Winnipeg Weekend, May 5-7, 2017
“The Dealer Price is the same as My Price?!” Dealer is reimbursed a holdback amount included in invoice price by the manufacturer for each vehicle sold*
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Ultimate model shown ♦ Selling price $40,637
The New
The New
2017 Tucson
2017 Santa Fe Sport
2.0L All Wheel Drive
DEALER INVOICE Dealer Invoice Price
Lease for only
r e l a e D Price
Your Price
$ 57 Weekly
$
DEALER INVOICE
27,814
+ At
For
Months◊ with $3,995 down
Get
For
Financing
Months†
0% 36
*
0.9% 48
Featu tures: • Dy ynamax™ All-Wheel Drive*** • He eated Front Seats • Re earview Camera • Blue uetooth®
Ultimate model shown ♦ Selling price $46,637
Get
+
5,000
$
in Dealer Invoice Price adjustments on all 2.0T trimsΩ Available Features: • Multi-view Camera System • Lane Departure Warning System • Adaptive Cruise Control with stop-and-go capability • Autonomous Emergency Braking
“The Dealer Price is the same as My Price?!” Dealer is reimbursed a holdback amount included in invoice price by the manufacturer for each vehicle sold*
SeeYourInvoice.ca
Ultimate model shown ♦ Selling price $30,637
The All-New
2017 Accent
2017 Elantra DEALER INVOICE
Lease for only
+
17,179
$ At
Weekly
Well Equipped GL Auto has: • Heated front seats and leather steering wheel • 7" monitor with rear view camera and Android AutoTM^ • Lane departure warning with blind spot detection • Bluetooth® hands-free phone system
hyundaicanada.com
5 Year †† Warranty
Get up to
0%
$3,988
in Dealer Invoice price adjustments
Now
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And
$ 654
Months◊ with $1,995 down
Or for more weekly◊ lease the 2017 Elantra GL Auto
DEALER INVOICE
Dealer Invoice Price PLUS
For
0% 48 $ 16
$ 29
The
DEALER INVOICE *
Financing
Cash Bonus
10,995
‡
$
Get up to
For
0% 84 Financing
PLUS Dealer Invoice Pricing on the 2017 Accent SE
Months†
Available 2017 Accent SE features: • Air conditioning • Fog Lights • 16“ Alloy Wheels • Power Sliding Sunroof
For
+
60
Months† on all 2017 Sonata models
2,459
$
OR Get
Ultimate model shown ♦ Selling price $38,187
2017 Sonata
L 6MT 4-Door
L 6MT
L 6MT Dealer Invoice Price
GLS model shown ♦ Selling price $21,737
The
in Dealer Invoice Price adjustmentsΩ Available Features: • Ventilated front seats • Android Auto™^ & Apple CarPlay™*^^ • Panoramic sunroof • 18” aluminum allow wheels
Dealers may charge additional fees for administration of up to $499. Charges may vary by dealer.
5-YEAR/100,000 KM Comprehensive Limited Warranty
5-YEAR/100,000 KM Powertrain Warranty
5-YEAR/100,000 KM Emission Warranty
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®/™The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. *The customer prices are those reflected on the dealer invoice from Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. The dealer invoice price includes a holdback amount for which the dealer is subsequently reimbursed by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. Dealer Invoice Price of $17,179/$27,814 available on all remaining new in stock 2017 Elantra L Manual/2017 Tucson 2.0L AWD models, includes price adjustments of $558/$1,123 on lease, finance and cash purchases. Price includes Delivery and Destination charge of $1,705/$1,805, fees, levies and all applicable charges (excluding GST/PST). Price excludes registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. ΩDealer Invoice Price adjustments are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Dealer Invoice price adjustments of $5,000 of in stock 2017 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T trims, available on finance and cash purchase only. Dealer Invoice price adjustments of up to $2,459 on lease, finance, and cash purchases on all 2017 Sonata models models. Price adjustments applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. ‡Dealer Invoice Price Plus of $10,995 available on all remaining new in stock 2017 Accent L Manual 4 Door models includes $654 in stackable price adjustments available on lease, finance, and cash purchase, and $3,988 in cash bonus available on cash purchase only. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,605 fees, levies and all applicable charges (excluding GST/PST). Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. ◊Leasing offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2017 Elantra L Manual/2017 Tucson 2.0L AWD/ 2017 Elantra GL Auto with an annual lease rate of 0%/0.9%/0%. Weekly lease payment of $29/$57/$45 for a 48/48/48-month walk-away lease. Down payment of $1,995/$3,995/$1,995 and first monthly payment required. Trade-in value may be applied to down payment amount. Total lease obligation is $8,016/$15,871/$11,355. Lease offer includes Delivery and Destination charge of $1,705/$1,805/$1,705, levies, and all applicable charges (excluding GST/PST). Lease offer excludes registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. $0 security deposit on all models. 16,000 km allowance per year applies. Additional charge of $0.12/km. †Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on 2017 Santa Fe Sport Ultimate/2017 Accent SE Auto 5-door / 2017 Sonata GL models with an annual finance rate of 0%/0%/0%. Weekly payments are $267/$53/$98 for 36/84/60 months. $0/$0/$0 down payment required. Trade-in value may be applied to down payment amount. Cash price is $41,637/$19,371/$25,438. Cost of borrowing is $0/$0/$0. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination charge of $1,905/$1,605/$1,805, levies and all applicable charges (excluding GST/PST). Finance offers exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees, and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. ♦Price of models shown: 2017 Elantra Ultimate/2017 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Ultimate/2017 Tucson 1.6T Ultimate/2017 Accent GLS 4-Door/2017 Sonata 2.0T Ultimate are $30,637/$46,637/$40,637/$21,737/$38,187. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,705/$1,905/$1,805/$1,605/$1,805, levies and all applicable charges (excluding GST/ PST). Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. *Ω◊†♦Offers available for a limited time and subject to change or cancellation without notice. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.I. and a full tank of gas. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order may be required. Visit www.hyundaicanada.com or see dealer for complete details. ^Android AutoTM is compatible with Android phones running Android Lollipop or newer. Android Auto may not be available on all devices and is not available in all countries or regions. Additional apps may be required. Visit www.android.com for further details and any applicable limitations. Android and Android Auto are trademarks of Google Inc. ^^Apple CarPlayTM works with iPhone 5s, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5 and later models running the latest version of iOS 7 and above. CarPlayTM may not be available on all devices and may not be available in all countries or regions. Visit www.apple.com for further details and any applicable limitations. Apple, Apple CarPlay and iPod are trademarks of Apple Inc. ***DynamaxTM is a trademark of Magna International Inc. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.
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Root for the route you want
City seeks public input on two possible rapid transit corridors: either east of the Exchange District or through Point Douglas BRAEDEN JONES METRO
City officials don’t know where a new rapid transit line will intersect with the Red River yet, but they’ll cross that bridge when they come to it. In the meantime, they’d like Winnipeggers to weigh in on the future corridor connecting downtown to eastern Winnipeg, as the city officially launched a study to identify its route Thursday. “The launch of the eastern corridor study represents an important next step towards further implementation of rapid transit in Winnipeg,” said Coun. Marty Morantz during the announcement. He added that public engagement is a “significant piece of this project.” Morantz, who chairs the public works committee, told reporters a main objective of the study — which will be conducted by MMM Group after their $2.9-million bid was approved in December 2016 — will be to determine “the most suitable route for providing rapid transit service.” Earlier discussions in city hall suggested two options for a rapid transit line heading east to cross the Red River; either east of the Exchange District through North St. Boniface, or through south Point Douglas. The latter option would include replacing the Louise Bridge with a multi-modal version, which Morantz said is also within the scope of MMM Group’s study. Dave Wardrop, the city’s chief transportation and utilities officer, said leaving the route question unsettled, no matter how much it affects the project scope, was deliberate. “The whole point of this study and investing in the study itself is to take a thorough engineering analysis of the situation, to come up with viable alternatives and best alternatives,” he
TAKE PART
$2.9 MILLION
You can help give feedback Check out one of these upcoming consultations on the eastbound rapid transit line:
How much the eastbound transit line will cost. Other numbers:
Oxford Heights Community Centre (359 Dowling Ave. East): Monday, May 15, 4:30 to 7:30 p.m.
