked reading to a newspaper in Nan the li s ver 35 Years bers of the NANAIMO y a lw a e D ...the paper I hav bed now is EXCE I saw as it is prese AILY ever subscri the free ones. When get a PTIONAL. n e v a h I . nted a kid and ding The paper h enjoyed rea Nanaimo Daily News ly phoned s y a as gone thro lw a t u b bounces ba ediate to the ubscribing Save On Foods I imm ck, thanks to ugh many hurdles but s r fo d a behind the always the hardwo ift card to sc Free $25. G ed. the gift card e To receive th enes as well as those rking individuals n a th re o b ri on e and subsc d to read the paper m t disappointed, as th us who are paper before 6 am is the front lines. te firs early risers. a bonus to I really wan n’t cashed it. I was at t too interesting. those of Lately we h e v n a ave been on ges , and o and still h a per. p w fe a ly and Parksv ged newspa erage d le -f ll fu aper was on ille and hav the move between Na a p cov t It is na eh our paper re new forma stories, great election rough is th h it directed to ad the opportunity to imo w l w th na No different ad have As with all n . When I am al and natio dresses. ewspapers It covers loc t least an hour to read r and she passes it on and news m always agre a ou e e and it takes ass it on to my neighb different po with what is printed, dia, we don’t p but it gives int of view to reading it I our. a h b e ig considered f the paper. The SPORTS r ne b o e t h n e to m e v . pro SECTION is kes awesome a r the great im Marlene Sto fo s – k n a h s T w ell. – J. Zimme r

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the Daily News Check out our expanded coverage in the Daily News FOR 141 YEARS, the Daily News has been the most-trusted news source in the Mid-Island region. For generations, readers have been informed, educated and entertained by this publication. We are now expanding that coverage of the news that is important to you and are sampling your neighbourhood to give you a look at what’s inside. I became a ‘returnee’ subs criber today because I wa news of ‘what’s happen ing’ in Nanaimo. Deliver s missing out on y has always been excellent in the past. I re ally like the new format, bo the TV Guide. th the paper and – Elena Dally

My wife and I subscribed to the Nanaimo Daily News for a few years some time ago. We stopped subscribing due the fact the paper (in it’s previous format) was cumbersome to read, and to be honest, the journalists were not that great. Now that it is in a Tab format it is much easier to read and the stories are well placed in proper sections. I even enjoy reading the advertisements as again they are colourful and easy to find. We also like reading the sports section – especially Marc Weber’s soccer column. Now the paper is filled with national, international stories plus good local coverage. I knew once I saw the Tab format that I would be back as a subscriber. Keep up the good work! – Ted Simpson

d I have starte rs a e y t h ig irty-e ews. For almost th h the Nanaimo Daily N und it d aro sw my morning what is going on in an me up to s ow I want to kn h day and the NDN keep ll as reports e c Nanaimo ea al news and sports as w c speed with lo rts of the globe. a y from other p r much of m fo t le b ta a e ow use Although I n t I still feel the need for th ft as I enjoy n le entertainme ting on the table to my y News for il it a s newspaper Thank you Nanaimo D t. my breakfas ! being there t – Ken Wrigh

Love, love, love the new format. Look forward to waking up to the morning paper and all the news an d articles that the previous issues did not offer. Had toyed with cancelling my subscription, glad I didn’t. age and the fact I appreciate the local news cover News” stories as well. Keep up the great work. that your editors include “Good ing in a wheelchair – Darlene Wilkie Today’s story of your reporter rid that are faced ges to discover firsthand the challen ity devices is a prime daily by those confined to mobil world coverage is example of a timely topic. The te that it is succinct. interesting to me and I apprecia beat, current and All in all I find the newspaper up imo. pertinent to the citizens of Nana – Kathy Reilly

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

HOCKEY

RENNEY

Tom Renney has big tasks ahead with Hockey Canada STEPHEN WHYNO THE CANADIAN PRESS

Vancouver Canucks rookie Jake Virtanen, left, and Winnipeg Jet Drew Stafford collide during second period NHL action in Winnipeg on Wednesday. [THE CANADIAN PRESS]

Canucks GM pumps tires after flat road trip BRAD ZIEMER VANCOUVER SUN

G

eneral manager Jim Benning remains confident the Vancouver Canucks are a better team than the one that has managed just seven wins in the first 20 games of this National Hockey League season. Benning knows they’ll have to be if they are to remain in the Western Conference playoff race. The Canucks limped home from a season-long seven-game road trip with a 7-7-6 record. To put that into perspective, the Canucks have not had so few wins after 20 games since the 1997-98 season. The Canucks started 4-13-3 that season under former head coach Mike Keenan and finished the year with just 65 points. Right now, the Canucks are on pace for just over 80 points and it’s almost certainly going to take something north of 90 to make the playoffs. While acknowledging he is far from satisfied with his team’s start, Benning said Thursday he remains confident the Canucks can recover from their recent stumbles. Vancouver went 1-4-2 on the seven-game odyssey that concluded with a 4-1 loss Wednesday to the Winnipeg Jets. “We haven’t had the success recently that we wanted, but I think the attitude of the players is good,” Benning said. “They understand that if we do a couple of things differently, we have a chance to win games. So I think we’re still excited about the season. “We have got good veteran leader-

SPORTS INSIDE Today’s issue

Local Sports CFL Playoffs National Sports Scoreboard World Sports

19 20 21 22 A8

ship and they hold other players in the room accountable. I feel comfortable with everything, but I also know we are going to have to be a little bit better because it’s going to be a tight race in our division all year. We are going to have to start winning games to stay in the race.” After winning three of their first four games to start the season, the Canucks have only four wins in their last 16 games. They have lost four straight and seven of their last eight. Their inability to win close games has cost the Canucks dearly this season. Benning does not know what to make of the team’s well documented struggles in three-on-three overtime, where they have lost six times. “We lose six points on that threeon-three, and even if we win half of those games, or we win four of those games, then our record is not nearly as bad as it looks,” he said. “But that’s part of the game now, and we

have to figure out how we are going to be successful and win some games in that three-on-three.” Injuries have forced the Canucks to become even younger than Benning imagined. He said injuries to the likes of Brandon Sutter, Brandon Prust and Luca Sbisa has forced the team to play its youngsters in situations they might not quite be ready for. “What ends up happening is your younger guys get moved up in the lineup,” Benning said. “Like with Bo Horvat, we wanted to make sure that we develop him properly. We didn’t want to put pressure on him to have to be a second-line centre, and that’s why we acquired Brandon Sutter. And then when we lose a guy like Brandon, it elevates his role in the lineup and his minutes on the specialty teams. “It puts more pressure on the younger players. It is a fine line that (head coach) Willie (Desjardins) has to manage and try to make sure he doesn’t put these guys in over their head and try to figure out a way where we can develop them.” Defensively, the Canucks are struggling. Vancouver has surrendered three or more goals in eight consecutive games and goalie Ryan Miller has not been nearly as sharp as he was early in the season. “You need to manage the puck properly,” Benning said. “I think in some instances we haven’t been focused on managing the puck, getting it out at our blue-line and making sure when we get to their blueline, not losing the puck and getting

it in and chasing after it. “When things don’t go well and you don’t win, it’s for a lot of different reasons. In some of the games we didn’t manage the puck properly … if we are going to play winning hockey, you can’t make those mistakes.” Benning said injuries to Sutter and Sbisa have hurt Vancouver’s normally reliable penalty-kill, which was torched for eight goals on the seven-game trip. Offensively, the Canucks can’t seem to get a big goal when they need it most. Radim Vrbata, who had a teamhigh 31 goals last season, has just three despite being tied for seventh in the NHL with 74 shots on net. “We miss his goals for sure,” Benning said of Vrbata. “He is getting lots of chances. He has hit posts. He has hit crossbars. He just hasn’t had any luck around the net.” Things don’t get any easier for the Canucks, who play back-to-back home games this weekend against the Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks and the improved New Jersey Devils before heading out on a four-game road trip. “Even though our record right now is not where we want it to be, I think once we get healthy we’ll be OK,” Benning said. “I like our team. When we were healthy to start the year, I thought we were competitive, we played hard, we were physical, and I liked the mix of our team to start the year. Through injuries, we haven’t seen our full team up now for a while.” BZiemer@vancouversun.com

TORONTO — Tom Renney has spent his first year or so as president and CEO of Hockey Canada getting reacquainted with fans’ passion for the sport, and getting acquainted with the odd cup of coffee to keep going. The longtime coach is still getting used to the trappings of being an executive and thinking on a big-picture scale about the health and the growth of the sport in Canada. “Historically I’ve been able to look up at the scoreboard at the end of the night and know how well I did,” Renney said Friday ahead of Hockey Canada’s annual winter meeting. “This is a lot different. “The results are a little more delayed, I suppose.” Renney sees some good elements to the first 16 months on the job, but it’s the next several months and years that will be a challenge. Canada will again host the world junior championships in Toronto and Montreal in 2017, and the question of NHL participation in the 2018 and 2022 Winter Olympics is looming. The NHL and NHL Players’ Association hold the strongest cards in discussions with the International Ice Hockey Federation and International Olympic Committee, but Renney will be part of the forces lobbying for it to happen. “As the national sport organization and kind of the governing body for amateur hockey, at least in Canada, we’re all-in when it comes to the Olympic Games,” Renney said. “There’s no question the best players from Canada that play the game should be there. I can’t suggest for a second that anything less than that is better.” Renney comes at it from a unique angle because he coached Canada at the 1994 Lillehammer Olympics, the last Games before NHL players were allowed to participate. Back then, he thought the mix-andmatch group of non-NHL players was a “dream team” because he always dreamt of coaching Canada at the Olympics. In the 21 years since losing to Sweden in the Lillehammer gold-medal game, the 60-year-old has come around on wanting NHL players in the Olympics. He knows they want to participate.


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

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SPORTS 19

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BCHL

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

Clippers exact some revenge on Smoke Eaters, cruise to a 7-2 win

Barsby’s tallest task comes today in Nanaimo

Nanaimo takes over first place, will need to win tonight in Duncan to stay in that spot SCOTT MCKENZIE DAILY NEWS

Three weeks ago, the Nanaimo Clippers went into Trail and were handed an unexpected 6-1 loss against a Smoke Eaters team that was, and still is, in the basement of the B.C. Hockey League’s Interior Division. Clearly, revenge was in order for the Clippers, who cruised to a 7-2 victory of the Smoke Eaters Friday night at Frank Crane Arena to take over first place in the Island Division. “We had it in the back of our minds that these guys gave us the treatment in Trail,” said Clippers right wing Sheldon Rempal, who had two goals and an assist Friday night to take over the BCHL scoring lead. “So it was nice to get some revenge on them, and I think we played great tonight.” The Clippers (15-10-0-1) held the Smoke Eaters without a shot on goal for the first 11 minutes of the game. Rempal and Corey Renwick scored goals 34 seconds apart, and the Clippers led 3-1 after the first period with a late goal from Matt Hoover. Clippers head coach Mike Vandekamp referenced that near flawless start as the key to his team’s success in the win. “We were controlling the play,” he said, “and that set us up for a couple goals in the second half of the first period. “I thought from there we played a pretty good hockey game.” Hoover finished the night with two goals, Yanni Kaldis had two assists and Renwick, Spencer Hewson and Chris Dodero each had a goal and an assist.

Scott McKenzie Daily News

F

Nanaimo Clippers centre Corey Renwick, middle celebrates his first-period goal with teammates Chris Dodero, left, and Zach Court Friday night against the Trail Smoke Eaters at Frank Crane Arena. [SCOTT MCKENZIE/DAILY NEWS]

“When our habits our better, we tend to get even more goals for,” Vandekamp said. “Tonight, we played a pretty good team game and when we had some opportunities that were going in.” Rookie goaltender Jakob Walter stopped 25 of the 27 shots he faced for his second career BCHL win. The Clippers now move on to play

their third game in four nights tonight in Duncan against a Cowichan Valley Capitals team that on Thursday led the division in winning percentage. They lost Friday night, 6-2 to the Victoria Grizzlies, but Vandekamp said it’s going to be a big test to beat Cowichan, a team they haven’t seen much of this season.

