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VANCOUVER
News worth sharing.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011www.metronews.ca
®/TM Trademark(s) of Royal Bank of Canada. RBC and Royal Bank are registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. ‡ All other trademarks are the property of their respective owner(s). VPS66061
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Lawyer Scott Bernstein is a Van-couverite in every possible way.
He lives in the city, pays munic-ipal taxes, is married to a Cana-dian and has decided to put downroots in this community.
The 46-year-old even worksclosely with various city depart-ments through his work with thePivot Legal Society.
But the Chicago native, like 14per cent of the city’s population,has absolutely no say in who runsthe city and how they do it.
That’s because Bernstein, a per-manent resident of Canada, mustwait at least three more yearsbefore he’s eligible for Canadiancitizenship and therefore isn’tafforded the right to vote.
“Why aren’t I able to have avoice about decisions that affectus day to day?” Bernstein asks.
He hopes that question will beput to a judge after filing a notice
of civil claim in B.C. SupremeCourt against the provincial gov-ernment, alleging that the Van-
couver Charter and School Actviolates his rights by grantingonly Canadian citizens the fran-chise in municipal elections.
“I can’t think of a really goodreason why there is the distinc-tion,” says Bernstein, adding thatnon-citizens have the right to votelocally in England, Australia andparts of the U.S.
“I haven’t dragged my feet (oncitizenship). Municipal electionsare completely different —they’re about city services andwater delivery, property taxes,libraries ... things that everyone inVancouver comes in contactwith.”
Any action taken will be far toolate for Saturday’s municipal elec-tion, but Bernstein hopes he’ll beable to cast a ballot in the nextelection in 2014.
Resident urgesvotes for all
Lawyer challenges citizen-only municipal voting Permanent residents should have say in local services, he argues
MATTHEW STOCKMAN/GETTY IMAGES
Davis Cup coming homeTennis Canada announced yesterday that the University of B.C.will play host to Davis Cup action between Canada and Francethis February. Vasek Pospisil will be among those playing in thecompetition. Story, page 6.
Tennis. Tourney
Vancouver’s Vasek Pospisil
serves to Roger Federer during
the Rogers Cup at Uniprix Stadium
in Montreal in August.
Should non-citizens
who are longtime
residents and who
pay local taxes be
allowed to vote in city elections?
@RBaldry: Yes. Especially whencitizenship applications take solong. In UK only nationalelections are citizen-only.@skyedonald: We need aminimum threshold for voting,and that threshold is citizenship,not tax paying or residency.@Bill_Stratton: No chance. Whatthen is Canadian citizenship if notthe right and privilege to vote?@hummingbird604: So, say... me,a non-citizen (yet) should bedenied the right to decide whomakes public decisions on my lifehere?
Twitter survey
Should non-citizens havethe right to vote in munici-
pal elections? Let us know [email protected] oron Twitter @vancouvermetro.
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1news
03metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011news: vancouver
An Occupy Vancouver pro-tester was arrested yester-day as police, fire officialsand city workers made theirrounds for a mass cleanupat the encampment.
Many of the occupiers re-mained peaceful and co-op-erative as city workershauled in tarps and severalunoccupied tents deemedunsafe into municipaltrucks. While the scene wasmostly calm, there werestill some upset campers. A
lone protester decided to sitin the middle of the inter-section of Georgia andHowe streets, police said.
VPD spokesperson Const.Lindsey Houghton said offi-cers were concerned for hispersonal safety and askedhim to leave several times,but he refused.
“He was arrested forbreach of peace out of con-cern that the might eitherhurt himself or cause a col-lision and was removedfrom the area,” Houghtonsaid in an email.
At the camp, Occupy’s se-curity committee accompa-
nied fire and city officials asthey made their way toeach tent to ensure theywere occupied, not coveredby tarps and appropriatelyspaced.
Occupier Yann Savard,who was filming the inspec-tion to prove their compli-ance, said he noticed theofficials were stricter thistime around and the groupis doing their best to com-ply with the fire and city’sdemands.
“Every thing is goingsmoothly, but they seem tobe rigid,” Savard said.“They’re actually taking the
tents that don’t respect therules.”
The move comes after aB.C. Supreme Court judgegranted the city an interimorder asking protesters tocomply with city fire bylawsand authorized police to ar-rest anyone who interferes.The City of Vancouver willreturn to court today, seek-ing an injunction to shutdown the encampment per-manently.
Meanwhile, Robert Red-ford was just around thecorner from the camp di-recting his film The Compa-ny You Keep.
Demonstrators working with city and fire officials to ensure fire bylawsare met Man sits in middle of the street, is arrested for breach of peace
Occupy Vancouver’s Yann Savard repositions a tent yesterday outside the Vancouver Art Gallery as fire and city officials enforce compliance with the city’s fire bylaws.
PHYLICIA TORREVILLAS/METRO
Occupier arrested asofficials enforce cleanup
Two moremen allegebrutalityby mallsecurityTwo more men have comeforward alleging they werebrutally beaten by securityguards in separateincidents at a DowntownVancouver mall.
Justin Peturson andMichael Freimark are join-ing three other men, whoclaimed they were draggedinto hidden areas at theHarbour Centre and beatenby guards from Fusion Se-curity.
Peturson said he wascoming home from his con-struction work on Nov. 15,2009, and was on his wayto a liquor store in HarbourCentre when he wasgrabbed by security andtold to leave the mall. Heclaimed in his lawsuit thathe complied, but enteredthe mall through adifferent entrance approxi-mately 10 minutes later.
“I was forcibly draggedinto a stairwell, handcuffedto the railing and abused atthat point,” Petursonclaimed.
He said he was kicked inthe thigh and wasn’t ableto walk for a week. He saidhe remained silent aboutthe incident because he felthumiliated until he readabout the three other cases.
PHYLICIA TORREVILLAS
Justin Peturson
PHYLICIA TORREVILLAS/METRO
PHYLICIA [email protected]
A new website offers help toyoung people who live with a
parent suffering fromdementia. Scan code for story.
To scan 2D barcodes inMetro, download thefree ScanLife app at2dscan.com.
On the web atmetronews.ca
Follow us on
@vancouvermetro
Eat, Fry, Love —starring WilliamShatner — soundsan offbeat note ofcaution about theprospect ofexplodingturkeys. Video atmetronews.ca/video
metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
04 news: vancouver
The Non-Partisan Associa-tion and the Vision Vancou-ver/COPE coalition aren’tthe only options for Van-couverites.
Community-based or-ganizations and independ-ents are always present oncivic ballots, and the 2011municipal election in Van-couver features several un-derdog candidatesthreatening to bring high-rolling city hall back downto earth.
The biggest of thesegroups is Neighbourhoodsfor a Sustainable Vancouver(NSV), a grassroots advoca-cy organization that has re-cently transformed into apolitical party over its dis-pleasure with the lack ofcommunity engagement,rampant development andan allegiance to big-money
donors under both NPA andVision leadership.
It hasn’t been easy forthe lesser-known candi-dates to capture the publicand media’s gaze, but NSVmayoral candidate RandyHelten says it’s critical thatresidents pay attention tothis election in particular.
“When you look at (Vi-sion and NPA) campaign fi-nancing and policies oncritical issues such as af-fordability and land-use,they’re almost identical,”said Helten.
The next mayor andcouncil’s input on theMetro Vancouver RegionalGrowth Strategy will setVancouver down a definedpath for the next 30 years,Helten says.
NSV council candidateTerry Martin, the formerchair of the VancouverBoard of Variance, says de-velopers have too much in-fluence at city hall.
“I think the real drivingforce is people who are des-perate for change,” he said.“We’re seeing neighbour-hoods destroyed and spotrezoning completelychange places that should-n’t. And we’re seeing thepublic ignored.”
Pollster Barb Justasonsaid last week that a few ofthe smaller and independ-ent candidates have a legiti-mate shot at snagging a
council seat, especially pop-ular Green party candidateAdriane Carr.
Sandy Garossino, a for-mer Crown prosecutor wholed the successful “Vancou-
ver Not Vegas” coalitionagainst casino expansion atBC Place, also has a realchance to make waves asan independent candidate.
“We could end up with a
real array of parties. Namerecognition is a huge fac-tor,” Justason said.
“It may be difficult forVision to produce a majori-ty in council.”
Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver candidates Terry Martin, for council, and
Randy Helton, for mayor, represent a growing segment that want to inject communities
back into Vancouver’s political scene.
MATT KIELTYKA/METRO
Grassroots groups eyeing city hall
Once touted as apossible premier,Surrey MayorDianne Wattsremains one of theprovince’s mostpopular politicians.Known for her prag-matism and moder-ation, she is running
for a third term in arace that Surrey’s
main opposition par-ty declined to con-test.
On fightingdrug addic-
tion:I guess at
the endof theday
when you look at an indi-vidual that’s addicted —and I’ve talked to a lot ofindividuals that have gonethrough various programsand come out the otherside — I mostly hear, “Ineeded to get out of the en-vironment, I needed thesupport, I needed people tohelp me in a positive way.”I don’t hear, “I’m so gladthey gave me more drugs.”On government spending:If you look at where we arein the City of Surrey, we’vegot the lowest residentialtaxes in Metro Vancouverand the second-lowest busi-ness taxes. So based on per-capita spending, if you dothat analysis, we’re one ofthe lowest in the country.We run a very lean organi-zation here.On TransLink taxes:Do I like paying two cents?
No, I don’t, but I’m goingto take that and I’m goingto invest. Because it’s notgoing to be for me. I don’tneed to get on a train or abus. But my kids do, andthe seniors do. So, for me,it’s less about me and moreabout how we’re going totreat the next generation. On cars versus public transit:There are people that willnever get out of their cars.So we’ll still have cars, butdo you need four cars inyour family? When youdon’t have the infrastruc-ture and you have the pop-ulation we have, youexacerbate the problem bybecoming a lot more car-dependent.On lack of interest in munici-pal government:People are busy and theydon’t realize that the feder-al government does thisand the provincial govern-ment does that, and we dothis. So there’s a lot ofthings we get involved inthat are not under our ju-
risdiction. Like funding forschools. That’s a provincialissue, but we’ve beenstrong advocates. And I cango meet with the premierand the finance ministerand education minister.That’s probably why I likeit so much, actually. It’s sohands-on.On the influence of develop-ers:Frankly, people know fullwell if you have a goodproject I’ll support it, and ifyou don’t then I won’t.Whether you want todonate money to acampaign or not, that’s to-tally up to you.On the Occupy movement:I think that gettinginvolved to effect change isbetter done inside a systemthan sitting in a tent. I un-derstand why they’re doingthat, but I think there hasto be more to it.
J.J. MCCULLOUGH IS A CARTOONIST AND POLITICAL COMMENTATOR. VISIT FILIBUSTERCARTOONS.COM.
MINUTES WITH:DIANNE WATTS5
THE RACEFORSURREY
Community-based campaigns and independentcandidates looking to break political cycle on Nov. 19
Read the full inter-view online atmetronews.ca/vancouver
“The policies thathave been put inplace and areproposed willirreversibly changehow the wholeLower Mainlanddevelops. We’re ata point of noreturn on Nov. 19.”NSV MAYORAL CANDIDATE RANDY HELTEN
Support Metro Vancouver Mayors and Councilors who will improve TransLink bus service and public transit with sustainable funding
WWW.WORKINGDESIGN.NET
VOTE FOR MORE BUSES NOW IN THE NOVEMBER 19 MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS!
Do you agree or disagree that
improvements should be made in Metro
Vancouver's bus and SkyTrain service?
Percentage of bus routes
with 10 minutes service
or better (by city).
85% Agree 59% 58%
26%8% ModeratelyDisagree
1% Strongly Disagree
6% Not Sure
0
20
40
60
80
100
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Toronto Montreal
Vancouver
Poll conducted by Vision Critical/Angus Reid Public Opinion for CAW Local 111 September 20-23, 2011
Metro Vancouver voters have a clear choice in the November 19 municipal elections — they can send a message to the provincial government and TransLink by electing Mayors and Councilors who support better public transit through sustainable funding.
That’s because Metro Vancouver bus service levels are inadequate — leading to ongoing pass ups of riders due to full buses, overcrowding and poor service despite high fares.
An Angus Reid Public Opinion poll conducted for Canadian Auto Workers Local 111, the union representing TransLink bus drivers, is clear — Metro Vancouver wants more service.
And for good reason — Montreal and Toronto have service every 10 minutes or less on 58% of their bus runs, while Metro Vancouver only has 10 minute service on 26% of its bus runs.
That’s because Metro Vancouver is between 500 and 800 buses short of the number needed to provide adequate service.
And 87% of Metro Vancouver residents want better Night Bus service and longer SkyTrain hours because tough new drinking and driving laws have made it even more important to get a safe ride home.
TransLink needs sustainable funding beyond inflationary increases to provide riders with the bus service they deserve — ask your candidates for Mayor and Council if they support sustainable funding — and make your vote count on
November 19.
Metro Vancouver wants More Buses Now, more Night Bus service, longer SkyTrain hours and
more SeaBus sailings — that’s what recent public opinion polling shows.
85% of those polled want significant improvements made to TransLink’s bus and SkyTrain service, with 48% strongly in favour.
www.MoreBusesNow.ca
The following mayoralty candidates support More Buses Now and increased, sustainable funding of Translink.
They all said"yes" to this question:
Do you support increasing funding of public transit in Metro Vancouver beyond inflationary increases in order to provide the sustainable funding levels needed to expand the system and restore adequate bus service? Yes or No?
