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Running on eco-friendly BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF Sarah and Chauncey Carter’s canola-powered school bus that they converted into a home on wheels has eco-friendly and economical written all over it. Actually, what it does say is — The Wandering Bus — in big blue letters above the front windshield. But it runs primarily on canola oil donated by mom and pop restaurants and shops they find on their travels. Chauncey said canola oil doesn’t add to the greenhouse effect and their bus gets 27 miles to the gallon compared to 18 miles on diesel. “There’s a lot of places the oil is not recycled. It’s just thrown out. That’s when we put it to a better use,” said Chauncey, 28, while visiting friends in Lacombe on Friday. “(Shop owners) are eager to get rid of it so we’re doing them a favor and they’re doing us a favour at the same time,” said Sarah, 23. The couple, based in Whistler, B.C., passed through Central Alberta late last week during their latest cross-country adventure. Three years ago they joined the skoolie movement by converting a school bus into a recreational vehicle. Sarah said there are about 2,000 skoolies. The couple gutted their bus three years ago and put in a kitchen, bathroom, shower, work space with a desk, a bedroom with a queen-sized bed, and a deck on the roof. They also added solar panels for energy. Sarah said they’ve spent about $40,000 to convert the bus and have travelled the continent. “It’s nice to build your own home and then be able to move it. It’s a cheap form of living.” Their 2001 school bus was decommissioned just because of a faulty light, she said. “There are graveyards of buses.”
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Sarah and Chauncey Carter along with their dog Money are travelling across Canada in their renovated school bus. The solar-powered vehicle runs on canola oil or diesel and will soon gather rain water. And buses are almost indestructible because they are made of steel, Chauncey said. “They carry the nation’s most pre-
cious cargo. School buses are the most over-engineered vehicles for civilians.” For more information visit The
Wandering Bus on Facebook or Instagram. szielinski@reddeeradvocate.com
Putting an end to the food fight with children BY SUSAN ZIELINSKI ADVOCATE STAFF Alberta Health Services wants to help put an end to the food fight at the table when young children refuse to eat what’s on their plate. The free workshop Goodbye Mealtime Struggles, for parents with children from six months to five years old, will run on Thursday, from 9:15 to 11:15 a.m., at Family Services of Central Alberta, 5409 Gaetz Ave. Led by a registered dietitian and a pediatric occupational therapist, the focus is on developing the eating skills of children, how to introduce new foods, and more. Shelley Cooper, registered dietitian with nutrition services, population and public health, at Alberta Health Services, Central Zone, said parents have to be ready for children to reject some of the food they are offered. “It sometimes takes numerous exposures, like 15 exposures to a food, before they are comfortable eating that food and will actually say they like the food,” Cooper said. She said it’s definitely stressful when children won’t eat and that’s why
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Alberta Health Services registered dietitian Shelley Cooper, right, discusses appropriate meal sizes for children and adults with Jackie Tomalty, a parent participant in the Good Bye Mealtime Struggles program. parents may unfortunately resort to bribing or forcing which triggers the flight or flight stress response in children. Blood flow is redirected away from the stomach so their interest in RED DEER WEATHER
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food disappears. Unlike children, adults can communicate what they like and what they don’t like, while children may resort to throwing food, fussing or crying, she
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said. “With kids all foods are new. We kind of forget and it’s hard to be patient all the time.” But children aren’t alone when it comes to being cautious about food. Even as experience eaters, adults may approach an unfamiliar meal or recipe or food carefully, she said. “We may take a little bit. Or we may ask a friend if they’ve tried it. We may smell the food.” Cooper said the workshop is about letting parents know they are not alone in their struggles and that there are ways to work with their children for better mealtimes. It’s also helpful for parents who aren’t experiencing problems and want to learn how to set up good eating habits for their children. Mealtime tips include always offering some familiar foods alongside unfamiliar foods, establishing three meals and two snacks per day to avoid grazing and to ensure an appetite at meals, and getting children involved in grocery shopping or cooking. Hiding foods in recipes should be avoided.
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Monday, June 20, 2016
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Notley target meant for a laugh BY THE CANADIAN PRESS BROOKS, Alta. — An organizer of an Alberta golf tournament where a cutout of Premier Rachel Notley was placed on the course as a target says it was meant to be humorous and was never intended to promote violence. Ernest Bothi, president of the Big Country Oilmen’s Association, says it was his idea to use the cutout, which was placed on the 11th hole of the Brooks Golf Club during the association’s annual golf tournament on Friday. The cutout drew criticism Saturday from an Alberta NDP member of the legislature, who says it was inappropriate to put a woman’s face on a target, especially following the murder of British MP Jo Cox. Bothi says people in the local energy industry are frustrated with Notley’s carbon tax and the cutout was meant as a laugh. He also says he was unaware of Cox’s gender, and thought the MP was a man when news reports Friday said the victim’s name was Jo. Bothi says he doubts there would have been an uproar if former prime minister Stephen Harper’s face was on a target. “There’s a lot of people here down in Brooks that, for want of a better term, needed a bit of a lift,” Bothi said in an interview on Saturday. He said no one hit the target. “Everybody had a good laugh and that’s all it was. It was good-hearted laughter. Nobody’s going to hop into their vehicles and head off to Edmonton and do something horrible,” he added. “There was even women on the course who got a good chuckle out of it.” Marie Renaud, a New Democrat who represents St. Albert in the legislature, called the Notley target upsetting. Renaud returned a call from the premier’s office seeking comment on it. “Of course, you hear the normal excuse, ‘It’s a
Photo by ADVOCATE NEWS SERVICES
Twitter user @kenfleury came under fire for posting this picture online Saturday morning. joke.’ That’s not a joke,” she said, reacting to earlier media reports on the golf tournament. Renaud said after Cox was murdered on Thursday, she decided to share what she called “ugly posts and messages” on social media that she’s received in the past year. She said using the premier’s face as a target promotes a violent message. “A lot of times it’s just faceless, nameless accounts online, but it’s disgusting and it’s horrific, the violence that people talk about,” Renaud said.
Solar power park lands in Star-Trek-themed Vulcan
Winning ticket sold in B.C. for Saturday night’s $12.8 million Lotto 649 jackpot BY THE CANADIAN PRESS TORONTO — A single winning ticket was sold in British Columbia for the $12.8 million jackpot in Saturday night’s Lotto 649 draw. The guaranteed $1 million dollar prize was claimed by a ticket purchased in Quebec. The jackpot for the next Lotto 649 draw on June 22 will be an estimated $5 million.
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS VULCAN, Alta. — The “next generation” in a Star-Trek-obsessed southern Alberta community involves a solar park and art display. The latest attraction in Vulcan, a town of about 2,000 that shares a name with Mr. Spock’s home planet, is getting some attention for boldly going into a new era of power production. And, since planet Vulcan was forged in flames, perhaps it’s only fitting that the town’s new power project harnesses energy from the fireball that is our sun. The solar park, which cost about $680,000 to build, includes solar panels both stand alone and as part of stylized grain elevators, a green living space and an art exhibit that lights up at night. The community believes the park is the first of its kind in Canada. That being said, the town’s mayor acknowledges it only generates enough electricity for two homes — certainly not enough to power up any spaceships — so it really qualifies more as a tourist attraction than as a way to light up the community. “We are boldly going where no man has gone before,” Mayor Tom Grant said. “It’s like anything in life — one person’s junk is another person’s treasure and one person’s art is another person’s solar energy. I think we just have to look outside the box and work with it.” For decades there was little to note about Vulcan, named after the Roman god of fire, other than golden fields of grain, a smattering of cows and grain elevators. But in the 1990s, local tourism officials realized they could make something of their town sharing a
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FOOD: Mistrust “We don’t want to set up any mistrust. We want to set up that positive feeding relationship. Focus more on talking about the foods and experiencing the foods together.” Providing healthy foods is also important, she said. “Their tummies are a lot smaller and we want to make sure that the food that is offered to them is nutrient dense so that their tummies are filled up on nutrient-dense foods.” She said establishing a relaxed, pleasant atmosphere at meals that is focused on the family will go a long way to reducing conflicts. “As a parent it’s important for us to learn our role is to offer food, healthy foods in regular intervals, and it’s up to the child to decide whether they’re going to eat that food and how much they are going to eat.” To register for Goodbye Mealtime Struggles call 403-309-8222 or online at www.fsca.ca. Free child care is provided. Another workshop will also run Aug. 25. szielinski@reddeeradvocate.com
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“I don’t think it’s OK in this day and age. When you know better, you do better, and this isn’t any better.” Bothi said he would never advocate harm to Notley or any politician. “I’m sure she’s a wonderful person to sit and drink coffee with, but I just wish she’d have a change of heart on what she’s doing, especially with this carbon tax,” he said. “Our industry is being beaten up bad.”
name with Spock’s birth place. In 1995, Vulcan unveiled its own Starship FX61995-A to welcome visitors. Its plaque includes greetings written in English, Vulcan and Klingon. Another sign welcomes visitors to Vulcan with the “Live Long and Prosper” motto. Three years later, the space-themed Vulcan Tourism Trek Station was opened. The community also holds an annual Vul-con Convention and the Spock Days Rodeo. Leonard Nimoy, who played the Spock character in the original series, in spinoffs and in movies, visited Vulcan in 2010 and was greeted with much fanfare and adoration. “I think there’s always the naysayers in anything that anybody does,” Grant said about the solar park. “I’m sure some people don’t think it’s the best way to go. “But as they buy into the concept, see what it produces and what it can do for our community, I think the majority will be on side. “Hey! This is the future.” Grant, who has lived in Vulcan his entire life, said the Star Trek influence and the town’s science-related endeavours have been embraced by most residents. He said it has also put Vulcan on the map. “There are people who still think it’s as hokey as can be, but I was in Boston and I had a coat on with a symbol from our tourism,” Grant said. A woman asked where he got the jacket and he told her Vulcan. “She said, ‘Not Vulcan, Alberta?’ “We have to look at these things as a positive no matter what … and every small town community is trying to survive. We all need that niche in our communities and this is ours.”
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Monday, June 20, 2016
BY THE CANADIAN PRESS Kent Peterson would forgive anyone who might think he’s got nothing to worry about when it comes to his retirement — or, for that matter, what happens to the Canada Pension Plan. After all, the 27-year-old has a unionized, full-time job with the Saskatchewan Federation of Labour. Most folks would likely assume he has a robust workplace pension plan to help him save for his golden years. Except he doesn’t. “I’m relying solely on the CPP,” Peterson admitted in an interview. “I’ve envisioned my retirement, and it’s not happy and rosy, to be honest with you.” Peterson will be watching the outcome of meetings Sunday night and Monday as the country’s finance ministers try to hammer out a preliminary agreement on an expanded Canada Pension Plan — one that’s likely to include higher benefits and an increase in the premiums that come off the paycheques of workers. One central issue: whether to impose an across-the-board change on all workers and employers, or to more selectively target those Canadian workers who are the least likely to save. Federal research has suggested the latter group tends to be under the age of 30, earns between $55,000 and $75,000 (although some estimates are higher), and either doesn’t save enough or lacks access to a workplace pension plan. The federal and provincial governments are looking at a possible increase in the $55,000 cap on annual maximum pensionable earnings, which would result in both higher premiums and increased pension benefits. Don Drummond, a professor of policy studies at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ont., said he believes the current cap is too low. Quebec and Ontario, which together hold the most political heft in the negotiations, walked into talks looking for a targeted approach. B.C., too, wants changes to CPP that would help middle-income earners who don’t save enough. “They either don’t save as most Canadians have … or they really can’t afford to save enough to pay the difference in terms of their retirement in-
come,” said Susan Eng, counsel to the National Pensioners Federation. As a young member of the workforce, Peterson’s finances don’t give him a lot of leeway to save, he said. Nor do his expenses: student debt of more than $50,000 — the legacy of undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Saskatchewan — as well as housing, food, utilities and transportation expenses. “I’m sorry, but there’s no skimping and saving I can do per month that would equal a secure retirement,” he said. “It just isn’t there.” Public opinion research work conducted by the federal Finance Department last year suggests a great many people in their 30s and 40s don’t expect the Canada Pension Plan to be of much help in their retirement. Other research suggests about twothirds of Canadians support expanding CPP, with a majority of those respondents saying they would support a doubling of benefits and premiums, said Frank Graves, president of EKOS Research Associates. Driving that feeling among Canadians is a high sense of insecurity around the medium- and long-term economic outlook, Graves said. “There is a pretty broad public mandate” to expand CPP, he said. “I don’t think it’s particularly dangerous for governments go down this path. In fact, there’s probably more political hazard to leave it alone than to do something.” Then comes the question of when to make it all happen. Saskatchewan has said the economy in parts of the country are too fragile right now for an increase in premiums, which critics call a payroll tax. B.C., another worker-rich province that also holds a fair bit of sway in the talks, says a modest expansion of the pension plan should happen “when economic conditions permit.” Ontario, however, wants a deal now. The federal Conservatives have questioned the rush to complete a deal by the end of the year, saying the Liberal government hasn’t proven its case for an across-the-board expansion of the program. Behind the scenes, proponents and opponents of an expanded CPP expect some kind of deal to be reached on Monday, but remain unsure about the final details.
Five things to know about the Canada Pension Plan and talks to expand it BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — Finance Minister Bill Morneau meets his provincial and territorial counterparts in Vancouver on Monday and one of the key agenda items is going to be the federal Liberals’ wish to expand the Canada Pension Plan. Here are five things to know about the CPP and the politics around it. ● The system is designed so that each generation of workers pays for its own retirement. That makes it different from two other income replacement programs for seniors and retirees: old age security (OAS) and the guaranteed income supplement (GIS). Those measures are covered through general tax revenues, meaning that workers today pay taxes to raise the incomes of poorer seniors. Any decisions on the future of the CPP would have a greater effect on younger workers than older workers. Will they pay attention? ● CPP premiums have only been raised once in the last 20 years. In 1997, finance ministers agreed to a phased-in increase in premiums to ensure one generation of workers wasn’t paying for another generation’s retirement. The argument today is that the CPP should pay more in benefits and help those who aren’t saving enough for retirement. The argument against raising premiums is that it would hit workers’ wallets at a time when governments keep saying the economy is fragile. ● Expanding the CPP has come down to one of two scenarios. One would be an across-the-board change that would mean higher benefits and premiums for all workers the other would target those segments of the population who aren’t saving enough for retirement. Those who aren’t sav-
Two charged after violent incident near Montreal music festival MONTREAL — Two men were charged on Saturday in connection with a violent scene that broke out near an outdoor music festival in Montreal. Police said dozens of people began throwing bricks, rocks and traffic cones at buildings in the city’s entertainment district at around 11:30 p.m. Friday. Six Montreal police officers were slightly injured and about 20 downtown buildings were vandalized. Montreal police spokesman JeanPierre Brabant said two men were arrested and charged in connection with the incident. A 25-year-old man was charged with armed assault on a po-
ing enough are the same people the federal Liberals want to help financially: Middle income earners. Research suggest those earning between $55,000 and $75,000 — some studies put the upper limit above $100,000 — are not saving enough for retirement, or don’t have an adequate workplace pension. One study from February 2015 suggested 17 per cent of households were not saving enough for retirement. ● Not every province has to have the CPP. Quebec has its own version. Saskatchewan has its own pension plan, but the payments are voluntary, acting more like a RRSP. Ontario’s proposed pension plan will be mandatory, unlike Saskatchewan’s, but it is aimed at workers without a private pension, meaning it isn’t universal like the QPP. Could other provinces follow suit in the absence of a deal on CPP? And would the federal government help them along? If the answer to both is yes, it could let everyone claim a political win and move off the political hot seat for now. ● Changing parts of CPP is more difficult than changing the Constitution. Like the constitutional amending formula, seven out of 10 provinces have to agree to any changes. But a constitutional amendment requires that those seven represent at least half the country’s population. The CPP bar is set at two-thirds of the population. Saskatchewan has already signalled it isn’t interested in a rate increase, but its population is so small — about three per cent of the total — that the federal government won’t worry if they are offside. Ontario is different. It has more than a third of the population, giving it an unofficial veto. The federal government needs Ontario’s help on changes, giving it a strong political voice in talks. lice officer and a 24-year-old man faces one count of obstructing police. Both were released Saturday afternoon on a promise to appear in court. Brabant said police are analyzing video from the scene to try to identify more of the people involved. Anti-riot police were called in to handle the incident, which took place downtown outside the popular FrancoFolies festival. Several businesses, parked vehicles and Montreal police headquarters had their windows smashed. Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre condemned the incident on Saturday, calling it “deplorable.” “Montreal is the capital of living together,” he said. “It’s a safe area. There’s no need to break anything.” The festival’s president said he didn’t believe security needed to be increased for the final concerts set to take place Saturday night.
RUNNING FOR BEER
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Runners head out onto the river trails in Red Deer on Saturday as part of the inaugural Troubled Monk Run. The 5K and 10K race drew 276 participants in the brewery’s running and beer event. Local live music and beer gardens greeted the runners at the finish. All proceeds raised during the run will go to the Red Deer Watershed Alliance because as the brewery’s website says, “without great water, we wouldn’t be able to make great beer.”
Planes wait in Chile before flying to Antarctica BY THE CANADIAN PRESS CALGARY — Two Canadian planes that are on their way to Antarctica on a medical mission are waiting on the southern tip of South America for favourable weather to complete their journey. The U.S. National Science Foundation says in a Facebook update that was posted Sunday afternoon that the aircraft are on the ground in Punta Arenas, Chile, and will carry on to the British Antarctic Survey station at Rothera when the weather allows. The two Twin Otter planes from Calgary-based Kenn w Air left Calgary on Tuesday. One will stay at the British station for search and rescue purposes, while the other will travel 2,400 kilometres further to the Amundsen-Scott Re-
search station at the South Pole. The foundation says a seasonal employee with Lockheed Martin at the Amundsen-Scott station requires hospitalization and must be evacuated. It’s mid-winter in Antarctica and the foundation says flights in and out of the station are usually not planned between February and October due to the extreme cold and darkness. The foundation says the Twin Otter aircraft that Kenn Borek Air flies are able to operate in extremely low temperatures and are able to land on skis. As there is no tarmac runway at the South Pole, it says the aircraft must land in total darkness on compacted snow. Kenn Borek provides contractual logistical support to the Antarctic Program, according to the foundation, and conducted similar evacuations in 2001 and 2003.
Ask The Dentist! by Dr. Michael Dolynchuk, DDS
Teeth for Tools Dear Dr. D: My son had some buddies in to watch the game on our big screen. We do talk and he makes sense most of the time. When I brought the boys in some snacks, I was horrified to see my son opening a beer bottle with his teeth! His friends all laughed. What's going to happen to his teeth if he keeps this up?
A: Easy! He'll probably break his tooth off – and it's most likely a front and central tooth. Using teeth for a bottle opener is pretty unusual but not unheard of. It's predictable, and age and gender specific (mostly males between 18 and 24). Dentists do extensive and expensive restorations on a tooth for the exact same reason. There are plenty of similar but not identical uses of teeth for tools that also cause damage. When I see gentlemen with multiple chipped teeth or women with the same – I've usually just met a fisherman or a seamstress. We've seen teeth used to tear open a bag of chips, rip price tags off clothing, open a bottle of nail polish, pull out a watch stem, and 'break' Scotch tape or packing tape. All can create unnecessary problems. Call them 'bad habits'. They will cause a tooth to chip or fracture. There are others. How about crunching down on ice cubes, for example? The brittleness as well as the cold temperature of the ice can cause a tooth to fracture. It is the tiny cracks in the enamel which can cause more significant dental issues over the long run that is the concern. Crushed ice is more kind to your teeth. Partially popped popcorn kernels (#1 cause of fractured teeth), pits of plums, apricots, and peaches are also problematic. Speaking of other problematic areas – as we age the choice of your toothbrush becomes more important. People used to believe that a firm, stiff toothbrush was best. This is not so for older adults, because when gums recede and roots are exposed, a hard toothbrush is more likely to cause sensitivity issues. Make sure you ask your dentist or hygienist for his/her opinion on the best brush for your specific mouth. If you use an electric brush, that doesn't get you off the hook. You still want to brush at least twice daily (pay attention to some of my other articles – twice may NOT be enough), and replace the head on those units regularly (at least once every 2 months). Change a normal toothbrush monthly. The advantage of the electric brush is that as we age, our mobility decreases. If you care for an aging parent pay particular attention to how they brush. Professional guidance may be in order. Common sense prevails - procedures and care must also!