“It’s a big game for our team,” he said. “Cowichan’s put together a good start to the season and they’ve got a good squad.” The two teams meet at the Island Savings Centre at 7 p.m. Scott.McKenzie @nanaimodailynews.com 250-729-4243

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

VIU men, women rough up Langara teams DAILY NEWS

Vancouver Island Mariners guard Lanae Adams drives to the basket against the Langara Falcons Friday night at VIU. [SCOTT MCKENZIE/DAILY NEWS]

A good night for the Vancouver Island University Mariners wasn’t so for the Langara Falcons Friday night in Nanaimo. Both the VIU men’s and women’s basketball teams eased past the Falcons in PacWest play with the women winning their game 82-51 before the men ran away with a 102-78 victory. VIU women’s team leading scorer Sienna Pollard was dominant against Langara, finishing the game with 31 points and 10 rebounds, while point guard Sara Simovic posted 15 points and forward Victoria Brown pulled down seven rebounds. That win put the Mariners at 5-1 on the season. On the men’s side, American duo John Thompson and Josh Ross led the Mariners with 22 and 21 points,

respectively, as VIU moved to 6-0 on the season as the No. 1 team in the country. Guard Bryson Cox posted 18 points, while forwards Curtis Wilson and Jason Fortin finished with 13 each. Both the VIU basketball teams are back at it today as the host the Quest Kermodes, one of a select few programs in the conference that has been able to compete with the Mariners as of late. They went into the weekend tied atop the PacWest standings in both men’s and women’s play with one loss on the women’s side and none on the men’s side. Today’s games begin at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. with the women hitting the floor first before the men take over to wrap up the weekend. Sports@nanaimodailynews.com 250-729-4243

or the first time in 2015, the streak of two straight Varsity AA high school football provincial titles for the John Barsby Bulldogs is in doubt. OK, technically it was last week, too, but a 77-0 win over the Moscrop Panthers to open playoffs didn’t exactly spark any feelings of fear in the hearts of the Barsby faithful. Today, when the No. 2-ranked Bulldogs take on the No. 3 Abbotsford Panthers (1 p.m. at Merle Logan Field), there will be doubt. Because along with the Panthers, Chase Claypool is coming to town. The most dynamic high school receiver in the country already committed to play for Notre Dame. All six feet, five inches and 215 pounds of a kid ranked as the No. 46 prospect in North America by Yahoo! Sports at his position. The Bulldogs have played tough teams all year — No. 1 G.W. Graham, No. 5 Carson Graham, former No. 1 Vernon Panthers, and a Mt. Douglas Rams team ranked No. 1 in Varsity AAA football. But that haven’t seen a single player with this much ability. Claypool has averaged 21.6 yards per touch this season with 1,489 all-purpose yards and 17 touchdowns. Barsby, though, sports a full team effort that has shut down top players before (see: Brayden Lenius, now at the University of Washington), and plan on doing so again against Abbotsford today. No one should be underestimating them, either. After a couple tough losses to open the season, they haven’t allowed a touchdown since playing Carson Graham. The Bulldogs also didn’t do much last week. There defensive starters never had to play more than four consecutive plays, and their starting runningbacks didn’t get any carries. The linemen had their team in the endzone before anyone could break a sweat. So today, it will likely come down to whether or not the Bulldogs can shut down a player no one has yet. But if we’ve learned anything in the past two years, it’s that a bet against the Bulldogs in the playoffs is a losing wager. » Scott McKenzie is the sports editor at the Nanaimo Daily News. To offer comments on this column or to submit a story idea, send an email to: scott.mckenzie@nanaimodailynews.com.


20 SPORTS

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

CFL PLAYOFFS

13TH Annual

5pm-7pm

Calgary Stampeders offensive tackle Quinn Smith’s versatility has given his team a distinct advantage on the offensive line. [STAMPEDERS PHOTO}

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Smith’s versatility is an asset for Stampeders DONNA SPENCER THE CANADIAN PRESS

CALGARY — Quinn Smith feels he’s had the best of both worlds this CFL season. The 24-year-old from Toronto felt the glory of recording a sack and also the fun of being on the field to celebrate touchdowns with the Calgary Stampeders. Smith started at defensive tackle the first 10 games of this season before morphing into the sixth man on the offensive line. The Concordia University product returned to defence for Calgary’s regular-season finale, only to switch to offence again in the West Division semifinal. That’s a lot of pages to memorize from the Stampeder playbook. “My brain has been a bit of a storm this year, but the coaches have been great helping me out and making it a little more simple,” Smith said Friday. “Defensive line, when you sack the quarterback you get a bit more praise, there’s a little more glory. But offence, you’re on the field for touchdowns so it’s pretty exciting. When you’re on defence and there’s a touchdown scored, it’s not a good thing. “It’s good to celebrate touchdowns once in awhile.” Stampeder head coach and general manager John Hufnagel called Smith “a very handy person to have on your roster this year” and now even more given the revamping of Calgary’s offensive line ahead of Sunday’s West Division final against the Edmonton Eskimos. Injuries to starting centre Pierre Lavertu (hamstring) and left guard Shane Bergman (upper body) in a division semifinal win last Sunday has the Stampeders relying even more on Smith’s versatility. The winner of Sunday’s tilt between the CFL’s 14-4 teams books a berth in the Grey Cup on Nov. 29. The Eskimos won the season series against the defending Grey Cup champions and thus earned home-field advantage for the division final.

“My brain has been a bit of a storm this year, but the coaches have been great helping me out and making it a little more simple. “ Quinn Smith, Calgary Stampeders

International John Estes, who played both centre and guard at the University of Hawaii, snapped to quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell in practice this week. Estes has played guard for the Stampeders this season, but not centre yet. “He puts it right on your chest every time,” Mitchell said. Spencer Wilson took over in the middle and Smith rotated in when Lavertu limped to the sidelines in the first quarter against the Lions. Defensive tackle Junior Turner was summoned to the offensive line when Bergman exited prior to the half. Wilson has shifted back to right guard. Quebec City’s Karl Lavoie has practised for two weeks, but the Stampeders’ firstround draft pick in 2015 appeared in just one game because of a knee injury. The Stampeders could also activate Calgary’s Paul Swiston or Edmonton’s Gord Hinse from the practice roster. Defensive end Charleston Hughes practised Thursday with a cast on his broken hand, but was not on the field Friday. Other injuries this season to guard Brad Erdos and tackles Dan Federkeil and Edwin Harrison contributed to keeping the six-foot-two, 300-pound Smith on the offensive line for seven of Calgary’s last eight games. Smith played both sides of the ball at Concordia. The way he sees it, flipping back and forth with the Stampeders makes him a more marketable pro player. “It’s a resume-builder I guess you could say when it comes time to be a free agent or something,” Smith said. “I’m always going to be playing, which is great.”


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SPORTS 21

CFL PLAYOFFS

OLYMPICS

Ottawa’s line is fine flying under the radar

IOC president calls for overhaul of drug-testing

LISA WALLACE THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The five players on the Ottawa Redblacks’ offensive line have enjoyed little fanfare this season, and that is fine with them. The Redblacks had the rare luxury of starting the same five lineman, Jon Gott, J’Micheal Deane, Nolan MacMillan, Colin Kelly and SirVincent Rogers, all 18 games this season. In comparison the other teams in the league started an average of 9.5 players on the line. “We’re really lucky I guess,” said offensive line coach Bryan Chiu. “To play that many games and have the same five guys it doesn’t happen often. I think (head coach Rick) Campbell has done a good job managing practices and keeping our guys healthy.” That consistency on the line allowed Ottawa to field a potent offence, and the Redblacks will be looking for more of the same when they host the Hamilton Tiger-Cats Sunday afternoon in the East Division Final. The five linemen take pride in having started every game and say they’re more than happy to let quarterbacks Henry Burris and the receivers enjoy the accolades. “We do the dirty work and we let those guys go out and do what they do which is run around and make plays,” said Rogers. “We’re fine with that. We don’t need to be glorified for what we do. Everybody understands that the only way that you can get it going is if we’re going up front. As long as everybody understands that we don’t need any glory.” Burris has had a career year and acknowledges much of the success goes to his linemen for providing him the time and space to do his job. The Redblacks allowed the fourth fewest sacks, 43, in the league. Last year they allowed 56. “It’s very rare that you’re able to go through an entire season especially with your entire front five intact throughout the course of the season,” said Burris. “Of course we’re only hoping that it continues to last. To have the front five playing a consistent 18 games together, we had a couple guys miss a play here or there, but the thing is to have those guys play consistently together it brings consistency on the field as far as in our play because we know what the guys up front are capable of and they give me time and give holes to our running back to make things happen down field.” Remaining healthy has been instrumental to the five’s success, but just as important is the respect and friendship they have for one another.

SPORTS BRIEFS Compiled by Daily News ◆ UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL

UBC Thunderbirds head to Winnipeg for semifinal The rapid rise of the UBC Thunderbirds has even Blake Nill struggling for an explanation. When the no-nonsense head coach took over the University of British Columbia’s football program last December — a team coming off a 2-6 campaign and without a winning record since 2004 — he was prepared for a painful rebuild. Fast-forward just 11 months and, much to Nill’s surprise, the Thunderbirds are within a game of the Vanier Cup. “It’s been a season that defies logic, to be honest with you,” he said this week.

KAREL JANICEK AND STEPHEN WILSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PRAGUE, Czech Republic — IOC President Thomas Bach proposed an overhaul of the World Anti-Doping Agency’s operations Friday, including the creation of independent testing and professional intelligence-gathering units to avoid the kind of scandals that have embroiled Russia and track and field. In a radical change, Bach also recommended that all doping sanctions be handed down by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, rather than by individual sports bodies or WADA. “We are convinced that the adoption of these proposals would lead to a more efficient, more transparent, more streamlined, more cost efficient, more harmonized anti-doping system,” Bach said. “It would better protect the clean athletes and enhance the credibility of sports.” Bach also said that Russia’s Olympic chief briefed him on “important first steps” that have been taken to reform the country’s anti-doping program following the suspension of its track and field federation. The Russian committee issued a statement reaffirming its commitment to punish athletes, coaches and officials involved in doping to ensure Russia can return to track and field competition at next year’s Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. The Russian committee said it

◆ HOCKEY

Guy Boucher returns to coach at Spengler Cup Fired by his Swiss league team, Guy Boucher has all the time in the world to prepare for the next step in his career. His focus right now is on coaching Canada at the Spengler Cup, but after being released by SC Bern in Switzerland’s National League A, the former Tampa Bay Lightning coach has his sights on returning to the NHL in the not-too-distant future. “I think now it was really important for me to make it clear that I want to be back, I’m ready to be back,” Boucher said by phone from Switzerland. “Even more experience, even more ready and that can be at any time, absolutely.”

International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach laughs while holding a speech during the 44th European Olympic Committee general assembly in Prague on Friday. [AP PHOTO]

planned to expel former Russian athletics federation president Valentin Balakhnichev from its executive body. Balakhnichev has been accused of participating in a plan to extort money from marathon runner Liliya Shobukhova. Balakhnichev has also been expelled from Russian President Vladimir Putin’s advisory council on sport and fitness, the ROC said. Bach spoke in a keynote address at the opening in Prague of the general assembly of the European Olympic

Committees, with Russian officials among the delegates. A month ago, a summit of Olympic leaders proposed that drug-testing be taken out of the hands of sports organizations, and that WADA should take over testing on a global level to ensure more credibility. WADA leaders agreed this week to study the idea. They also welcomed Bach’s expanded plans, but reiterated the need to find more funding for an increased role.

BOXING

Cotto, Alvarez title fight may be worth the hefty price tag

October 13 - December 17, 2015 Schedules are subject to change without notice.

VANCOUVER ISLAND - LOWER MAINLAND NANAIMO (DEPARTURE BAY) - HORSESHOE BAY

TIM DAHLBERG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS — The sting from Mayweather-Pacquiao is still there, which makes anyone who spent $100 to watch that overhyped snoozer think twice about wasting their money on boxing again. Miguel Cotto and Canelo Alvarez aren’t to blame, but it does force them to have to work harder to sell their own fight. They get in the ring Saturday night for what is expected to be the biggest pay-per-view fight since 4.4 million households bought into the hype in May for Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao. While the fight is an attractive one for boxing fans, it won’t match the pay-per-view record set six months ago. But Oscar De La Hoya likes what it brings to the sport, even if it struggles at the box office. “Mayweather was all about

the business, how many payper-views, how much money was made,” said De La Hoya, who promotes Alvarez. “We’re going back to the roots of boxing where if you fight the best everything follows that. And this is a perfect example of the best fighting the best.” Fans of Gennady Golovkin would argue that, but Cotto vs. Alvarez just might be the best matchup of the year in boxing. Better yet for those contemplating spending $69.95 to watch it at home, it doesn’t figure to lack for action. This being boxing, of course, even a potentially great fight has its issues. It was supposed to be for a piece of the middleweight title, but now only Alvarez can leave the ring as a champion if he wins. Cotto was stripped of his 160-pound title this week rather than agree to the demands of the ringmasters at the WBC, who wanted him to

pay a $300,000 sanctioning fee to keep his belt. That’s on top of the $800,000 that Cotto spent earlier to avoid meeting Golovkin so he could take on Alvarez instead. “For $1.1 million I can buy any belt I want and be champion of whatever I want in my house,” Cotto said. “But this fight speaks for itself. I don’t need a belt for this fight.” It’s probably just as well, because the fight was barely a middleweight bout anyway. The two fighters agreed to meet at a 155-pound catch weight instead of fighting at the class limit of 160 pounds so the fight could get made. Whatever the weight, the fight at the Mandalay Bay casino is a big one. Triple G will be at ringside, hoping that he will get the winner sometime next year, and unbeaten light heavyweight champion Sergey Kovalev will also be on hand.

