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Pipeline to be reworked around ancient bones
A major pipeline project in Sas-katchewan is to be modified after ancient bones were found at the dig site.
TransGas, the pipeline sub-sidiary of SaskEnergy, says the redesign will minimize any impact to newly discovered cultural lands near Bethune, northwest of Regina.
“Typically, pipelines are done using a shallow trench and that’s about six feet of a hole that is made. The pipeline is lowered in, the ground cover is put back in and on we go,” SaskEnergy spokesman Dave Burdeniuk said Thursday.
“We’re not going to do that now for the location where the remains were discovered. We’re going to back up further away and then we’re going to go deep.”
The company will use trenchless technology to bore down between depths of nine metres and 45 metres for al-
most a kilometre underneath the site, Burdeniuk said.
TransGas was installing a transmission pipeline to supply natural gas service to a new pot-ash mine site when bone frag-ments were unearthed Oct. 15. Archeologists have determined the remains are human and es-timate the bones are more than 1,000 years old. There was no indication before work began that there was anything cultur-ally significant along the pipe-line route, said Burdeniuk.
“We knew there were a couple of sites close and those were flagged and the crews were told to avoid those.
“But we had no idea that there were these human re-mains, so this is a way that we can get the project accom-plished, but do it in such a manner that we’re not going to disturb the surface or any-thing that might be remain-ing still near the surface.” THE CANADIAN PRESS
Near Bethune. TransGas says dig will back up and go deep, won’t disturb site where human remains were found Oct. 15
CLASH OF THE TITANSWhen the Saskatchewan Roughriders and Calgary Stampeders kick off at McMahon Stadium on Saturday, all eyes will be on Kory Sheets, left, and Jon Cornish in what is expected to be an epic running-back battle. Story, page 17. THE CANADIAN PRESS; PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: DAVID VAN DYKE/METRO
First Nations consultation
Representatives from Carry the Kettle First Nation and elders from the Nakota Nation were at the site Wed-nesday for a sacred blessing ritual and to further exam-ine it.
• TransGas said it will work with Chief Barry Kennedy and elders to determine the most appropriate and sensitive way to deal with soil already disturbed.
I GET THE FEELING THIS ONE’S A WINNER METRO’S PHOTO CHALLENGE ASKED READERS TO SUBMIT PHOTOS DEPICTING THE SENSES — INCLUDING THE SIXTH —AND THE WINNERS ARE IN PAGE 12
I GET THE FEELING THIS ONE’S A WINNER METRO’S PHOTO CHALLENGE ASKED READERS TO SUBMIT PHOTOS DEPICTING THE SENSES — INCLUDING THE SIXTH —AND THE WINNERS ARE IN
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†Sears® FinancialTM MasterCard® Sears FinancialTM VoyageTM MasterCard® or Sears Card offers are on approved credit. Personal shopping only. Savings offers do not include Parts & Service or Sundry Merchandise, Items with #195XXX & Sears ‘Value’ Programs with prices ending in .97. All merchandise sold “as is” and all sales final. No exchanges, returns or adjustments on previously purchased merchandise; savings offers cannot be combined. No dealers; we reserve the right to limit quantities. Prices do not include home delivery. Although we strive for accuracy, unintentional errors may occur. We reserve the right to correct any error. ‘Reg.’, ‘Was’ and ‘Sears selling price ’refer to the Sears Catalogue or Retail store price current at time of merchandise receipt.Sears® MasterCard, Sears Voyage MasterCard or Sears Card offers are on approved credit. Sears® and VoyageTM are reregistered Trademarks of Sears, licensed for use in Canada.®/TM-MasterCard and the MasterCard Brand Mark are registered trademarks of MasterCard International Incorporated. Sale priced merchandise may not be exactly as illustrated. Offers valid at Sears Regina Outlet Store shown only. For other hot deals, visit the Outlet Site at www.sears.ca/outlet© 2013 Sears Canada Inc.
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03metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013 NEWS
NEW
S
240 Albert St3251 Quance St
595 Henderson Dr5875 Rochdale Blvd
Jennifer Barrett, the city’s senior housing planner METRO
City moves for tax exemption to spur downtown housingCity administrators say a pro-posed $7,500 tax exemption cap for downtown homeowners will encourage development of smaller apartments and con-dominiums, while providing a variety of housing options.
“Predominantly, what we’re seeing (downtown) are large one- and two-bedroom condominiums,” Jennifer Bar-rett, senior housing planner with the City of Regina, said on Thursday at a city hall meeting of a new municipal housing
commission. “What we wanted to see was a shift more toward smaller units that would sup-port singles that enjoy living downtown.”
The idea behind the cap, Barrett said, is to provide a longer tax incentive for smaller units, while providing the same incentive for larger units but for a shorter period.
During its first meeting, the housing commission approved the proposal. However, it must be passed by council before tak-
ing effect. Mayor Michael Fougere said
the incentive scheme repre-sents the city’s desire for more “diversity” in downtown hous-ing. “(The residential incentive) program was altered to encour-age more modest housing that otherwise would not be built there,” he said. “It is more ex-pensive to build downtown than in the suburbs … that’s why the (incentive program) is there.”
In addition to Fougere, the
commission includes council-lors Bob Hawkins and Bryon Burnett, as well as developer Terry Canning and Tim Gross of Saskatchewan Housing Corp., among others.
The mayor said it’s import-ant to seek the “expertise” of a diverse array of stakeholders in a bid to ease Regina’s housing crunch. “We fashion new poli-cies on housing, (which) we feel is much more strongly done by having this commission,” he added. MARCO VIGLIOTTI/METRO
Mark and Craig McMorris have gone from the flatlands around Regina to some of the tallest mountains around.
And in November, the brothers will reach a new high as their show McMorris and McMorris premieres on MTV Canada.
“I am very excited. We met with Red Bull Media House … over a year ago and pitched the idea,” said Craig, the older McMorris. “Now that we’ve filmed all eight episodes, it’s pretty crazy and I can’t wait for it to go live.”
The premise follows Mark and Craig as they head off to different countries and con-
tinents, hanging out with friends while going through the rigours of competitive snowboarding.
“Usually when you’re travelling for snowboarding, people only see the one run, they don’t see all the behind-the-scenes stuff,” said Craig.
The locations include Aspen, Colorado for the Ex Games and Cancun, Mexico for spring break.
“We try to keep a really nice balance of staying com-petitive, staying sharp and staying in shape, but also having a little bit of fun,” he said.
Both brothers have made big names for themselves, as Craig has boarded on the Canadian national team and Mark has won high-profile contests.
Craig said the series is a great opportunity to demon-strate their skills and repre-sent their hometown.