Alpen Dental 4 - 5025 Parkwood Road, Blackfalds, AB 1-800-TOOTHACHE (1-800-866-8422) www.AlpenDental.com Services are provided by General Dentists
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Finance ministers to talk changes to CPP
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COMMENT
THE ADVOCATE Monday, June 20, 2016
Trying to avoid Cold War sequel BY THOMAS WALKOM SPECIAL TO THE ADVOCATE
O
ttawa is under pressure from Washington to take command of one of four new NATO battle groups being set up in Poland and the Baltic states to face off against Russia. Each is to consist of between 800 and 1,000 troops. That’s not enough to stop Russia should it choose to invade its neighbours. But the theory is that the presence of even a small number of North American and Western European troops in these countries would, by acting as a kind of tripwire, deter Moscow. Germany, the United States and Britain have already announced publicly that they will command three of the four battle groups. The British-led force will include about 500 British troops, plus some from Denmark and France. The U.S. says most of the battle group it commands will be American. Technically, Canada has not yet made up its mind. A government spokesperson told Canadian Press that Ottawa is “actively considering
options.” But the news coming out of the NATO defence ministers’ meeting Tuesday in Brussels suggests Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government will find it hard to say no. Eastern European members of NATO — particularly Poland and the Baltic states of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia — are spooked by Russia’s annexation of Ukrainian Crimea. They want to be sure that NATO will come to their aid if they are attacked. Putting North American and Western European soldiers on the front line is meant to accomplish that. “We don’t want a new Cold War,” NATO secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg told reporters in Brussels. But that’s exactly what is happening. Meanwhile, back in Canada, the Trudeau government is simultaneously trying to forge a friendlier relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s regime. Foreign Affairs Minister Stéphane Dion is the key figure here. In March, he noted that former prime minister Stephen Harper’s strategy of trying to isolate Russia by severing ties hasn’t worked. Last month, Dion rejected the idea
of passing a Canadian version of America’s so-called Magnitsky Act, designed to freeze the assets and limit travel of Russian human rights violators. He said then that such a law, named after a Russian critic of the Putin regime who died in prison after being beaten, was unnecessary and would only antagonize the current Russian government. Dion has run into a buzzsaw of criticism for this, even from within his own party. Former justice minister Irwin Cotler has called for a Magnitsky Act as has former interim Liberal leader Bob Rae. At least two sitting Liberal MPs also support a law that would crack down more severely on Russian human-rights violators. Added to this are the domestic politics within Canada. Many Canadians whose families came from Eastern Europe are deeply suspicious of Russia. As former prime minister Stephen Harper found, the idea of standing tough against Putin is not unpopular in this country. Up to now, the Liberal government has managed to juggle its conflicting approaches to Russia without irritating too many. On the one hand, it con-
tinues to oppose Russia’s annexation of Crimea. On the other, it doesn’t let that annexation interfere with its attempts to deal practically with the Putin regime in other areas — ranging from Arctic co-operation to the war in Syria. At the same time, it has continued to participate in NATO exercises designed to deter Russia — including the deployment of 200 Canadian military advisers to Ukraine. On Wednesday, Trudeau and the prime minister of Romania discussed a plan to base a multinational NATO brigade in that former Soviet satellite. But will commanding a battle group along the Russian border be viewed by Ottawa as a step too far? Clearly, there is some resistance within government to the idea. That’s why Canada, unlike Germany, Britain and the U.S., didn’t sign on publicly this week. Will that resistance hold? Can the Liberal government resist the pressure from Washington and some of its own voters to take a harder line against Moscow in this new Cold War? I’m not sure it can. Thomas Walkom’s is a national affairs writer syndicated by Torstar.
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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.
Food service industry’s disconcerting glass ceiling SYLVAIN CHARLBOIS OPINION
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ender imbalance within its leadership ranks is holding back Canada’s restaurant industry. Restaurant Brands International Inc., the Canadian-based parent company of Burger King and Tim Hortons, was recently criticized by a Canadian investment fund for having an all-male board. The board’s response? To carry on with its business without any changes, thus missing an opportunity to send a clear signal that something has to change in the industry. While more than 70 per cent of front-of-house restaurant employees are women, the kitchen, where many managerial decisions are made, is often dominated by men. At the corporate level, the situation is even worse. At a recent Canadian Restaurant Association conference in Toronto, more than 80 per cent of the industry leadership were men and many panels during the conference were all male. This is in sharp contrast to RED DEER
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what most people know of the food service industry. The challenge is everywhere. Cara Operations Ltd., owner of such major Canadian chains such as Harvey’s, Montana’s, Swiss Chalet and St-Hubert, has an all-male board. As well, very few women are involved in upper management. Similarly, the majority of the management at fast-food chain A&W are men. Yet if you discuss the issue with industry leaders, no one appears to mind. So Restaurant Brands International ’s response to the request to make its board more gender-balanced is anything but surprising. The result of this gender imbalance is that management practices are often behind the times. For example, many women servers are still expected to wear short skirts, sexualizing food service. Earls Kitchen and Bar recently backed down on its strict dress code for female servers by offering a choice between pants and skirts. Previously, women servers had to make a formal request to wear something other than a short skirt. The chain made the change after the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario stated that waitresses should not have to make a request to wear something other than revealing News News tips 403-314-4333 Sports line 403-343-2244 News fax 403-341-6560 Sports reporter 403-314-4338 editorial@reddeeradvocate.com
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attire at work. For several years, women have represented almost 60 per cent of university graduates in Canada, but they have been unable to make inroads in food services management and on boards. Challenging schedules and child-rearing realities are obvious constraints for women, but the industry should find ways to manage these intricacies. Other sectors have. Grocers face similar challenges but are doing something about it. Beyond board diversity, most grocers are making a deliberate effort to nurture female leadership. The advancement of female talent is at the core of corporate priorities for companies like Loblaws, Sobeys and Metro. In food service, however, the oldboys network remains predominant. Gender equality and diversity on boards and in management is not only the right thing to do, it also makes strategic sense. How else do you fully understand markets and see new opportunities? A Boston-based group suggested recently that the stocks of female-led Fortune 1000 companies are likely to outperform other companies. And the way women assess market
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gaps and manage risks is complementary to men. Time will eventually help women, since most men under 50 don’t carry the same biases as previous generations. In fact, gender equality is not only expected, it should be proactively sought. The gender-balanced cabinet that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appointed last fall was hardly a surprise for younger men, who saw it as normal gesture: government should fully represent its constituents. The same should apply to economic sectors that matter to everyone. The food industry should value diversity at least as much as any other industry. Most families in Canada spend more than $2,500 of their annual budgets in restaurants, and that amount rises every year. Traditionally, calls for more women in leadership roles in the food service industry have come from women. Plainly, the industry now needs male champions for women leaders. Remaining quiet is no longer an option. Troy Media columnist Sylvain Charlebois is dean of the Faculty of Management and professor in the Faculty of Agriculture at Dalhousie University.
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NEWS
A5
Monday, June 20, 2016
Outdated meds most prescribed BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — Health Canada makes some on-reserve patients jump through hoops or wait longer than non-indigenous Canadians to access prescription drugs their doctors believe they need to treat mental illnesses, a psychiatrist who has worked in First Nations communities says. Dr. Cornelia Wieman, who spent eight years as a community-based psychiatrist at Six Nations of the Grand River Territory, a reserve near Brantford, Ont., said some prescriptions used to treat severe mental illnesses are not covered by Health Canada unless the patient has tried other antipsychotic agents first and experienced no improvement or suffered adverse reactions. “I would often have to try the older versions of medications that according to the clinical practice guidelines were out of date, and I would have to have a patient fail on those older medications before they received funding for newer medications that were available on the market,” Wieman, a psychiatrist at the Centre for Addictions and Mental Health in Toronto, told the parliamentary committee studying the high suicide rate in indigenous communities. The issue is linked to Health Canada’s non-insured health benefits program which provides about $1 billion in annual coverage to eligible First Nations and Inuit people for a limited range of prescription drugs, dental care, vision care, medical supplies and equipment, medical transportation and mental health counselling not covered by private or provincial or territorial health insurance plans. The drugs benefit list includes four antipsychotic drugs that can be used only under limited conditions and require pre-approval from Health Canada. All four of them, however, are covered under general benefits in the Ontario drug plan. Wieman said when it comes to remote indigenous communities, their chances to see a psychiatrist are often few and far between. “That may be the one and only time I am in contact with that patient for, say, the next six months or a year or even more,” she said in an interview. That means it could take even longer for the patient to finally get approved for the medication the doctor wanted to prescribe in the first place.
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A woman and a child walk through the streets in Attawapiskat, Ont., on Monday, April 16, 2016. Health Canada makes some on-reserve patients jump through hoops or wait longer than non-indigenous Canadians to access prescription drugs their doctors believe they need to treat mental illnesses, a psychiatrist who has worked in First Nations communities says. “I think there is this extra layer that First Nations and Inuit people, who are funded under non-insured health benefits, may have to go through in order to get the treatment that they require that would be equivalent to the standard of care that we provide in urban settings and that’s an inequality,” said Wieman, the first indigenous woman to become a psychiatrist in Canada. Yvonne Jones, the parliamentary secretary to Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett, told The Canadian Press earlier this year that the Liberal government is aware of the issues with the non-insured health benefits program and is considering reform. A spokesperson from Health Canada was unavailable for comment. Another problem, said Dr. Alika Lafontaine, president of the Indigenous
World needs new way of helping refugee crisis, advocates say BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — Tom Cochrane turns his phone around to give a glimpse of where he’s sitting — the middle of Lebanon’s farming heartland that’s now home to settlements of tens of thousands of Syrian refugees. A Syrian mother and her sons smile and wave from a group of shacks and tarps. They’re among the ones who will be part of the upwards of 30,000 Syrians settled in Canada by the end of this year. When Cochrane visited them this week, someone had been playing his classic song “Life is a Highway.” It was a moment of connection during a visit that impressed upon the Canadian musician the importance of the West making enduring connections to all refugees, not just the ones who may settle in Canada or elsewhere one day. After all, most just want to go home, he said. “If there is going to be peace in our world, it’s got to start with the kids and they have to know that the West cares and they have to know that we care,” he said in an interview. About half of those affected by the Syrian crisis are children World Vision and others help fund education programs but the money is running out, putting the programs and the children they help at risk. Cochrane was in Lebanon to help draw attention to the issue he’s been working alongside World Vision for years, one of many celebrities who’ve long lent their star power to promoting humanitarian causes. But much has changed since the days a single star-studded concert could raise millions in a matter of hours for relief, including the scope and size of the need. An estimated 60 million people are now displaced by conflict and climate change, the highest number since the Second World War.
World Refugee Day on Monday provided an opportunity for one organization to try something new. Months ago, the Humanitarian Coalition, representing five agencies, began reaching out to others to create a fundraising and awareness campaign using June 20 as an artificial deadline to attach some urgency to the need for people to help, taking a page from matching campaigns used by the federal government in recent years. The cross-agency effort united behind a single website, worldrefugeeday.com, and then went on to get support from the private sector, everyone from media companies who agreed to run ads to PayPal, which agreed to waive its fees for every gift to the campaign. The Canadian Teachers Federation is promoting the campaign among its members and so is home store Rona. One activity is the ability to “donate” via a YouTube message. People can videotape messages of support for refugees and then “donate” them to the campaign where they will be shared on Monday. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has already posted one of his own as part of a digital twist on the old radio telethon. “The old ways of doing things are inadequate. We need to do more and we need to differently,” said Nicolas Moyer, the executive director of the Humanitarian Coalition. “Fundamentally, the competitive fundraising model we’ve had for decades, it’s going to have to cease.” The campaign was developed prior to the federal government’s launch of a review of international assistance, but the challenge facing aid agencies and governments is being explored through that as well. In a time of scarce dollars and scattered attention, there needs to be more thought given to how aid can be both more efficient and more effective, said Kevin Dunbar, emergency director for CARE Canada, which is leading his agency’s response to the review.
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Ontario woman could become Iceland’s first lady BY THE CANADIAN PRESS In just a few days an Ontario woman will find out if she is to become the first lady of Iceland. Eliza Reid, who married an Icelandic history professor and moved to the Nordic country more than ten years ago, has found herself at the centre of an election campaign in which her husband has emerged as the front-runner for the office of the president. The whirlwind race, and its implications for the future, have Reid grappling with the very real possibility of taking up a public position and having to move her family into the presiden-
tial residence. “When I was growing up in the Ottawa Valley it would never have occurred to me that my future would have taken me in this direction,” she said. “I feel like I’ve been very welcomed by Icelandic society. It would be a tremendous honour to be able to have that role.” As election day looms on June 25, Reid believes her Canadian background has helped in a campaign which cropped up “completely out of the blue.” “As a Canadian, my stereotype is a bit that I am grounded and regular and don’t try to be something that I’m not,” said the mother of four.
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ada said that only two per cent of pharmacy claims are subject to pre-approval, meaning the department asks for “additional information to confirm that certain criteria are met before providing coverage.” Dr. Michael Kirlew, a family doctor who works in indigenous communities surrounding Sioux Lookout, Ont., pointed out that some of the drugs requiring prior approval are commonly used to treat things like asthma or heart disease and that patients and their pharmacists have to deal with paperwork — and delays — that non-indigenous Canadians do not. “The standard of health care that people receive is far inferior to what other people get and this is just another example of that,” Kirlew said. “The system is not equal,” he said.
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Physicians Association of Canada, is that it takes the decision-making power away from clinicians. “Fiscal restraint should never be an excuse for non-patient-centred care,” said Lafontaine. Wieman said as frustrating as the obstacles to prescription medication can be, she thinks the even bigger problem is how comparatively little money goes to counselling. The 2014-2015 report on the non-insured health benefits program shows that 41 per cent of the $1 billion spent that year went to pharmacy claims, compared to just 1.5 per cent to mental health. The program covers up to 20 one-hour sessions, following an initial assessment. In response to an order paper question, which is like an access-to-information request for MPs, Health Can-
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IN PICTURES
THE ADVOCATE A6
MONDAY, JUNE 20, 2016
National Aboriginal Day Photos by Jeff Stokoe/ Advocate staff
ABOVE; Drummers gather around the big drum and bring in the grand entry party with their rhythms. LEFT; Stewart Daigneault, left, and Dean Johnson hammer in tent pegs on a tipi they erected in Heritage Square Park on Saturday.
Although National Aboriginal Day is officially celebrated on Tuesday, June 21, the Red Deer Native Friendship Society and the Urban Aboriginal Voices Society held a celebration in Red Deer on Saturday so more people could take part in the event. Members of the community gathered at Heritage Square Park to celebrate Aboriginal culture and have some fun at the same time. “So today we are celebrating National Aboriginal Day a few days early so we ensure we could get in a full day of fun activities for everybody to come out and participate in and celebrate the Aboriginal culture here in Red Deer,” said Pamela Taylor of the Red Deer Native Friendship Society and Urban Aboriginal Voices Society. After the grand entry of elders and special guests the fun got underway. During the afternoon there was a tipi raising competition, Aboriginal games, traditional dancers, drumming and a barbecue with donations going to the Asooahum Crossing Culture Centre which is under construction along Riverside Drive near the Lions Campground in Red Deer. In recognition of National Aboriginal Day a ceremony will also take place at the Shining Mountains Metis Community Services office at 4925 46 Street in Red Deer on Tuesday.
TOP RIGHT; Two dancers from the Red Deer Native Friendship Society hold hands as they participate in the grand entry. ABOVE; As the celebration got underway everyone got the opportunity to smudge with smoke carried around the park grounds. BELOW; From the left, Alden Boysis carries the Canadian flag, elder Lyle Keewatin Richards with the Eagle Feather Staff and Gilles Allard carries the Metis flag during the grand entry. LEFT; Red Deer Aboriginal elder Lyle Keewatin Richards speaks during the beginning of the National Aboriginal Day celebration.
NEWS
Monday, June 20, 2016
A7
Online caribou trade raises concerns BY THE CANADIAN PRESS Wildlife managers are concerned a booming online trade in caribou meat may pose a threat to one of the last healthy herds on the Canadian tundra. Hunters in the central Arctic have been taking so many animals from the Qaminirjuaq herd and sending the meat to parts of Nunavut where the hunt is restricted that airlines have been asked to report on their shipments. “It’s our top, No. 1 priority over the next several years,” said Ross Thompson of the Beverly-Qaminirjuaq Caribou Management Board. The Qaminirjuaq (pronounced kam-uh-NARE’-eeack) herd’s range covers a huge swath from northern Saskatchewan to Queen Maud Gulf on the central Arctic coast. Almost 250,000 animals strong, it’s not about to disappear. But the herd is only about half the size it was in the mid-1990s and biologists are watching. Aboriginals in two provinces and two territories depend on the herd for food. And as caribou quotas grow tighter across the North and hunters and the hungry link up on Facebook, pressure on the Qaminirjuaq is growing. The tiny community of Coral Harbour on Southampton Island has been shipping out between 5,000 and 7,000 kilograms of meat in the winter months,
said Steve Pinksen of Nunavut’s Environment Department. That’s between 1,500 and 2,000 animals a year, roughly equal to what the community consumes itself. Meat is also being shipped from Arviat, Rankin Inlet and Naujaat, formerly known as Repulse Bay. “We’re not in panic about this,” Pinksen said. “But if the herd does continue a natural decline — and at the same time we have a substantial harvest in addition to the subsistence harvest — that does pose some concerns for the future.” Most of the meat ends up in the territorial capital of Iqaluit on Baffin Island — especially after biologists realized the island’s herds had declined by 95 per cent. “Ever since (then) the Baffin district cut their quota down to zero,” said Alex Ishalook, a board member from Arviat. “We are caribou-eaters and the same goes up there.” Ishalook said most of the trade is between individuals and is facilitated by Facebook. Social media is popular in isolated northern communities and Facebook groups for buying, selling and trading country foods now have thousands of members. A whole caribou sells for about $400, said Thompson.Under the Nunavut land claim, Inuit are the only aboriginal group in Canada that has the right to sell game. Part of the demand is fuelled by the high cost of
northern groceries. Some of it is driven by increasingly tight quotas on other barren ground caribou herds. Nine of Canada’s 13 major caribou herds are declining. Earlier this week, one management board in the Northwest Territories cut quotas for one of its herds and banned hunting on another. The combination of a shrinking resource and the ability to sell what was once freely shared is changing things for Inuit, said Ishalook. “It’s not our traditional lifestyle, selling meat,” he said. “We’re working on ideas to improve all this selling.” The hunt is unrestricted and only the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board can impose a total allowable harvest. Inuit can take and sell as many caribou as they want, Pinksen said. “It’s people utilizing their constitutionally guaranteed rights.” But it may be hard to sustain those rights if all communities on the Qaminirjuaq range start taking twice as many animals as they need for their own use, Thompson said. “We’re not questioning the right, but in order for our board to work on behalf of those communities, we have to take all kinds of information,” he said. “As long as there’s the financial factors involved, it’s a tough chore we’re facing.”
Gunmen storm hospital 1 dead, 2 wounded in shootout BRAZIL BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RIO DE JANEIRO — A group of heavily armed men stormed a Rio de Janeiro hospital Sunday to free a suspected drug trafficker, sparking a shootout with officers that left a patient dead and a nurse and an off-duty policeman wounded. The attack took place at Hospital Souza Aguiar, one of the medical facilities recommended for tourists seeking emergency treatment during the upcoming Olympic Games. At least five attackers stormed the hospital before dawn to rescue the 28-year-old suspect, who was being treated there for a gunshot wound, Rio de Janeiro police said in a statement. As many as 15 other gunmen were outside during the attack, witnesses told police. Investigators were studying security camera footage, and Rivaldo Barbosa, head of the state’s homicide unit, said two of the assailants had been identified. “This was a carefully orchestrated attack,” Barbosa told reporters outside the hospital. “It was a bold action that will not go unpunished. It is unacceptable.” Souza Aguiar is one of five hospitals designated by the city to treat tourists during the sporting event because of its proximity to the famed Maracana Stadium, site of the opening ceremony on Aug. 5. It’s also on a U.S. Embassy list of medical facilities recommended for travellers to the games. Fabio Melo, a sergeant who was guarding the suspect in the hospital, said he feels vulnerable to attacks as Rio de Janeiro state is increasing officers’ shifts.The state declared a financial disaster on Friday largely because revenues from oil royalties have plummeted as a result of low crude prices. The government wants more freedom to manage scarce resources in areas such as public safety, health care and education as it wraps up Olympic projects and beefs up tourist services during the games. “People in our line of duty go through these kinds of different experiences. Thank God I was not injured and I was able to help my co-worker,” Melo told reporters. “But we are defenceless. I am defenceless, you are defenceless and the whole population, too.” Later in the day, police acknowledged that they had received reports last week that about a plot to free the suspected drug trafficker. Col. Luiz Henrique Pires told journalists they reinforced security at the hospital but that they don’t have the resources “to deploy 30 or 40 police officers to police after every report that is made.” Pires also said public hospitals are not prepared to admit prisoners and that it is necessary to have special medical facilities for such cases.
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
A pit bull named Athena goes for a walk at the SPCA, Tuesday, June 14, 2016 in Montreal. Montreal will ban pit bulls and other dangerous breeds of dogs beginning in September. Mayor Denis Coderre says dogs that already live in the city will be grandfathered but will have to be sterilized and wear muzzles in public.
Montreal to ban pit bulls and other breeds following fatal attack BY THE CANADIAN PRESS MONTREAL — Less than two weeks after a woman died following a dog attack in her backyard, Montreal’s mayor has announced a plan to ban pit bulls and other breeds that are deemed to be dangerous. Denis Coderre said the new rules will likely be brought before city council in September. “We’re going to have an applied strategy, not just for one breed, but based on the level of potential danger of several types of dogs,” he told a news conference on Saturday. Dogs that already live in the city will be allowed to stay but will have to be sterilized and wear muzzles in public, Coderre said. The ban was announced 10 days after a 55-yearold Montreal woman was found dead after being attacked by a pit bull. The dog escaped from a nearby home before it attacked Christiane Vadnais. In a separate incident, a woman was bitten on the thighs by a pit bull on Tuesday in Sainte-Adele, north of Montreal. Coderre said the city will also immediately create a special squad to enforce the city’s existing dog regulations, including licensing and leash laws. He acknowledged that many dog attacks are the result of negligent owners, and promised the new rules would attack the
problem “at both ends of the leash.” The city is currently studying which breeds besides pit bulls to include in the ban, and Coderre said the rules will be written to allow other types of dogs to be added. “We have to remember that before, in the 1970s, it was the Doberman,” Coderre said. “In the 80s, it was the German shepherd. It’s been the Rottweiler. If we ban one breed just to ban it, they’ll just come up with another breed.” Less 14 per cent of Montreal’s estimated 145,000 dogs are licensed, according to the city. Without getting into specifics, Coderre said the new rules would require dog owners to show they are capable of owning a pit bull or other dangerous breed of dog. That may include a clause that would prevent anyone with a serious criminal record from owning one. Coderre’s announcement came days after the mayors of Quebec City and the Montreal-area city of Brossard announced they would be banning pit bulls. Premier Philippe Couillard said this week his government will likely follow Ontario’s example and adopt a provincewide ban on the breed.