Leave Departure Bay

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3:00 pm 5:00 pm D7:00 pm 9:00 pm

6:30 am 8:30 am 10:30 am 12:30 pm

3:00 pm 5:00 pm 7:00 pm D9:00 pm

6:30 am 8:30 am 10:30 am 12:30 pm

D Fri, Sat & Sun only.

NANAIMO (DUKE POINT) - TSAWWASSEN Leave Duke Point

Leave Tsawwassen 3:15 pm 75:45 pm 7 8:15 pm 7 10:45 pm

5:15 am 7:45 am 10:15 am 12:45 pm 7 Except Sat. Except Sun.

5:15 am 7:45 am 10:15 am 12:45 pm

3:15 pm

75:45 pm 7 8:15 pm 7 10:45 pm

Except Sat & Sun.

SWARTZ BAY - TSAWWASSEN Leave Swartz Bay

Leave Tsawwassen 3:00 pm 4:00 pm 5:00 pm 7:00 pm 9:00 pm

7:00 am z8:00 am 9:00 am 11:00 am 12:00 pm 1:00 pm z Oct 13 only. Fri & Sun only.

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22 SPORTS

NHL

HOCKEY

EASTERN CONFERENCE

OILERS 5, DEVILS 1

ATLANTIC DIVISION

First Period 1. Edm, Draisaitl 7 (Hall, Davidson) 6:59. Penalties — Stempniak NJ (interference) 15:47; Palmieri NJ (hooking) 19:17. Second Period 2. New Jersey, Palmieri 7 (Schlemko, Zajac) 6:04 (pp). 3. Edmonton, Klefbom 4 (Purcell, Draisaitl) 7:12. Penalties — Pouliot Edm (interference) 5:41; Lander Edm (holding) 11:46; Gryba Edm (holding) 12:53; Cammalleri NJ (slashing) 15:19; Gionta NJ (crosschecking) 18:54. Third Period 4. Edmonton, Eberle 3 (Hall) 3:23 (pp). 5. Edm, Letestu 2 (unassisted) 13:18. 6. Edm, Hall 9 (Draisaitl) 17:29 (en). Penalties — Josefson NJ (hooking) 2:59; Farnham NJ (interference) 4:19; Hendricks Edm (high-sticking) 8:44. Shots on goal New Jersey 4 12 4 —20 Edmonton 9 5 9 —23 Goal — Power plays (goal-chances) — New Jersey: 1-4; Edmonton: 1-6. Attendance — at Edmonton.

Montreal Ottawa Detroit

GP 21 19 20

W 15 9 10

L OL SL 4 1 1 5 2 3 8 2 0

GF 74 57 45

GA 48 57 49

Pts Home 32 8-2-1-0 23 4-3-1-3 22 5-5-1-0

Away 7-2-0-1 5-2-1-0 5-3-1-0

Last 10 Strk 6-2-1-1 W-1 5-2-2-1 W-1 6-3-1-0 W-1

L OL SL 3 1 1 5 1 0 7 0 0

GF 58 54 44

GA 34 41 43

Pts Home 30 9-1-1-0 25 6-3-1-0 24 7-3-0-0

Away 5-2-0-1 6-2-0-0 5-4-0-0

Last 10 Strk 9-1-0-0 L-1 6-3-1-0 L-1 7-3-0-0 W-2

METROPOLITAN DIVISION NY Rangers Washington Pittsburgh

GP 19 18 19

W 14 12 12

WILD CARD NY Islanders New Jersey Tampa Bay Boston Florida Buffalo Toronto Philadelphia Columbus Carolina

GP 20 19 21 18 19 19 20 19 21 19

W L OL SL 10 7 2 1 10 8 0 1 9 9 1 2 9 8 1 0 8 8 2 1 8 9 1 1 7 9 1 3 6 8 4 1 8 13 0 0 6 10 2 1

GF 57 47 48 60 50 43 48 35 52 36

GA 49 48 50 56 48 52 56 54 66 55

Pts 23 21 21 19 19 18 18 17 16 15

Home 6-4-2-0 5-4-0-1 4-4-0-1 3-6-1-0 5-4-1-0 4-6-1-0 3-4-1-1 3-4-2-1 3-6-0-0 2-5-2-1

Away 4-3-0-1 5-4-0-0 5-5-1-1 6-2-0-0 3-4-1-1 4-3-0-1 4-5-0-2 3-4-2-0 5-7-0-0 4-5-0-0

Last 10 Strk 4-5-0-1 L-1 6-4-0-0 L-2 4-5-0-1 W-1 5-5-0-0 W-1 3-5-1-1 L-1 5-3-1-1 L-3 6-2-1-1 W-2 2-5-2-1 L-2 6-4-0-0 W-1 3-4-2-1 L-5

WESTERN CONFERENCE CENTRAL DIVISION Dallas St. Louis Nashville

GP 20 20 18

W 16 13 11

L OL SL 4 0 0 6 1 0 4 2 1

GF 71 54 53

GA 50 48 44

Pts Home 32 7-2-0-0 27 6-2-1-0 25 7-1-1-1

Away 9-2-0-0 7-4-0-0 4-3-1-0

Last 10 Strk 8-2-0-0 W-4 6-4-0-0 W-1 5-3-1-1 L-1

GP 19 19 19

W 12 11 10

L OL SL 7 0 0 8 0 0 8 1 0

GF 48 51 53

GA 41 47 56

Pts Home 24 7-5-0-0 22 3-5-0-0 21 3-4-0-0

Away 5-2-0-0 8-3-0-0 7-4-1-0

Last 10 Strk 6-4-0-0 L-1 6-4-0-0 W-4 5-5-0-0 W-1

GP 20 18 20 20 20 21 19 20

W L OL SL 11 7 2 0 10 5 3 0 9 9 1 1 7 7 6 0 7 9 3 1 8 12 0 1 7 11 1 0 7 12 1 0

GF 54 53 54 56 38 50 53 55

GA 49 51 63 54 50 75 54 63

Pts 24 23 20 20 18 17 15 15

Away 3-5-1-0 3-4-3-0 5-6-0-1 5-4-3-0 3-6-1-0 3-7-0-1 5-6-0-0 3-7-0-0

Last 10 Strk 5-3-2-0 L-1 5-3-2-0 L-3 3-6-0-1 W-1 3-5-2-0 L-4 6-2-2-0 W-1 6-4-0-0 W-2 4-6-0-0 L-2 4-5-1-0 W-1

PACIFIC DIVISION Los Angeles San Jose Arizona

WILD CARD Chicago Minnesota Winnipeg Vancouver Anaheim Calgary Colorado Edmonton

@NanaimoDaily

Home 8-2-1-0 7-1-0-0 4-3-1-0 2-3-3-0 4-3-2-1 5-5-0-0 2-5-1-0 4-5-1-0

Note: a team winning in overtime or shootout gets 2 points & a victory in the W column; the team losing in overtime or shootout gets 1 point in the OTL or SOL columns. )ULGD\¡V UHVXOWV Toronto 2 Carolina 1 (SO) Edmonton 5 New Jersey 1 Calgary 2 Chicago 1 (OT) Columbus 4 Nashville 0 Detroit 3 Los Angeles 2 Montreal 5 NY Islanders 3 7KXUVGD\¡V UHVXOWV Arizona 3 Montreal 2 Dallas 3 Washington 2 San Jose 1 Philadelphia 0 (OT) St. Louis 3 Buffalo 2 (SO) Ottawa 3 Columbus 0 Tampa Bay 2 NY Rangers 1 Pittsburgh 4 Colorado 3 Anaheim 3 Florida 1 Boston 4 Minnesota 2

6DWXUGD\¡V JDPHV Colorado at Washington, 7 p.m. Anaheim at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m. San Jose at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. NY Rangers at Florida, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Ottawa, 7 p.m. Arizona at Winnipeg, 7 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 7 p.m. Detroit at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Buffalo at Dallas, 8 p.m. Nashville at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Chicago at Vancouver, 10 p.m. 6XQGD\¡V JDPHV Los Angeles at Carolina, 1 p.m. San Jose at Columbus, 5 p.m. NY Islanders at Montreal, 7 p.m. New Jersey at Vancouver, 10 p.m.

LEAFS 2, CANES 1 (SO)

FLAMES 2, HAWKS 1 (OT)

First Period — No Scoring. Penalties — Malone Car (roughing) 2:40; Grabner Tor (embellishment), Malone Car (slashing) 11:43; Froese Tor (holding) 18:40; Polak Tor (hooking) 19:14. Second Period — No Scoring. Penalty — Lindholm Car (tripping) 19:19. Third Period 1. Car, Malone 1 (Faulk, Versteeg) 7:47. 2. Toronto, Kadri 2 (Komarov, van Riemsdyk) 16:27 (pp). Penalties — Matthias Tor, Pesce Car (roughing) 11:58; Lindholm Car (face-off violation) 15:44. Overtime — No Scoring. Penalties — Faulk Car (slashing) 2:13. Shootout — Toronto wins 2-1 Tor — Holland goal, Parenteau miss, Kadri miss, Bozak miss, Lupul goal. Carolina — Terry miss, Skinner miss, Nash goal, Lindholm miss, Gerbe miss. Shots on goal Toronto 8 4 8 5—25 Carolina 12 10 9 3—34 Goal — Toronto: Reimer (W, 7-2-3); Carolina: Ward (LO, 5-6-3). Power plays (goal-chances) — Tor: 1-4; Carolina: 0-2. Attendance — 10,327 at Raleigh, N.C.

First Period 1. Cal, Monahan 7 (Russell, Gaudreau) 15:05. 2. Chicago, Anisimov 8 (Seabrook, Kane) 16:59 (pp). Penalties — Hamilton Cgy (stick hold) 16:46; Hjalmarsson Chi (closing hand on puck) 17:20; Gaudreau Cgy (hold) 18:17. Second Period — No Scoring. Penalties — Seabrook Chi (tripping) 10:04; Frolik Cgy (tripping) 18:31. Third Period — No Scoring. Penalties — None. Overtime 3. Calgary, Gaudreau 5 (Hamilton) 1:38. Penalties — None. Shots on goal Chicago 7 8 4 0 —19 Calgary 13 4 14 6 —37 Goal — Chicago: Darling (LO, 2-2-1); Calgary: Ramo (W, 6-7-0). Power plays (goal-chances) — Chi: 1-3; Calgary: 0-2. Attendance — 19,289 at Calgary.

SCORING LEADERS Patrick Kane, Chi Tyler Seguin, Dal Jamie Benn, Dal David Krejci, Bos John Klingberg, Dal Taylor Hall, Edm Blake Wheeler, Wpg Artemi Panarin, Chi Erik Karlsson, Ott

G 13 11 12 8 4 8 8 7 5

Friday's games not included

A Pts 17 30 17 28 15 27 14 22 18 22 13 21 13 21 14 21 16 21

JACKETS 4, PREDATORS 0 First Period 1. Col, Campbell 2 (Rychel, Anderson) 2:35. 2. Col, Johansen 3 (Jenner, Murray) 4:16. Penalties — None. Second Period 3. Col, Jenner 10 (Johansen, Saad) 5:17. Penalties — Johansen Clb (hooking) 7:53; Calvert Clb (high-sticking) 18:01. Third Period 4. Columbus, Hartnell 9 (Atkinson, Foligno) 19:10 (en). Penalties — Rychel Clb (roughing) 2:11; Neal Nash (goalie interference) 9:52. Shots on goal Nashville Columbus

10 5

17 12—39 7 6—18

Goal — Nashville: Rinne (L, 10-3-3); Col: Bobrovsky (W, 8-9-0). Power plays (goal-chances) — Nash: 0-3; Col: 0-1. Attendance — 13,584 at Columbus.

RED WINGS 3, KINGS 2 First Period 1. Detroit, Tatar 6 (Abdelkader, Zetterberg) 14:10 (pp). 2. LA, Carter 8 (Kopitar, Martinez) 16:21 (sh). Penalties — Glendening Det (hooking) 2:41; Forbort LA (holding) 12:39; Doughty LA (tripping) 16:09; Gaborik LA (high-sticking) 19:52. Second Period 3. Detroit, Green 1 (unassisted) 3:45. 4. Det, Larkin 7 (Abdelkader, Zetterberg) 6:08. 5. LA, Carter 9 (Toffoli, Muzzin) 10:43. Penalties — Abdelkader Det (holding) 0:30; Marchenko Det (holding) 9:15; Gaborik LA (high-sticking) 9:17; Abdelkader Det (stick holding) 12:58. Third Period — No Scoring. Penalties — None. Shots on goal Los Angeles Detroit

14 10

15 8—37 9 10—29

Goal — Los Angeles: Enroth (L, 3-1-0); Detroit: Mrazek (W, 6-4-1). Power plays (goal-chances) — Los Angeles: 0-4; Detroit: 1-5. Attendance — 20,027 at Detroit.

