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CHASING LIGHTS
‘Unite the right’ group votes for new party BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF
Contributed photo by Team Tanner
ABOVE AND BELOW: These stunning photos of the northern lights were captured by Darlene and Theresa Tanner of Alix, often found online with the hashtag #teamtanner.
ALIX COUPLE CAPTURE BRILLIANT PHOTOS OF AURORAS BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF On clear nights, Darlene and Theresa Tanner skimp on sleep to capture spectacular light shows over Central Alberta. Brilliant curtains of green and yellow light shimmer in their photographs of the night sky. Occasionally there are streaks of dramatic purple, or brilliant pinks and oranges. With northern lights, “it’s never the same show. Every night it’s something different,” said Theresa, who lives in Alix with her spouse Darlene. After checking meteorological conditions on satellite weather maps on apps and websites, the Tanners will slip coats over their pajamas and put on rubber boots. The couple will drive out in the dark to optimal viewing loca- THERESA AND tions, equipped with cameras, DARLENE TANNER tripods and bear spray — just in case. Their photos of the aurora borealis over Ponoka, Bashaw, Alix, and other rural locations rival the most spectacular shots of northern lights taken anywhere in the world. Pictures by #teamtanner are regularly featured on TV’s The Weather Network. Their photos have also been purchased as art, and have been shared and liked on Facebook sites across this country and beyond. Darlene recalled once speaking to a Kansas storm chaser who asked her “Hey, do you take those picture of the northern lights? Wow! I see your stuff on Twitter all the time!” Northern Lights are caused when gaseous particles in the Earth’s atmosphere collide with charged particles from the sun. Different gas particles cause the colour variations. The more common yellowish-green colour is produced by oxygen molecules 60 miles above the earth. Rare all-red auroras are produced by oxygen at heights of 200 miles. Nitrogen produces the blue or purplish-red auroras. That’s the scientific explanation. But there’s something emotionally stirring, even spiritual, about watching the aurora borealis, said Darlene, 46. “It feel magical. It’s like nothing else in the world matters when you’re standing out there, watching Northern Lights dance, it’s so peaceful.”
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The couple, who have day jobs, have been regularly photographing northern lights, as well as thunderstorms and other weather phenomena for the past four years. They constantly get amazed reactions from Central Albertans who see their pictures and can’t believe such dramatic lights show appear in this area. “More people need to look up at the sky,” responded 35-year-old Theresa — especially in the dark countryside. Light pollution tends to erase the full affect of the aurora borealis, Milky Way and meteor showers. The Tanners usually drive within a 150-km radius from their house. “If it’s cloudy, we go where the clear skies are,” said Darlene. They operate two digital single-lens reflex cameras on tripods and use time-lapse photography — keeping the shutter open from a few seconds to 20 sec. or so. During a full moon, the camera’s ISO (light sensitivity) must be lowered, “or your picture will turn out white,” said Darlene, who recommends experimenting to discover what works.
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6/49: 1,7,18,28,30,34, bonus: 48 Western 6/49: 5,8,12,16,44,47, bonus : 23
BUSINESS: A12 FOOD: B5
A “family reunion” of more than 400 right-wing Albertans — both Progressive Conservative Party and Wildrose Party supporters — was held Saturday in Red Deer. The majority of participants at the Alberta Can’t Wait meeting endorsed the idea of forming a new, unified right-of-centre party by 2019. Joined by concerns about continued vote-splitting in the next election, “people who have not been seated in the same room together for years… have come together with a common purpose,” said Grande Prairie-Mackenzie MP Chris Warkentin. He added, “this is absolutely fantastic… This kind of enthusiasm hasn’t been seen in provincial politics for decades…” While Warkentin attended the Alberta Can’t Wait conference, along with his federal Conservative Party colleague Red Deer-Mountain View MP Earl Dreeshen, event organizer Prem Singh was disappointed that no provincial Tory or Wildrose leaders or MLAs had come to the meeting. No reasons were given, but the MLAs were reportedly told not to go, she said. Singh believes it’s just a matter of time before they come around. “At some point, they’re going to have to listen to us, because what happens when the grassroots movement is bigger than their party? “We know what we want,” added the Calgary energy consultant and Alberta Can’t Wait co-founder — “and that’s to bring back the Alberta Advantage.” Preston Manning also did not attend the conference as expected, because he was delayed in returning from Australia. But a series of speakers at the event, held at Red Deer College, restated the values held by most right-wing supporters, including fiscal responsibility and government accountability, and discussed “the principles of a taxpayer-friendly government.” Four options for the future were also laid out: uniting the right under the PCs, under the Wildrose, retaining the status quo of two right-wing parties, or forming a new entity. At the end of focus-group discussions, an overwhelming majority of attendees voted in a straw poll in favour of pursuing the formation of a new party, unaffiliated with the PCs or Wild Rose parties. Alberta Can’t Wait was also given a mandate to drum up more public support for this new right-ofcentre party from the public, as well as members of the Wildrose and Tory Parties. Calgary businessman Scott Wagner was impressed by the tone of proceedings, saying. “It’s the first gathering I’ve been to where there was no sniping.” “We don’t want to be negative,” said Singh, who called the meeting a “family reunion… It’s time for us to talk to people — relatives — we never used to talk to, because Alberta is more important than any political party.” Ryan Becker, a Tory from La Crete, was glad to see so many “engaged” people, who had never been politically active before. “Everybody has the same objective: We have to do something,” agreed Len Kushner, of Calgary. Rancher Bill Baleman, who last voted for Wild Rose, was encouraged to see people focusing on common interests. They realize “time is working against us,” he said, with only three years to go before the next election.
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Monday, May 2, 2016
STEPPING UP
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Firefighter faces 18 arson charges BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
Struggling to stay upright on a wiggling stability ball Keesha Fairbrother, left, and Jenna Wolokoff attempt to write out lines from a Dr. Seuss story during one of the challenges in the Step-Up project in Red Deer on Saturday. The two Notre Dame High School students joined about 120 of their classmates this weekend for the final day of a fundraising and awareness project that will see the group raising money for Parkland School in Red Deer. With a goal of raising $35,000 during the project the students participated in an Amazing Race/Scavenger hunt around Red Deer and at the school.
MAYERTHORPE, Alta. — A firefighter who battled the flames that destroyed a railway trestle bridge northwest of Edmonton last week has now been charged with setting the fire, as well as others in and around his community. RCMP say Lawson Michael Schalm, 19, of Mayerthorpe faces 18 counts of arson following an investigation into a recent rash of fires, including the one on the CN bridge on April 26. The chief of the town’s fire department, Randy Schroeder, says Schalm is the son of a former mayor of Mayerthorpe and joined the department as a junior member when he was 15. He became a full member when he turned 18. Schalm is being held in custody and is scheduled to make his first court appearance on the arson allegations in Stony Plain Provincial Court on Wednesday. Schroeder confirmed that Schalm was among the firefighters who fought last week’s fire on the bridge. “The entire department is shocked and in disbelief right now regarding the situation,” Schroeder said on Sunday. “It’s almost grief-like symptoms at this point.” Thick, black smoke billowed from the burning railway bridge for hours until it collapsed. Students at the nearby Mayerthorpe high school and residents of 38 mobile homes at the Kreek’s Krossing trailer park were forced to leave. Water bombers, along with fire crews from Mayerthorpe and surrounding areas, battled the blaze. Police say no one was hurt in any of the suspicious fires, which began April 19. Schroeder and Mayerthorpe mayor Kate Patrick said in a news release that members of the fire department will undergo “Critical Incident Stress Debriefing” and that individual counselling will be available to all members over word of the charges. Schroeder said the community’s firefighters are volunteers who are paid on-call. The release said firefighters “volunteer tirelessly” and that all who were available stepped up during the rash of fires. “Our community can continue to expect the highest possible service from its fire department and town officials,” the release states. “The fire department will continue to respond to emergencies and will respond to calls.”
Long-form census forms return to mailboxes this week after absence
Local
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — Call it the start of the government’s biggest big data push. Monday marks the start of mailings from Statistics Canada of census surveys, including the return of the mandatory, long-form questionnaire that was replaced with a voluntary survey five years ago. Statistics Canada says more than 15 million households will receive census letters over eight days, along with reminders to either fill the form out by hand or online, which half of Canadians did five years ago. Every home will receive a short-form questionnaire. One in every four homes will receive the longform census. So far this year, about 1,700 Canadians have subscribed to an online reminder from Statistics Canada to fill out their form, which the agency says requires no registration or lengthy download processes. And census officials have visited more than 60 per cent of First Nations communities since the start of April to help residents fill out the questionnaire. The census gives a statistical snapshot of the population once every five years, collecting demograph-
ic information on every man, woman and child living in the country, as well as Canadians living abroad on a military base, or part of an embassy. For provincial coffers, the population estimates in the census determine how much per capita funding they will receive in transfers from the federal government. For local governments and community groups, the demographic details in neighbourhoods help with decisions on where to place new schools, transit routes, seniors’ housing and emergency services. For companies, the census data act as a much-needed complement to what’s become known as big data. “Some people wonder, well, why do you even need a census when we have big data?” said Jan Kestle, president of Environics Analytics. “When you combine the kind of data we now can collect with census data, you can really get a more integrated view of what consumers want both in terms of products and services and that’s also true in terms of what citizens want from government.” It’s a massive undertaking that is estimated to cost $715 million for the seven-year period that it takes to prepare, collect, analyze and distribute results. The final cost isn’t known until two years after census day.
THE WEATHER
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BRIEFS Sundre man killed in motorcycle crash A 47-year-old Sundre man was killed when his motorcycle was hit by a car that crossed the centre lane on Friday night on Hwy 27. According to a police report, an east-bound car crossed into the westbound lane, colliding with the motorcycle about 15 km east of Sundre at about 11:40 p.m. The motorcyclist was transported by STARS air ambulance to a Calgary hospital, where he later died of his injuries. His name was not released by Sundre RCMP. The 30-year-old car driver from B.C. was arrested, and is expected to be charged with impaired driving causing death. His name will be released once formal charges are laid. An interim hearing will also have to determine whether he will be held in custody or released, pending his court appearance. The investigation is continuing with help from an RCMP collision analyst and members of the Criminal Collision Investigation Team.
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NEWS
Monday, May 2, 2016
Teen killer Ellard seeks day parole
Ottawa continues to negotiate with Bombardier: Trudeau
18 YEARS AFTER REENA VIRK MURDER BY THE CANADIAN PRESS VANCOUVER — Almost two decades since an ostracized 14-year-old was swarmed, viciously beaten and then callously drowned near a Victoria bridge, Reena Virk’s most notorious killer is asking for release. Kelly Ellard was 15 years old in November 1997 when she smashed Virk’s head against a tree and then held the Grade 9 student’s head underwater until she stopped moving. Ellard is scheduled to attend her first day-parole hearing on Tuesday, seven years after the Supreme Court of Canada rejected an appeal of her second-degree murder conviction. She has waived her right to a full parole hearing four times while serving her life sentence, but has remained eligible for day parole and applied for release several months ago. Ahead of the hearing, Virk’s grandfather said the family no longer believes Ellard can redeem herself. “If she had admitted (her role) and if she had told the truth, then it would have been much better for our conscious, our pain, our satisfaction,” said Mukand Pallan, 86, from his home in Victoria. “The way she behaved, we’re very, very mad about it. It doesn’t seem right, she’s not a good girl, she doesn’t deserve any help.” Members of the Virk family showed compassion for many years towards Ellard, three others girls convicted of assault and Warren Glowatski, who was also found guilty of second-degree murder in the teen’s death. They no longer believe Ellard, now 33, will change but will trust the federal parole board to make the correct decision, Pallan said. “It is very painful, but there’s nothing too much we can do about it anymore.” Virk’s parents, Manjit and Suman, have taken a vacation in order to avoid media attention, Pallan added. The attack focused a national spotlight on bullying and teen violence, particularly among girls. The murder happened late in the evening after Virk joined a group of teens gathered outside a local school to drink and smoke pot. She was assaulted until bloody by several teens and then crossed a bridge, pleading to be left alone. Successive trials heard that Ellard and Glowatski followed. During Ellard’s third trial, a pathologist testified Virk’s brain was swollen and she suffered at least 18 forceful blows to her body. She died from drowning and her body was found adrift in a local inlet. Ellard was put on trial for murder as an adult. A jury found her guilty during the first trial in 2000, but the verdict was overturned and a new trial ordered when the B.C. Court of Appeal determined the Crown had conducted cross-examination improperly. She testified during her second trial in 2004, sobbing and insisting she “nev-
Canada BRIEFS Naval community marks Battle of the Atlantic anniversary Members of Canada’s naval community are gathering across the country today to commemorate the 71st anniversary of the end of the Battle of the Atlantic. It was the longest continuous battle in the Second World War, spanning from 1939 to 1945. It is remembered each year on the first Sunday of May. About 2,210 Canadians died in the battle to keep the sea lanes to Great
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BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
FILE Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Kelly Ellard and her father, Lawrence, leave the Vancouver courthouse for dinner, March 30, 2000. Almost two decades since an ostracized 14-year-old was swarmed, viciously beaten and then callously drowned near a Victoria bridge, Reena Virk’s most notorious killer is asking for release. er crossed the bridge.” The jury was unable to reach a verdict. Ellard didn’t testify during her third trial in 2005. She was convicted and then won an appeal, but Canada’s highest court rejected the case and restored the conviction. She has run into other trouble since Virk’s death. Ellard’s bail was revoked in 2004 while she was living in a halfway house awaiting trial. She was charged with assault causing bodily harm of an older woman in a New Westminster park. The charges were stayed after she was found guilty in the Virk trial. Court documents in 2005 said Ellard was a belligerent and often abusive inmate, who had violent outbursts that included throwing food and kicking chairs. She was portrayed as having a fragile mental state as a result of her prison time during her sentencing hearing. At the time, her mother Susan Pakos said in a letter to the judge that Britain open in the face of attacks on merchant vessels by German submarines. There will be ceremonies at naval divisions in all of the provinces, and there will be a national ceremony on Parliament Hill.
Police identity woman whose remains were found behind butcher shop TORONTO — Police say they’ve identified the victim whose severed remains were found behind a Toronto butcher shop in mid-April. Police also say they’ve charged a man with indignity to a dead body in connection with the case. The remains, which police said were believed to be part of a human torso, were found in a garbage bag behind the store when an employee was taking out the trash on Tuesday morning.
MONTREAL — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau praised Bombardier’s CSeries as an “exceptional airplane” on Saturday but would not hint whether his government plans to invest federal money in the Montreal-based aerospace giant. Trudeau said his government recognizes the importance of Canada’s aerospace industry and the jobs it creates. “That’s why we’re engaged in negotiations and discussions with Bombardier, and have been for quite a while, around the right business case for Canada to invest,” Trudeau told reporters in Montreal, where he was attending the biennial convention of the federal Liberal party’s Quebec wing. The Quebec government has promised US$1 billion of public money for Bombardier (TSX:BBD.B) and the company is seeking a similar sum from Ottawa. Premier Philippe Couillard said this week that the pressure is mounting on Ottawa to do its part to after the announcement that Delta had placed an order with the company for 75 CS100 aircraft with options for an additional 50 planes. Speaking on Thursday, Couillard called it “paradoxical” that the federal government hasn’t hesitated to help Ontario with billions in public funds in the past to help with the troubled automobile sector while seemingly dragging its feet with respect to Quebec’s key aerospace sector. Trudeau praised the Delta deal on Saturday, calling it “great news” for Bombardier and the Canadian aerospace industry. He also brushed off any inference that his government not pushing hard enough on files that matter to Quebec, saying there are “extremely strong voices” for the province in his cabinet. He said he has not followed the tradition of naming a Quebec lieutenant because he represents a Montreal riding.
her daughter “has suffered more publicly and privately than anyone can ever imagine.” Her lawyer Peter Wilson described her as “a Walmart LiveBetter Magazine person everyone loves to CORRECTION NOTICE hate.” Should Ellard’s request May 2016 Issue – Page 41 for parole be granted, she The price shown for the Hometrends would be placed under a Kelowna 7-Pce Dining Set is incorrect. release plan that includes The correct price is $1,048 and not $104. a requirement she live in a halfway house, a parole We apologize for any inconvenience. official said.
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COMMENT
THE ADVOCATE Monday, May 2, 2016
Unite the right wishful thinking BY BARRY COOPER SPECIAL TO THE ADVOCATE
A
fter the Alberta NDP won last year, several grassroots efforts arose to “unite the right.” Considering the reckless spending the Notley government has undertaken, it might be more accurate to speak about uniting the centre. There was another such meeting this past weekend in Red Deer. The problems surrounding any effort at bringing together the two non-socialist parties are almost entirely organizational and not about policy and ideas. This is because all political parties are held together (in order of importance) by friendships nourished by shared experience, by loyalties based on memories of prior struggles, and by shared policy preferences and ideas of justice. Ideas, the least important, come in two flavours. The first deals with what allies favour, the second on what they reject. The latter are much less cohe-
sive and often much less intelligible than the former. Focusing on ideas has led commentators to conclude that is it somehow inevitable that the anti-socialist parties will come together. This is wishful thinking. Mostly the individuals and groups who make such commonsensical statements about uniting all right-thinking people against the big-government spendthrifts in the NDP are themselves outside the two nonsocialist parties. Despite occasional calls for joint conversations over “principles,” very little has happened. There was a brief period of informal cooperation when Wildrose relinquished its position in Question Period after the death of Manmeet Bhullar so the PCs could ask the NDP about matters their late colleague thought important. A few weeks later both ran candidates to replace Bhullar in Calgary Greenway. The 29 per cent turnout indicated that the PCs were not yet comatose. If 168 more voters had been attracted to Wildrose, they would have
won. It was also a reflection of how much Bhullar was liked, respected, and missed by his constituents. The winning PC candidate, Prab Gill, a great fan of Justin Trudeau, was also a bit of an opportunist. Both parties concluded they had rosy futures, so there was no serious need to hook up. The history of the two parties over the past few years is about obstacles to cooperation. The PCs point to their core support of around 25 per cent of Albertans, which is equal to the NDP and eight to 10 points behind Wildrose. The diminished PC rump have long memories of their own glory days. Many are genuine urban progressives with a deep antipathy to the warmedover Socred country bumpkins in Wildrose. For their part, Wildrose core supporters have not overcome their disgust for the PC machine and their distrust of their own leadership which, as Danielle Smith showed, can act in their own interests without even considering their core supporters. Finally, there is the problem of tim-
ing. Without a permanent PC leader, even if the Wildrosers wanted to create a New Conservative Party (NCP) rather than absorb the PCs, it is not likely to happen in the next year or so. When the PCs get a permanent leader in 2017, there will be no time to amalgamate before the election, especially if the NDP calls an early one. Worse, the struggle of the PC leadership contest precludes anyone promising to join with Wildrose. Rather, the new leader will promise to restore the party to strength, greatness, and government, not amalgamate with the treacherous upstarts. Ironically, Manmeet Bhullar might have been statesman enough to create an NCP with the existing Wildrose. Until the PCs find a leader unconnected to the old PC machine, there can be no serious talk even about common principles. And what happens outside the parties is almost without significance. Troy Media Contributor Barry Cooper is professor of political science at the University of Calgary.
infrastructure project paid for entirely with private funds. Thousands of manufacturing, construction and operating jobs would be created right across Canada at a time when they are needed. Granting veto power over these pipelines to special interest groups, which only represent a tiny percentage of the total population, on an issue this important to the economic well being of the entire country, is institutionalizing the tyranny of the minority. It is extremely manipulative and self-serving and perverts the concept of social license. Michael O’Hanlon Red Deer
side of that unbelievable mess. The build-up increases year after year. When travelling throughout Canada’s Maritime Provinces and Newfoundland, or for that matter in foreign countries like China or Vietnam, it is often difficult to spot a piece of roadside litter. Yes, there are litter problems here in B.C. as well, but nothing compared to the embarrassment to all Canadians represented by this stretch of highway at Red Deer. I am sure that many local residents are distressed when driving that route, particularly when in the company of friends or family members who may be visiting them. So, who is to blame? The answer is simple: Red Deer residents, Red Deer city council, Red Deer companies and Tourism Red Deer. No one in the community has stepped forward to provide leadership in tackling this problem. It is particularly depressing given that the solution is so straightforward. I have been involved in AdoptA-Highway programs for more than 20 years. Alberta Transportation will supply all necessary materials including safety manuals, safety vests and garbage bags. Filled bags are placed along the outer edge of the highway shoulders to be picked up later. Alberta Transportation also installs “Caring for Alberta’s Highways” identification signs adjacent to the highway section adopted. These signs
will include a tab showing the group, company or individual’s name. Come on Red Deer. You can do better. Much, much better! Gord Mallett Kelowna
Advocate letters policy
T
he Advocate welcomes letters on public issues from readers. Letters must be signed with the writer’s first and last name, plus address and phone number. Pen names may not be used. Letters will be published with the writer’s name. Addresses and phone numbers won’t be published. Letters should be brief and deal with a single topic; try to keep them under 300 words. The Advocate will not interfere with the free expression of opinion on public issues submitted by readers, but reserves the right to refuse publication and to edit all letters for public interest, length, clarity, legality, personal abuse or good taste. The Advocate will not publish statements that indicate unlawful discrimination or intent to discriminate against a person or class of persons, or are likely to expose people to hatred or contempt because of race, colour, religious beliefs, physical disability, mental disability, age, ancestry, place of origin, source of income, marital status, family status or sexual orientation. Due to the volume of letters we receive, some submissions may not be published. Mail submissions or drop them off to Letters to the Editor, Red Deer Advocate, 2950 Bremner Ave., T4R 1M9; or e-mail to editorial@ reddeeradvocate.com.