2020 When the Southwest Transitway, connecting downtown to the University of Manitoba’s Fort Garry campus, is due to finish
Centennial Concert Hall (555 Main St.): Tuesday, May 16, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
2030 When all six rapid transit routes in the city’s transportation master plan should be running
Elmwood High School (505 Chalmers Ave.): Tuesday, May 16, 5 to 8 p.m. East Elmwood Community Centre (490 Keenleyside St.): Wednesday, May 17, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The city is studying the best route to get rapid transit riders from downtown to the eastern reaches of Winnipeg. BRAEDEN JONES/METRO
said. “To go in with a bias ahead of time and apply that bias to the study would be irresponsible.” Morantz said a final route will be determined by the completion of the study in spring 2018. The city won’t begin negotiations to secure land for completing the project until after that time, as Wardrop said it would be “premature to have any conversations or negotiations” with existing land owners at this point. There are five other rapid transit routes in the city’s transportation master plan that could have some bearing on the eastern corridor, all
LOOKING FOR A GREAT DENTURIST?
of which are due to be completed by 2030. Morantz said the eastern corridor study is next on the docket because of the line’s “potential tie-ins” with the other corridors in the future, but added, “it may or may not be the next route” built. “Ultimately it comes down to council and what council decides in terms of what the next route may be,” he said. “I wouldn’t assume that just because we’re studying the eastern corridor now that it is necessarily going to be the next corridor.”
The master plan approved by the last council called for a certain order, beginning with the Southwest Transitway, which will connect downtown to the University of Manitoba’s Fort Garry campus by 2020, but left it partially dependent on ridership demand. Morantz said he’d like to see a new, more specific “rapid transit master plan for the entire city” guiding the build-out moving forward. “That will give us a better idea in terms of how to move forward in terms of a comprehensive plan for the entire city, but that’s an initiative that hasn’t come to fruition yet,” he said.
Notre Dame Community Centre (271 Avenue de la Cathedrale): Wednesday, May 17, 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. Neeginan Centre (181 Higgins Ave.): Thursday, May 18, 4:30 to 7:30 p.m.
To go in with a bias ahead of time would be irresponsible. Dave Wardrop
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4 Weekend, May 5-7, 2017
Winnipeg
View from the 300s
Bidding farewell to Gary Lawless Andrew ‘Hustler’ Paterson
For Metro | Winnipeg
TSN radio host Gary Lawless jokingly gets ready to lay into co-host Andrew “Hustler” Paterson. The two have co-hosted Hustler and Lawless for 11 years, but Lawless recently announced he would be leaving Winnipeg to work for the new Las Vegas NHL team. contributed
You may have heard news that TSN radio host Gary Lawless is leaving Winnipeg to take a job with the NHL’s new team in Las Vegas, the Golden Knights. It’s an incredible opportunity for Gary and his family and I couldn’t be happier for him. It also means our city is losing one of its most influential and hardest-working members of the Winnipeg media. Eleven years ago, Gary and I began a little side project on a small radio station with a Saturday morning sports show. It was a heck of a lot of fun but I don’t think either of us could have imagined then the success we would have together and how that opportunity would change our lives. Over the last decade, Gary grew from an eager newspaper reporter working the beat of the Winnipeg Gold-
eyes, Manitoba Moose and Winnipeg Blue Bombers into one of the most respected voices in the Canadian media. This rise was a combination of his talent, personality and an incredible amount of hard work. What many people don’t know about Gary is that through his gruff exterior he is in fact one of the most caring guys you could meet. I saw first-hand how he would assist fledgling media employees on learning the ropes of the industry. He received plenty of that early in his career and was always there to pay it forward. Even with the good cop, bad cop chemistry we had on our show, Gary was always very open and welcoming to listeners and especially enjoyed bringing kids up to our set during Winnipeg Jets pregame shows, throwing the headsets on and taking pictures and letting them feel like they were part of the
show. Gary also truly became a Winnipegger. While not growing up here, he embraced this city and its people and became one of us. His work for TSN championed our city, our teams and our athletes. One of the toughest parts of him taking this new job is leaving a city that became home for him and his family. I have been lucky to call him a friend and partner for the last decade. There’s not enough newsprint for me to tell all that I learned from working with him and the good times we shared together both on and off the air. He starts his new job June 6. The Winnipeg sports scene will certainly miss Gary Lawless, as will I, every afternoon on TSN 1290. Good luck in Sin City, pal. It’s been one hell of a ride. Andrew “Hustler” Paterson is the co-host of the Hustler and Lawless show on TSN 1290
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5
Winnipeg
Things to do this weekend There is plenty to see, hear and taste in Winnipeg this weekend. metro lucy scholey
Weekend, May 5-7, 2017 tickets
Red River Exhibition returns
The Red River Ex announced it’s inviting Winnipeggers to “find your thrill” with a diverse lineup for this year’s event announced Thursday. In a prepared statement, the Ex highlighted a handful of new attractions being introduced to freshen up the annual event. From motorcycle daredevils the Moto Maniacs, to an educational butterfly exhibit, the Ex’s entertainment promises something
for everyone. Organizers also hinted at a “top-secret new ride” being added to the midway, an inflatable city children can drive a “kid-size car through,” and an inflatable obstacle course for “bigger folks.” The June 16-25 event will also get in on celebrating Canada’s 150th birthday with two special fireworks shows on Saturday, June 17 and 24.
On the main stage, the lineup includes The Glorious Sons, the Treble and Panicland, Chad Brownless, April Wine, and tribute bands playing hits from both the Eagles and Johnny Cash. Advance tickets are now available online at redriverex. com and will be on sale at Giant Tiger, Safeway, Sobeys and Mac’s by mid-May. More info is available at redriverex.com.
IN BRIEF Burton Cummings adds second Winnipeg show Burton Cummings has announced a second Winnipeg concert in September, due to “overwhelming demand.” At the time, the Sept. 22 show was announced, but now Cummings has agreed to stick around his hometown long enough for a second show on Sept. 23. metro
metro
Rayannah will be one of the 10 Franco-Manitoban musicians performing with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra at “Manitoba mon amour” on Saturday. Contributed
Winnipeg Wine Festival Wine lovers can get their (glass) fill at the RBC Convention Centre. This year’s event boasts 485 samples from 130 wineries. With tickets costing $64 each, there will be plenty of reds, whites and roses to keep your palate happy. The Saturday night tasting has sold out, but there are still tickets available Friday from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. and Saturday afternoon from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Tickets are available at winnipegwinefestival.com.
Future Shock
Art City, West Broadway’s not-for-profit community art studio, is hosting its annual fundraiser party at the Marlborough Hotel. The theme is Future Shock, so expect to create — or buy — futuristic art. Tickets cost $30 at the door or $25 in advance at various locations, including Into the Music (245 McDermot) and online at eventbrite.ca.
Queer, present and hilarious
The touring LGBTQ comedy show, Queer and Present Danger, is making its first stop in Winnipeg on Friday, with hometown funnyperson Chantel Marostica playing host. Come for the laughs, stay for the late-night Whitney Houston dance party. The show starts at Club 200 at 9 p.m. Tickets cost $10 in advance (at eventbrite.ca) or $15 at the door.
Celebrate la musique francaise
Ten up-and-coming Franco-Manitoban musicians are pairing with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra for a “Manitoba mon amour” on Saturday. It’s part of the 50th anniversary celebrations for Le 100 Nons, the keystone province’s francophone music organization. Catch the likes of Faouzia, Kelly Bado, Justin Lacroix and others at the Centennial Concert Hall at 8 p.m. Tickets start at $25 or you can buy the full postconcert VIP experience for $95. Tickets are available at wso.ca.