CANADIENS 5, ISLANDERS 3 First Period 1. Montreal, Petry 2 (Flynn, Semin) 2:52. 2. NYI, Nelson 7 (Tavares, Okposo) 11:57. 3. Montreal, Fleischmann 6 (Desharnais) 12:32. 4. Montreal, Beaulieu 2 (Galchenyuk, Smith-Pelly) 18:17. Penalties — Subban Mtl (holding) 15:18. Second Period 5. NY Islanders, Hamonic 1 (Nielsen, Lee) :39. 6. Montreal, Petry 3 (Beaulieu, Weise) 14:49. Penalty—Kulemin NYI (interference) 12:49. Third Period 7. NY Islanders, Nelson 8 (Bailey) 7:25. 8. Montreal, Gallagher 9 (Plekanec) 19:41 (en). Penalties — Pateryn Mtl (cross-checking) 2:55; Smith-Pelly Mtl, Clutterbuck NYI (roughing) 5:28; Petry Mtl (delay of game) 9:19. Shots on goal Montreal NY Islanders

11 10

11 6—28 15 11—36

Goal — Montreal: Price (W, 8-2-0); NY Islanders: Halak (L, 5-5-1). Power plays (goal-chances) — Montreal: 0-1; NY Islanders: 0-3. Attendance — 15,171 at Brooklyn, N.Y.

TENNIS At London, England

ROUND ROBIN — SINGLES ILIE NASTASE GROUP Rafael Nadal (5), Spain, def. David Ferrer (7), Spain, 6-7 (2), 6-3, 6-4. Stan Wawrinka (4), Switzerland, def. Andy Murray (2), Britain, 7-6 (4), 6-4. Standings: x-Nadal 3-0 (sets 6-1), x-Wawrinka 2-1 (4-2), Murray 1-2 (2-4), Ferrer 0-3 (1-6) STAN SMITH GROUP Standings: x-Federer 3-0 (6-1), xDjokovic 2-1 (4-2), Nishikori 1-2 (3-5), Berdych 0-3 (1-6)

GOLF

NBA

WHL

CFL PLAYOFFS

PGA

EASTERN CONFERENCE

EASTERN CONFERENCE

DIVISION FINALS

RSM CLASSIC

Sunday's games

At St. Simons Island, Ga. s-Sea Island Resort: Par-70 p-Sea Island Resort: Par-72 Second Round

Cleveland Chicago Atlanta Miami Indiana Detroit Boston Toronto Washington New York Charlotte Orlando Milwaukee Brooklyn Philadelphia

EAST DIVISION GP W L Prince Albert 22 14 5 Brandon 23 14 7 Moose Jaw 22 11 7 Regina 20 10 9 Saskatoon 20 9 8 Swift Current 22 8 12

OL 2 0 3 1 3 2

SL 1 2 1 0 0 0

GF GA 78 67 82 61 79 68 59 70 67 80 57 68

Pt 31 30 26 21 21 18

OL 0 0 0 3 2 2

SL 0 0 1 0 1 0

GF GA 91 64 84 72 66 74 62 79 68 80 49 92

Pt 32 26 25 19 17 12

CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L Red Deer 23 16 7 Lethbridge 22 13 9 Calgary 23 12 10 Edmonton 23 8 12 Medicine Hat 20 7 10 Kootenay 23 5 16

B.C. DIVISION GP W L Kelowna 21 15 5 Victoria 23 15 7 Prince George 21 11 9 Kamloops 19 9 8 Vancouver 21 5 12

OL 1 0 1 2 2

SL 0 1 0 0 2

GF GA 84 66 77 48 58 61 68 62 56 84

Pt 31 31 23 20 14

U.S. DIVISION Seattle Everett Spokane Portland Tri-City

GP W L 20 13 6 19 11 7 21 10 8 19 10 9 21 8 12

OL 1 0 2 0 1

SL 0 1 1 0 0

GF GA 73 53 44 39 65 72 66 56 61 78

Pt 27 23 23 20 17

Note: Division leaders ranked in top 2 positions per conference regardless of points; a team winning in overtime or shootout gets 2 pts. & a victory in the W column; team losing in overtime or shootout gets 1 pt. in OTL or SOL columns )ULGD\¡V UHVXOWV Brandon 2 Regina 1 Prince George 4 Lethbridge 2 Kootenay 2 Moose Jaw 1 (OT) Red Deer 6 Saskatoon 1 Medicine Hat 2 Everett 1 Seattle at Kamloops Tri-City at Portland Edmonton at Kelowna Swift Current at Spokane Victoria at Vancouver 6DWXUGD\¡V JDPHV All times Local Regina at Prince Albert, 6 p.m. Everett at Calgary, 7 p.m. Swift Current at Kootenay, 7 p.m. Saskatoon at Lethbridge, 7 p.m. Prince George at Medicine Hat, 7:30 pm. Edmonton at Kamloops, 8 p.m. Moose Jaw at Spokane, 8:05 p.m. Victoria at Tri-City, 8:05 p.m. Vancouver at Kelowna, 8:05 p.m. Portland at Seattle, 8:05 p.m. 6XQGD\¡V JDPH Saskatoon at Calgary, 4 p.m.

BCHL GP W L 24 23 1 23 15 5 23 13 8 25 12 12 23 10 13 27 8 17

T OL GF GA Pt 0 0 102 43 46 2 1 94 64 33 0 2 81 75 28 0 1 121 79 25 0 0 67 93 20 0 2 84 112 18

ISLAND DIVISION GP W L Cowichan Vally 23 13 7 Nanaimo 25 14 10 Powell River 22 12 10 Victoria 27 9 15 Alberni Valley 22 9 11 GP W L 23 15 5 23 14 5 24 13 11 23 9 10 25 6 17 24 4 20

WEST DIVISION Calgary at Edmonton, 4:30 p.m.

GREY CUP At Winnipeg Sunday, Nov. 29 Hamilton-Ottawa winner vs. CalgaryEdmonton winner, 6 p.m.

NFL AMERICAN CONFERENCE New England Buffalo N.Y. Jets Miami

W 9 5 5 4

L 0 4 4 5

T 0 0 0 0

Pct 1.000 .556 .556 .444

PF 303 231 217 191

PA 169 207 184 225

W 4 4 4 2

L 5 5 6 8

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .444 .444 .400 .200

PF 200 184 211 182

PA 227 211 268 233

W 8 6 2 2

L 1 4 7 8

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .889 .600 .222 .200

PF 235 236 210 186

PA 152 191 236 277

W 7 4 4 2

L 2 5 5 7

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .778 .444 .444 .222

PF 205 224 227 210

PA 168 195 241 249

SOUTH Indianapolis Houston Jacksonville Tennessee

NORTH Cincinnati Pittsburgh Baltimore Cleveland

WEST Denver Kansas City Oakland San Diego

NATIONAL CONFERENCE EAST N.Y. Giants Washington Philadelphia Dallas

W 5 4 4 2

L 5 5 5 7

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .500 .444 .444 .222

PF 273 205 212 166

PA 253 209 184 214

W 9 6 4 4

L 0 3 5 6

T 0 0 0 0

Pct 1.000 .667 .444 .400

PF 255 229 191 255

PA 175 190 237 315

W 7 6 4 2

L 2 3 5 7

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .778 .667 .444 .222

PF 198 219 199 167

PA 154 185 234 261

W 7 4 4 3

L 2 5 5 6

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .778 .444 .444 .333

PF 302 166 199 126

PA 185 183 179 223

SOUTH Carolina Atlanta Tampa Bay New Orleans

NORTH Minnesota Green Bay Chicago Detroit

WEST

INTERIOR DIVISION Penticton Salmon Arm West Kelowna Vernon Trail Merritt

EAST DIVISION Hamilton at Ottawa, 1 p.m.

EAST

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Chilliwack Wenatchee Langley Coquitlam Prince George Surrey

BARCLAYS FINALS

[ Âł DGYDQFHG WR VHPLĂ€QDOV

FOOTBALL

T OL GF GA Pt 1 2 89 108 29 0 1 93 82 29 0 0 75 61 24 0 3 68 83 21 1 1 62 77 20

MAINLAND DIVISION

ATP

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

T OL GF GA Pt 1 2 90 54 33 2 2 81 53 32 0 0 94 80 26 1 3 62 87 22 0 2 56 104 14 0 0 54 118 8

)ULGD\¡V UHVXOWV Powell River at Chilliwack Wenatchee at Coquitlam Trail at Nanaimo Alberni Valley at Salmon Arm Cowichan Valley at Victoria Vernon at West Kelowna, 7 p.m. Penticton at Langley, 7:15 p.m. 7KXUVGD\¡V UHVXOW Trail 3 Victoria 2 6DWXUGD\¡V JDPHV Trail at Langley, 6 p.m. Wenatchee at Chilliwack, 7 p.m. Penticton at Coquitlam, 7 p.m. Nanaimo at Cowichan Valley, 7 p.m. Salmon Arm at Prince George, 7 p.m. Alberni Valley at West Kelowna, 7 p.m. Powell River at Merritt, 7:30 p.m.

Arizona St. Louis Seattle San Francisco

Thursday's result Jacksonville 19 Tennessee 13 Sunday's games N.Y. Jets at Houston, 1 p.m. Denver at Chicago, 1 p.m. Oakland at Detroit, 1 p.m. Indianapolis at Atlanta, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. St. Louis at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Dallas at Miami, 1 p.m. Washington at Carolina, 1 p.m. Kansas City at San Diego, 4:05 p.m. San Francisco at Seattle, 4:25 p.m. Green Bay at Minnesota, 4:25 p.m. Cincinnati at Arizona, 8:30 p.m. Monday's game Buffalo at New England, 8:30 p.m.

CIS PLAYOFFS NATIONAL SEMIFINALS Saturday's games

MITCHELL BOWL Montreal (RSEQ) at Guelph (OUA), 12:30 p.m.

UTECK BOWL B.C. (Canada West) at St. Francis Xavier (AUS), 4 p.m.

NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP VANIER CUP At Quebec City Saturday, Nov. 28 Guelph-Montreal winner vs. St. Francis Xavier-British Columbia winner, 1 p.m.

Kevin Chappell Freddie Jacobson Kevin Kisner Kyle Stanley Jason Gore Alex Cejka Hiroshi Iwata Michael Kim Graeme McDowell Trey Mullinax Ricky Barnes Jim Herman David Hearn Tim Wilkinson Scott Stallings Jeff Overton Robert Streb Matt Kuchar Rob Oppenheim Cameron Percy Lucas Glover Chad Campbell Jason Dufner Mark Hensby Derek Fathauer Brendon de Jonge Zac Blair Charles Howell III Johnson Wagner Stewart Cink Fabian Gomez Jon Curran Jamie Lovemark Mark Hubbard Tyler Aldridge Steve Marino Patrick Rodgers Roberto Castro Boo Weekley Justin Thomas Smylie Kaufman Bill Haas Brett Stegmaier Martin Piller John Huh Si Woo Kim Jonathan Byrd Brendon Todd Russell Henley Vijay Singh 6HDQ 2¡+DLU Tom Hoge Missed the Cut Adam Svensson Austin Connelly

66p-65s — 131 65s-67p — 132 65p-67s — 132 66p-67s — 133 65s-69p — 134 67s-67p — 134 67p-67s — 134 67s-67p — 134 67s-68p — 135 65s-70p — 135 68p-67s — 135 66p-69s — 135 64s-72p — 136 71p-65s — 136 66p-70s — 136 64s-72p — 136 70p-66s — 136 69p-67s — 136 65s-71p — 136 67s-69p — 136 66s-71p — 137 66s-71p — 137 67p-70s — 137 68s-69p — 137 67p-70s — 137 67p-70s — 137 66s-71p — 137 67s-70p — 137 65s-72p — 137 67p-70s — 137 68s-69p — 137 67s-70p — 137 69p-68s — 137 68p-69s — 137 70p-67s — 137 68p-70s — 138 71p-67s — 138 68s-70p — 138 72p-66s — 138 67s-71p — 138 68s-70p — 138 67s-71p — 138 68p-70s — 138 67s-71p — 138 69s-69p — 138 66p-72s — 138 67p-71s — 138 68p-70s — 138 66s-72p — 138 68s-70p — 138 V S ³ 64s-74p — 138 72p-70s — 142 71s-75p — 146

LPGA CME GROUP CHAMPIONSHIP At Naples, Fla. Par 72 Second Round Ha Na Jang Lydia Ko Cristie Kerr Jennifer Song Karine Icher Gerina Piller Brittany Lincicome Ai Miyazato Catriona Matthew Lexi Thompson Sei Young Kim Austin Ernst Danielle Kang Hee Young Park Hyo Joo Kim Jenny Shin Inbee Park I.K. Kim Jaye Marie Green Minjee Lee Mo Martin Sandra Gal Eun-Hee Ji 5\DQQ 2¡7RROH Amy Yang Sun Young Yoo Suzann Pettersen Jessica Korda Brooke M. Henderson Stacy Lewis Pornanong Phatlum Karrie Webb Mi Hyang Lee Xi Yu Lin Angela Stanford Sydnee Michaels Lizette Salas Mika Miyazato Paula Creamer Alena Sharp Chella Choi Candie Kung Brittany Lang Kim Kaufman