VANCOUVER
Mayor Gregor Robertson
SURREY
Mayor Dianne Watts
PORT COQUITLAM
Mayor Greg Moore
NORTH VANCOUVER CITY Mayor Darrell Mussatto
NORTH VANCOUVER
DISTRICT
Mayor Richard Walton
COQUITLAM
Candidate Barrie Lynch
NEW WESTMINSTER
Candidates James Crosty and
Vance McFadyen
PORT MOODY
Candidate Mike Clay
WHITE ROCK
Candidates
Larry Anschell and
Lynne Sinclair
MAPLE RIDGE Candidates Christian Cowley
and J. Craig Ruthven
RICHMOND Candidate Richard Lee
LANGLEY TOWNSHIP Candidate Mel Kositsky
Full answers of all candidates who responded, including yes, no and other, available at:
www.MoreBusesNow.ca
metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
06 news: vancouver
Vancouver will play host tothe Davis Cup first-roundtie between Canada andFrance next year, TennisCanada announced yester-day.
The 110-year-old compe-tition will take place in-doors Feb. 10-12 at UBC’sDoug Mitchell Thunder-bird Sports Centre. Thematchup will be the firstever tennis event held atthe sports centre.
“The stage has been setto have a big impact on thegame, on tennis in gener-al, on the next generation,and this is something to re-ally look forward to,” saidMartin Laurendeau, MieleCanadian Davis Cup teamcaptain.
“We’ve had big successhere. We know we can
play really good tennishere.... We know the venuehere will be perfect for us.”
Canada will take onFrance in a best-of-fivematch format — the firstday will consist of singlesmatches, followed by dou-bles matches and reversesingles.
Vasek Pospisil, a profes-sional tennis player fromVancouver, is confidentthat playing in front of ahome crowd will give theCanadian team a signifi-cant advantage over theirFrench competitors.
“I know from past expe-riences playing there thatthe Vancouver fans arepassionate about support-ing their own,” saidPospisil via video confer-ence from Illinois. “We arehoping that those largeand noisy crowds come outto cheer us on in Febru-ary.”
Provincegets a C+ on waterreport card
B.C. has some of the low-est water-protection stan-dards in the country,according to a new reportreleased yesterday by Eco-justice, an environmentalorganization.
Waterproof 3, Ecojus-tice’s third drinking-wa-ter report card based onhow well drinking wateris protected, gave theprovince a C+ for the sec-ond year in a row due toits poor water treatmentand testing. Alberta alsofell short on the list,receiving a C-.
Ontario received an A,and Nova Scotia receivedan A- for their strong wa-ter treatment, testing,and protection programs.
Federally, Canadareceived an F for the sec-ond year in a row.
UBC to host Davis Cup matches Canada takes on France Feb. 10-12
Vasek Pospisil celebrates his victory over Israel’s Amir Weintraub during the
Davis Cup world group playoff tennis match near Tel Aviv in September.
ARIEL SCHALIT/THE CANADIAN PRESS
Marty McFly’shigh-tops atRogers ArenaON DISPLAY. A pair of Nikehigh-tops, originally wornby Michael J. Fox in thefilm Back to the Future II,will be on display atRogers Arena between 5and 8 p.m. during the B.C.Basketball Classicbetween Gonzaga Univer-sity and the University ofHawaii on Nov. 19.
KENDRA WONG
Watts demandsaction from portRIVER. Surrey MayorDianne Watts is calling onPort Metro Vancouver toimmediately approve anadditional dredging of 1.3metres in the Fraser River,which she claims will cre-ate 1,300 new jobs.
Watts and the SurreyFirst team believe thedredging will allow localbusinesses to expandtheir services.
Watts is seeking re-elec-tion as mayor on Nov. 19.
KENDRA WONG
B.C. renews children’swatchdog SECOND TERM. B.C.’s childwatchdog — often a thornin the side of the B.C. gov-ernment over child-welfare issues — has beengiven a second five-yearterm.
Members of the B.C.legislature reappointedMary Ellen Turpel-Lafondas the Representative forChildren and Youth aftera unanimous recommen-dation from a special leg-islative committee.THE CANADIAN PRESS
Referendum cost$8M: Elections BCPRICE TAG. Elections BCsays it cost just under $8million to conduct the ref-erendum on theharmonized sales tax ear-lier this year.
The agency hasreleased its final report onthe mail in referendum.
Elections BC says 1.6million people voted inthe referendum and justunder 3,000 ballots wererejected for variousreasons. THE CANADIAN PRESS
News in brief
KENDRA [email protected]
For more local newsvisit metronews.ca/Vancouver
KENDRA [email protected]
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metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
08 news: vancouver
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Insurance Institute for Highway SafetyTop Safety Pick
Sedationquestioned
Specialist not sure terminally illshould be sedated to hasten death
Former NHLstar opposesresort planThe former captain of Cana-da’s Olympic gold medalmen’s hockey team saysBritish Columbia is one ofthe world’s few remaininghomes to wild grizzly bears,which is why he’s speakingout against a proposed re-sort development near hishometown in Cranbrook.
Scott Niedermayer saidyesterday the proposedJumbo Glacier ski resortproject in the Purcell Moun-
tains of southeastern B.C.threatens valuable habitat.
Niedermayer retiredfrom professional hockeyin 2010 after 18 seasons inthe National Hockey Leagueand four Stanley Cups.THE CANADIAN PRESS
Sedating terminally ill pa-tients into unconscious-ness to ease their painuntil they die is a treat-ment option available todoctors, but one pallia-tive-care specialist isn’tsure doctors should beable to go the next stepand deliberately hastentheir deaths.
B.C. Civil Libertieslawyer Joe Arvay is argu-ing in B.C. Supreme Court
that physicians should begiven the right to help se-riously ill patients endtheir lives.
He said the safeguardsin place for palliative carealready provide the foun-dation.
Dr. Douglas McGregor,head of palliative care for
the Vancouver CoastalHealth Authority, agreedthe rules would be inplace if physician-assisteddying was made legal.
“But I’m not sure that’sthe right thing to do inour society,” he told thetrial yesterday.
McGregor testified that
his health-care team hasadministered so-calledpalliative sedation just sixor seven times amid thehundreds of patients he’streated at the hospicewhere he has worked overthe last eight years.
The sedation is onlyused to give a patient re-lief from pain or sufferingwhen they’re near death,but it is not intended tokill them. THE CANADIAN PRESS
PHYLICIA TORREVILLAS/METRO
Europe pushes student programTommy Europe, a former CFL player and host of Canada’s The Last 10 Pounds Bootcamp, was in townyesterday to support the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame’s HeroIn You educational program, which brings stories ofathletes to classroom lesson plans and aims tomotivate students to achieve success.
Cup. Winner
B.C. Sports Hall of Famer Tommy Europe poses with theGrey Cup yesterday at Urban Fare on Alberni Street.
“I’m not sure that’s the right thing to doin our society.”DR. DOUGLAS MCGREGOR ON SO-CALLED PALLIATIVE SEDATION
Scott Niedermayer.
CONTRIBUTED
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*Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Global Wireless Matrix Database 3Q11.WIND, WIND MOBILE are trademarks of Wind Telecommunicazioni S.p.A. and are used under license in Canada by Globalive Wireless Management Corp. © 2011 WIND Mobile.
OVER-CHARGED,UNDER-APPRECIATED,CONTRACT-LOATHINGMOBILE PHONE CUSTOMERS.
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metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
10 news
Crackdowns against theOccupy Wall Street en-campments across thecountry reached the epi-center of the movementyesterday, when policerousted protesters from aManhattan park and ajudge ruled that their freespeech rights do not ex-tend to pitching a tent andsetting up camp formonths at a time.
It was a potentially dev-astating setback. If crowdsof demonstrators return toZuccotti Park, they will notbe allowed to bring tents,sleeping bags and otherequipment that turned thearea into a makeshift cityof dissent.
But demonstratorspledged to carry on withtheir message protestingcorporate greed and eco-nomic inequality, either inZuccotti or a yet-to-be cho-sen new home.
“This is much biggerthan a square plaza in
downtown Manhattan,”said Hans Shan, an organ-izer who was workingwith churches to findplaces for protesters tosleep. “You can’t evict anidea whose time hascome.”
State Supreme CourtJustice Michael Stallmanupheld the city’s evictionof the protesters after anemergency appeal by the
National Lawyers Guild.The protesters have
been camped out in theprivately owned park sincemid-September. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Occupy Wall Street protesters clash withpolice at Zuccotti Park after being orderedto leave their longtime encampment inNew York, early yesterday.
Police disperse protesters near theencampment at Zuccotti Park. At about 1a.m. yesterday, police handed out noticesfrom the park’s owner and the city sayingthat the park had to be cleared.
A protester is arrested during a march onBroadway after police ordered demonstra-tors to leave the park.
Sanitation workers gather at the site tostart the cleanup effort.
Two protesters and their dog, who saidthey have slept with other protesters forthe last 56 nights, sit along a police barricade at the edge of Zuccotti Park.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
News
in pictures
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PHOTOS
1. CRAIG RUTTLE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
2. MARY ALTAFFER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
3. MARY ALTAFFER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
4. JOHN MINCHILLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
5. CRAIG RUTTLE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Judge’s ruling
Supreme Court JusticeMichael Stallman denied a motion by thedemonstrators seeking tobe allowed back into thepark with their tents andsleeping bags.
The protesters “have notdemonstrated that theyhave a First Amendmentright to remain in ZuccottiPark, along with their tents,structures, generators andother installations to theexclusion of the owner’sreasonable rights ... or tothe rights to public accessof others who might wishto use the space safely,”Stallman wrote.
New York Mayor MichaelBloomberg said he orderedthe sweep because healthand safety conditions andbecome “intolerable” inthe crowded plaza.
Ouster raises doubtsabout Occupy future
New York City police officers keeps a demonstrator affiliated with the Occupy Wall Street movement from entering Zuccotti Park yesterday in New York.
MARY ALTAFFER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York City protesters gather to discuss options to sustain movement
Police apprehend a protester in Toronto.
JAMES MACDONALD/THE CANADIAN PRESS
Can’t ‘evict an idea’: Occupy T.O.A judge says Occupy Toron-to protesters can remain ina downtown park while themerits of a city eviction or-der are argued in court.
Occupy Toronto protest-ers went to court yesterdayafter receiving the evictionnotices and are requestingan injunction against theeviction.
The judge says the pro-testers can’t be removed
pending his decision fol-lowing arguments on Fri-day, but added that no newstructures can be erected inthe park.
As police looked on, by-law officers threaded theirway between tents andthrough the mud yesterdaymorning to put up the no-tices, which were quicklytaken down.
The protesters said the
city could not “evict anidea” whose time hadcome, and they said theyplanned to stay.
But some demonstratorssaid they would leaverather than risk confronta-tion with police and possi-ble criminal charges.
The protesters took overthe park several blocks eastof Bay Street on Oct. 15.THE CANADIAN PRESS
Reporters takeninto custodyNYC. Journalists havebeen detained whilecovering Occupy WallStreet. N.Y. police didn’thave a count of howmany journalists werearrested and didn’t im-mediately comment. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
News in brief
SEAN MCKIBBON/METRO
Bearlyoccupied While ice-hog mascotswaved, oblivious to theprotester behind them,NCC mar keting chief Guy La flamme deflectedquestions about the impend ing clashbetween his organi -zation and the activistsin Ottawa’sConfederation Park, oneof the main venues forWinterlude.
Cool. Reception
Protester Darren Noftall holds up a sign at a National Capital Commission photo-op promoting the capital’s annual winter festival, Winterlude.
For more news onOccupy Wall Streetand its affiliateprotests, visitmetronews.ca
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metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
12 news
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Scrapping the requirementto register rifles and shot-guns could fuel illegalfirearms trafficking acrossthe Canadian border, warnsan internal federal memo.
It says the move wouldweaken import controls byeliminating a requirementfor border officials to verifyfirearms coming into thecountry.
“Such a loophole couldfacilitate unregistered pro-hibited and restrictedfirearm trafficking into andthrough Canada,” says the
declassified memo, origi-nally marked secret.
The memo was releasedunder the Access to Infor-mation Act to the NationalFirearms Association andposted along with hun-dreds of other pages on theorganization’s website.
It was prepared by MarkPotter, a senior Public Safe-ty Department official, foran assistant deputy minis-ter as Parliament was de-bating a private member’sbill to kill the registry. THE CANADIAN PRESS
Memo warns of illegal arms tradeMinister quick to dismiss own
department’s analysis on endingregistry of rifles and shotguns
Shooting Edge range officer Patrick Deegan displays long guns at the store in Calgary.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE
Attack on royalwebsite blockedLONDON. Scotland Yard’s cy-ber-crime unit helped fendoff an attack on the officialwebsite of Britain’s royalwedding in April, the divi-sion’s chief said yesterday.
Det. Supt. CharlieMcMurdie told a cybersecu-rity conference that actionwas taken to safeguard thesite, which received 15 mil-lion hits when Prince
William married Kate Mid-dleton on April 29.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Literary goldrush for authorTORONTO. VancouverIsland native PatrickdeWitt says he wasplagued with doubt abouthis comic western novelThe Sisters Brothers whenit first entered the wildworld of publishing.
But that feeling is gonenow that the story hasstruck book-prize gold,winning a $25,000 Gover-
nor General’s LiteraryAward for fictionyesterday — two weeks af-ter it landed the $25,000Rogers Writers’ Trust Fic-tion Prize. DeWitt’s novel,about two gunslingingbrothers en route to Cali-fornia in the gold-rush eraof the 1850s, was alsonominated for the ManBooker Prize and the Sco-tiabank Giller.THE CANADIAN PRESS
Nazi victims eye litigationMIAMI. Thousands of aging
Holocaust survivors in theU.S. want Congress toclear a path for them tosue European insurancecompanies they contendillegally confiscated Jew-ish life insurance policiesduring the Nazi era andhave refused to pay an es-timated $20 billion stillowed.
A hearing is scheduledtoday on a bill that wouldprovide the survivors withaccess to U.S. courts andalso force companies todisclose lists of policiesheld by Jews before theSecond World War.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
News in briefMurderersexecuted in Ohio and FloridaTwo U.S. men were execut-ed yesterday, one forkilling his three sleepingsons, the other for killing awoman and her twodaughters after they visit-ed Disney World.