CELEBRATING THE BEST OF INDIGENOUS MUSIC
MAY 19, 2017
CLUB REGENT EVENT CENTRE WINNIPEG, MANITOBA
Happy 20th, Winnipeg jazz
It seems to be a weekend of musical milestones. The Winnipeg Jazz Orchestra (WJO) is closing out its 20th anniversary season with a familiar face. Clarinetist Sasha Boychouk, a WJO pioneer, is returning to Manitoba for two shows on Sunday. Head to the Winnipeg Art Gallery for 2 p.m. or 7:30 p.m. Tickets are available at winnipegjazzorchestra.com.
Check out this year’s nominees and performers
INDIGENOUSMUSICAWARDS.COM
Tickets available at
5
#IMA2017
6 Weekend, May 5-7, 2017
Winnipeg
Pride 30 for 30
U of W grad fears deportation lgbtq
Refugee board to determine fate of gay Egyptian man Jessica Botelho-Urbanski
I don’t think I should be protecting a country or government that’s looking to kill or imprison gay men.
Samer Habib is acting calm considering his future in Canada is being decided by a complete stranger this week. “At this point, there’s not much I can do,” he said Wednesday, sitting cross-legged on the lawn in front of the University of Winnipeg with his boyfriend, Giovanny Penner. “It’s out of my control. So there’s no point in stressing out because I just have to be mentally prepared for Friday.” A member of the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) will decide Habib’s fate Friday in a hearing via video conference. Habib, 23, is terrified of be-
where I could be tortured or beaten up. And my life would just be over at that point.” Habib came to Winnipeg in 2011 and studied business administration at the U of W, where he now works for campus living. Last month, he filed a refugee claim as a last resort once he learned his permanent residency application may not be approved before his passport expires. Penner, 19, will testify on his boyfriend’s behalf and said he is “extremely nervous” for the IRB member’s verdict. “This one person could be going through a bad day and
Samer Habib
Metro | Winnipeg
Samer Habib has applied for refugee status and will testify at the Immigration and Refugee Board Friday to determine whether he’s allowed to stay in Canada. Jessica Botelho-Urbanski/Metro
ing deported back to Egypt once his passport expires in June. If he returns, he said he’d have to join the military and fears being prosecuted because he’s gay. “I don’t feel like I want to
serve in the military because the country itself — the environment and the government — is against my beliefs. Like, I don’t think I should be protecting a country or government that’s looking to kill or
imprison gay men,” he said. “(If ) they suspect, for example, that I’m gay...if they just hear a rumour, if they sense from the way I walk or the way I talk or whatever it is, that’s where I could be jailed. That’s
ruin someone’s life with the stroke of a pen,” he said. But Habib’s immigration lawyer Bashir Khan said he’s feeling “extremely confident” about his client’s chances of staying, thanks in part to a new set of rules instated by the IRB this week. Guideline 9 protects LGBTQ refugee claimants from inappropriate questioning by IRB members, outlining appropriate language and questions to be asked about sexual orientation, gender identity and expression (SOGIE). “It basically directs the mind of the adjudicating board member to go to the heart of the matter, rather than beat about the bush by asking questions that are either inappropriate or irrelevant to the central question of whether someone is gay and whether their safety is in danger,” Khan said. Khan — who’s worked on about 30 LGBTQ-related cases this year — said in the past, IRB members have prodded about sexual practices and asked claimants questions like, “How often have you made love?”
Winnipeg
Weekend, May 5-7, 2017
7
LGBTQ issues
Trans youth in Prairies at higher risk: Study Jessica Botelho-Urbanski Metro | Winnipeg
A study released this week shows a bleak environment for transgender youth in the Prairies, with attempted suicide rates higher than the national average. Being Safe, Being Me in the Prairie Provinces used data acquired during the Canadian Trans Youth Health Survey, David Chartrand, president of the Manitoba Métis Federation, linked charges against two Métis hunters to recent tough talk from Premier Brian Pallister on Indigenous hunting. Sean Kilpatrick/THE CANADIAN PRESS file
Groups say charges were discriminatory Indigenous issues
Premier’s views linked to night hunting case: Métis group Two Indigenous groups say tensions over hunting continue to rise in Manitoba where they are driven in part by racially charged comments from Premier Brian Pallister. The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs and the Manitoba Métis Federation pointed Thursday to the recent acquittal of two Métis hunters on charges of illegal night hunting. The case fell through after the Crown withdrew an apparently forged confession, said Métis president David Chartrand, who linked it to recent tough-talk from Pallister on Indigenous hunting. Derek Nepinak, grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, said conservation officers may be cutting corners after Pallister’s comments in recent months, including a speech in January in which he said Indigenous night hunting was becoming a “race war.”
“The premier of Manitoba holds a moral responsibility to be very, very wary of inflammatory rhetoric, particularly when it deals with racialized rhetoric,” Nepinak said. “If it’s acceptable for the premier to talk about race wars or to speak in derogatory terms about Indigenous hunters ... it can also ... embolden those people in public office — public officials — who are like-minded. And they can act on those things.” One of the acquitted men, Mitchel LeStrat, 30, said he was subjected to slurs in his hometown of Lundar, after he was charged in November 2015. LeStrat and Jordan Thorsteinson’s lawyer, Jessica Sanders, said the Crown produced a signed statement in which Thorsteinson appeared to confess to illegally hunting at night with spotlights. His friend never signed such a document, Sanders said, and a handwriting expert from Texas examined the document and determined the signature was not Thorsteinson’s. Two days before the men were to stand trial last month, the Crown withdrew the document and the men were acquitted, Sanders said. The Canadian Press
IN BRIEF City close to settling in police headquarters flood Much of the murky controversy around the downtown police headquarters remains unclear, but the city is close to checking “water damage settlement” off the list. On Thursday, council’s finance committee gave its
approval for a plan to accept a $7.4-million settlement and end legal action over an insurance claim that followed an August 2014 basement flood at the headquarters. The city’s CFO, Mike Ruta, told the committee the settlement represents a cost recovery of 92.3 per cent. Braeden Jones/Metro
which had 923 respondents, 67 of them from Manitoba and Saskatchewan. In Manitoba and Saskatchewan, 53 per cent of trans youth (ages 14 to 25) reported being bullied in school. Seventy-four per cent of those 18 and older said they were treated unfairly because of their physical appearance. Among 14- to 18-year-olds, 77 per cent had unwanted sexual comments, jokes or gestures directed at them, while nearly
two in five trans youth were subject to sexual assault, the report said. Tracey Peter, a sociology professor at the University of Manitoba who helped produce the study, said the results show there is a need for greater LGBTQ education in classrooms. She pointed to programs offered by Winnipeg’s Rainbow Resource Centre as a solid model. “I think there’s a lot of unique issues where we need to be more
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trans-aware and trans-inclusive. I think that’s kind of where the education needs to go,” she said. The study also found trans youth from the Prairies reported higher rates of attempted suicide (50 per cent) than the national average (37 per cent) and used more drugs. About one in three respondents were Indigenous, 94 per cent said they had lived in Canada for their whole lives and 94 per cent said they spoke only English at home.
8 Weekend, May 5-7, 2017
Canada/World
Prince Philip retiring at 95 monarchy
Glamour, gaffes recalled fondly by Canadian royal watchers News of Prince Philip’s retirement from public life has sparked fond memories as Canadian royal watchers recall the visits of a man who transitioned from rebellious modern monarch to royal elder statesman while staunchly supporting dozens of causes. Buckingham Palace released a statement Thursday saying that Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, would retire from royal duties this fall. Philip, 95, made the decision himself with the full support of the Queen, the palace said in a statement. The royal has suffered from heart disease and other ailments in recent years but has nonetheless maintained a vigorous public schedule.