69-65—134 69-67—136 68-69—137 68-69—137 71-67—138 68-70—138 68-70—138 72-67—139 70-69—139 70-69—139 68-71—139 66-73—139 73-67—140 71-69—140 71-69—140 71-69—140 71-69—140 69-71—140 68-72—140 75-66—141 73-68—141 72-69—141 72-69—141 ³ 72-69—141 72-69—141 71-70—141 70-71—141 72-70—142 72-70—142 70-72—142 70-72—142 67-75—142 74-69—143 73-70—143 72-71—143 72-71—143 72-71—143 70-73—143 74-70—144 76-68—144 73-71—144 72-72—144 70-74—144

W

L

Pct

GB

9 8 9 7 7 7 7 8 5 7 7 6 5 2 0

3 3 5 4 5 5 5 6 4 6 6 6 7 11 13

.750 .727 .643 .636 .583 .583 .583 .571 .556 .538 .538 .500 .417 .154 .000

— 1 /2 1 1 1 /2 2 2 2 2 21/2 1 2 /2 21/2 3 4 1 7 /2 91/2

WESTERN CONFERENCE Golden State San Antonio Dallas Phoenix Memphis Oklahoma City Utah L.A. Clippers Denver Houston Minnesota Portland Sacramento L.A. Lakers New Orleans

W

L

Pct

GB

13 9 9 7 7 7 6 6 6 5 5 5 4 2 2

0 3 4 5 6 6 6 6 7 8 8 9 9 10 11

1.000 .750 .692 .583 .538 .538 .500 .500 .462 .385 .385 .357 .308 .167 .154

— 31/2 4 51/2 6 6 1 6 /2 61/2 7 8 8 81/2 9 101/2 11

)ULGD\¡V UHVXOWV Charlotte 113 Philadelphia 88 Boston 120 Brooklyn 95 Detroit 96 Minnesota 86 New Orleans 104 San Antonio 90 Memphis 96 Houston 84 New York 93 Oklahoma City 90 Dallas 102 Utah 93 Phoenix 114 Denver 107 Portland 102 L.A. Clippers 91 Toronto 102 L.A. Lakers 91 Chicago at Golden State 7KXUVGD\¡V UHVXOWV Miami 116 Sacramento 109 Cleveland 115 Milwaukee 100 Golden State 124 L.A. Clippers 117 6DWXUGD\¡V JDPHV Sacramento at Orlando, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at Indiana, 7 p.m. Atlanta at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m. Washington at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. New York at Houston, 8 p.m. Philadelphia at Miami, 8 p.m. Memphis at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. 6XQGD\¡V JDPHV Toronto at L.A. Clippers, 3:30 p.m. Phoenix at New Orleans, 6 p.m. Boston at Brooklyn, 6 p.m. Dallas at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Golden State at Denver, 8 p.m. Portland at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.

SOCCER MLS PLAYOFFS CONFERENCE FINALS (2-game, total-goals series) EASTERN CONFERENCE Sunday's game New York City at Columbus, 5 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 29 Columbus at New York City, noon. WESTERN CONFERENCE Sunday's game Dallas at Portland, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 29 Portland at Dallas, 1 p.m.

DENMARK SUPERLIGA Midtjylland 1 OB Odense 1

ENGLAND LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP Middlsbrough 1 Queens Park Rangers 0

FRANCE LIGUE 1 Nice 3 Lyon 0

GERMANY BUNDESLIGA Hamburger SV 3 Borussia Dortmund 1

SCOTLAND CHAMPIONSHIP St. Mirren 1 Greenock Morton 1

NHL

Canadiens beat Islanders 5-3 in Carey Price’s return THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Jeff Petry had his first two-goal game and the Montreal Canadiens beat the New York Islanders 5-3 on Friday night in goalie Carey Price’s return from a lower-body injury. Price, the NHL’s reigning MVP and Vezina Trophy winner, missed eight games. He made 33 saves to help Montreal win for the second time in three

games. Tomas Fleischmann, Nathan Beaulieu and Brendan Gallagher also scored to help the Canadiens improve to 15-4-2. Montreal is tied with Dallas for the NHL lead with 32 points. Brock Nelson scored twice, and Travis Hamonic added a goal for New York. BLUE JACKETS 4, PREDATORS 0 Sergei Bobrovsky made 39 saves for his 12th career shutout, and Boone

Jenner and Ryan Johansen each had a goal and an assist in Columbus’ victory over Nashville. Gregory Campbell and Scott Hartnell also scored to help Columbus win for the fourth time in five games. Bobrovsky got his sixth win in seven starts. Nashville’s Pekka Rinne surrendered goals on Columbus’ first two shots 1:41 apart, and the Blue Jackets scored three times on their first nine shots.

MAPLE LEAFS 2, HURRICANES 1, SO Joffrey Lupul beat Cam Ward to the glove side in the fifth round of the shootout to lift Toronto past Carolina. Brad Malone scored for the Hurricanes 7:47 into the third period, and Toronto’s Nazem Kadri tied it with 3:33 left. Toronto’s James Reimer stopped 33 shots, and Ward made 24 saves. Toronto has won five of six games, and Carolina has lost five straight.

RED WINGS 3, KINGS 2 Mike Green and Dylan Larkin put Detroit ahead with second-period goals and Petr Mrazek made 35 saves in the Red Wings’ victory over Los Angeles. Tomas Tatar also scored for the Red Wings, and Justin Abdelkader and Henrik Zetterberg each had two assists. Jeff Carter scored twice for Los Angeles. The Kings dropped to 5-2 on the road.


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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015 GARFIELD

@NanaimoDaily

DIVERSIONS 23

CROSSWORD SATURDAY STUMPER ACROSS 1 Desisted 8 Milieus for popcorn 15 Early Motorola car product 16 Frans Hals Museum city 17 Stretcher at the gym 18 Highbrow 19 Makes firmer 20 “No way!” 22 Tear down 23 The “l” in craigslist’s slo page 24 Bundle of energy 26 Brilliant display 27 US Space and Rocket Center locale 28 What some boards vote on 30 Casualty departments, in the UK 31 1971 Time cover subject 34 What many schooners carry 35 Alibi issue 36 It might get a bully going 44 Lib. arts major 45 Western demonym looked down on by locals 46 “A little __ the mightiest Julius fell”: Hamlet 47 Competitor of 42 Down 49 Fishy 50 Compounds phased out by the Montreal Protocol 51 Got good stuff from 53 Its Shop sells umbrellas and flags 54 Pay, with “out” 55 What a juggler might say 57 Shaq, as of 2011 59 Middle 60 Take more than seconds 61 Malcontents 62 Labyrinthine configurations

FOR BETTER OR WORSE

ANDY CAPP

ZITS

DOWN 1 What waving a white flag can mean 2 Dosage container 3 eBay’s founder, genealogically 4 Beth March portrayer in 1994 5 Action figures 6 Quaint plaint 7 NFL East town 8 2011 Best Picture Oscar also-ran 9 Misc.

PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED

10 President who met Pope Francis last May 11 Pitcher’s success 12 One on Coppola’s short list for Vito Corleone 13 They’re seen in shower scenes 14 Extracts in plants 21 “Bold and Beautiful” sloganeer 24 Blusher shade 25 Couple to be honored with 2016 coins 28 Micronesian nation

29 W.C. Fields footwear 32 Franciscan cross 33 Science Matters Newsletter publisher 36 Kurosawa film remade as A Fistful of Dollars 37 It precedes every Sabres home game 38 Suppresses 39 Daniel Webster, for one 40 Squabbles 41 Scholarly paper evaluator 42 Toon whose first name is Veritably 43 “Aw, what the heck!” 44 Kid-lit favorite turning 55 this year 48 Strobe light element 50 Cicada sound 52 Joan Collins, since early 2015 54 Quip conclusion 56 NATO member since 1990 58 Die Meistersinger heroine

HI AND LOIS

HAGAR

» EVENTS // EMAIL: EVENTS@NANAIMODAILYNEWS.COM SATURDAY, NOV. 21

MONDAY, NOV. 23

THURSDAY, NOV. 26

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Randerson Ridge Christmas Gift and Craft Fair at Dover Bay High School gymnasium, 6135 McGirr Rd., Nanaimo. SUNDAY, NOV. 22

7:30 p.m.: ‘Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy, Port Theatre 125 Front Street, Nanaimo.

7 p.m. Daniel Wesley at The Dinghy Dock Pub 8 Pirates Lane, Protection Island. Advance tickets $30 include return ferry, $35 at the door at Lucid, The Dog’s Ear, Desire Tattoo, Dinghy Dock or ticketzone.com.

9-11 a.m. Breakfast with Santa will feature entertainment, a balloon artist, face painting, perfect for your whole family. Tickets are available at Guest Services, $6 for children under 12 and $12 for adults. All proceeds from this event goes to the BC Children’s Hospital Foundation. Nanaimo North Town Centre 4750 Rutherford Rd.

4:30-6 p.m.: ‘ Climate Change Theatre Action’. Contact Nelson Gray at Nelson.Gray@viu.ca.

TUESDAY, NOV. 24

WENESDAY, NOV. 25 10-11 a.m. CC Tiny Tots Play Group at Country Club Centre.

FRIDAY, NOV. 27 7 p.m. Doors open for David Bitonti, Brian Hazelbower, Genevieve Rainey at Dinghy Dock Pub 8 Pirates Lane, Protection Island. Tickets $20 plus fee includes return ferry. Noon-1 p.m.: Sexual Health Initiative, titled ‘Dick Loss Prevention, Volume 1, Make Sure

Your Dick Doesn’t Fall Off Before You Die Drunk and Alone’. .

at 372 Bates Drive, Fanny Bay, BC. Please park in the empty lot next to the property. Admission $10. Please register in advance 250-754-1750.

SATURDAY, NOV. 28 All day: Downtown Nanaimo merchants mark Shop The Neighbourhood Day between Black Friday and Cyber Monday, two shopping days notorious for driving dollars online or across the border. Shop The Neighbourhood will feature exclusive deals at local businesses to encourage local spending. 2 p.m. A walking tour of George Sawchuk’s Forest Gallery. Sawchuk (1927–2012) was a logger who lost part of a leg in an industrial accident and began working as an artist. Meet

4:30 p.m. Enjoy the delightful children’s voices during a free performance courtesy of the Vancouver Island Symphony Children’s Choir under the direction of Patricia Plumley in Diana Krall Plaza. 7:30 p.m. Nanaimo Chamber Orchestra at Brechin United Church and for also Dec 6, 2:30 p.m. St. Edmund’s Anglican Church in Parksville. Tickets are $20 ($5, students, under 12, free) at the Port Theatre Box Office or at the door. For more information, see www.nanaimochamberorchestra.com


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24 DIVERSIONS BLONDIE

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HOROSCOPE by Jacqueline Bigar ARIES (March 21-April 19) You might feel a bit off as you change gears to weekend mode. In the early morning, someone could describe you as irritable. Don’t worry so much -- you are full of ideas, and you will be able to enjoy yourself far more than you thought possible. Tonight: Carry on. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You could be surprised by everything you hear. When someone says that a matter is confidential, stay mum, even if you don’t agree that the secret is worth keeping. Take time to complete a particular project. Tonight: Keep your whereabouts hush-hush. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You might feel as if your actions won’t make much of a difference. A loved one will communicate what he or she would like to do, but only after you already have made plans. Curb your frustration, and use your creativity to find a solution. Tonight: Where the action is. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Reach out to someone at a distance. You tend to accept a lot of responsibility that others won’t. A family member or loved one is hot under the collar and is likely to be difficult. You can do only so much. Focus on where you can make a difference. Tonight: Out and being noticed. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Speak to people who can help you get past an immediate problem. This type of contact is important. Your perspective could radically change as a result. Brainstorm with people

BABY BLUES

BC

WORD FIND

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

whose minds you respect, but who come up with very different ideas. Tonight: Be near live music. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Oneon-one relating allows you to connect with certain people on a much more intimate level than usual. People reveal more when they feel that they are important and that their feelings are valued. Family remains a high priority. Tonight: Out with a special person. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Others could be unusually challenging, which might trigger some anger on your part. You tend to be diplomatic, and as a result, you don’t openly share your feelings. Change what you are doing, and let go of disappointment for now. Tonight: Let someone else run the show. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You have a project on the back burner that you need to work on. You might find that you are sitting on a lot of anger, which seems to emerge at the drop of a hat. Find out why you are feeling this way. Perhaps you aren’t in sync with what is going on. Tonight: Rent a movie. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Your adventurous style encourages you to take strange risks. You might want to say “no” to more wild decisions for now; otherwise, you could hit a snafu eventually. A close friend or loved one will express his or her support. Tonight: Add more spirit to the moment. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Stay close to home, knowing that you would like to cocoon for a little while. You might enjoy taking a nap, turning off your cellphone

and letting the outside world exist without you. Everyone will be able to manage. Tonight: Try a new neighborhood hot spot. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You’ll speak your mind and get plenty of feedback from a friend. Reach out to a loved one who tends to be somewhat difficult. You might not like what you hear, but you’ll know to take what this person says with a grain of salt. Tonight: Hang out at home. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Before you splurge on a big expense, make sure you really want this item. You could discover that you are simply riding an impulsive wave and will change your mind later. Do some comparison shopping before deciding to move forward. Tonight: Make it your treat. YOUR BIRTHDAY (Nov. 21) This year you often find that you are overtired and perhaps too focused on work. Make a point of letting go more often. You will benefit from having a less stressful schedule. If you are single, someone who enters your life could be very important to your life’s history. You will find yourself relating to someone who makes you very happy. If you are attached, the two of you have a great time together, but you often need to get away together in order to fully appreciate the bond. Don’t let the grind of daily life interfere with your relationship! ARIES can be challenging. BORN TODAY Singer/songwriter Carly Rae Jepsen (1985), actress Marlo Thomas (1937), actress Goldie Hawn (1945)

SUDOKU CRYPTOQUOTE

www.harbourviewvw.com

Barrel of oil

$41.90 +$0.18

Dow Jones

Harbourview Volkswagen

PREVIOUS SUDOKO SOLVED

17,823.81 +91.06

Canadian Dollar The Canadian dollar traded Friday afternoon at 74.93 cents US, down 0.27 of a cent from Thursday’s close. The Pound Sterling was worth$2.0276, Cdn, down 0.54 of a cent while the Euro was worth $1.4206, down 0.66 of a cent.