In Ohio, ReginaldBrooks of East Clevelandwho fatally shot his threesons while they slept in
1982, shortly after his wifefiled for divorce, was exe-cuted with each of hishands clenched in an ob-scene gesture.
In Florida, Oba Chandlerwas executed for killing anOhio woman and her twoteenage daughters in June1989 as the victims re-turned from a dream vaca-tion to Disney World.
Brooks died at 2:04 p.m.local time. Chandler, 65,was administered a lethalinjection and pronounceddead at 4:25 p.m. localtime yesterday.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
13metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011news
Support for the Talibanamong Afghans has steadilydeclined in recent yearsand people strongly back a
government peace initia-tive, according to a surveyfunded in part by the U.S.government.
But the survey alsoshowed a population wearyof insecurity and corrup-tion. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Support for Taliban drops in Afghanistan
STEPHEN WANDERA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Traders protest power outagesThe riot police fired tear gas to disperse the demonstrators who were protestingover what they said was an inability to do their work and business due toprolonged power outages in the East African nation.
Uganda. Unrest
A Ugandan trader tries to catch
fresh air through a hole in a
door after police fired tear gas
into her locked shop
during a demonstration
by traders and workers
in the capital Kampala
yesterday.
Army defectors ambusheddozens of Syrian troopsand regime forces gunneddown civilians during oneof the bloodiest days of thecountry’s eight-month-olduprising, which appearedyesterday to be spirallingout of President Bashar al-Assad’s control.
Up to 90 people werekilled in a gruesome waveof violence Monday, ac-tivists said. The extent ofthe bloodshed only cameto light yesterday, in partbecause corpses lying inthe streets did not reachthe morgue until daylight.
As the bloodshedspiked, al-Assad’s formerallies were turning on himin rapid succession — asign of profound impa-
tience with a leader whohas failed to stem monthsof unrest that could ex-plode into a regional con-flagration.
Amateur video providedby activists showed a fireat the end of an alley send-
ing up a plume of smoke,followed by an explosion.Other videos showed tankson streets firing their can-nons and crowds of peoplerunning from the sound ofautomatic gunfire.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Defectors ambushSyrian troops
In this image from amateur video, a boy is shown
throwing an object at a vehicle as an army tank
burns in Daraa, Syria, on Monday.
UGARIT VIA APTN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Turkey, Jordan, Arab League fed up with president’sresponse to uprising, ready to pressure him to go
14 business WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
metronews.ca
The federal telecommunica-tions regulator has rejecteda controversial plan thatwould have allowed the bigphone and cable companiesto impose a usage-basedbilling model on Internetservice resellers, a systemthat the Conservative gov-ernment and many con-sumers had opposed.
The Canadian Radio-tele-vision and Telecommunica-tions Commission’sdecision yesterday insteadgives the companies a
choice of either chargingthe smaller Internetproviders a flat rate per useror selling the ISPs a specificamount of capacity on theirnetworks.
“The net effect of it isthat there will be no caps,no limitations, no meteringof use for retail customersas a result of this CRTC deci-sion,” CRTC chairman Kon-rad von Finckenstein said.
The regulator launchedits review after a social me-dia campaign launched by
the ISPs and an ensuingpublic backlash, as well asurging by former industryminister Tony Clement.
Under the new capacitymodel for billing, a smallISP buys a certain amountof network capacity fromone of the big providers,and if its customers unex-pectedly increase their us-age, their service couldslow.
“If they buy too littlethey have a problem withtheir end customers, if they
buy too much they pay forsomething that they don’tuse,” von Finckenstein said.
Industry Minister Chris-tian Paradis said the govern-ment would study thedecision carefully to ensureit stimulated competitionand investment and al-lowed Canadians to choose.“Let me be clear: our gov-ernment’s policy will al-ways be to encouragecompetition, ensure con-sumer choice and minimizeregulation,” he said in a
statement last night.Independent Internet
service provider TekSavvywas pleased with the struc-ture, but said the actualrates will increase costs forconsumers. “The rates ap-proved by the commissiontoday will make it muchharder for independent ISPsto compete,” TekSavvy CEOMarc Gaudrault said. “Thisis an unfortunate develop-ment for telecommunica-tions competition inCanada.” THE CANADIAN PRESS
Charge per user, not for usage: CRTC Market momentTSX
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TransCanada Corp. says ithas reached an agreementwith the Nebraska govern-ment to change the route ofits proposed Keystone XLoil pipeline to avoid theecologically sensitive Sand-hills region.
The Calgary-basedpipeline giant said it sup-ports Nebraska legislationthat ensures the pipelinedoesn’t cross the expanse ofgrass-strewn, loose-soil
hills, and part of the Ogal-lala aquifer, which supplieswater to Nebraska and sev-en other states.
The 2,700-kilometre, $7-billion US pipeline, if built,will carry crude from Alber-ta’s oilsands to refineries onthe U.S. Gulf Coast, travers-ing six states along the way.
Some of the most heatedenvironmental oppositionto the pipeline has comefrom Nebraska, where
many residents were con-cerned a spill from thepipeline could pollute wa-ter they rely on for farmingand ranching.
Last Thursday, the U.S.State Department heededthose concerns, announc-ing it would delay its deci-sion on Keystone XL untilearly 2013 so that the com-pany could come up with anew route.
The U.S. State Depart-ment has final say on Key-stone XL because it would
cross an international bor-der. THE CANADIAN PRESS
16 business WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
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Change of route for oil pipelineNebraska conducts own environmental assessmentCost and kilometres added to project undetermined
U.S. Rep. Tom Griffin speaks during
a news conference on Capitol Hill in
Washington yesterday to urge
President Barack Obama to approve
the Keystone XL pipeline.
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ANOTHER FIRST IN VANCOUVER. ONLY FROM
18 voices metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
@Miss604:On this day in1937 the Pat-tullo Bridge
was opened by ThomasDufferin “Duff” Pattulloow.ly/7uuTD@BruceClaggett: Emptytents at the Art Galleryhave been torn down byfirefighters, angeringsome #OccupyVancouverprotesters.@ensay151: Yesterday wasmy first run of the seasonat @Cypressmtn #vancou-ver Can’t wait to go again!@caitlintturner: Is there a#Muppets Midnight Show-ing in #Vancouver next
week?@BurrowsWingman: If Lu-ongo can’t play tomorrow,I’m confident in Schneider.Got to love the benefits ofhaving two startinggoalies! #Canucks@PushpinderMann: Rober-to Luongo misses secondstraight #Canucks practice!@mcap81: CHICKEN RT@ChrisKuc: #Canucks goal-tender Roberto Luongo isnot practicing today withwhat could be groin injury.#Blackhawks@spook_kati: is excited forthe BC Lions! Can’t waituntil the western final thisSunday! GO Lions GO!
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Managing Editor, Night Production Matt LaForge, Associate Managing Editor, News and Business Kristen Thompson, Art Director Laila Hakim, Business Ventures Director Tracy Day, National Sales Director Peter Bartrem
WEIRD NEWS
Trimming thecost of a haircutOne Ohio barber has turned theprice of a haircut on its head.
After a mortgage crisis, macro-un-employment, stock-market tumblesand poor consumer confidence, Gre-gory Burnett is only charging peoplewhat they can afford for a haircut, ac-cording to the Canton Repositorynewspaper.
After his usual back-to-school rushfailed to show, he put up a sign thatsays, “TIMES ARE HARD WHAT CANYOU PAY FOR A CUT.”
He has accepted as little as $5 for aregular $12 haircut, the newspaperreports.
The owner of Old School BarberShop said he named his shop for thatmantra.
“Old school is making somethingout of nothing,” Burnett told theRepository.
The 56-year-old has been a work-ing man all his life by doing servicejobs: shining shoes, driving cabs, andfor the last 25 years he has workedas a hairstylist and barber, the Repos-itory says.
And now that he has his own bar-ber shop, he still shines shoes.Although it’s $5, and that’s non-negotiable.
METRO
DAD’S DOINGDOUBLE DUTY
Life is full of doublestandards, and here’s one ofmine: I can admit I protect(and sometimesmicromanage) my daughters,11 and 9, in a way I probably
wouldn’t if I had boys. When I was dating my now-wife in
high school — yes, high schoolsweethearts! — I used to snicker whenshe had to get home by midnight to turnoff her dad’s alarm clock. If she didn’tbeat the alarm, he said he’d go out
looking for her, call police, call hospitals. I said I’d neverbe that kind of dad.
I am that kind of dad. More so because I have girls.Why? Well, for one thing, I’m fully aware there are
boys who will try to take advantage of them. Not allboys, but some.
There are also predators/monsters in the real worldand online, enormous pressures around drugs and alco-hol, and bullying (in recent weeks, a 10-year-old Illinoisgirl, Ashlynn Conner, hanged herself after being bulliedat school). I know these things apply to boys as well, but Ijust think the implications are compounded for girls.
It’s not that I don’t trustmy daughters. It’s that Iknow what kids are like. Iwas one. Kids are kids, notadults. They will make mis-takes. They will make baddecisions sometimes. Thereare so many peer pressures.
What I tell my girls iswe’re instantly accessiblewhenever they’re in a bind.Text us, call us, tweet us —we’ll be there. Noquestions. No judgments.(Well, questions will comelater.)
Mobile devices are ablessing for this generation,allowing kids to be muchmore accessible to theirparents if they’re in harm’sway. But adding social me-dia to the mix does createmore trigger points.
The extent of our bad“social media” growing up: crank calls and rolled-uppieces of paper (e.g., “Johnny loves Sarah”) passedaround class. Now there’s the quick distribution ofvoyeuristic photos from a party that go “viral” and MeanGirl tactics (“You’re fat,” “You’re ugly,” “You’re Stupid”)that don’t end in the schoolyard but continue onFacebook.
We let our daughters use social media — there aremany virtues to it — but monitor it very closely.
Sure kids have to have some sense of forging an iden-tify outside their parents. We will give ours some line.But my blinders will not be on. Denial and ignorance dono good. As parents, you have to anticipate and react.Particularly with girls.
My angels won’t understand all the decisions we makeuntil they have grown into women and parents.
In the meantime, all we can do is protect them — andhopefully empower them at the same time.
JUST SAYIN’ ...NEIL MORTONMETRO
“The extent ofour bad ‘social
media’ growingup: crank callsand rolled-up
pieces of paper(e.g. ‘Johnnyloves Sarah’)
passed aroundclass. Now
there’s the quickdistribution of
voyeuristicphotos from aparty that go
‘viral ...’”
photo of the day
Metro invites its readers to join the Metro Global Photo Challenge — runningin 100 cities on four continents — to win fantastic prizes and worldwiderecognition. Enter your digital photos at metrophotochallenge.com. The contest runs until Nov. 22. As well as a chance to win a trip to any city Metropublishes, one submission will also be featured here daily.
This photo titled Prince’s Island Park at Sunset wassubmitted to the Environment category
by lindsay_j8 from Calgary.
Register at metropolitanpanel.ca and take the quick poll
Did something special happen to youon 11-11-11?
71%NO IT WASJUST ANOTHERDAY
29%YES, AND IT
WAS MAGICAL
Dear mayoral candidates,and other electedofficials in the city ofVancouver: Stop hidingbehind acronyms, showus your humanity, andunderstand that themovement felt aroundthe world is not goingaway.
It is a causal flaw inthe machinery of our eco-nomic system that willnot allow any current de-sirable progress withoutfirst addressing thesymptoms directly. Occu-py Vancouver is a cog inthe machine that doesnot need greasing, butneeds redefining and re-machining so that wecan all move forward to-gether. If you want to gar-ner our votes instead ofputting fundamental is-sues aside until after Nov.19, then you will look atwhat this movement hasbecome and what it rep-resents in this city.
The 99 per cent arescreaming to be heard,and in Vancouver theyare letting you know thatbasic human necessitiesare not being afforded toall our residents. So, I askyou, why are you so wor-ried about shutting thismovement down insteadof finding a space that isowned by the city that isnot being used for a relo-cation of this “tent city.”JAYCE ROWENVANCOUVER
Letters
Local tweets
2scene
scene 19metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
At the startof the ani-mated pen-guin pictureSurf’s Up,Cody Maver-ick (the voice
of Transformer’s star ShiaLaBeouf ) takes a shot atanother cartoon tuxedoedbird movie.
Asked if he has anyother skills besides surf-ing. Cody sarcasticallysays, “Like what? Singingand dancing?”
Of course, he’s refer-ring to Happy Feet, theOscar winning movie
about an Emperor Pen-guin who can’t find hissoul mate the usual way— through song — so heuses his other talent —tap dancing.
The musical penguinsof Happy Feet shimshammed their way tohuge box office in 2006,and will paddle and rolltheir way back into the-atres again this weekendin Happy Feet Two.
For a while, it seemedlike you couldn’t swing aherring without hitting apenguin at the movies.
March of the Penguins,a real-life look at the mi-gration march of Emperorpenguins to their tradi-tional breeding ground,was a left field hit in 2005.The winner for Best Docu-
mentary not only outgrossed all the nomineesfor Best Picture that year— it took in $77 millionvs. $75 million for Broke-back Mountain — but alsobecame the second high-est grossing theatricaldocumentary afterFahrenheit 9/11.
It was such a huge hit itinspired an R-rated paro-dy, Farce of the Penguins.Featuring the voices ofSamuel L. Jackson, JasonAlexander and ChristinaApplegate, it’s an R-ratedspoof that imagines whatsex-starved penguinsmight talk about on the70 mile walk to their mat-ing grounds.
“I am tired of the clubscene,” says one penguin.“So are the baby seals!”replies another.
More family friendlywas Madagascar, the storyof four Central Park Zooanimals who get strandedon the island of Madagas-car. The movie featured alarge menagerie of char-acters, but the zoo’s pen-guins, Skipper, Kowalski,
Rico and Private, provedto be audience favorites.They have most of themovie’s best lines — onlanding in Africa one ofthe flightless birds says,“Africa? That ain't gonnafly!” — and were featuredin a short film, The Mada-gascar Penguins in aChristmas Caper, a TV se-ries and video games.