The announcement drew a tweet of congratulations from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who thanked Philip for his decades of service and wished him well in retirement. The Queen’s husband last visited Canada four years ago. Some Canadians marvelled at Philip’s stamina for the demands of public life, which he embraced from the time he married in 1947. Robert Finch, chairman of the Monarchist League of Canada, said Philip’s inaugural royal visit to this country took place more than 66 years ago in 1951, noting that his years in public service exceeded the retirement age for most people. “I think we’ll still see him in public for the odd occasion here and there, but at 95 years old I think he can be proud of his service, and I think Canadians can be proud of his service to their country,” Finch said in an interview. Philip’s first true visit to Can-
gender identity
Parents urge bill’s passage
ada came long before he became a member of the British royal family, when his career as a naval officer brought him to Halifax for a brief and routine shore leave in 1941. On that occasion, according to royal historian Carolyn Harris, a local woman reminisced to Time Magazine that “he looked just like any other Royal Navy midshipman. He seemed to be growing out of his uniform.” A decade later, when Philip made his first official royal visit alongside his wife, he cut a more memorable and dashing figure. Harris said Philip and his wife were heralded at the time as a glamorous pair of royal newlyweds with the star power and modern sensibilities to revitalize the monarchy, not unlike the way their grandson Prince William and his wife Kate were described upon their arrival in Canada in 2011.
Prince Philip visits the University of Sherbrooke in Quebec. in 1989.
Parents of transgender youth urged members of the Senate’s legal committee on Thursday to back the Liberal government’s gender identity and gender expression bill, suggesting it could be a matter of life and death. Melissa Schaettgen, a mother from Carp, Ont., shared her family’s struggle with their nine-year-old transgender daughter Warner — a victim of assault — and the risks associated with speaking publicly about what they’ve gone through. “You must … know that by doing so, I put myself and my family at great risk,” she told the committee. “After last telling our story publicly, we were bombarded with a number of letters and emails stating we were sick and that we should be shot and burned.” Many families live in constant fear and in hiding, she added, noting relatives and friends have turned their backs on their family.
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Weekend, May 5-7, 2017
Wild ride stokes fiery flashbacks Wildfire
Escape on horseback made national headlines Darren Krause
Metro | Calgary
Jada Polem and her quarter-horse, Mya. Polem fled the Fort McMurray wildfire on Mya’s back during last year’s wildfire. contributed
9
When Jada Polem swings into the saddle, she has flashbacks of the Fort McMurray wildfire. Polem’s story of a dramatic, 15 km ride to safety aboard her palomino quarter-horse mare, Mya, told first by Metro, made headlines across Canada as tens of thousands fled the northern Alberta disaster. “Every time I’m riding any horse, as soon as I put my leg over, you get that quick flashback of going straight, but as soon as you look behind you everything’s just up in flames,” said Polem. “It’s flashbacks every time you do something that’s involved with the fire, whether it was
driving out or riding out.” The day before the fire her family moved their three horses from the Clearwater Horse Club to a campground on the north side of Fort McMurray. But the winds shifted, and by Tuesday they had to move the horses again. But with the evacuation underway and fire bearing down, no horse trailers could get through to help. They had a trailer only big enough for two horses, and the only way to get Mya out was to ride. Polem said the horses were anxious and knew tensions were high. When they returned to Fort McMurray after the fire, riding through the fields around home the horses were still unsettled. “The smell of home is here, but they can still sense that something’s happened and things have changed,” Polem said. The 17-year-old, soon-to-be high school graduate said having a year to reflect on the fire, her harrowing escape and what lies ahead for the community has given her a new perspective on things.
Prior to the fire starting, Polem said she was making summer plans with family and friends. She recalled the Saturday prior as just another hot, summer day. Within a day, smoke and flames started showing. “That’s when everything changed,” she said. “You literally live day by day. This year you almost expect something to happen because you’re feeling so prone to something happening.” Polem said every day things are inching back to normal. When Metro spoke with Polem, the day of the one-year anniversary of the fire, she said there was a noticeable tension. People still talk quite frequently of the fire — some more than others — but it’s always in the back of people’s minds. For her, riding has provided that daily routine that she can count on as the post-fire days pass by. “Riding horses just makes it more settling. it’s an everyday thing and you know that it feels more normal than not having (the horses) around,” Polem said.
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World
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Expats set to choose next head of state
During the first round of voting in the French presidential election two weeks ago, the sidewalks and cafés in Outremont, home to the city’s only voting station for expats, had all the flavours and accents of a typical Parisian arrondissement. But the Montreal neighbourhood also had lineups that stretched out the doors of a stately private school that served as the voting station, along the street out front and
around several corners. In all, 23,431 French citizens showed up to cast their ballots in Montreal from thousands of kilometres away, a number that overloaded volunteers and forced the polls to remain open until 11 p.m. that Saturday night to accommodate as many people as possible. With the candidates now whittled from 11 down to just two — the centrist favourite, Emmanuel Macron, and Mar-
ine Le Pen, the leader of the extreme right Front National — the second round of voting for French expats that takes place this weekend still has several looming unknowns. One is whether the changes being put in place by the French consulate in Montreal — the de facto French capital in North America — will alleviate the interminable wait. The other is whether forecasts in advance of the Saturday vote will prove accurate
— of all the Canadian cities where consular officials have arranged for voting booths, only Vancouver is not expecting rain. “This time, people are very interested and people are voting out of conviction,” said Roland Lescure, who left his prestigious job as chief investment officer of the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec to become one of Macron’s main organizers in Montreal. TORSTAR NEWS SERVICE
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U.S. President Donald Trump congratulates House Speaker Paul Ryan after Republicans passed legislation aimed at repealing and replacing Obamacare on Thursday. Getty Images
Trump high on victory in health vote Obamacare
Legislation fulfills U.S. president’s election pledge U.S. President Donald Trump is celebrating the passage of the House Republican health care bill, saying he is confident it will get through the Senate. Flanked by Republican lawmakers in the Rose Garden on Thursday, Trump called former president Barack Obama’s health care law a “catastrophe” and called the GOP bill “a great plan.” Trump delayed his first trip home to New York as president to celebrate House passage of legislation undoing much of Obama’s health law, a longsought GOP goal and top Trump campaign promise. House leaders came through with the votes to give Trump a major political victory more than a month after Republic-
ans’ first attempt to pass a health care bill went down in a humiliating defeat. The legislation now heads to the Senate. The developments pushed back Trump’s first-time meeting with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull by several hours. Manhattan is where Trump made a name by transforming himself from real-estate developer into a celebrity businessman and now president. He hasn’t set foot in the city since leaving on Jan. 19 for Washington to be inaugurated into office the following day. During the campaign, Trump would fly thousands of miles back to New York City to sleep in his own bed, leaving the impression that he would make frequent trips home after he became president. But Trump said last week that he so far has avoided returning to the city of his birth because the trips are expensive for the government and would inconvenience New Yorkers. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN BRIEF Call of the wild harder to hear in American parks Peaceful, natural sounds — bird songs, rushing rivers and rustling grass — are being drowned out by noise from people in many of America’s protected parks and wilderness
areas, a new study finds. Scientists calculated that in nearly two-thirds of the Lower 48’s parks, the noise can be twice the natural background level because of airplanes, cars, logging, mining and drilling. the associated press
science The Amazon rainforest is so phenomenally diverse because it was covered in a vast ocean 10M years ago, a new study suggests
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OPENING SOON: JURASSIC PARK?
Findings Your week in science
With new tech such as gene-editing system CRISPR, some scientists are working to resurrect creatures like the woolly mammoth, extinct about 4,000 years. But should we bring them, or anything, back? Here’s a look at the debate:
Bring me back!
Bring it! Proponents of “de-extinction” include Harvard biologist George Church and Stewart Brand, founder of Revive & Restore, a “genetic rescue” foundation. Scientists at R&R’s Woolly Mammoth Revival project are figuring out how to modify Asian elephants to make them more like mammoths, until, after many generations, they essentially are mammoths. (Mammoth DNA is readily available, preserved in permafrost, for reference).