S&P/TSX

NASDAQ

5,104.92 +31.28

13,433.49 -40.34

SOLUTION: GROWING THE FINEST


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Version” 19 Come before 22 It may be saucer-shaped 25 Loon (Fr.) 28 Ottawa suburb: Bell’s ___ 31 One of a married couple 33 Ont. “cranberry capital” 34 News note 35 Photog’s item 38 Outstanding swimmer Vicki 41 Some call it supper 42 Winter eaves-dropper? 43 Winery container 44 Street shader 45 Similar (to) 46 Went downhill

Having lost Dad back in picture has bright side Kathy Mitchell & Marcy Sugar Annie’s Mailbox Dear Annie: My husband and I raised my three children with very little help from their birth father. He paid no child support and rarely visited them. Of course, now that the children are adults, Dad is back in the picture. My children are so hungry for what they feel they missed that they’ve left me behind in the dust. I do understand this on a primitive level, yet it hurts. I would like people to think about how much care is required to raise a family. That “father” didn’t take you to the doctor, the orthodontist or any

of the other necessary appointments. He didn’t go to your school activities and conferences or talk to your teachers. He didn’t support you as he should have, emotionally or financially, even when he had the money. He didn’t have to instill discipline, especially when one of the reasons you acted out was because you felt abandoned by your father. Now you think he’s the greatest thing since sliced bread. — The Ones Left Behind Dear Left Behind: You have a good grasp of your children’s emotional need for their biological father, even though he abandoned them. Try to look on the bright side of this — he may turn out to be helpful and loving now that the kids don’t require so much effort from him. Consider this a benefit for your children. Kids can never have too many people in their lives who love them. And also keep in mind that once the novelty wears off, the kids will likely see Dad more clearly.

Please don’t express hurt or dismay that they long for Dad’s company. Be supportive and understanding. We hope they will come to appreciate you even more than they already do. Dear Annie: I work in a small department within a larger corporation. One of my co-workers is a rather large gentleman who has very bad body odor. I am a larger gal myself, and I sweat more than others. I know this, so I bathe daily and use antiperspirant. This co-worker comes into the office smelling this way, so he probably doesn’t shower every morning. He works with the public, and I can’t help but wonder what kind of an impression he leaves about our department. I am not the only one who has noticed this, but I am not comfortable enough to talk directly to this person. Should our supervisor say something? Please help. — Suffocating in Saskatchewan Dear Suffocating: Some body odors

are hard to control, so it’s best not to make assumptions. It’s possible that this man bathes daily and wears deodorant and it still isn’t enough. It could be the detergent he washes his clothes in, his shampoo or soap, or even an ineffective deodorant. Someone needs to talk to this co-worker and suggest that he speak to his doctor. The supervisor is the best one to do this, making it an issue of office professionalism and not personal judgment. We know this is difficult for anyone to do, but frankly, the supervisor would be doing him a huge favour. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@creators.com, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. You can also find Annie on Facebook at Facebook. com/AskAnnies.

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1 Eager 5 Duet number 8 Colourless 12 Have a hand out 15 Equestrian 17 That guy’s 18 Air 19 Beseech 20 Excuse 21 Put a burden on 23 Coarse file 24 Messy stain 26 Lummox 27 Public rows 29 Posed 30 Run smoothly 32 Redbreast 36 Strangely 37 Songbird 39 Wore away 40 They’re caught on beaches 41 Like Canada’s population 44 Polished 46 Quebec inventor of snowblower 47 Mohammed’s religion 49 More eager 53 Make mittens 54 Watch part 55 Wreath material 56 Old Roman welcome 57 Business abbr. 58 Hawaiian greeting 60 N.W.T.’s floral emblem: mountain ___ 62 Three-way joint 63 Snaky fish 64 Cubs’ refuge 65 Like the Prairies in the Dirty Thirties 66 Money set aside for a purpose 67 Night movies 69 Companies 71 Goes around 73 Misunderstood 75 Fruit from Florida 77 Squint 79 No longer in the closet 80 Actor’s part 81 Figure skating venue 82 Makes preparations 85 Hive worker 86 That girl 89 Masculine

48 The Aegean or the Baltic 50 “The ___ of Things” (TV series) 51 Happenings 52 Marsh plants 54 Heir 55 Nourished 58 Naval rank 59 With a discount of 60 The long ___ of the law 61 Cap brim 65 Noah’s creation 66 Seedy fruit 68 Useful or pleasant feature 69 Fowl homophone 70 Whit 71 January specials 72 Patella 74 Apex 76 Thieve 77 Grade One reader 78 In a ghostly way 81 Ward off 83 Neither hide ___ hair 84 Burn 86 Freezing rain 87 Throw with effort 88 Ruhr Valley city 90 Marathoner Gillis 92 Head the crew 94 Greek war god 97 Age 98 Tout’s offering 99 Exploit 100 Banned pesticide

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@NanaimoDaily

A V E R T

www.nanaimodailynews.com

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

Adele’s new album won’t be streamed THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Fans seeking to listen to Adele’s new album won’t be able to do so on Spotify or Apple Music. The streaming sites said Thursday that Adele’s 25 will not be available for streaming when it is released on Friday. “We love and respect Adele, as do her 24 million fans on Spotify,” Spotify said in a statement. “We hope that she will give those fans the opportunity to enjoy 25 on Spotify alongside 19 and 21 very soon.” It’s unclear if Adele’s album will appear on Spotify or Apple Music in the future. A representative for the British singer declined to comment. Pulling the highly anticipated album from the streaming platforms will force listeners to buy it digitally and at stores, driving its sales.


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26 DIVERSIONS

PERMANENT LINKS ACROSS

1 Neighbor of Rwanda 7 Only OK 11 Lucky mystique 15 Odist, e.g. 19 Bagel shape 20 ”— Excited” 21 Baldwin of film 22 Duncan of education 23 Decorative window option 25 Grown-up eft 26 Dryer fuzz 27 Tendril, e.g. 28 Atop, to a 15-Across 29 Washed-out 31 Slowly, on a score 33 Hurdle for a new driver’s-license applicant 38 See 24-Down 41 Wall St. news 42 Prefix with vision 43 Superhero film of 2015 44 Apple pic application 46 Bottom-row PC key 47 ”— Miniver” 48 Mimics a wolf 51 Totem pole, essentially 53 Item in an election box 56 Ocean’s hue 57 Ocean’s kin 58 Cleveland cager, briefly 59 Subsides 60 Oxidizes 62 Upright height 65 Coach Riley 66 Pick up on 68 What can follow eight key words in this puzzle to get phrases meaning ”permanent” 70 SSA part 75 City area, informally 77 Deny, as a fact 79 Mambo relative 80 ”No, not true!” 84 Mine rocks 85 Bang into 87 Fix, as a cat 88 Vase inserts 90 Fixed goal 93 State, to Luc 94 Alias initials 95 Jacob’s first wife 96 Secondary

@NanaimoDaily

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

97 Venerate 100 Objectives 101 24-hr. cash source 102 Serpentine letter 103 Fancy wedding mailing 108 Frosh topper 109 Seedy loaf 110 Salem-to-L.A. dir. 111 It’s a no-no 115 Greek liqueur 116 White-dwarf explosion 119 Feature of a bodybuilder’s tummy 122 Dunkable cookie 123 Smack hard 124 Gofer, e.g. 125 Isis’ brother 126 ”Freak on a Leash” rock band 127 In times past 128 Fulfill 129 Cloud layers DOWN 1 Colorado natives 2 Alternative style to emo 3 Former BP gas brand 4 Not at all, informally 5 Classic cola brand 6 Count up 7 — mignon 8 Italian liqueur 9 Specific mag. printing 10 UFO museum city 11 Miracle food from above 12 Bullfighting yell 13 Hanukkah observer 45 Egg-shaped 14 Eighth of a circle 46 Raccoon lookalike 15 Tasty 47 Experts 16 They’re not 49 “__ name it!” facsimiles 50 Brand of fuel 17 Film scorer additives Morricone 52 “Gone” actor Bentley 18 ”Grand” mountain 53 “Lili” actress Leslie 24 With 38-Across, 54 Dolly’s calls deteriorate 55 Fur tycoon on the 30 Logger’s tool Titanic 32 Block (up) 58 “Aw” inspirer 34 Apple items with 61 Certain oar earbuds 63 Longhair cat 35 Geeky sort 64 Romanov bigwigs 36 Rover’s planet 67 Half a sextet 37 Foot section 38 Jean-Luc of the U.S.S. 69 Neighbor of 36-Down Enterprise 71 Tooth parts 39 Light-blocking 72 Horn in (on) 40 Propulsion

73 Demeans 74 Parfait parts 76 Look out for 78 Talk shrilly 80 Cola cooler 81 “Tsk, tsk!” 82 Daydreamer 83 Matinée time 86 Prefix with faceted 89 Barely earned, with “out” 90 Rig on a road 91 Manhattan area 92 Most distant 95 Equipment for realtime viewing on the Net 98 Steve of rock guitar 99 “All the same ...” 100 Above zero 101 To __ (unerringly)

103 Nook reading 104 Prefix with physiologist 105 Beyond mad 106 Good point 107 Low point 112 Silents vamp Theda 113 Somber paper notice 114 Greek mount 117 Have 118 Carpet sweeper, briefly 120 Move hastily 121 UCLA part

PREMIER CROSSWORD SOLUTION HOCUS-FOCUS


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CHRISTMAS CRAFT Sale, Nov 26 & 27, 9am - 5pm, 2465 Labieux Road.

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Cully, Margaret Miriam (nee Vincent) Born March 24, 1916 in Montreal, Quebec. Passed away peacefully surrounded by her family on Monday, November 9, 2015 at the age of 99. She was predeceased by her beloved husband Robert John (1985) and their infant son Bobby (1946). Cherished mother of Barb (Herb) of Penticton, Margaret of Nanaimo, and Roberta (Gord) of Wawa, Ontario. She leaves behind her grandchildren Lisa (Jim), Kelly (Shane), Lynn (Shawn), and David, also her great grandchildren Kaitlin, Megan, Connor, and Brooke. A loving, kind and caring mother, grandmother, great grandmother and friend. She will be greatly missed. Many thanks to the Home Support staff for their kindness and care over the last few years. Also thanks to the compassionate staff at the Palliative Care Unit at Nanaimo Regional General Hospital. A family service was held November 17, 2015

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DEATHS

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White, Ronald Philip (1954-2015)

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES GET FREE vending machines can earn $100,000 + per year. All cash-locations provided. protected territories. Interest free ďŹ nancing. Full details call now 1-866-668-6629 website www.tcvend.com. HIP OR knee replacement? Arthritic Conditions/COPD? Restrictions in walking/dressing? Disability tax credit $2,000 tax credit $20,000 refund. Apply today for assistance: 1-844-453-5372.