Probably the most fa-mous penguin characterin the movies is OswaldCobblepot a.k.a. The Pen-guin, as played by DannyDeVito in Batman Re-turns.
This super villain is hu-man, but dresses like apenguin, eats raw fish andtries to conquer Gothamwith an army of speciallytrained penguins.
IN FOCUSRICHARD [email protected]
From March of the Penguins to Farce of the Penguins to the return of Happy Feet, it’s hardto toss a fish without hitting one at the movies But who is the most famous penguin of all?
Much ado about penguinsHappy Feet Two dances into theatres this weekend.
HANDOUT
The musicalpenguins of HappyFeet shimshammed theirway to huge boxoffice in 2006, andwill paddle androll their way backinto theatres againthis weekend inHappy Feet Two.
More than a dozenCanadians are stillin the running togo on a tourorganized bydrummer RogerTaylor of the clas-sic rock bandQueen. He organ-ized webauditions to find afive-piece coverband and three vo-calists to performclassic Queentunes. Lead singer,Freddie Mercury,shown, died in1991.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Queen
Fourth soundtrack to blockbuster Twilight saga brings romance
with sadness
21metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
20 scene
The apple, as they say,doesn’t fall far from thetree.
Not only has KieferSutherland followed thefamous footsteps of hisparents, Donald Suther-land and Shirley Douglas,into the acting biz but heseems to have also inher-ited some of the fire of hisgrandfather.
When I complimentSutherland on his glasses,a pair of retro-lookingheavy frames, his passionflares.
“In the ’30s Rooseveltmade a deal betweenMoscot and the federalgovernment,” he says.
“Anybody who neededglasses during the greatdepression got theseglasses for free. Theymade millions of them. Soanyone who says therewas never a NationalHealthcare in the States isa liar. That was the firstnational healthcare pro-gram where they provid-ed glasses for free for theentire country.”
Echoes of his grandfa-ther, Tommy Douglas thefather of Canadian health
care, hang in the air.He’s equally passionate
when he speaks of his ad-miration for his latest di-rector, Lars von Trier, thecontroversial filmmakerbehind Melancholia.
“I have a great affectionfor Lars,” he says. “I’vedone 80 some odd films.I’ve done 198 episodes of24, which is the equiva-lent of another 100movies and this was themost unique experienceI’ve had as an actor.”
Von Trier, the outspo-ken Danish director brokedown the way his actorswere used to working, do-ing away with lengthy re-hearsals and traditionalblocking.
Sutherland explainshow, on his first day ofshooting, von Trier threwhim and a co-star into acomplicated scene.
“He walks CharlotteGainsbourg and I to adoor. He says, ‘OK this isthe room. I want you toplay this scene on the oth-er side of this door. We’reall set and ready to go,and you just go do it.’”
When Sutherland ob-jected von Trier told himto, “Stop talking.”
“We went and did the
scene and he deconstruct-ed everything I’ve learnedas a technical actor,” hesays.
“John Hurt has myfavourite line in the en-tire movie. He’s dancingand I’m walking with allthe drinks for the table.As I walk by he says, ‘Ihave no idea what I’m do-ing!’ We all felt like that. Idon’t know what I’m do-ing either! And that’s ex-actly how Lars wanted it.That was the spirit of it.It’s something that I willcarry with me for the restof my career.”
‘The most uniqueexperience I’vehad as an actor’
Kiefer Sutherland stars in Melancholia. The film centres around a new
planet that “threatens to collide into the Earth,” according to IMDB.
CONTRIBUTED
Keifer Sutherland opens up about working with controversial director Lars von Trier in Melancholia
RICHARD [email protected]
“I have a greataffection for Lars.I’ve done 80 someodd films. I’vedone 198 episodesof 24, which is theequivalent ofanother 100movies and thiswas the mostunique experienceI’ve had as anactor.”
KIEFER SUTHERLAND ON WORKINGWITH DIRECTOR LARS VON TRIER
Drake onmaking sureto Take Care
When Drake found out hislatest album, Take Care,had leaked online a weekbefore its release, he tookto Twitter and in a verypractical tone wrote to hisfour million followers, “Lis-ten, enjoy it, buy it if youlike it...and take care untilnext time.”
This pragmatic responseis telling of Drake’s ap-proach. On Take Care, hefrequently raps about whathe observes with a sense ofboth realism and optimism.
This is present most insongs like, We’ll Be Fine,and HYFR, where he says, “Ilearned working with thenegatives could make for abetter picture.”
Is it just a given that analbum will always leak beforeit comes out, or do you actu-
ally try to figure out wherethe leak came from?Nah. You know, my last al-bum leaked like 28 days be-fore it came out and thatwas kind of devastating. Idon’t know necessarilyknow how it happened butI feel that if leaks are some-what contained — like ifyour album leaks six or sev-en days before it’s supposedto come out — I never see itas detrimental or that dam-aging. First of all, I’m anartist that was birthed inthe generation of leaks onthe Internet, so I’m not real-ly trippin’ when the albumcomes out a little bit beforethe release date. But whenpeople get it like two tothree or four weeks before,that’s when it’s hard. Imean, some music doesn’teven last two weeks any-more. People’s interest lev-els switch so quickly. I wascool with it though, to behonest, as cool as I could be.
Obviously, I wish that theycould all hear it at the sametime, on the day that itdrops, but I think that un-fortunately with the accessthat everybody has to mu-sic, I think that’s just unre-alistic unless you dropsolely digital, which affectsyour sales, so it’s a toss-up. You knew for more than ayear that this album was go-ing to be called Take Care.How did you decide that soearly on in the process?We came up with it whenwe were touring in Europewith Jay-Z, and we were allon the bus together and wecame up with this name,and as the months went on,it just got stronger andstronger. It just started hav-ing more meaning, moreimpact, and I started hear-ing it more and realizedthat it’s kind of an infec-tious title. I was prettymuch sold on it. There wasnever a point where I waslike, ‘Oh, I need a new al-bum title’ or anything. You have a lot guest stars onthis album. There’s Lil Wayne,Rick Ross, Nicki Minaj, Rihan-na and even Stevie Wonder. Iwas surprised though thatyou didn’t have Stevie sing.Instead you just had him playhis signature harmonica.I think that the record, theway it was, was done al-ready when he was listen-ing to it. Vocally, we hadtracked it out, and me andhim have these other plansfor a record where we singtogether. We’ve been talk-ing about it for a while now.And I thought this wasmore of an interesting wayto incorporate him in thealbum, as almost like a mu-sical contributor and a mu-sical guide. He added somegreat things to that songand I thought that was coolas opposed to having a bla-tant feature.
The Toronto rapper dishes on trying to preventan album from leaking, A-list guest stars and balancing philosophy and party rhymes
Drake says he wasn’t too bothered by the fact his
latest album, Take Care, was leaked early.
JAG GUNDU/GETTY IMAGES
METRO WORLD NEWS
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Get off the ledge — Community is not cancelledDespite rumors thatspread like wildfire on theInternet Monday evening,NBC’s Community has notbeen cancelled.
The comedy show,which stars Joel McHale,was not on the NBC’s mid-season renewal plans, butThe Hollywood Reportersaid that the show was notcancelled.
After Community en-thusiasts started to panicthinking the show wascancelled, Brain Stelter, a
New York Times reporterthat covers television anddigital media tweeted thefollowing:
“Community is definite-ly not cancelled. NYT's BillCarter says, two cubiclesover. ‘NBC says it’ll be offthe air for only a brieftime.’”
While the show is on
NBC’s prime Thursdaynight slot, it's no secret it’sstruggling.
According toMSNBC.com the show’smost recent airing attract-ed 3.5 million viewers,which is just short of itsseason low.
Community airs onCitytv in Canada.
And for those who careto know, Prime Suspectwas not cancelled either.
MARY ANN GEORGANTOPOULOSFOR METRO NEW YORK
“Community isdefinitely notcancelled.” BRIAN STELTER
You can stop writing that angry email — Community has not been cancelled.
HANDOUT
Transforming ordinary hu-mans into flesh-eating,mindless zombies forAMC’s monster hit TheWalking Dead involves afair bit of Hollywood mag-ic, to be sure. But makeupmaster Greg Nicotero or-chestrated his own re-markable transformationwith a leap to the direc-tor's chair for the show'ssecond season.
The special effects wiz-ard — whose diverse slateof movie projects includeInglourious Basterds, TheGreen Mile, Sin City, ThePacific and the Kill Bill se-ries — helms an upcomingepisode that marks a newbenchmark in his grue-some career.
The broadening appealof horror and fantasy fareis helping gross-out geekslike him find notoriety in
the mainstream, and evensnag high-profile projectsof their own, he says.
“I think what’s interest-ing about it is (we’re in) asituation where guys wholove and respected thegenre when they wereyounger are now well-placed in the industry,”Nicotero says in a recentinterview from the set ofThe Walking Dead.
“Between (directors)Sam Raimi and FrankDarabont and QuentinTarantino, Robert Ro-driguez — we all had thesame diet when we grewup, and that diet was lov-ing to watch old Ray Harry-hausen movies andreading Famous MonstersMagazine. It was just thiskind of weird shared exis-tence we all had when wewere younger.”
The Walking Dead has thrust special effects wizards back into the spotlight It’s truly a world unto itself
The grandiosity of gore
The Walking Dead has become known for its gory effects.
HANDOUT
Nicotero and his prolificeffects company KNB EFXGroup are featured in a
new documentary fromCanadian filmmaker Don-na Davies called Night-
mare Factory. It profiles agroup of craftsmen whopour their hearts and souls
into detailed prosthetics,even as much of the indus-try is increasingly turningto computer-generatedspectacles.
“They can sometimestake six months to buildan effect that will be onscreen for three seconds,”Davies says of Nicotero andhis partners.
“These are sculptors,painters, artists, line crafts-men — it’s not just aboutsitting down and hitting abutton and there it is. AndI think you can feel thatwhen you watch theshows.”
Davies, whose other TVdocs have included Zom-biemania and PrettyBloody: The Women ofHorror, was fascinated bythe reverence effectsartists have for filmmakerswho came before them.She notes Nicotero learnedhis craft from ‘80s splatterwizard Tom Savini (Fridaythe 13th, Day of the LivingDead).
“It’s a process whereyou learn under the direc-tion of another master andthat doesn't exist in thefilm industry very much,or in any other industry inthe arts as much.”THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
“They cansometimes take sixmonths to build aneffect that will beon screen for threeseconds.”DONNA DAVIES
Irish actor Jason O’Mara isback on network televisionin Terra Nova, Fox’s mas-
sive, Steven Spielberg-pro-duced sci-fi series about hu-mans from a burned-outfuture colonizing the dis-tant past in a parallel uni-verse.
In it, O’Mara stars as JimShannon, a cop and family
man making a new life in ajungle overrun with di-nosaurs. His last TV gig, Lifeon Mars, was also about atime-travelling cop, coinci-dentally, but O’Mara insistshe’s not trying to make thathis niche.
After Life on Mars and this,are you secretly thinkingabout the next time travel-based role you’ll take on?No (laughs). It was a fluke,really. I didn’t do it becauseit was another cop travel-ling through time — I did it
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Life on Mars to life with dinosJason O’Mara has an accidental penchant for playing cops who don’t live
in the present He currently stars on the Spielberg-produced Terra Nova
Jason O’Mara
CONTRIBUTED
Terra Nova airsMonday nights
on Citytv
METRO WORLD NEWS IN HOLLYWOOD
in spite of that. It’s an excit-ing premise and I thoughtan exciting world, and theidea of a future civilizationwrestling with a Cretaceousone was fascinating to meand something that isn’t re-ally on TV, so I couldn’t sayno because of that. But theydidn’t think I was going todo it because it was anothercop travelling throughtime. I did it in spite of that,and I think the next things Ido, whether I’m a cop ornot, will be more in the realworld.
Were you wary of going backinto a network show after Lifeon Mars?Yeah, I was. I was quitewary — and quite gun-shyof playing a lead in a prime-time network series againbecause Life on Mars ex-hausted me. But this had aworld around it. It wasn’tjust about one man’s jour-ney, it was about him andhis family, and then youmeet this other characterwho’s just as interesting if
not more so. There’s a lot ofcharacters’ journeys aroundyou, so I knew I wasn’t go-ing to be working everyscene every day, which iswhat gets you down whenyou’re doing TV.
So what can you revealabout what’s coming up forthe rest of the season?We just recently revealed afew things, like one of thebeloved characters is goingto be dying by the end ofseason one, and that a di-nosaur would die by theend of season one, andthat the season finale wasgoing to be pretty spectac-ular, that there was goingto be a lot of explosiveevents. You know, I got in-to trouble from a lot ofthese people. A lot of myTwitter followers werelike, “Don’t spoil it! Whatare you doing? You’rekilling us. We want to besurprised.” But I don’tknow, sometimes it’s goodto tease, but people don’tlike to be spoiled.
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Patti LaBelle accused of screamingat a toddler and punching its mother
The diva vs. the babyIf you are a ba-by and happento come acrosssinger Patti La-Belle, it’s best ifyou pull upyour diaper,grab your rat-
tle, and crawl right out ofthere.
It was disclosed yester-day in a lawsuit filed inManhattan Supreme Courtthat the singer screamedobscenities at a toddler andthrew a punch at the baby’smother (who also happensto be a school teacher)sometime this year.
The mother, RoseannaMonk, is now suing LaBelle,who was living in her Man-hattan apartment buildingwhile appearing on Broad-way’s Fela. Apparently, thisis what happened, accord-
ing to Monk’s lawyer, re-ports The New York DailyNews: The 18-month-oldtoddler, named Genevieve,was “scampering” aroundthe apartment building’slobby when LaBelle, who isdescribed as being in “fullstar regalia with oversizeshades and a fur coat” be-came upset at the baby asshe walked through.