Believers in de-extinction think it could transform ecosystems for the better. Mammoths, the theory goes, could graze in the Arctic. This could help tundra return grasslands and help keep permafrost frozen, absorbing more carbon and mitigating climate change. Finally, de-extinction, like going to Mars, arguably generates wonder and excitement about science’s possibilities.
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DEFINITION Dendrochronology is using the tree rings in wood, such as in old buildings, to determine when events happened in the past. It can also be used to study historical climate patterns. (Trees usually get one new ring every year).
species, depleting resources and disrupting the environment. Then there’s the cost: not just of bringing species back, but of caring for and managing the populations. McCauley said it’s far more costeffective to invest in protecting living endangered species, though they’re usually nowhere near as charismatic as the mammoth. “I see a lot of value in using the same (deextinction) technologies to helping species that are almost extinct.”
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Ecologist Douglas McCauley is skeptical. He loves the idea of meeting a mammoth in real life. He’s just afraid de-extinction will turn species into curiousities, seen only in “zoo-like” contexts. If the mammoth does return, he said, “I want it doing its ecological thing in nature.” However, the Arctic ecosystems where mammoths roamed have changed over millennia, McCauley said. Mammoths could become “ecological zombies,” like an invasive
PALEO BITES Until now, it was widely believed that ancient hunter-gatherers bit into their mammoth steaks with ease, never dealing with tooth decay until agriculture brought sugary and starchy foods into their diets. But a new study of modern-day huntergatherers has found many of them do have bad teeth despite their “paleo” diet.
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Quick, give Yondu an Oscar in focus
Our Guardians are back, and yes there is an emotional core Richard Crouse
For Metro Canada Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 opens with a battle scene that would not be out of place in almost any other superhero movie. The set-up has the Guardians — Peter Quill /Star-Lord (Chris Pratt), Gamora (Zoe Saldana), Drax the Destroyer (Dave Bautista) and Rocket (Bradley Cooper) — working for the Sovereigns, a thin-skinned race of aliens who have hired the heroes to protect valuable batteries from an interdimensional monster. The action is as wild and woolly as we’ve come to expect from these big CGI extravaganzas, but the thing that sets the scene apart from all other superhero movies is the sheer, unbridled joy brought to the screen by Baby Groot (Vin Diesel), a tree-like being too small to take part in the fight. Instead he blissfully dances throughout to Mr. Blue Sky, the lush, Beatles-esque ELO song that underscores the sequence. The scene and the movie brim
Michael Rooker (on left), Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana and Bradley Cooper star in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, which is about a group of heroes hired by a race of aliens to protect valuable batteries from an inter-dimensional monster. contributed
with the missing element of so many other big superhero movies — fun. “That’s what we hoped to do,” says star Michael Rooker, “bring back the fun. It was fun as hell doing it.” Rooker reprises his role as blue-skinned, red-finned mercenary Yondu. The former Walking Dead actor — he played Daryl’s older brother Merle Dixon — jokes that his normal look, his handsomely craggy face, is ac-
tually make-up, and the Blue Man Group style we see in the movie is the face he was born with. “It takes four or five hours
to get this on,” he says, pulling at his cheek. “The real problem is getting the fin off.” Yondu’s weapon of choice is
movie ratings by Richard Crouse Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 Jeremiah Tower: The Last Magnificent First Round Down I, Daniel Blake
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a flying arrow made of special sound-sensitive metal he controls through whistling. “Dude,” he says, “everyone is digging that weapon.” It’s the character’s trademark and Rooker laughs when remembering talking to director James Gunn about the role. “The first time I got to whistle I did the melodic whistle... I hypnotized one of the aliens and then I shot out a piercing whistle. Yondu has different whistles.”
One wild action sequence with Yondu’s deadly arrow and set to ’70s pop ditty Come a Little Bit Closer is a showstopper, an imaginatively staged set piece with a huge body count and just as many laughs. “That whole sequence is very much like a western gun fight if you think about it,” Rooker says. “You go out, and jacket pulled back, methodical, not fast. It is a total tribute.” In the scene he is accompanied by two computer-generated characters, Baby Groot and Rocket, a genetically engineered raccoonbased bounty hunter. Neither actually appeared on set while shooting, but Rooker says they were there in spirit. “Because these movies use a lot of CGI they require your imagination to be fertile and open and ripe for seeding,” he says. “I’m like, ‘There is Baby Groot. He’s over there and he’s sopping wet...What have they done to him?’ I talk to them like they were any other two characters.” Yondu may be a vicious, arrowwielding mercenary but he’s also the film’s emotional core and James Gunn says people will be “surprised by Michael Rooker’s performance. He deserves an Academy Award nomination. No joke.” What does Rooker think? “We’ll see about that bro. I’m up for anything.”
Weekend, May 5-7, 2017 15
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Twist of fate ignites unlikely friendship
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New Canadian doc explores battlefield and brotherhood They fought on opposite sides of the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s, where one saved the other’s life on the battlefield. Zahed Haftlang and Najah Aboud didn’t see each other again for some two decades — until a couple of twists of fate brought them together in Vancouver and ignited a friendship. Their ongoing journey is the focus of My Enemy, My Brother, which is making its world premiere at Toronto’s Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival. “It’s a positive film, particularly in light of the Trump travel ban,� says Ann Shin of Toronto, who directed the film. “It’s great to have stories like these come to light.� My Enemy, My Brother expands on a short documentary Shin made on the duo with the same title two years ago. It was nominated for an Emmy Award and shortlisted for an Oscar. As the story goes, Iranianborn Haftlang ran away from home at age 13 to join the army, while Aboud of Iraq was conscripted to fight in the war in his late teens, leaving behind his wife and son. On the battlefield, Haftlang found Aboud critically injured in a bunker and decided to save him and take him to a military hospital. Aboud was taken as a prisoner of war, while Haftlang suffered from deep depression.
Zahed Haftlang saved Najah Aboud’s life during the Iran-iraq War in 1980s, only to be reunited with him in Vancouver two decades later. contributed
Coincidentally, both would end up living in Vancouver, where Haftlang was a mechanic and Aboud ran a moving company. They didn’t realize they were in the same city until they happened to meet each other in a waiting room about a decade ago. She first came into the project five years ago when she read a newspaper article about Aboud and Haftlang and sought them out in Vancouver, where her parents live. “I sat down to tea and I heard their story, which was crazy,�
she recalls. “It was 17 years of war, being a prisoner of war, and then finding each other miraculously in Canada.� This new feature-length version of My Enemy, My Brother expands on the short doc by travelling to the Middle East with the two subjects as they try to reconnect with their loved ones amid present-day conflicts. “Najah and Zahed’s story has inspired me from the start about how you can rise above your own circumstances — how you may be told, you may be trained to see a person as
an enemy or as a threat but on the battlefield, these men overcame that and it’s always moved me,� says Shin. “Even now the way they are with each other and the way they support one another, it just inspires me to see the best of humanity and the best about our country, Canada, where this can happen, and really shows these two men of Muslim background in a really positive light.� Hot Docs runs through May 7 with a total of 230 titles from 58 countries. the canadian press
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16 Weekend, May 5-7, 2017
A trendsetting Tower, the first celebrity chef documentary
But pioneer now finds the term terribly overcooked Steve Gow
Jeremiah Tower didn’t have his sights set on being a cuisine trailblazer. contributed
dine” today. The septuagenarian star of the new documentary Jeremiah Tower: The Last Magnificent may be the so-called “first celebrity chef,” but his story is one of humble beginnings. After all, Tower’s intent was hardly that of obtaining fame. “It filled the restaurant and
that was the point of it,” admitted the one-time aspiring architect who drew celebrity status through his charisma as well as his cuisine. “The best thing was finally a mother could tell her friends that her son is a cook and feel proud instead of saying he’s an accountant.” Tower’s career began in the
CAREER
If Jeremiah Tower insists celebrity chefs “have the courage to be your own person,” then there’s a bright future for at least three food stars from the digital world:
gastronomy includes the Montreal-based creator behind Epic Meal Time — a popular series that creates high-caloric confections like Cheeseburger Baklava.