“We get to show the world this is our home, this is what can come out of Sas-katchewan and it’s one of the most beautiful places on the Earth,” he said.
McMorris and McMorris premieres Friday, Nov. 1 at 9 p.m. EST.
Sask. boarders star on MTV
Two snowboarders from Saskatchewan are starring in an MTV show that premieres this November. Craig McMorris,left, and his 19-year-old brother Mark are prepared to show the world what they’ve got in Season 1 of McMorris andMcMorris. COURTESY OF MTV
A tale of two bros. McMorris and McMorris is a new reality show that follows brothers Mark and Craig of Regina as they snowboard around the world
JACOB [email protected]
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04 metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013NEWS
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Call for urgency
Anti-bullying report to be released soonEducation Minister Don Morgan says an anti-bullying report will be made public soon, probably during anti-bullying week in November.
The report is being worked on by Saskatoon MLA Jennifer Campeau.
Morgan says the govern-ment’s response will come out at the same time as the report. The Opposition says the government shouldn’t wait to release the report in anti-bullying week, which runs Nov. 17 to 22.
NDP Leader Cam Broten says there are children in Saskatchewan who fear going to school, so urgent action is needed. The Canadian Press
Murder trial
Fingerprint points no finger: LawyerThe lawyer for an American accused of killing a Saska-toon woman says tests on a fingerprint found at the crime scene were inconclusive.
Morris Bodnar was granted an adjournment in his client George Allgood’s trial last
month to re-test the print.Bodnar says the sample
wasn’t good enough to con-clude whether it belongs to another person. It was previ-ously found that the print did not belong to Allgood.
Allgood is charged with the murder of Susan Rein-hardt — the mother of his son — and the attempted murder of her boyfriend. The Canadian Press/CKOM
After getting a good look at Regina’s transportation plans, some residents say any improvements could yet be way, way down the road.
Jeannie Maw, an avid cyc-list, likes city hall’s proposal for street bicycle lanes in the transportation master plan, as presented for the public on Thursday at Cornwall Centre.
She pointed out, though, that “they’ve been talking about bike lanes since the 1980s,” and have since created some on Smith and Lorne streets cov-ering a four-block stretch.
Maw is pleased by a pro-posal for cycling lanes on long sections of 15th Avenue and El-phinstone Street.
“What’s happening here, if they really get it done, would be great,” she told Metro.
“Let’s hope they do it within the next five years, because I can’t wait much longer.”
A man viewing the plans at the mall echoed Maw’s con-cerns, suggesting that all the talk should come with a com-mitment to action.
The Regina Pats and Sas-katchewan Roughriders are taking their new teamwork to a more visible level.
After joining forces on a ticket discount campaign last month, the Pats will
wear newly created green uniforms, bearing the Rid-ers logo as well as their own, for a game on Oct. 30 at the Brandt Centre against the Moose Jaw Warriors. MeTrO
new jerseys. Pats team up with riders on uniforms
Pats GM Chad Lang, left, and players Dyson Stevenson and Chandler Stephenson are joined by Riders president Jim Hopson Ross Romanuik/metRo
Jeannie Maw likes the city’s ideas for cycling lanes, but wonders when she’llever see them. Ross Romanuik/metRo
Transit plan prompts time concerns
Wanted in Yorkton
Woman, teen boy arrested over armed robberyA 34-year-old woman and a 15-year-old boy wanted in an armed robbery in southeast-ern Saskatchewan have been arrested.
Police in Saskatoon say the
pair was discovered when of-ficers were called to an apart-ment building on Wednesday to check on another woman.
She was safe. Officers realized that a second woman and a teen, who were also in the apartment, were suspects in the robbery of a business in Yorkton.
They will be transported to Yorkton to face charges. The Canadian Press
‘Master plan.’ Residents like proposals, but want to see some action
RoSS [email protected]
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06 metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013
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Training for frontline officers and better information sharing between police and govern-ment agencies can help protect law enforcement officials from potentially aggressive “sover-eign citizens,” says a newly de-classified briefing to Canadian police chiefs.
The presentation, prepared for a meeting of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, calls the libertarian-inspired philosophy “a growing con-cern” that poses a “threat to of-ficer and public safety.”
Enforcement agencies are
becoming increasingly wary of sovereign citizens, members of the Freeman-on-the-Land move-ment and other like-minded people who resist police and government authority. Adher-ents say they shun violence and merely want to live free of government-imposed shackles.
However, police say those who espouse the ideology have been involved in numerous
violent encounters with law-enforcement and government employees in the United States and, to a lesser extent, in Can-ada. Freemen commonly claim they do not require a driver’s licence, insurance or vehicle registration, police say. And ad-vocates frequently assert a right to have weapons for self-protec-tion, among other things. the canadian press
anti-government ideology becoming a growing concernSovereign citizens? Libertarian-inspired philosophy said to pose threat to officer and public safety
A Calgary police van remains in front of a rental home that a Freeman-on-the-Land follower had claimed as an embassy in September. Bill Graveland/the canadian press
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07metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013 NEWS
A Roma woman in Bulgaria has undergone DNA testing and faces preliminary char-ges of child selling as author-ities investigate if she is the mother of a young girl found living with an unrelated couple in Greece, authorities said Thursday.
Though the tests have yet to prove Sasha Ruseva, 35, is the biological mother of the girl known as “Maria,” the woman’s admission that she once left a baby behind in Greece opened her up to a formal investigation.
Ruseva acknowledged to
Bulgarian TV that she had been questioned about the girl, believed to be five or six years old, who was found during a raid for drugs and weapons in a Roma camp in central Greece last week. Ruseva said she gave birth to a girl while working as an ol-ive picker in Greece.
The child’s case gained global notice.
Ruseva said she wanted the girl back if tests prove she is the girl’s mother.
But she denied taking any money for giving up her baby to another Roma family years ago.
The preliminary charges filed against her allow au-thorities to start an investi-gation into whether money changed hands for the child.
Greek authorities took custody of “Maria” after a prosecutor present during the camp raid noticed the blond, blue-eyed and pale-
skinned girl looked nothing like the couple raising her.
A DNA test confirmed she was not related to them.
Ruseva said she rec-ognized the Greek Roma couple in the “Maria” case as the same people with whom she left her child. Ruseva said she gave birth to a girl while working as an ol-ive picker in Greece “several years ago,” but that she had to leave the child because she didn’t have enough money to take her home.