Re: Trudeau government and social license Prime Minister Trudeau says there is a need for social license in order to approve any new pipeline projects in Canada. Social license exists when projects or decisions have broad approval of, or broad acceptance from, the community and stakeholders. None of the generally accepted definitions of the term states that one or more of the stakeholders are able to wield veto power over the broader community. In the case of the Energy East, Kinder Morgan and Northern Gateway pipeline proposals, Trudeau has coopted aboriginals, environmentalist zealots and Quebec and B.C. municipal and provincial politicians and will blame them for his inevitable decision to deny approval to build any of these pipelines. He will be able to say: “I have to turn the proposals down. The opposition by these groups proves there is no social license to proceed.” According to polls, the vast majority of Canadians believe constructing these pipelines would be very good for the Canadian economy and would be the safest and most environmentally friendly method to get Alberta and Saskatchewan crude to Atlantic and Pacific tide water and to Eastern Canadian refineries. In addition, constructing the pipeline would be a $15.7 billion national, shovel ready
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We drive along Highway 1 from British Columbia to Alberta twice a year to visit family and friends. My heart soars when the big sky country finally opens up in front of us. The beauty of the open prairies — where I spent my youth and all my working years — is imprinted in my memory. But wait! A couple of hours later, driving north along the Queen Elizabeth Highway, the panorama suddenly changes. What was once big sky country becomes Big Litter Country. The worst litter of course is along Gasoline Alley but the problem extends several kilometres on each News News tips 403-314-4333 Sports line 403-343-2244 News fax 403-341-6560 Sports editor 403-314-4363
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Red Deer: Big Litter Country
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Alberta Press Council member The Red Deer Advocate is a sponsoring member of the Alberta Press Council, an independent body that promotes and protects the established freedoms of the press and advocates freedom of information. The Alberta Press Council upholds the public’s right to full, fair and accurate news reporting by considering complaints, within 60 days of publication, regarding the publication of news and the accuracy of facts used to support opinion. The council is comprised of public members and representatives of member newspapers.
Re: Queens hockey new home — the Centrium As a former Director of Athletics at Red Deer College and long time Central Alberta sport enthusiast I was so pleased to read that RDC Queens Hockey new home and practice facility will be the Centrium. With the demolition and replacement of the Red Deer Arena there is currently a major crunch for ice facilities in our community. I would like to congratulate the Red Deer College leadership team, Diane St. Dennis (Athletic Director) and senior administration (Linda Moore-Martin and Joel Ward) along with Westerner Park General Manager, Ben Anitaiff for forging a relationship that provides opportunity in the short term for Queens hockey and in the larger picture profiles the importance of equal opportunities for girls and women in sport to excel in Central Alberta. Red Deer continues to be a provincial and national leader in sport by our ability to partner and collaborate. Well done! Allan Ferchuk Red Deer
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NEWS
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Monday, May 2, 2016
TOUCHING DOWN
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
A Canadian Goose touches down on the water at Bower Ponds Saturday. The popular Red Deer park draws people of all ages to get out and enjoy Red Deer parks and providing a place where residents and visitors can get close to urban wildlife.
Senate and P.E.I. gear up for Duffy’s return BY THE CANADIAN PRESS CHARLOTTETOWN — Canadians could be forgiven for assuming P.E.I. residents are all feeling a sense of relief as Sen. Mike Duffy — the Island’s most high-profile political export — prepares to return to the Senate this week after a three-year hiatus punctuated by intrigue, scandal and, finally, vindication in a court of law. But that’s not the way things work on the Island, where there are lingering doubts about Duffy’s connection to Canada’s smallest province and his expense claims. On the sun-drenched streets of Charlottetown, where the icy wind off the Northumberland Strait keeps the city in a deep freeze, residents say they understand why the former TV personality was cleared last month on all 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery. But that doesn’t mean they’re ready to accept what happened and move on. “There really didn’t seem to be any laws broken, and you can’t be found guilty of something if there’s no rules,” said Charlottetown resident Scott MacBurnie, commenting on the Senate’s vague spending rules and residency requirements that were at the heart of Duffy’s trial. “But it’s embarrassing to think that he’s a senator from P.E.I. and that he’s still a senator. I’m embarrassed for the Island … You’d think he would be decent enough to say I’m not really a senator from P.E.I. because I don’t live there, and he would step down rather than going back.” Duffy has been living for years in an Ottawa suburb, but maintains a summer home in P.E.I. that he claimed as his primary residence when he was appointed to the upper chamber by former Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper in 2008. Whether or not that home should qualify him for a Senate seat was an issue from the very day he was named,
“MIKE DUFFY WASN’T QUALIFIED TO BE IN THE SENATE IN THE FIRST PLACE, SO WHY IS HE GOING BACK?” — ALAN HOY, CHARLOTTETOWN RESIDENT throughout his trial, and still, apparently, in P.E.I. itself. “Mike Duffy wasn’t qualified to be in the Senate in the first place, so why is he going back?” asked Charlottetown resident Alan Hoy, a man with a close-cropped grey beard, wearing sunglasses and a Montreal Canadiens tuque. “He wasn’t a resident.” Alex Forrest, a young, stocky man from Summerside, P.E.I., said the intense scrutiny that Duffy faced in court should be extended to all of his colleagues in the upper chamber. “It’s not just him who got away with it, he’s just the only one who got caught,” he said. The Senate continues to grapple with the fallout from the Duffy affair. While its expenses system has been overhauled since the scandal broke, two other senators still face a trial and a third is awaiting to hear if charges will be laid. Seven former senators are currently at risk of being taken to court to get them to pay back some $528,000 in expenses the auditor general found were improperly claimed. “The lesson is: don’t hate the player, hate the game,” said Rob Lantz, who stepped down as leader of the province’s Progressive Conservative party until just after the P.E.I. Liberals won the most recent general election. “The larger question is about the Senate in general and how they govern themselves … Mr. Duffy is entitled to walk back into the senate as a vindicated man, as far as I’m concerned.” Now that Duffy’s been cleared, Senate rules allow him to walk right in when the upper chamber resumes Tuesday and take his seat. He’ll sit
as an independent, as he’s not being welcomed back into the Conservative caucus. To what extent the entire Senate caucus will embrace him is unknown. Duffy was suspended by the Senate, losing his pay and privileges, in 2013, long before the criminal charges were laid. While his pay resumed once the last session of Parliament was resolved, there has been a question of whether he’s entitled to back pay.
“Any decision relating to that suspension, including retroactive sessional allowance, would also rest with and require a motion in the Chamber,” said Senate Law Clerk Michel Patrice in a statement. Conservative Sen. Leo Housakos, chair of the internal economy committee, told CTV Question Period that while a motion can be put forward to overturn the decision about his pay, he didn’t think there would be “much of an appetite” for senators to revisit the issue. Charlottetown resident Lori Fry-Gordon was quick to defend Duffy. “We support our own here,” she said. “I’m glad to see him back in the Senate … He is from Prince Edward Island. If he chooses to live somewhere closer to his job, then so be it.”
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NEWS
Monday, May 2, 2016
A7
Jail uniforms take away dignity: inmate ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — If it’s true that clothes make the man, convicted robber Kevin Roberts says wearing orange coveralls at Her Majesty’s Penitentiary in St. John’s, N.L., isn’t making him a better one. “We’re here to rehabilitate people, right?” he said as he sat in a small interview room in Newfoundland and Labrador’s largest jail. “The clothing is not helping. Absolutely not.” Inmates at the penitentiary started wearing standard-issue jumpsuits, shorts, T-shirts, underwear and sneakers this year in place of their own clothing in part to curb contraband and related bullying. The province has joined several others including Ontario, B.C., Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia where inmates are clothed by corrections. “It absolutely makes the institution a safer place for inmates and staff,” said Owen Brophy, superintendent of prisons for Newfoundland and Labrador. “We’ve had trouble before with contraband drugs being smuggled inside the clothing, cutting apart seams, placing drugs into it and then sewing them up again, taking the soles out of sneakers and shoes and re-gluing them.” Everything from needles to handcuff keys have come into the penitentiary with the help of inventive sewing, Brophy said. “We had a huge problem with inmates bullying and assaulting other inmates, basically taking their high-end clothing such as sneakers, shirts and work-out clothes.” Inmates can still buy running shoes through the jail’s canteen but other items are now provided using about $100,000 earmarked in last year’s provincial budget, he added. It’s a pilot project at Her Majesty’s Penitentiary that he’d like to see expanded to other correctional sites around the province. Ottawa also issues clothing for inmates of federal jails — those serving sentences of two years or more — but takes a different approach. “I kind of cringe to say ‘uniform,”’ said Ghislain Sauve, director general of technical services and facilities for Correctional Service Canada. He oversees 43 institutions from B.C. to Nova Scotia, housing about 14,000 men and 650 women. Male inmates across the country get a standard set of items. They include jeans, light green T-shirts, golf shirts and underwear that they’re responsible for washing. Prison-issue clothes help staff distinguish inmates from volunteers, maintenance workers and other visi-
tors, Sauve said in an interview. Federal inmates also make much of the clothing, as part of prison employment programs. “We have standardization so we can tell who’s who, but we haven’t gone to the point of giving them a jumpsuit and all that. We still want people to wear clothes that are recognizable for them as clothes, as opposed to something that they would only wear in an institution.” A key goal is to limit the extent to which inmates dissociate from the communities most of them will at some point re-enter, Sauve said. “We want to ensure, to the degree that we can, that we help the offender rehabilitate and make his or her way back into society.” Sauve said there is no standard clothing for the relatively small number of female federal offenders. Dress codes in women’s prisons are set by local wardens, he explained. A growing body of research suggests that clothes do, in fact, affect how people think and feel. A study last year co-authored by Abraham Rutchick, a psychology professor at California State University, Northridge, found that formal clothes such as a business suit make the wearer feel powerful while broadening responses to cognitive tests. “If you’re wearing a lab coat that you think is a doctor’s uniform, you act more like a doctor,” he said in an interview. “You’re more detail-oriented and attention-oriented than if you think that’s a painter’s coat.” That said, Rutchick stressed it’s understandable that security trumps such considerations when it comes to prison wear. Drew Wilby, executive director of corporate affairs for the Saskatchewan Ministry of Justice, said inmates weren’t happy when the province introduced grey tops and green pants in 2008 to replace outside clothes. As in Newfoundland, the move was to help limit contraband and gang intimidation, he said in an interview. “In the initial stages, there was some concern raised by the inmates in terms of personal freedom and personal liberties,” he recalled. “The safety and security of the facility of course takes precedent.” Roberts, a repeat offender whose drug habit and “addiction to money” landed him in jail for armed robbery and flight from police, agreed there has been less “muscling” for coveted items. But he said the change has increased tensions in other ways, cutting physical activity such as basketball games because the handout running shoes have little support or don’t fit well.
A sampling of policies from jurisdictions across Canada Newfoundland and Labrador has joined jurisdictions across Canada where prisoners are clothed by corrections. A sampling of some inmate clothing policies: Ontario: All inmates in provincial custody are required to wear clothing provided by the institution unless attending court. Issued items include shirt, pants, socks, underwear and sometimes coveralls. Colours for men are usually orange. Women wear purple or dark green. British Columbia: Male inmates wear red T-shirts, sweatshirts and pants which they sew as part of a tailoring work program to reduce costs and provide skills. Those on kitchen duty wear “kitchen whites.” Female inmates in medium and open custody wear grey sweatpants, T-shirts and sweatshirts. Women in secure custody wear green sweatpants, T-shirts and sweatshirts. Nova Scotia: The province has issued inmate clothing for more than 40 years. It used to provide green work shirts and pants but inmates now
wear orange “scrubs” or orange sweatpants and long- or short-sleeved shirts. Female offenders wear similar items in navy blue. “Inmate clothing is warm, comfortable and easily fits most body types,” says an emailed statement. Saskatchewan: Between 2008 and 2010, Saskatchewan began issuing grey T-shirts, sweatshirts and green pants, replacing personal clothing linked to contraband and intimidation problems. Newfoundland and Labrador: The province this year replaced personal clothing at its largest jail, Her Majesty’s Penitentiary in St. John’s, with orange jumpsuits. Underwear, T-shirts, shorts and sneakers are also provided. It’s part of a pilot project that could expand to other correctional sites in the province. Correctional Service Canada: Male inmates get a standard set of clothes including jeans, light green T-shirts, golf shirts and underwear that they’re responsible for washing. Federal inmates make much of the clothing as part of prison employment programs. There is no standard clothing for female offenders. Dress codes in women’s prisons are set by local wardens.
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NEWS
Monday, May 2, 2016
Car bomb in southern Turkey kills 2 police officers
Iraqis end demonstration in Baghdad’s Green Zone BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BAGHDAD — Anti-government protesters temporarily ended their mass demonstration in Baghdad’s Green Zone on Sunday and began an orderly withdrawal a day after tearing down walls around the government district and invading parliament. Loudspeakers manned by followers of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who has led the protest movement, announced the disbanding of the protests, which had marked the culmination of months of sit-ins and demonstrations demanding the overhaul of a political system widely seen as corrupt and ineffectual. “We decided to end it now because of the anniversary of Imam (Moussa) al-Kadhim,� said Sadiq al-Hashemi, a representative of al-Sadr’s office in Baghdad who was present at the protests. Al-Hashemi said al-Sadr made the decision in order to allow Iraqi security forces to protect the thousands of pilgrims who are expected to walk from across Iraq to the shrine of the 8th-century Imam in Baghdad. Earlier on Sunday, car bombs in the southern Iraqi city of Samawah killed 31 people and wounded dozens, the latest in a series of large attacks claimed by the Islamic State group as the country grapples with the worsening political crisis. A police officer said two parked cars filled with explosives were detonated within minutes of each other around midday, the first near government offices and the second at an open-air bus station less than a kilometre (mile) away. At least 52 people were wounded in both explosions, and the police official said the death toll was expected to rise. A medical official confirmed the casualty figures. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release information. IS claimed the bombings in an online statement, saying they were carried out by suicide attackers targeting police. It was not immediately possible to reconcile the competing claims. The Shiite-dominated city is located some 370 kilometres (230 miles) south of the capital, Baghdad. The extremists have repeatedly targeted Iraq’s Shiite majority — which they view as apostates — as well as the Shiite-dominated security forces. Earlier on Sunday, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi ordered authorities to arrest and prosecute those among the protesters who had attacked security forces, lawmakers and damaged state property after breaking into the Green Zone. Videos on social media had showed a group of young men surrounding and slapping two Iraqi lawmakers as they attempted to flee the crowd, while other protesters mobbed lawmakers’ motorcades. Jubilant protesters were also seen jumping and dancing on the parliament’s meeting hall tables and chairs and waving Iraqi flags. No one was seriously
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Supporters of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr chant slogans calling for governmental reforms as they wave national flags before ending their sit-in inside Baghdad’s highly fortified Green Zone, Sunday. Antigovernment protesters temporarily ended their mass demonstration in Baghdad’s Green Zone on Sunday and began an orderly withdrawal a day after tearing down walls around the government district and invading parliament. wounded. The protesters left parliament late Saturday and had been rallying in a nearby square. “We are fed up, we are living a humiliated life,� Rasool Hassan, a 37-year old father of three told The Associated Press from inside the Green Zone before the protest was disbanded. Al-Hashemi, the al-Sadr representative, said the protests would resume after the Imam al-Kadhim pilgrimage ends this week. Al-Hashemi said the al-Sadr movement would also give Iraqi lawmakers one more chance to vote in new reforms. “We have achieved something here,� al-Hashemi said. “We got our message out from the Iraqi street.� Also on Sunday, the United Nations said at least 741 Iraqis were killed in April due to ongoing violence, a sharp decline from the previous month. In its monthly report, the U.N. mission to Iraq put the number of civilians killed at 410, while the rest were members of the security forces. A total of 1,374 Iraqis were wounded that month, it added. In March, at least 1,119 people were killed and 1,561 wounded.
Kenya officials: Death toll of collapsed building up to 20 BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenyan rescuers continued searching for survivors Sunday of a residential building in a low income area that collapsed Friday, as officials said the death toll has risen to 20 and 73 people remain missing. Japheth Koome, the police chief for Nairobi, the capital, confirmed the death toll. Authorities had initially said the building had six stories but it emerged that the ground and first floor had sunk following heavy rains. The building, next to a river, had been declared unfit for human habitation by Kenya’s National Construction Authority but was not torn down. Bribe-taking officers in the county government are responsible for allowing contractors bypass building codes, Nairobi governor Evan Kidero said. He vowed to fire those responsible. The building’s owner obeyed police orders and turned himself in for questioning, Koome, Nairobi’s police chief said.
“People who’ve died in Huruma have died an unnecessary death. That death is a product of corruption ‌ someone is paid $10,000 or$20,000 to approve the building that cost the lives of Kenyans,â€? nominated legislator Johnson Sakaja said. Kenyan military personnel led the rescue operation using heavy machinery to remove concrete slabs. About 300 residents of two adjacent buildings, also built close the river, were evacuated. Taking advantage of a high demand for housing in Nairobi, some property developers bypass building regulations to cut costs and maximize profits. President Uhuru Kenyatta last year ordered an audit of all the country’s buildings to see if they are up to code after eight buildings collapsed, killing at least 15 people. The report from the audit by the National Construction Authority found that 58 per cent of buildings in the capital are unfit for habitation. The majority of Nairobi’s estimated 4 million people live in low income areas or slums.
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ANKARA, Turkey — A car bomb struck the entrance of a Turkish police station Sunday in the southern city of Gaziantep, killing two police officers and wounding 22 other people in a day marred by violence and May Day protests. Four civilians were among those wounded in the explosion, according to Gov. Ali Yerlikaya of Gaziantep province. The blast shattered the windows of nearby buildings. The police station is close to offices for the governor and mayor. Gaziantep is also home to the offices of international aid organizations focused on the conflict in neighbouring Syria. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack. A Turkish interior ministry official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with government practice, said investigations were ongoing. Speaking in Ankara, the Turkish capital, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu expressed his condolences and wished a speedy recovery to those wounded in Gaziantep’s “heinous terrorist attack.� Turkey has suffered multiple bombings in recent months linked either to Kurdish militants or the Islamic State group. In the eastern provinces of Mardin, three Turkish soldiers were killed and 14 wounded in an attack by Kurdish militants, the military reported. Another was killed in clashes with PKK militants in the border province of Sirnak. Later on Sunday, a car bombing targeted a gendarme station in the southeastern town of Dicle, Diyarbakir Province, according to the interior ministry official. He told The Associated Press “a few soldiers were injured� when the “bomb-laden vehicle exploded.� A local official gave a higher toll, saying one soldier was killed and 26 others, including civilians, were wounded in the attack. The authorities were blaming the Dicle bombing on the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, a group designated by Ankara and its allies as a terrorist organization. Meanwhile, another Kurdish militant group, known as the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons, claimed responsibility for a suicide attack in Bursa, Turkey’s fourth largest city, which wounded 13 people on Wednesday. Turkey, which is facing both growing blowback from the conflict in Syria and renewed conflict with Kurdish militants, has seen a rise of deadly attacks across the country. In the past year, more than 200 people across the country have been killed in six major bombings. Sunday’s violence eclipsed International Labor Day celebrations. In Gaziantep, demonstrations were cancelled for security reasons. Police in Ankara carried out anti-terror operations the night before and detained four suspected IS members allegedly planning to attack May Day demonstrators. In Istanbul, police imposed tight security measures and used water cannons and tear gas on demonstrators who sought to rally in non-designated areas. The office of the governor of Istanbul said 24,500 security officers reported for duty on Sunday and that 207 people were detained. One man died after being run over by a water cannon vehicle. Elsewhere, eight people were wounded after four rockets hit Kilis, another town near the Syrian border, the state-owned Anadolu Agency reported. Three Syrians were among the injured. The news agency said the Turkish military retaliated by firing at IS targets across the border in Syria, killing nine militants. It wasn’t possible to verify the agency’s claim. Kilis, where Syrian refugees outnumber locals, has been hammered by cross-border fire since mid-January. There have been a total of 18 fatalities in that period. The wider province of Kilis borders areas in Syria that are contested by Kurdish factions, IS militants and rebels fighting to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
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NEWS
Monday, May 2, 2016
Trade unions hold rallies to mark May Day clashes BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Trade unions and other groups are staging rallies around the world to mark International Workers Day. A look at some May Day events:
FRANCE
Fearing France’s worker protections are under threat, hundreds of angry youths on the sidelines of a May Day labour rally hurled stones and wood at police in Paris, receiving repeated bursts of tear gas in response. Trade unions, teenagers, pensioners and families held nearly 300 largely peaceful marches Sunday in Paris and cities around the country. The traditional May Day rallies took on greater weight this year as parliament is debating a bill that would allow longer working hours and let companies lay workers off more easily. The bill has prompted the most violent labour-related protests in a decade, with marches and sit-ins frequently degenerating into clashes with police. Riot police encircled a few hundred suspected troublemakers on the sidelines of the Paris march Sunday, and frustrated youth threw projectiles. Later, protesters set fires at a subway entrance and around the Republique plaza that has become a rallying point. Nationwide two people were injured and 18 arrested, according to the Interior Ministry. Marchers held banners calling President Francois Hollande a “traitor.” The Socialist government hopes the relatively modest labour reform will reduce chronically high unemployment and make France more globally competitive, by allowing companies more flexibility. Opponents say it erodes hard-fought worker protections and call it a gift to corporate interests.