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NEWS
Monday, June 20, 2016
A8
Date uncertain for Mexican visa lift BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — A plan for how Canada will meet a promise to lift visa requirements for Mexicans will be announced later this month when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hosts Mexico’s president as part of the Three Amigos summit. But multiple sources tell The Canadian Press negotiations are still underway on whether the plan will contain a fixed date to remove the visas as Canadian officials push to link it to the implementation of new border controls still in their infancy. “We shall see,” Immigration Minister John McCallum said when asked whether a deal will be reached by June 29. The previous Conservative government imposed visas in 2009 to stop thousands of asylum claims being made by Mexican citizens later ruled to be unfounded. It was a controversial decision that sparked outcry from industry and the Mexican government. The Liberals promised during the election campaign the visa would be lifted.
Pressure to do so intensified as part of Trudeau’s decision to convene the Three Amigos summit — the meeting between the leaders of Canada, the U.S. and Mexico that the Tories postponed last year. The visa issue was among the diplomatic irritants at the time, though the Tories had promised to lift some restrictions through a new electronic travel authorization system that was supposed to take effect in March 2016, but has been delayed. Last week, the Liberals announced a long-awaited second part of immigration reform — legislation so that border officials won’t just know when someone enters Canada but also when they leave. After the visas were put in place, the number of asylum claims fell to 1,199 from more than 9,000, and immigration violations also dropped. There’s fear the numbers will climb again without the visas, and the electronic travel authorization system and the new exit controls would curb some of that issue, the sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to publicly discuss negotiations.
There are also markers used to determine whether to remove a visa, including how many applications get rejected. The threshold for the temporary resident visa refusal rate is four per cent averaged over the previous three years. For Mexico, the refusal rate from 2013 to 2015 was 6.7 per cent, according to the Immigration Department. Officials also look at the immigration violation rate — the percentage of a country’s nationals who don’t follow immigration laws while in Canada or in trying to enter Canada. The rate should be below three per cent over the three previous calendar years and the rate for Mexico between 2013-2015 was 1.9 per cent. The government also examines the country’s socio-economic profile, migration trends, safety and security issues, human rights, and bilateral and multilateral issues, the department said. In 2012, the Conservatives placed Mexico on a list of countries it considered safe and therefore unlikely to produce valid refugee claimants, meaning it would handle claims from
there differently in a bid to stop unfounded ones. Numerous groups immediately objected, citing corruption and violence from the ongoing drug war there among many concerns, and argued to suggest Mexico was safe would bias the asylum process against people actually in need of refuge. The designated country of origin system as a whole is under review by the Liberals, but a new report being released Monday says Mexico should be off that list immediately. “While Mexico has undertaken significant reforms to combat discrimination and human rights violations, people living with HIV, sexual minorities and other vulnerable Mexicans still have little protection when their rights are violated,” said Samer Muscati, the director of the University of Toronto’s International Human Rights Program, which wrote the report. “Mexico’s failure to investigate and hold perpetrators accountable for violent crimes against marginalized populations is completely at odds with Canada’s designation of the country as ‘safe’.”
UK referendum campaign resumes with vote near EUROPEAN UNION BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LONDON — Britain’s long and difficult referendum campaign has resumed in earnest after a three-day halt caused by the killing of Labour Party lawmaker Jo Cox in a brazen knife and gun attack. The death has cast a pall over the referendum set for Thursday, and its impact on the eventual results — if any — are unclear. The campaign tone was perhaps a bit more moderate Sunday as both sides in the bruising battle over whether Britain should remain a member of the 28-nation European Union seemed to take a more civil approach. The content remained the same: the “remain” camp predicts economic doom if Britain leaves the EU while the “leave” campaign warns of the perils of uncontrolled immigration unless Britain strikes out on its own. Prime Minister David Cameron, leading the “remain” campaign, invoked Cox’s memory as a contrast to the values of some of the “leave” campaigners, singling out UK Independence Party chief Nigel Farage for taking a negative approach. In a newspaper column, he said Cox — who favoured EU membership, and wanted Britain to do more to help Syrian refugees — offered a hopeful vision for Britain while Farage wants to divide the country, not unite it. “Are we going to choose Nigel Farage’s vision — one which takes Britain backwards divides rather than unites and questions the motives of anyone who takes a different view. Or will we, instead, choose the tolerant, liberal Britain a country that
doesn’t blame its problems on other groups of people,” he said. With the resumption of campaigning, including a London rally featuring former Mayor Boris Johnson, a popular “leave” figure, fresh attention was focused on a poster unveiled by Farage’s supporters hours before Cox was killed. The poster showed a long line of immigrants fleeing poverty and warfare in the Middle East and elsewhere trudging across Europe with a warning in capital letters that said: BREAKING POINT. In smaller type, it accused the EU of failing Britain. The poster has been cited by politicians and commentators as a prime example of how jarring the tone of the referendum campaign has become. Treasury Chief George Osborne Sunday called it “vile” and compared it to Nazi propaganda of the 1930s. Even Justice Secretary Michael Gove, a prominent leader of the “leave” campaign, decried the poster. He said he “shuddered” when he saw it. “I thought it was the wrong thing to do,” said Gove, a former Cameron ally who has broken with the prime minister over Britain’s future in Europe. Farage did not apologize for the provocative image, but he conceded that the Cox killing, which he called an act of terrorism, may have blunted the “leave” campaign’s momentum at a key moment just days before the vote. He blamed the tragedy on “one person with serious mental issues” and said he does not know how the public mood will sway in the next four days. A range of public opinion surveys suggest the race is close. The Cox case is likely to remain in the public eye because Thomas Mair, accused of murdering her, is scheduled to appear in court Monday.
At his first court appearance, he gave his name as “death to traitors, freedom for Britain,” generating lurid headlines throughout the country. Parliament will also meet in special session to give fellow lawmakers a chance to honour the youthful mother of two who had only served a short time before she was stabbed and shot to death. With so much sadness in the air,
one group introduced a bit of levity into the debate over Britain’s ties to the vast continent that lies across the English Channel by holding an “Anglo-European kiss-in” near Parliament Square. The goal was to show love between Britain and Europe, with similar events held in several other European capitals.
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Clashes leave 4 dead in Mexico OAXACA, Mexico — Violent clashes between police and unionized teachers who were blockading roads and burning vehicles in southern Mexico left at least four people dead on Sunday. The teachers from the radical National Coordinator of Education Workers, or CNTE, are opposed to the mandatory testing of teachers as part of Mexico’s education reform and are also protesting the arrest of union leaders on money laundering and other charges. Sunday’s clashes in several municipalities in Oaxaca state involved federal and state police. Associated Press journalists saw riot police firing on protesters in Nochixtlan, where officials said the protests were strongest. Isabel Garcia, a member of the CNTE’s political commission, said three people supporting the protests were killed. And a state official, who was not authorized to speak to the press and requested anonymity, said a state police officer was killed. Mexico’s federal government released a statement Sunday evening that made no reference to the number of people killed, but said that 21 federal agents had been wounded, three of them by gunfire.
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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BUSINESS
A9 THE ADVOCATE Monday, June 20, 2016
Jobs at risk in fading lumber deal BY THE CANADIAN PRESS MONTREAL — Canadian jobs and sawmills across the country are increasingly at risk because of fading prospects they will avoid a new round of U.S. duties on imported softwood lumber, according to an industry analyst. RBC Capital Markets analyst Paul Quinn says he expects the United States will impose duties of at least 25 per 1cent in mid-2017 and that will put pressure on Canadian producers. “They’ll be mills shut right across Canada because nobody’s making the kind of money that they’d have to pay in the duties,” Quinn said in an interview. He expects at least five mills to be affected in British Columbia but declined to say how many sawmills or jobs could be impacted in other provinces. Quebec-based producer Resolute Forest Products (TSX:RFP) said jobs would also be at risk if Canada accepts a U.S. proposal that would put a 24 per cent quota on Canadian imports. “We don’t have a big enough market in Canada to sell our product and so what ends up happening is there is a greater risk of capacity having to be closed,” said spokesman Seth Kursman. The company, which operates about 20 sawmills in Canada, believes the federal government should push for free trade because Quebec’s forestry system is now market-based and Ontario subsides are inconsequential. “We believe that Canada shouldn’t be rushing to the U.S. and asking for an agreement. Canada is negotiating against itself right now.” Kursman said western producers are in a different situation than their eastern counterparts because they own 39 sawmills in the U.S. south and have developed markets in Asia, which give them a hedge against U.S. trade restrictions. Quinn doesn’t see the 100-day negotiating timeline set in March by President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau bearing any fruit. Obama and Trudeau will meet in Ottawa on June 29 during the so-called Three Amigos Summit with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto. The B.C. Lumber Trade Council
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Logs are moved at a softwood lumber sawmill in 2008 in Saguenay, Que. Canadian jobs and sawmills across the country are increasingly at risk because of fading prospects they will avoid a new round of U.S. duties on imported softwood lumber, according to an industry analyst. says it believes a new agreement, if properly designed, could provide certainty and stability for lumber producers on both sides of the border. “However, if a reasonable agreement cannot be reached, we are also prepared to work alongside the Canadian government to defend the industry against any potential punitive trade actions brought by the United States, as we have done successfully in the past,” said council CEO Susan Yurkovich. Federal Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland and U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman acknowledged the challenges in reaching a deal in a news release issued by Freeland’s of-
fice on Friday. “While significant differences remain between us, this period of intensive engagement has helped define shared goals and explore options for several key components of any new agreement,” the release said, adding that the two sides have vowed to continue talks to reach a “durable and equitable solution.” Failure to reach a deal by Oct. 15 — the one year anniversary of the expiry of the old nine-year agreement — would allow U.S. producers to petition Washington to impose new duties. Quinn said in a report that reducing Canadian sawmill capacity and lowering shipments across the border would
Canadian envoy warns Brexit could cause huge economic impact BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA — Canada’s top diplomat in Britain says it is time to take the vitriol out of the referendum campaign over leaving the European Union following the killing of a British parliamentarian this week. Canadian High Commissioner Gordon Campbell says the British public needs to confront the fact that if they vote to leave the EU, it will disrupt not only their country, but the world at large, wreaking havoc on the global economy for a generation. Campbell also warned that a British decision to leave — known as a Brexit — could stall the implementation of the Canada-EU free trade deal and imperil the jobs of thousands of Canadians working in hundreds of British companies. Campbell’s remarks echo those of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion, Finance Minister Bill Morneau and former prime minister Brian Mulroney, who have all spoken in favour of Britain remaining in the 28-country EU. But in an exclusive interview with The Canadian Press, Campbell — a former British Columbia premier — warned of dire and unpredictable economic consequences of a Brexit, for Britain, Canada and the world. “This is generational impact on the United Kingdom, Europe and the world’s economies.” Campbell said the killing Thursday of British Labour MP Jo Cox, a 41-yearold mother of two, underscored the need for Britons to start treating the referendum as an important public policy question rather than an emotional question of national identity. “The details of what happened to Jo Cox are still emerging, but I will say that I do hope that this true tragedy has led a lot of public figures here in the U.K. to think long and hard about the tone of the debate around the EU referendum,” Campbell said. “I think there is a consensus that the vitriol needs to stop and this needs to be less about personal, emotional attacks and more about the realities of what a vote to leave the European Union will mean for the British people and the world.” Police were trying to assess the motive of the man who fatally shot and stabbed Cox outside a library in her northern England riding, but her death ground the referendum campaign to a halt. The suspended campaign appeared to spark a modest rebound in the London’s FTSE and the British pound,
help to raise prices but would not fully offset the impact of the expected duties. The analyst has downgraded several Canadian producers — West Fraser Timber, Western Forest, Conifex, Canfor, Tember and Resolute Forest Products — saying their share prices will be weighed down by the export tax overhang. The exception is Interfor, which has dramatically increased its U.S. footprint. Quinn foresees an impasse continuing for years, especially because of the protectionist positions espoused by presumptive presidential nominees, Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton.
Five things to watch for in the Canadian business world in the coming week BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
Electrifying Event
Quebec’s premier and representatives from the automotive industry will speak at the 29th World Electric Vehicle Symposium in Montreal. The three-day event comes on the heels of an announcement by German automaker Volkswagen that it plans to ramp up offerings of electric vehicles as it fights to bounce back from a scandal over diesel cars rigged to cheat on emissions tests.
Retirement Planning
Photo by THE CANADIAN PRESS
Britain’s Prince Charles, left, and Camilla, Dutchess of Cornwall are welcomed by High Commissioner for Canada Gordon Campbell during a visit to Canada House in London, , May 4. Canada’s top diplomat in Britain says it is time to take the vitriol out of the referendum campaign over leaving the European Union following the killing of a British parliamentarian this week. leading some analysts to conclude Cox’s death might be taking the wind out of the Brexit side. Prior to that, both had been in sharp decline because of the uncertainty caused by the referendum, which Campbell said could only be taken as a harbinger of bad economic fallout if Britons vote to leave the EU on Thursday. Campbell said a British departure from the EU would have negative consequences for 10,000 Canadian jobs in Britain as well as for the hundreds of companies doing business there. And he speculated it could stall the implementation of the Canada-EU free trade deal, known as CETA. Both sides hope to ratify the pact this fall, and are hoping to see it implemented in early 2017. That timeline could be disrupted, said Campbell. “If Europe is engaged in what would be a very challenging negotiation about the United Kingdom leaving, they’re certainly not going be nearly as focused on engaging in ratifying the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement,” said Campbell. “There’s been a lot of glib talk about how quickly trade agreements
can be made.” Campbell referenced Trudeau’s recent remark to Reuters news agency that it would be difficult for Britain to replicate its own version of CETA, which was a dig at Brexit supporters. “It would be an Olympic gold in trade negotiations if it took them less than a decade,” Campbell said. Campbell is nearing the end of a five-year term as Canada’s envoy to Britain and he says he has seen the best the country had to offer in recent years. It hosted the Olympics, celebrated the Queen’s 90th birthday and London flourished as a “truly international city.” But all of that is at risk now, he said, because of the movement to take Britain out of the EU. “All that Canada can really do now is say to people in the United Kingdom: you have an important role to play in the world, you’ve always played it, and we encourage you to continue to play it,” Campbell said. “And the way to have the strongest impact and the most long-term, beneficial impact, not just for Europe and the United Kingdom, but for the world, is to remain and reform and to lead, not to leave.”
The Canada Pension Plan is expected to be a hot topic for the country’s federal, provincial and territorial finance ministers when they meet in Vancouver on Monday. Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau has said he wants to see a deal to expand the CPP completed by the end of the year, but talks are now in high gear in hopes of reaching a preliminary agreement much sooner.
By The Numbers
Statistics Canada releases monthly data for April next week, including wholesale trade and travel between Canada and other countries on Monday, and retail trade on Wednesday. Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz said last week the country’s economy is finally making progress.
BlackBerry Blues
The Canadian smartphone company meets its shareholders in Waterloo, Ont., on Wednesday, and the next morning releases results for its fiscal first quarter. Analysts are expecting another loss.
Oil comeback
Penn West Petroleum meet shareholders on Thursday in Calgary. Once on the brink of bankruptcy, the company’s stock soared last week after it agreed to sell its Viking assets to Teine Energy Ltd. for $975 million. The deal should help reduce Penn West’s heavy debt load by more than $600 million.
BUSINESS
Monday, June 20, 2016
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Boeing sale involves 100 planes BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TEHRAN, Iran — Boeing Co. is negotiating a deal to sell 100 airplanes to Iran, state-run media reported Sunday, a sale potentially worth billions that would mark the first major entry of an American company into the Islamic Republic after last year’s nuclear deal. Chicago-based Boeing declined to discuss details of the talks or the figure of 100 planes, attributed to Ali Abedzadeh, the head of Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization. Regulatory hurdles and U.S. sanctions that remain in place after the nuclear agreement could complicate the deal. Despite efforts by the U.S. State Department to encourage trade to Iran, many American firms remain worried about the legal and political ramifications of any agreements with the country. The state-run IRAN newspaper quoted Abedzadeh as saying negotiations took “several stages” and final figures and terms had yet to be reached. “Both sides — Iran and Boeing — have reached a written agreement for buying Boeing airplanes,” Abedzadeh was quoted as saying. Fakher Daghestani, a Boeing spokesman based in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, declined to answer any questions about Abedzadeh’s comments. “Any agreements reached will be contingent on U.S. government approval,” Daghestani said in a statement. A senior Obama administration official confirmed Sunday that the U.S. government would have to review such an agreement. Under the nuclear deal with Iran, the Treasury Department will review on a case-by-case basis the licensing of individuals or entities that want to export, re-export, sell, lease or transfer to Iran commercial passenger aircraft, and associated parts and services, ex-
Photo By Associated Press
An Iran Air Boeing 727 landed on its nose, after the landing gear jammed, at the Mehrabad airport in Tehran, Iran. Boeing Co. is negotiating a deal to sell 100 airplanes to Iran, state-run media reported Sunday, June 19, 2016 a sale potentially worth billions that would mark the first major entry of an American company into the Islamic Republic after last year’s nuclear deal. clusively for commercial passenger aviation. The official declined to be identified, citing the sensitivity surrounding corporate business dealings with Iran. Iranian airlines have some 60 Boeing airplanes in service, but most were purchased before the 1979 Islamic Revolution that ousted Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and brought Islamists to power. Out of Iran’s 250 commercial planes, about 150 are flying while the rest are grounded due to lack of spare parts. Parts and servicing remained nearly impossible to get while the world sanctioned Iran over its contested nuclear program.
Environmental groups launch court challenge of Trans Mountain pipeline BY THE CANADIAN PRESS VANCOUVER — A pair of environmental groups are asking the courts to quash a recommendation that the federal government allow the controversial Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project to go ahead. Lawyers for the Living Oceans Society and the Raincoast Conservation Foundation have filed an application for judicial review of the National Energy Board’s recommendation in Vancouver’s Federal Court of Appeal, arguing that it is unlawful. Documents filed in court Friday allege the NEB did not take into account the impact the $6.8-billion project would have on Southern Resident killer whales and their habitat. If successful, a judicial review would force the board to reconsider its recommendation that the project be approved by the federal cabinet. Trans Mountain wants to triple the capacity of its existing pipeline from the oilsands near Edmonton to Burnaby, B.C., increasing the number of tanker ships in the area seven-fold. The NEB spent two years reviewing the proposal and heard from 35 indigenous groups and 400 interveners before issuing a report and a positive recommendation in May. The recommendation is subject to 157 conditions on engineering, safety, environmental and emergency preparedness conditions. But lawyer Dyna Tuytel said the report failed to consider the harm increased tanker traffic noise would cause endangered killer whales off of British Columbia’s coast. “What (tanker traffic noise) does is it interferes with their communication and it interrupts their critical life functions like hunting or socializing
… and causes them to do other activities such as travelling away from the noise,” Tuytel said in an interview. Evidence about the impact on the whales was made at hearings on the project, but the board has not justified the damage that would be done, she said. “People are frustrated with what the board has decided in the face of so much evidence of threats from this project.” The application for judicial review asks the court to declare that the NEB made several errors in law and didn’t meet the requirements of the Environmental Assessment Act or the Species at Risk Act. Tuytel said the environmental groups want the court to stop the federal government from making a final decision on the project based on what she called a “flawed” report. “The fact that they’re not addressing the affects, for example on endangered killer whales, means that no one will,” she said. Trans Mountain spokeswoman Ali Hounsell said in a statement that the company is reviewing the application for judicial review and “will be responding more fully through the court process.” The environmental groups are not the first to raise concerns about the NEB report. Last week, the Squamish Nation launched its own judicial review of the recommendation, arguing the board did not fulfil its obligation to consult with the First Nation about the project. Fifty B.C. First Nations also wrote to the prime minister and the premiers of B.C. and Alberta last week, describing the consultation process on the proposed project as “woefully inadequate.”
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Included in last year’s nuclear deal is approval for airline manufacturers to enter the Iranian market. Already, Iran Air has signed agreements to buy 118 planes from the European consortium Airbus and 20 more from French-Italian aircraft manufacturer ATR. Iran is a lucrative market, with the Airbus deal alone worth 22.8 billion euros ($25 billion). But Boeing has treaded cautiously. U.S. sanctions not tied to the nuclear program remain in place, and American lawmakers have warned Boeing not to do business there as the Iran deal remains a hot topic in the ongoing presidential election.
Boeing may need to run the sale through an overseas subsidiary and use a currency other than U.S. dollars in order to avoid running afoul of American laws. In April, Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency quoted Maqsoud Asadi Samani, the secretary of the Society of Iranian Airlines, as saying Boeing officials offered 737, 777 and 787 model aircraft on a trip to Tehran. In his published remarks Sunday, Abedzadeh said that “Iran will not be in a hurry about the agreement since the U.S. has always used Iran’s old fleet as leverage.” “Iran will apply caution in the talks,” he said.
Newest stock exchange looks to slow down high-speed traders BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — Slow down markets, you move too fast. The nation’s newest stock exchange has arrived, one that is looking to slow down high-frequency traders by putting speed bumps in their way. The IEX Group won approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday to become a national stock exchange, following months of arguments with hedge funds and highspeed traders. One of IEX’s hallmarks is imposing a delay of 350 millionths of a second on orders. That speed bump is meant to limit the influence of high-speed traders, which critics say reap unfair profits at the expense of longer-term investors, including pension funds and mutual funds held in 401(k) accounts. “We are grateful and humbled by the support we’ve received from the investor community,” IEX Chief Executive Officer Brad Katsuyama said in a statement. “Without it, we may have faced a different result.”