Ruseva has had eight chil-dren. “I intended to go back and take my child home, but meanwhile I gave birth to two more kids so I was not able to go back,” Ruseva said on Bulgarian TV, insisting that she did not get paid for giving up the girl. The “Maria” case has spurred con-cerns about child trafficking within the Roma community. the associated press
abduction case sends aftershock
Iancu Muntean, left, and Loredana with one of their children, Regina, 4, in Ireland, Thursday. The family were shaken after police took their other child Iancu, 2, and returned him after DNA testing. Peter Morrison/the associated Press
Roma people in the spotlight
Child trafficking?The “Maria” case has spurred concerns about child trafficking within the
Roma community, and cries of racism, as well. In an epi-sode apparently inspired by the Greek case, two young blond, blue-eyed children were taken by police in Ireland from their Roma
parents, who had different complexions. But the girl and boy were returned to their families Wednesday after DNA tests determined the children were rightfully theirs. the associated press
Madeleine Mccann case reopenedPortugal’s public broadcaster says prosecutors are reopen-ing the police investigation into the disappearance of Brit-ish child Madeleine McCann, after a review of evidence found new leads in the case.
The public prosecutor de-cided to reopen the case after “new indications” emerged,
though the prosecutor gave no details in a report seen on Radiotelevisao Portuguesa.
The case was closed in 2008 because no crime was detected.
The girl vanished during a family vacation in south-ern Portugal’s Algarve region in May 2007, just before her
fourth birthday.A team of detectives from
northern Portugal began re-viewing the evidence two years ago.
British police have also been sifting through the case files and said they have identi-fied new avenues of investiga-tion. the associated press
Roma. Negative reporting on minorities has re-emerged via recent cases: Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights
![Page 8: 20131025_ca_regina](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022051519/568c4af41a28ab49169a4b55/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
08 metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013NEWS
FRIDAY,NOVEMBER 8TH@ 7:30PMDOORS OPEN AT 6:30PM
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The Harper government’s bid for summary execution of senators Mike Duffy, Pamela Wallin and Patrick Brazeau has turned into an agoniz-ingly slow soap opera that is exposing a nasty — and in-creasingly personal — family feud within the Conservative caucus.
Debate over government motions to suspend, without pay, the three erstwhile Con-servatives continued to rage in the Senate for the third straight day — with no end in sight.
Thursday’s debate saw
Marjory LeBreton, former government leader in the Senate, fire back at Duffy for alleging she was part of a “monstrous” conspiracy to in-timidate him into accepting a secret deal to pay back ineli-gible expenses or face being disqualified from sitting in the Senate.
She variously described Duffy’s claims as “utterly preposterous,” “blatant false-hood” and “stretching credu-lity.”
And, although LeBre-ton didn’t directly question Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s judgment in ap-pointing Duffy to the upper chamber, she revealed that she was never a fan of the former broadcast journalist, who hosted a daily show on federal politics until his ele-vation to the Senate in 2009.
“I sometimes found my-self … frustrated by his style of journalism, trading as he
did, more often than not, on gossip and the latest hot ru-mour,” LeBreton told the up-per chamber.
“And sometimes I was so disgusted that I felt like put-ting my foot through the tele-vision set.”
When anyone com-plained, Duffy would say, “It’s showbiz,” LeBreton said, im-plying that Duffy has taken the same approach to justify-ing his role in the Senate ex-penses scandal.the canadian press
Ongoing scandal shows deep rifts in tory ranks
Sen. Pamela Wallin is surrounded by security as she arrives at the Senate on Parliament Hill on Thursday. AdriAn Wyld/THE CAnAdiAn PrESS
Getting nasty. Debate continues to rage over bid to oust disgraced senators Duffy, Wallin and Brazeau — and now it’s personal
sex-assault claim. sask. woman who felt ignored by police turns to Youtube A Saskatoon woman has turned to YouTube to have her voice heard after she says her allega-tions of sexual assault were dis-missed by police.
In a video uploaded to You-Tube on Tuesday, 29-year-old Rebecca Campbell levels the ac-cusations against her co-work-ers at a local restaurant.
Campbell alleges the ordeal began 10 years ago after an ac-quaintance took advantage of her. “We had been at a party together and at the time I was actually homeless,” Campbell told Metro. “He had offered to let me crash on his couch for a couple days, so I left the party
with him and he attacked me and raped me.”
Although she said she ori-ginally went to the police, she feels she was dismissed.
A spokesperson for the Sas-katoon Police Service, Alyson Edwards, said upon seeing the video, an officer from the sex-crimes division contacted Campbell.
“We wanted to reach out to her right away so we could resolve any issues or con-cerns that she has and we wanted her to know that we do take her complaint very seriously,” said Edwards. JacOb MOrgan/MetrO
Senate
Reform plan ruled unconstitutionalThe Harper government’s most recent attempt at Senate reform has been declared unconstitutional in a stinging court ruling
rendered Thursday.The Quebec Court of
Appeal has released an opinion that the federal government had no right to create Senate elections and set term limits with-out seeking provincial approval.the canadian press
![Page 9: 20131025_ca_regina](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022051519/568c4af41a28ab49169a4b55/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
prairieford.ca
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cle(
s) m
ay b
e sh
own
with
opt
iona
l equ
ipm
ent.
Deal
er m
ay s
ell o
r lea
se fo
r les
s. L
imite
d tim
e of
fers
. Offe
rs m
ay b
e ca
ncel
led
at a
ny ti
me
with
out n
otic
e. S
ee y
our F
ord
Deal
er fo
r com
plet
e de
tails
or c
all t
he F
ord
Cust
omer
Rel
atio
nshi
p Ce
ntre
at 1
-800
-565
-367
3. F
or fa
ctor
y or
ders
, a c
usto
mer
may
eith
er ta
ke a
dvan
tage
of e
ligib
le F
ord
reta
il cu
stom
er p
rom
otio
nal i
ncen
tives
/offe
rs a
vaila
ble
at th
e tim
e of
veh
icle
fact
ory
orde
r or t
ime
of
vehi
cle
deliv
ery,
but n
ot b
oth
or c
ombi
natio
ns th
ereo
f. De
aler
ship
ope
ratin
g ho
urs
may
var
y. *
*Unt
il Oc
tobe
r 28,
201
3, re
ceive
0%
APR
pur
chas
e fin
anci
ng o
n ne
w 2
013/
2014
Fie
sta
mod
els
for u
p to
72
mon
ths
and
0% A
PR p
urch
ase
finan
cing
on
new
201
3 Es
cape
mod
els
for u
p to
60
mon
ths;
Oct
ober
31,
201
3, re
ceive
0%
APR
pur
chas
e fin
anci
ng o
n ne
w 2
013
[Foc
us (e
xclu
ding
BEV
)] fo
r up
to 7
2 m
onth
s; a
nd u
ntil
Dece
mbe
r 2,
201
3, re
ceive
0%
APR
pur
chas
e fin
anci
ng o
n ne
w 2
013
Ford
[Edg
e (e
xclu
ding
SE)
] for
up
to 4
8 m
onth
s, 2
014
Ford
[Tau
rus]
for u
p to
60
mon
ths,
201
4 [F
iest
a] fo
r up
to 7
2 m
onth
s to
qua
lified
reta
il cu
stom
ers,
on
appr
oved
cre
dit (
OAC)
from
For
d Cr
edit.