“‘What are you doing let-ting your kid run aroundlike that?’ she reportedlyyelled. And then, accordingto the lawyer yet again,‘started screaming at myclient, throwing water froma bottle at the mother’s faceand the baby’s face.’”
As if that wasn’t enough,LaBelle then took a swing atthe baby’s mother.
She then was shoved in-to a waiting car by her en-tourage and the baby
“violently” threw-up. So far, LaBelle hasn’t re-
sponded to the allegations. She’s probably too busy
not-babysitting to do so.
And in other baby news...Christina Applegate mightnot want to have LaBelle asa guest star on her TV showUp All Night anytime soon.
As she tells The View,having her nine-month-olddaughter Sadie around wasa priority when deciding todo the new NBC show.
“My whole thing was,‘I’m not doing this unless Ican bring her.’ So they hadto build me a room for herand it’s got her toys and acrib and she takes her napsthere,” the actress ex-plained. “That’s called acrazy mother who said, ‘No,I’m not doing anything un-less I can be with my baby.’”
THE WORDDOROTHY [email protected]
Patti LaBelle
ALL PHOTOS GETTY IMAGES
Bloomberg’sNY is noplace for the
1stamendment.
Bloomberg serves WallStreet, now and forever.And Wall Street cannothandle free speech.
@AlecBaldwin
Celebrity tweets
The perfectplace to read my book:A toilet in Austria.
@CarrieFFisher
You knowwho I hate?Judgemental
people. In myopinion they are
worthless scum.
@JimCarrey
With the first part of theTwilight finale hitting the-atres, actress Nikki Reed is
opening up about the less-than-familial atmosphereamongst the cast.
Twilight cast wasn’ttight: Nikki Reed
Nikki Reed
Jay-Z says his own experi-ence of his father leavingwhen he was 11 had a last-
ing impact on him.“If your dad died before
you were born, yeah, ithurts, but it’s not like youhad a connection withsomething that was real,”Jay-Z tells GQ magazine.
“My dad was such agood dad that when heleft, he left a huge scar. Hewas my superhero.”
The rapper is currentlyexpecting a daughter withwife Beyoncé Knowles, andhis main priority is beingthere for his child.
“Providing — that’s not
Jay-Z: I’ll changeour baby’s diapers
“My dad was sucha good dad thatwhen he left, heleft a huge scar. Hewas my superhero”JAY-Z
Jay-Z
love. Being there — that’smore important,” he says.
And does being theremean changing diapersonce the little girl arrives?
“Of course, of course,”he says. “One hundred percent.”
METRO
“In the beginning, it wasinnocent and fun, and wewere like one big happyfamily. It was like being atsleep-away camp,” Reedtells Seventeen magazine.
“Success came along andchanged the dynamic.We’re not all best friends,and we’re not all going tohang out together after thefinal movie is done.”
And watching her co-stars’ relationships fallapart once filming stoppedwasn’t the easiest thing.
“It was very, very sad.Let’s just leave it at that,”she says. METRO
3life
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Escape the resortWe could all use a littlequality time in the sun anda dip in the ocean, especial-ly as another long Canadi-an winter approaches.
But if you’re like some ofthe thousands of Canadiantravellers who flock to thisCaribbean island nation of10 million people eachyear, you want the all-inclu-sive travel experience to beabout more than just sit-ting around the resort allday with the latest DanielleSteel/John Grisham novel.
That’s where the It Zonecomes in. Launched in No-vember by Nolitours (amember of Transat A.T.Inc.), the It Zone is de-signed for travellers toPuerto Plata who enjoy thehome base of an all-inclu-sive resort — ours was thescenic Be Live GrandMarien — but who are ea-ger to get in touch with thelocal culture, try some out-door adventure activitiesand check out the nightlife.
Eat
A recent tour gave a groupof Canadian journalists aclose-up glimpse of life out-side the perimeter, but firstwe had to fuel up with anintimate dinner at chefRafael Vásquez Heinsen’sMares Restaurant andLounge. Vásquez Heinsen’s
shaded backyard terraceserves as the main diningarea, and the lobster isfresh from the ocean thatday.
Monkey business
The next day, a short driveoutside Puerto Plata, inSosua, is the MonkeyJungle, run by thehusband andwife team ofChuck and Can-dy Ritzen. TheAmerican ex-pats have hit onan innovativebusiness modelthat contributes tothe economy, creates
jobs and provides basicdental and health care tothe local population.
Monkey Jungle is hometo 15 protected squirrelmonkeys and six Capuchinmonkeys, with a careprovider who was formerlywith the Toronto Zoo. You
can walk throughthe squirrel
monkeyhabitat andthe curi-ous simi-ans justhop onyour
shouldersfor a ride. It’s
the first timeI’ve literally had a
monkey on my back. You can also zip-line
through seven stations to-taling 4,400 feet and, be-fore the last zip, descendon a cable from a platforminto a cave; sort of like zip-lining, but vertically. TheRitzens have a self-sustain-ing operation where theyuse the profits from thezip-lining and monkey jun-gle activities to fund thehealth clinic on the premis-es.
Sustainable tourism
The idea of sustainabletourism has also been tak-en up by tour companies.Transat A.T. Inc. partners
with SOS Children’s Vil-lages, which provides car-ing, village-style grouphomes for orphaned,abused or abandoned chil-dren.
We were given a tour ofthe village in Santiago delos Caballeros, about anhour from Puerto Plata.The smiling kids were cu-rious, and a spontaneousgame of baseball, the na-tional sports obsession,broke out using a stickand a ball of rolled-up tin-foil.
Go big, or go home
If it’s true you have to gobig or go home, then OceanWorld is a must-see beforeyou head back to the GreatWhite North.
Open since 2004, themassive ocean-side com-plex features interactive ac-tivities with dolphins,sharks and stingrays aswell as exhibits with every-thing from tigers to tou-cans.
In terms of size, theplace filters six millionlitres of seawater an hour.
Now put that book downand go!
The beach and a trashy novel are great for a few days, but when tanning gets old, youmight want to see what’s outside the resort walls Puerto Plata’s It Zone has the answer
ALL PHOTOS: STEPHEN KNIGHT
Don’t just slurp frosty drinks by the pool while in Puerto Plata. Get a taste of the
local culture with trips outside the resort walls.
If you go...
Nolitours offers the It Zonethrough resorts in the Dominican Republic. Visititzone.nolitours.com.
Travel in brief
A new 200-kilometrehighway in theDominican Republic,from the capital SantoDomingo to touristhot spot Punta Cana,will make it easier forvisitors to explore theCaribbean country.The divided highway,which has been underconstruction for thelast four years, wascompleted earlier thisyear from SantoDomingo to LaRomana on the southcoast, significantly re-ducing travel timesbetween the twocities. THE CANADIAN PRESS
Revitalized neighbourhoodin downtown Montreal wins
Phoenix Award.
Each bite ofthis PizzaStuffedFrench Toastwill give youthe gooey
taste of pizza in a sand-wich. The egg and cheesemixture adds great flavourthat kicks up a classic.
Preparation:
1 Lay bread slices on worksurface and spread withpizza sauce. Top halfwith 1 slice of the moz-zarella, then pepperoni,pepper and mushrooms,if using. Place remaining
cheese on top. Top withremaining bread slices;set aside.
2 In shallow dish, whisktogether eggs, milk,cheese, oregano, saltand pepper. Dipsandwiches into eggmixture, turning to soakup the egg mixture.
3 In non-stick skillet, meltbutter over mediumheat and cooksandwiches, turningonce for about 4minutes per side or untilbrown and crisp andcheese is melted. EMILYRICHARDS IS A PROFESSIONAL HOME ECON-OMIST, COOKBOOK AUTHORAND A TV CELEBRITY CHEF.FOR MORE, VISIT EMILYRICHARDSCOOKS.CA/ONTARIO EGG FARMERS
28 food metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
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Hail CaesarThe classic Caesar callsfor vodka and a celerysalt rim, but go aheadand cross the Rubiconwith some bold experi-mentation. Try makingone with gin ortequila,add freshhorse-radish orbeef broth,and garnishwith celery,spicy beansor even a
Drink of the week chicken wing.
• 1.5 oz bourbon whisky• 6 dashes Tabasco Sauce • 6 dashes Worcestershiresauce• .25 oz lemon juice• dash of olive brine • Orange slices• Clamato, to top
In a highball rimmed with Ja-maican jerk spice and filledwith ice, add all ingredientsbut Clamato. Top with Clam-ato, and stir.
JOE HOWELL, TORONTO-BASEDMIXOLOGIST AND BARTENDER
Bite into the savouryside of French Toast
While this treat is usually drizzled with maple syrup, it can also beserved in a hearty Pizza Stuffed sandwich Try it with chicken breast
DINNER
EXPRESSEMILY [email protected]
Ingredients:
• 10 slices (1/2 inch/1 cmthick) Italian loaf• 1/3 cup (80 mL) pizzasauce• 35 slices pepperoni• Half green pepper, thinlysliced• 3 mushrooms, thinlysliced (optional)
• 10 slices mozzarella • 4 eggs• 1/3 cup (80 mL) milk• 2 tbsp (30 mL) freshlygrated Parmesan cheese• 1 tsp (5 mL) dried oreganoleaves• Pinch each salt and pepper• 1 tbsp (15 mL) butter
ONTARIO EGG FARMERS
This recipe makes four servings.
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One-on-one dialogue is a start, but it’s not enough to tackle society’s most complex problems. Powerful solutions require multiple perspectives. That’s why the Adler School is training tomorrow’s psychology practitioners to bring more voices into the conversation. Apply today—and empower communities to speak up. adler.edu
Leading Social Change
Information Session Saturday, November 19th 1:00–2:30pm RSVP to [email protected]
A meeting with WendyDoulton isn’t easy to comeby.
As a headhunter forhigh-profile clients such asAmazon, Gap and Sony,she’s responsible for find-ing the best talent to fillpositions that commandpaychecks beginning inthe six figures.
Viewers got a sneakpeek into what Doulton’slooking for in a Fortune500 executive when herBravo special, The Head-huntress, aired this week.
While she’s the perfectreality star — successful,intense and quick — shewas more than graciouswhen we asked her toshare some career advice.Here’s how to land onDoulton’s radar.
Know what you offer
“My foundational coach-ing is to know who you areand know what you bringto the party,” says Doulton.“Pay very close attentionto anything that affects
your mood — positively ornegatively — and let thatinform you.”
Interview your interviewer
Interviews go both ways.“The trick here isn’t to an-swer the question right,it’s to get the job that’sright for you,” she says.
“It’s like a date: ‘Doeshe like me, does he likeme?’ Well, do you likehim? Do you want to havecoffee and breakfast withhim every day of yourlife?”
Be positive
The poor job marketmakes headlines, butDoulton hasn’t seen a dipin business. “I’m recruit-ing for companies all thetime. Attitude is every-thing — if you want to sitaround and say, ‘There areno jobs out there,’ you’llbe right.”
Answer the question
Even if you don’t have theright answer to an inter-viewer’s question, get tothe point — and don’t takeyour time.
“Don’t skirt around the
question. People do that allthe time, even when theydo have a good answer.And I think it’s becausethey have these things thatthey think they need tosay.”
And answer it honestly
It’s important to comeacross as genuine and putthings out in the open be-fore you get offered a posi-tion that isn’t right for you.
High-profile headhunter WendyDoulton shares her top job-huntingtips with Metro Her Bravo special,The Headhuntress, gives an insidelook into finding the best talent
Career advice from a Headhuntress
Target the right job with Doulton’s job-hunting tips.
ISTOCK IMAGES
“Lawyers arethe onlypersons inwhomignorance ofthe law is notpunished.”
- Jeremy Bentham (1748 - 1832)How do you win in court?It starts with selecting theproper lawyer. But withcountless factors to consid-er, finding the ideal lawyerto navigate your case canbe overwhelming. Here arethree cautionary tales.
AdvertisingA lawyer’s search enginerankings have nothing todo with his or her legal
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125 years ago Carl Benz introduced the world to the internal-combustion engine. Today, Mercedes-Benz is introducing a whole new passenger vehicle engine — the hydrogen fuel cell, and it will be built for the worldwide market right here in Canada.
Located in Burnaby, B.C., the Canadian Mercedes-Benz Fuel Cell plant will solely bring the new hydrogen fuel cell to market, making it the world’s fi rst ever large-scale production of fuel cell stacks for passenger vehicles.
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Join us in our commitment to a zero-emission future. Mercedes-Benz is looking for specialized engineering and technology leaders, including the necessary IT, to ramp up production, develop new production processes and new materials to launch this ground breaking and exciting technology.
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Now hiring specialized engineers and technologists to build new fuel cell engines.
PICKING OUT THE PROPER LAWYERRemember that there is no such thing as a ‘free’ consultation
WORKPLACE
LAWDANIEL [email protected]: @DANLUBLIN
skill. Rather, Internet-basedadvertising allows lawyersto pay for and then snatchup high rankings on Googlethat are not indicative ofthe quality of the lawyer orher firm. Similarly, thereare no rules limitinglawyers without much ex-perience in employmentlaw from professing thatthey practise it, on theirwebsites and in the media,and they often do.
Free consultationsSome lawyers advertise“free” consultations. Thesecan be a sham. A free con-sultation is usually nothingmore than a bait and switchtactic, designed to get youin the door and then con-vince you to spend moneyfor any substantive workperformed afterward.
Oral agreementsThe biggest problem mostpeople face with lawyers istheir billing practices. This
is because the regulatorybodies that oversee lawyershave few restrictions gov-erning how they charge fortheir work. Lawyers are of-ten left to their own de-vices, charging clientsbased on any combinationof their time spent or the
result obtained. If asked, alawyer should predict tothe best of his or her abili-ty the potential costs ofyour case. Then confirmthat arrangement in writ-ing. DANIEL LUBLIN IS AN EMPLOYMENTLAWYER WITH WHITTEN & LUBLIN LLP.