IEX and Katsuyama were featured in “Flash Boys,” a bestselling book by Michael Lewis that heightened critical attention on traders that make transactions in billionths of a second. Critics say these high-speed traders can ultimately force mom-and-pop and other slower investors to pay a higher price for stocks they purchase. Opponents of IEX, including hedge funds and others, argued to the SEC that the speed bump could make price quotes for stocks stale and unreliable and could have unintended consequences. They also argued the delay would run against regulations related to “immediately accessible orders.” The SEC said Friday that “a small delay will not prevent investors from accessing stock prices in a fair and efficient manner.” It said an intentional delay of less than one millisecond, or one thousandth of a second, is a “de minimis” amount of time. The SEC also said it will conduct a study within two years about whether the speed bump is hurting the market or investors.
India’s central bank governor won’t seek 2nd term BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW DELHI — The governor of India’s central bank said Saturday that he will not seek a second term and will return to academia when his term ends in September. Raghuram Rajan’s announcement ends speculation over whether Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government will give him another three-year term with India’s economy growing at an
impressive 7.5 per cent. That made India the world’s fastest-growing major economy, overtaking China’s growth in the January to March quarter. Rajan was appointed the Reserve Bank of India’s governor by the previous Congress party government three years ago. Some leaders of Modi’s Hindu nationalist party recently criticized him for adopting a hard line against inflation despite pressure to cut interest rates to push India’s economic growth.
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SPORTS
THE ADVOCATE Monday, June 20, 2016
Cavaliers complete comeback BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cavaliers 93 Warriors 89 OAKLAND, Calif. — LeBron James cradled the shiny gold trophy and struggled to sum up what might be his sweetest championship yet, the one he is so proudly bringing home to his native northeast Ohio just as he promised to do when he returned to the Cavaliers two summers ago. Later, flanked by his three children on Father’s Day, a cigar between his lips and winning net as a necklace with the lingering stench of champagne, James began to understand the magnitude of his accomplishment for Cleveland after a half-century wait. “I’m coming home with what I said I was going to do,” he said, adding, “I can’t wait to get off that plane, hold that trophy up and see all our fans at the terminal.” James and his relentless, nevercount-them-out Cavs pulled off an improbable NBA Finals comeback, and Cleveland is title town again at long last. James delivered on a vow to his home state and brought the Cavs back from the brink as they became the first team to rally from a 3-1 finals deficit, beating the defending champion Golden State Warriors 93-89 on Sunday night to end a 52-year major sports championship drought in Cleveland. “I’ve never seen a man in my life tell an entire state: ‘Get on my back, I got you. Get on my back and I’m going to carry you. I don’t care if we fail, I’m going to wake up the next morning and I’m going to start working out and prepare for the next year,”’ Richard Jefferson said. “… He was like, ‘I’m going to come back home because I promised them that I would do something.’ And he carried us the whole way.” In a testy series of blowouts — and a few blowups — the winner-take-all Game 7 provided the thrilling finale with James as the finals MVP disarming two-time reigning MVP Stephen Curry and his record-setting Warriors. The native of Akron rattled off moments from the lengthy list of Cleveland sports heartbreak and said what it meant for him to personally bring the Cavaliers their first championship. Playing his sixth straight finals, James almost single-handedly carried
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James, center, celebrates with teammates after Game 7 of the NBA Finals against the Golden State Warriors in Oakland, Calif., Sunday. The Cavaliers won 93-89. the Cavs back into this series and finished with 27 points, 11 assists and 11 rebounds as the Cavs gave their city its first major sports winner since the Browns won the NFL title in 1964. He also had three blocked shots and two steals, overcoming five turnovers. An emotional James fell to the floor when this one ended with a second win in a week on Golden State’s imposing home floor, surrounded by his teammates. Only moments earlier, he went down in pain with 10.6 seconds left after being fouled by Draymond Green while going for a dunk, then came back out to make the second of two free throws. After four successful seasons in Miami and two titles with the Heat,
James came back to the Cavs in hopes of winning the title this franchise and championship-starved city so coveted. It took a second try against Golden State after Cleveland lost to the Warriors in six games last year. “I was calm. I was focused. I was locked in,” James said. Cleveland did it after a coaching change, with Tyronn Lue taking over in January for the fired David Blatt. “We made history tonight,” Lue said. “Cleveland, Ohio, we’re coming back, baby!” Kyrie Irving scored 26 points to cap his brilliant finals, including a 3-pointer over Curry with 53 seconds left. Curry sat briefly on the bench to take in the scene after the Warriors
made their last basket with 4:39 left. “It hurts, man,” Curry said. “Just proud of every single guy that stepped foot on the floor for our team this year. … Hopefully we’ll have many more opportunities to fight for championships and be on this stage because this is what it’s all about.” Green had 32 points, 15 rebounds and nine assists, but the Warriors’ record-setting season ended without the only prize this close-knit “Strength In Numbers” crew cared about from way back in the beginning — through the record 24-0 start as Coach of the Year Steve Kerr was out, Curry’s second consecutive MVP campaign, and the 73 regular-season wins to break the 199596 Chicago Bulls’ mark.
Top fighters hold ground at Superfights 24 BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF No title changed hands at Superfights 24 as the challengers couldn’t knock off the top billed fighters. For one Red Deer fighter, Stephanie Schmale, that meant holding her own against a fighter whose style is similar to her own. For another Red Deer fighter, Braedon Rice, it was a crushing blow as he was knocked out by a vicious kick to the head in the second round. The loss ended the challenger’s shot at Tim Lo’s Western Canadian Super Light Heavyweight belt. The two were part of a 12 fight card Saturday night at the Red Deer Sheraton. Schmale squared off against Leslie Ens out of Saskatoon in a 135-pound Modified Muay Thai three-round bout. The two traded blows and in one of the closer fights of the night, Schmale emerged on top by a split decision. Her Ladies Western Canadian Welterweight championship was not on the line in the penultimate fight of the evening, but the fight was still an important one for her. “I’m used to girls charging at me and not really thinking, whereas she was calculated so that was a bit differ-
Photo by MURRAY CRAWFORD/Advocate Staff
Red Deer’s Braedon Rice gets knocked out in the second round by Tim Lo, Western Canadian Super Light Heavyweight champion, as the referee rushes to assist Rice. Their full Muay Thai bout was the main event of Superfights 24, Saturday, at the Red Deer Sheraton. ent,” Schmale said about her veteran adversary. “I tried to be patient with her. I’m
kind of a counter-puncher, she’s kind of a counter-puncher so there was a lot of trying to figure each other out. I just
tried to be patient and not push in too hard.” The Red Deer native trains out of Cheney’s Zen Karate and Kickboxing. To prepare for the fight she trains in kickboxing about three days a week and two days a week of long-distance running. But for her, the key is to have more time to prepare for the fight. Schmale hopes to defender her title this November. Rice, who trains out of 7 Stars Praying Mantis in Red Deer, had a title shot in his fight against Tim Lo, out of Sherwood Park. The two were the main event. Unlike the other fights on the evening, their fight went five rounds. In the second round, Lo caught Rice with a kick to the head that knocked Rice out and ended the bout. Michael Roe, out of Lacombe Zen and Kickboxing, of Lacombe won by unanimous decision in his fight against Ryan Demyen out of Regina. The two fought the full three rounds in a modified Muay Thai 150-pound bout. Justin Rocheleau of Red Deer, out of Cheney’s Zen Karate and Kickboxing, and Dean Coslovi of Lethbridge fought to a majority draw in their 175-pound Modified Muay Thai threeround bout. mcrawford@reddeeradvocate.com
Dustin Johnson wins U.S. Open at Oakmont for first major BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS OAKMONT, Pa. — Dustin Johnson had everything going his way Sunday in the U.S. Open. He was playing the best golf on the toughest course. He had a two-shot lead on the back nine at Oakmont. He even got a huge break on a ruling that allowed him to escape deep rough, the kind of breaks that usually go to major champions. That’s when he saw two USGA officials approach him on the 12th tee. They told him he might get a one-shot penalty for his ball moving on the fifth green. They wouldn’t know until after his round. Try playing the back nine of a U.S. Open with that kind of confusion. “It’s nothing new at this point,” said Johnson, who has had major mishaps for the last six years. “It’s happened so many times I kind of expect it now.” The difference was the outcome. Johnson showed the mettle — and yes, the wits — to finally win a major championship. “For it to not affect the outcome is fantastic,” he said. “It just shows how
well I played.” No one knew if he was leading, tied or one shot behind, and neither did Johnson. He didn’t look at a board the rest of the day, taking on each shot regardless of the score and coming up with all the right shots — the 10-foot par save on the 16th, a cautious bunker shot on the 17th, and a 6-iron that settled the score. It dropped down 5 feet from the hole for a birdie that wrapped up a U.S. Open that was overdue. The USGA wound up giving him the penalty shot after it was over, so Johnson closed with a 1-under 69 for a three-shot victory over Shane Lowry, Scott Piercy and Jim Furyk, a runner-up at Oakmont for the second straight U.S. Open. “I still didn’t want the penalty. I didn’t think that I did anything to cause the ball to move,” Johnson said. “But at the end of the day, it didn’t affect what happened. So it doesn’t bother me at all.” Finally, he’s a major champion. Johnson scooped up 18-month son Tatum into his arms on Father’s Day and raised the silver trophy for all to see.
Murray Crawford, Sports Reporter, 403-314-4338 E-mail mcrawford@reddeeradvocate.com
“I’ve been here a bunch of times and haven’t quite got it done,” Johnson said. “But today, I did. And it feels really good.” He saluted a Pittsburgh crowd that was on his side even amid all the uncertainty. The grandstands were raucous, with one fan shouting, “What’s the call, USGA?” At the trophy presentation, when Fox Sports announcer Joe Buck brought up the penalty situation, the crowd booed. Johnson finished at 4-under 276, the lowest winning score in nine U.S. Opens at Oakmont. The lingering question was whether the toughest test in golf was tougher than it needed to be. Johnson had a short par putt on the fifth hole, took a few practice strokes and as he placed the putter behind the ball, it moved slightly — backward. Johnson stepped back and called over the rules official, told him he didn’t cause it to move. He tapped in for par. Jeff Hall, senior director of rules and open championships for the USGA, said a staff member said on the radio that it might be worth another look. The USGA thought Johnson should
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know that his score might be one shot worse than it was, so it told him on the 12th tee. “After looking at video, the actions he took could have caused the ball to move,” Hall said. “We asked if there was some other reason the ball could have moved. He didn’t state a reason.” But it led to confusion over the entire back nine — for Johnson and for the guys trying to catch him. Lowry, who began the final round with a four-shot lead that he lost on the front nine, tied him when Johnson made bogey on the 14th. Were they tied? Was Johnson trailing by one? Jack Nicklaus, who won the first of his 18 majors at Oakmont in 1962, said if the USGA thought it might be a one-shot penalty, it should have done it right there and “let him get on with the job.” That’s what he did, scrambling for pars, keeping his cool, thinking only the major that kept eluding him. Johnson said he couldn’t help but wonder if he was in for more bad luck at a major that he was poised to win. “Just one more thing to add to the list, right?” he said.
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SPORTS
Monday, June 20, 2016
B2
Pankewitz powers out win at Innisfail DIANNE FINSTAD RODEO Bull riders are no strangers to challenges. After all, they do believe their 170 pounds can outmuscle a 1700-pound bovine for at least eight seconds. But Tyler Pankewitz came to the Daines Ranch Saturday night facing an extra hurdle or two. Take, for instance, the fact he has a broken foot. It happened on the May long weekend at a rodeo in Cloverdale, B.C., and Pankewitz hobbled around on it for several weeks before getting it checked. It’s an arch bone, so he contends it doesn’t really affect his riding. But it was the treatment that seemed to do more damage than good. “I’m sore as heck,” admitted the Ponoka cowboy. “I got put in a walking cast, but I threw that away because it was putting my hips out, being so lopsided by walking around on it. I’ve just a brace on my foot, and it seems to be working better.” “My back actually hurts more than my foot.” But that didn’t stop Pankewitz from strapping his rope on a Calgary Stampede bull called Uptown Funk. “Once I climb in that chute, I don’t really feel anything. I just focus on what I’ve got to do, and stay to my job, and feel it all after, when I hit the dirt.” “Right now I’ve got to show up and focus on getting loosened up. When you’re this sore, you’ve got to get limber, especially when you’re over 30 as a bull rider. You don’t feel as good as when you’re 20!” The bull power at the Innisfail rodeo was dominating, with only two of twenty riders before Panekwitz making the whistle. And his opponent tried a little intimidation before they even entered the arena. “He wasn’t very good in the chute. He wanted to keep laying down and jumping up, and he hooked my outside foot right out of the gate. I didn’t think it was going to be very good from there. He wanted me in the well the whole time, but I leaned over on that outside shoulder and got sitting up pretty.” It was as ‘pretty’ as a bull ride gets, and the judges handed out 86 points. That score held up through Sunday’s final performance, giving Pankewitz the first place cheque of $2,173. Add to that some extra ‘ground money’ because only five bull riders got a mark
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Cole Jamison of Innisfail got a no score after being bucked off his ride during the bareback riding event at the Innisfail Rodeo on Saturday afternoon. at Innisfail, and you’ve got some of the best pain medication in rodeo. It will also move Pankewitz into Canada’s top five for the season. That’s encouraging, because just over a year ago he dislocated his shoulder and had to sit out the rest of the season after surgery to repair it. When he came back at the end of April, he was ready. He stayed on his first bull, but then went through a stretch when he was lodged among the buck-off crowd. Finally, at Leduc earlier this month, he broke the ice, and placed second, following that up with a win at Brooks as well. “Now that I’ve got the feeling of staying on again, it seems to be rolling, and hopefully it stays this way,” grinned Pankewitz. A North Dakota cowboy claimed the bronze award in the saddle bronc riding at the 56th Daines Ranch Rodeo. Dusty Hausauer was the victor on Calgary’s famous horse Stampede Warrior, turning in an 86 point performance Sunday afternoon, for $2,214. “I got on her at Hermiston (OR) a couple years ago and I didn’t ride her very good,” said Hausauer, who was the Canadian champion in 2008. “I was really nervous today because you don’t draw these horses every day, a horse of that caliber that they win so much on. You’ve got to really take advantage
when you do draw them.” “I gave her more bronc rein, which helped me keep my shoulders back a little bit. Last night I was in Reno, and I started a horse very well, and didn’t finish it as well. So today I wanted to really improve, and finish the horse better.” While rodeo cowboys always want to ride well for the fans, there were plenty of past bronc riding champions like Glen O’Neill and Rod Hay enjoying the Innisfail hospitality, which Saddle bronc adds a little extra winner Dusty incentive. Hausauer “That’s why I really wanted to ride. I didn’t want just an ‘all-right’ ride. I wanted to ride very well because Glen’s been 95 in this arena, Roddy’s been, I’d hate to guess how many points every year he’s been in this arena. There’s a lot of history here. This bronze means a lot to me.” Jim Berry of Rocky Mountain House had to get on three horses in the same event (with rerides) but it was worth it,
because his 84-point score netted him second place and $1,818. Four-time Canadian champion Dusty LaValley of Bezanson came close to picking up another Innisfail bareback title when he was 87 points Sunday afternoon on Reckless Margie. But the extra half point Caleb Bennett earned Friday night was enough to give him the edge, and the first place payout of $2,185. LaValley earned $1,794 for second place in an event where it took 84.5 points to even earn a last place paycheque. It was an Oklahoma mother-daughter duo that ran away with the biggest money in the barrel racing. Cayla Melby, who’s just 18, made a blistering run of 15.634 seconds right in the middle of one of the downpours that broke up the sunshine Sunday afternoon, worth $2,745. Then her mother, Jane, came out and raced to second place in 15.778 seconds. Hometown favorite Sydney Daines wasn’t far behind, finishing in fourth place. The steer wrestling did speed up, and it was Dallas Frank who claimed first place with a 4.4 second run, adding $2,305 to his season’s tally. “It’s been up and down,” said the Stony Plain cowboy, about his year to date. “I’ve been picking away at a few cheques. A guy always wants to do better but this will maybe kick it off. There’s lots of good rodeos coming up, so hopefully it all works out good.” Jeremy Harden of Castor did wind up in second with his 4.8 second run from opening night, with Donalda’s Curtis Cassidy in third. No one was able to better the 8.4 second tie-down roping run from Utah’s Rhen Richard in Thursday’s slack, so he took home $2,178 for top place, while the team roping honors went to southern Alberta cowboys Steele Depaoli and Kasper Roy for their 5.7 second run. Manitoba’s Bailey Plaisier won the novice bareback with a 77, while Chase Zweifel of Saskatchewan took the novice saddle bronc with a 75. Steer riding finished with a 73 point tie between Dixon Tattrie of Youngstown and Justin Arksey of Sylvan Lake. The pro rodeo season in Canada heats up now, with action this weekend in Sundre, High River and Wainwright. The 80th Ponoka Stampede gets rolling with seven days of rodeo June 27th at 6:30 pm. The WPCA chuckwagons start June 28th. There’s also the richest one day PBR Canada bull riding event happening in Ponoka June 25th, featuring the likes of PBR stars Tanner Byrne and Aaron Roy. Dianne Finstad is a local freelance writer and covers rodeo for the Advocate.
Braves sweep three-game series with Fort McMurray
Riggers roll to pair of wins BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF Riggers 8 Cubs 1 (7 innings) Riggers 13 Cubs 2 (5 innings) Making short work of the visiting Confederation Park Cubs, the Red Deer Riggers needed only 12 innings to beat them twice in a doubleheader. The two Sunburst Baseball League teams met Sunday afternoon for Father’s Day at Great Chief Park. The Riggers rattled off two straight wins, 13-2 and 8-1 over the visiting Cubs. The wins maintain the Riggers’ perfect start to the season, 8-0. Rigger’s first baseman Jason Louis put on a show in the opening game belting a solo home run in the fourth inning and two doubles, on his way to a five RBI day. “Some days you just have it and everything you hit is square,” said Louis, who also partially credited not thinking too much for why he had the good game. “Sometimes (in doubleheaders) you can come out flying, we won 13-2, and it’s easy to come back and go flat and give up a game you probably could have won.” The offence was fired up in the first game as they combined to score 13 runs, beating the Cubs 13-2. Shortstop Jason Chatwood drove in four runs, including a two-run double as part of the Riggers seven run fourth inning. Not helping matters was a shaky Cubs infield who had four errors in the first game. “The guys were swinging it well and our pitching staff threw strikes and got
their outs,” said Chatwood. “They got a lead early in the second game and we stuck with it and gutted it out.” Helping matters in the first game was a solid start from pitcher Dustin Northcott, who got the win. He pitched four innings, struck out three and walked one. He allowed only one earned run on one hit. “He sets the tone,” said Chatwood. “He’s been one of our guys for a long time. You have a comfort level playing behind him.” Closer Joel Peterman came in to pitch the fifth inning as the Sunburst Baseball League’s mercy rule applied. He surrendered one earned run, but then shut the door on the Riggers’ win. Davin Gulbranson took the mound in the second game and picked up the win in an 8-1 Riggers victory. He allowed the Cubs’ only run in the first inning, but settled down from there on in. Right fielder Derek Chapman went three-for-four in the second game with three singles. After going scoreless in the first and second innings, the Riggers scored three in the third, one in the fourth and two in both the fifth and sixth innings. The Riggers now go on the road to play the St. Albert Tigers on Tuesday and will play in the Tigers’ tournament this weekend. Their next home game is scheduled for June 28 against the Confederation Park Cubs at 7:30 p.m. at Great Chief Park. mcrawford@reddeeradvocate.com
giving up three runs on five hits with five walks and three strikeouts. MacCuaig came in to close out the game, he held the Oil Giants scoreless and hitless. He walked three and struckout one. The third game, on Sunday, lasted five innings as the Braves cruised to a 13-0 win. Brett Stockwood led the attack with a two-run double and a single. Griffin Moline had an RBI double, while both Ty Moline and Olson had RBI singles. Booth had two singles, a walk and an RBI and Hester and Lalor both had a single and a walk each. Ozga pitched a complete game, shutting the Oil Kings out. He gave up four hits and four walks, while striking out three. The Braves now go on the road to play the Calgary Rockies on Tuesday. Their next home game on Wednesday at Great Chief Part at 7 p.m. against the Calgary Dino’s Black.
Fan critical after falling from deck after NBA Finals
State Warriors in the NBA Finals. Oakland police spokeswoman Johnna Watson says the man in his early 20s fell over a railing because of a fight with another fan just after the game ended on Sunday night. Watson says the man was taken to a hospital in critical-but-stable condition.
Authorities say a fan fell from the second to the first deck of Oakland’s Oracle Arena after the Cleveland Cavaliers’ Game 7 victory over the Golden
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Shayne Court slides into second base during the second game of a double header between Court’s Red Deer Riggers and the Confederation Park Cubs. The Riggers won both games on Sunday.