Not
all
buye
rs w
ill qu
alify
for t
he lo
wes
t int
eres
t rat
e. E
xam
ple:
$25
,000
pur
chas
e fin
ance
d at
0%
APR
for 4
8/60
/72
mon
ths,
mon
thly
paym
ent i
s $5
20.8
3/ $
416.
66/ $
347.
22,
cost
of b
orro
win
g is
$0
or A
PR o
f 0%
and
tota
l to
be re
paid
is $
25,0
00. D
own
paym
ent o
n pu
rcha
se fi
nanc
ing
offe
rs m
ay b
e re
quire
d ba
sed
on a
ppro
ved
cred
it fro
m F
ord
Cred
it. T
axes
pay
able
on
full
amou
nt o
f pur
chas
e pr
ice.
*Un
til D
ecem
ber 2
, 201
3, re
ceive
$50
0/ $
750/
$1,
000/
$1,
250/
$1,
500/
$1,
750/
$2,
000/
$2,
250/
$2,
500/
$2,
750/
$3,
000/
$3,
500/
$3,
750/
$4,
000/
$4,
250/
/ $4
,750
/ $5,
500/
$5,
750/
$6,
500/
$6,
750/
$7
,500
/ $8,
000/
$8,
250/
$8,
500/
$9,
250/
$9,
500
in M
anuf
actu
rer R
ebat
es w
ith th
e pu
rcha
se o
r lea
se o
f a n
ew 2
013
[Foc
us (e
xclu
ding
S a
nd B
EV)],
201
4 [E
scap
e 1.
6L] /
201
3 [F
usio
n (e
xclu
ding
S)],
201
4 [F
ocus
S, T
auru
s SE
, Esc
ape
S, F
-150
Reg
ular
Cab
XL
4x2
(Val
ue L
eade
r)]/ 2
014
[Foc
us B
EV, T
rans
it Co
nnec
t (ex
clud
ing
Elec
tric)
, E-S
erie
s] /
2013
[C-M
ax],
2014
[Esc
ape
2.0L
]/ 20
13 [E
-Ser
ies]
/ 201
4 [M
usta
ng V
6 Co
upe]
/ 20
13 [F
iest
a S,
Mus
tang
V6
Coup
e, E
dge
AWD
(exc
ludi
ng S
E), F
-150
Reg
ular
Cab
XL
4x2
(Val
ue L
eade
r), F
-350
to F
-550
Cha
ssis
Cab
s], 2
014
[F-3
50 to
F-5
50 C
hass
is C
abs]
/ 201
3 [E
xplo
rer B
ase]
/ 201
4 [T
auru
s (e
xclu
ding
SE)
]/ 20
13 [F
iest
a (e
xclu
ding
S)]/
201
3 [E
dge
FWD
(exc
ludi
ng S
E)]/
2013
[Fle
x]/ 2
013
[Mus
tang
V6
Prem
ium
, Exp
lore
r (ex
clud
ing
Base
)], 2
014
[Mus
tang
V6
Prem
ium
]/ 20
13 [T
auru
s SE
, Esc
ape
1.6L
, Tra
nsit
Conn
ect
(exc
ludi
ng E
lect
ric)]/
201
4 [M
usta
ng G
T]/ 2
013
[Mus
tang
GT,
Esca
pe 2
.0L]
/201
3 [E
xped
ition
]/ 20
13 [T
auru
s (e
xclu
ding
SE)
], 20
14 [F
-150
Reg
ular
Cab
(exc
ludi
ng X
L 4x
2)] /
201
4 [F
-250
to F
-450
Gas
Eng
ine
(exc
ludi
ng C
hass
is C
abs)
]/ 20
14 [F
-150
Sup
er C
ab a
nd S
uper
Cre
w]/
2013
[F-2
50 to
F-4
50 G
as E
ngin
e (e
xclu
ding
Cha
ssis
Cab
s)]/
2013
[Foc
us B
EV]/
2013
[F-1
50 R
egul
ar C
ab (e
xclu
ding
XL
4x2)
]/ 20
14 [F
-250
to F
-450
Die
sel
Engi
ne (e
xclu
ding
Cha
ssis
Cab
s)]/2
013
[F-1
50 S
uper
Cab
and
Sup
er C
rew
]/ 20
13 [F
-250
to F
-450
Die
sel E
ngin
e (e
xclu
ding
Cha
ssis
Cab
s)] -
all
Rapt
or, G
T500
, BOS
S302
, and
Med
ium
Truc
k m
odel
s ex
clud
ed. M
anuf
actu
rer R
ebat
es a
re n
ot c
ombi
nabl
e w
ith a
ny fl
eet c
onsu
mer
ince
ntive
s. ‡ B
etw
een
Octo
ber 2
3, 2
013
and
Octo
ber 2
8, 2
013,
elig
ible
pur
chas
e fin
anci
ng a
nd le
ase
cust
omer
s w
ill ha
ve th
e eq
uiva
lent
of t
heir
first
thre
e bi
-wee
kly
paym
ents
cov
ered
by
Ford
Mot
or C
ompa
ny o
f Can
ada,
Lim
ited
up to
a m
axim
um a
mou
nt p
er e
ligib
le v
ehic
le (t
he “O
ffer”
). Th
e Of
fer a
pplie
s to
the
first
thre
e bi
-wee
kly
paym
ents
for c
usto
mer
s pa
ying
on a
bi-w
eekl
y ba
sis
and
the
sum
of 1
2 m
onth
ly pa
ymen
ts d
ivide
d by
26
and
mul
tiplie
d by
3 fo
r cus
tom
ers
payin
g on
a m
onth
ly ba
sis
(“Fi
rst 3
Bi-W
eekl
y Pa
ymen
ts”)
. Max
imum
am
ount
s ar
e $5
00 o
n Fo
cus
and
Fies
ta; $
750
on F
usio
n, E
scap
e an
d CM
AX, $
1,00
0 on
Mus
tang
(exc
ludi
ng S
helb
y GT
500)
, Tau
rus,
Edg
e, E
xplo
rer,
Flex
and
F-1
50 (e
xclu
ding
Rap
tor);
and
$1,
750
on E
xped
ition
. All
Med
ium
Tru
ck, C
hass
is, S
tripp
ed C
ab a
nd c
utaw
ay m
odel
s ex
clud
ed. O
ffer o
nly
avai
labl
e on
app
rove
d cr
edit
(O.A
.C.)
from
For
d Cr
edit.