TURKEY
Thousands of Turkish demonstrators rallied for May Day in an authorized area of Istanbul while police cracked down on other protests. Police used tear gas and water cannons on demonstrators trying to reach Taksim Square. One man died after being hit by a water cannon vehicle. Taksim has symbolic meaning as the centre of protests in which 34 people were killed on May Day in 1977.
The office of the governor of Istanbul said 24,500 security officers reported for duty Sunday, and that 207 people were detained. Tensions are running high in Turkey after a string of deadly suicide bombings linked to either Kurdish or Islamic State group militants. In the capital, Ankara, police rounded up four suspected IS members who were allegedly planning to attack May Day demonstrators. May Day marches were held elsewhere in Turkey without incident but were cancelled in the southern city of Gaziantep after a deadly car bombing on a police station. In the coastal city of Izmir, some demonstrators stripped down in protest over police body searches at a square where people were allowed to gather, according to local media.
RUSSIA
Tens of thousands of people marched across Moscow’s Red Square on a sunny Sunday morning in a pro-Kremlin workers’ rally. The protesters were carrying the Russian tricolour and balloons. As is typical for rallies organized by the ruling United Russia party, the May Day rally steered clear of criticizing President Vladimir Putin or his government for falling living standards. The slogans focused on wages and jobs for young professionals. Left-wing Russian groups held their own rallies. This year the May Day coincided with the Orthodox Easter in Russia. Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov told Russian news agencies ahead of the rally that he celebrates Easter despite the Communist party’s history of oppressing the Russian Church. When a supporter greeted him with “Christ has risen!” Zyuganov echoed “He is risen indeed!” in a traditional Orthodox greeting.
PHILIPPINES
In Manila, about 2,000 left-wing protesters scuffled with riot policemen, who used shields and a water cannon to try to prevent the flag-waving demonstrators from getting near the U.S. Embassy. Labor leaders said 20 protesters were injured. Some of the protesters managed to break through the police cordon. TV video showed some of them punching a retreating police officer and using wooden poles to hit a fire truck. Police
made no arrests and the protesters dispersed after about two hours. May Day rallies were held across the Philippines, with campaigning entering the final week ahead of the May 9 presidential election. Some of the candidates pledged to address labour complaints. “We’ll see the real colour and what will become to the sweet promises when one of them sits as president,” left-wing labour leader Elmer Labog said.
BRITAIN
Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn joined thousands of people at a May Day rally in central London, using the occasion to condemn the progress of far-right groups throughout Europe. Standing atop a red London bus, Corbyn said the party is united against the far-right and against racism. “We stand in solidarity now against the growth of the far right in Europe,” said Corbyn, whose faltering opposition party has been accused of anti-Semitism in recent days. Corbyn, who represents Labour’s left wing, was the first Labour leader to address a May Day crowd in decades.
TAIWAN
In Taipei, Taiwan’s capital, labour unions took to the streets with a march to call on the government to reduce working hours and increase wages. Many among the Taiwanese public have been concerned that outgoing President Ma Ying-jeou’s push for closer economic ties with China has benefited just a few. Young Taiwanese have seen wages stagnate and good full-time jobs harder to find as the export-led economy has slowed. Chen Li-jen, a protester with the Taiwan Petroleum Workers Union, said that while companies were seeing their earnings per share grow every year, workers’ salaries were not rising in tandem. “Hardworking labourers are being exploited by consortiums,” Chen said. “For the past decade, our basic salary has not made any progress,” he said. “Labourers’ rights have always been neglected. This is why I hope to take advantage of the May 1 Labor Day protest and tell the government that we are determined to fight for our rights.”
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Anti-capitalist May Day protest turns violent in Montreal BY THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal’s annual May Day march turned chaotic on Sunday as Montreal police clashed with anti-capitalist demonstrators in the city’s downtown. The afternoon march began peacefully but degenerated after about an hour, when police say protesters threw projectiles and broke windows at a downtown police station, prompting police to fire off tear gas canisters. Red and orange-coloured smoke filled the air as protesters dispersed into small groups and ran in different directions, some being chased by police. Police reported about 10 arrests and one minor injury as of 5 p.m, although small protests were ongoing in the early evening. Several hundred demonstrators, many wearing masks and eye protection, marched through the streets waving signs and chanting anti-capitalist slogans. At least two groups converged and made their way to Sainte-Catherine street, bringing traffic to a standstill on one of the city’s busiest thoroughfares. Police presence was heavy and included officers on horseback and on bicycles as well as dozens who walked alongside the demonstrators. In a statement, the Montreal Anti-Capitalist Convergence said the goal of the event was to “disrupt commercial activity dominated by the local bourgeoisie.” One protester, Marguerite Garepy, said she was marching to denounce the capitalist system, which she describes as being more focused on profit than on people’s well-being. She said she was there to call for free education, a better public health system, responsible resource exploitation and a higher minimum wage. “Someone working at $10-something an hour, they can’t get by,” she said. “It’s not liveable for poor people.” Earlier in the day, a union-organized protest was held without a hitch. Its purpose was to denounce government austerity measures and call for higher wages and measures to reduce social inequality. Many of the organizers also called for Quebec’s minimum wage to be raised to $15 an hour. Protests are held annually to mark May Day, also known as International Workers’ Day.
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Alberta Can’t Wait volunteer organizer Prem Singh speaks with Cam Davies, centre, who was the campaign manager for Wildrose leader Brian Jean and Travis Olson a former candidate for the Wildrose party in Athabasca/Sturgeon/ Red Water. The three were attending an Alberta Can’t Wait meeting at Red Deer College Saturday. This storm photo was captured by #teamtanner
STORIES FROM PAGE A1
LIGHTS: Pictures are edited to heighten contrast While their pictures are edited to heighten contrast, Theresa said she doesn’t fiddle with the colours — the northern lights actually look that intense in real life. So far, the photographers haven’t crossed paths with a bear on their night forays, but the Tanners have occasionally seen coyotes. One time they heard something rustling in the bushes, turned on their head lamps, and spotted a porcupine. Their most hair-raising experiences — literally — have been with electrical storms. This summer, The Weather Network is equipping the couple with a Go-pro camera to make some storm-chasing videos. Theresa’s mother already worries about them getting killed by a tornadoes or lightning strike. And the photographers admit they have gotten awfully close to violent storms — such as a giant thundercell near Bashaw, emitting hail and multiple lighting bolts. (The resulting picture went viral online, getting nearly 10,000 ‘likes.’) But the Tanners feel they take
necessary precautions — constantly checking storm-tracking sites and staying in front of gales, so the wind can’t turn back on them. They also intend to start using remote devices this summer, so they can take pictures without leaving their vehicles. “A few times, I felt my hair stand up this last year — and that’s not good,” said Darlene. The Lac La Biche native works as a grocery store meat cutter. Theresa, of Camrose, does shift work on the help desk for the provincial government. When their workdays are over, and they head out with their cameras, Theresa usually navigates and Darlene drives. Big groups of storm chasers showing up prompts the Tanners to turn in the opposite direction. Theresa explained vehicle line ups make it harder to retreat if a twister changes direction and sweeps towards them. “That’s how you get killed,” said Darlene. But the other reason for avoiding crowds is “we don’t want the same pictures as them, anyway…” Darlene added, with a chuckle. More information about #teamtanner can be found on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram (@treetanner and @dartanner). lmichelin@reddeeradvocate.com
RIGHT: Hard road Sharon Olsen, of Camrose, believes joining two political parties will be “a
hard road to go down.” But she praised the co-operative spirit that emerged. “I think this opened a good conversation,” added Judy Johnson, of Calgary. lmichelin@reddeeradvocate.com
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MONDAY, MAY 2, 2016
THE MUSIC MAN STORY AND PHOTOS BY JEFF STOKOE/ADVOCATE STAFF Koinonia Christian School students presented their production of the award-winning 1957 musical The Music Man by Meredith Willson and Franklin Lacey. The Broadway show won five Tony Awards and a Grammy Award for best cast album. Hollywood also produced a 1962 feature film staring Robert Preston and Shirley Jones. For their part the Koinonia Christian School production was a family friendly affair that got a major financial boost of $25,000 to make the musical possible. Acting and production director Perer Vanderwal has joined forces with choreographer Heather Hankins and music director Annette Bradley to stage the production at the Memorial Centre in Red Deer. Thursday to Saturday of last week.
Each scene of the production is full of song and choreographed moves.
ABOVE LEFT: Professor Harold Hill played by Josiah Albers plays his charm on Tommy played by J.P. Pangan during a rehearsal. ABOVE RIGHT: Professor Harold Hill plays his convincing sham on the people of a small town in Iowa in the Koinonia Christian School production of The Music Man by Meredith Willson and Franklin Lacey.
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BUSINESS
THE ADVOCATE Monday, May 2, 2016
Cost of domestic flights remains at a six-year low STATSCAN REPORT BY THE CANADIAN PRESS The average domestic airfare on major Canadian airlines remained at a six-year low in the third quarter of 2015, according to the latest figures from Statistics Canada, although that might come as a surprise to travellers. In its report this week, the agency said a one-way domestic flight cost on average $175.70 before fees and taxes, down from 187.60 a year earlier. International fares edged up by just 60 cents, from $340.60 to $341.20. Statistics Canada says the $12 drop in domestic prices allowed Canada’s overall rates to remain at their lowest levels in six years. The figures are based on WestJet, Air Transat and Air Canada and its subsidiaries. However, the total cost of a ticket still remains high, as airport improvement fees, fuel surcharges, security fees and other charges are constantly on the rise. Marc-Andre O’Rourke, executive director of the Ottawa-based National Airlines Council of Canada, says those extra fees may keep consumers from seeing the low base-fare reflected in the total cost. “All those fees, airlines have no control over government and agencies adding their own fees to the airfare,” he says. O’Rourke, whose group represents Canada’s major airlines, says carriers are doing what they can to keep ticket prices down but have little control over what consumers actually end up paying for a flight. “The frustrating part is that our member airlines are doing their part to keep their prices competitive, but then we have these third-party taxes and fees that piggyback on the airfare that affect the total that the passenger pays,” O’Rourke says, adding that ticket prices are not directly correlated to
FILE Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
A WestJet Airlines Boeing 767 (767-300ER) jetliner lands in Calgary, in January. The average domestic airfare on major Canadian airlines remained at a six-year low in the third quarter of 2015. fuel prices. But Paul Ferley, assistant chief economist at the Royal Bank of Canada, says the weakened energy sector
does put downward pressure on air fares. “Generally, air fares respond fairly quickly to movements in oil prices,” he says.
While low oil prices hurt those drawing wages from the energy sector, low air fares are a “clear benefit” to most Canadian households, he says.
Canadians making premature RRSP withdrawals MONEYWISE Canadians in and approaching retirement are dipping into their RRSPs prematurely to replace missing income and help them meet short-term financial needs, two recent BMO studies show. Fifty nine per cent of Canadians say they miss or expect to miss employment income from their working life in retirement and 67 per cent believe the most significant challenge in retirement is ensuring they do not run out of money to live comfortably. According to the studies, Canadians on average have withdrawn almost $16,000 from their RRSPs. One third of them have paid the money back but 25 per cent expect they never will pay it back. The top reason for making premature RRSP withdrawals include to buy a home, pay off debt, help pay living expenses and to cover the costs after an emergency, such as a car accident or a house flood. Withdrawing funds early from your RRSP can have some tax and financial penalties. If you withdraw up to $5,000 you pay a 21 per cent withholding tax in Quebec and 10 per cent in all other provinces. Withdrawals between $5,001 and $15,000 are taxed at 26 per cent in Quebec and 20 per cent in other provinces and early withdrawals over $15,000 are taxed at 31 per cent in Quebec and 30 per cent in all other provinces. The money withdrawn is considered income and will be added to your total income and you are taxed on that as well.
Once you’ve withdrawn the money it is removed from the contribution room available to you. Once the money is out you have to start over again to save it and you lose the compounding growth that you could have gotten if it had stayed in. Two exceptions are withdrawing funds and investing in the first-time home buyers and the lifelong learning plans, which allow you to withdraw certain amounts from your RRSP to buy your first home or go back to school and repay it within a certain time without paying tax. “Although it is not advisable to make withdrawals from an RRSP it’s clear some Canadians have had to do so in order to meet short-term needs,” says Chris Buttigieg, senior manager of wealth planning strategy with BMO Wealth Management. “There are tax consequences so it’s a good idea to speak with a financial professional to see if you have any other options before doing so.” More than 80 per cent of Canadians who have made early RRSP withdrawals said they did it as a last resort and three quarters said they were concerned about the potential consequences such as loss of retirement income, withholding tax, not being able to save effectively for retirement and loss of contribution room in the future. One way to avoid raiding your RRSP is to build up a contingency fund in a short-term savings vehicle such as the Tax Free Savings Account or a savings account. “It’s best to only make premature RRSP withdrawals for the purpose of buying a new home or paying for continuing education as these withdrawals may qualify for the Home Buyers Plan or the Life Long Learning Plan respectively,” Buttigieg says. These plans allow you to remove money from your RRSP tax free and
repay it later. There are other things Canadians can to do help them prepare financially for retirement such as pre-retirement investment strategies, critical illness insurance, registered retirement income funds and life income annuities, and universal life policies. A financial adviser can help you determine the right strategies and investments for both the pre-retirement and retirement phases of your life. “The most common concerns Cana-
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SPORTS
THE ADVOCATE Monday, May 2, 2016
Blues shoot down Stars in OT BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Blues 4 Stars 3 (OT) DALLAS — David Backes gave the St. Louis Blues a big gift on his 32nd birthday, with another overtime goal to go home even. What a serenade of “Happy Birthday” for the Blues captain from his teammates after Backes scored off a rebound during a power play 10:58 into overtime of Game 2 on Sunday for a 4-3 victory over the Dallas Stars. “I want to know what they did with the money their parents gave them for voice lessons,” Backes said with a smile. After blowing a two-goal lead while getting outshot 13-2 in the third period, the Blues took advantage of their second power-play chance in overtime. Backes followed up Alexander Steen’s shot 17 seconds after Antoine Roussel was called for interference. “The thing that impressed me more than anything was the way we played in the overtime Outstanding,” coach Ken Hitchcock said. “We went into attack mode and stayed on it the whole time. I was really impressed with the way we did OT.” Instead of a 0-2 hole, the Blues go home 1-1 in the best-of-seven series matching the Western Conference’s top two teams. Game 3 is Tuesday night, with Game 4 also in St. Louis on Thursday before the series returns to Dallas for Game 5 on Saturday. When Roussel was asked if the penalty was the right call, he responded, “I don’t know. They have a tough job. It’s not easy to be a ref out there.” Roussel slammed his stick when exiting the penalty box after Backes scored to end the game. “That second (penalty) was tough. He was trying to stay onside,” Stars coach Lindy Ruff said. “It doesn’t matter whether I like the call or don’t like the call. … We looked like we were going to get an odd-numbered rush and
they got a couple hooks on (Stars rookie Radek Faksa) him just before going through the middle of the ice, which I was frustrated with.” Antti Niemi had stopped 19 consecutive shots since relieving Kari Lehtonen after the first period until Backes scored. Blues goalie Brian Elliott had 31 saves, including big shots by Jason Spezza and Stars captain Jamie Benn about a minute apart in overtime. St. Louis had a quick extra-man chance in overtime when John Klingberg was whistled for holding as Vladimir Tarasenko, who scored 40 goals in the regular season and four in the first-round series, was charging toward the net. But Niemi, who took over as the Stars’ goalie in the second period, stopped three shots in that 2-minute span. Spezza and Benn, who scored the OT-forcing goal with 2:36 left in regulation, then had their shots before the game-deciding penalty. Tarasenko took a slap shot that was blocked by Alex Goligoski. With the defender still stunned from the puck hitting his knee, the Blues kept charging and Backes scored on the rebound of Alexander Steen’s shot. “The win was huge but just to play the way we can. The first two periods were night and day from the other night,” said Troy Brouwer, who had a power-play goal and an assist in the first period. “Obviously anytime you win in overtime, that’s good, and to bring the series back even, that’s good.” Backes is only the second player in Blues history with two overtime goals in the same post-season, having scored the OT winner in the opener of the Blues’ first-round series against Chicago. Benn knocked a loose puck past Elliott to tie the game at 3-all late in the third period, when Cody Eakin got his third assist of the game. Stars rookie centre Mattias Janmark had a breakaway goal 4 ½ min-
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
St. Louis Blues defenseman Joel Edmundson (6) and Dallas Stars left wing Patrick Sharp (10) vie for control of the puck during the first period of Game 2 of the NHL Stanley Cup Western Conference semifinals, Sunday, in Dallas. utes into the third period, and Dallas was almost immediately on the power play after the ensuing faceoff. But the Stars were 0 for 4 with the extra man, and are now 1 for 20 on power plays at
home this post-season. “Take the officials out of the equation,” Ruff said. “We had our power plays and didn’t do a good enough job.”
Raptors exorcise demons with Game 7 win BY THE CANADIAN PRESS Raptors 89 Pacers 84 TORONTO — DeMar DeRozan and Kyle Lowry spent late Saturday night in an otherwise empty Air Canada Centre arena, with only the red and white T-shirts laid carefully over each seat as their audience. “You just think about that moment, when there’s nobody in the gym with you, with no pressure,” DeRozan said. Sunday, the two who’ve been so instrumental in the Raptors’ rise to success, shrugged off a world of pressure — and finally erased all the heartbreak of playoffs past. DeRozan poured in 30 points including two huge free throws in the dying minutes as the Raptors beat the Pacers 89-84 in Sunday’s thrilling Game 7, winning their best-of-seven opening-round series against Indiana. The series win was just the second in Toronto’s 21-year franchise history. They’ll face the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference semifinals, with Game 1 on Tuesday in Toronto. At the post-game podium, DeRozan smiled and whispered to his daughter Diar, balanced on his lap in a sequined No. 10 jersey and furry black skirt. “Got the monkey off our back, more than anything, with these past couple of years. It just feels good to get that off,” he said. “The energy, the moments, a lot of people don’t get those opportunities to be able to play in a Game 7 when everything is the line, and all the things that me and this guy (Kyle) and the team has been through,” he added. “It’s tough to get that moment duplicated, and we just want to live every single minute of it.” Rookie Norman Powell had 13 points for Toronto, while Patrick Pat-
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Toronto Raptors centre Jonas Valanciunas (dunks the ball past Indiana Pacers forward Myles Turner during round one NBA playoff action in Toronto on Sunday. The Raptors won the game 89-84 to advance to the next round. terson and Lowry had 11 apiece. Jonas Valanciunas had 10 points and a gamehigh 15 rebounds. Paul George, who was spectacular all series, led Indiana with 26 points. Backed by a raucous home crowd, the Raptors led almost the entire game, and took a 78-64 advantage into the fourth quarter. Toronto went up by 16 points when Powell drilled a three-pointer and then swiped the ball away from Indi-
ana on the next possession for a Cory Joseph bucket. But in a roller-coaster series where no lead has been safe, the Pacers pulled to within three points with 2:36 to play when Monta Ellis drilled a three. A pair of George free throws made it a three-point game with 53 seconds to play, but DeRozan grabbed a huge steal off George on the Pacers’ next possession and then calmly sunk two free throws with 6.5 seconds to play to
secure the victory. “I think everybody wrote the Raptors off and gave us up for dead,” said coach Dwane Casey. “But that locker-room is full of fighters and scrappers and guys that are really getting into it now. Like I told them, it’s a marathon, but I’m happy for those young men in there.” The Raptors had advanced to the second round of the playoffs one other time, way back in 2001, when they knocked off the New York Knicks in a five-game series. After last year’s four-game debacle at the hands of Washington, they’ve played under heavy expectations. The subtext of this season was whether or not they could win a playoff series, and then roaring to a franchise-best 56 wins and earning the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference only intensified the pressure. Monkey successfully removed, the Raptors hope they’ll play more freely in the next round. “Honestly, before you come into a game like this you probably get hundreds of text messages of people telling you what happened in the past years,” said Bizmack Biyombo. “The big thing for us was if we finish second in the East, the right way to finish this series is to move on to the next round… This is just the beginning of something great.” DeRozan, meanwhile, struggled with his shooting all series, going 31.9 per cent over the seven games. He was 10-for-32 Sunday. Lowry shot 31.6 per cent for the series, but doled out nine assists, and was at his scrappy best Sunday, diving all over the floor. The Maple Leaf — laid out in a pattern of red and white T-shirts — provided the Air Canada Centre backdrop. And the crowd of 20,669 was electric, in full voice from the opening jump ball.