Two close games gave way to a blowout as the Red Deer Midget AAA Carstar Braves swept the Fort McMurray Oil Giants in three weekend games. The Braves hosted the Oil Giants for the three game set at Great Chief park. It started on Saturday with a 6-4 Braves win. Mike Ozga had two walks, a single and an RBI and Andrew MacCuaig showed off his buntings skills with a sacrifice bunt and a bunt single in the game. Ben LeBlanc, Parker Booth, Zach Olson and Griffin Moline all had hits in the game. Ty Wagar threw a complete game, giving up four runs on six hits, walking two and striking out six. The second game was close, as the Braves edged out the Oil Giants 4-3. Kelsey Lalor had two singles, Cooper Jones had two walks and scored twice and Booth and Tsar Hester both had sacrifice bunts. Griffin Lorenz pitched five innings,
SPORTS
Monday, June 20, 2016
B3
Orioles’ bats beat up Blue Jays BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Orioles 11 Blue Jays 6 BALTIMORE — In a duel between prolific offensive teams, the Toronto Blue Jays were unable to overcome a disappointing outing for Marcus Stroman. The Baltimore Orioles amassed a season-high 19 hits against Stroman and five relievers, and the Blue Jays wasted homers by Troy Tulowitzki and Devon Travis in an 11-6 loss Sunday. “Our guys did a really good job swinging the bats, and it was plenty good to get a win,” Stroman said. “So it’s frustrating not to be able to do my job.” Stroman (6-3) gave up seven runs and 10 hits over 3 2/3 innings in his shortest outing of the season. The right-hander is 2-3 with a 7.59 ERA over his last seven starts. On a hot day at Camden Yards, Stroman couldn’t find an easy out in a lineup filled with sluggers. “They can beat you 1 through 9, and you have to really be on your game when you’re facing them,” Stroman said. “If you’re not, they’re going to expose you and take advantage of you, like they did today.” Matt Wieters had four hits, including a homer, and drove in four runs to help the Orioles win the deciding matchup of the three-game series between AL East foes. Jonathan Schoop homered and drove in three runs for Baltimore, and
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Baltimore Orioles’ Jonathan Schoop, back right, rounds the bases past Toronto Blue Jays relief pitcher Jesse Chavez after hitting a two-run home run in the seventh inning of a baseball game in Baltimore, Sunday. Chris Davis had three hits and scored three runs. “They get the ball in the air — everybody in that lineup,” Toronto manager John Gibbons said. “They got the left-right balance, which is very tough. They play in a great hitting park. You really have to go toe-to-toe with that.”
The Orioles were without two-time All-Star Manny Machado, who began a four-game suspension for charging the mound on June 7. The punishment ended Machado’s run of 229 consecutive starts, the longest active streak in the majors. His replacement at third base, Ryan
Flaherty, had two hits and two RBIs from the No. 9 spot in the batting order. Chris Tillman (10-1) allowed four runs and five hits in five laborious innings. Unbeaten since April 14, Tillman needed 99 pitches to extend his career-high win streak to nine. “Made some pitches when I needed to and the boys picked me up, picked me up big time today,” Tillman said. “Tough day on the bullpen, but we came out of everything with a big series win.” The Blue Jays have dropped two in a row after winning seven of eight. With the score knotted at 4 in the fourth, Wieters doubled and scored on a single by Schoop. Flaherty doubled in a run, and Adam Jones chased Stroman with an RBI single. Wieters made it 8-4 with an RBI single in the fifth, and Schoop connected in a three-run seventh that made it 11-6. “When you get these two offences together, you know you’re going to need to score with each other,” Wieters said. Baltimore jumped to a 3-0 lead in the first inning when Davis hit an RBI single and Wieters followed with his seventh home run. Toronto used two-run homers by Tulowitzki and Travis to go up 4-3 in the second. Activated from the disabled list Saturday, Tulowitzki hadn’t gone deep since May 14. Flaherty tied it in the bottom half with an RBI single.
Swiss follow France into the sweet 16 at Euro PARIS — France and Switzerland settled for a 0-0 draw that suited both sides, while Albania staked its claim to a place in the last 16 of the European Championship by eliminating Romania in a 1-0 victory on Sunday. Two years ago in Brazil, France overran the Swiss in a 5-2 rout at the World Cup but in Lille it was a very different story. Switzerland matched France for possession to secure second place behind the host nation in Group A — and seal its first appearance in the knockout stages of the European Championship. France had the better of the scoring chances, with midfielder Paul Pogba hitting the crossbar in the first half with a swerving shot from 25 metres. Substitute Dimitri Payet, who scored in both of the team’s previous games, did the same in the 75th minute with a fine volley. But the hosts have yet to really hit their stride at the tournament and will look for an improvement when they take on one of the third-place teams in a week’s time. “I’m not blind, I know we can do better — but a new competition starts for us on Sunday,” France coach Didier Deschamps said.
It was a particularly bad game for kit suppliers, with the ball bursting in the second half and Switzerland having to provide three new shirts for its players after the originals ripped. After two narrow defeats, Albania’s victory over Romania has given it a fighting chance of advancing to the knockout stages as one of the best third-place teams at the tournament. Armando Sadiku scored the only goal with a far post header over goalkeeper Ciprian Tatarusanu, who had left his line. It was also Albania’s first ever goal in an international tournament. “If we stay in the tournament we will be trouble to other teams, to important teams, because today we got some more confidence,” Albania’s Italian coach Giovanni De Biasi said through a translator. “We needed the first two games to settle in.” Albania, which has three points on the board, must wait to find out if it will be playing in the last 16 as one of the four best third-place teams at Euro 2016. A wide open Group B will be settled on Monday, when Russia plays Wales in Toulouse and England takes on Slovakia in Saint-Etienne. England is currently top with four points, followed by Wales and Slovakia on three points, while Russia has one.
Canadians can’t catch Kim at Meijer LPGA Classic BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BELMONT, Mich. — Sei Young Kim won the Meijer LPGA Classic on Sunday for her second victory of the year, beating Carlota Ciganda with a birdie on the first hole of a playoff. After bogeying the 18th in regulation to drop into the playoff, the 23-year-old Kim rebounded on the par4 hole in the playoff. She hit a 124-yard shot from the deep left rough — so deep that she momentarily lost her ball after looking away — ran onto the green and settled at 3 ½ feet. The South Korean player finished with a 3-under 68 at Blythefield to match Ciganda at 17-under 267. Ciganda, from Spain, parred the final five holes in a bogey-free 67. Winless on the tour with four runner-up finishes, she also hit into the left rough in the playoff. She hit a 156-yard shot through the green and couldn’t get upand-down for par. Kim has five career victories, going 3-0 in playoffs. She also won the Founders Cup this year in Phoenix, shooting 63-66-70-62 to match Annika Sorenstam’s LPGA Tour scoring record of 27 under. Last year, she won three times and was the rookie of the
Brier and Tournament of Hearts have formats changed to expand field to 16 rinks OTTAWA — Canada’s national curling championships — the Brier and the Tournament of Hearts — had their fields expanded to 16 rinks on Sunday at Curling Canada’s annual general meeting. The tournaments will now feature the champions of Curling Canada’s 14 member associations, the defending champions representing Canada, as well as the top-ranked non-qualified team on the Canadian team ranking system once each provincial/territorial playdown is completed. The new format is a pilot that was approved in concept at the 2015 Curling Canada AGM, which takes advantage of the fact the 2018 championships will have little or no bearing on the
year. On 18 in regulation, Kim drove left into the rough under trees, hit her second into thick rough left of the green and missed a 15-foot par putt. South Korea’s In Gee Chun, tied for the third-round lead with defending champion Lexi Thompson, had a 71 to finish third at 15 under. The U.S. Women’s Open champion bogeyed two of the first four holes. Thompson, fighting back pain, shot a 72 to tie for fourth with top-ranked Lydia Ko at 14 under. Ko, coming off a playoff loss to Canada’s Brooke Henderson last week in the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship outside Seattle, closed with a 68. Henderson, of Smiths Falls, Ont., had a 71 to tie for 21st at 6 under. Hamilton’s Alena Sharp was the top Canadian after shooting an even 71 on Sunday and finished the tournament in a tie for 13th at 9-under 275. Maude-Aimee Leblanc of Sherbrooke, Que., was 2 under for the event. Ariya Jutanugarn, third last week after winning her previous three starts, tied for 18th at 7 under after a 68. Michelle Wie shot a 75 to tie for 56th at 1 under. She’s winless since the 2014 U.S. Women’s Open and hasn’t had a top-10 finish in 38 events. qualifying process for the 2022 Winter Olympics. The teams will be split into two pools of eight, with the top four teams from each pool then advancing to a championship pool that will determine the final four playoff teams. That will allow the Brier and the Tournament of Hearts to stick to their traditional nine-day formats, while insuring that all 14 teams have direct entry into the main portion of the championship. In addition to the format changes, Curling Canada and its Member Associations approved the introduction of a new Canadian under-18 boys and girls curling championship. The event will make its debut in the spring of 2017 and will complement the existing Canadian Junior (Under-21) Curling Championships, which will take place in January 2017 in Esquimalt, B.C.
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Albania’s Bekim Balaj, third from left, deflects a free kick during the Euro 2016 Group A soccer match between Romania and Albania at the Grand Stade in Decines-Charpieu, near Lyon, France, Sunday.
LOCAL BRIEFS Marlins have strong showing in Innisfail INNISFAIL — The Red Deer Marlins swim club had a strong showing at the Innisfail Dolphins Invitations Swim Meet. The event, held on June 17 and 18, featured swimmers from all over Alberta competing for both individual and relay points. Marlins earned just shy of 170 team relay points in the event. But it was the individual swimmers who stole the show, taking more than 1,000 individual points throughout the weekend. A total of 66 Marlins swimmers participated in the meet.
In the event, the Marlins had 42 first place finishes, 30 second place finishes and 37 third place finishes.It was a clean sweep of the visiting Calgary Saints for the Red Deer Titans senior womens and mens teams.
Titans teams take down Saints The Titans hosted the visiting Saints Friday evening at the Titan’s Rugby Field south west of Red Deer. The women, playing in the Calgary Rugby Union’s first division, started it off with a commanding 44-5 victory over the Saints. The men’s team followed it up with a come from behind win over the Saints, 38-17. Meanwhile, the U13 boys dropped their game against the Calgary Canucks, while the U15 boys clawed from a deficit at the half to win 41-24.
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THE ADVOCATE B4
SCOREBOARD MONDAY, JUNE, 20, 2016
Local Sports Today ● Senior Men’s Baseball: Phantoms at Gophers, 6:30 p.m., Canadian Brew House Ballers at North Star Sports, 7 p.m. and Gophers at Lacombe Stone and Granite, 8:30 p.m., Great Chief Park
Tuesday ● Ladies Fastball: Bandits vs. Badgers and Stettler vs Panthers, 7 p.m. and Rage U16 vs. Panthers, 8:45 p.m., Great Chief Park ● Senior Men’s Baseball: Gary Moe Volkswagen Legends at Printing Place Padres, 7 p.m., Great Chief Park
Wednesday ● Minor Baseball: Red Deer AAA Bantam Braves vs. Okotoks Dawgs Red and Red Deer AAA Midget Braves vs. Calgary Dino’s Black, 7 p.m., Great Chief Park
Baseball
Gary Moe Volkswagen Legends, 6:30 p.m., Printing Place Padres at Play It Again Sports Athletics, 7 p.m., and Gary Moe Volkswagen Legends at North Star Sports, 8:30 p.m., Great Chief Park ● Ladies Fastball: Bandits vs. U18 Rage, 7 p.m. and Rage U18 vs. Badgers, 8:45 p.m., Great Chief Park and Stettler vs. Rage U16, 7 p.m., Stettler
Saturday ● Minor Baseball: Red Deer AAA Midget Braves vs. Spruce Grove White Sox, 12 p.m. and 3 p.m., Great Chief Park. Red Deer AAA Bantam Braves vs. St. Albert Cardinals, 1 p.m. and 4 p.m., Great Chief Park ● Alberta Major Soccer League: Edmonton Victoria at Red Deer Renegades, 2 p.m., Edgar Park
Sunday ● Minor Baseball: Red Deer Midget Braves vs. Spruce Grove White Sox, 11 a.m., Great Chief Park
Thursday ● Senior Men’s Baseball: Phantoms at
Golden State (W1) vs. Cleveland (E1) (Cleveland wins series 4-3) Sunday’s result Cleveland 93 Golden State 89 Game One — Thursday, June 2 Golden State 104 Cleveland 89 Game Two — Sunday, June 5 Golden State 110 Cleveland 77 Game Three — Wednesday, June 8 Cleveland 120 Golden State 90 Game Four — Friday, June 10 Golden State 108 Cleveland 97 Game Five — Monday, June 13 Cleveland 112 Golden State 97 Game Six — Thursday, June 16 Cleveland 115 Golden State 101 Sunday’s summary Cleveland 23 19 33 18—93 GoldenState 22 27 27 13—89 CLEVELAND (93) James 9-24 8-10 27, Love 3-9 3-4 9, T.Thompson 3-3 3-4 9, Irving 10-23 4-4 26, Smith 5-13 0-0 12, Jefferson 1-4 0-0 2, Williams 1-3 0-0 2, Shumpert 1-3 3-3 6. Totals 33-82 21-25 93. GOLDEN STATE (89) Barnes 3-10 2-2 10, Green 11-15 4-4 32, Ezeli 0-4 0-0 0, Curry 6-19 1-1 17, K.Thompson 6-17 0-0 14, Iguodala 2-6 0-2 4, Speights 0-3 0-0 0, Varejao 0-1 1-2 1, Livingston 3-7 2-2 8, Barbosa 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 32-84 10-13 89. 3-Point Goals—Cleveland 6-25 (Irving 2-5, Smith 2-8, Shumpert 1-3, James 1-5, Williams 0-1, Love 0-3), Golden State 15-41 (Green 6-8, Curry 4-14, Barnes 2-4, K.Thompson 2-10, Barbosa 1-1, Speights 0-1, Iguodala 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Cleveland 48 (Love 14), Golden State 39 (Green 15). Assists—Cleveland 17 (James 11), Golden State 22 (Green 9). Total Fouls—Cleveland 15, Golden State 23. NBA Champions 2015-16 — Cleveland Cavaliers 2014-15 — Golden State Warriors 2013-14 — San Antonio Spurs 2012-13 — Miami Heat 2011-12 — Miami Heat 2010-11 — Dallas Mavericks 2009-10 — Los Angeles Lakers 2008-09 — Los Angeles Lakers 2007-08 — Boston Celtics 2006-07 — San Antonio Spurs
Hamilton Toronto Ottawa Montreal
West Division GP W L T Edmonton 2 2 0 0 Winnipeg 2 1 1 0 B.C. 2 1 1 0 Calgary 2 1 1 0 Saskatchewan 2 0 2 0 WEEK TWO Saturday’s result Edmonton 25 Saskatchewan 11 Friday’s results Hamilton 42 Ottawa 25 Montreal 22 Toronto 15 Calgary 31 B.C. 21 End of CFL Pre-season REGULAR SEASON WEEK ONE Bye: Saskatchewan
PF 48 50 49 44 27
PA 50 38 56 51 PA 24 31 47 44 53
Pt 2 2 2 2 Pt 4 2 2 2 0
GB — 1 3 6 1/2 8 1/2 GB — 1/2 4 1/2 5 1/2 17 1/2 GB — 8 1/2 11 14 16
Saturday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 7, Minnesota 6 Baltimore 4, Toronto 2 Boston 6, Seattle 2 L.A. Angels 7, Oakland 1 Houston 5, Cincinnati 4, 11 innings San Francisco 6, Tampa Bay 4 Texas 4, St. Louis 3 Cleveland 13, Chicago White Sox 2 Kansas City 16, Detroit 5
AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS G AB R H Pct. Bogaerts Bos 67 284 55 100 .352 Ortiz Bos 62 231 32 79 .342 Altuve Hou 70 272 48 93 .342 VMartinez Det 66 234 27 76 .325 Nunez Min 60 237 33 76 .321 Machado Bal 67 271 50 86 .317 Hosmer KC 69 261 39 82 .314 YEscobar LAA 65 256 32 80 .312 Desmond Tex 69 275 50 85 .309 Bradley Jr. Bos 64 230 36 71 .309 Saunders Tor 63 230 36 71 .309 Home Runs Trumbo, Baltimore, 20 Cano, Seattle, 19 Frazier, Chicago, 19 Beltran, New York, 18 Ortiz, Boston, 18 Encarnacion, Toronto, 18 Machado, Baltimore, 17 Longoria, Tampa Bay, 17 Donaldson, Toronto, 17 3 tied at 16. Runs Batted In Encarnacion, Toronto, 61 Ortiz, Boston, 59 Cano, Seattle, 53 Trumbo, Baltimore, 51 Betts, Boston, 50 Napoli, Cleveland, 49 Beltran, New York, 48 Trout, Los Angeles, 47 3 tied at 46. Pitching Sale, Chicago, 11-2 Tillman, Baltimore, 10-1 Zimmermann, Detroit, 9-3 Tomlin, Cleveland, 8-1 Porcello, Boston, 8-2 Happ, Toronto, 8-3 Salazar, Cleveland, 8-3 Hill, Oakland, 8-3 Price, Boston, 8-4 SWright, Boston, 8-4.
Washington Miami New York Philadelphia Atlanta
Monday’s Games Chicago White Sox (Gonzalez 1-2) at Boston (Wright 8-4), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (Karns 5-2) at Detroit (Pelfrey 1-7), 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Smyly 2-7) at Cleveland (Tomlin 8-1), 5:10 p.m. Baltimore (Gausman 0-4) at Texas (Holland 5-5), 6:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Chacin 3-4) at Houston (Fister 7-3), 6:10 p.m.
2005-06 — Miami Heat 2004-05 — San Antonio Spurs 2003-04 — Detroit Pistons 2002-03 — San Antonio Spurs 2001-02 — Los Angeles Lakers 2000-01 — Los Angeles Lakers 1999-00 — Los Angeles Lakers 1998-99 — San Antonio Spurs 1997-98 — Chicago Bulls 1996-97 — Chicago Bulls 1995-96 — Chicago Bulls 1994-95 — Houston Rockets 1993-94 — Houston Rockets 1992-93 — Chicago Bulls 1991-92 — Chicago Bulls 1990-91 — Chicago Bulls 1989-90 — Detroit Pistons 1988-89 — Detroit Pistons 1987-88 — Los Angeles Lakers 1986-87 — Los Angeles Lakers 1985-86 — Boston Celtics 1984-85 — Los Angeles Lakers 1983-84 — Boston Celtics 1982-83 — Philadelphia 76ers 1981-82 — Los Angeles Lakers 1980-81 — Boston Celtics 1979-80 — Los Angeles Lakers 1978-79 — Seattle SuperSonics 1977-78 — Washington Bullets 1976-77 — Portland Trail Blazers 1975-76 — Boston Celtics 1974-75 — Golden State Warriors 1973-74 — Boston Celtics 1972-73 — New York Knicks 1971-72 — Los Angeles Lakers 1970-71 — Milwaukee Bucks 1969-70 — New York Knicks 1968-69 — Boston Celtics 1967-68 — Boston Celtics 1966-67 — Philadelphia 76ers 1965-66 — Boston Celtics 1964-65 — Boston Celtics 1963-64 — Boston Celtics 1962-63 — Boston Celtics 1961-62 — Boston Celtics 1960-61 — Boston Celtics 1959-60 — Boston Celtics 1958-59 — Boston Celtics 1957-58 — St. Louis Hawks 1956-57 — Boston Celtics 1955-56 — Philadelphia Warriors 1954-55 — Syracuse Nationals 1953-54 — Minneapolis Lakers 1952-53 — Minneapolis Lakers 1951-52 — Minneapolis Lakers 1950-51 — Rochester Royals 1949-50 — Minneapolis Lakers
Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado Arizona San Diego
National League East Division W L Pct 43 27 .614 37 32 .536 36 32 .529 30 40 .429 23 46 .333 Central Division W L Pct 47 20 .701 35 33 .515 33 36 .478 31 39 .443 27 43 .386 West Division W L Pct 44 26 .629 38 33 .535 32 36 .471 32 39 .451 29 42 .408
GB — 5 1/2 6 13 19 1/2 GB — 12 1/2 15 17 1/2 21 1/2 GB — 6 1/2 11 12 1/2 15 1/2
Saturday’s Games Arizona 4, Philadelphia 1 Houston 5, Cincinnati 4, 11 innings Miami 9, Colorado 6 San Francisco 6, Tampa Bay 4 Texas 4, St. Louis 3 Atlanta 4, N.Y. Mets 3 Chicago Cubs 4, Pittsburgh 3 L.A. Dodgers 10, Milwaukee 6 San Diego 7, Washington 3
Tuesday’s Games Colorado at N.Y. Yankees, 5:05 p.m. San Diego at Baltimore, 5:05 p.m. Arizona at Toronto, 5:07 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Boston, 5:10 p.m. Kansas City at N.Y. Mets, 5:10 p.m. Seattle at Detroit, 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 5:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Texas, 6:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Houston, 6:10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games Atlanta 6, N.Y. Mets 0 Miami 3, Colorado 0 San Francisco 5, Tampa Bay 1 Arizona 5, Philadelphia 1 Houston 6, Cincinnati 0 Texas 5, St. Louis 4 L.A. Dodgers 2, Milwaukee 1 San Diego 6, Washington 3 Chicago Cubs 10, Pittsburgh 5 Monday’s Games Arizona (Miller 1-6) at Philadelphia (Hellickson 4-5), 11:05 a.m. San Francisco (Bumgarner 8-2) at Pittsburgh (Locke 5-5), 5:05 p.m. Colorado (Bettis 5-5) at Miami (Nicolino 2-4), 5:10 p.m. St. Louis (Garcia 4-6) at Chicago Cubs (Lackey 7-2), 6:05 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 10-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 10-1), 8:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Colorado at N.Y. Yankees, 5:05 p.m. San Diego at Baltimore, 5:05 p.m. San Francisco at Pittsburgh, 5:05 p.m. Arizona at Toronto, 5:07 p.m. Atlanta at Miami, 5:10 p.m. Kansas City at N.Y. Mets, 5:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Texas, 6:05 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 6:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Minnesota, 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Oakland, 8:05 p.m. Washington at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS G AB R H Pct. Murphy Was 67 257 40 92 .358 Marte Pit 63 246 36 83 .337 Prado Mia 65 259 31 84 .324 Ozuna Mia 68 257 42 82 .319 Yelich Mia 64 230 32 73 .317 Braun Mil 58 222 29 70 .315 CGonzalez Col 65 259 46 81 .313 LeMahieu Col 63 228 41 71 .311 Lucroy Mil 65 235 35 73 .311 Zobrist ChC 63 226 47 70 .310 Home Runs Arenado, Colorado, 20 Duvall, Cincinnati, 20 Carter, Milwaukee, 18 Cespedes, New York, 17 Story, Colorado, 17 Bryant, Chicago, 17 Rizzo, Chicago, 17 Myers, San Diego, 16 5 tied at 15. Runs Batted In Arenado, Colorado, 57 Rizzo, Chicago, 53 Bruce, Cincinnati, 51 Duvall, Cincinnati, 48 Kemp, San Diego, 47 Bryant, Chicago, 47 Murphy, Washington, 46 Story, Colorado, 45 Goldschmidt, Arizona, 45 Myers, San Diego, 44. Pitching Arrieta, Chicago, 11-1 Strasburg, Washington, 10-0 Kershaw, Los Angeles, 10-1 Cueto, San Francisco, 10-1 Greinke, Arizona, 10-3 Lester, Chicago, 9-3 Fernandez, Miami, 9-3 Bumgarner, San Francisco, 8-2 3 tied at 8-4.