Hannah Hart: With her popular My Drunk Kitchen series on YouTube, the California-based comedian/ chef has become a sensation by blending laughs and liquor and getting crocked when she’s cooking.
Vani Hari: She’s not a chef per se, but the “food babe” has become equally as famous by using her online status to promote healthy eating. And it’s working — Time magazine named her one of the most influential people on the web today.
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with creating the concept of “celebrity chefs.” After all, with the food industry now saturated with misguided cuisiniers on television and the Internet, America’s preeminent epicurean finds the whole moniker slightly overcooked. “People showing off (bothers me),” said Tower, who doesn’t observe much originality among today’s celebrities. “It’s about being a good cook — knowing what makes great ingredients, what to do with them, and how to present them (and) to have the courage to be your own person.”
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early ’70s when he was casually hired at popular California bistro Chez Panisse, a successful stint that led to Stars, his own esteemed eatery that attracted celebrities, promoted dining as a form of entertainment and launched the concept of the open-kitchen. “I just wanted to see every-
thing and control everything,” explained Tower of the now commonplace design. “It turned out to be this great idea but of course I had no idea at the time.” Tower’s modesty may seem self-effacing but it’s because cooking, not business, is his primary passion and art. Perhaps that’s why the “father of American cuisine” (as Martha Stewart calls him) grew disillusioned and disappeared for 15 years before making a bittersweet rebound at Manhattan’s notorious Tavern on the Green. It’s also why Tower gracefully grimaces when credited
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For Metro Canada It may not occupy most people’s daily thoughts but without one specific person, there’d be no Rachael Ray, Anthony Bourdain or Gordon Ramsay. In fact, it may be difficult to believe but there was a time before the requisite restaurant role was even given much respect. That is, until the “first celebrity chef” Jeremiah Tower came along. “In 1972, I couldn’t tell my grandmother I was working in a kitchen. She would’ve disowned me,” recently laughed the legendary chef largely responsible for “revolutionizing the way Americans eat and
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Weekend, May 5-7, 2017 17
Entertainment
Bill Nye: Science’s ‘dorkiest’ defender q&A
ically? Philosophy. Science used to be called natural philosophy. Don’t make me draw that line.
He wants his plumber to think critically – is that wrong? Early in the documentary Bill Nye: Science Guy, which saw its international premiere in Toronto this week at the Hot Docs film festival, Nye laments: “we have this increasing anti-science movement in the United States. It’s worse than ever.” Those who dimly remember Nye from the 1990s when he was the zany, bow-tied host of a kids science television show may be surprised to learn that Nye is back, and that he has taken a turn for the sharply political: his new Netflix series is called Bill Nye Saves the World. Nye has made science literacy his fight, and the documentary tries to uncover his motivations for doing so.
way we talk in the U.S. about health care, or the way in Canada you talk about — well, do you talk about the tarsands?
I struggle all the time with whether simply talking about science increases science literacy. It’s not enough, but it’s required. If we were talking about climate change the
I’ve seen research that shows that when you argue with people, both sides get more entrenched. Have you actually looked at research on what changes people’s minds? Here’s what I think, based
Cole Burston/Torstar news service
on my experience with what I would call skepticism — which you might also call nowadays critical thinking, or what my dad would have called reasoning. The first time you hear that there’s no connection between hospital emergency room visits and the full moon, people who believe that based on anecdotes go, “Yes there is, I heard that!” But
it takes about two years. You have to hear it over and over for about two years before you let go of your old world view. But what we want is to get people trained, to have the habit of mind of thinking critically, so it doesn’t take two years. Is science the only way of teaching people to think crit-
I’m a philosophy major who is now a science reporter so. . . There’s an example! As a mechanical engineer who had to bust my butt — I took three years of calculus and four years of physics — I thought, philosophy majors, they have it so easy. But I’ve completely changed my mind about that. I now think philosophy is the key to all happiness. We throw around this term, ‘liberal arts education.’ That’s what we want everyone to have. And it doesn’t mean everyone has to go to a four year university, but we want — I want my plumber to be able to think critically, is that so wrong? Whether or not that guy or gal chooses to go to university for four years. Do you think talking to adults is as effective as talking to kids? No. Talking to adults is not as effective. No. They’re cooked. They’re not a lost cause, but it’s not as effective. No, that’s what concerns me so much about that guy in Kentucky —
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his influence on children. I’ve also met Ken Ham. I went to Kentucky to write about creationism and the Ark Encounter. It was a very disorienting experience for me, as I’m sure it was for you. The documentary features criticism of how you sitting down with Ken Ham — I blew it! It’s all my fault. Your show is called Bill Nye Saves the World, so I’m going to ask you the million-dollar question. Is that U.S. or Canadian? U.S., it’s worth much more. It seems like creationism and anti-vaxxers and climate denial are all facets of the same problem. How did we get here, and what can the average reader of my newspaper or a watcher of your show do about it? As I say, when you’re in love you want to tell the world. Read the paper. Watch my show. Read books. Turn it up loud. The longest journey begins with a single step. Because we have this problem doesn’t mean we should address it, for crying out loud. torstar news service
ON thE mENu
Sizzle up a healthy alternative to ground beef
contributed
Turkey isn’t just for the holidays — with just 140 calories and 29 grams of protein per 125 gram serving — incorporating ground turkey into weekly meal planning is a healthy and delicious alternative that will have even the pickiest of eaters heading back for a second helping. Whether it’s 'Taco Tuesday' or 'Pizza Friday', ground turkey is a much leaner option than other ground meats, and studies have shown it can even help to lower cholesterol levels with
regular consumption, says Lynne Roy, marketing and communications coordinator with Manitoba Turkey Producers. “Ground turkey can be made with white meat or a combination of white and dark meat which makes it one of the leanest cuts you can buy,” says Roy. “It’s perfect for parents of picky eaters like me — I replace ground beef with ground turkey all the time — and my kid can’t tell the difference.”
As well as being a healthier choice, Roy says ground turkey cooks exactly the same as other ground meats. “The only thing to remember is ground turkey needs a touch of oil when it’s frying because it’s so much leaner than other ground meats,” she says. Go to makeitwithturkey.ca to find ground turkey recipes that will modernize your weekly meal planning.
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72 hours in El Salvador
El Salvador has always been a traditional stopover en route to Costa Rica, Honduras or Belize. But there’s so much more to see outside the capital city of San Salvador. Here’s a guide to navigating the country in one, two or three days. JENNIFER WEATHERHEAD HARRINGTON FOR METRO
DAY 2
Visit historic sites
With your next 24 hours, head to Suchitoto (stay at the boutique hotel Los Almendros de San Lorenzo), a picturesque town surrounded by volcanoes, lakes and ancient sites like the indigenous city of Chalchuapa (home to the highest pyramids in the country). Continue your history tour through Joya de Ceren, a UNESCO World Heritage Site preserved after being buried under layers of volcanic ash from the Loma Caldera volcano in 660 BC (also known as the “Pompei of America”). DAY 3
Chase some waves
A third day will allow you to take in El Salvador’s impressive coastline. After a morning stroll along the cobblestone streets of Suchitoto, grab a pupusa (a Salvadorian dish of meat, cheese and beans in a flat pastry) and get a glimpse of the impressive man-made Lago Suchitlan. Then get your surf gear on. El Salvador is known for its surfing, and the swells at the famed volcanic Playa El Tunco will rival most others in the world. Bring your beach shoes, because much of the beach is rocky mixed with black sand, and get set to tackle the waves with El Salvador Surf Camps (elsalvadorsurfcamps. com). Not into big waves? Park yourself on the beach, soak up the sun or book a massage in the cliffs at the B Boutique Hotel.