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ways to give yourcareer some direction7Erin Millar and Ben Coli walk students through their post-secondaryjourney in The Canadian Campus Connection We combed thebook to find top tips to help you improve your job prospects
MARISABARATTATALENTEGG.CA
Stay healthy — it’s important
When it comes down to it, your health mattersmost. Don’t pull an all-nighter, stock up on coffeeor force yourself to attend your weekly gym classif you’re sick. Stress can take a toll on your healthand can create an impact that goes well into yourgraduate years. Most post-secondary institutionsoffer a plethora of ways for you to go abovepreventing illness and into maintaining a healthystate of life.
Fun electives can boost your resumé
How can a hiring manager forget the promisingcandidate who, in addition to earning strong marksand joining several clubs, completed a course invideo game addiction and the history of gaming atthe University of Western Ontario or learned aboutswing and golf etiquette at Medicine Hat College?
Get to know your professors
You may not love your class. But getting to knowyour professor could save your career. If you facethe common struggle of finding a job after yougraduate, your professor could become thestrongest reference on your resumé. Who knowsyou better than the person who saw you everyweek in class, read your papers and evaluated yourwork ethic firsthand? And you’ll be more interest-ed in what wisdom he or she has to share.
Plan your career path before yougraduate
You shouldn’t be expected to know where you wantto work when you’ve only just started university orcollege. But it’s a good idea to make anappointment with your adviser, even if it is to dou-ble-check that you’re fulfilling your program’srequirements. The last thing you want is to discov-er you have to reschedule your classes or stay backa semester to complete a course.
There is more to school than academics
Employers are more impressed with someone whodoes well in school and outside of it than someonewho can boast great marks with no extra-curriculars to show for it. Getting involved on cam-pus demonstrates many traits that are desirable inemployers’ eyes — time management skills and theability to multi-task and meet deadlines. Itindicates that you possess an interest in the worldaround you.
You don’t have to choose between university and college
Some programs combine the hands-on, practicalexperience of college with the theory-based, analyt-ical side of university. Those aspiring to be nursescan opt for a college diploma focusing on skills andexperience or a more academic degree from a uni-versity. These programs increase a graduate’sappeal among employers as their education demon-strates they can thrive in both settings.
Don’t underestimate the power of your network
You’ve heard it and you’ll hear it again: It’s not whatyou know, it’s whom you know. It’s essential thatyou possess a strong work ethic and a passion forwhat you do, but you’ll likely find after graduationthat this doesn’t seem to be enough to find a job.The friends you make, the people you meet and theadvisers you work with on campus can all help youfind a job or put you in touch with the right person.
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Nicklas Lid-strom iswell intothe backnine of hiscareer — infact, he’s
likely on the 18th green. When he finally hangs
’em up he’ll leave a void asthe league’s best blue-linerand create a regular race forthe Norris Trophy.
Nashville’s Shea Weberlooks like a safe bet to takeon the crown, but there’s abuzz along the West Coastthat another Swede couldtake on the role.
When Christian Ehrhoff,who many saw as theCanucks’ best blue-liner lastyear, departed this off-sea-son, the consensus amongpundits was the blowwould be softened by therise of 25-year-old AlexEdler.
Turns out the punditswere right ... offensively, atleast. Edler has been every-thing Ehrhoff was and
more through Vancouver’sfirst 18 games. Ehrhoff ledthe Canucks D-corps inpoints last season with 50in 79 games (0.63 points pergame), while Edler has 16points (three goals, 13 as-sists, 0.89 PPG) in 2011-12and is third — by a widemargin — on the squadoverall.
His point total also tieshim for tops among all de-fencemen, with Tampa’sMarc-Andre Bergeron, Flori-da’s Brian Campbell and Ot-tawa’s Erik Karlsson. Edler’salso second in power playpoints with 10, just one be-
hind Campbell.Plus no Canuck sees the
ice more than Edler, whoaverages better than 23minutes a night.
Those are heady stats tobe sure, numbers that puthim in the conversation forthe Norris (which, for rightor wrong, nearly alwaysgoes to a man with bigpoint production). Howev-er, one stat that jumps outas a big minus for Elder is,well, his minus-1 rating.
All the “O” in the worldwon’t make you theleague’s No. 1 if you don’tshow a regular penchant
for shutting it down (seeGreen, Mike). Edler has allthe tools to be a force defen-sively — big, physical, longreach, wits and composureunder pressure — so it’sjust a matter of consistency.Sometimes brain crampsget the best him and theynormally manifest them-selves in cringe-worthygiveaways. Will those disap-pear? In now his fourth fullNHL season, the time issoon to put it all together.
The downside is a year-after-year 60- to 70-point D-man. The upside is he’s thenext Lidstrom.
Edler on verge of cracking Norris codeTHE HOCKEY
NEWSEDWARD [email protected]
There are times whenTravis Lulay envies the play-ers on defence.
The B.C. Lions quarter-back admits he can be“pretty feisty on game day.”The energy and emotionthat bubbles up inside himneeds to escape like steamfrom a boiling kettle.
“It is a constant effort tocurve that a little bit,” Lulaysaid yesterday after prac-tice.
“A quarterback is notlike a defensive guy whereyou can just go out and hitsomebody on the first playand get rid of some of theenergy. I do everything Ican to calm myself downbefore the game.”
How Lulay performswhen the Lions face the Ed-monton Eskimos in Sun-day’s CFL West final at BCPlace Stadium will go a longway in determining whichteam advances to the Nov.27 Grey Cup in Vancouver.
The Lions beat the Eski-mos three out of four timesduring the regular seasonand outscored them 130-79.
“There is a confidencelevel knowing that if weplay like we feel we are ca-pable of, we can do goodthings,” said Lulay.
“At the same time, weknow we have to earn everysingle thing. Nothing is go-ing to come easy because ofwhat has happened in thepast.”
Edmonton quarterbackRicky Ray has played in sev-en playoff games and
thrown for over 1,700yards.
Lulay has started justonce for the Lions in theplayoffs, a 41-38 overtimeloss to the SaskatchewanRoughriders in last year’sWest semifinal.
He completed an impres-sive 28-of-49 passes for 357yards, two touchdowns andone interception. Lulay alsoran five times for 39 yards,scored a TD and fumbledonce.
The biggest lesson Lulaylearned from that game ishow missed chances come
back to haunt you.“You have to take advan-
tage of opportunities,” hesaid. “We felt we had someopportunities in the first
half we didn’t quite take ad-vantage of.”
Coach and general man-ager Wally Buono showedpatience with Lulay this
season, even when the Li-ons staggered to a 0-5 start.There were times when the28-year-old made bad deci-sions or hurried throws.Buono’s faith has paid off.
Lulay has become morepoised in the pocket, hasbetter anticipation of whena receiver will be open andwhere to throw the ball.
“He’s had 18 games,”Buono said. “He anticipateswell, he reads well.
“He has more confidencein everything he does andthe guys around him.”THE CANADIAN PRESS
‘Feisty’ QB Lulay attempts to turn last year’s playoff disappointment into West final triumph
Lions coach and general manager Wally Buono and quarterback Travis Lulay at practice in Surrey yesterday.
Lulay had a breakout season in 2011, throwing for 4,815 yards, 32 touchdowns and 11 interceptions.
Only Montreal’s Anthony Calvillo threw for more yards.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS
Balancing focus and ferocity
Bruce moves past
police incident
Slotback Arland Bruce
addressed his Lions
teammates yesterday, after
being involved in an
incident with police
Sunday over a parking
infraction.
“I addressed the team man-to-man and said I’mlooking to help this teamwin. I’m back at practiceand looking forward,” hesaid.A Vancouver policespokesman said it’s unlikelythere will be any further in-vestigation or that anycharges will be laid.
Quoted
“It’s nothingserious.”
VANCOUVER COACH ALAINVIGNEAULT ON THE INJURYTHAT WILL KEEP CANUCKSGOALIE ROBERTO LUONGOOUT OF TONIGHT’S GAME
AGAINST THE CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS.
LUONGO MISSED PRACTICEMONDAY AND YESTERDAYAND HAS BEEN LISTED ASDAY-TO-DAY DUE TO WHAT
VIGNEAULT CALLED ANUPPER-BODY INJURY.
BACKUP CORY SCHNEIDERWILL START AGAINST
CHICAGO.
Scan code for more sports.
5drive
drive 33metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
EngineThe 2012 ZL1’s supercharged 6.2-litre V-8 — a variation of theengines found in the Corvette ZR1 and Cadillac CTS-V — ismated to a six-speed manual transmission and dynos at 580horsepower and 556 pound-feet of torque. This makes it themost powerful production Camaro ever built and, Chevroletproclaims, will be the most powerful Chevy droptop ever.
The ZL1 constitutes much more than just unbridled horse-power, but represents a thoroughly sorted out performanceplatform where nearly every component has been beefed upor completely redesigned to handle the engine’s hefty output.
Often when companies dig out sacred names from the past, they’re stuck to inferior cars that disappoint. Not here.
It’s your move, Mustangand Challenger. The newChevrolet Camaro ZL1 hasgot your number, or morecorrectly, has beaten yourbest horsepower numbers... by a lot.
How does the high-per-formance ZL1 coupe andconvertible square withGeneral Motors’ greenifica-tion program of introduc-ing fuel-sipping electrics,hybrids plus a couple ofnew ankle-biter sub-com-pacts?
Well, the eco trend is def-initely here to stay, but atthe opposite end of the oilbarrel, GM’s cornerstone di-vision isn’t neglecting its in-volvement in themuscle/ponycar bracket. Al-though relatively small, thepedal-to-the-metal gunfight-er class remains unequivo-cal in its No Imports
Allowed policy. And in this club the nu-
mero uno bylaw states thathorsepower rules and ab-solute horsepower rules ab-solutely, or at least untilanother club member upsthe ante and overthrowsthe leader.
The 2011 edition of theChevrolet Camaro’s SSmodel was rated at 426horsepower and was cer-tainly nothing to besneezed at.
But it couldn’t catch acold next to the DodgeChallenger’s SRT8 392 thatgenerated 470 horses fromits 6.4-litre “Hemi” V-8 en-gine.
That goes double forFord Mustang-based ShelbyGT500’s 550 ponies thatemanate from a super-charged 5.4-litre V-8.
With bragging rights onthe line, you just had toknow that Chevrolet wouldeventually retaliate.
Pony power
The convertible ZL1 will arrive after the tin-top model,
late enough to deem it a 2013 edition.
There’s really not much to do inside other than add some
suede inserts to the seats, which act like velcro to keep you
planted and in control — somewhat — of 580 horsepower.
MALCOLM [email protected] MEDIA
CabinBoth driver and their front passengershould have no problems stretchingout inside the Camaro’s generouslysized cabin with its power-adjustableheated leather seats with grippysuede-like inserts. They’ll also appre-ciate the sounds from the dual-modeexhaust system that becomes freerflowing (and louder) when the driveropens the taps a bit.
SuspensionThe ZL1’s suspension employs GM’sMagnetic Ride Control, which uses spe-cial shock dampers that constantly varythe degree of firmness, according toroad and driving conditions.
There are also Tour (soft) and Sport(firmer) settings that the driver can dialin. Most of the remaining suspensioncomponents have either been strength-ened or swapped out.
BASE PRICE:$58,000
Camaro ZL1
What you should know
about the 2012 Chevrolet
Camaro ZL1:
Types: Two-door, rear-wheel-drive coupe and con-vertible.Engine (hp): 6.2-litre OHVV-8, supercharged (580).Transmission: Six-speedmanual.Market position: A horse-power and sales war ofsorts exists between thethree main domesticprotagonists for supremacyin the so-called “ponycar”category, with the newChevrolet Camaro ZL1 firingthe latest shot.Mileage: L/100 km(city/hwy) 13.5/7.5 (est.).
By comparison
MustangShelby GT500 Base price: $60,700Well turned-outhigh-performancecoupe or convertibleis ZL1’s main rival.
Cadillac CTS-VcoupeBase price: $73,000Great-looking, ultra-quick Caddy thatshares itspowerplant with theZL1.
DodgeChallengerSRT8Base price: $50,500A Mopar fanfavourite that’s noslouch in the powerdepartment.
WHEELBASE MEDIA
Scan code for more car reviews and news
34 drive metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
Starting from
1.9%†
Purchase Financing24 Months APR
Offer valid on all 2006 – 2010 CR-V models.
Buy a used car,get a used car.
Buy a used Honda,get a Honda.
Honda reliability. Certified. When Honda certifies a used vehicle, you know it can be depended on. Every Certified Used Honda undergoes a series of thorough dealer inspections to ensure it upholds the reliability of the Honda name. You get the performance, safety and efficiency of a Honda, with the added assurance that comes with a factory warranty. Find yours at cuv.honda.ca
†Limited time Purchase Financing offer on Honda Certifed Used CR-V models available through Honda Financial Services, on approved credit. Offer only available up to 24 months on Honda Certifi ed Used Honda models (2006-2010 model years). Finance example based on 2006 CR-V models: $10,000 at 1.9% per annum equals $424.96 per month for24 months. Cost of borrowing is $199.12 for a total obligation of $10,199.12. Taxes, license, insurance, registration and fees are not included. See your Honda dealer for full details. Dealer may sell for less. Additional fi nancing offers available on 36, 48, 60 and 72 months. Offer expires December 31, 2011.
Final-gen GM minivans should offer reliability2005 to 2009 Pontiac Montana/Chevrolet Uplander
SECONDGEAR
For many shoppers, theminivan delivers the ulti-mate in bang-for-the-buckwhen it comes to movinga family around.
At General Motors, theChevrolet Uplander andPontiac Montana SV6 werethe most recent offeringsto the minivan-seekingmasses.
Though cosmeticallydifferent, the underlyinghardware in the Uplanderand Montana were basical-ly identical.