Riggers ready to redeem themselves after tough end to last season BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF A strange, but disappointing ending to the Sunburst Baseball League final followed by a quarter-final exit at nationals is still fresh in the minds of the Riggers. “It leaves a bitter taste in everybody’s mouth,” said Riggers coach and shortstop Jason Chatwood. “When you lose Game 5 of the playoffs at home. “We went to nationals after and we competed in every game, but I think with the group of guys we have we definitely can medal at the national tournament. We’re capable of being a top four team.” With the best-of-five league final series tied at two wins each, the Riggers were up 8-7 over the Sherwood Park Athletics with two outs in the top of the eighth inning. But a collision at home plate jarred the ball loose,
SUNBURST BASEBALL LEAGUE which would have been the third out. The call was contested, under Baseball Canada rules the base runner has to slide or make an attempt to miss the catcher, but stood as a run. The A’s scored eight runs that inning and won the game 15-8, winning the series. “By losing provincials and knowing we’re not going to nationals this year, it makes us want to get right back out there,” said Chatwood. “We want to get that opportunity to play for nationals next year. “We don’t like losing and losing last year put a sour taste in everybody’s mouth. Guys worked hard during the winter and everyone was excited to get back and see each other. Our goal is to win the league this year.” At nationals in Nova Scotia, the Rig-
Murray Crawford, Sports Reporter, 403-314-4338 E-mail mcrawford@reddeeradvocate.com
gers finished the round robin with two wins and two losses. They fell to the eventual silver medal winning Quebec team in the quarter-final. The Riggers have won provincial titles in 2009, 2010, 2013 and in 2014. The A’s will go to nationals this year, while the Riggers will look to avenge last year’s loss. Chatwood said the roster has kept its core group of guys, with only a few new faces. The hope is to have those new faces spur some competition within the team. “I think we’re a pretty versatile team,” said Chatwood. “I think we’ll have a really solid offensive lineup top through bottom with a mix of guys who can get on base and have speed and then we definitely have some guys who
>>>>
can hit for power and guys who can get some RBIs.” Leading the pitching rotation is the right-handed Dustin Northcott and the southpaw Josh Edwards. “They’ve proven they can be successful in the league,” said Chatwood, adding he thinks the rotation is pretty strong. “We look to (Northcott and Edwards) a lot and they’re leaders on the staff. Then we have guys who are good out of the bullpen or the spot starters, guys like Davin Gulbransen who have a lot of experience.” Last year’s coach Curtis Bailey is back with the team as a player. Chatwood admits he will look to Bailey and others at times for coaching help. The Riggers open the season with two home games, on May 10 and 17 at Great Chief Park starting at 7:30 p.m.. The first game is against the Parkland White Sox and then meet the A’s. mcrawford@reddeeradvocate.com
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SPORTS
Monday, May 2, 2016
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Rampage open with pair of victories Pavelski leads Sharks to win over Preds
BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF Rampage 12 Crude 9 Rampage 8 Warriors 6 Two wins are always a great way to start a season, but the Red Deer Rampage are always trying to be better. Their head coach, Trey Christensen, said after Saturday’s win over the St. Albert Crud, 12-9, the team still wants to be better. “We have a really good squad this year so we hold ourselves to a higher standard,” said Christensen. “Right now it’s about finding that consistency. There are points where we really dominate games and we just need to find consistency and play a full 60-minute game.” The Jr. B Tier 1 Rampage opened their Rocky Mountain lacrosse League with a road game and a home game. A back-and-forth game on Saturday had the Crude and Rampage trading goals in the early stages before the Crude jumped out to a 7-4 lead eight minutes into the second period. The Rampage responded with a run of seven straight goals in the second and third periods. The day before, Friday, the Rampage opened their season with an 8-6 win over the Edmonton Jr. B Warriors in Edmonton. “It’s good to get the two wins, but we do have a lot to work on,” said Christensen. “While we’re happy with the wins, we’re competitive guys and we’re trying to get to that next level.” Through the first two games, Christensen said he likes his team’s speed and the lack of ego or selfishness on the squad. The Rampage start the season with two wins and no losses and will next play two home games against the Edmonton Warriors on Saturday at 2:30 p.m. and against the Calgary Shamrocks on Sunday at 5 p.m. Both games are at the Kinex Arena.
11-5 win over the Medicine Hat Sun Devils. The Renegades next play at home on Sunday at 2:30 at the Kinex Arena against the Calgary Wranglers Wranglers 13 Locos 5 Axemen 6 Locos 6 The Lacoka Locos dropped both of their games over the weekend. Losing to the Calgary Wranglers 13-5 on Saturday and following it up with a 7-6 loss to the Calgary Axemen The Locos will play on Sunday against the Sylvan Lake Yetis at the G.H. Daw Centre. Senior Ladies Saints 8 Rage 4 Cougars 12 Rage 2 The Red Deer Rage, ladies senior team, dropped its Saturday game to the Capital Region Saints junior squad
8-4 on Saturday at the Kinex Arena. Then on Sunday, the Rage lost to the Calgary Cougars 12-2. The Rage opened the season with four straight home losses. The Rage have a rematch against the Cougars on May 13 at 8:30 p.m. at the Kinex Arena. Senior C Silverbacks 11 Warriors 9 The Blackfalds Silverbacks opened their season with an 11-9 win over the Edmonton Warriors in Blackfalds. Tyler McRobbie had three goals while Troy Klaus and Harry Thompson had two goals each. They next play on Saturday and Sunday for two straight games against the Vermilion Rage at the Blackfalds Multiplex. Saturday’s game is at 8:30 p.m. and Sunday’s is at 2 p.m.
Sharks 3 Predators 2 SAN JOSE, Calif. — The Nashville Predators frustrated Joe Pavelski and San Jose’s top line for much of the night, forcing turnovers, blocking shots and limiting chances. That all changed with one big shift late in the game that put the Sharks in control of their second-round series. Pavelski scored the tiebreaking goal with 2:40 left in regulation and Martin Jones stopped 37 shots to lead San Jose to a 3-2 victory over the Nashville Predators on Sunday night and a 2-0 series lead. “I don’t think it was our line’s best game, by any means,” Pavelski said. “Our last shift, you take a look, there’s three minutes left, it’s tied, you hope for a chance.” He got one and San Jose’s captain delivered just as he always seems to do in the biggest moments. Joe Thornton started the sequence by sending a cross-ice pass to Matt Nieto, whose initial shot was stopped by Pekka Rinne. But Pavelski knocked the rebound in for his sixth goal of the playoffs to give the Sharks a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. “Those guys, I’m sure they’d be the first to tell you, they didn’t spent a lot of time in the offensive zone tonight like we’re used to,” Sharks forward Logan Couture said. “But, when we needed a big goal, those guys stepped up and they did it for us.” Couture added a power-play goal and Thornton scored an empty-net goal that proved crucial when Ryan Johansen scored with 3.6 seconds left for the Predators.
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Junior B Tier 2 Axemen 8 Renegades 7 Renegades 11 Sun Devils 5 The Red Deer Renegades had a shot at early season redemption, but fell short of the Calgary Axemen 8-7. The Renegades closed out last weekend with an 8-6 loss to the Axemen, and had a chance to settle the score Friday night. However they came up short. Then on Sunday, the Renegades got their second win of the season an
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SPORTS
Monday, May 2, 2016
B3
Stroman strikes down Rays on birthday BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Toronto Blue Jays shortstop Troy Tulowitzki throws out Tampa Bay Rays’ Brandon Guyer at first base after fielding Guyers’s ground ball during the fourth inning of a baseball game in St. Petersburg, Fla., Sunday.
Blue Jays 4 Rays 3 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Marcus Stroman gave himself and the Toronto Blue Jays a birthday gift. Stroman allowed one run in eight innings on his 25th birthday, Troy Tulowitzki hit a three-run homer during a four-run ninth and the Blue Jays beat the Tampa Bay Rays 5-1 on Sunday. “It was awesome,” Stroman said. “More importantly just to get the win.” The Blue Jays took two of three to win just their fourth series in the last 27 trips to Tropicana Field. Stroman (4-0) scattered three hits, walked two and struck out a career-high nine. The Blue Jays’ opening day starter is 8-0 in 10 starts since returning from knee surgery last year. “A special kid,” Toronto manager John Gibbons said. “He’s got so many things that he can attack you with. He was on today.” Pinch hitter Darwin Barney doubled and Michael Saunders walked to open the ninth against Xavier Cedeno (2-1). Alex Colome entered and walked Josh Donaldson before striking out Jose Bautista. After Edwin Encarnacion hit a tiebreaking RBI grounder, Tulowitzki made it 5-1 on his fifth homer. “To come through on his birthday, it was nice,” Tulowitzki said. “He was great out there. It’s always fun to play behind him. Pitches with that intensity.” Tulowitzki had been hitless in his previous 10 atbats in the series and is hitting .172. “They made a good move to bring in Barney,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “He gets a big hit and you have that feeling, know that those guys coming up get paid to drive in runs. They capitalized and got the big hits.” Donaldson’s ninth homer with one out in the fourth was the Blue Jays’ first hit and put Toronto up 1-0. Evan Longoria tied it at 1 in the sixth on his fifth homer and second in as many days.
Jake Odorizzi gave up one run and two hits over seven innings for the Rays. Since the beginning of the 2014 season, the right-hander has allowed one earned run or fewer in 21 of 34 starts at home. The three Tampa Bay starters in the series — Drew Smyly, Chris Archer and Odorizzi — allowed a combined five hits in 19 innings. Four of the hits were homers. “As tough as it’s been, to get two out of three against those three pitchers down here you feel pretty good,” Gibbons said. Toronto had 15 hits, including eight homers in the series to become the first major league team to be held to 15 or fewer hits and hit eight or more homers in a three-game series. TRAINER’S ROOM Blue Jays: RHP Bo Schultz (left hip surgery) gave up three runs, three hits and walked two while getting two outs in his second rehab appearance Saturday night for Class A Dunedin. CAUGHT BY CONGER Rays C Hank Conger stopped a stretch where 48 consecutive runners had successfully stole a base against him when he threw out Ezequiel Carrera at second in the fifth. It was Conger’s first caught stealing since last May 29. GOING DEEP Longoria is 6 for 12 with two homers off Stroman. … Donaldson has three hits — all homers — in 14 atbats against Odorizzi. MINOR MATTERS OF Michael Bourn is hitting .250 (7 for 28) with four RBIs in seven games with Dunedin. Released by Atlanta at the end of spring training, Bourn signed a minor league contract with the Blue Jays last month. UP NEXT Blue Jays: Knuckleballer R.A. Dickey (1-3) will go against Texas RHP A.J. Griffin (3-0) on Monday night in the opener of a four-game home series. Rays: LHP Matt Moore (1-2) will face former Tampa Bay LHP Scott Kazmir (1-2) on Tuesday night when the Los Angeles Dodgers play at Tropicana Field for the first time since 2007.
Keselowski wins crazy crash-fest at Talladega BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TALLADEGA, Ala. — Two cars went airborne, 35 were involved in an accident of some kind, and Danica Patrick had the wind knocked out of her in a vicious crash into the wall. Just another demolition derby at Talladega Superspeedway. Brad Keselowski won the crash-fest Sunday that was dominated by multiple wrecks that caused millions of dollars in damage to race teams. It was Keselowski’s fourth career win at Talladega and second victory of the season, and ended Joe Gibbs Racing’s streak of four consecutive victories. “Crazy day. Somehow we managed to stay ahead of or out of all the chaos,” Keselowski said. “That’s how Talladega goes. Sometimes we run here and everybody kind of lines up against the wall, and sometimes we come here and it’s crazy side by side, wreck ‘em up, flip ‘em. “I think that’s kind of the allure to coming here because you don’t know what you’re going to get.” That’s not entirely true about Talladega, which more times than not turns into a mess of wrecked race cars. Keselowski said that’s just part of restrictor-plate racing at the 2.66-mile superspeedway. “Racing has always been that balance of daredevils and chess players, this has always been more of a daredevil-type track,” said Keselowski. Chris Buescher’s car flipped three times in an early crash, and Matt Kenseth was turned upside down in the waning laps. In Kenseth’s accident, Patrick hit hard into an energy-absorbing wall that that seemed to buckle upon impact. She appeared shaken after the hit and hustled out of her burning car. “I have a pretty decent bruise on my arm and my
foot, and my head feels like I hit a wall at 200,” she said. “My chest hurts when I breathe.” There were 21- and 12-car accidents in the final 28 laps. And, as Keselowski crossed the finish line, another wreck in the back of the pack punctuated the sloppy day. NASCAR’s box score showed 35 of the 40 cars were involved in some sort of accident. Only 21 of the 40 cars finished on the lead lap, and 12 cars were ruled out of the race. Second-place finisher Kyle Busch said he looked in his rearview mirror at one point and only saw four cars without some sort of damage “I hate it. I’d much rather be at home,” said Busch, the reigning Sprint Cup Series champion. “I’ve got a win. I don’t need to be here.” Austin Dillon finished third and said he enjoyed the race, even though it was nerve-racking. Dillon was in his own horrific crash at Daytona last July and said the style of racing at restrictor-plate tracks creates an atmosphere of danger. “We all have to do it. I don’t know how many really love it,” Dillon said. “I know our mom’s, wives and girlfriends don’t like it. We don’t like to be part of crashes. If people are cheering for crashes, man, it’s not a good thing.” The pace of Sunday’s race was up a tick because of potential rain that could have shortened the event from its scheduled 180 laps. Once the race hit the
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Several cars collide in a crash during the NASCAR Talladega auto race at Talladega Superspeedway, Sunday, in Talladega, Ala. halfway point and was official, drivers began their charge to the front because they couldn’t avoid waiting and rain suddenly ending the event. Patrick, who was inside the top 10 when she was hit by another car and turned into Kenseth, who went airborne, said the potential rain intensified the
VEGAS, STUARD SHARE LEAD IN RAIN-DELAYED ZURICH CLASSIC BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AVONDALE, La. — Jhonattan Vegas birdied two of five holes he was able to play in the rain-delayed third round of the Zurich Classic on Sunday, giving him a share of the lead with Brian Stuard. Tournament officials cut the event to 54 holes in an attempt to finish play Monday. Vegas made birdie putts from beyond 7 feet on the first two holes to reach 13 under, then parred three straight before steady rain, accompanied by intermittent thunder, forced organizers to clear the water-logged TPC Louisiana after little more than two hours of play. Stuard, who has not made a bogey in the tournament, had one birdie Sunday. Like Vegas, he’ll resume play on the sixth hole. Top-ranked Jason Day was in a five-way tie for fifth at 10 under through 44 holes. Rain, which also delayed play Thursday and Saturday, is again forecast Monday. The Zurich Classic is the first PGA Tour event to be shortened to 54 holes since the 2013 Hyundai Tournament of Champions at Kapalua. The last Monday finish was the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines in early February. Play was suspended a just after 10 a.m. time and tournament officials waited hopefully through a delay of more than six hours before finally calling off play for the day and shortening the tournament. “I’m just trying to stay awake right now. It’s been
NHL
Dupuis, Jagr, Zuccarello named Masterton finalists BY THE CANADIAN PRESS NEW YORK — Pittsburgh’s Pascal Dupuis, Florida’s Jaromir Jagr and New York Rangers forward Mats Zuccarello have been named the three finalists for the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy. The NHL announced the finalists for the award, which goes to the player who “best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to hockey,” on Sunday.
racing. “We all raced to the halfway, then we all raced to the rain that was coming, then we all raced to the end,” she said. “It was like the whole race, you spent it racing like it was the end. There was no moments to relax at all. I’m sure that kind of expanded people’s comfort zones at the end of the race because we were already so used to running close. “Some people took it over the edge.” Other incidents in Sunday’s race: TYPICAL TALLADEGA: Not every driver was alarmed at all the accidents. Jamie McMurray, one of the better plate races in the series, thought Sunday was pretty typical. “Everyone is pretty calm until we get to halfway because we all want to get to halfway, and then it got a little bit wild after that,” he said. “But it’s just plate racing. When you look back at all of these restrictor plate races, you have a lot of wrecks that just don’t happen. And today we had a lot of wrecks, and they happened.” ——— AMELIA IS DESTROYED: Defending race winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. brought his favourite car, named “Amelia” to Talladega in search of his first win of the season. But he wrecked on lap 50 and had to go to the garage. He eventually returned to the track, and his steering wheel mysteriously came off in his hand.
a really long day,” Vegas, a Venezuelan with one career PGA Tour triumph, said during the delay. “Just got to find a way to relax and keep the mind calm.” He said he was focused on “doing things simple” in conditions that were sloppy but hardly unfamiliar to him. “I grew up in a place that rained a lot,” Vegas said. “The big thing here (is) just being able to hit the ball clean, especially when it’s muddy and so wet. It should be a fun finish.” None of the Canadians on the course finished the round David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., was at 4 under through 13 holes, Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford, B.C., was at 1 under through 10 and Nick Taylor of Abbotsford was at 1 over through eight. The 33-year-old Stuard is trying to win a PGA Tour event for the first time, and the delays have given him plenty of time to sit around and think about the high stakes he now faces in his final round, although he’s trying not to do that. “Just try not to get ahead of yourself,” Stuard said. “We just got to keep that right mind frame and just worry about the next shot.” Bobby Wyatt, who has an eagle and four birdies in his third round, climbed from 22nd after two rounds to third at 12 under with nine holes to play. Jamie Lovemark was fourth at 11 under with 13 holes left. Day birdied his last two holes before play was stopped. He was tied with Charley Hoffman, Scott Stallings, Chris Kirk and Charles Howell III. Hoffman and Stallings each have just four holes left, while Kirk has nine and Howell 12. Dupuis earned the Masterton nomination for rejoining the team after nearly a year of rehabilitation for multiple injuries and blood clot concerns. He appeared in 18 games before a pair of medical scares convinced him to retire. The 44-year-old Jagr helped lead the Panthers to franchise records for wins (47) and points (103) while capturing their second division title. Playing in his 22nd NHL season, Jagr led the Panthers in scoring with 27 goals and 39 assists, becoming the oldest player in league history to surpass the 60-point plateau. Zuccarello was nominated in recognition of a spirited return after suffering a serious head injury during the 2015 Stanley Cup playoffs. Zuccarello missed the Rangers’ final 14 post-season games last year after being struck in the head by a slap shot. He played in 81 games this season and established career highs in goals (26), points (61) and power-play goals (seven).
He had to steer the car himself with his hand on the steering column as he put the wheel back on. Then he was collected in a wreck with Carl Edwards. He finished last. “Hell, I’m going home. I’m done,” he said. “I think we need to park the car for a while, too.”
Rosberg keeps rolling with Russian GP win BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SOCHI, Russia — Nico Rosberg cruised to victory in the Russian Grand Prix on Sunday as his title rival and teammate Lewis Hamilton dodged crashes and battled through the pack for second. Rosberg has won all four of this season’s races seven in a row including victories from last season - and has a hefty 43-point lead over Hamilton in the title race. “It’s been an awesome weekend, the car has been fantastic. Very, very happy, thanks to everybody,” Rosberg said, but played down his championship lead. “Lewis is going to come back of course. He’s on it and as motivated as ever. So, early days.” Pole position and the unbeatable pace of the Mercedes meant Rosberg faced little competition as he won by 25 seconds from Hamilton, who had to fight through the field after starting 10th due to a technical failure in qualifying. Already up to fifth after an incident-packed first lap in which Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel crashed out, Hamilton passed both Williams cars and the other Ferrari of Kimi Raikkonen to take and hold second. Hamilton had been closing in on Rosberg in the second half of the race, but backed off after the team warned him of a water-pressure problem. Whether he could have caught Rosberg was doubtful - the German demonstrated he could produce blistering pace when needed with a fast lap just before the end. “The car felt good. At that time, I was lapping a little quicker than Nico, I was chewing away at (his lead),” said Hamilton, adding he had no idea how serious the problem with his car was. “At that point was when I had to back off and I was a second slower.” Raikkonen was third, 6.9 seconds behind Hamilton. Following another race in which Ferrari was far behind Mercedes, the Finn said the result was “not exactly what we want, we want to win races.” Raikkonen is third in the standings, 57 points behind Rosberg. After the chaotic first lap that featured three retirements, the safety car came out and at the restart on lap 5, Hamilton jumped the Williams of Felipe Massa for fourth and then blasted past Raikkonen’s Ferrari three laps later to take third. Rosberg took full advantage of Mercedes’ untouchable pace this weekend in Russia, quickly building a solid lead. After the race’s only round of stops, Hamilton remained stuck behind Valtteri Bottas’ Williams, but passed him swiftly. However, he remained 13 seconds behind Rosberg at the halfway point.