Golf PGA - U.S. Open Sunday At Oakmont Country Club Oakmont, Pa. Purse: $10 million Yardage: 7,219; Par: 70 Final (a-amateur) Dustin Johnson, $1,800,000 Jim Furyk, $745,270 Shane Lowry, $745,270
67-69-71-69—276 71-68-74-66—279 68-70-65-76—279
Scott Piercy, $745,270 Sergio Garcia, $374,395 Branden Grace, $374,395 Kevin Na, $313,349 Jason Day, $247,806 Jason Dufner, $247,806 Zach Johnson, $247,806 Daniel Summerhays, $247,806 David Lingmerth, $201,216 Brooks Koepka, $180,298 Kevin Streelman, $180,298
68-70-72-69—279 68-70-72-70—280 73-70-66-71—280 75-68-69-69—281 76-69-66-71—282 73-71-68-70—282 71-69-71-71—282 74-65-69-74—282 72-69-75-67—283 75-69-72-68—284 69-74-69-72—284
Bryson DeChambeau, $152,234 71-70-70-74—285 Andrew Landry, $152,234 66-71-70-78—285 Brendan Steele, $152,234 71-71-70-73—285 Gregory Bourdy, $120,978 71-67-75-73—286 Sung Kang, $120,978 70-72-70-74—286 Marc Leishman, $120,978 71-69-77-69—286 Graeme McDowell, $120,978 72-71-71-72—286 Adam Scott, $120,978 71-69-72-74—286 Byeong Hun An, $82,890 74-70-73-70—287 Derek Fathauer, $82,890 73-69-70-75—287 Russell Knox, $82,890 70-71-73-73—287
Soccer MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE GP W L T GF Philadelphia 15 6 4 5 23 New York 15 7 7 1 26 New York City 16 5 5 6 25 Montreal 14 5 4 5 22 Toronto 14 5 5 4 15 New England 15 4 4 7 21 Orlando 14 3 3 8 25 D.C. 15 4 6 5 14 Columbus 14 3 5 6 18 Chicago 13 2 6 5 11
Football CFL Pre-Season Standings East Division GP W L T PF 2 1 1 0 58 2 1 1 0 40 2 1 1 0 43 2 1 1 0 35
Philadelphia at Minnesota, 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Oakland, 8:05 p.m.
Sunday’s Games Cleveland 3, Chicago White Sox 2, 10 innings San Francisco 5, Tampa Bay 1 Boston 2, Seattle 1 Baltimore 11, Toronto 6 Houston 6, Cincinnati 0 Minnesota 7, N.Y. Yankees 4 Kansas City 2, Detroit 1, 13 innings Texas 5, St. Louis 4 L.A. Angels 2, Oakland 0
Basketball 2016 NBA Playoffs Fourth Round THE FINALS (Best-of-7)
Major League Baseball American League East Division W L Pct Baltimore 40 28 .588 Boston 39 29 .574 Toronto 39 33 .542 New York 34 35 .493 Tampa Bay 31 36 .463 Central Division W L Pct Cleveland 38 30 .559 Kansas City 38 31 .551 Detroit 34 35 .493 Chicago 33 36 .478 Minnesota 21 48 .304 West Division W L Pct Texas 45 25 .643 Seattle 36 33 .522 Houston 34 36 .486 Los Angeles 31 38 .441 Oakland 28 41 .412
Thursday’s game Hamilton at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. Friday’s game Montreal at Winnipeg, 6:30 p.m. Saturday, June 25 Ottawa at Edmonton, 5 p.m. Calgary at B.C., 8 p.m. Saturday’s summary Eskimos 25, Roughriders 11 First Quarter Edm — TD Getzlaf 5 pass from Reilly (Whyte convert) 1:18 Edm — Single Shaw 51 4:56 Edm — FG Whyte 25 14:56 Second Quarter Edm — Single Shaw 76 11:27 Sask — TD Chiles 5 run (Crapigna convert) 13:56 Sask — Single Crapigna 80 14:09 Third Quarter Edm — TD McKnight 85 run (Shaw convert) 6:07 Edm — FG Whyte 35 10:15 Edm — FG Whyte 48 14:19 Fourth Quarter Sask — FG Van Gylswyk 46 5:04 Saskatchewan0 8 0 3 — 11 Edmonton 11 1 13 0 — 25
GA 19 20 31 20 15 26 23 16 21 16
Pt 23 22 21 20 19 19 17 17 15 11
WESTERN CONFERENCE GP W L T GF GA Pt Colorado 15 9 2 4 19 11 31 Dallas 17 8 5 4 24 24 28 Salt Lake 14 7 4 3 25 23 24 Los Angeles 14 5 3 6 27 17 21 San Jose 15 5 4 6 18 18 21 Vancouver 16 6 7 3 24 27 21 Kansas City 17 6 8 3 16 18 21 Portland 16 5 6 5 25 27 20 Seattle 14 5 8 1 13 17 16 Houston 15 3 7 5 20 22 14 Note: Three points awarded for a win one for a tie. Sunday’s results Kansas City 2 Dallas 0 New York 2 Seattle 0 Saturday’s results Colorado 2 Chicago 1 D.C. 0 Houston 0 Montreal 0 Columbus 0 New England 2 Vancouver 1 New York City 3 Philadelphia 2 Portland 2 Salt Lake 2 San Jose 2 Orlando 2 Toronto 1 Los Angeles 0 Wednesday’s games Chicago at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. New England at D.C., 6 p.m. New York at Salt Lake, 8 p.m. Colorado at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.
At Lille, France Switzerland 0 France 0 At Lyon, France Albania 1 Romania 0
UEFA Euro 2016 At Sites in France Group Stage Group A W L T GF GA 2 0 1 4 1 1 0 2 2 1 1 2 0 1 3 0 2 1 2 4 Group B MP W L T GF GA England 2 1 0 1 3 2 Wales 2 1 1 0 3 3 Slovakia 2 1 1 0 3 3 Russia 2 0 1 1 2 3 Group C MP W L T GF GA Germany 2 1 0 1 2 0 Poland 2 1 0 1 1 0 Northern Ireland 2 1 1 0 2 1 Ukraine 2 0 2 0 0 4 Group D MP W L T GF GA x-Spain 2 2 0 0 4 0 Croatia 2 1 0 1 3 2 Czech Rep. 2 0 1 1 2 3 Turkey 2 0 2 0 0 4 Group E MP W L T GF GA x-Italy 2 2 0 0 3 0 Belgium 2 1 1 0 3 2 Sweden 2 0 1 1 1 2 Rep. of Ireland 2 0 1 1 1 4 Group F MP W L T GF GA Hungary 2 1 0 1 3 1 Iceland 2 0 0 2 2 2 Portugal 2 0 0 2 1 1 Austria 2 0 1 1 0 2 x — clinched berth in second round Note: Three points awarded for a win, one for a tie. x-France x-Switzerland Albania Romania
MP 3 3 3 3
Sunday’s results Group A
Pt 7 5 3 1 Pt 4 3 3 1 Pt 4 4 3 0 Pt 6 4 1 0 Pt 6 3 1 1 Pt 4 2 2 1
Saturday’s results Group E At Bordeaux, France Belgium 3 Ireland 0 Group F At Marseille, France Iceland 1 Hungary 1 At Paris Portugal 0 Austria 0 Monday’s matches Group B At Saint-Etienne, France Slovakia vs. England, 1 p.m. At Toulouse, France Russia vs. Wales, 1 p.m. Tuesday’s matches Group C At Paris Northern Ireland vs. Germany, 10 a.m. At Marseille, France Ukraine vs. Poland, 10 a.m. Group D At Bordeaux, France Croatia vs. Spain, 1 p.m. At Lens, France Czech Republic vs. Turkey, 1 p.m. Wednesday’s matches Group E At Nice, France Sweden vs. Belgium, 1 p.m. At Lille, France Italy vs. Ireland, 1 p.m. Group F At Lyon, France Hungary vs. Portugal, 10 a.m. At Saint-Denis, France Iceland vs. Austria, 10 a.m. Conclusion of Group Stage
CFL CUTS
Veteran Denmark won’t be continuing his career with Riders
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BY THE CANADIAN PRESS Veteran receiver Clarence Denmark won’t be continuing his CFL career with the Saskatchewan Roughriders. Denmark was among Saskatchewan’s 20 final cuts Sunday as CFL teams reduced their rosters to the league-mandated 46-man active roster. Demark joined the Riders this off-season as a free agent after being released by the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. “Tough biz we deal with but this gives me the chance to slide to the peg to see my lil man on Father’s Day,” Denmark tweeted. “See the good in everything .life.” Denmark had 306 career catches for 4,165 yards and 16 TDs in 88 regular-season appearances with Winnipeg. He was a West Division all-star in 2014 after amassing 1,080 receiving yards. The Riders also released quarterback Brett Smith, who completed 142-of-224 passes for 1,822 yards with 15 TDs against nine interceptions as a rookie last season. Defensive linemen Eric Norwood and Dylan Ainsworth, quarterback Phillip Sims and offensive lineman Jarriel King and Matt Vonk went on the sixgame injured list. Saskatchewan also acquired international defensive back Brandon McDonald from the Calgary Stampeders for a negotiation list player. The five-foot-11, 185-pound McDonald enters his third CFL season after splitting the previous two with Ottawa and the Stamps. The defending Grey Cup-champion Edmonton Eskimos released nine players, including veteran Canadian safety Cauchy Muamba. The six-year veteran spent the last two seasons in Alberta after playing for the B.C. Lions and Winnipeg. Also released by Edmonton was former Toronto Argonauts receiver Natey Adjei. Canadian linebacker Herve Tonye-Tonye and American defensive back Shane Herbert were among 16 players released by Toronto. The Argos also added running back Chad Kackert, the MVP of the 2012 Grey Cup, to their practice roster after releasing the veteran last week.
EVENING EDITOR
PHOTOGRAPHER
The Red Deer Advocate, Central Alberta’s only daily newspaper, is seeking an EDITOR for one evening shift a week.
The Red Deer Advocate, Central Alberta’s only daily newspaper, is seeking a PART-TIME PHOTOGRAPHER for the summer.
Duties will include writing, editing and page layout on Friday evenings, posting to the web for our website and social media sites and any other duties assigned by the managing editor. They may also be asked to fill in when other editors are on vacation or are ill. Qualifications A degree or equivalent work experience in journalism, and a working knowledge of InDesign and Photoshop is required. The successful candidate will have strong layout and editing skills. Anyone interested is asked to apply to managing editor Josh Aldrich by June 29, 2017. Josh Aldrich Managing Editor jaldrich@reddeeradvocate.com We thank all applicants for their interest, however, only selected candidates will be contacted. No phone calls please.
To learn more about Black Press see blackpress.ca
This will be for three shifts a week — Thursday, Friday and Saturday — for three weeks in July and for a week in August. Qualifications A degree or equivalent work experience in journalism and a working knowledge of Photoshop is required. The successful candidate will know what makes a good news photo and be able to shoot a wide range of events, from sports to enterprise to breaking news. A knowledge of CP Style and the ability to also write concise copy is also required. Anyone interested is asked to apply to managing editor Josh Aldrich by June 24, 2016 with a resume, cover letter and portfolio/tear sheets. Josh Aldrich Managing Editor jaldrich@reddeeradvocate.com We thank all applicants for their interest, however, only selected candidates will be contacted. No phone calls please.
To learn more about Black Press see blackpress.ca
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LIFE
THE ADVOCATE Monday, June 20, 2016
A healthier shortcake that won’t short-sell your strawberries BY MELISSA D’ARABIAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Strawberry shortcake has always been a favourite dessert of mine — it reminds me of the carefree days of summer at my grandparent’s house, where we’d buy strawberries by the pound and eat them in just about everything. Our family always preferred the biscuit-shortcake to the spongecake variety, which was too sweet and ruined the strawberries, according to my grandma. I think she was right — a light fluffy biscuit with just a touch of sweetness and enough heft to handle seriously juicy berries is the ticket to perfect shortcake. Since we eat shortcake all summer, I’ve created a recipe that includes a little extra fiber and protein by subbing out half the white flour with whole wheat flour (whole wheat pastry flour is particularly great for baked goods, if you can find it). But with the husk and germ of the wheat comes a slighter darker, nuttier colour, which isn’t quite what children may be craving for dessert. My easy solution: embrace the beautiful brown colour and enhance it with a little cinnamon. Suddenly, wheaty biscuits are transformed into cinnamon shortbread in the eyes of my kiddos. And the flaky texture comes from just a little bit of butter, while low-fat plain Greek yogurt subs in for the traditional heavy cream and buttermilk. The berries are made perfectly tangy and sweet with some balsamic vinegar and brown sugar, an homage to my grandma who used apple cider vinegar in just about everything, including her berries for shortcake. (Balsamic is a little sweeter and more balanced than apple cider vinegar, so it’s a nice upgrade.) The final touches of mint and orange zest add nuanced flavour, so the berries shine through without a ton of extra sugar. And instead of whipped cream, I mix up a luscious vanilla cream from part-skim ricotta and Greek yogurt. We’ll be eating this recipe straight through to fall.
CINNAMON BISCUIT BERRY SHORTCAKES Start to Finish: 45 minutes Yield: 6 servings For the berries: 2 tablespoons white balsamic vinegar (or apple cider vinegar) 1 tablespoon brown sugar 2 cups raspberries, blueberries, and sliced strawberries 1 teaspoon grated orange zest 2 teaspoons chopped fresh mint
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cinnamon Biscuit Berry Shortcakes are shown in a June 1, 2016 photo in Coronado, Calif. This recipe includes a little extra fiber and protein by subbing out half the white flour with whole wheat flour. For the shortcake biscuits: 1 ¼ cup flour - half whole wheat, half all-purpose 2 ½ teaspoons baking powder ¼ teaspoon baking soda 2 tablespoons sugar, plus more for sprinkling ¼ teaspoon salt ½ teaspoon cinnamon 3 Tablespoons cold butter, cut into small cubes ½ cup low-fat plain Greek yogurt 1 egg, lightly beaten, divided in half For the creamy filling: 1/3 cup part-skim ricotta cheese 3 tablespoons low-fat plain Greek yogurt 1/8 teaspoon vanilla extract 1 tablespoon brown sugar Preheat the oven to 400. In a medium bowl, toss together the berries with the balsamic vinegar, brown sugar, orange zest and mint and place in refrigerator while you make the biscuits. Place the flour, baking powder, baking soda, sugar, salt and cinnamon in a small food processor. Pulse once or twice to mix the dry ingredients. Add the butter, and pulse 7 or 8 times until mixture looks like wet sand. Add half the egg into the yogurt and stir to com-
bine, and then pour on top of the flour. Process until the dough comes together in a large clump, about 30 seconds. Empty the dough onto the counter and form into a 6” disk. Slice the dough into 6 wedges and place on a baking sheet lined with parchment. Brush lightly with a little remaining beaten egg and sprinkle with a little sugar on top. Bake until golden brown and fluffy, about 13-15 minutes. Remove from the oven and allow to cool. Meanwhile, make the cream: in a small bowl, mix together the ricotta cheese, yogurt, vanilla and brown sugar until smooth. Chill until ready to serve. To serve, split the biscuits in half, spoon some ricotta cream on the bottom half, top with macerated berries and the top biscuit half. Enjoy. Nutrition information per serving: 255 calories 80 calories from fat 9 g fat (5 g saturated X g trans fats) 58 mg cholesterol 422 mg sodium 36 g carbohydrate 4 g fiber 13 g sugar 9 g protein. Food Network star Melissa d’Arabian is an expert on healthy eating on a budget. She is the author of the cookbook “Supermarket Healthy.”
Don’t go sour on homemade pickles BY MELISSA D’ARABIAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In the world of summer barbecues, the pickle hardly plays a starring role. Truth to be told, “hold the pickles” is my standard order, as I am not a fan of pickles on a cheeseburger, nor do I particularly care for pickle juice leaking onto my sandwich bread at a deli. But homemade quick pickles made from a variety of fresh veggies, not just cucumbers, are a completely different story! Quick pickles are made in minutes, not days, so the veggies stay crisper than store-bought versions. And since you control the ingredients, you can customize your pickles to make them as tart, sweet, sour, spicy or salty as you want. Make one batch, and you’ll immediately know how to adjust the flavours to your liking. You can even make a variety of pickling flavours easily — add extra smashed garlic cloves and red pepper flakes to the green beans and bump up the vinegar to give cauliflower floret pickles extra pucker. You can even pickle fruit — sliced lemon, pineapple chunks, halved cherry tomatoes all make tangy toppings for grilled meats and spicy dishes. The homemade pickle is a far more versatile actor than its commercially-produced cousin. Try serving a variety of lightly-pickled veggies with dip instead of the expected crudite. Imagine a veritable mini-buffet of brightly colored pickled veggies in mason jars set up next to the condiments at your next barbecue. Bring along a jar or two to someone else’s party this summer as a healthy
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1
Photo by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Six-ingredient pickles are made in minutes, not days, so the veggies stay crisper than store-bought versions. hostess gift. Or, just keep a jar or two in your fridge for snacking. The basic recipe is easy enough to keep your fridge stocked, too. Just six simple pantry ingredients are needed: vegetable, vinegar, salt, sugar, garlic and an herb or spice. (You do need kosher or coarse pickling salt — regular iodized salt will turn your vegetables an unappealing black.) Which means homemade pickles can probably be on your menu tonight without even a trip to the store.
ART IN THE AM AT RED DEER MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY
THINGS HAPPENING TOMORROW
Art in the AM is a new facilitated program for people with memory issues and their care partners from the Red Deer Museum and Art Gallery developed in collaboration with the Alzheimer’s Society of Alberta and the Northwest Territories and sponsored but the Rotary Club of Red Deer. Cost is $5 per pair and runs from 10-11:30 a.m. on Tuesday.
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6-INGREDIENT QUICK PICKLES Start to Finish: 15 minutes Yield: varies ½ cup white vinegar 1 tablespoon kosher salt 2 teaspoons sugar 6 smashed garlic cloves 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes (or other spice or herb, such a mustard seed, celery seed, or dill) 2 cups vegetables, approximately, trimmed to fit in two 1-pint mason jars Special equipment: 2 mason jars (1 pint size) Heat the vinegar, salt and sugar in
PENHOLD COMMUNITY MARKET
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The Penhold Community Market is a weekly outdoor market featuring local artisans, producers and other vendors at the Penhold Regional Multiplex on Tuesday from 4-8 p.m.
a saucepan with 2 cups of water and bring to a boil and stir until salt and sugar dissolve, about 2 minutes. Meanwhile place the garlic and red pepper flakes at the bottom of the mason jars, and add the trimmed vegetables. Pour the boiling pickling liquid into the jars to cover the vegetables completely. (You should have enough water, but if not, boil a little extra plain water and add.) Cover the jars and let the vegetables sit until cool enough to eat. Store in refrigerator. Best if eaten within a week.
DEAN RAY ACOUSTIC ON THE ROSS STREET PATIO The Ross Street Patio is back up and running for another year, featuring free live music all summer long over the lunch hour. This Tuesday from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. will feature Three Hills musician Dean Ray.
FIND OUT WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING IN OUR EVENT CALENDAR AT WWW.REDDEERADVOCATE.COM/CALENDAR.