If th
e eq
uiva
lent
of t
he F
irst 3
Bi-W
eekl
y Pa
ymen
ts e
xcee
ds th
e m
axim
um a
mou
nt, t
he c
usto
mer
will
be re
spon
sibl
e fo
r the
bal
ance
. Firs
t 3 B
i-Wee
kly
(or
mon
thly
paym
ent e
quiva
lent
, as
appl
icab
le) p
aym
ents
are
requ
ired
from
cus
tom
er. F
inan
ce c
usto
mer
s w
ill re
ceive
a c
hequ
e fo
r the
am
ount
of t
heir
Firs
t 3 B
i-Wee
kly
Paym
ents
from
the
deal
er. F
or R
CL c
usto
mer
s, th
e fir
st m
onth
’s p
aym
ent w
ill be
wai
ved
and
they
will
rece
ive a
che
que
for t
he a
mou
nt o
f one
bi-w
eekl
y pa
ymen
t - c
usto
mer
will
then
be
resp
onsi
ble
for m
akin
g al
l of h
is/h
er re
mai
ning
sch
edul
ed p
aym
ents
in a
ccor
danc
e w
ith
thei
r con
tract
. Offe
r not
ava
ilabl
e to
cas
h pu
rcha
se c
usto
mer
s. N
ot c
ombi
nabl
e w
ith C
FIP,
CPA,
GPC
, Com
mer
cial
Upfi
t Inc
entiv
e Pr
ogra
m o
r Dai
ly Re
ntal
Allo
wan
ces
ince
ntive
s. ††
Offe
r onl
y va
lid fr
om S
epte
mbe
r 4, 2
013
to O
ctob
er 3
1, 2
013
(the
“Offe
r Per
iod”
) to
resi
dent
Can
adia
ns w
ith a
Cos
tco
mem
bers
hip
on o
r bef
ore
Augu
st 3
1, 2
013.
Use
this
$1,
000C
DN C
ostc
o m
embe
r offe
r tow
ards
the
purc
hase
or l
ease
of a
new
201
3/20
14
Ford
(ex
clud
ing
Fies
ta, F
ocus
, C-M
ax, R
apto
r, GT
500,
Mus
tang
Bos
s 30
2, T
rans
it Co
nnec
t EV,
and
Med
ium
Tru
ck) o
r Lin
coln
veh
icle
(eac
h an
“Elig
ible
Veh
icle
”). T
he E
ligib
le V
ehic
le m
ust b
e de
liver
ed a
nd/o
r fac
tory
-ord
ered
from
you
r par
ticip
atin
g Fo
rd d
eale
r with
in th
e Of
fer P
erio
d. O
ffer i
s on
ly va
lid a
t par
ticip
atin
g de
aler
s, is
sub
ject
to v
ehic
le a
vaila
bilit
y, an
d m
ay b
e ca
ncel
led
or c
hang
ed a
t any
tim
e w
ithou
t not
ice.
Onl
y on
e (1
) offe
r may
be
app
lied
tow
ards
the
purc
hase
or l
ease
of o
ne (1
) Elig
ible
Veh
icle
, up
to a
max
imum
of t
wo
(2) s
epar
ate
Elig
ible
Veh
icle
sal
es p
er C
ostc
o M
embe
rshi
p Nu
mbe
r. Of
fer i
s tra
nsfe
rabl
e to
per
sons
dom
icile
d w
ith a
n el
igib
le C
ostc
o m
embe
r. Of
fer i
s no
t com
bina
ble
with
any
CPA
/GPC
or D
aily
Rent
al in
cent
ives,
the
Com
mer
cial
Upfi
t Pro
gram
or t
he C
omm
erci
al F
leet
Ince
ntive
Pro
gram
(CFI
P). A
pplic
able
taxe
s ca
lcul
ated
bef
ore
$1,0
00CD
N of
fer
is d
educ
ted.
† Rec
eive
a w
inte
r saf
ety
pack
age
whi
ch in
clud
es: f
our (
4) w
inte
r tire
s, fo
ur (4
) ste
el w
heel
s an
d fo
ur (4
) tire
pre
ssur
e m
onito
ring
sens
ors
whe
n yo
u pu
rcha
se o
r lea
se a
ny n
ew 2
013/
2014
For
d Fo
cus
(exc
ludi
ng S
and
Foc
us E
lect
ric),
Esca
pe, F
usio
n, E
dge
(exc
ludi
ng S
port)
, Exp
lore
r, or
Fie
sta
(exc
ludi
ng S
) on
or b
efor
e De
cem
ber 2
, 201
3. T
his
offe
r is
not a
pplic
able
to a
ny F
leet
(oth
er th
an s
mal
l flee
ts w
ith a
n el
igib
le F
IN) o
r Go
vern
men
t cus
tom
ers
and
not c
ombi
nabl
e w
ith C
PA, G
PC, C
FIP
or D
aily
Rent
al in
cent
ives.
Som
e co
nditi
ons
appl
y. Se
e De
aler
for d
etai
ls. V
ehic
le h
andl
ing
char
acte
ristic
s, ti
re lo
ad in
dex
and
spee
d ra
ting
may
not
be
the
sam
e as
fact
ory
supp
lied
all-s
easo
n tir
es. W
inte
r tire
s ar
e m
eant
to b
e op
erat
ed d
urin
g w
inte
r con
ditio
ns a
nd m
ay re
quire
a h
ighe
r col
d in
flatio
n pr
essu
re th
an a
ll-se
ason
tire
s. C
onsu
lt yo
ur F
ord
of C
anad
a de
aler
for d
etai
ls
incl
udin
g ap
plic
able
war
rant
y co
vera
ge. ©
2013
Siri
us C
anad
a In
c. “S
irius
XM”,
the
Siriu
sXM
logo
, cha
nnel
nam
es a
nd lo
gos
are
trade
mar
ks o
f Siri
usXM
Rad
io In
c. a
nd a
re u
sed
unde
r lic
ence
. ©20
13 F
ord
Mot
or C
ompa
ny o
f Can
ada,
Lim
ited.
All
right
s re
serv
ed.
Available in most new Ford vehicles with 6-month
pre-paid subscription
$9,250IN MANUFACTURER REBATES*
ON MOST NEW MODELS
UP TO
(2013 F-150 SUPERCREW AMOUNT SHOWN)
3BI-WEEKLY PAYMENTS‡
FIR
ST
ON USWITH THE PURCHASE FINANCE OR LEASE OF MOST NEW VEHICLES
![Page 10: 20131025_ca_regina](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022051519/568c4af41a28ab49169a4b55/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
10 metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013NEWS
Wildrose party Leader Danielle SmithTHE CANADIAN PRESS fIlE
Wildrose leader hedges on question of climate changeAlberta’s Opposition leader is again under fire for refusing to take a stand on whether cli-mate change exists.