THE ADVOCATE B4
SCOREBOARD MONDAY, MAY 2, 2016
Hockey
Local Sports Metropolitan Division Washington (1) vs. Pittsburgh (2) (Series tied 1-1) Saturday’s result Pittsburgh 2 Washington 1 Thursday’s result Washington 4 Pittsburgh 3 (OT) Monday’s game Washington at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m. Wednesday, May 4 Washington at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m. Saturday, May 7 Pittsburgh at Washington, TBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE Brandon (E1) vs. Red Deer (C2) (Brandon wins series 4-1) Friday’s result Brandon 5 Red Deer 2 WESTERN CONFERENCE Seattle (US1) vs. Kelowna (BC2) (Seattle wins series 4-0) ED CHYNOWETH CUP League Championship Brandon (E1) vs. Seattle (US1) (Best-of-7) Friday, May 6 Seattle at Brandon, 8 p.m. Saturday, May 7 Seattle at Brandon, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 10 Brandon at Seattle, 8:05 p.m. Wednesday, May 11 Brandon at Seattle, 8:05 p.m. Friday, May 13 x-Brandon at Seattle, 8:35 p.m. Sunday, May 15 x-Seattle at Brandon, 7 p.m. Monday, May 16 x-Seattle at Brandon, 7 p.m. x — played only if necessary. 2016 WHL playoff scoring leaders G John Quenneville, Bdn 13 Nolan Patrick, Bdn 10 Adam Brooks, Reg 7 Tim McGauley, Bdn 8 Reid Duke, Bdn 6 Jayce Hawryluk, Bdn 2 Mathew Barzal, Sea 5 Adam Helewka, RD 9 Jake DeBrusk, RD 8 Jack Walker, Vic 8 Dryden Hunt, MJ 7 Cole Sanford, Reg 7 Brayden Point, MJ 6 Sam Steel, Reg 6 Justin Kirkland, Kel 11 Jayden Halbgewachs, MJ 9 Tanner Jeannot, MJ 6 Ethan Bear, Sea 6 Brett Howden, MJ 4 Kale Clague, Bdn 6
(pp). Penalties — Lehtera StL (hooking) 14:52 Roussel Dal (tripping) 17:41. Second Period No Scoring. Penalties — Nichushkin Dal (hooking) 5:31 Brouwer StL (cross-checking) 9:46 Schwartz StL (cross-checking) 13:07. Third Period 5. Dallas, Janmark 1 (Eakin, Sceviour) 4:35. 6. Dallas, Ja.Benn 5 (Eakin, Russell) 17:24. Penalties — Berglund StL (tripping) 4:37 Roussel Dal (high-sticking) 5:46. First Overtime 7. St. Louis, Backes 3 (Steen, Shattenkirk) 10:58 (pp). Penalties — Klingberg Dal (holding) 1:13 Roussel Dal (interference) 10:41. Shots on goal St. Louis 5 10 2 8 — 25 Dallas 10 6 13 5 — 34 Goal — St. Louis: Elliott (W, 5-4-0). Dallas: Lehtonen (5 shots, 2 saves), Niemi (00:00 second period, L, 1-2-0, 20 shots, 19 saves). Power plays (goals-chances) — St. Louis: 2-5 Dallas: 0-4.
N.Y. Islanders at Tampa Bay, TBA
WHL 2016 Playoffs CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7)
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division Dallas (1) vs. St. Louis (2) (Series tied 1-1) Sunday’s result St. Louis 4 Dallas 3 (OT) Friday’s result Dallas 2 St. Louis 1 Tuesday’s game Dallas at St. Louis, 6 p.m. Thursday, May 5 Dallas at St. Louis, 6 p.m. Saturday, May 7 St. Louis at Dallas, TBA
A 11 14 16 13 14 18 14 9 9 8 9 9 10 10 4 6 9 9 11 8
Pts 24 24 23 21 20 20 19 18 17 16 16 16 16 16 15 15 15 15 15 14
2016 Stanley Cup Playoffs Second Round DIVISION FINALS (Best-of-7) EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division Tampa Bay (2) vs. N.Y. Islanders (WC1) (Series tied 1-1) Saturday’s result Tampa Bay 4 N.Y. Islanders 1 Wednesday’s result N.Y. Islanders 5 Tampa Bay 3 Tuesday’s game Tampa Bay at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. Friday, May 6 Tampa Bay at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. Sunday, May 8
Pacific Division (San Jose leads series 2-0) Sunday’s result San Jose 3 Nashville 2 Friday’s result San Jose 5 Nashville 2 Tuesday’s game San Jose at Nashville, 7 p.m. Thursday, May 5 San Jose at Nashville, 7 p.m. Saturday, May 7 Nashville at San Jose, TBA Sunday’s summaries Sharks 3, Predators 2 First Period No Scoring. Penalties — Josi Nash (cross-checking) 6:24 Ward SJ (tripping) 13:38. Second Period 1. San Jose, Couture 4 (Pavelski, Burns) 18:36 (pp). Penalties — San Jose bench (too many men, served by Donskoi) 15:16 Nashville bench (too many men, served by Arvidsson) 18:03. Third Period 2. Nashville, Ekholm 3 (Wilson, Josi) 12:56. 3. San Jose, Pavelski 6 (Nieto, Thornton) 17:20. 4. San Jose, Thornton 2 (Couture, Pavelski) 19:04 (en). 5. Nashville, Johansen 3 (Josi, Fisher) 19:56. Penalties — Dillon SJ (roughing) 6:34. Shots on goal Nashville 10 16 13 — 39 San Jose 7 10 8 — 25 Goal — Nashville: Rinne (L, 4-5-0). San Jose: Jones (W, 6-1-0). Power plays (goals-chances) — Nashville: 0-3 San Jose: 1-2. Blues 4, Stars 3 (1st OT) First Period 1. Dallas, Goligoski 3 (Ja.Benn, Eakin) 3:36. 2. St. Louis, Berglund 2 (Fabbri, Backes) 4:11. 3. St. Louis, Edmundson 1 (Brouwer, Upshall) 7:02. 4. St. Louis, Brouwer 2 (Shattenkirk, Fabbri) 18:40
John Tavares, NYI Tyler Johnson, TB Jamie Benn, Dal Brent Burns, SJ Nikita Kucherov, TB Jason Spezza, Dal Evgeni Malkin, Pgh Reilly Smith, Fla John Carlson, Wash Sidney Crosby, Pgh Logan Couture, SJ Nick Bonino, Pgh Joe Pavelski, SJ T.J. Oshie, Wash Jason Pominville, Minn Jaden Schwartz, StL Phil Kessel, Pgh Nicklas Backstrom, Wash Marcus Johansson, Wash Artemi Panarin, Chi Kyle Okposo, NYI Jonathan Drouin, TB Patrick Kane, Chi
G 6 4 4 2 6 4 3 4 3 3 3 1 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1
A 5 6 6 8 3 5 6 4 5 5 5 7 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 5 6 6 6
Pts 11 10 10 10 9 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7
2016 NHL Draft Order Order for the first 14 teams for the 2016 National Hockey League draft (June 24-25 in Buffalo, N.Y.), after Saturday’s lottery selection: 1. Toronto 2. Winnipeg 3. Columbus 4. Edmonton 5. Vancouver 6. Calgary 7. Arizona 8. Buffalo 9. Montreal 10. Colorado 11. New Jersey 12. Ottawa 13. Carolina 14. Boston Note: Remaining order to be determined after end of Stanley Cup playoffs.
Washington at Kansas City, 6:15 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 8:05 p.m. GB — 1/2 3 1/2 3 1/2 6 GB — 3 4 6 10 1/2 GB — 1/2 1 1/2 2 6
Saturday’s Games Detroit 4, Minnesota 1 Oakland 2, Houston 0 Tampa Bay 4, Toronto 3 Chicago White Sox 8, Baltimore 7 Philadelphia 4, Cleveland 3 Boston 8, N.Y. Yankees 0 Texas 7, L.A. Angels 2 Seattle 6, Kansas City 0 Sunday’s Games Toronto 5, Tampa Bay 1 Chicago White Sox 7, Baltimore 1 Detroit 6, Minnesota 5 Philadelphia 2, Cleveland 1 L.A. Angels 9, Texas 6 Houston 2, Oakland 1 Kansas City 4, Seattle 1 Boston 8, N.Y. Yankees 7 Monday’s Games Texas (Griffin 3-0) at Toronto (Dickey 1-3), 5:07 p.m. L.A. Angels (Weaver 3-0) at Milwaukee (Nelson 3-2), 5:20 p.m. Minnesota (Berrios 0-1) at Houston (Keuchel 2-3), 6:10 p.m. Washington (Gonzalez 1-1) at Kansas City (Volquez 3-1), 6:15 p.m. Seattle (Karns 2-1) at Oakland (Graveman 1-2), 8:05 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Detroit at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore, 5:05 p.m. Texas at Toronto, 5:07 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Tampa Bay, 5:10 p.m. Boston at Chicago White Sox, 6:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Milwaukee, 6:10 p.m. Minnesota at Houston, 6:10 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS G AB R H Pct. Castellanos Det 23 83 11 30 .361 Machado Bal 24 100 20 35 .350 VMartinez Det 24 80 14 28 .350 Forsythe TB 23 86 14 29 .337 Mauer Min 25 89 10 30 .337 Hosmer KC 24 93 11 31 .333 Trumbo Bal 24 94 13 31 .330 Andrus Tex 23 80 8 26 .325 Pedroia Bos 24 108 19 35 .324 Mazara Tex 18 68 10 22 .324 Home Runs Donaldson, Toronto, 9 Cano, Seattle, 8 Altuve, Houston, 7 CDavis, Baltimore, 7 Frazier, Chicago, 7 Machado, Baltimore, 7 Moustakas, Kansas City, 7 ColRasmus, Houston, 7. Runs Batted In Cano, Seattle, 24 Donaldson, Toronto, 21 ColRasmus, Houston, 20 Ortiz, Boston, 19 Trumbo, Baltimore, 19 Bautista, Toronto, 18 Castellanos, Detroit, 18 VMartinez, Detroit, 18. Pitching Sale, Chicago, 6-0 Zimmermann, Detroit, 5-0 Porcello, Boston, 5-0 Latos, Chicago, 4-0 Stroman, Toronto, 4-0 Price, Boston, 4-0 ERamirez, Tampa Bay, 4-1.
Washington New York Philadelphia Miami Atlanta Chicago Pittsburgh St. Louis Cincinnati Milwaukee Los Angeles San Francisco Colorado Arizona San Diego
National League East Division W L Pct 17 7 .708 15 8 .652 15 10 .600 12 12 .500 6 18 .250 Central Division W L Pct 17 6 .739 15 10 .600 12 13 .480 10 15 .400 9 15 .375 West Division W L Pct 13 13 .500 13 13 .500 11 12 .478 12 14 .462 9 16 .360
GB — 1 1/2 2 1/2 5 11 GB — 3 6 8 8 1/2 GB — — 1/2 1 3 1/2
Saturday’s Games Washington 6, St. Louis 1 Atlanta at Chicago Cubs, ppd. N.Y. Mets 6, San Francisco 5 Philadelphia 4, Cleveland 3 Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 1 Miami 7, Milwaukee 5 Colorado 5, Arizona 2 San Diego 5, L.A. Dodgers 2
Sunday’s Games San Francisco 6, N.Y. Mets 1 Cincinnati 6, Pittsburgh 5, 11 innings Milwaukee 14, Miami 5 Washington 6, St. Louis 1 Atlanta 4, Chicago Cubs 3, 10 innings Philadelphia 2, Cleveland 1 Colorado at Arizona, late L.A. Dodgers 1, San Diego 0 Monday’s Games Chicago Cubs (Hammel 3-0) at Pittsburgh (Cole 2-2), 5:05 p.m. Atlanta (Foltynewicz 0-0) at N.Y. Mets (Colon 1-1), 5:10 p.m. San Francisco (Cueto 4-1) at Cincinnati (Finnegan 1-1), 5:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Weaver 3-0) at Milwaukee (Nelson 3-2), 5:20 p.m. Philadelphia (Hellickson 2-1) at St. Louis (Wainwright 1-3), 6:15 p.m. Washington (Gonzalez 1-1) at Kansas City (Volquez 3-1), 6:15 p.m. Colorado (Gray 0-0) at San Diego (Shields 0-4), 8:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh, 5:05 p.m. Arizona at Miami, 5:10 p.m. Atlanta at N.Y. Mets, 5:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Tampa Bay, 5:10 p.m. San Francisco at Cincinnati, 5:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Milwaukee, 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m. Washington at Kansas City, 6:15 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 8:10 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS G AB R H Pct. Prado Mia 20 78 8 32 .410 ADiaz StL 23 74 18 30 .405 DMurphy Was 23 85 12 31 .365 Fowler ChC 22 80 20 28 .350 Braun Mil 23 83 14 29 .349 Cozart Cin 19 75 14 26 .347 Conforto NYM 22 79 15 27 .342 Yelich Mia 24 82 13 28 .341 CGonzalez Col 23 95 16 32 .337 Segura Ari 25 111 12 37 .333 Home Runs Arenado, Colorado, 11 Story, Colorado, 10 Harper, Washington, 9 NWalker, New York, 9 Rizzo, Chicago, 8 Stanton, Miami, 8 Carter, Milwaukee, 7 Cespedes, New York, 7 Kemp, San Diego, 7. Runs Batted In Arenado, Colorado, 25 Harper, Washington, 24 Rizzo, Chicago, 24 Cespedes, New York, 23 Pence, San Francisco, 22 Braun, Milwaukee, 20 Markakis, Atlanta, 20 Stanton, Miami, 20 Story, Colorado, 20. Pitching Arrieta, Chicago, 5-0 Strasburg, Washington, 4-0 Cueto, San Francisco, 4-1 Velasquez, Philadelphia, 4-1 CMartinez, St. Louis, 4-1 Niese, Pittsburgh, 3-0 Verrett, New York, 3-0.
Transactions Sunday’s Sports Transactions BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Reinstated RHP David Robertson from the bereavement list. Optioned RHP Tommy Kahnle to Charlotte (IL). LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Recalled RHP A.J. Achter from Salt Lake (IL). Placed OF Craig Gentry on 15-day DL, retroactive to April 26. Transferred LHP C.J. Wilson to the 60-day DL. Selected the contract of OF Shane Robinson from Salt Lake. Optioned RHP Matt Shoemaker to Salt Lake. TEXAS RANGERS — Sent RHP Yu Darvish on injury rehab assignment to Frisco (TL). National League CINCINNATI REDS — Selected the contract of RHP Tim Adleman from Louisville (IL). Transferred C Kyle Skipworth to the 60-day DL. Placed RHP Raisel Iglesias on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 26. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Activated C Wilson Ramos from the bereavement list. Optioned C Pedro Severino to Syracuse. FOOTBALL National Football League CHICAGO BEARS — Released S Antrel Rolle and
G Matt Slauson. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Agreed to terms with TE Braedon Bowman, OT Rashod Hill, WR Jamal Robinson, OT Pearce Slater, QB Max Wittek, CB Briean Boddy-Calhoun, CB Mike Hilton, PK Jaden Oberkrom and S Jarrod Wilson. HOCKEY National Hockey League NHL — Suspended Washington D Brooks Orpik for three games for interference against Pittsburgh D Olli Maatta durning a game on April 30. SOCCER Major League Soccer FC DALLAS — Loaned D Moises Hernandez to Rayo OKC (NASL) for the remainder of the 2016 season. NEW YORK RED BULLS — Loaned D Gideon Baah to New York Red Bulls II (USL). Saturday’s Sports Transactions BASEBALL American League BOSTON RED SOX — Recalled INF Marco Hernandez from Pawtucket (IL). Optioned RHP Pat Light to Pawtucket. TEXAS RANGERS — Sent OF Josh Hamilton on
Central Team wins D final at Alberta Cup CANMORE — The Central team ended its run at the Alberta Cup on a high note, winning the D final 5-4 over Edmonton Yellow. Held over the weekend, the Alberta Cup is a bantam level tournament played by the best players from each region of the province. The Central team finished with two wins and three losses. On Saturday, Central lost its consolation semifinal to Northwest 4-2. Goals for Central came from Kyle Gerrits, of Bentley, and Adam Heindel, of Lacombe. Red Deer’s Bretton Park stopped 37 of the 41 shots he faced in the game. On Sundays, Deegan Mofford, of Rocky Mountain House, had a hat trick and an assist while Kyle Crosbie, of Didsbury, had a goal and four assists to lead the Central squad. Park made his second start in a row, stopped 16 of the 20 shots he faced.
injury rehab assignment to Frisco (TL). National League PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Activated RHP Jared Hughes from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Rob Scahill to Indianapolis (IL). FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Signed LS Daniel Dillon. CHICAGO BEARS — Agreed to terms with QB Brian Hoyer on a one-year contract. NEW YORK GIANTS — Signed DT Greg MIlhouse, Jr. HOCKEY National Hockey League DALLAS STARS — Recalled LW Curtis McKenzie and RW Brett Ritchie from Texas (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS — Assigned C Andreas Athanasiou to Grand Rapids (AHL). NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Recalled G Marek Mazanec from Milwaukee (AHL). American Hockey League AHL — Suspended Utica D Jon Landry one game as a consequence of a match penalty for an illegal check to the head of an opponent in an April 28 game against Albany.
NHL PLAYOFFS
Capitals’ Orpik suspended three games for hit on Maatta Washington Capitals defenceman Brooks Orpik was suspended three games for his late hit to the head of Pittsburgh Penguins defenceman Olli Maatta. Orpik will miss Game 3 Monday, Game 4 Wednesday and Game 5 Saturday. He’d be eligible to return if the series gets to Game 6 on May 10. Orpik hit Maatta in the head after the puck was gone four minutes into Game 2 Saturday and was given a two-minute minor penalty for interference. After a hearing with the NHL’s department of player safety, the punishment was far more severe. Director of player safety Patrick Burke said Sunday in the video announcing the suspension that “this hit is forceful, unacceptably high and excessively late.” Orpik waiting a full second after Maatta released the puck for a shot and his “significant head contact” contributed to the suspension, as did Maatta’s injury.
Sunday
Saturday ● Rocky Mountain Lacrosse League Jr. B Tier I: Edmonton Warriors at Red Deer Rampage, 2:30 p.m., Kinex Arena
● Rocky Mountain Lacrosse League Jr. B Tier II: Calgary Wranglers at Red Deer Renegades, 2:30 p.m., Kinex arena ● Rocky Mountain Lacrosse League Jr. B Tier II: Sylvan Lake Yettis at Lacoka Locos, 3:30 p.m., G.H. Dawe Centre ● Rocky Mountain Lacrosse League Jr. B Tier I: Calgary Shamrocks at Red Deer Rampage, 5 p.m., Kinex Arena
Basketball Portland 106 L.A. Clippers 103
2016 NBA Playoffs First Round Conference Quarter-finals (Best-of-7)
NHL playoff scoring leaders following Saturday’s game:
Baseball Major League Basbeball American League East Division W L Pct Boston 15 10 .600 Baltimore 14 10 .583 Toronto 12 14 .462 Tampa Bay 11 13 .458 New York 8 15 .348 Central Division W L Pct Chicago 18 8 .692 Detroit 14 10 .583 Kansas City 13 11 .542 Cleveland 10 12 .455 Minnesota 7 18 .280 West Division W L Pct Texas 14 11 .560 Seattle 13 11 .542 Oakland 13 13 .500 Los Angeles 12 13 .480 Houston 8 17 .320
Thursday ● WHL: Bantam Draft, 8:30 a.m., Calgary
Second Round Conference Semifinals (Best-of-7) EASTERN CONFERENCE Cleveland (1) vs. Atlanta (4) Monday’s game Atlanta at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Wednesday, May 4 Atlanta at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Friday, May 6 Cleveland at Atlanta, 5 p.m. Sunday, May 8 Cleveland at Atlanta, 1:30 p.m.
EASTERN CONFERENCE Cleveland (1) vs. Detroit (8) (Cleveland wins series 4-0) Toronto (2) vs. Indiana (7) (Toronto wins series 4-3) Sunday’s result Toronto 89 Indiana 84 Friday’s result Indiana 101 Toronto 83
WESTERN CONFERENCE Golden State (1) vs. Portland (5) (Golden State leads series 1-0) Sunday’s result Golden State 118 Portland 106 Tuesday’s game Portland at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, May 7 Golden State at Portland, 6:30 p.m. Monday, May 9 Golden State at Portland, 8:30 p.m.
Miami (3) vs. Charlotte (6) (Miami wins series 4-3) Sunday’s result Miami 106 Charlotte 73 Friday’s result Miami 97 Charlotte 90 Atlanta (4) vs. Boston (5) (Atlanta wins series 4-2) WESTERN CONFERENCE Golden State (1) vs. Houston (8) (Golden State wins series 4-1)
San Antonio (2) vs. Oklahoma City (3) (San Antonio leads series 1-0) Saturday’s result San Antonio 124 Oklahoma City 92 Monday’s game Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Friday, May 6 San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, May 8 San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m.