November 17, 1940 - November 12, 2015 Born in Sidney, B.C. on Nov. 27, 1940 and passed peacefully on Nov. 12, 2015. Sid enjoyed his new home at Woodgrove Manor for the last 2 years. There he received all the kindness, loving care and respect he deserved. Predeceased by sisters, Barbara and Colleen. He will be greatly missed by sisters Beverley, Linda (Alan), Teresa, Irene, Valerie, Karen (Bruce) and Sharon (Keith) and brother Arthur. Also will be missed by numerous family and his many friends. A tea will be held at Cavallotti Lodge, Saturday November 28, 2015 at 2060 East Wellington Road, Nanaimo B.C. from 1:00-4:00 p.m.

at 2pm on Monday, November 30th. Friends and family are welcome to attend and/or gather afterwards for a celebration of Ron’s life at the Bayshore Restaurant (Unit 101-1240 Stewart Ave) located behind the Marina Hotel. In lieu of flowers donations can be made to the local SPCA.

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After a life filled with laughter, music, and love, Ron passed on from this world on the morning of November 18th, in the 61st year of his life. Beloved husband of the late Constance. Cherished father of Aaron (Trista) O’Flanagan. Loving brother to Linda (Michael) and Vince (Hartej). Cherished uncle to Dustin, Brendan, Shaelyn and Chandran. Predeceased by mother, Florence, father Philip and step mother, Beulah. Ron will be greatly missed by his close friend, Ray, who supported him throughout his illness. The internment of ashes will take place at the Chinese Cemetery on 1598 Townsite Road in Nanaimo

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Donald Allen Golob (1955-2015)

It is with the deepest sadness that the family of Donald Allen Golob announce his passing on October 24, 2015 in Nanaimo. Suffering the indignities of cancer with as much tenacity, guts and pure strength of will as is humanly possible, he left us all with advice for the future: make the most of your life. He certainly made the most of his; completing the Pacific Crest Trail; trail running the North Shore mountains, the Knee Knacker and the Kusam Klimb; bagpiping, travelling the world; and being a super dad to his two boys. Work colleagues will recall his leadership and organizational skills, either facilitating with a not-for-profit or volunteering with IAP2. We all will miss his wit, intellect, insight and unique fashion sense. He leaves behind his loving wife Susan Clift, sons Johnathan and Benjamin, siblings, nieces and nephews, parents, many friends and colleagues, and Amber the cat. A celebration of life will take place at the Lantzville house in the New Year. A special thank you to Dr Andrzej Buczkowski, Dr Andrew Attwell, Dr Alan So, the nurses with Nanaimo Home Care Services, and especially to Richard Golob and Julie Dunne. You all gave so much of yourselves in Donald’s 10 year journey with cancer.


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3:00 p.m.(15:00 hours), Pacific Time, Friday, January 8, 2016 Delivery Methods:: 1) Hand or courier delivery to the Purchasing Department which is located at the City’s Public Works Department at 2020 Labieux Road, Nanaimo, BC V9T 6J9; or 2) Electronically to: purchasinginfo@nanaimo.ca Please Note: Maximum electronically submitted file size is 8 MB or less. Questions: Please direct all questions regarding the Street Banner Design Competition to the Culture and Heritage Department by email to: cultureandheritage@ nanaimo.ca or phone: (250) 755-4483. The City’s preferred communication is email. The City is not obligated to accept any Submissions and reserves the right to reject all Submissions or cancel this competition at any time. SILVIA REID, SCMP BUYER 2020 LABIEUX ROAD NANAIMO BC V9T 6J9

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

TENNIS

Wawrinka gets by Murray at ATP Finals MATTIAS KAREN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON — Stan Wawrinka grabbed the last semifinal spot at the ATP World Tour finals by beating Andy Murray 7-6 (4), 6-4 Friday to wrap up the group stage at the season-ending tournament. Murray led 4-2 in the first-set tiebreaker but then lost the next five points and was broken in the first game of the second to put Wawrinka in control. The French Open champion broke again for a 5-2 lead but needed two attempts to serve out the match. He saved two break points at 5-4 before converting his second match point when Murray’s backhand went wide. Wawrinka will play Swiss compatriot Roger Federer on Saturday, while Rafael Nadal faces Novak Djokovic in the other semifinal. Nadal beat David Ferrer 6-7 (2), 6-3, 6-4 earlier to finish the group stage unbeaten. The early exit gives Murray a bit more extra rest ahead of next weekend’s Davis Cup final against Belgium on clay, but the Briton said that hasn’t been on his mind in London. “I wanted to try and win the tournament,� Murray said. “Obviously you have to try your best right way through to the end. It wasn’t enough.� Wawrinka served for the first set at 5-3 but Murray broke back after chasing down a volley to hit a passing shot for a winner and force the tiebreaker. But after earning the first mini-break, the Briton made a number of errors to hand the momentum back to Wawrinka. “In the tiebreak, I made bad mistakes

WAWRINKA

at the wrong time,� Murray said. “I believe I gave a cheap point away at 4-2. I missed a forehand on the first ball of the rally. It was a fairly basic shot . . . I made one other error at the end of the set as well. Obviously, that was an important point in the match.� In the early match, neither player had much at stake as Nadal had already clinched first place in the group and Ferrer had been eliminated, but the two baseline sluggers still went at it relentlessly for more than 2 1/2 hours in a match full of heavy hitting and long rallies. Nadal earned the decisive break to go up 5-4 in the third set — having previously wasted five break points in a marathon first game of the decider — and sealed victory with a backhand volley winner. It was Nadal’s third straight win in London but that kind of grueling encounter probably wasn’t the best preparation for a match against Djokovic.

SOCCER

Madrid set to clash with Barcelona TALES AZZONI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MADRID — Rafa Benitez promises Real Madrid will come out attacking in the first clasico of the season against Barcelona on Saturday. With all his top strikers available after injuries and off-the-field problems, the coach said on Friday that Madrid will not relinquish its offensive style just because it’s facing Barcelona. “The team’s characteristic is to attack, to score goals, and to always be near the opponent’s goal,� Benitez said. “And that’s what we will have to do.� He said nothing will change even if Lionel Messi returns to the Barcelona squad following a long injury layoff. “Madrid is always trying to attack ... no matter who the opponent is,� Benitez said. “We don’t worry too much about our rival. We have to do what we are used to doing.� Barcelona coach Luis Enrique said Messi may be able to play but won’t be fully fit for the match at the Santiago Bernabeu. “It’s obvious that he won’t be at 100 per cent physically,� said Enrique, adding that a decision

“Barcelona (isn’t) going to change their playing style and neither will we.� Gareth Bale, Real Madrid

on whether the Argentine star will play likely won’t be made until closer to the game. “I will talk to him today (Friday) and I’ll likely talk to him again tomorrow. It’s the player who ultimately can tell you how he feels, if he’s confident or not. I do know that he has been waiting for this for a long time.� Messi tore a ligament in his left knee nearly two months ago and has missed nine matches since then. Enrique said midfielder Ivan Rakitic has recovered from a muscle injury and will be available on Saturday, although it wasn’t clear if the Croat would start. Benitez did not announce Madrid’s lineup, but said Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema, and Gareth Bale will be available. Bale and Benzema have been injured, and Benzema has also been dealing with a sex tape con-

troversy that led him to being briefly detained in France two weeks ago. Benitez also said playmaker James Rodriguez was ready to play despite coming off two full games with Colombia. It’s only the second time this season that Benitez will have all of his players available for a game. He said Madrid should be considered the “favourite� because it’s at full strength and playing at home. Despite pledging an offensive team on Saturday, Benitez didn’t say whether he planned on using Rodriguez instead of defensive midfielder Casemiro, who has been the starter recently. He emphatically dismissed rumours of a meeting organized by the players to demand a more offensive style, and defended himself by pointing to the team’s numbers this season. Real Madrid goes into the game with the Spanish league’s best attack with 26 goals, one more than Barcelona. “Barcelona (isn’t) going to change their playing style and neither will we,� Bale said. “I’m certain you’ll see an attacking game from both teams, and it makes sense that the team that scores a lot of goals will win.�


29

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

Exhibit explores a legendary look Jacqueline De Ribes, born to aristocratic parents in 1929, was a unique figure in fashion in the 20th century JOCELYN NOVECK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FRENCH FLARE

W

hen the latest exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute opens this week, celebrating the style of French fashion figure Jacqueline de Ribes, an important guest will be missing: The 86-year-old de Ribes herself. In the wake of the horrific Paris terror attacks, “she felt it would be unseemly to celebrate,” said the exhibit’s curator, Harold Koda. Despite cancelling her trip, however, de Ribes noted in a statement that she hopes the show “will represent the joy associated with the freedom of creation.” De Ribes, born to aristocratic parents in 1929, was a unique figure in fashion for much of the 20th century, beginning in her ’20s when she was already landing on best-dressed lists. She was famously photographed by Richard Avedon and termed a “swan” by Truman Capote. Not content to simply wear the designs of others, she often had dressmakers make her own designs for her, and in the 1980s she came to New York and launched her own design business, despite the perception that aristocrats like her (she’s a countess) didn’t get involved in commerce.

I

n a walk through the exhibit earlier this week, Koda explained that it was hard to find early dresses that de Ribes wore, because she gave clothes to charity through the 1960s. Luckily for the museum, she kept many of her clothes from 1975 onward — both her haute couture gowns, and her own designs. Still, Koda said, “It was hard to convince her to do the show, because there’s a side of her that wanted to keep things private.” Koda convinced her, though, by proposing that the show focus on her creative arc, from a little girl who made costumes, to the haute couture client who always had changes made to garments she bought, to the eventual designer she became. “She was always making things,” Koda said. “Jacqueline De Ribes: The Art of Style” is composed of items from her personal collection, half designed by others — like Yves Saint Laurent, Emanuel Ungaro and Valentino — and half of her own design. After passing by a giant black-and-white Avedon portrait of de Ribes, in profile with a long black braid, visitors will spot a photo of de Ribes and her sister, as little girls, dressed in fringed hula skirts that Jacqueline made from shredded potato sacks. A daywear section shows de Ribes was an early devotee of the current concept of “mixing high and low,” combining elegant pieces with sporty streetwear, and also mixing designers — some 20 years before it became the norm. She was an aficionado of down winter coats, and there’s a Norma Kamali “sleeping bag coat” on display, in a pinkish red, worn over de Ribes’ self-designed light pink sweater dress and brown sable hat.

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earby, in the cocktail section, there’s a sparkly summer evening dress by Saint Laurent from 1969 — short, with fringes, beads, pearls and sequins. It’s one of the few items that de Ribes did not change at all — however, she pairs it here with a dramatic “motoring veil,” meant to keep dust out of one’s face. “She remembered that she had it somewhere,” Koda said. “She remembers everything.” A set of ruffled, Grecian-style gowns in three different colours — orange and two shades of

Dresses worn by French style and fashion icon Jacqueline de Ribes are displayed at the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The exhibit, Jacqueline de Ribes: The Art of Style, opened on Thursday. [AP PHOTO]

blue — shows she was nothing if not practical. “Saint Laurent was closing the couture atelier, and so she got a call asking if she wanted anything. She finds her favourite dress from 1983 and has it done in two other colours,” Koda said. De Ribes’ own designs — except for her elaborate costumes for balls, and the like — are simple. “She likes ornament,” Koda said, “but the best description was in Women’s Wear Daily: ’Spare ribs.’ A kind of simplicity.

She loves drama, but in the end she’s very disciplined.” The show also features a set of casual photos, several showing de Ribes engaging in sports. A photo of her waterskiing on one ski caught the curator’s eye. “Jacqueline,” Koda recalls telling her. “I’m surprised that you’re wearing a turban in that photo!” “Harold,” she told him. “I had no intention of falling in!”

Koda also said de Ribes feared the show might not have universal appeal. “Will young girls be interested?” he said she asked him. “Does anyone want to be elegant, rather than sexy?” She might as well have looked back at one of her own quotes, one that’s written on a wall at the exhibit: “I totally disagree with Christian Dior, who once said that one could never look sexy and be elegant at the same time,” the quote reads. “It is just more difficult, that’s all.”


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30 WEEKEND

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

HEALTH

Personal Ink helps women with healing Vancouver Island artist is among a select group inking mastectomy tattoos onto breast cancer survivors J.R. RARDON PARKSVILLE QUALICUM BEACH NEWS

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t the home studio of Errington tattoo artist Samantha “Sam” Rae, a plump bumblebee hovered silently over a vibrant daisy set in a wash of background colour. Then Tracy Young closed the shawl covering her reconstructed chest and the view disappeared. Young, a 52-year-old breast cancer survivor from Victoria, traveled to Errington in October to take part in the third annual P.Ink (Personal Ink) Day, a program that links patients of mastectomies with qualified tattoo artists to turn ravaged flesh into works of art. Costs are largely covered through donations gathered by the Personal Ink organization through its website at p-ink.org. “I wanted to be part of a network of amazing artists who come from a heart-centric place to help the healing process for breast cancer survivors,” said Rae, who inked Young’s chest at her Sam R Tattoo Studio while participating in P.Ink Day for the second time. P.Ink Day began in 2013 with 10 artists in New York City matched with

Tattoo artist Samantha Rae, left, transformed breast cancer survivor Tracy Young of Victoria with a mastectomy tattoo in Rae’s Errington home studio on P.Ink Day in October. [J.R. RARDON]

10 mastectomy patients. It has grown to 45 artists in 13 North American locations enlisted to ink mastectomy tattoos on 48 survivors this year. Rae, 34, has one of just two registered P.Ink Day sites in Canada. The other is in Calgary, where Rae’s mentor, Stacie-Rae Weir of Calgary, works. Weir is a breast cancer survivor who now serves an artist advisor for the organization.