Danielle Smith is being “weasely” and “disingenuous” for promising to fight green-house gases while refusing to say if she believes they are a problem in the first place, NDP Leader Brian Mason said Thurs-day.
“It’s a dodge,” Mason said.“What she is saying is kind
of weasely words. It’s trying to have it both ways (by saying), ’I personally don’t know if there is climate change or not, but
we’re going to oppose (green-house gases) because other people think so.’
“That’s not leadership. Tell us what you think, Danielle, and then stand up for it.”
Smith made her comments Wednesday while taking ques-tions from reporters on party resolutions to be debated at the Wildrose annual general meet-ing in Red Deer on Saturday.
Two of those resolutions deal with taking steps to reduce greenhouse gases.
On Wednesday, Smith stressed the party wants to do something on emissions be-
cause the global community demands Alberta do so.
“We know we have to do something because we have obligations nationally and internationally. We also have our customers who are de-manding that we produce our resources in a way that is more environmentally responsible,” said Smith.
But Smith said the party will not issue a resolution on whether climate change exists. She said that would be unfair to do so.
“I don’t expect our mem-bers to be scientists,” she said.
“I just expect them to pass policy that allows us to give a pretty clear indication of what we would actually do if we were government.
“I’m hopeful that our mem-bers will endorse us taking
some clear action to reduce greenhouse gases and toxic emissions.”
When asked if she believes in climate change, she replied: “I’m not a scientist.
“I don’t think people are interested in hearing what politicians have to say about scientific matters. You can ask scientists that.
“My obligation is to make sure we have a policy that makes sense.”
Mason said the climate change question strikes at the heart of Wildrose credibility.the canadian press
As Stephen Chalmers stepped into his bright, spacious, new 1999 fifth-wheel in Langley, B.C., on Thursday, he went si-lent and just took it all in.
Then, he burst into tears.“I live in a palace,” he said,
his voice quivering with relief after having survived nearly six weeks in a run-down Surrey trailer park without power.
Chalmers, who suffers from multiple mental illnesses in-cluding depression, was pushed to his limit when the landlord, K.B. Properties, failed to hire a health-and-safety co-ordinator for the demolition of the neigh-bouring Beladean Motel.
The demolition crew hit live hydro wires, and ever since then the Beladean Trailer Park has been running on unreliable generators — and even those the landlord failed to provide until the city got involved.
Chalmers wanted to leave, but his leaky 1989 trailer was too old and broken down to be accepted at most other trailer parks.
Realizing how desperate the situation was, his sister, Mari-lyn Chase, started a crowdfund-ing campaign on Fundrazr.com with Metro’s assistance.
Within five days the cam-paign hit its goal of $5,000. Metro then partnered with the
Travelhome trailer dealership in Langley, plus a very generous anonymous donor who heard Chalmers’ story on Classic Rock 101 and offered another $5,000, to buy him a refurbished, family-sized 26-foot trailer.
On Thursday Travelhome staff also surprised Chalmers, who lives on disability, with plenty of home furnishings, such as pots and pans, towels, bedding and gift certificates for groceries.
“I’m overwhelmed, over-joyed, ecstatically happy,” Chal-mers said, before adding he wanted to send a message to the donors across the country
and as far away as Norway who made it all possible.
Chalmers has found a new, quiet trailer park to live in,
and is thrilled that he will be reunited with his beloved shih tzu, Spaghetti. He has been un-able to live with her for the past two years because his old, leaky trailer wasn’t safe for her.
“It means that I’m not total-ly alone,” he said. “The love that that dog shows me is absolutely undying and unconditional.”
Several local politicians, in-cluding two members of prov-incial parliament and Surrey city councillor Barinder Rasode, showed up to the key handover to wish Chalmers well, and to promise him they will continue to fight for harsher penalties for negligent landlords.
“As we head into the winter and you look at serious issues like people not having electri-city or heat, we are working on it right away,” said Rasode.
“We’re hoping in the next couple of weeks that we’ll have a recommendation (on tougher bylaws) from our bylaws de-partment.”
B.c. trailer-park nightmare finally over for one resident‘Overjoyed.’ Stephen Chalmers has a new home thanks to donors from across the country
Stephen Chalmers relaxes in his new 1999 trailer with his dog, Spaghetti, after surviving nearly six weeks in a Surrey, B.C., trailer park with no power.JENNIfER GAuTHIER/METRo
Others still without power
Eight residents with nowhere else to go still live at the Beladean Trailer Park in Sur-rey, which has been running on generators for nearly six weeks since an inadequately supervised motel demolition knocked the power out on Sept. 14.
• Program manager of emergency shelter Hyland House Peter Fedos con-ducts homeless outreach in the area on behalf of B.C. Housing.
• He said the city, the Ministry of Social Develop-ment, and Options Com-munity Services, of which Hyland House is a part, are in constant contact about the situation.
• “Everyone is trying to ease the stress occurring for the residents at the trailer park,” he said.
• “The Hyland House Mobile Outreach team is work-ing with people there to see if we can get them re-housed in collaboration with B.C. Housing and everyone who is at the table supporting us.”
How to donate to tenants who still need help
Metro is continuing to assist with the community’s efforts to help some of the tenants buy new mobile or manufactured homes. To donate to the crowdfunding campaign, visit metronews.ca/newtrailer
KatE WEbbMetro in Vancouver
Chalmers’ message to donors
“I don’t pass out the word love very often, but the amount of love that you people showed me is overwhelming, and for that I thank you and I love you.” Stephen Chalmers
Quoted
“I don’t think people are interested in hearing what politicians have to say about scientific matters. You can ask scientists that.” Wildrose leader Danielle Smith
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Third-quarter earnings
Potash Corp. hit hard by weaker prices, lower salesPotash Corp. is reporting third-quarter earnings of 41 cents per share on $356 million in net earnings.
That’s down from 74 cents per share, or $645 mil-lion, in the same period last year as a result of weaker prices and lower potash sales volumes.
The Saskatoon-based company says offshore in-vestments in Jordan, Chile and Israel contributed $85 million to earnings for the quarter.
Key markets — par-ticularly large buyers in China and India — delayed purchases or were reluctant to accept major shipments against existing contracts.