San Antonio (2) vs. Memphis (7) (San Antonio wins series 4-0) Oklahoma City (3) vs. Dallas (6) (Oklahoma City wins series 4-1) L.A. Clippers (4) vs. Portland (5) (Portland wins series 4-2) Friday’s result
Soccer MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE GP W L T GF Montreal 9 4 3 2 13 Philadelphia 8 4 3 1 11 Toronto 8 3 3 2 9 New York City 9 2 3 4 13 Orlando 8 2 2 4 15 D.C. 9 2 3 4 11 New England 10 1 2 7 11 New York 9 3 6 0 12 Columbus 8 2 4 2 7 Chicago 7 1 2 4 7
New England at Los Angeles, 1:30 p.m. New York City at D.C., 5:30 p.m. GA 11 8 7 15 13 11 16 17 10 8
Pt 14 13 11 10 10 10 10 9 8 7
WESTERN CONFERENCE GP W L T GF GA Pt Salt Lake 8 5 1 2 14 12 17 Colorado 9 5 2 2 12 8 17 Dallas 10 5 3 2 15 17 17 Los Angeles 8 4 1 3 18 8 15 San Jose 9 4 2 3 12 11 15 Kansas City 10 4 4 2 11 10 14 Seattle 8 3 4 1 8 10 12 Portland 9 3 3 3 14 16 12 Vancouver 10 3 5 2 12 15 11 Houston 8 1 5 2 14 16 5 Note: Three points awarded for a win one for a tie.
English Premier League GP W D L GF Leicester City 36 22 11 3 64 Tottenham 35 19 12 4 65 Arsenal 36 19 10 7 59 Man City 36 19 7 10 68 Man United 35 17 9 9 43 West Ham 35 15 14 6 60 Southampton 36 16 9 11 53 Liverpool 35 15 10 10 59 Stoke 36 13 9 14 38 Chelsea 34 12 11 11 53 Everton 35 10 14 11 55 Watford 35 12 8 15 36 Swansea 36 11 10 15 37 West Brom 36 10 11 15 32 Bournemouth 36 11 8 17 43 Crystal Palace 36 10 9 17 36 Newcastle 36 8 9 19 39 Sunderland 35 7 11 17 40 Norwich 35 8 7 20 35 r-Aston Villa 36 3 7 26 27 r-Relegated
GA Pts 34 77 26 69 34 67 38 64 31 60 43 59 39 57 48 55 52 48 46 47 49 44 42 44 50 43 46 41 63 41 46 39 64 33 58 32 61 31 72 16
Saturday, April 30 Everton 2, Bournemouth 1 Newcastle 1, Crystal Palace 0 Stoke 1, Sunderland 1 Watford 3, Aston Villa 2 West Brom 0, West Ham 3 Arsenal 1, Norwich 0
Sunday’s results Portland 2 Toronto 1 Los Angeles 1 Kansas City 1 Saturday’s results San Jose 1 Philadelphia 1 Colorado 2 Montreal 2 Seattle 1 Columbus 0 New York City 3 Vancouver 2 D.C. 1 Chicago 1 Orlando 2 New England 2 Salt Lake 2 Houston 1
Sunday, May 1 Swansea 3, Liverpool 1 Manchester United 1, Leicester City 1 Southampton 4, Manchester City 2 Monday, May 2 Chelsea vs. Tottenham, 1900 GMT
Friday’s result New York 4 Dallas 0
Saturday, May 7 Norwich vs. Manchester United, 1145 GMT Aston Villa vs. Newcastle, 1400 GMT Bournemouth vs. West Brom, 1400 GMT Crystal Palace vs. Stoke, 1400 GMT Sunderland vs. Chelsea, 1400 GMT West Ham vs. Swansea, 1400 GMT Leicester City vs. Everton, 1630 GMT
Friday, May 6 New York at Orlando, 5 p.m. Saturday, May 7 Portland at Vancouver, 3 p.m. Montreal at Columbus, 5:30 p.m. Dallas at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. Kansas City at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Salt Lake at Colorado, 7 p.m. San Jose at Seattle, 8 p.m.
Sunday, May 8 Tottenham vs. Southampton, 1230 GMT Liverpool vs. Watford, 1500 GMT Manchester City vs. Arsenal, 1500 GMT
Sunday, May 8
Golf Ken Duke Russell Henley Troy Merritt Si Woo Kim Michael Bradley Benjamin Taylor Joe Affrunti Scott Langley Mark Hubbard Angel Cabrera Nick Taylor Brian Gay Steve Stricker Vijay Singh Morgan Hoffmann Marc Leishman Blayne Barber Erik Compton Sung Kang Rob Oppenheim Rhein Gibson
PGA-Zurich Classic Saturday At TPC Louisiana Avondale, La. Purse: $7 million Yardage: 7,341 Par: 72 Completed Second Round Brian Stuard 64-68—132 Jamie Lovemark 67-66—133 Jhonattan Vegas 64-69—133 Harold Varner III 69-67—136 Daniel Berger 71-65—136 Byeong-Hun An 68-68—136 Charles Howell III 67-69—136 Chad Collins 72-64—136 Patrick Rodgers 67-69—136 Patton Kizzire 67-70—137 Thomas Aiken 68-69—137 Steve Wheatcroft 69-68—137 John Senden 70-67—137 Jason Day 69-68—137 Seung-Yul Noh 68-69—137 Derek Ernst 67-70—137 Lucas Glover 69-69—138 Chris Kirk 71-67—138 Spencer Levin 68-70—138 Cameron Percy 68-70—138 Bobby Wyatt 67-71—138 Gary Woodland 72-66—138 Chris Stroud 72-66—138 Bryce Moulder 71-67—138 Ryan Ruffels 70-68—138 Cameron Tringale 69-70—139 Will Wilcox 70-69—139 David Toms 68-71—139 Billy Horschel 68-71—139 Robert Garrigus 69-70—139 Henrik Norlander 66-73—139 Jonas Blixt 70-69—139 Freddie Jacobson 69-70—139 Stuart Appleby 69-70—139 Robert Streb 71-68—139 Geoff Ogilvy 67-72—139 Retief Goosen 65-74—139 Charley Hoffman 67-73—140 Scott Stallings 72-68—140 Dicky Pride 70-70—140 Michael Kim 74-66—140 Lucas Lee 72-68—140 Jeff Overton 70-70—140 Danny Lee 68-72—140 J.J. Henry 67-73—140 Chesson Hadley 71-69—140 MarcTurnesa 70-70—140 David Hearn 69-71—140 Tyler Aldridge 70-70—140 Andres Gonzales 69-71—140 Tim Wilkinson 72-69—141 Jon Curran 71-70—141 Chad Campbell 69-72—141 Roberto Castro 69-72—141 Anirban Lahiri 72-69—141 Aaron Baddeley 70-71—141 Adam Hadwin 72-69—141 Ben Martin 70-71—141 Rickie Fowler 68-73—141 Bronson Burgoon 72-69—141 Jamie Donaldson 73-69—142
67-75—142 69-73—142 71-71—142 70-72—142 72-70—142 70-72—142 69-73—142 75-67—142 74-68—142 69-73—142 70-72—142 73-69—142 70-72—142 72-70—142 73-69—142 71-71—142 70-72—142 73-69—142 71-71—142 70-72—142 71-71—142
LPGA-Volunteers of America Texas Shootout Sunday At Las Colinas CC Irving, Texas Purse: $1.3 million Yardage: 6,462 Par: 71 Final a-amateur Jenny Shin, $195,000 68-70-65-67—270 -14 Amy Yang, $90,231 68-68-65-71—272 -12 Mi Jung Hur, $90,231 66-69-66-71—272 -12 Gerina Piller, $90,231 67-65-67-73—272 -12 Shanshan Feng, $53,472 72-69-65-68—274 -10 Ariya Jutanugarn, $43,749 69-66-69-72—276 -8 Na Yeon Choi, $32,515 74-67-68-68—277 -7 Eun-Hee Ji, $32,515 67-66-71-73—277 -7 Sei Young Kim, $32,515 68-67-68-74—277 -7 Mirim Lee, $24,413 70-71-67-70—278 -6 Cristie Kerr, $24,413 72-67-69-70—278 -6 Karine Icher, $24,413 71-67-70-70—278 -6 In Gee Chun, $20,005 69-73-70-67—279 -5 Sarah Jane Smith, $20,005 72-71-67-69—279 -5 Jacqui Concolino, $20,005 69-70-69-71—279 -5 Angela Stanford, $16,895 70-71-69-70—280 -4 Candie Kung, $16,895 71-67-71-71—280 -4 Charley Hull, $16,895 71-69-68-72—280 -4 Gaby Lopez, $14,648 72-71-70-68—281 -3 Stacy Lewis, $14,648 74-70-67-70—281 -3 Bro. Henderson, $14,648 69-68-73-71—281 -3 So Yeon Ryu, $14,648 67-73-68-73—281 -3 Ashleigh Simon, $12,163 71-69-71-71—282 -2 Nannette Hill, $12,163 70-68-73-71—282 -2 Paula Reto, $12,163 73-69-68-72—282 -2 Marina Alex, $12,163 70-72-68-72—282 -2 Belen Mozo, $12,163 70-69-71-72—282 -2 Dori Carter, $12,163 71-69-69-73—282 -2 Simin Feng, $10,176 71-70-70-72—283 -1 a-Cheyenne Knight 70-69-72-72—283 -1 Carlota Ciganda, $10,176 69-72-69-73—283 -1 Catriona Matthew, $10,176 68-70-68-77—283 -1 Casey Grice, $8,831 69-69-75-71—284 E Anna Nordqvist, $8,831 73-69-70-72—284 E Briana Mao, $8,831 74-69-68-73—284 E Min Seo Kwak, $8,831 70-69-72-73—284 E Katie Burnett, $7,337 74-70-69-72—285 +1 Lee-Anne Pace, $7,337 72-69-72-72—285 +1
Lacrosse National Lacrosse League East Division GP W L Pct GF y-Buffalo 18 13 5 .722 251 x-New England 18 10 8 .556 229 x-Georgia 18 8 10 .444 238 Rochester 18 7 11 .389 196 Toronto 18 5 13 .278 190
y-Sask. x-Colorado x-Calgary
West Division GP W L Pct 18 13 5 .722 18 12 6 .667 18 8 10 .444
Vancouver 18 5 13 .278 198 245 x — clinched playoff berth y — clinched division. GA GB 214 — 212 3 240 5 215 6 224 8
GF GA GB 233 186 — 203 202 1 216 216 5
WEEK 18 Sunday’s result Rochester 10 New England 8 Saturday’s results Georgia 14 Vancouver 6 Buffalo 12 New England 7 Saskatchewan 13 Rochester 5 Calgary 18 Toronto 17 (OT) Friday’s result Colorado 11 Vancouver 10 End of 2016 NLL Regular Season
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LIFE
THE ADVOCATE Monday, May 2, 2016
Pineapple on the grill THE SECRET’S IN THE SPICE BY ELLIE KRIEGER ADVOCATE NEWS SERVICES By mid-April, when I have grown weary of winter citrus but the bounty of local berries hasn’t hit the market yet, I like to turn to the tropics for some sweet, juicy variety. My luscious pineapple dessert not only is packed with island flavor, it satisfies a sweet tooth healthfully as well. Grilling the fruit caramelizes its natural sugars, brings forth its juices and gives it attractive grill marks. A sprinkling of ground allspice adds another dimension with its warm, aromatic Caribbean flair. Once the pineapple comes off the grill, it’s topped off with another layer of tropical flavor in the form of coconut whipped cream. I don’t use coconut milk because it is more healthful; it isn’t necessarily better for you than regular whipped cream. I use it because it has such an intense, craveable coconut flavor that it makes you see palm trees. Besides, it keeps the dish vegan-friendly. To make it, you refrigerate a can of full-fat coconut milk for several hours long enough for the fat to separate and rise to the top of the liquid. Then you scrape off the solid fat and whip it as you would cream, with a touch of sugar. It is so rich and decadent that you need just a little for this recipe. But the rest keeps well in the refrigerator, so you can have it on hand to dollop on those berries, too, when they arrive at last.
Grilled Pineapple With Coconut Whipped Cream 4 servings The pineapple also can be cooked on an outdoor grill. (Remember to brush the grates with oil.) If you have a pineapple corer, use it to remove the core before you cut the pineapple into rings. MAKE AHEAD: The can of coconut milk needs to be refrigerated for at least 5 hours and up to 1 day in advance. You’ll have whipped coconut cream left over; it can be refrigerated
Photo by ADVOCATE NEWS SERVICES
Grilled Pineapple With Coconut Whipped Cream. for at least 1 month. Ellie Krieger likes to refrigerate the beaters she uses for the coconut whipped cream; you can chill them along with the canned coconut milk. Ingredients One 13.5-ounce can full-fat coconut milk 1 tablespoon confectioners’ sugar 1 fresh whole pineapple ¼ teaspoon ground allspice Canola oil, for the grill pan 2 teaspoons fresh mint leaves (whole or chopped), for garnish Steps Chill the can of coconut milk in the refrigerator for at least 5 hours and up to 1 day. Remove it from the refrigerator without shaking it or moving it too much. Transfer what has congealed at
the top to a mixer bowl, being careful not to include any of the liquid. The yield should be about ¾ cup of solid coconut cream. Add the sugar to the bowl; whip with chilled beaters (optional; see headnote) on medium-high speed (stand mixer or handheld electric mixer) until the coconut cream is glossy and firm enough for a spatula to leave tracks that remain. The yield is about 1 cup. Cut off the top and bottom of the pineapple. Cut away and discard the skin and any brown spots on the fruit. Cut the pineapple flesh crosswise into eight equal slices (about ½ inch thick). Use a spoon or apple corer to carve out the center core of each slice to create rings. Sprinkle the allspice evenly over each pineapple ring (on one side only). Brush a large grill pan lightly with
the oil and heat the pan over medium-high heat. Working in batches and adjusting the heat as needed, cook the pineapple rings for 2 to 3 minutes per side or until they are nicely browned and grill marks have appeared. To serve, place 2 pineapple rings on each serving dish. Top each with a small dollop (2 teaspoons) of the coconut whipped cream, and garnish with mint. Nutrition Per serving: 90 calories, 0 g protein, 21 g carbohydrates, 5 g fat, 3 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 0 mg sodium, 2 g dietary fiber, 16 g sugar Krieger’s newest cookbook is “You Have It Made: Delicious, Healthy, DoAhead Meals” (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016). She blogs and offers a weekly newsletter at www.elliekrieger.com.
Progress made in cutting salt in packaged foods BY THE CANADIAN PRESS TORONTO — A federal strategy to get Canadians to shake the amount of salt in their diets has resulted in only a relative sprinkle of change in the amount of sodium found in thousands of packaged foods commonly eaten by consumers, a study has found. In 2010, Health Canada set out voluntary targets for the food industry to cut sodium content in processed and packaged foods, with the aim of slashing Canadians’ consumption of salt. Excessive salt, or sodium, consumption can cause high blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart disease, stroke and kidney dysfunction. The goal of the federal program was to gradually reduce Canadians’ average daily intake of sodium by one third by the end of 2016. On average, Canadians’ sodium intake exceeds 3,400 mg per day — more than double the recommended 1,500 mg and well above the daily maximum of 2,300 mg set by the Institute of Medicine, a non-profit organization that provides evidence-based public health recommendations to the Canadian and U.S. governments. “Those sodium reduction targets weren’t to get us down to the recommended level they were to get us down to the upper level,” study co-author Mary L’Abbe, chair of nutritional sciences at the University of Toronto, said in a release. “It was envisioned as the first step in a longer process of getting our sodium levels to about half of what they are now.” But a 2013 analysis of more than 16,000 packaged food items by the U of T research team discovered that only a sixth of these foods, lumped into about 100 categories, had curtailed their sodium content. “When we looked at those, what we found was that 82 per cent of those categories had no change in sodium and 16 per cent had reduced sodium content,” said JoAnne Arcand, who
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Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
While many food companies are working to cut sodium levels in their products in response to a voluntary reduction strategy introduced by Health Canada in 2010, a study has found that only 16 per cent of food categories have significantly cut their salt content. led the study published Tuesday in the Journal of Applied Physiology, Nutrition and Metabolism. The most significant reductions in sodium — about 15 to 20 per cent — were seen in such food categories as condiments, breakfast cereals, canned soups and canned vegetables, said Arcand, now an assistant professor at the Ontario Institute of Technology in nearby Oshawa, Ont. Bread products, which she called a top contributor to salt in the diet, saw sodium content fall by about seven per cent. “When we looked further into the bread product category … we saw that English muffins and rolls and buns made the biggest improvement,” she said in an interview Tuesday. “But the pantry breads, which Canadians
OLD-FASHIONED HAM DINNER AT SUNNYBROOK FARM
THINGS HAPPENING TOMORROW
2
Ladies of Sunnybrook Farm Museum Old-Fashioned Ham Dinner will be held on May 3 to 5 in the historic Hanna Log House on the museum grounds. There will be sittings at 5 and 6:30 p.m. each night of delicious old-fashioned ham and scalloped potatoes. The cost is $15 for adults and $10 for children under 10 years. Tickets must be purchased in advance by phoning 403-340-3511.
consume a lot of, they didn’t make as much progress.” While sodium content in the sausage and wiener category fell by about 10 per cent, other deli meats saw virtually no salt reduction, said Arcand, noting that Canadians are big consumers of deli meats. “So we would hope that between this mid-point evaluation and the end of 2016 that we would see some more progress made in the deli meat category.” Although the aim of setting benchmark targets was to encourage food producers to cut sodium content in all their products, the amount an individual consumes depends on the types of foods they eat. “We know that older people consume more soups and younger people,
RED DEER GARDEN CLUB EXAMINES GARDEN MAKEOVERS
3
Red Deer Garden Club presents Is a garden makeover really for you with Calgary horticulturist Kath Smyth on Tuesday, 6:45 to 8 p.m. at Golden Circle Senior Resource Centre. If you would like less watering, weeding and fertilizing, this talk is for you. Tickets are available at Red Deer Museum and Art Gallery for $15 each.
children may consume more hot dogs,” she said. “So in order for (the strategy) to be an effective, equitable public health intervention, we really should see reductions in a broad number of categories rather than in just a few.” Dr. Norm Campbell of the University of Alberta, who holds a chair in hypertension prevention and control, said the findings show that while the food industry is making some progress in shrinking the amount of sodium in its products, it is not keeping pace with voluntary standards it set for itself. “Further, we know that food labels have historically underestimated the sodium content of foods,” said Campbell, adding that government should be monitoring the accuracy of food labels and the food industry should be held to account for meeting reduction targets. “Regular monitoring would send a strong message to industry about the importance of taking action to reduce sodium, trans fats and added sugar in packaged foods,” he said in a statement. “We should not have to rely on scientists alone to undertake such a large-scale, complex analysis and publish critical data about it.” Arcand said that without such independent research, there would be no way to gauge whether voluntary targets are being met because of the way in which Ottawa set up the sodium reduction strategy. A similar federal program aimed at slimming trans fats in foods has been largely successful, possibly because content is monitored by the government and the findings are posted online for public scrutiny. “With sodium reduction, we don’t have that same program,” she said. “There’s no government monitoring of this overall, which is why we as researchers took this on to see how well the food industry is doing, so it can inform some next steps or at least provide a progress report on how industry is doing half-way through.”
IAN TYSON PLAYS THE MEMORIAL CENTRE Canadian country music legend Ian Tyson will be playing Red Deer’s Memorial Centre on Tuesday, making his return to the stage after serious health issues. He will be joined by opening act Jake Peters from Didsbury. Tickets for the 7:30 p.m. show are $62 from Black Knight Inn.
FIND OUT WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING IN OUR EVENT CALENDAR AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM/CALENDAR.
Congratulations to everyone involved! Your efforts make Red Deer proud!
is proud to acknowledge the men and women, boys and girls, involved with Red Deer Minor Hockey!
g n i t a r n b o e s l a e C e se th LEFT; Caitlin Zachow, Brooke Korenchuk, Hannah Kelley, Kayton Hartfield and Ella Gulayets, members of the Red Deer Pee Wee Chiefs, enjoyed the BBQ and speakers at the league windup. ABOVE; Former NHL player Colin Fraser gives a keynote address during the evening. BELOW; The Bantam AAA Chiefs Girls were taking in the festivities at the Pidherney Curling Centre. BELOW LEFT; From the left, Kyle Gibson, Cassidy Holman, Kelsey, Kirkland, Abagael Thiessen Ben Isaac and Matthew Froehlick were awarded $1,000 scholarships from Red Deer Minor Hockey.