The following informa-tion, therefore, applies toboth.
EnginePower came from oneof two V-6 engines: a3.5-litre with 200 horsepower, ora 3.9-litre with 240. A four-speedautomatic transmission wasstandard and All Wheel Drivewas available.
Common issuesProblems stated with thenewer GM minivan power-plants seem few and farbetween — and are mainlysensor related. If theengine and transmission’sservice requirements havebeen adhered to, if it runssmoothly and if no “checkengine” lights are illumi-nated, you’re well on yourway. Be sure to “feel” forany transmission slipping— and avoid any modelthat exhibits it.
Avoid models with pow-er sliding doors. These canbe an expensive hasslewhen they fail.
VerdictA well-maintained Uplan-der or Montana should bea machine from whichowners can expect solidpowertrain reliability,plenty of space and afford-able pricing in the usedmarket.
What ownerslikeMost owners report acomfortable highway ride, smooth per-formance, plenty of interior space anda flexible cargo and passenger compart-ment layout. Gas mileage is ratedstrongly, relatively speaking.
What ownersdislikeComplaints tend to in-clude interior squeaking, rattlingand trim wear as the vehicles age,as well as bland and uninspiredstyling.
2005 Pontiac Montana SV6
All offers expire December 14, 2011. Offers may be cancelled at any time without notice. See Service Advisor for complete details. Applicable taxes and provincial levies not included. Dealer may sell for less. †† In order to receive a competitor’s advertised price: (i) tires must be purchased and installed at your participating Ford Dealer;(ii) customer must present the competitor’s advertisement (containing the lower price) which must have been printed within 30 days of the sale; and (iii) the tires being purchased must be the same brand, sidewall, speed and load ratings as shown in the competitive advertisement. Offer only available at participating Ford dealer-ships. This offer is valid on the cost of the tire only and does not include labour costs, valve stems, mounting, balancing, disposal, and taxes. Offer does not apply to advertised prices outside of Canada, in eBay advertisements, by tire wholesalers (including Costco) and online tire retailers, or closeout, special order, discontinued andclearance/liquidation offers. Offer may be cancelled or changed at any time without prior notice. See your Service Advisor for details. ‡‡ Rebate offers are manufacturer’s mail-in rebates. Rebates available on select Goodyear, Michelin, Bridgestone (AMEX branded prepaid card), Dunlop, BFGoodrich, Continental, Pirelli, and Yokohamatires. Offers are valid on qualifying sets of four tires, purchased and installed at participating locations during the respective promotion periods for each tire brand. Offer is valid on the cost of the tire(s) only and does not include labour costs, valve stems, mounting, balancing, disposal, and taxes. Amount of rebates, start dates andexpiration dates vary depending on tire manufacturer. It is the responsibility of the customer to submit the required claim forms and proof of purchase to the relevant tire manufacturer with sufficient postage by the required deadline for that rebate offer. See your Service Advisor for complete details and claim forms. °Dealer maysell for less. Additional parts and service charges may apply. Excludes installation. Valid on most vehicles, makes, and models. Wheel compatibility is dependent on vehicle model and optional accessories. Please see your Dealer for fitments and pricing. **Storage term is at the dealer’s sole discretion, up to a maximum of one year.‡Applies to single rear wheel vehicles only. Diesel models not eligible. �Based on a Ford Fusion V6 automatic that has a fuel consumption rating of 10L/100 km in combined city/highway driving (properly tuned), a one-year driving distance of 24,000 km and $1.02 per litre for gasoline. Improved fuel efficiency and emission reduction levels depend on model, year and condition of vehicle. *Up to 5 litres of oil. Disposal fees may be extra. Does not apply to diesel engines. �Ford Protection Plan is only available for non-commercial cars and light trucks. If an eligible Ford, Motorcraft® or Ford-approved part fails due to a defect in material or workmanship, wearout or rust through, it will be replaced at no charge as long as the original purchaser of the part owns the vehicle on which the part was installed. Labour is covered for the first 12 months or 20,000 km (whichever occurs first) after the date of installation. Emergency brake pads are not eligible under this plan. See Service Advisor forcomplete details and limitations † Offer applies to single rear wheel vehicles. Taxes and disposal fees extra. Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) excluded. Dual rear wheel models qualify at additional cost. Up to 16 litres of oil. Disposal fees extra. ^While supplies last. Limit one (1) bottle per Diesel Works Fuel Economy Package service. “5 Shot”Anti-Gel & Performance Improver (PM-23-B) treats 473 litres of fuel. �While supplies last. Limit of one (1) set of Motorcraft® Wiper Blades per Motorcraft® Brake Pads or Shoes service.
TOTAL TIRE CARE
We won’t be undersold on tires!††
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For added convenience, let us store your summer tires.** Available at participating locations.
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ASK ABOUT OUR WINTER SAFETY PACKAGE
Help prepare for winter with select brand name tires, wheels and tire pressure monitoring system designed by Ford for your Ford.
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36 drive metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
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iQutetest
Scion’s smart ‘city car’ lives up to its name
plenty of head room forthose days when my hair isoh-so-’80s.
Acceleration is surpris-ingly rapid. Although thepassing lanes on the wind-ing roads of our drivingroute were short, the iQdidn’t hesitate. It felt confi-dent and sure-footed whileenjoying a small spurt of115 km/h on the highway.
You just have to keep inmind that 94 horsepower is94 horsepower. The iQdoesn’t think it’s biggerthan it is but, like the adsays, it is bigger than you think.
I like the Scion iQ’s mi-cro size yet macro personal-
ity. When you’re in it, thereis no sign of a Napoleoncomplex. The iQ is smalland proud of it.
I like the way the tiresare jauntily pushed out tothe edge of the vehicle. I
like the smooth seat-glid-ing levers on either side ofthe passenger chair. And,even though I didn’t seethem, I like the class-lead-ing 11 airbags as well asthe great fuel economy.
The iQ doesn’t weigh all that much, so the
94-horsepower engine feels stronger, relatively speaking.
PHOTOS BY WHEELBASE MEDIA
Ifound a car that does-n’t need reverse gear.Really. The start andend points of a day inthe Scion iQ were thesame, essentially a
circle. All day, I drove, ma-noeuvred, parked, stopped,started, accelerated andturned.
There were wrong turns,tight turns, U-turns. Re-verse gear? Not even once.
Along a meandering andpretty shore road, my drivepartner and I did every-thing we could to throwour test vehicle into thetightest circles possible.
And both of us giggleduncontrollably every time.
The 2012 Scion iQ has aturning radius of just fourmetres and in the deliciousHot Lava colour, it matchedmy Kate Spade bag quitenicely, thank you very
much.Thinking about spend-
ing the day in the world’ssmallest four-seater, I haveto admit that I was a littleapprehensive since I’m al-most six feet tall. Would Ihave to be pried out of thething? Would I be sportingbruised temples, ankles, el-bows and a pretzeledspine?
First off, it might techni-cally have four seats, butthe back is strictly for tod-dlers and passengers of thecanine variety. If I daredsuggest any of our threeleggy daughters sit backthere, I would get dirtylooks and plenty of eye-rolling.
We most certainly werenot in Alabama in mid-July,but, on our drive day, wewere treated to an unsea-sonably warm day and theworld’s smallest air-condi-tioning system handled itwith aplomb.
Scion, the youthful off-
shoot of its Toyota parents,boasts that the iQ, in directcompetition with Italian-heartstring-tugging Fiat500 and Germany’s SmartForTwo, has the flattest gastank, no thicker than a canof soda and half as thick asstandard gas tanks.
The “iQute” also has theworld’s first rear-windowairbag, which is proper be-cause if you’re in that backseat, you want to knowthat there’s something be-tween grave danger andyour head.
I spent equal time in thedriver’s seat and in the pas-senger seat of the iQ.
The passenger’s side isinteresting and innovative.There is no glove box. Adrawer that slides outfrom under the seat takescare of that storage re-quirement.
On the driver’s side, theseat and positioning arecomfortable. Enough roomfor long legs and arms and
LISA CALVIWHEELBASE [email protected]
Scion family The fun and funky family ofScion cars has been on salein North America since 2003and in Canada for the lastcouple of years. The brandhas made an impact, with800,000 of its cuties roam-ing the roads. The three sib-lings of the iQ are thehatchback xD, the boxy butheartwarming xB and thesporty tC two-door coupe.
Wis
e cu
stom
ers
read
the
fine
prin
t: •,
*, ‡
, § T
he H
ave
It Al
l Eve
nt o
ffers
are
lim
ited
time
offe
rs w
hich
app
ly to
reta
il de
liver
ies
of s
elec
ted
new
and
unu
sed
mod
els
purc
hase
d fro
m p
artic
ipat
ing
deal
ers
on o
r afte
r Nov
embe
r 1, 2
011.
Dea
ler o
rder
/trad
e m
ay b
e ne
cess
ary.
Offe
rs
subj
ect t
o ch
ange
and
may
be
exte
nded
with
out n
otic
e. S
ee p
artic
ipat
ing
deal
ers
for
com
plet
e de
tails
and
con
ditio
ns. •
$37,
998
Purc
hase
Pric
e ap
plie
s to
201
1 Je
ep G
rand
Che
roke
e La
redo
(26E
) onl
y. $1
8,99
8 Pu
rcha
se P
rice
appl
ies
to 2
011
Jeep
Wra
ngle
r Sp
ort (
23B+
4XA)
on
ly an
d in
clud
es $
3,25
0 Co
nsum
er C
ash
Disc
ount
. Pric
ing
incl
udes
frei
ght (
$1,4
00) a
nd e
xclu
des
licen
ce, i
nsur
ance
, reg
istra
tion,
any
dea
ler a
dmin
istra
tion
fees
and
oth
er a
pplic
able
fees
and
app
licab
le ta
xes.
Dea
ler o
rder
/trad
e m
ay b
e ne
cess
ary.
Deal
ers
may
sel
l for
less
. See
pa
rtici
patin
g de
aler
s fo
r com
plet
e de
tails
. *Co
nsum
er C
ash
Disc
ount
s ar
e of
fere
d on
sel
ect n
ew 2
011
vehi
cles
and
are
man
ufac
ture
r-to
-dea
ler i
ncen
tives
, whi
ch a
re d
educ
ted
from
the
nego
tiate
d pr
ice
befo
re ta
xes.
Am
ount
s va
ry b
y ve
hicl
e. S
ee y
our d
eale
r for
com
plet
e de
tails
. ‡4
.99%
pur
chas
e fin
anci
ng fo
r up
to 9
6 m
onth
s av
aila
ble
on th
e ne
w 2
011
Jeep
Gra
nd C
hero
kee
(26E
)/201
1 Je
ep W
rang
ler (
23B+
4XA)
mod
els
to q
ualif
ied
cust
omer
s on
app
rove
d cr
edit
thro
ugh
Roya
l Ban
k of
Can
ada.
Dea
ler o
rder
/trad
e m
ay b
e ne
cess
ary.
Deal
er m
ay s
ell f
or
less
. See
you
r dea
ler f
or c
ompl
ete
deta
ils. E
xam
ple:
201
1 Je
ep G
rand
Che
roke
e (2
6E)/2
011
Jeep
Wra
ngle
r (23
B+4X
A) w
ith a
Pur
chas
e Pr
ice
of $
37,9
98/$
18,9
98 (i
nclu
ding
app
licab
le C
onsu
mer
Cas
h Di
scou
nt) f
inan
ced
at 4
.99%
ove
r 96
mon
ths
with
$0
dow
n pa
ymen
t equ
als
208
biw
eekl
y pa
ymen
ts o
f $22
2/$1
11 w
ith a
cos
t of b
orro
win
g of
$8,
178/
$4,0
90 a
nd a
tota
l obl
igat
ion
of $
46,1
78/$
23,0
88. P
ricin
g in
clud
es fr
eigh
t ($1
,400
) and
exc
lude
s lic
ence
, ins
uran
ce, r
egis
tratio
n, a
ny d
eale
r adm
inis
tratio
n fe
es a
nd o
ther
app
licab
le fe
es a
nd ta
xes.
Dea
ler
orde
r/tra
de m
ay b
e ne
cess
ary.
Deal
ers
may
sel
l for
less
. §20
11 J
eep
Gran
d Ch
erok
ee O
verla
nd s
how
n. P
rice:
$52
,385
. Pric
ing
incl
udes
frei
ght (
$1,4
00) a
nd e
xclu
des
licen
ce, i
nsur
ance
, reg
istra
tion,
any
dea
ler a
dmin
istra
tion
fees
and
oth
er a
pplic
able
fees
and
app
licab
le ta
xes.
De
aler
ord
er/tr
ade
may
be
nece
ssar
y. De
aler
s m
ay s
ell f
or le
ss. �
Base
d on
War
d’s
2011
Mid
dle
Spor
t Util
ity V
ehic
le s
egm
enta
tion.
¤Ba
sed
on 2
011
Ener
Guid
e Fu
el C
onsu
mpt
ion
Guid
e ra
tings
pub
lishe
d by
Nat
ural
Res
ourc
es C
anad
a. T
rans
port
Cana
da te
st m
etho
ds u
sed.
You
r ac
tual
fuel
con
sum
ptio
n m
ay v
ary.
The
Best
Buy
Sea
l is
a re
gist
ered
trad
emar
k of
Con
sum
ers
Dige
st C
omm
unic
atio
ns L
LC, u
sed
unde
r lic
ence
. ®SI
RIUS
and
the
dog
logo
are
regi
ster
ed tr
adem
arks
of S
IRIU
S Sa
tellit
e Ra
dio
Inc.
®Je
ep is
a re
gist
ered
trad
emar
k of
Chr
ysle
r Gro
up L
LC.
SCAN HEREFOR MORE GREAT OFFERS
2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland shown.§
$37,998•PURCHASE FOR
$18,998•PURCHASE FOR
INCLUDES FREIGHT.
INCLUDES $3,250 CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.