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B6
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announcements Obituaries
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KATHLEEN AUBREY 1919 - 2008 If we had one wish it would be to have just one more special moment, one more breath, one more smile, hug and kiss. We cherish our memories Mom and miss you so much it still hurts. ~ Love and Miss you Always Your loving family
CARLISLE James “Al” Allen It is with great sadness that the family of Al Carlisle announces his passing at the Olds Hospital, Tuesday June 14, 2016 at 67 years of age. He was born in Souris Manitoba on August 28, 1948. He joined the RCMP in 1970 and moved to Alberta. He met the love of his life Darlene and they were married in 1972. Al had an abundance of love and zest for life and it shone through his family and his home. His greatest joys were his children, grandchildren and his home. Al will be profoundly missed by his wife Darlene of 44 years; his children Sherri Carlisle, Lori (Lane) Milligan; two granddaughters Peyton and Brooke Milligan; his sister Suzanne (Rick) Pinsent and many extended families. He was predeceased by his parents Frank and Dorothy Carlisle, his brother and sister in-law Peter and Corrine Carlisle and his inlaws Don and Mary Wolfer. A Celebration of Al’s Life will be held on Tuesday, June 21 at 1:00 p.m. at Heartland Funeral Services Chapel (5226 46 St.)Olds. In lieu of flowers a memorial tribute in Al’s name can be made to the Tom Baker Cancer Centre. HEARTLAND FUNERAL SERVICES LTD., OLDS entrusted with arrangements. 403-507-8610 www.heartlandfuneralservices.com
JOHNSON Margaret 1934 - 2016 Margaret Rose Johnson passed away June 13, 2016 at the age of 81 in Lacombe, Alberta. A Graveside Service will be held Wednesday, June 22, 2016 at 11:00 a.m. at Fairview Cemetery, Lacombe, Alberta. Condolences may be made by visiting www.wilsonsfuneralchapel.ca WILSON’S FUNERAL CHAPEL & CREMATORIUM serving Central Alberta with locations in Lacombe and Rimbey in charge of arrangements. Phone: 403.782.3366, 403.843.3388 “A Caring Family, Caring for Families”
HOOD Irene Sophia 1923 - 2016 Mrs. Irene Sophia Elizabeth Hood of Red Deer, Alberta, passed away peacefully at the Extendicare Michener Hill, Red Deer, Alberta on Tuesday, June 14, 2016 at the age of 92 years. Irene was born in Grenfell, Saskatchewan on June 19, 1923. She will be lovingly remembered by her children, Cindy Mamen, Hardy (Barbara) Hood and Lynette (Ed) Grose; her grandchildren In Memory of Ashley and Dallas Mamen, Mildred Dorothy Frizzell Stephen and Dustin Hood Aug. 5, 1925 - Dec. 6, 2015 and Emily and Carson Grose, her sister-in-law’s, Memorial Service to be held Irene Gataint, Edith and Saturday, June 25, 2016 Katie Dech, and brother-infrom 1 - 3 p.m. at the law, Vern Hack, as well as Royal Canadian Legion, numerous relatives and close 2810 Bremner Avenue, friends. Irene was predeceased Red Deer, AB T4R 1M9 by her husband Claybyn, her parents Jacob and Susanna Dech, her son-in-law Erik, siblings, George Fred, Chris, Jake, and Harold Dech and Katherine Milne and Jean Hack. Upon completion of school, Irene was as a hairdresser and owned her own salon. In 1952, she married Claybyn and they lived in Francis and Regina until the family relocated to Red Deer in 1966. After raising her children, she worked at the Red Deer Nursing Home for ten years. She loved to curl, golf, play bridge, and was active in the community. Irene had the gift of hospitality and her love language was cooking and baking for her family and friends, and is remembered DORIS NELSON for her perogies, cabbage Feb. 7, 1043 - June 20, 2015 rolls, cookies and so many other wonderful treats! She If tears could build a stairway, was a loving mother and and memories a lane, grandmother, who treasured I’d walk right up to heaven time with her family and and bring you home again. loved serving others. Special thanks to the staff of Forever loved Michener Extendicare and Norman and family the many others who have helped Irene over the last number of years. A Celebration of Irene’s life will be held at Mount Calvary Lutheran Church, 18 Selkirk Engagements Blvd. Red Deer, Alberta on Tuesday, June 21, 2016 at 11:00 a.m. Memorial Donations in Irene’s honor may be made directly to the Canadian Lung Association, www.lung.ca/donate or the Canadian National Institute for the Blind www.cnib.ca/en/alberta. 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. FOLKMAN - STEBNER Rock and Charlene Folkman are delighted to announce the engagement of their daughter, Marilee, to Colin Stebner, son of Del and Diane Stebner. Their wedding will take place on July 30, 2016, in Sylvan Lake, AB.
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Lost
BLUE and grey backpack belonging to deaf 4-yearold child taken from car in parking lot at Las Palmeras restaurant on June 14. Backpack contained items which he needs to help him hear via his cochlear implants. Extremely valuable to him - no one else. Reward offered. If found please call 403-342-6590. MOUNTAIN BIKE, black with white strip on seat. Lost at North Walmart. Bike is for Special Needs Person - Only Means of Transportation! If found call 403-314-1608 Ask for Brent Start your career! See Help Wanted REWARD RING, Gold with blue stone, LOST south Red Deer. If found please call 403-307-3880
Companions
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LONELY Gent looking for lonely lady Please answer with phone number to : Box 1120, c/o Red Deer Advocate, 2950 Bremner Ave., R.D. AB T4R 1M9
Personals
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ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS 403-347-8650 COCAINE ANONYMOUS 403-396-8298
800 Restaurant/ Hotel 820
TO ORDER HOME MCDONALD’S Restaurant Gasoline Alley, Cameron DELIVERY OF Bay Holdings Inc. has Full THE and Part time positions for Late Night shift. We’re ADVOCATE looking for night Owls who are detailed orientated, CALL OUR energetic and thrive in a DRAGON ENERGY team focused environment. CIRCULATION • 11 Pm - 7 AM (Red Deer) • Flexible days of work is looking for a DEPARTMENT • Free uniforms Tanker (B620) 50% off meals across Technician / Welder • Canada 403-314-4300
Oilfield
/ Fabricator
Medical/Dental benefits (full time) Scholarship program (part time) • $12 - $15 per hour • Employee outings and Activities • Advancement opportunities If you have excellent verbal Looking for a new pet? communication skills and a Check out Classifieds to passion for Customer find the purrfect pet. Service, send your resume to cbay22@telus.net or FRAC Water management visit us in person at 37479 company looking to hire Hwy 2 or 37428 Hwy 2, experienced water Red Deer, AB. personnel. Must have knowledge of pumps, running hoses, lay out of Sales & jobs, supervising crews. Distributors Rapidly growing company with year round work. Marketing reps Competitive wages needed and benefits. Hiring immediately. Work in $500+/week to start Alberta in BC area. 8 Full time entry level Please forward resumes to positions open in Red info@ Deer this week! No whitewatermanagement.ca experience necessary! Must be available to start asap. Raise/promotion Restaurant/ available in 30 days. Qualified in accordance with ASME Code, Section IX. Must have related experience in B620 shop, Valid driver license. e-mail resume to jeff.sahli@modernusa.com or edson.hernandez@ modernusa.com
Hotel
820
EAST 40TH PUB REQ’S F/T or P/T GRILL COOK Apply in person with resume 3811 40th Ave. Tired of Standing? Find something to sit on in Classifieds
You can sell your guitar for a song... or put it in CLASSIFIEDS and we’ll sell it for you!
JJAM Management (1987) Ltd., o/a Tim Horton’s Requires to work at these Red Deer, AB locations: #3, 5111 22 St. 37444 HWY 2 S 37543 HWY 2N 700 3020 22 St. CLASSIFICATIONS Food Service Supervisor 700-920 Req’d F/T & P/T permanent shift, early morning, morning, day, Caregivers/ eves. shift weekend day night. both full and part Aides time. 40 - 44 hrs/wk FULL-TIME live-in caregiver 8 Vacancies, $13.75 /hr. + medical, dental, life and needed for elderly lady. vision benefits. Start Please call 403-392-0711 ASAP. Job description www.timhortons.com LOOKING for a Live-in Experience 1 yr. to less Caregiver w/exp. to care than 2 yrs. Education not for 5 & 8 yr. old. Email req’d. Apply in person or resume to: jeannette. fax 403-314-1303 lobaton@yahoo.ca
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jobs
710
Restaurant/ Hotel
Announcements the informative choice! Classifieds 309-3300
•
•
830
820
Call 1-(844)-207-7513 for an interview today!
Trades
850
P/T Carpenter needed, will work into F/T seasonal. mmurphy@decks.ca
SHUNDA CONSTRUCTION Requires Full Time
Exp’d Framers Journeman Carpenters Competitive Wages & Benefits. Fax resumes & ref’s to: 403-343-1248 or email to: admin@shunda.ca
880
Misc. Help
AAA-1 OPPORTUNITY Healthtek Inc is expanding in Red Deer area & needs 8 Full Time positions filled ASAP. Call for Red Deer interview
NO EXP NECESSARY Operators on duty Saturday 12pm-8pm Sunday 2pm-6pm Monday 10am-5pm Tuesday 10am-5pm 1 - (844) 207 - 7513
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stuff
Now Hiring
CLASSIFICATIONS
GASOLINE ALLEY LOCATION
Building Supplies
1500-1990
FULL TIME and PART TIME SHIFTS AVAILABLE • Very Competitive Wages • Advancement Opportunities With medical Benefits • Paid training • Paid Breaks
1550
(15) 14’, 2x4’s, new but not straight. $35. for all 403-346-2859 LUMBER, pressure treated 2x6 10’ and 12’. 10 of each. $165 or offers. 403-346-7103
EquipmentHeavy
1630
TRAILERS for sale or rent Job site, office, well site or storage. Skidded or wheeled. Call 347-7721.
7642688F7-20
DEADLINE IS 4:30 P.M. FOR NEXT DAY’S PAPER
Apply in person or send resume to: Email:kfcjobsrd@yahoo.ca or Fax: (403) 341-3820
Tools
1640
BENCH Grinder, 1/3 HP, $25.; Dremel Tool Kit with base, $40.; Metal Folding table, $15. 403-346-6539 METAL STORAGE shelves, (2) metal 3’ x 6’. $30. Wind speed Indicator, $15.; CB Radios (2), w/accessories. $25. 403-346-6539
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 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
ADULT CARRIERS NEEDED INNISFAIL 6 DAYS A WEEK BY 6:30 AM Call Joanne at 403- 314-4308
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, June 20, 2016 B7
1640 Suites
Tools
METRIC Socket, plus tool box. $100. 403-343-6044
Firewood
1660
FIREWOOD seasoned & split $50.00 1/2 ton load. 403-728-3485
Health & Beauty
1700
INVERSION Table, $200. 403-343-6044
Household Furnishings
1720
3060
ADULT 2 BDRM. spacious suites 3 appls., heat/water incl’d., ADULT ONLY BLDG, no pets, Oriole Park. 403-986-6889
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
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homes CLASSIFICATIONS 4000-4190
Realtors & Services
4010
DOWNTOWN well-managed, quiet adult bldg., avail. now, 1 & 2 bdrm. with balcony, $850 and $895/mo. Heat and water incld. 2 wks. free with 6 mo. lease. No pets. 403-348-1262 or 403-347-3213
WANTED
Misc. for Sale
1760
100 VHS movies, $75 for all. 403-885-5020 2 ELECTRIC LAMPS, $20. 403-885-5020 50 - BRAND NEW turn buckles, hook and eye, 9-3/8” $1.00 each call 403-728-3485 CAMPING dishes, unbreakable, Durawere Set. $35. Coleman Propane lantern, $50. Coleman Propane Camp Stove, $100. 403-343-6044 COFFEE Maker, under counter, $30. 403-343-6044 COPPER clad aluminum #2, booster cables $40. 403-343-6044 Electric Bar-B-que $50. 403-309-3045 FAN, Áoor model, Àts in doorway, 22”x22”. $25. 403-347-3849 SPIDERMAN Àgures, (4), single sheets, hat, toque and gloves. $25. 403-347-3849 VIDEO Photo Tripod, extended height, 143 cm. $40. 403-346-6539 WATER HOSE REEL, $35. 403-885-5020
Travel Packages
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rentals CLASSIFICATIONS
FOR RENT • 3000-3200 WANTED • 3250-3390
3020
4 BDRMS, 2 1/2 baths, single car garage, 5 appls, $1595/mo. in Red Deer. 403-782-7156 403-357-7465 SYLVAN: fully furn. rentals incld’s all utils. & cable. $550 - $1300. By the week or month. 403-880-0210
Condos/ Townhouses
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
THE NORDIC
Rental incentives avail. 1 & 2 bdrm. adult building, N/S, No pets. 403-596-2444
CLASSIFICATIONS 5000-5300
Boats & Marine
3030
Large waiting room, 2 ofÀces & storage room, 403-346-5885 Celebrate your life with a Classified ANNOUNCEMENT
3180
Pasture
PASTURE
North Red Deer. 10 cow/calf pairs, no bulls, no yearlings. 403-346-5885 Something for Everyone Everyday in Classifieds
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
3050
ACROSS from park, 2 bdrm. 4-plex, 1 1/2 bath, 4 appls. Rent $925/mo. d.d. $650. Avail. now or July 1. 403-304-5337
GLENDALE
2 Bdrm. 4-plex, 4 appls., $925. incl. sewer, water & garbage. D.D. $650, Avail. now or July 1. 403-304-5337
GLENDALE
1/2 DUPLEX, 2 storey 1600 sq. ft. 3 bdrms., 2 1/2 baths, main Ár. laundry, att. dble. garage, close to playgrounds, schools & shopping. Serious buyers only, no realtors. 403-342-0813
Condos/ Townhouses
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Boat Slips Available For Sale or Rent Sylvan Lake, AB 403.318.2442 info@watersedgesylvan.com www.watersedgesylvan.com
4040 Tires, Parts Acces.
5180
ENGINE STAND, $35. 403-346-7103 H.D. R.V Scissor Jacks, 1 pr. $100. 403-347-2797 MICHENER Hill condos Phase 3 NEW 4th Ár. corner suite, 1096 sq. ft., 2 bdrm, 2 bath, a/c, all appls, underground parking w/storage, recreational amenities, extended care centre attached, deck. 403-227-6554 to 4 pm. weekdays or 588-8623 anytime. Pics avail. on Kijji. CELEBRATIONS HAPPEN EVERY DAY IN CLASSIFIEDS
Property
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 Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
Photo by Komsomolskaya Pravda via AP
WatersEdge Marina
TIRES, (4) 215/65R16, M & S Radial, good cond. $120. 403-347-2797 TOWING MIRRORS, 2 pr. custom, 1 pr. for 1993 -1977 Dodge pickup, 1 pr. for 2002 - 2005 Dodge pickup. $40. /pr. 403-347-2797 TWO Bridgestone tires, 175-70-13, 85% treadwear, $40 for both. 403-505-3113
Red Deer ADVOCATE CLASSIFIEDS 403-309-3300 CALL NOW TO FIND OUT MORE
4100
RARE OPPORTUNITY 2 CLEARVIEW MEADOWS 4 plexes, side by side, $639,000. ea. 403-391-1780
PUBLIC NOTICES
SENTINEL SELF-STORAGE
NOTICE of SALE Goods will be sold by online Auction at ibid4storage.com on Monday June 27, 2016 for Sentinel Self-Storage, 5433-47 Street, Red Deer, Alberta to satisfy outstanding charges for storage rental incurred by the following:
Milton Rohovich Tabitha Mercer Frances Ervin Jesse Halvorson & Alicia Wilson Cory Radway Shaun Rolfes
will be accepted from Monday June 27, 2016 3190 Bids to Wednesday June 29, 2016.
Mobile Lot
BEIRUT — Syrian government forces advanced to within six miles (10 kilometres) of the Islamic State-occupied Tabqa air base in the northern part of the country on Sunday, part of a push to try to unseat the extremist group from its de facto capital, Raqqa. Government forces recaptured the nearby Thawra oil field from IS militants, according to a Syrian journalist Eyad al-Hosain, who is embedded with the army. Activists said Sunday’s government assault was accompanied by an aerial campaign on the town of Tabqa, five miles north of the air base. The activist group, Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently, which smuggles news out of IS-held territory, reported that fighter jets struck the town with cluster munitions, killing at least 10 civilians. The Tabqa base, 45 kilometres (28 miles) from Raqqa, holds strategic and symbolic value in the government campaign on the IS capital. It was the last position held by government forces in Raqqa province before IS militants overran it in August 2014, killing scores of detained soldiers in a massacre they documented on video. Raqqa itself became the militants’ first captive city. A Syrian opposition coalition, meanwhile, called on Turkey to investigate the deaths of at least eight Syrian refugees, including four children, who were allegedly shot dead by border guards Saturday night while trying to cross the frontier. A statement by the National Coalition of Syrian Revolution and Opposition Forces accused Turkish border guards of firing at a group of civilians trying to cross from Kherbet al-Jouz in northwestern Syria into Turkey’s Hatay province, killing 11 people. The coalition, which relies on Turkish political and financial sup-
port, said the incident “clashes with the generosity displayed by the Turkish government and brotherly people toward displaced civilians.” The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights put the death toll at eight. The Local Coordination Committees, an activist network, said at least one of those trying to cross was from Jarablus, a northern Syrian town under Islamic State control. A senior Turkish official said Turkey was unable to independently verify the claims regarding the shooting, but said authorities were investigating. “Turkey provides humanitarian assistance to displaced persons in northern Syria and follows an opendoor policy — which means we admit refugees whose lives are under imminent threat,” said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with government regulations. Later Sunday, the Turkish Foreign Ministry issued a statement denying that border guards had fatally shot Syrians trying to cross illegally into Turkey. The Syrian war has pushed over 2.7 million refugees into Turkey, according to the United Nations. Turkey has tightened security along its border in recent months to prevent further inflows. The Observatory says border guards have shot dead 60 refugees trying to cross since the start of this year. Meanwhile, Hezbollah’s TV station Al-Manar broadcast footage Sunday of a fierce aerial and artillery campaign against Syrian rebels, driving the militants to abandon their positions in the thick of the battle. It said the footage was from the southern Aleppo countryside. Activists reported Saturday that rebels in co-ordination with al-Qaida militants managed to take two towns in the area, further threatening the government’s supply route to its neighbourhoods in divided Aleppo city.
Wildfire crews make progress; brace for winds
If interested in bidding, for more info and to view units, register at www.ibid4storage.com. Dated in the City of Edmonton, in the Province of Alberta this 6 day of June, 2016, Sentinel Self-Storage Corp., #1970, 10123 – 99 Street, Edmonton, Alberta, T5J 3H1
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services CLASSIFICATIONS 1000-1430 To Advertise Your Business or Service Here
Call Classifieds 403-309-3300 classifieds@reddeeradvocate.com
Accounting
1010 Entertainment1160 Roofing 1370
INDIVIDUAL & BUSINESS Accounting, 30 yrs. of exp. with oilÀeld service companies, other small businesses and individuals RW Smith, 346-9351
Cleaning
1070
CLEAN FREAK FOR HIRE Avail. to start cleaning houses on July 2. Call: Sharla at 403-357-7801 leave msg
Construction
1085
3 Bdrm. 4-plex, 4 appls., HICKORY DICKORY $975. incl. sewer, water & DECKS garbage. D.D. $650, Avail. For all your decking needs. now or July 1. 403-304-5337 Wood or low maint. ORIOLE PARK composite. Warranty. 3 bdrm., 1-1/2 bath, $975. mmurphy@decks.ca rent, s.d. $650, incl water (403) 348-1285 sewer and garbage. Avail. now or July 1st. 403-304-5337 Contractors TWO WEEKS FREE CLEARVIEW, 4 plex BLACK CAT CONCRETE 2 bdrm. + den (bdrm), Garage/Patios/RV pads 1 1/2 baths, $975.mo. n/s, Sidewalks/Driveways no pets, . 403-391-1780 Dean 403-505-2542 WESTPARK 2 bdrm. 4-plex, 4 appls. BRIDGER CONST. LTD. Rent $925/mo. d.d. $650. We do it all! 403-302-8550 Avail. now or July 1 CONCRETE??? 403-304-5337 We’ll do it all...Free est. Call E.J. Construction Jim 403-358-8197
1100
3060
5160
In this file photo taken on Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2016, soldiers from the Syrian army fire a rocket at Islamic State group positions in the province of Raqqa, Syria.
Manufactured
ROOM TO RENT very large $450. 403-350-4712
SEIBEL PROPERTY ONE MONTH FREE RENT
Suites
wheels
STUDIO Homes APARTMENT SALE! All inclusive senior living. Avail. for immed. occupancy 2 BDRM. mobile home, from $1849. Call to book a stove fridge, washer, dryer in Rimbey Mobile Home tour 403-309-1957 Park. Good cond. $19,500. obo. 1-780-465-7107
BLACKFALDS, $500, all inclusive. 403-358-1614
4150
Syrian forces advance on IS-held air base
SMALL ofÀce storage etc. Unit approx., 8x20, not on skids, all steel & insulated w/power & furnace. 8x12 Calf shed w/Áoor & doors. Call 403-347-6455
4090
VICTORIA PARK
2 BDRM. 1400 SQ. FT. 2009 condo w/att. single garage, Ironstone Way Ref’s req’d. Avail. now. Rent neg. 403-728-3688
4 Plexes/ 6 Plexes
Buildings For Sale
1930 Offices 3110 Public Notices 6010 Downtown Office
SMALL TABLE with two chairs for indoor use wanted. Call 403-358-3597.
Houses/ Duplexes
NEW Glendale reno’d 1 & 2 bdrm. apartments, rent $750, last month of lease free, immed. occupancy. 403-596-6000
QUEEN’S BUSINESS PARK New industrial bay, 2000 sq. ft. footprint, $359,000. or for Rent. 403-391-1780
4020
Houses For Sale
1900 Rooms For Rent 3090 Income
TRAVEL ALBERTA Alberta offers SOMETHING for everyone. Make your travel plans now.
Wanted To Buy
MORRISROE MANOR Rental incentives avail. 1 & 2 bdrm. adult bldg. only, N/S, No pets. 403-596-2444
4120
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GLENDALE, 2 bdrm., $800/mo., D.D. $850, N/S, GLASS TOP metal end HERE TO HELP no pets, no partiers. tables (2) and coffee table & HERE TO SERVE 403-346-1458 w/glass. $50. each. Call GORD ING at 403-341-9050 RE/MAX real estate LARGE, 1 & 2 BDRM. KITCHEN Chairs, (4), $40; SUITES. 25+, adults only central alberta 403-341-9995 ChesterÀeld & Chair, n/s, no pets 403-346-7111 TOO MUCH STUFF? French Provincial, Beige Let Classifieds Satin $150.; help you sell it. 403-309-3045 Antiques, furniture and estates. 342-2514
Industrial Property
DANCE DJ SERVICES 587-679-8606
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 Áoor, and bsmt. renovations. Also painting and Áooring. Call James 403-341-0617
Massage Therapy
1280
FANTASY SPA
PRECISE ROOFING LTD. 15 Yrs. Exp., Ref’s Avail. WCB covered, fully Licensed & Insured. 403-896-4869 Buying or Selling your home? Check out Homes for Sale in Classifieds
QUALITY work at an affordable price. Joe’s RooÀng. Re-rooÀng specialist. Fully insured. Insurance claims welcome. 10 yr. warranty on all work. 403-350-7602
Seniors’ Services
HELPING HANDS Home Supports for Seniors. Cooking, cleaning, companionship. At home or facility. 403-346-7777 Looking for a place to live? Take a tour through the CLASSIFIEDS
Elite Retreat, Finest Yard in VIP Treatment.