ABOVE; Abagael Thiessen received the top defenceman in the Alberta Major Midget Female category from Dallas Gaume. ABOVE RIGHT; Indy Graphics Midget AA Chiefs were acknowledged for their outstanding season. BELOW RIGHT; Chef Francis Flores works at the grill trying to feed a lot of hungry hockey players. Photos by JEFF STOKOE/ADVOCATE STAFF
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MINOR HOCKEY
Monday, May. 2, 2016
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Making sure they have fun RED DEER MINOR HOCKEY GENERAL MANAGER WANTS EVERY PLAYER TO HAVE GREAT EXPERIENCE BY ADVOCATE STAFF Growing up in Innisfail, Dallas Gaume fondly remembers his days playing bantam and midget hockey. Now the Red Deer Minor Hockey general manager, he has worked for the past five years to make sure young players have as much fun as he did. “I really have fond memories of minor hockey,” said Gaume. “When I took this job, one of the first things I said was I want all of our kids to have the experience I had. I thought I had good coaches, good teammates and it was just fun to play hockey and come to the rink.” He said the local organization grew by about 20 kids this year. Many of
the young hockey players and their families filled the Pidherney Curling Centre for a year end barbecue and a chance to listen to Colin Fraser, a former Red Deer Rebel, talk about his experiences in minor hockey. Fraser played four seasons with the Red Deer Rebels and spend time in the NHL with the Chicago Blackhawks, Los Angeles Kings, St. Louis Blues and Edmonton Oilers. But before all that, the 31-yearold, played minor hockey. Born in Sicamous, B.C., he grew up in Surrey B.C., playing with in the Surrey Minor Hockey Association. He also played with the Pacific Vipers, now known as the B.C. Junior Canucks. Gaume lauded the success of Red Deer minor hockey teams and his
League winners and award recipients
Congratulations To All Teams!
group of coaches and volunteers. “I can’t think of a better place to play minor hockey with the group of people we have,” said Gaume. “It’s neat to see the kids develop, during the season and from year-to-year. I watch a lot of hockey and it’s really neat to see the kids develop as players and as people.” The next two years will be a challenge for Red Deer Minor Hockey as they will not have the use of the Red Deer Arena, which is set for demolition this summer. It will be replaced, but it will take two years for the new facility to be built. Gaume said they will make the best of the situation and find solutions to the shortage on available ice. “We like to say we’re in the people
Red Deer Minor Hockey Award Winners Chief Award Winners: Indy Graphics Midget — Damon Loiselle Prairie Bus Lines Midget — Cass Lindseth Midget Sutter Fund Chiefs — Maddison Toppe Bantam Welcan — Dyson Zukiwksy Bantam Ramada — Tye Carriere Bantam Steel Kings — Cameron Loomis-Labrosse Pee Wee Save-On-Foods — Nathan Verrier Pee Wee Sutter Fund — Ella Gulayets Pee Wee Cosmos — Kaeden Briggs Atom Sutter Fund — Anna Boyer
development business,” said Gaume. “Most importantly we’re developing players, but also their life skills. The ability for kids to overcome adversity, commit to something, learn to be a good teammate, learn about respect and discipline. All these things are really important in the growth of a child.” Gaume said one of the most important parts of minor hockey is having kids playing at the level they should be playing. Having players on teams that also match their skill levels. “If they’re playing at a level too high for them, they’re not going to have as many puck touches, the development’s not going to happen,” said Gaume. “It’s not going to be as fun.”
Atom Servus Credit Union — Morgan McCullough Novice MNP — Wyatt Jasper Novice Kirks Tire — Nathan Hemstreet Novice Kindopps — Jaxon Sewards Dynamite Next Shift — Ryan Bettenson Scholarship winners: Kyle Gibson, Matthew Froehlick, Ben Isaac, Abagael Thiessen, Cassidy Hollman and Kelsey Kirkland. League Award Winners: Alberta Major Bantam Hockey League Sportsman Player of the Year — Ronan Seeley Alberta Major Midget Female Hockey League Best Defenceman of the Year — Abagael Thiessen Coach Award of Excellence: Al Sim and Tom Bast.
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820
JJAM Management (1987) Ltd., o/a Tim Horton’s Requires to work at these WHAT’S HAPPENING Red Deer, AB locations: 5111 22 St. CLASSIFICATIONS 37444 HWY 2 S 50-70 37543 HWY 2N 700 3020 22 St. Food Service Supervisor Req’d permanent shift Personals weekend day and evening both full and part time. 10 Vacancies, $13.75 /hr. + ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS 403-347-8650 medical, dental, life and vision benefits. Start ASAP. COCAINE ANONYMOUS Job description 403-396-8298 www.timhortons.com Experience 1 yr. to less Start your career! than 2 yrs. See Help Wanted Apply in person or fax resume to: 403-314-1303
wegot URBANO Cleopatria 1963 - 2016 Miss Cleopatria Berina ‘Pat’ Urbano of Red Deer, Alberta passed away peacefully at the Red Deer Regional Hospital Centre on Monday, April 25, 2016 at the age of 52 years. She will be lovingly remembered by her mother, Lydia Urbano, her four brothers, Alfredo Jr. (Felyn), Frederick (Femia), Robert (Melinda), Froilan (Liza); her three sisters, Angelina (Bernardo) Bautista, Havilland (Benito) Cara and Sally Galilea. She is also survived by her five nieces, three nephews and her one great niece. Pat was predeceased by her father, Alfredo Urbano Sr. and her brother, Genaro Urbano. Prayers will be held at Parkland Funeral Home, 6287 - 67 A Street (Taylor Drive), Red Deer, Alberta on Thursday, May 5, 2016 between 5:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. with The Reverend Father Len Cadieux officiating. Condolences may be sent or viewed at www.parklandfuneralhome.com Arrangements in care of PARKLAND FUNERAL HOME AND CREMATORIUM 6287 - 67 A Street (Taylor Drive), Red Deer. 403.340.4040.
Announcements
Daily
Classifieds 309-3300
COLIN POPE Oct. 19, 1974 - May 2, 2016
CLASSIFICATIONS 700-920
For Colin How can it be one whole long year since you have gone away? To those of us who love you so it feels like yesterday. We miss your brilliant awesome smile the twinkle in your eyes, The hurt we feel within our hearts goes deeper than a mile! Never will a day go by when we won’t think of you. Your memory always will live on in little things we do. Reminders of you are always there everywhere we go. The farm is where the thoughts are strong It’s where your soul lives on. We feel so blessed we had your life, if only for a while. But part of you lives on each day in your daughter’s smile. We hope you feel the love we send, We send it everyday. We hope you are at peace my son, but why did you go away? Always remembered and never forgotten Mom, Dad, Corrie, Joel, Malia, Kai, Laree & Kristen
740
Dental
REG. DENTAL Hygienist Must be flexible with hours. Apply to Healthy Smiles Fax resumes attn: Corinne or Chrissy (403) 347-2133 or email: healthysmiles4life@ hotmail.com Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
770
Janitorial
ARAMARK at (Dow Prentiss Plant) about 20-25 minutes out of Red Deer needs hardworking, reliable, honest person w/drivers license, to work 40/hrs. per week w/some weekends, daytime hrs. $15/hr. Floor skills would be an asset. Fax resume w/ref’s to 403-885-7006 Attn: Val Black You can sell your guitar for a song... or put it in CLASSIFIEDS and we’ll sell it for you!
AUBREY Emmett Michael Sr. 1920 - 1997 19 years have come and gone and we still miss you. Love you Pops! Your loving family.
830
WIRELESS World Solutions at 107-4747 67 ST, RED DEER, AB, requires a F/T, Perm. Assistant Manager-Retail with min. 1-2 yrs of related sales exp., ASAP. Duties: Plan, direct and evaluate the operations, Manage staff and assign duties, Resolve customer complaints etc. Wages $26.50/Hr. Email Resume - retailjobs@ mywirelessworld.ca
Trades
850
BUSY dealership now hiring.
880
Misc. Help
NEW WEST GEOMATICS is seeking a field survey assistant or junior party chief to join our central Alberta team. Applicants must possess a valid driver’s license and preferably have current safety certification. If you are a motivated individual interested in developing a career in the survey industry, please send your resume to careers@ newwestgeomatics.com today. RECYCLE SORTERS F/T, required Immed. in Red Deer & Olds offices. Email resume with a min. of 2 references. to: canpak1212@gmail.com Looking for a place to live? Take a tour through the CLASSIFIEDS
wegot
stuff CLASSIFICATIONS 1500-1990
Children's Items
Pike Wheaton Chevrolet
is currently seeking an exp. licensed automotive technician. GM Dealership exp. would be considered an asset. This position offers a competitive wage with a bonus system. Pls. apply in person with resume to the Service Manager. No phone call pls. Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!
Misc. Help
880
LIKE to camp? Canyon Creek Golf & Camping, 14 km northeast of Rocky, is looking for a mature, responsible Campground Host. Pls. phone 1-403-845-5001 for details.
1580
EXERCISE SAUCER, toys all the way around, pets and smoke free home. $25. 403-346-5423
Electronics
1605
Wii 2 with 5 games, $70; SONY DVD surround system, $50; and VCR and DVD combo player, $30. 403-782-3847
EquipmentHeavy
1630
TRAILERS for sale or rent Job site, office, well site or storage. Skidded or wheeled. Call 347-7721.
Tools
1640
METRIC Socket, plus tool box. $100. 403-343-6044
services CLASSIFICATIONS 1000-1430 To Advertise Your Business or Service Here
Call Classifieds 403-309-3300 classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com
1020
Acupuncture
Traditional Chinese Acupuncture & Therapeutic Massage ~ Acute or chronic pain, stress, surgery problems. 4606 - 48 Ave., Red Deer. Walk-ins. Call or txt 403-350-8883
Contractors
1100
BLACK CAT CONCRETE Garage/Patios/RV pads Sidewalks/Driveways Dean 403-505-2542 BRIDGER CONST. LTD. We do it all! 403-302-8550
CONCRETE???
We’ll do it all...Free est. Call E.J. Construction Jim 403-358-8197
Flooring
1180
NEED FLOORING DONE? Don’t pay the shops more. Over 20 yrs. exp. Call Jon 403-848-0393
Handyman Services
1200
BOOK NOW! For help on your home projects such as bathroom, main floor, and bsmt. renovations. Also painting and flooring. Call James 403-341-0617
Health Care
1210
Dr. Lyla May Yip & Complementary DAMON INTERIORS Alternative Health Care Provider Drywall, tape, texture, Fully licensed & insured. Free Estimates. Call anytime Dave, 403-396-4176
Repair or Renovate
No job too small, full service. Free Estimates Seniors Discount. Call 587-377-0977 R.D. RMD RENOVATIONS Bsmt’s, flooring, decks, etc. Call Roger 403-348-1060
1160
Entertainment
DANCE DJ SERVICES 587-679-8606
Dr. of TCM & Reg. Acup. (house calls available) 403-597-4828
Misc. Services
1290
5* JUNK REMOVAL
Property clean up 505-4777
Painters/ Decorators
1310
MIKE’S Refresh Painting Exterior/Interior, Prompt & Courteous Service 403-302-8027
Roofing
1370
PRECISE ROOFING LTD. 15 Yrs. Exp., Ref’s Avail. WCB covered, fully Licensed & Insured. 403-896-4869 CELEBRATIONS HAPPEN EVERY DAY IN CLASSIFIEDS
Seniors’ Services
1372
HELPING HANDS Home Supports for Seniors. Cooking, cleaning, companionship. At home or facility. 403-346-7777 Buying or Selling your home? Check out Homes for Sale in Classifieds
Yard Care
Firewood
1660
B.C. Birch, Aspen, Spruce/Pine. Delivery avail. PH. Lyle 403-783-2275 FREE TRUCK LOADS OF BLACK POPLAR LOGS. You pick up. Very close to Red Deer. 403-392-8385.
TO ORDER HOME DELIVERY OF THE ADVOCATE CALL OUR CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT 403-314-4300 ADULT or YOUTH CARRIERS NEEDED For delivery of Flyers, Wednesday and Friday ONLY 2 DAYS A WEEK CLEARVIEW RIDGE CLEARVIEW TIMBERSTONE LANCASTER VANIER WOODLEA/ WASKASOO DEER PARK GRANDVIEW EASTVIEW MICHENER MOUNTVIEW ROSEDALE GARDEN HEIGHTS MORRISROE Call Prodie at 403-314-4301
ADULT or YOUTH CARRIERS NEEDED
wegot
REUM The Reum Family would like to thank all our friends who supported us with your calls, cards, meals, well wishes and donations during the recent loss of Carolyn Reum. Without all your kokua, this journey would have been much more difficult. Special thanks to Dr. Miller of Innisfail; the Acute Care Staff at the Innisfail Hospital; the staff at the Tom Baker Cancer Centre in Calgary; and the Chemotherapy Units A, B & C. Carolyn thanks you as do we. Aloha, Charles, Jana, Kale, Leilani & Malia
Sales & Distributors
jobs
Card Of Thanks
In Memoriam
wegotads.ca
wegotstuff
wegotservices
60
PYPER It’s with great sadness to announce that Jayson John Pyper passed away suddenly, April 27, 2016. Jayson is lovingly remembered by his parents, Jack and Lois Pyper; his brother, Ryan Pyper; sisterin-law, Rozanne Pyper; extended family and many loving friends. He was born March 9th, 1981 in Red Deer, Alberta where he lived shortly before moving to Joffre, then resided in the Red Deer area while being employed in the oil field industry. He was full of life, loving, kind, a great brother and son and a friend to many. He had a big heart which he wore proudly on his chest. Jayson was also very smart and talented and could do anything he put his mind to like sports, woodworking, mixed martial arts, cooking, and art. A memorial service will be held in his memory Wednesday, May 4th, 2016, 1:00pm at the Lacombe Memorial Centre. In Lieu of flowers donations may be made out to Klassic Kennels at RR1 Red Deer AB, T4N 5E1. Expressions of sympathy can be made by visiting www.wilsonfuneralchapel.ca WILSON’S FUNERAL CHAPEL of Lacombe and Rimbey are in charge of arrangements. 403-782-3366 or 403-843-3388. “A Caring Family Caring for Families for 40 years.”
B8
Red Deer Advocate
announcements Obituaries
Monday, May 2, 2016
1430
SECOND 2 NONE aerate, dethatch, clean-up, eaves, cut grass. Free estimates. Now booking 403-302-7778 SPRING cleanups, summer mowing. Irish Green Yard Care, experienced family business. 403 341 6620 SPRING LAWN CLEANUP Call Ken 403-304-0678 THE ROTOTILLER GUY Rototilling Services & Yard Prep. 403-597-3957
For delivery of Flyers, Wednesday and Friday ONLY 2 DAYS A WEEK ANDERS BOWER HIGHLAND GREEN INGLEWOOD JOHNSTONE KENTWOOD RIVERSIDE MEADOWS PINES SUNNYBROOK SOUTHBROOKE WEST LAKE WEST PARK Call Tammy at 403-314-4306
CARRIERS NEEDED For CENTRAL ALBERTA LIFE 1 day a week INNISFAIL PENHOLD LACOMBE SYLVAN LAKE OLDS BLACKFALDS PONOKA STETTLER Call Sandra at 403- 314-4303
7119052tfn
TO PLACE AN AD
Earn Extra Money
¯ ROUTES AVAILABLE IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
Red Deer Ponoka
Sylvan Lake Lacombe
call: 403-314-4394 or email:
carriers@reddeeradvocate.com
7119078TFN
For that new computer, a dream vacation or a new car
RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, May 2, 2016 B9
Garden Supplies
1680
2 LAWNMOWERS, tuned up and ready to go. $75 and $95. 403-347-5873 or 403-350-1077 FREE GARDEN SPACE available, in exchange for you planting my Áowers & rhubarb. 403-346-4090
Household Furnishings
1720
BEDSIDE stand, solid wood, 3 drawer, good solid table, 18x20x30. $30. 403-346-5423
4 Plexes/ 6 Plexes
GLENDALE
3 Bdrm. 4-plex, 4 appls., $975. incl. sewer, water & garbage. D.D. $650, Avail. May 1 403-304-5337
ORIOLE PARK
3 bdrm., 1-1/2 bath, $975. rent, s.d. $650, incl water sewer and garbage. Avail. now or May 1st. 403-304-5337 WESTPARK 2 bdrm. 4-plex, 4 appls. Rent $925/mo. d.d. $650. Avail. now or May 1 403-304-5337
WANTED
Antiques, furniture and estates. 342-2514
Stereos TV's, VCRs
1730
200 CHANNEL VHF Pro2045 Scaner. $140. FIRM. 403-346-6539
Misc. for Sale
1760
30 Peacock feathers, $1/ea,, and assorted cookie cans to give away. 403-346-2231 AIR CONDITION, DANBY (new in box) 8000 BTU, with remote, 3 spd. fan. $200. 403-358-5568 CAMPING dishes, Set $35; Air Conditioner, $100. 403-343-6044 COPPER clad aluminum #2, booster cables $40. 403-343-6044 DIE CAST models, cars, trucks, and motorcycles, biker gifts, replica guns, tin signs, framed pictures, clocks, fairies, and dragons. Two stores to serve you better, Man Cave and Gold Eagle, entrance 2, Parkland Mall. GRILL, Charcoal 180 sq. in. of cooking surface, temp. gauge on lid, used twice, like new. Replacement $259. Asking $110. 403-346-2859
3050
3060
Suites
2 BDRM. lrg. suite adult bldg, free laundry, very clean, quiet, Avail. now or MAY 1. $900/mo., S.D. $650. 403-304-5337 2 BDRM. N/S, no pets. $800. rent/d.d. 403-346-1458
Income Property
4100
RARE OPPORTUNITY 2 CLEARVIEW MEADOWS 4 plexes, side by side, $639,000. ea. 403-391-1780
Industrial Property
4120
QUEEN’S BUSINESS PARK New industrial bay, 2000 sq. ft. footprint, $359,000. or for Rent. 403-391-1780
wegot
wheels CLASSIFICATIONS 5000-5300
5030
Cars
CITY VIEW APTS.
2 bdrm in Clean, quiet, newly reno’d adult building. Rent $900 S.D. $700. Avail. immed. Near hospital. No pets. 403-318-3679 LARGE, 1 & 2 BDRM. SUITES. 25+, adults only n/s, no pets 403-346-7111
LIMITED TIME OFFER:
One free year of Telus internet & cable AND one month’s rent FREE on 2 bedrooms! Renovated suites in central location. Cat friendly. leasing@ rentmidwest.com 1(888)482-1711
MORRISROE MANOR Rental incentives avail. 1 & 2 bdrm. adult bldg. only, N/S, No pets. 403-596-2444
NEW Glendale reno’d 1 & 2 bdrm. apartments, rent $750, last month of lease free, immed. occupancy. 403-596-6000
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
2011 TOYOTA Avalon, 110,000 kms. $17,500. fully loaded, A Must See! 403-986-1443
Vans Buses
5070
2001 WINDSTAR, lady driven 184,000 kms. Exc. cond. $3000. 403-598-1906
Motorcycles
5080
1840
WANTED: Small dog (Bijon/Shitzu) cross for elderly couple. Dog found.
Sporting Goods
1860
INVERSION Table, $200. 403-343-6044 Something for Everyone Everyday in Classifieds
Collectors' Items
1870
NOW RENTING SELECT 1 BDRM. APT’S. starting at $795/mo. 2936 50th AVE. Red Deer Newer bldg. secure entry w/onsite manager, 3 appls., incl. heat & hot water, washer/dryer hookup, inÁoor heating, a/c., car plug ins & balconies. Call 403-343-7955
Opposite Hospital 2 bdrm. apt. w/balcony, adults only, no pets heat/water incld. $875. 403-346-5885
PENHOLD 1 bdrm. 4 IRONSTONE China Ewer, appls, inclds. heat & water, has embossed Áowers and no pets $760/mo., avail. ferns. Very Old. June 1. 348-6594 $20. ************* Imari Plates (2), mounted in a tier holder. Rental incentives avail. $15. 1 & 2 bdrm. adult building, ************* N/S, No pets. Emerald “Dream Dove 403-596-2444 Brand” measuring cup, $15. ************** Roommates Emeral Footed Cake Plate, Wanted $20. *************** OVER 200 CHANNELS, Amber Carnival Glass TV SUPPLIED, MUST Candy Dish, $15. LOVE DOGS, MUST BE WORKING M., RENT 403-342-7460 $500., N/S, 587-272-1952
THE NORDIC
3080
Travel Packages
1900
TRAVEL ALBERTA Alberta offers SOMETHING for everyone. Make your travel plans now.
wegot
rentals CLASSIFICATIONS
FOR RENT • 3000-3200 WANTED • 3250-3390
Houses/ Duplexes
3020
3 BDRM., main Ár. no pets, no kids, no drugs, mature, quiet adult, fully employed preferred. $650 rent/dd, 1/2 util. 403-348-0530 after 3
Condos/ Townhouses
3030
AVAIL. May 1, 3 & 4 bdrm. townhouse, 4 appl., hardwood, 2 parking stalls, close to shopping & schools.$975 - $1100 + util. + d.d. 403-506-0054
SEIBEL PROPERTY ONE MONTH FREE RENT
6 locations in Red Deer, well-maintained townhouses, lrg, 3 bdrm, 1/2 1 bath, 4 + 5 appls. Westpark, Kentwood, Highland Green, Riverside Meadows. Rent starting at $1000. SD $500. For more info, phone 403-304-7576 or 403-347-7545 SOUTHWOOD PARK 3110-47TH Avenue, 2 & 3 bdrm. townhouses, generously sized, 1 1/2 baths, fenced yards, full bsmts. 403-347-7473, Sorry no pets. www.greatapartments.ca TOWNHOUSE for RENT in Lacombe, 2 bdrm, 1.5 baths, 2 storey, small yard, $950.00/mo. + util + d.d. Available May 15 403-782-5107
Manufactured Homes
3040
WELL-MAINT. 2 bdrm. mobile home close to Joffre $810 inclds. water, 5 appl. 403-348-6594
4 Plexes/ 6 Plexes
3050
3 BDRM., no pets, $975. mo. 403-343-6609 ACROSS from park, 2 bdrm. 4-plex, 1 1/2 bath, 4 appls. Rent $925/mo. d.d. $650. Avail. now or May 1. 403-304-5337 CLEARVIEW, 4 plex 2 bdrm. + den (bdrm), 1 1/2 baths, $975.mo. n/s, no pets, Avail. May 10 and June 1. 403-391-1780
Rooms For Rent
3090
ROOM TO RENT very large $450. 403-350-4712
Mobile Lot
3190
2008 SUZUKI C109, 1800 CC ALL the bells & whistles!! 44,600 kms.
Excellent Condition Never laid down.