As a result, shipments from North American producers fell to one of the lowest third-quarter totals in recent history.THE CANADIAN PRESS
While the families of Bangladesh Rana Plaza building collapse victims pay tribute on Thursday, the show goes on in Toronto. At right, a model struts down the runway in a Joe Fresh outfit this week. The Canadian brand, ownedby Loblaw, was produced in the factory. photo on left: Suvra Kanti DaS/the aSSociateD preSS; chriS Young/the canaDian preSS
Loblaw joins Primark in paying out victims
Grocery giant Loblaw Com-panies Ltd. says it will pro-vide long-term financial assistance to the victims and families affected by a deadly factory collapse in Bangladesh in April.
The company said Thurs-
day the compensation will go to those who worked at the New Wave Style factory, which produced clothing for Loblaw’s Joe Fresh cloth-ing line. The company will
also pay three months in wages to workers until the longer-term funds kick in.
The New Wave Style fac-tory was one of five manu-facturing plants in the Dhaka plaza that collapsed, killing more than 1,100 workers on April 24.
Loblaw did not disclose the total compensation amount.
In addition, the company has joined with British clothing retailer Primark to provide financial assistance to workers of all retailers in the factory plaza. THE CANADIAN PRESS
Damage control. After deadly factory collapse in Bangladesh, where Joe Fresh produced cheap clothes, company pledges to help victims
Stepping up
3,600Loblaw pledged: “should the other brands not step forward and join in this funding, we will join Primark and immediately contribute to the payment of three months wages for the approximately 3,600 individuals involved, regardless of the brand apparel that was being produced in their workplace.”
Market Minute
DOLLAR 95.92¢ (-0.38¢)
TSX 13,324.75 (+81.43)
OIL $97.11 US (+25¢)
GOLD $1,350.30 US (+$16.30)
Natural gas: $3.63 US (+1¢) Dow Jones: 15,509.21 (+95.88)
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12 metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013VOICES
President Bill McDonald • Vice-President & Group Publisher, Metro Western Canada Steve Shrout • Editor-in-Chief Charlotte Empey • Deputy Editor Fernando Carneiro • National Deputy Editor, Digital Quin Parker • Managing Editor, Regina Tara Campbell • Managing Editor, News & Business Amber Shortt • Managing Editor, Life & Entertainment Dean Lisk • Sales Manager Kim Kintzle • Distribution Manager: Darryl Hobbins • Vice-President, Sales and Business Ventures Tracy Day • Vice-President, Creative Jeff Smith • Vice-President, Finance Phil Jameson METRO REGINA 1916 Dewdney Avenue Regina, SK S4R 1G9• Telephone: 306-584-2025 • Toll free: 1-877-895-7194 • Fax: 1-888-243-9726 • Advertising: [email protected] • Distribution: [email protected] • News tips: [email protected] • Letters to the Editor: [email protected]
courtesy Jacqueline Gilmore
Sixth sense
“I get the feeling the people in the exiting Winnebago are somehow responsible for what’s happening — and that no good whatsoever is going to come of the next 30 minutes.” Douglas Coupland, Author
Sound
“I was startled when I came across the photo as if I was the one intruding on their silent journey through the neck-deep snow. There is something eerie that we are all fam-iliar with: the way snow dampens or amplifies certain noises around us.”Nonna AroutiounianClarinettist
Touch
“This image shows how important touch is in our world in connecting people.”Maria Franke, Curator at the Toronto Zoo
Sight
“It was fresh and glamourous in an understated way. The portrait made me fall in love with the girl the moment I laid my eyes on her.”Jeanne BekerTV personality and fashionista
Touch
“This photo makes you want to reach out and touch the tiger.”
Maria Franke Curator at the Toronto Zoo
Sixth sense
“It doesn’t take a clairvoyant to tell that the bottom of this lake is filled with at least a dozen bodies in various states of decay, just waiting to float to the surface with their faces pointing towards the moon, at which point they will suddenly smile.”Douglas CouplandAuthor
Smell
“The scent of fresh air on cheeks from the outside of a child is truly the most wonderful scent memory for all of us.”Barb Stegemann Author
Smell
“The water is so pristine you could smell the fresh air and cool water.”Barb Stegemann, Author
courtesy Vincent H. turGeon
courtesy Jowell mandrileJo courtesy Vy nGuyen
courtesy maricel s
courtesy am
elia JoHn
ston
courtesy anGie cHoi
Photo challenge Metro asked readers to submit their best work with the five senses as a theme,
and as an extra challenge — the sixth sense. Here are the 12 Canadian winners as chosen by our panel of celebrity judges. They will now compete for the global prize in each category in addition to being considered for the grand prize —
a trip to Africa —as selected by the public. Visit metrophotochallenge.ca.
courtesy am
elia JoHn
ston
courtesy mark yan
courtesy Vincent H. turGeon courtesy Jowell mandrileJo
courtesy william orsuaSight
“I loved the sense of excitement and
exoticism of the scene. It reminded me that we
never know what fabulous surprises lurk in
urban back alleys.” Jeanne Beker
TV personality and fashionista
Sound
“Upon seeing this photo, I felt as if I was transported to the
space and could hear nothing but the wind grace the ears of the never-ending wheat
field creating that shimmering wispy noise that only nature can fully succeed in making.”
Nonna AroutiounianClarinettist
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13metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013 SCENE
SCENE
Sharability:38
hardeasy
Cameron Diaz and Penélope Cruz are just two parts of the Counselor’s star-studded cast. CONTRIBUTED
Richard: Mark, The Counselor is the feel bad movie of the year. Bleak and hopeless, it’s a crime drama that examines the reasons and consequences of crime instead of focusing on the crime itself. It’s a stylish cau-tionary tale about the worst of human behaviour driven by greed, lust and hubris; a non-action, action movie where most of the fireworks are in McCarthy’s dialogue. Luckily actors like Bardem, Pitt and Fassbender are there to keep the fuse lit. What did you make of it?
Mark: I’m convinced there’s a decent movie embedded in this overstuffed, overwrit-ten film. First, let’s take out all the portentous, existen-tial speeches delivered by even the most tangential characters. Then, we could cut about two-thirds of Mi-chael Fassbender’s pained reaction shots. He looks like he’s got indigestion after be-ing force-fed the script. Oh, and get rid of the opening soft-core scene between him and Penélope Cruz. Then, there might be a grimly sar-donic movie on the order of No Country for Old Men. But as it is, I could only enjoy it for the acting, the scenery, and Bardem’s collection of 80’s Versace shirts.
RC: I liked it more than you, but only by one of Javier Bar-
dem’s crazy Brian Grazier hairs. Talky to the extreme, the entire movie is built around dialogue that sounds like it flowed from the hard-est boiled crime writer out there, which I guess Mc-Carthy is now that Elmore Leonard is working from his celestial typewriter. Catch phrases abound — “You don’t know someone until you know what they want,” for example — but it is wordy. Sometimes brilliantly so, but the pacing, particularly in the first hour, will be thought of as hypnotic by some, slow by others. My main disappoint-ment was Diaz, who I didn’t think could deliver the dia-logue. You?