$
¤
2011 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDOUNSURPASSED 4X4 HIGHWAY FUEL ECONOMY�
2011 JEEP WRANGLER SPORTUNRIVALLED LEGENDARY 4X4 CAPABILITY
THE CLEAROUT LEGENDS ARE MADE OF.
Jeep.ca/Offers
THE 2011S ARE CLEARING OUT FAST!
HURRY TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF TOTAL DISCOUNTS UP TO
$10,750*
ON REMAINING 2011 MODEL LINE UP. WHILE SUPPLIES LAST.
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4.99%‡
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@
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OR CHOOSE
OR CHOOSE
H A V E I T
C L E A R A N C E E V E N T
¤
CHEROKEE LAREDO
38 play metronews.caWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
1 866 519 5111 | flightcentre.caConditions apply. Ex: Vancouver. ◊Price per person based on quad occupancy (2 adults & 2 children ages 2-17) for total length of stay. Prices are for select departure dates and are accurate and subject to availability at advertising deadline, errors and omissions excepted, and subject to change. Taxes & fees include transportation related fees, GST/HST and fuel supplements and are approximate and subject to change. BC REG: #HO2790
Anaheim Family Special, Air + 4 Nights
from $224◊
+ taxes & fees $113
INCLUDES accom near theme parks. Price per person based on family of 4.
EuroCharmSkincare and Body Clinic Inc.Where Wellness Meets Beauty
Gift Certificates Available Specials Expire Nov. 30, 2011
All Laser50% 30% 30%
And 2011Vancouver View
Award
2009
We’re all over your city in moreways than one. Metro brings youbreaking news and great reviews.
find us follow uslike us
Across
1 “Bam!”4 Altar affirmative7 Consequently8 Dodge10 Decorate11 Eateries13 Good thing with abad element16 Pigpen17 Beethoven’s “Für —”18 Slithery squeezer19 Chow20 Galley supply21 Nervous23 Move laterally25 Humdinger26 Finished27 — Baba28 Accumulate30 Witticism33 Ambivalence of asort36 Sir Isaac who devel-oped a shorthandmethod37 Finish38 Archaeologists’meccas39 Best pocket pair40 “Monty Python”opener41 Beavers’ creation
Down
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8 Forgo the cue cards9 — Council (“Sur-vivor” meeting)10 Mornings (Abbr.)12 Sleep soundly?14 Sad15 Petrol19 Wildebeest20 Praise in verse21 Dutch flower22 Panacea23 Mediocre24 As an alternative25 Felon’s flight26 Curses28 Fess up
29 Wherewithal30 Web surfer’s need31 Responsibility32 Recipe meas.34 Needle case35 Bygone Peruvian
SudokuCrossword
How to playFill in the grid, so that everyrow, every column andevery 3x3 box contains thedigits 1-9. There is no mathinvolved. You solve the puzzle with reasoning andlogic.
Yesterday’s answer
Send a
You can now post yourkiss, and read even morekisses, online atmetronews.ca/kiss.
Birthday Boy, Happy belat-ed. Watching you take careof the 4 legged visitor onthe counter made me real-ize how we could not live inthe AB'TOS without you al-though maybe if youcleaned better it would notbe necessary - cheers! BSMT-DWELLER
MyOneTrueLove, i love wak-ing up to you every morn-ing and goin to bedtogether, these past twomonths have been the best2 months and i cant wait tospend many more monthswith you. You keep me smil-ing from ear to ear andthats what i love about you,you excite me and make melaugh when i am down. ihope we are together for along time. THELOVEOFMYLIFE
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Yesterday’s answer
Today’s horoscope
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For today’s crossword answersand for expanded horoscopes, go to metronews.ca “Man, is
it ever hard to justsit and weight.”
EVON
WIN!
Aries March 21-April 20 WithMars, your ruler, on excellent termswith expansive Jupiter today, thereis nothing you cannot accomplish.
Taurus April 21-May 21 Youwon’t lack for courage or confi-dence today, but make sure theyare both well directed.
Gemini May 22-June 21 Ifyou promised to do something fora loved one then you must see itthrough to completion.
Cancer June 22-July 22 Don’twaste precious time thinking ofwhat might have been. Start beingamazing today. Live for now.
Leo July 23-Aug.23 The planetssuggest that if you make an effort,the results will astonish you.
Virgo Aug. 24- Sept. 22 Don’twaste time worrying aboutwhether or not you are doing theright thing. If it feels right to you,that’s all that matters.
Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 23 If thereis something you should have fin-ished but never got round to com-pleting, have a second crack at it.
Scorpio Oct. 24-Nov. 22 Youcan sense that if you want to makechanges now is the time to getbusy. So don’t wait, get to it.
Sagittarius Nov. 23-Dec. 21 With Mars and your ruler Jupiteron good terms over the next 24hours, you can overcome fears.
Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 20Don’t waste time on tasks that canbe done with your brain stuck inneutral. Be bold and brilliant.
Aquarius Jan. 21-Feb. 18What you start over the next twoor three days will bring great suc-cess in the very near future.
Pisces Feb. 19-March 20. It’llbe easy to lose your sense of per-spective in the next 24 hours. Con-trol emotions. SALLY BROMPTON
TM
The
Hyu
nd
ai nam
es, lo
go
s, pro
du
ct nam
es, fe
ature
nam
es, im
age
s and
slog
ans are
trade
marks ow
ne
d by H
yun
dai A
uto
Can
ada C
orp
. †Fin
ance
offe
rs available
O.A
.C. fro
m H
yun
dai F
inan
cial Se
rvices b
ased
on
a new
2012
So
nata G
L 6
-Sp
ee
d/2
012 A
ccen
t L 5
Dr 6
-Sp
ee
d/2
012 E
lantra L
6-S
pe
ed
/2012
Elan
tra To
urin
g L
5-S
pe
ed
/2012
Veracru
z GL
FW
D w
ith an
ann
ual fin
ance
rate o
f 0%
/2.9
%/2
.9%
/0%
/0%
for 7
2/7
2/7
2/6
0/8
4 m
on
ths. B
i-we
ekly p
ayme
nt is $
156
/$10
6/$
122
/$13
4/$
194
. No
dow
n p
ayme
nt is re
qu
ired
. Co
st of B
orrow
ing
is $0
/$1
,36
0/$
1,5
62
/$0
/$0
. Fin
ance
offe
rs inclu
de
De
livery an
d D
estin
ation
of
$1
,56
5/$
1,4
95
/$1
,49
5/$
1,4
95
/$1
,760
. Re
gistratio
n, in
suran
ce, P
PS
A, fe
es, levie
s, charg
es, lice
nse
fee
s and
all app
licable
taxes are
exclud
ed
. De
livery an
d d
estin
ation
charg
e in
clud
es fre
igh
t, P.D.E
., de
aler ad
min
fee
s and
a full tan
k of g
as. Fin
ancin
g exam
ple
: 2012
Elan
tra L 6
-spe
ed
for $
17,34
4 at 2
.9%
pe
r an
nu
m e
qu
als $12
2 b
i-we
ekly fo
r 72
mo
nth
s for a to
tal ob
ligatio
n o
f $18
,90
6. C
ash p
rice is $
17,34
4. C
ost o
f Bo
rrowin
g is $
1,5
62. E
xamp
le p
rice in
clud
es D
elive
ry and
De
stinatio
n o
f $1
,49
5. R
eg
istration
, insu
rance
, PP
SA
, fee
s, levies, ch
arge
s, licen
se fe
es an
d all ap
plicab
le taxe
s are exclu
de
d. Ω
Fue
l eco
no
my
com
pariso
n b
ased
on
com
bin
ed
fue
l con
sum
ptio
n ratin
g fo
r the
2012
Acce
nt 5
Dr 6
-Sp
ee
d M
anu
al (4.9
L/10
0km
), man
ufactu
rer’s te
sting
and
2011
AIA
MC
com
bin
ed
fue
l con
sum
ptio
n ratin
gs fo
r the
sub
-com
pact ve
hicle
class. ‡A
uto
Pacific Ve
hicle
Satisfactio
n A
ward
for B
est C
om
pact C
ar award
ed
to th
e 2
011
Elan
tra Se
dan
. Fu
el co
nsu
mp
tion
for 2
012 S
on
ata GL
6-S
pe
ed
(HW
Y 5
.7L
/100
KM
; City 8
.7L
/100
KM
)/2012
Acce
nt L
5D
r 6-S
pe
ed
(HW
Y 4
.9L
/100
KM
; City 6
.7L
/100
KM
)/2012
Elan
tra L 6
-spe
ed
man
ual (H
WY
4.9
L/10
0K
M; C
ity 6.8
L/10
0K
M)/2
012 E
lantra To
urin
g L
5-S
pe
ed
(HW
Y 6
.4L
/100
km; C
ity 8.9
L/10
0km
)/2012
Ve
racruz G
L F
WD
(HW
Y 8
.5L
/100
KM
; City 12
.7L
/100
KM
) are b
ased
on
Man
ufactu
rer’s te
sting
. Actu
al fue
l efficie
ncy m
ay vary base
d o
n d
riving
con
ditio
ns an
d th
e ad
ditio
n o
f certain
veh
icle acce
ssorie
s. Fue
l eco
no
my fig
ure
s are u
sed
for co
mp
arison
pu
rpo
ses o
nly. †
Offe
rs available
for a lim
ited
time
and
sub
ject
to ch
ang
e o
r cance
llation
with
ou
t no
tice. S
ee
de
aler fo
r com
ple
te d
etails. D
eale
r may se
ll for le
ss. Inven
tory is lim
ited
, de
aler o
rde
r may b
e re
qu
ired
. πB
ased
on
the
Se
pte
mb
er 2
011 A
IAM
C re
po
rt. G
overn
me
nt 5
-Star S
afety R
ating
s are p
art of th
e U
.S. N
ation
al Hig
hw
ay Traffic Safe
ty Ad
min
istration’s (N
HT
SA’s)
New
Car A
ssessm
en
t Pro
gram
(ww
w.S
aferC
ar.gov). ∆
Se
e yo
ur d
eale
r for e
ligib
le ve
hicle
s and
full d
etails o
f the
Grad
uate
Re
bate
Pro
gram
. ††
Hyu
nd
ai’s Co
mp
reh
en
sive L
imite
d W
arranty cove
rage
covers m
ost ve
hicle
com
po
ne
nts ag
ainst d
efe
cts in w
orkm
ansh
ip u
nd
er n
orm
al use
and
main
ten
ance
con
ditio
ns.
5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty
HyundaiCanada.com
GLS model shown
ELANTRA L 6-SPEED. DELIVERY & DESTINATION
INCLUDED.DOWNPAYMENT
$0AND
BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$122†OWN IT
FINANCING FOR 72 MONTHS
2.9%WITH
HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM
58 MPG
3 DESIGN 2012 ELANTRA SEDAN2011 AUTOPACIFIC BEST COMPACT CAR‡
2012 SONATA5-STAR SAFETY RATING
FINANCING FOR 72 MONTHS
DOWNPAYMENT
0% $0BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$156†OWN IT WITH AND
HIGHWAY 5.7L/100 KM
50 MPG
SONATA GL 6-SPEED. DELIVERY & DESTINATION
INCLUDED.
AWARDED THE HIGHEST GOVERNMENTCRASH SAFETY RATING
U.S. NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION1 SAFETY
2012 ACCENT2 FUEL EFFICIENCY BEST-IN-CLASS FUEL ECONOMYΩ
FINANCING FOR 72 MONTHS
DOWNPAYMENT
2.9% $0BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$106†OWN IT WITH AND
ACCENT L 5DR 6-SPEED. DELIVERY & DESTINATION
INCLUDED. HIGHWAY
4.9L/100 KM 58 MPGΩ
Limited model shown
Limited model shown
GLS model shown
GLS model shown 6 STANDARD AIRBAGS 3.8L V6 ENGINE 6-SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM AVAILABLE AWD
2012 VERACRUZ5 VERSATILE“IT’S A SEVEN-SEATER, MID-SIZE SUV WITH SERIOUS CARGO AND PEOPLE-CARRYING CAPACITY.” – THE GLOBE AND MAIL
Mertin Hyundai45753 Yale Rd.
Chilliwack, 604-702-1000D#30337
Maple Ridge Hyundai23213 Lougheed HighwayMaple Ridge, 604-467-3401
D#7356
Langley Hyundai19459 Langley BypassSurrey, 604-539-8549
D#30331
OpenRoad Hyundai13171 Smallwood PlaceRichmond, 604-606-9033
D#28516
Jim Pattison Hyundai Surrey15365 Guildford Drive
North Surrey, 604-582-8118D#10977
Jim Pattison Hyundai Port CoquitlamUnit B - 2385 Ottawa St.
Port Coquitlam, 604-552-1700D#30242
Jim Pattison Hyundai Northshore855 Automall Dr.
North Vancouver, 604-985-0055D#6700
Abbotsford Hyundai30250 Automall Dr.
Abbotsford, 604-857-2622D#9390
Murray Hyundai White Rock3150 King George Highway
Surrey, 604-538-7022D#30780
Destination Hyundai445 Kingsway
Vancouver, 604-292-8188D#31042
2012 ELANTRA TOURING4 SPACIOUS SPIRIT AND PRACTICALITY, IN PERFECT BALANCE.
DOWNPAYMENT
$0AND
FINANCING FOR 60 MONTHS
0%BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$134†OWN IT WITH
ELANTRA TOURING L 5-SPEED. DELIVERY & DESTINATION
INCLUDED.HIGHWAY
6.4L/100 KM 43 MPG
DOWNPAYMENT
$0AND
FINANCING FOR 84 MONTHS
0%BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$194†OWN IT WITH
VERACRUZ GL FWD. DELIVERY & DESTINATION
INCLUDED. HIGHWAY 8.5L/100 KM
33 MPG
AJAC’s Best new small car under $21K
AJAC’s Best new small car over $21K
FINANCING FOR UP TO MONTHS0% 84MODELS
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