$7600. o.b.o. (403)318-4653
Holiday Trailers
5120
2014 19.6 NOMAD trailer, SUV towable, sleeps 4, Gently used. Asking $14,500. 403-347-5953
Boats & Marine
5160
WatersEdge Marina
Boat Slips Available For Sale or Rent Sylvan Lake, AB 403.318.2442 info@watersedgesylvan.com www.watersedgesylvan.com
CLASSIFIEDS 403-309-3300
PADS $450/mo. Brand new park in Lacombe. Spec Mobiles. 3 Bdrm., 2 bath. As Low as $75,000. Down payment $4000. Call at anytime. 403-588-8820
CALL NOW TO FIND OUT MORE
wegot
PUBLIC NOTICES
homes CLASSIFICATIONS 4000-4190
Acreages
4050
FOUR acres, 10 min. from Red Deer, 1,450 sq. ft. home with 3 car garage, 40’ x 60’ heated shop, exc. water, very well kept yard. 403-357-7635
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MINNEAPOLIS — On stage, Prince was still captivating audiences at recent performances in Australia and California. He hosted a pop-up party at his Paisley Park studio, and there were few outward signs in his final months that anything was wrong. But off stage, something was different. Prince began wanting meals that were easier to digest and was fighting off waves of sore throats and frequent upset stomachs, the musician’s personal chef said. A law enforcement official has told the AP that investigators are looking into whether Prince, who was found dead at his home on April 21, died from an overdose and whether a doctor was prescribing him drugs in the weeks beforehand. The official has been briefed on the investigation and spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. Ray Roberts, who cooked for Prince nearly every day for almost three years, said in an interview that wasn’t the man
Public Notices
6010
WITNES WANTED: MVA
on Mar. 2, 2016 at 8 a.m. on Airport Drive involving an Alberta Gold Taxi and a Chevy Blazer that left the scene. If you have any information related to this collision please call Mitchell Selly at MacIsaac & Company 800-663-6299
Conducted By AB Storage Take notice that miscellaneous goods and chattels belonging to the following person(s) and stored at AB Storage (SOUTH) will be sold due to unpaid charges:
CRYSTAL R. GASKIN ANDRE ZEMAITIS MICHAEL S. DANYLUK MICHAEL CAMPBELL The sale will be on WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 2016 via an online auction thru iBid4Storage.com, http://www.ibid4storage.com. The goods may be viewed commencing on MONDAY, MAY 9, 2016. All bids are for the entire contents of the storage unit. Winning bidder will be contacted via iBid4Storage. com for payment arrangement. 7426686B1,8
Online Auction Conducted By AB Storage Take notice that miscellaneous goods and chattels belonging to the following person(s) and stored at AB Storage (NORTH) will be sold due to unpaid charges:
CORY NICKERSON TINA PRANG BONNIE DUFFIELD
The sale will be on WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 2016 via an online auction thru iBid4Storage.com, http://www.ibid4storage.com. The goods may be viewed commencing on MONDAY, MAY 9, 2016. All bids are for the entire contents of the storage unit. Winning bidder will be contacted via iBid4Storage.com for payment arrangement.
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS A monthly look at what’s scheduled to be added to the catalogues of streaming services Netflix Canada, Shomi and CraveTV:
TOP PICKS
Online Auction
RICHARD FERGUSON ZACK BLAIR RODNEY MEINTZER
Longtime chef says Prince recently fought throat, stomach pains he saw nearly every night, “not even a hint. Not at all.” But Roberts did start noticing changes in Prince’s diet — he was eating less and drinking less water, and looked like he was losing weight. “It felt like he wasn’t himself probably the last month or two,” Roberts said. “I think he was just struggling with being sick a lot.” Prince, who didn’t eat meat, normally loved foods like roasted beets and minestrone soup with a harissa chermoula, an herb sauce from North Africa. In recent months, Roberts said, as Prince would have sore throats or seem like he wasn’t feeling well for “weeks at a time,” he would prefer smoothies and fresh juices to soothe his throat or stomach. Stomach and throat ailments aren’t unusual in a stubbornly cold Minnesota winter, and to the public, there was little to suggest something was amiss. Since Prince’s death, fans who saw him recently have talked about his energy and his mesmerizing performances with just a microphone and a piano. Many who saw his final public appearance at Paisley
Park only days before he died said he may have seemed more tired — one person who was at one of his last shows in Atlanta said his speaking voice was weak at times — but overall he was not changed. “He seemed fine. He looked normal and he had this kind of energetic glow that he always had,” said Lars Larson, a Minneapolis man who often worked at Paisley Park for Prince’s parties. Even in private, Roberts said, Prince would soldier through and work. “It was amazing. I don’t think I ever saw him really looking bad ever. He was always on point,” he said. Roberts and his wife began cooking for Prince in 2013 after an informal tryout with several other chefs, and he made all his meals for the musician in the restaurant-grade kitchen at Paisley Park. Roberts saw Prince nearly every day. He cooked for him every day except Sunday — and sometimes even then. The musician would even bring Roberts and his wife on tour around the country at times to cook for him.
New to streaming services for May
7574518E2,9
Dogs
A mural honoring the late rock star Prince adorns a building in the Uptown area of Minneapolis last Thursday. Prince died last week at his Paisley Park home at the age of 57. An investigation into his death continues.
NETFLIX: “Chelsea,” debuting May 11, marks a new experiment for Netflix: it’s the first time the streaming service has launched a talk show that will feature new episodes weekly. The 30-minute show, hosted by comic Chelsea Handler, will have new episodes available to stream on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. SHOMI: Comedian Louis C.K. seems less and less interested in developing new episodes of his hit series “Louie,” which means the fifth season might be the last. Shomi will get the eight-episode season — which picked up a number of Emmy nominations including one for best comedy series — on May 27. CRAVETV: The HBO series “Olive Kitteridge,” starring Frances McDormand as the titular character, cleaned up at last year’s Emmys taking home eight trophies including the award for best miniseries. The four-episode series hits CraveTV on May 6. Here are the lists of movies and TV shows that are expected in May:
NETFLIX
May 1 “Admiral” “Casanova” “Cool Runnings” “Deja Vu” “Fantastic Four” “Flubber” “I Am Road Comic” “Kevin Hart Presents Keith Robinson: Back Of The Bus Funny” “Kevin Hart Presents Lil Rel: Relevent” “Kevin Hart Presents: Plastic Cup Boyz” “Mistress America” “Mud” “Palm Trees In The Snow” “She’s Beautiful When She’s Angry” “Somm: Into The Bottle” “Terra” “Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers: Runnin’ Down A Dream” “Treasure Planet” “Who’s Driving Doug” May 2 “Planes”
“Tangled” May 4 “The Diary Of A Teenage Girl” May 5 “Marseille” (season 1) May 6 “Ali Wong: Baby Cobra” “Grace And Frankie” (season 2) May 7 “Edge Of Tomorrow” May 8 “The Chosen Ones” May 9 “Mi-5” May 11 “Chelsea” (season 1) “Fast Times At Ridgemont High” “They Look Like People” May 13 “Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation” “Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview” May 15 “The Spectacular Now” May 16 “Labyrinth Of Lies” May 17 “American Dad” (season 10) “Bridge Of Spies” May 18 “A Girl Like Her” May 19 “The Amazing Spider-man 2” May 20 “.horror” “Dixieland” “Lady Dynamite” (season 1) May 21 “The Fosters” (season 2) May 22 “Krampus: The Christmas Devil” “The Ouija Experiment” “The Ouija Experiment 2: Theatre Of Death” May 23 “Electricity” May 24 “Drop Dead Diva” (season 6) “Grandma” May 26 “The Last Man On The Moon” May 27 “Bloodline” — (season 2) “Chef’s Table” — (season 2a) “Mako Mermaids” (season 4) “The Do-over” May 28 “August: Osage County” “Hell On Wheels” — (season 5) May 31 “Scream” — (season 2)
SHOMI
May 1 “Babel” “Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules” “Footloose” (1984) “School of Rock” “The World’s End” May 3 “Jane the Virgin” (season 2, episode 20) May 4
“Fresh Off the Boat” (season 2, episode 21) May 5 “Empire” (season 2, episode 16) May 6 “Epic” “Odd Mom Out” - (season 1) “Peaky Blinders” - (season 2) May 7 “The Originals” - (season 3, episode 20) May 10 “Jane the Virgin” - (season 2, episode 21) May 11 “Fresh Off the Boat” - (season 2, episode 22) May 12 “Empire” - (season 2, episode 17) May 13 “The Missing” - (season 1) “Lost Girl” - (season 6) May 14 “The Originals” - (season 3, episode 21) May 17 “Jane the Virgin” - (season 2, episode 22) May 18 “Fresh Off the Boat” - (season 2, episode 23) May 19 “Empire” - (season 2, episode 18) May 20 “Cedar Rapids” “Looper” May 21 “The Originals” - (season 3, episode 22) May 25 “Fresh Off the Boat” - (season 2, episode 24) May 27 “American Dad” - (season 10) “Louie” (season 5)
CRAVETV
May 6 “Mistresses” — (season 3) “Olive Kitteridge” “The Rolling Stones: Stones In Exile” “Steve Mcqueen: The Mans And Le Mans” May 13 “The Circus: Inside The Greatest Political Show On Earth” — (season 1a) “The Last Ship” — (season 2) “Not Safe With Nikki Glaser” — (season 1a) “Tosh.o” — (season 8a) May 20 “Another Period” — (season 1) “Bessie” “Bitten” — (season 3) “Bon Jovi Live In London” May 27 “Graceland” — (season 3) “More Than This: The Story Of Roxy Music” “The Newsroom” — (seasons 1-3) “Time Travelling Bong”
B10 RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, May 2, 2016 FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
TODAY’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
HI & LOIS
PEANUTS
BLONDIE
HAGAR
BETTY
PICKLES
GARFIELD
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THE ADVOCATE B11
ENTERTAINMENT MONDAY, MAY 2, 2016
No shortage of stories from the North BY THE CANADIAN PRESS It was one of the most successful cultural exports from the North since someone suggested southerners might like those little carvings. Thirty years after amazing and entertaining audiences at Expo 86, Arctic Comics with its mythological heroes, tall tales and meditations on what it means to be Inuit is back. “There’s no shortage of stories up here,” said Nicholas Burns, one of the artists behind the 88-page, full-colour comic book being published this month. The first Arctic Comics began almost as a lark when the Northwest Territories government realized it would need northern material to sell at its pavilion at Vancouver’s world party. “I put in a proposal saying I’ll do up this comic and do up stories of Inuit past, present and future and they thought it was a great idea,” said Burns, who was then living in Rankin Inlet, now part of Nunavut. “I essentially self-published and sent them down and they sold like hotcakes.” The N.W.T. pavilion turned out to be one of the hits of the fair. Eager visitors snapped up 60,000 copies of Arctic Comics. “It was round-the-block lineups all the time.” The plan was to do it again for Expo 92 in Seville, Spain. But the team missed the publication window and Arctic Comics languished. Until now.
With the same past, present and future focus as the original, the new Arctic Comics features a trip with a legendary Inuit Ulysses in Kiviuq versus Big Bee. The fantastical adventure of the long-ago traveller, drawn from Inuit myth, was written by the late Jose Kusugakm, one of the founders of Nunavut, and illustrated by Germaine Arnaktauyok, who drew the drum dancer on the back of a special-edition toonie. There’s a romp entitled The Great Slo-Pitch Massacre and a science-fiction yarn called Blizzard House — aficionados will recognize artist George Freeman who drew Captain Canuck. Dauntless RCMP Const. Lucy Puqittuq and her loyal dog Vincent make an appearance and the theme of southerners inventing their own version of the North comes in for some teasing in Film Nord. And then there’s Michael Kusugak’s On Waiting, a setting of a poem about a boy lying on a beach waiting for a seal. Almost nothing happens — except for everything. The boy dreams, watches the tide and thinks of his dead grandfather playing walrus-head soccer with other spirits among the aurora’s dancing lights. “There have been so many misconceptions about Inuit for a long, long time, ever since people started writing about us, that we just lie around and wait until we’re hungry again and go get another (seal),” said Kusugak. “A simple, hand-to-mouth existence. “It’s not true. It’s never been true. “I thought it was time we started
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Thirty years after amazing and entertaining audiences at Expo 86, ‘Arctic Comics’ with its mythological heroes, tall tales and meditations on what it means to be Inuit is back. producing things that tell you what it really feels like to be there.” Burns agrees that the biggest audience for Arctic Comics is likely to be in the south. “I thought European audiences in particular — they romanticize First Nations communities and peoples and culture. But most people in southern Canada have very little knowledge or understanding of the North either.”
Arctic Comics will be first published in both French and English. Burns said he looked for a publisher that could produce an Inuktitut version, but the sales were unlikely to justify the expense. But he added an Inuktitut version will follow, funded by revenue from the other editions. “I’m going to be fascinated by the responses we get from the North.”
Jungle Book rules box office again as Civil War looms NEW YORK — Disney’s The Jungle Book trounced a handful of underperforming new releases to rule the box office for a third consecutive week, while next week’s certain champ, Captain America: Civil War, began setting records overseas. Jon Favreau’s live-action Rudyard Kipling adaptation earned $42.4 million in its third week at North American theatres, according to studio estimates Sunday. One of the year’s biggest hits, The Jungle Book has now totalled $684.8 million globally. The weekend’s debuts withered under the stampede of The Jungle Book. Keegen-Michael Key and Jordan Peele’s feline action-comedy Keanu opened with a modest $9.4 million. That was a whisker behind The Huntsman: Winter’s War, which limped its way to $9.4 million in its second disappointing week of release. Warner Bros.’ R-rated Keanu, from the former Comedy Central stars of Key and Peele, cost only about $15 million to make. In it, they play Los Angeles cousins who are led into a criminal underworld in their search for a lost cat. Garry Marshall’s latest holiday-themed romantic comedy, Mother’s Day, bowed with a weak $8.3 million despite the presence of stars Jennifer Aniston and Julia Roberts. Though Marshall’s Valentine’s Day opened with $56.2 million in 2010, audiences have since been less enthusiastic for his poorly reviewed Hallmark card ensembles. Mother’s Day, released by Open Road, even trails the $13 million opening of 2011’s New Year’s Eve. The video-game adaption Ratchet & Clank, from
Focus Features, made even less of a dent with an estimated $4.8 million. With Captain America: Civil War opening next weekend in North America, the box office was largely in a holding pattern, waiting for Marvel to effectively launch the summer movie season. Civil War gave a preview of its might in 37 international territories over the weekend, taking in an estimated $200.2 million. That includes record openings in Mexico, Brazil and the Philippines for the film some expect to be the year’s biggest hit. Once it lands, Disney will have accounted for three of the top five movies of the year, along with The Jungle Book and Zootopia. Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theatres, according to comScore. Where available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.
War, $9.4 million. 3. Keanu, $9.4 million. 4. Mother’s Day, $8.3 million ($2.1 million international). 5. Barber Shop: The Next Cut, $6.1 million. 6. Zootopia, $5 million ($8.3 million international).
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THE ADVOCATE B12
ADVICE MONDAY, MAY 2, 2016
Uncle concerned about teen seeking sexual encounter MITCHELL AND SUGAR ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Dear Annie: I am a 38-year-old single man with a serious problem involving my 13-year-old nephew, “Hayden.” Hayden’s father died when he was 3, and I immediately stepped in as a surrogate parent. We share a close, affectionate relationship, and he has spent the night at my house on numerous occasions. There was never a problem until a month ago. During a sleepover, I awoke to find Hayden had crawled into my bed and was attempting to perform a sex act on me. I immediately stopped him, and we spent the rest of the evening discussing what happened. He confessed
he was attracted to men and had been obsessed with having an intimate homosexual encounter since he was 11 years old. He thought I would be receptive to it because I always give him a hug and kiss when I see him. I have been doing this since he was a toddler, and there was never anything remotely sexual about it. Hayden also admitted he has had a few sexual encounters with a 16-yearold male neighbor. I was stunned by all this. I calmly explained to Hayden that a sexual relationship between us was simply not possible, and that it was dangerous to be looking for that with any adult. He seemed genuinely sorry and begged me not to tell his mother. I agreed, but now regret making that promise. I worry he might seek an encounter with someone who may not have his best interests in mind. Do I break my promise and tell my sister, thereby losing his trust? Or do I handle this myself, and if so, how? —
Louisville Uncle Dear Uncle: You have handled this well so far. However, at some point you will need to break that promise, so first arm yourself with useful information. Contact PFLAG (pflag.org) and encourage Hayden to do the same. Like any teenager, he should understand the emotional and physical risks of becoming sexually active, and he needs guidance. Dear Annie: My daughter received an iTunes gift card from one of her friends. At the birthday party, she and this friend attempted to redeem the card online, but it did not activate. The friend told her mother the card did not work. Two days later, we attempted to exchange the card at the store where it was purchased, but we needed a receipt. I called the friend’s mother, but she told me she thought she had thrown it out, but she’d check and let me know. Anyway, this particular mother has
not contacted me, apologized or tried to exchange the purchase herself. If it were me, I would have taken the card back and gotten another. Am I out of line? What would be the proper action if this happens again? — Kind of Annoyed in Florida Dear Annoyed: Say nothing. Is it possible this girl gave your daughter a card that had already been used? That would explain a lot, including Mom’s reaction. Yes, of course she should have apologized and exchanged the card herself. However, it was a gift, which means even if Mom was ill-mannered and cheap, you’re out of luck. 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 find Annie on Facebook at Facebook. com/AskAnnies.
American supermodel to host MMVAs GIGI HADID TAKES IHEARTRADIO CANADA STAGE
TORONTO — Gigi Hadid is heading from the runway to centre stage as host of the IHeartRadio Canada MuchMusic Video Awards. The American supermodel made her MMVA debut as a presenter last year. Hadid will be hosting this year’s show alongside Much personalities Liz Trinnear and Tyrone Edwards. The 21-year-old has made a splash
JOANNE MADELINE MOORE HOROSCOPES Monday, May 2 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: Dwayne Johnston, 44; David Beckham, 41; Lily Allen, 31 THOUGHT OF THE DAY: The Moon’s in Pisces which favours creative, spiritual and humanitarian pursuits. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: You love fixing other people’s problems but make sure they require your assistance before you get involved. August is a marvellous month for love and romance. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Frustration levels are high today Rams, as Mars continues reversing through your adventure zone. So try to do some exercise — preferably outdoors — to expend frustrated energy is positive ways. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Your creative Taurean qualities are boosted at the moment, as Venus and the Sun sparkle through your sign. So make sure you tap into your inner confidence and make positive things happen! GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The stars are good for professional projects, volunteer work and creative thinking, but nervous energy is also high today Twins. So, if you don’t pace yourself, then youíll be exhausted by bedtime. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Have you been a cranky Crab? And have you been
negative about a business partnership or close relationship? Todayís planets urge you to see a current problem in a more positive light. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Lions can be self-absorbed souls but helping others is the way you’ll get the most out of the day. The Pisces Moon encourages you to focus less on yourself and more on others — for a change! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): There may be some tension between keeping work colleagues happy and fulfilling all of your romantic or family responsibilities. Single Virgos — look for a lover who is creative and romantic. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You have a knack for making others feel comfortable, with your convivial conversation and pleasant repartee. But be extra careful when posting comments on social media today. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): The Piscean Moon is travelling through your creativity/friendship zone, so projects and people will be hard to pin down. The more open and flexible you are, the better the day will be. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You’re in the mood to socialize but take care when communicating with others today. You’re keen to help, but make sure your well-meant generosity doesn’t end up as just empty promises. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Don’t let negative talk get you down. Your motto for today is from birthday great, David Beckham, “I know that if I set my mind to do something, even if people say I can’t do it, I will achieve it.” AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Are you worried about money? It’s time to investigate clever ways to boost your cash flow. Use
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Gigi Hadid poses on the red carpet last year during the 2015 MuchMusic Video Awards. Hadid will be hosting this year’s IHeartRadio Canada MuchMusic Video Awards show alongside Much personalities Liz Trinnear and Tyrone Edwards. your imagination to come up with some super creative ideas, and a family member may be able to help. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You’re keen to help a relative or friend in need but keep it real and don’t promise more than you can ac-
tually deliver. A chat with a respected teacher or mentor puts a current problem in perspective. Joanne Madeline Moore is an internationally syndicated astrologer and columnist. Her column appears daily in the Advocate.
7547580D7-G25
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
on the international fashion scene, walking the runways for leading labels including Marc Jacobs, Jean Paul Gaultier and Chanel, and gracing the covers of several magazines, including Vogue. Hadid also racked up a significant following on social media with more than 16 million followers on Instagram. Brampton, Ont., pop sensation Alessia Cara, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis and Nick Jonas are slated to perform on this year’s telecast on June 19.
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