ALL PHOTOS ISTOCK
DAY 1
Climb a volcano and tour a coffee plantation
You can squeeze a lot into 24 hours in El Salvador and get a great grasp of the country’s best offerings. Drop your bags off at a hotel and head to El Boquerón, the imposing volcano on the city’s limits. You can hike around the edge of the crater (if you want to stretch those plane legs) or opt for the shorter route and drive to the top to get the panoramic views of San Salvador. In the afternoon, take a short trip outside San Salvador to Ataco. Colourful murals on nearly every wall make the town an Instagrammer’s dream and it’s also home to another one of El Salvador’s famed exports — coffee. Tour the El Carmen State plantation and see the bean go from plant to cup, sip on some local brew, then hit up Ataco’s tiny cafés to take in the country’s best flavours.
Avianca offers direct flights from Toronto to San Salvador. This trip was hosted by the tourism board of El Salvador, which didn’t review or approve this story.
TRAVEL NOTES HIPPO WITH MESSAGE OF HOPE, SAVE THE DATE: BOSTON MARATHON REGISTRATION, NYC’S NEW FERRY SERVICE
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NYC Ferry routes
New York City has launched its new ferry service. The service started Monday with a Rockaway, Queens, route. NYC Ferry will get a South Brooklyn route on June 1. An Astoria, Queens, route begins in August, followed by Lower East Side and Bronx routes in 2018. A ride costs $2.75, the same as the subway, and includes transfers. Ferries accept MetroCards, are WiFi capable and serve snacks and alcohol. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ISTOCK
If you just ran the Boston Marathon, chances are your legs are still trashed. But if you plan to be back next year, mark your calendar for 10 a.m. on Monday, Sept. 11. That’s when the Boston Athletic Association will open registration for the 2018 edition. The BAA says it will again use a “rolling” registration to give the fastest qualifiers first dibs on a bib. The 122nd Boston Marathon will be run on April 16, 2018.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
An Ohio zoo that received help from a hospital for its prematurely born hippo, Fiona, has sent onesies to the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The baby clothes feature Fiona’s image and are meant as a message of hope to families of premature babies. Fiona weighed 29 pounds when she was born Jan. 24 at the Cincinnati Zoo, her weight now tops 100 lbs. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ready, set, register
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Zoo sends baby onesies to hospital
NBA prospect Lonzo Ball has unveiled his own Big Baller Brand signature shoe — the ZO2 Prime — at the whopping price of $495 US IN BRIEF Johnson returns to shoot 70 in North Carolina Six weeks away from competition has done little to slow Dustin Johnson. The top-ranked golfer in the world showed more game than rust at the Wells Fargo Championship, where he missed only two greens for a 2-under 70 that left him four shots behind leader Francesco Molinari at blustery Eagle Point Golf Club. The Associated Press Two cyclists booted from Giro d’Italia for doping Two riders from the Italian team Bardiani CSF have been kicked out of the Giro d’Italia on the eve of the annual race. Nicola Ruffoni and Stefano Pirazzi returned positive tests for growth hormone-releasing peptides. The Associated Press Nationals’ Harper leaves game with injured groin Nationals slugger Bryce Harper left Thursday’s 4-2 win over Arizona after hurting his left groin and is day to day, according to Washington manager Dusty Baker. Harper, who said he felt the injury while diving to make a catch, is batting .376 with nine homers and 27 RBIs. The Associated Press
Hockey’s necessary evil 2017
Playoffs
Crosby Update
NHL
Conference semifinals
Glory, injuries come from shot blocking Nothing says sacrifice for a hockey team like blocking a shot, no matter how dangerous. Ian Laperriere took a puck to the face during the Flyers’ run to the 2010 Stanley Cup final and was heralded as a hero, even though post-concussion symptoms blamed on the blow ended his career the following fall. Gregory Campbell could barely skate on a broken leg after blocking a shot in 2013, but finishing his shift during the Bruins’ run made him into a cult phenomenon in a sport that glorifies taking frozen rubber fired at more than 100 m.p.h. off whatever part of your body you choose — as long as you keep it out of the net. Shot blocking is still an essential part of playoff hockey, though the risk-reward value of the time-honoured tradition filled with bruises and broken bones is being questioned like never before. “I think shot blocking’s a last resort,” said Ian Cole, the Pittsburgh Penguins’ shot-blocker extraordinaire. “It’s not some-
Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby skated at the Penguins practice facility Thursday, two days after the team confirmed he suffered a concussion. Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said Crosby is focused on his rehab and didn’t provide an update on the star centre’s availability for Game 5 vs. Washington. The Canadian Press
The Senators’ Jean-Gabriel Pageau throws his body in front of a shot by the Rangers’ Nick Holden on Tuesday in New York. Bruce Bennett/Getty Images
thing that you try to go out and search for.” Hockey’s analytics awakening has put a premium on holding on to the puck and attempting more shots than your opponent. By that measure of success, blocking too many shots means you’re on the defensive too much.
“If you’re blocking an absolute ton of shots, you’re probably not having a very good game,” Washington Capitals defenceman Matt Niskanen said. “You don’t have the puck much and you’re not closing on people. You’re slow. They’re playing way faster than you. They have too much space.”
I’m sure there’s some people that think it’s stupid and pointless. Capitals defenceman Brooks Orpik
More More Trails Trails More Trails
The best teams still block shots, a necessary evil this time of year with scoring usually at a premium. The Penguins blocked 18 shots a game on the way to the championship last season and are averaging 19.3 so far in these playoffs. More than likely a team blocking a ton of shots is enduring a ton of injuries. Just ask Ottawa Senators captain Erik Karlsson, who improved his shot-blocking prowess en route to another Nor-
ris Trophy nomination as the NHL’s top defenceman. Karlsson is also playing with two microfractures in one of his feet from blocking a shot late in the regular season. Still, there isn’t a coach around who will tell a player to get out of the way. Nor is there a player with his sights set on the Cup who will get out of the way even if it’s risky. “It’s still mandatory,” Niskanen said. “Every team’s going to get opportunities to shoot the puck, so it’s still a requirement to block it.” The Associated Press Go to metronews. ca for more playoff coverage
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20 Weekend, May 5-7, 2017
Lowry a doubt for Game 3 nba playoffs
“Everybody else gotta do something a little bit more to fill whatever void it is he can’t fully do out there on Kyle Lowry the court.” L o w r y getty images missed Thursday’s practice at Biosteel Centre and was scheduled for an MRI later in the day, according to coach Dwane Casey. The injury occurred early in the third quarter when Cleveland’s Tristan Thompson shoved Norman Powell, who hit Lowry from the side while falling. “I don’t think the officials saw that part of it,” Casey said of Thompson’s shove. “I don’t think Tristan did it maliciously, but he threw him down, threw Norm down into his ankle, and
Raptors’ star point guard picked up ankle injury in Game 2 The Raptors may have to face Cleveland on Friday without Kyle Lowry. Toronto’s dogged point guard is questionable after spraining his left ankle in Wednesday’s 125-103 loss to the Cavaliers, and backcourt partner DeMar DeRozan said his absence would be “a big problem,” for a Toronto team that’s two losses away from elimination. “Kyle is our driving force, our point guard, our leader. So for us not to have him anything close to 100 per cent, it would be difficult on us,” DeRozan said.
all of his weight went onto his ankle. So I knew it was bad when I first saw it.” Lowry was arguably Toronto’s best player in the two losses to Cleveland, scoring 20 points in both games. The three-time all-star missed 21 games late in the regular season after undergoing wrist surgery. The team fared surprisingly well, going 14-7 in his absence. “It’s unfortunate, obviously, when anyone goes out, especially one of our stars,” said Cory Joseph, who started in Lowry’s absence. “I just think we have that mentality of next man up, just playing hard, as we do when he’s there and we were able to win games. Next man mentality and we’re all playing good together.” Joseph had 22 points on Wednesday, but much of it was in the fourth quarter after both coaches
I love playing out on the road more than I love playing at home.