“I didn’t know about it until I worked with (Weir),” Rae said. “I started working with her three years ago, right when this was on the upswing.” The organization has grown slowly, and that is by design, said Rae. Each artist must serve an apprenticeship before being certified as a P.Ink Day artist. “I’m suited to apply my method to

sensitive skin,” Rae said. “And I can certainly apply that sensitivity to this work.” The day was documented in Rae’s studio by a photographer, a videographer and a social media coordinator who uploaded images to Personal Ink’s website, Pinterest and Facebook pages. Terri Welsh of Courtenay, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in June 2013 and who underwent a mastectomy in November of that year, served as the social media co-ordinator. Just like the artists, mastectomy patients must apply in advance to receive a P.Ink Day tattoo, and Welsh hopes to be Rae’s subject in next year’s event. “It’s a process,” said Welsh. “I was seeking something creative for myself after my own mastectomy. It was too late for me to apply for this year, but I wanted to come and be involved.” I hadn’t made a decision on what to do, but today, after seeing Tracy, I made the decision,” Welsh added as she broke into tears. Young also said she was sold on the tattoo — her first — after meeting with Rae for a consultation last spring. The Victoria wife and mother was diagnosed five years ago and underwent a double mastectomy and

chemotherapy sessions before being declared cancer-free, she said. “I started thinking about (a tattoo) about two years ago, and a year ago I started seriously looking for a tattoo artist who would work with mastectomy victims,” said Young, who was unaware of the P.Ink Day program at the time. “When I came and saw Sam, I knew she was the exact right person.” During their first meeting in April, the women discussed Young’s design, the flower-and-bee motif that covers both of her reconstructed breasts. “I wanted something organic, something gentle and soft,” said Young. “The daisy, to me, is a super strong and resilient, yet gentle flower. I view the daisies as my family and friends. “The bee is an amazing creature who can do so much they aren’t supposed to do — they aren’t supposed to be able to fly, but they do — and they bring us life. The bee is the person I want to be.” P.Ink Day — which is held over the second weekend of October — matches a single artist with a single survivor at each location. But mastectomy patients may sign up for tattoos the rest of the year at p-ink.org, where donors may also contribute to help fund the program.

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TRUE TITAN

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ed in the esearch publishl The Lanall medical journa in three of cet says one men in China the young die from to e likely fall are for an offshor r can gutsthat the numbe of the a lot ofbut the battle t takes g. intosmokin tobacco, Three to getquit akermen ThebyBig a.cted researchautom if the North Americ forever condu in , s since ChipickupThe studies segment sity, the e soon. ated this es Oxford Univer grip anytim the have domin ersbefrom Medicagel Scienc losing their with y ofchallen e Diseas won’t Academ for and nesetook on the e Center in 2003. pickup Chines irds of g Titantwo-th But Nissan and them duty that umbin mediul, show to mind-n aChina start half-ton,Contro offer of tics domes men ining — variety and 20, final While thethe young ageand confus ntly before boxes ally be , mostlyains, — and freque eventuthings smoke will drivetr s,half of those d to keep they stop sizes, engine that Nissan decide g on o unless by tobacc le by focusinhauling drive ratios, killed tandab n, studies unders . and tractio nently simple perma s: power, ng two matter hunresearch, involvi what reallyThe including N, Page 38 capability. and the SeeofTITAN and towing people, says 15 years apart nds me of all the young dreds of thousa o deaths, mostly tobacc by one in three number of reached 1 million Lancet’ says if l journal ‘The among men, hit 2 million by 2030 r ed in the medica g. [AP PHOTO] that the numbe 2010 and will continue. quit smokin Research publish cet shows g in China has Saturday. r can fall if the men current trendshers say the trends Beijing on t for people men smokin tage of all m building in s, but that the numbe e good suppor But researc ed if the smokers e of an office not provid quit. I have tried elec-is and the percencan be attrib illnesse stemm be to to smoke outsid tobacco-related that could y who want of Men in China that die from Beijing’s efforts past tes, but I think rising, while huge wave quit. are likely to government, o use have in the tronic cigaret ” Wei said. avoid this smoking is of Chinese w a g cigatobacc as l worse, “The key to on, and if you are s s growin tions g contro perhap genera recent decade available. are showin it omised. likely to smo said co-audeaths is cessati the rise in been compr people in China find Some people ess of the health e easily become less born in th don’t start,” have becom people start to many a culawaren young man, Peto, from the Univer those in of rettes to Also, habit e signs w pared d kick the hers also thor Richar . As more Chinesages, researchers become so to smoke, difficult to risks. Yet, researc trend am er ago, I used smoking has ard sity of Oxford have dropped sigof male deaths puff at young ture where “Three years it is bad for health this downw be revers proportion to increase. a realize Smoking rates men in developed expect the g ingrained. lt, because there is but now I environment, so I quit,” women mightshown mo among in States, about attributed to smokin tobacco kills up nificantly “It is difficu at work, so I smoke and also the Ma Huiwei, 35, said studies have up smo world, In the United smoke re the ies. d than pressu countr more Aroun taking lot of office worker of adult men do, and tension,” Beijing users, and Beijing. Lan- women 20 per cent to half of its deaths annually result to to alleviate the Bin, 32, said in an downtown h published in The cent of women about one Wei ing and 15 per five million tobacco use, accord office worker g causes U.S. The researc y does the ization. cigarette smokin from direct interview. deaths, said time our countr Health Organo an importof every five Disease Control and the World “At the same e with tobacc Centers for However, revenue for the Chines of tage of smokPrevention. ant source the percen has been on In China, Chinese men ers among this die It appears h to fertilizer to getting throug i to produce Canad crops of energy and other r Since 1975 to soy beans such anothe row corn, half the amoun n preservatives There’s also can end t of po meats contai nitrosamines and to feed them. the amoun the F fertilizer and low daily. ogenic in as nitrites problem. Excessrivers leading to In the U.S. are carcin less red meat and Advis if people ate consumption of red of we know these up in lakes zones. Guidelines the high risk ns ls. people pollute In effect, a higher oxygen dead has urged 2 anima e can also red meat contai related to meat meat was ar disease, stroke, Type In addition, ted fat. Tons of manurFinally, antibiotics processed Wilays. satura vascul do? of Dr. W. for to cardio waterw good . levels es lean. cancer evia meat lover get protein our in animals are not ma nt Gifford-Jon diabetes and that the strongest is So what is try to used This must lead to resista Game says you shoulds such as poultry, Willett says meat causes cancer sors reac of us as they The Doctor lett any proces red main source dence that ancy. And that the s us that from other low fat dairy bacteria. So what will like also remind beans and nt It iest dairy colon malignprocessed red meats fish, nuts, But Willett a number of differe over before p And the health in so many d its effect on culprits are e, hot dogs and lunch products. risk comes ce, he empha and mashe o hy is it that for you because of For instan such as bad bacon, sausag food is yogurtthe intestine. packages. them listed things are We know other habits during in on the meats. microbes in sizes that exercise, trans admit that these days? ’s remarks eating meats risk of sugar, salt inadequate and vegetables po interMoreover, I found Willett smoking, more fish, that too much nation increases the of particular lack of fruit cancer and combi adolescence in premenopausal environment out that cattle emit fats and a of vegetables. s are a bad and se the risk b and calorie breast cancerfar Willett doesn’t know est. He pointsts of methane gas, can increa ar disease. He also It all gets ity. Nutrial to for longev vascul he points women. So ng th consume publication, ses large amoun the U.S. Environment But cardio s. who realizi health people to increa the atomic Now, the ne’s impact why this happen according stresses thatbread, rice, potatoes, only an occ , says red meatdiseases. ki ting fact. When Agency, metha tion Action an interes dropped on Nagasa Protection 20 times greater than have the same more white going to sh several major as roast drinks of is were e were eat cola risk cattle n, the breasts bombs on climat sweets and attack as those who news for me ’s! In additio ima young r Horrendous d potatoes are my to greenhouse and Hirosh to develop cancer from carbon dioxide risk of heart that obesity is anothe See websit times more five over likely And e hens. beef and mashe So how risky is it more and meat. produc red ns, pigs on while womenly no risk e factor. favourite meal. the radiati gas than chicke that cattle requir ts huge risk age had virtual eat meat? 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MILITARY

Project Resolve CEO Spencer Fraser, left, at Davie Shipbuilding, in Levis, Que., on Oct. 13. Defence sources say that the Liberal government is uncomfortable with the sole-source nature of the arrangement. [THE CANADIAN PRESS]

Navy supply ship plan put on hold Liberals uncomfortable with sole-source deal MURRAY BREWSTER THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The Liberal government has hit the pause button on a plan to acquire a temporary supply ship for the navy — a decision that has shocked the shipbuilding industry and prompted stiff opposition from Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard. Defence sources told The Canadian Press that Justin Trudeau’s government is uncomfortable with the sole-source nature of the arrangement and the way the Conservatives handled the arrangement with Project Resolve, a subsidiary of Levis, Que.-based Chantier Davie shipyard. The company’s plan is to upgrade a civilian tanker to act as military replenishment ship while the navy’s long-delayed, joint support ships are built. In order to get the deal going last spring, the Harper government quietly made an unprecedented change to the cabinet regulations governing solesource purchases. Documents obtained by The Canadian

Press last summer revealed a line was added to contracting regulations in June. It gives the cabinet authority to award a deal to a single company if there are urgent “operational reasons” and it fulfills an interim requirement. The letter of intent signed with Project Resolve and the planned contract were put before the federal Treasury Board but defence sources say the plan puts the Liberals in a political jam. For years the Liberals have demanded open competitions in military procurement, but the first program they’re asked to approve is a sole-source arrangement that required a special cabinet fix. Industry officials said the contract was expected to be worth $400 million, but defence sources insisted it could be higher. Couillard said putting the breaks on the project is unacceptable. Work is ready to start in the shipyard, 250 people have been hired, and another 400 are on standby, the premier told reporters in Ottawa.

Hotel will cater to canine clientele THE CANADIAN PRESS

WHITEHORSE — From its large lobby to rooms with doors leading to a private yard for each guest, the newest hotel in Whitehorse offers everything you’d expect in comfortable accommodation. But this one is literally for the dogs. Peter Harms, a teacher at Hidden Valley Elementary School, is set to open the 12-room hotel next month. It will include a large common yard with space for pooches to run around and socialize at the yet-to-be named facility. Harms hosted his first guests last weekend.

Twenty students from the school’s Huskies basketball team had a sleepover there after convincing him to let them be the first ones to stay at the hotel. In one case, six students crowded into the space, marvelling at the heated floors beneath their sleeping bags. Harms heard of dog hotels from his sister a couple of years ago after she had to book weeks in advance to have her pet stay at a Calgary facility while she was away. “There’s no more dog-intense place than Whitehorse,” he said, adding the hotel will eventually offer 26 rooms and a space for grooming or training.

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2015

NEWS IN BRIEF The Associated Press ◆ WARSAW , POLAND

Backlash against new ruling party Poland’s new conservative ruling party faced strong criticism Friday for rushing through legislation that allows it to stack the nation’s top court with its supporters. The legislation, passed late Thursday, comes at the end of a politically eventful week in which the ruling Law and Justice party and President Andrzej Duda took decisive steps to strengthen their own power and weaken political rivals. “As of today, Poland is no longer a law-abiding democracy,” said Andrzej Zoll, a former head of the constitutional Tribunal who protested the actions regarding the court.

◆ NEW YORK

Israel spy out of jail after 30 years Jonathan Pollard was released from prison Friday after 30 years for spying for Israel, and his lawyers immediately went to court to challenge tough parole conditions seemingly designed to ensure he doesn’t spill any U.S. military secrets he might have left. The 61-year-old former Navy intelligence analyst was set free in the middle of the night from a medium-security federal prison in Butner, North Carolina, after being paroled from a life sentence that had turned him into a continual source of tension between the U.S. and Israel.

◆ CAPE CANAVERAL

Photos document a day on Pluto NASA’s newest Pluto pictures depict an entire day on the dwarf planet. The space agency released a series of 10 close-ups of the frosty, faraway world Friday, representing one full rotation, or Pluto day. A Pluto day is equivalent to 6.4 Earth days. The New Horizons spacecraft snapped the pictures as it zoomed past Pluto in an unprecedented flyby in July. A similar series of shots were taken of Pluto’s jumbo moon, Charon. But the Pluto pictures stand out much more because of the orb’s distinct heart-shaped region. New Horizons is now headed to a new target.


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