10 - 2am Private back entry
403-341-4445
Misc. Services
1290
5* JUNK REMOVAL
Property clean up 505-4777
1372
Care
1430
MARSHALL MAN LAWN CARE: Lawn mowing & trimming, deck & fence painting & staining, Reasonable rates. Odd Jobs. 403-896-9851
SECOND 2 NONE, reg. and res. grass cutting/yard COUNTERTOP replacement. Moving & clean-up/trim hedges, brush/ Kitchen reno’s. 2 BDRM. lrg. suite adult rock and sod jobs/eaves. Wes 403-302-1648 Storage bldg, free laundry, very Free est. 403-302-7778 clean, quiet, Avail. now or DALE’S HOME RENO’S JULY 1. $900/mo., S.D. Free estimates for all your MOVING? Boxes? Appls. YARD CARE $650. 403-304-5337 Call Ryan @ 403-348-1459 reno needs. 403-506-4301 removal. 403-986-1315
1300
Photo by The Associated Press
Navajo County Sheriff KC Clark, second from left, listens during a wildfire briefing from a U.S. Forest Service official on Fort Apache Indian Reservation, Ariz., on Thursday, June 16, 2016. Fire lines were holding Thursday in the fight against a wildfire threatening several communities with thousands of residents in east-central Arizona. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LOS ANGELES — Firefighters battling home-threatening wildfires in the West are bracing for gusty winds and scorching heat on Sunday. They made progress by containing 45 per cent of a four-day-old fire in California coastal canyons after 40-mph “sundowner” winds failed to materialize. Those evening and night gusts had driven the flames through steep, brushy canyons west of Santa Barbara on previous nights and forced closure of a major highway. However, forecasters warned of extreme fire danger Sunday evening due to hot, dry weather and winds that could gust up to 50 mph. No homes have burned, but about 270 homes and ranches are at risk and campgrounds are evacuated with flames only 2 miles from more densely populated coastal communities. In New Mexico, Gov. Susana Martinez directed the New Mexico National Guard to assist in securing communities affected by a massive wildfire in the central part of the state. Guardsmen will be patrolling and protecting evacuated homes from possible looting. They also will be called on to help with potential flooding. The fire, which erupted in the Manzano Mountains south of Albuquer-
que, has burned more than 27 square miles about 6 miles northwest of Tajique since Tuesday and spread a pall of smoke as far as Denver. The damage includes 24 homes and nearly as many structures near the small community of Chilili. The blaze is 9 per cent contained. In Arizona, a fire southwest of Show Low was 30 per cent contained. Firefighters beefed up containment areas on the northern and western sides of the blaze. Evacuation orders remain in effect for the community of Forestdale. The fire has burned nearly 19 square miles since Wednesday. Crews in Utah also made gains against three wildfires in the southern part of the state. A 350-acre wildfire near Cedar City was 30 per cent contained, but the blaze still threatened 20 structures including homes and outbuildings. More than 1,200 firefighters attacked the California fire, which has engulfed more than 12 square miles of mountain and agricultural lands. Overnight, crews nailed down lines on the fire’s west side, which hadn’t moved for days, Santa Barbara County fire Capt. Dave Zaniboni said. However, the eastern side of the blaze was uncontrolled and virtually inaccessible. Crews were relying on aircraft water drops and on cutting firebreaks ahead of the flames.
B8 RED DEER ADVOCATE Monday, June 20, 2016 FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
HI & LOIS
PEANUTS
BLONDIE
HAGAR
BETTY
PICKLES
GARFIELD
LUANN
June 20 2013 — Southern Alberta hit with massive flooding as rain-swollen rivers burst their banks; more than 100,000 people in 30 communities are affected; causes over $6 billion in damage. 2011 — Bank of Canada unveils new polymer bank notes to replace the paper-cotton bills. Changeover started in No-
vember with the $100 note, followed by the $50 and $20 in March and May of 2012. The rest of the plastic money goes into circulation in early 2013. 1977 — Government ends 5-year oil exploration freeze, opens over 400 million hectares offshore; effective August 1. 1901 — Red Deer becomes a town 1882 — John A. Macdonald retains power, winning Canada’s fifth general election with 133 seats, to 73 for Edward’s Blake’s Liberals, and 5 Independents in the 211 seat house.
ARGYLE SWEATER
RUBES
TODAY IN HISTORY
TUNDRA
SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, every column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 through 9. SHERMAN‛S LAGOON
Solution
ENTERTAINMENT
THE ADVOCATE B9
MONDAY, JUNE 20, 2016
‘Star Trek’ actor Anton Yelchin killed by own vehicle BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LOS ANGELES — Anton Yelchin, a rising actor best known for playing Chekov in the new Star Trek films, was killed by his own car as it rolled down his driveway early Sunday, police and his publicist said. The car pinned Yelchin, 27, against a brick mailbox pillar and a security fence at his home in Los Angeles, Officer Jenny Hosier said. He had gotten out of the vehicle momentarily, but police did not say why he was behind it when it started rolling. Yelchin was on his way to meet friends for a rehearsal, Hosier said. When he didn’t show up, the group came to his home and found him dead. The freak accident tragically cuts short the promising career of an actor whom audiences were still getting to know and who had great artistic ambition. Star Trek Beyond, the third film in the rebooted series, comes out in July. Director J.J. Abrams, who cast Yelchin in the franchise, wrote in a statement that he was “brilliant … kind … funny as hell, and supremely talented.” His death was felt throughout the industry. “He was a ferocious movie buff who put us all to shame,” said Gabe Klinger, who directed Yelchin in the upcoming film Porto, likely to be released this fall. “He was watching four or five movies every night — silent movies.” Yelchin began acting as a child, taking small roles in independent films and various television shows, such as ER, The Practice, and Curb Your Enthusiasm. His breakout big-screen role came opposite Anthony Hopkins in 2001’s Hearts in Atlantis. He transitioned into teen roles in films such as the crime thriller Alpha Dog and the comedy Charlie Bartlett. He also played a young Kyle Reese in 2009’s Terminator Salvation. Yelchin, an only child, was born in Russia. His parents were professional figure skaters who moved the family to the United States when Yelchin was a baby. He briefly flirted with skating lessons, too, before discovering that he wasn’t very skilled on the ice. That led him to acting class. “I loved the improvisation part of it the most, because it was a lot like just playing around with stuff. There was something about it that I just felt completely comfortable doing and happy doing,” Yelchin told The Associated Press in 2011 while promoting the romantic drama Like Crazy. He starred opposite Felicity Jones. “(My father) still wanted me to apply to college and stuff, and I did,” Yelchin said. “But this is what I wanted.” The discipline that Yelchin learned from his ath-
Photo by The Associated Press
Anton Yelchin, a charismatic and rising actor best known for playing Chekov in the new “Star Trek” films, has died at the age of 27. He was killed in a fatal traffic collision early Sunday morning. lete parents translated into his work as an actor, which he treated with seriousness and professionalism, said Klinger, the director. He drew on his Russian roots for his role as the heavily accented navigator Chekov in the Star Trek films, his most high-profile to date. “What’s great about him is he can do anything. He’s a chameleon. He can do bigger movies or smaller, more intimate ones,” Like Crazy director Drake Doremus told the AP in 2011. “There are a lot of people who can’t, who can only do one or the other. … That’s what blows my mind.” Yelchin seemed to fit in anywhere in Hollywood. He could do big sci-fi franchises and vocal work in “The Smurfs,” while also appearing in more eccentric and artier fare, like Jim Jarmusch’s vampire film Only Lovers Left Alive and Jeremy Saulnier’s hor-
ror thriller Green Room, a cult favourite that came out earlier this year. Klinger recalled a conversation with Jarmusch about Yelchin before Klinger cast him in “Porto.” “Jim was like, ‘Watch out. Anton read Dostoyevsky when he was like 11 years old!”’ Klinger said. The director said that for Yelchin, every film was an opportunity to learn and study more. He admired Nicolas Cage’s laser-focus on the Paul Schrader film Dying of the Light and also got to work with one of his acting heroes, Willem Dafoe, on the film Odd Thomas. “He used to refer to Willem as an artist, not an actor,” Klinger said. “That’s the kind of actor he aspired to be, where people didn’t regard him as an actor, they regarded him as an artist.” Yelchin’s publicist, Jennifer Allen, confirmed his death and said his family requests privacy.
‘Finding Dory’ sets animation record BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LOS ANGELES — The forgetful blue fish of “Finding Dory” is box office gold. The Pixar sequel far-surpassed its already Ocean-sized expectations to take in $136.2 million in North American theatres, making it the highest-grossing animated debut of all time, according to comScore estimates Sunday. The 2007 film Shrek the Third was the previous record-holder with a $121.6 million debut. Finding Dory, which comes 13 years after Finding Nemo hit theatres, is also now the second-largest June opening of all time behind Jurassic World. The well-reviewed film features the voices of Ellen DeGeneres and Albert Brooks and played particularly well with audiences, who gave the film an A CinemaScore — Pixar’s 17th film in a row to receive the impressive grade. Going into the weekend, analysts expected Finding Dory to do big, $100 million plus business, but never this much. “The thought was ‘could this be the movie to eclipse Toy Story 3’s opening,’ not, ‘could it become the biggest animated opening of all time,”’ said Paul Dergarabedian, comScore’s senior media analyst. “That’s the power of the Pixar brand.” “Toy Story 3” was the biggest Pixar opening ever until now with $110.3 million. Disney’s Executive Vice-President of Distribution Dave Hollis was particularly heartened that the film did such robust late night business on both Friday and Saturday. “That’s really a testament to this being a picture for everyone — not just for families,” Hollis said. Finding Dory has the animated seas to itself until The Secret Life of Pets opens July 8. The Kevin Hart and Dwayne Johnson buddy comedy Central Intelligence also had a relatively muscular weekend, with a better-than-expected $34.5 million, putting it in second place. “It’s a real home run,” said Jeff Goldstein, Warner Bros.’ executive vice-president of domestic distribution. “These two comedians are just stars. They connect with their audience and each other in such a strong way. You just laugh when you watch them.” Central Intelligence cost a reported $50 million to make and scored especially well with younger audiences, who the studio hopes will propel the word of mouth in weeks to come. The next major comedy releases don’t come until mid-July with Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates and Ghostbusters. In third place, the James Wan horror pic “The Conjuring 2” fell 62 per cent in its second weekend in theatres, earning $15.6 million and bringing its domestic total to $71.7 million. Rounding out the top five were Now You See Me 2, with $9.7 million and Warcraft, with $6.5 million, both of which opened last weekend. Overall, the weekend is down nearly 5 per cent from last year, when Inside Out launched with $90.4 million and Jurassic World earned $106.6 million in its second weekend in theatres. Still, Dergarabedian notes that the comparatively
Photo by Pixar/Disney via AP
This image shows the character Dory, voiced by Ellen DeGeneres, in a scene from “Finding Dory.” The Pixar sequel far-surpassed the already Ocean-sized expectations to take in $136.2 million, according to comScore estimates Sunday, June 19, 2016. big audiences this weekend are good for the business in the long run since they’ll be exposed to trailers for upcoming summer films. The success of Finding Dory and Central Intelligence also comes at a critical moment after a few weekends of underwhelming sequels and all out flops. “A movie like ‘Dory’ can reinvigorate a marketplace that has been in the doldrums for the last few weeks,” he said. “It helps everyone.” Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theatres, according to comScore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.
4. Now You See Me 2, 9.7 million. 5. Warcraft, $6.5 million. 6. X-Men: Apocalypse, $5.2 million. 7. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows, $5.2 million. 8. Me Before You, $4.2 million. 9. Alice Through the Looking Glass, $3.6 million. 10. Captain America: Civil War, $2.3 million.
1. Finding Dory, $136.2 million. 2. Central Intelligence, $34.5 million. 3. The Conjuring 2, $15.6 million.
Cannon releases ‘Divorce Papers’ BY THE WASHINGTON POST WASHINGTON – Hey, isn’t that … Nick Cannon, the multi-hyphenated entertainer and soon-to-be-ex-husband of elusive chanteuse Mariah Carey, having dinner with friends at the W hotel on Friday night? Our sources tell us that Cannon and two other guys hung out at the POV rooftop lounge, the popular A-listy destination atop the W. The actor, 35, was in town for the second annual National Maker Faire,
part of the White House’s push for education in science, technology, engineering and math. These have been tough days for the dad of two. Cannon and Carey split in 2014, and his alleged reluctance to finalize their divorce has since been making headlines, even more so now that Carey is engaged to Australian billionaire James Packer. Last week, Cannon rapped about his tabloid-friendly troubles in a single called, you guessed it, Divorce Papers.
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How to comfort a fearful child BY MEAGHAN LEAHY SPECIAL TO ADVOCATE Q: Our 2-year-old is scared of many things: using slides, going on Ferris wheels with his parents, playing in ball pits, even riding a merry-go-round on his dad’s lap. He seems to be hyper-aware of his surroundings. Other than that, he is a typical toddler who is developing on schedule, knows his ABCs, can say a ton of words and sentences, etc. Is this something we should wait out? How much should we continue to try these things? A: This is a great question because it is a great example of the healthy and normal development of a 2-year-old. It is also a great question because parents often make the mistake of attributing intelligence to maturity. So, let’s unpack this a bit, shall we? Why is your 2-year-old afraid of slides, Ferris wheels, ball pits and merry-go-rounds? Because they are scary! I don’t know about you, but I know quite a few adults (my husband is one) who are afraid of rides. The speed and the height are not exhilarating for him, and many other children and adults feel the same way. It is absolutely normal for humans to be afraid of rides, slides and ball pits. So let’s begin by normalizing the fear that is felt about these activities, for anyone of any age. More important, why is a 2-yearold even more scared of these things? Why do 2-year-old children cling to their parent’s legs? Why are they “hyper-aware” of their surroundings? Because biologically, 2-year-olds need to be scared. Their lives depend on it. Their young systems need to be alarmed and say, “Whoa, buddy. Stay
Photo by Advocate news services
He’s young, and it’s his job to be scared of things. A parent’s job is to accept that. close to your mom. This is not safe.” And even though your son is showing signs that he is intelligent, he is still immature. He cannot look at a slide or ride and say, “Get it together. This ride has been inspected and is thoroughly safe. Get over your fear and get up there!” No. A 2-year-old is completely scared because he is meant to be. His primary need in life is to be loved and stay close to those to whom he is attached. When he is close to you, he feels safe and protected. We want him close because he lacks the maturity to make good decisions when he goes out on his own.
We also need to think about what it’s like for a 2-year-old’s brain to take in so much sensory information at once. An adult with a mature brain can stand in a crowded hall of talking people and focus enough to listen to one person. This takes maturity. But a 2-year-old is experiencing it all, all at once. Screams. Laughter. Flashing lights. It is overwhelming; it is supposed to be overwhelming to him. He is meant to be alarmed, and his brain says, “Too much! Stay near Mommy! Not safe!” Furthermore, you cannot teach a child to feel safe. Feeling safe is an emotion that comes naturally when the connection is strong, so we want to en-
courage it when we see it. Here is a short list of what will make 2-year-olds more fearful: ● Physically pushing them toward what scares them. This will make them doubly alarmed, as they will be scared not just of the ride but also that you are trying to “get rid” of them. ● Bribing, rewarding or punishing them to get them to go to what scares them. ● Constantly trying to talk up or cheerlead how “great” it will be. ● Comparing their fear with other children’s “bravery.” ● Constantly bringing them to what scares them in the hope they will change their mind. Here is a short list of what will make them feel safe: ● When Mom, Dad or their caretaker stands at a distance and just watches. ● Asking whether they would like to go on once and not bringing it up again. Take “no” for an answer. ● Acknowledging and normalizing their feelings. “It is loud and scary, isn’t it?” ● Welcoming them into your presence, unconditionally. “You can stay with me as long as you like. I will not force you to do this.” ● Finding something that makes them smile. You may have a child who will come to love these activities or you may have a child who will never get on a ride. It is not up to you. Your job is to love and support your son and to trust that he is right where he needs to be. And it seems as though he is. Leahy is the mother of three daughters. She holds a bachelor’s degree in English and secondary education, a master’s degree in school counseling and is a certified parent coach.
No need to keep friendship with spiteful person KATHY MITCHELL AND MARCY SUGAR ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Dear Annie: About 30 years ago, my husband became friends with “Rob,” who was personable and fun. However, Rob’s wife, “Doris,” was unpleasant to be around. In 30 years, she never had one nice thing to say about anyone, including me. Rob became ill and spent months in a nursing home. Doris often would phone me and say she wished he would “just go to sleep.” Three weeks ago, he finally did. Doris now calls us several times a week. She carries on about how wonderful Rob was and how much she misses him. She is usually drunk when she calls. When they married, Rob had a young daughter from a previous mar-
JOANNE MADELINE MOORE HOROSCOPES Monday, June 20 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: Brian Wilson, 74; Lionel Richie, 67; Nicole Kidman, 49 THOUGHT OF THE DAY: Take a look at tonight’s Full Moon, which is a rare Blue Moon. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: You are an emotional and caring soul. You’ll find you reach your dreams a lot faster if you spend less time stressing and more time relaxing. ARIES (March 21-April 19): The Full Moon encourages you to visualize your dreams for the future, and then act on them. As birthday great Nicole Kidman says, “Life has got all those twists and turns. You hold on tight and off you go.” TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Attached Bulls — things could get hot and heavy at Casa Taurus, as the Full Moon invigorates your intimacy zone. Singles — you’re in a hurry to find a dependable partner but you’ll have to
riage and Doris had two sons. There has always been a rift between the children. Rob’s daughter told me that when she was a child, Doris was terribly mean to her and has never made any effort to create a warmer relationship. Recently a walkathon was held in Rob’s memory. People walked in teams and the top-10 teams were entitled to a prize at the end. Doris’ son and grandson were paired with her stepdaughter’s two children. Their group left before the prizes were distributed, so I suggested to Doris that she choose four prizes for them. She returned with prizes for her son and grandson, but nothing for the others. When I asked why, she said there were no prizes left. But, Annie, there were dozens of prizes left. This really upset me, because it proved what a spiteful and mean-spirited person she is. I told my family about this and they said it was time to get Doris out of my life. But we live in a small community
and it will be difficult to avoid her. My question is, should I tell her why I’m upset or just stop answering the phone when she calls? I have not spoken to her since the walkathon. — Upset in Texas Dear Upset: You are not obligated to remain friends with Doris simply because you have known her for 30 years. You apparently never much cared for her. Since you are planning to end the friendship anyway, it does no harm to let her know why. Please don’t be unkind. Simply tell her that the way she treats other people, especially Rob’s daughter and grandchildren, bothers you so much that you won’t be able to continue the friendship. Then suggest that speaking to a therapist might be life-changing for her. People who are so negative often have untreated depression. Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Oregon,” who said she was in an accident during a bicycle race and her husband had her cellphone and all of her identification in his backpack. My husband and I run half mara-
thons. He’s faster, so we are rarely together. Here’s what we do: All runners have a bib with their race number printed on it. On the reverse is space for your name, medications and emergency contact info. On my bib, I write my husband’s name, cellphone number and his bib number. He does the same for me. We also have ID bracelets that we wear anytime we’re running, even in our little subdivision. You never know when there will be an emergency. — West Virginia Dear West Virginia: Thanks for the great suggestions. Even if you aren’t in a race, you should have identification, including your name, an emergency contact, any medications, etc. It pays to be careful. 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.
be patient. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You can get so caught up in the busyness of daily life that you neglect those closest to you. The full moonbeams fall in your relationship zone, so spend quality time with loved ones today or tonight. CANCER (June 21-July 22): With the Full Moon activating your work and daily routine zone, chances are you’ll be burning the midnight oil. Pace yourself Crabs, otherwise you may suffer from a stress-related health issue. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The Full Moon lights up your entertainment zone so it’s the perfect time to party, see a movie, go to a concert or entertain at home. But, when it comes to a child or friend, are you jumping to conclusions? VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The focus is on home and career, as you try to juggle domestic duties with professional projects. If you spend less time worrying, then youíll have more time and energy to get things done. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Communicating with others is the key to an exciting and satisfying day. But don’t get carried away and exaggerate your ability to contribute. It’s much better to under-promise and over-deliver! SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): The Full
Moon shines a spotlight on money matters and self-esteem issues. Have confidence in your true inner worth, and avoid being too attached to appearances and material possessions. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): With the fiery Full Moon activating your sign again, your positive traits are magnified — and so are your negative ones. So strive to be bold and spontaneous; rather than bossy and slap-dash! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lift your nose from the career grindstone Capricorn, and take a look within. It’s the perfect time for some quiet contemplation, as you communicate with — and receive guidance from —
your inner self. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your independent, rebellious spirit is stimulated today, as you feel adventurous and do the exact opposite of what’s expected. Others may be shocked, but you need to do what’s right for you. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Are you bored with your job? Be careful what you wish for Fish — with the Full Moon lighting up your career zone, ambitious aspirations are fine but you also need to keep your feet on the ground. Joanne Madeline Moore is an internationally syndicated astrologer and columnist. Her column appears daily in the Advocate.
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