LeBron James who is averaging a staggering 34.2 points, 9.2 rebounds, 7.3 assists, 2.7 steals and 1.8 blocks in the playoffs.
had emptied their benches. He averaged 4.7 points per game in 16.1 minutes a night in the regular season. Lowry averaged 15.1 points in 38.7 minutes per game. Cavs superstar LeBron James saw Lowry go down, saying the injury “didn’t look that great.” “I just wanted him to get up. He’s a good friend of mine.”
IN BRIEF United gains semi-final edge Marcus Rashford scored a second half free kick for Manchester United to beat Celta Vigo 1-0 in the first leg of the Europa League semifinals on Thursday. Rashford, who hit the winner against Anderlecht in the quarter-finals, struck again, securing United the advantage going into the second leg. the associated press
Colts sign undrafted rookies with famous dads The Indianapolis Colts have signed 18 undrafted rookies, including Trey Griffey and Jerome Lane, whose fathers were pro athletes. Griffey, the son of baseball Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr. and Lane’s father played in the NBA and broke a backboard in college at Pitt.
Doping violations rule prospects out of CFL draft Prospects for the 2017 CFL draft have been deemed ineligible for anti-doping violations, the league said Thursday. Kent State’s Kain Anzovino, McGill’s Moy McDonald, Carleton’s Daniel McNicholl and Calgary’s Rashaun Simonise all had their draft years deferred to 2018. THE CANADIAN PRESS
Spurs’ Parker out of playoffs San Antonio Spurs guard Tony Parker will miss the rest of the playoffs after rupturing a quadriceps tendon in Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals against the Houston Rockets. Parker will need seasonending surgery, meaning the Spurs will have to go without their veteran leader.
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Weekend, May 5-7, 2017 21
YESTERDAY’S ANSWERS on page 15 make it tonight
Crossword Canada Across and Down
Irresistible Chocolate Peanut Butter Balls photo: Maya Visnyei
Ceri Marsh & Laura Keogh
For Metro Canada These impressive homemade sweets are so easy to make. What’s not easy? Eating just one at a time… Ready In: 1 hour 30 minutes Prep Time: 15 minutes Chill Time: 45 minutes Ingredients • 1/2 cup creamy natural peanut butter • 3 Tbsp butter, softened • 1 cup confectioner’s sugar • 8 oz chocolate, chopped (or chocolate chips) Directions 1. In a bowl, mix peanut butter, sugar and butter together until
they form a dough. Shape into a ball, cover with plastic wrap and chill 15 minutes. 2. Pinch off a small bits of and roll into 1-inch balls. If too sticky, pop back in fridge for a few minutes. 3. Place balls on a parchment lined baking sheet and then in the freezer for half an hour. 4. Melt chocolate gently using a double boiler and then pour into a shallow bowl. 5. Using a toothpick, pick up each ball, dip it into the chocolate and then let excess drip off. Place each ball onto a clean parchment lined baking sheet. You can leave plain or sprinkle a pinch of sea salt of finely chopped nuts before the chocolate firms up 6. Refrigerate until you serve. for more meal ideas, VISIT sweetpotatochronicles.com
Across 1. Dove and Irish Spring 6. Mil. rank 9. Information session, e.g.: letter + wd. + letter 14. “Doctor Zhivago” (1965) character 15. ‘Text’ suffix 16. An archangel 17. Feminine name endings 18. Moulder 19. R’egal’-sounding bird 20. Aromatic resin 21. Canadian athletic chain store: 2 wds. 23. Musician Ms. Mann 25. Slangy one-eighty turn 26. Beach Boys’ 1988 tropical hit 29. Hamilton expressway, The __ 31. Arthurian title, briefly 34. Arctic __ (Baffin is one of its islands) 36. Scandinavian rug 37. Small estuaries 38. Understand 39. Sprays a famous cooking spray, say 40. Sea: French 41. Crosby, Stills & Nash song: 2 wds. 45. Mr. Pacino’s 46. “The Brady Bunch” star, __ _. Davis 47. Actress Ms. Danner 48. Rock logo insurance co. 49. Village People gyms 51. Ringo’s birthplace 55. Spectacles style, __-nez
59. Budget-saving prefix 60. Flier to Narita Intl. Airport 61. Illegally live in a dwelling 62. “I __ __ backing at all!” 63. ‘Hect’ add-on 64. Shania Twain’s
“(If You’re Not in It for Love) I’m __ Here!” 65. “Now you __ ‘__, now...” 66. Mag. edition 67. Twiggy retreats Down 1. New Brunswick’s motto: __ Reduxit 2. Cheerios char-
acteristic 3. Stars sci. 4. Ancient Egyptian kings 5. Raw fish of Japanese cuisine 6. Hex 7. As an in-motion rowboat: 3 wds. 8. Jared of “Dallas Buy-
It’s all in The Stars Your daily horoscope by Francis Drake Aries March 21 - April 20 Clever you! You see ways to improve your health today. Likewise, you see ways to improve your job or to introduce reform where you work. Taurus April 21 - May 21 Today you are resourceful when it comes to ideas about how to entertain yourself and others. You also will apply your clever mind to improving sports events or how sports are played. Gemini May 22 - June 21 Look around where you live today to see how to improve bathroom areas, laundry areas and anything to do with plumbing, garbage and recycling. You can do this.
Cancer June 22 - July 23 When communicating with others today, you are strong and direct. That’s why this is a good day for those in sales, marketing, teaching, acting and writing.
Libra Sept. 24 - Oct. 23 Secrets might come out today. Something you are involved with that is behind the scenes suddenly might reveal a new truth to you. If it’s juicy, be discreet.
Leo July 24 - Aug. 23 Listen to your moneymaking ideas, because you can see a new way to boost your income today. You also might see how to improve something you own.
Scorpio Oct. 24 - Nov. 22 Your interaction with a female friend today is powerful. In fact, you might attract someone who seems strong to you. Whatever the case, this person might cause you to change your future goals.
Virgo Aug. 24 - Sept. 23 Take a realistic look in the mirror today. How can you improve your appearance? (You never get a second chance to make a first impression.)
Sagittarius Nov. 23 - Dec. 21 Bosses and parents will be impressed with your suggestions to improve something today. That’s why you should just speak up. You’re on the ball!
by Kelly Ann Buchanan
Capricorn Dec. 22 - Jan. 20 You have strong thoughts about politics, religion, philosophy and racial issues, which is why you should be careful when talking to others today. Aquarius Jan. 21 - Feb. 19 You might see a better way to deal with shared property today. Perhaps you see a better arrangement about sharing something or dividing an inheritance. Pisces Feb. 20 - March 20 During a discussion with a partner or close friend today, you actually might see how to improve the relationship itself. Oh yes, there’s always room for improvement.
ers Club” (2013) 9. Provincial park in northern Ontario bordering Minnesota 10. Had _ __ (Competed on the track) 11. Poetically approaching 12. Proofreader’s ‘remove’
13. Director Mr. Keshishian 22. Ladder step 24. Floor-cleaning implement 26. John Lennon’s “Instant __!” 27. Projecting window 28. Barenaked Ladies’ “If I Had $1,000,000” styles of vehicles 30. ‘Different’ suffix 31. Brightly banded snake 32. Stage in a dragonfly’s life cycle 33. Montreal ‘mug’ 35. “Ghostbusters” (1984) - Dr. __ Spengler 39. Bodybuilder’s build 41. Military command/ strategy headquarters: 2 wds. 42. “Movin’ __ __”: “The Jeffersons” theme 43. Jimmy Fallon’s station 44. Applies the paint in a way: 2 wds. 48. Short-tubed pasta 50. Titles for French misses [abbr.] 51. Tabletop’s propper-uppers 52. Slurpee-like beverage 53. Mark a ballot 54. Bionic Woman’s California hometown 56. Pecans 57. Carrie Chapman __ (American suffrage leader) 58. Airport scr. postings
Conceptis Sudoku by Dave Green Every row, column and box contains 1-9
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