MB: Diaz was OK because she looked the part and that got her through some clunky
line readings. But back to the script... the plot is revealed slowly, in layers, which will not be to everyone’s liking. You just know you are in the company of some very bad people; you’re just not sure why. This mysterious-ness kept me interested for awhile; then I started counting the speaking parts and calculating the budget. Even at scale, it must have mounted up. And semi-famous actors keep showing up for only one scene, never to be seen again, like Ruben Blades. And Richard, was that John Leguizamo in an uncredited scene?
RC: Yes! It’s cameo city!
MB: Fits right in with the movie’s aesthetic of more is more.
Less talk, more actionThe Counselor. Existential speeches bog down a promising dark crime drama
Reel Guys
RICHARD CROUSE AND MARK BRESLIN
Synopsis
In Cormac ‘No Country for Old Men’ McCarthy’s screenwrit-ing debut, The Counselor, he tells a gritty story of a greedy lawyer (Michael Fassbender) in over his head after dipping his toe in the narcotics trade with drug lord Reiner (Javier Bardem) and his sociopath girlfriend Malkina (Cameron Diaz). When the deal — smug-gling 625 kilos of cocaine from Mexico to Chicago — goes south, the counselor fi nds his life swirling out of control. Spiraling around this grim vortex are womanizing mid-dle-man Westray (Brad Pitt), prison inmate Ruth (Rosie Perez) and the counselor’s long-distance girlfriend Laura (Penélope Cruz).
• Richard: •••••
• Mark: •••••
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14 metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013scene
Southland Mall3025 Gordon Rd.
Captain Phillips (PG) Fri 6:55-9:50 Sat-Sun 12:50-3:50-6:55-9:50 Mon-Thu 5:20-8:15 Star & Strollers Screening Wed 1 Carrie (14A) Fri 7:30-10:20 Sat-Sun 1:25-4:40-7:30-10:20 Mon-Tue 6:05-8:35 Wed 1:20-6:05-8:35 Thu 6:05-8:35 Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 (G) Sat-Sun 2 Mon-Tue 5:30 Wed 1:35-5:30 Thu 5:30 Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 3D (G) Fri 7:35-9:55 Sat-Sun 5-7:35-9:55 Mon-Thu 7:45 Don Jon (18A) Fri-Sun 7:50-10:05 Mon-Thu 8:20 Enough Said (PG) Sat-Sun 1:55-4:50 Mon-Tue 5:55 Wed 1:25-5:55 Thu 5:55 The Fifth Estate (PG) Fri 7-9:50 Sat-Sun 1:15-4:10-7-9:50 Mon-Thu 5:25-8:15 Star & Strollers Screening Wed 1 Gravity 3D (PG) Fri 8-10:15 Sat-Sun 1:45-5:10-8-10:15 Mon-Tue 6-8:40 Wed 1:10-6-8:40 Thu 6-8:40 Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa (14A) No Passes Fri 7:20-9:40 No Passes Sat-Sun 1:40-4:30-7:20-9:40 No Passes Mon-Tue 5:45-8:05 No Passes Wed 1:40-5:45-8:05 No Passes Thu 5:45-8:05 Lee Daniels’ The Butler (PG) Fri 7:10-10 Sat-Sun 1-4:05-7:10-10 Mon-Tue 5:35-8:25 Wed 1:30-5:35-8:25 Thu 5:35-8:25 She’s the One (PG) Fri 6:50-9:30 Sat-Sun 1:10-4-6:50-9:30 Mon-Tue 5:50-8:30 Wed 1:15-5:50-8:30 Thu 5:50-8:30 We’re the Millers (14A) Fri 7:40-10:10 Sat-Sun 1:30-4:20-7:40-10:10 Mon-Tue 5:40-8:10 Wed 1:45-5:40-8:10 Thu 5:40-8:10
Galaxy Cinemas Normanview S.C.
420 McCarthy Blvd. N. UnitCaptain Phillips (PG) Fri 4-7-10 Sat 12:55-
4-7-10 Sun 1-4-7-10 Mon 7:10-10:10 Tue-Thu 7:05-10:05 Carrie (14A) Fri 5:20-7:50-10:30 Sat 12:20-2:50-5:20-7:50-10:30 Sun 2:40-5:10-7:45-10:15 Mon 7:25-9:20 Tue-Thu 7:50-10:15 Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 (G) Sat 11:30 Sun 1:55 Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 3D (G) Fri 4:20-6:45-9:10 Sat 1:55-4:20-6:45-9:10 Sun 4:20-6:45-9:10 Mon-Wed 6:55-9:25 Thu 6:55-10:10 Corpse Bride (PG) Sat 11 The Counselor (14A) No Passes Fri 4:40-7:30-10:20 No Passes Sat 11:05-1:50-4:40-7:30-10:20 No Passes Sun 1:50-4:40-7:30-10:15 No Passes Mon-Thu 7:35-10:20 Dead Before Dawn 3D (14A) Wed 7:30 Ender’s Game (PG) Thu 9:20 Escape Plan (14A) Fri 4:35-7:35-10:15 Sat 1:40-4:35-7:35-10:15 Sun 1:10-3:20-7:20-9:45 Mon-Thu 7:20-10 The Evil Dead (14A) Mon 7 Gravity 3D (PG) Fri 4:55-7:15-9:40 Sat 12:15-2:35-4:55-7:15-9:40 Sun 2:35-4:55-7:15-9:40 Mon 7:50-10:05 Tue-Thu 7:25-9:45 Insidious: Chapter 2 (14A) Fri-Sat 10:25 Sun 9:50 Mon-Thu 9:55 Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa (14A) No Passes Fri 4:50-7:10-9:35 No Passes Sat 12-2:20-4:50-7:10-9:35 No Passes Sun 2:25-4:45-7:05-9:25 No Passes Mon-Thu 7-9:15 No Passes Fri 5:50-8:10-10:35 No Passes Sat 1-3:20-5:50-8:10-10:35 No Passes Sun 1:05-3:25-5:45-8:05-10:20 No Passes Mon 8-10:15 No Passes Tue-Thu 8-10:20 The Metropolitan Opera: The Nose (STC) Sat 10:55 Prisoners (14A) Fri 6:50-10:10 Sat 12:10-3:30-6:50-10:10 Sun 3:55-10:10 Mon 9:50 Tue 6:50-10:10 Wed 9:50 Thu 6:50 Runner Runner (14A) Fri 5:35-7:55 Sat 12:50-3:15-5:35-7:55 Sun 2:55-5:15-7:35
Mon-Thu 7:40 WWE Hell in a Cell - 2013 (STC) Sun 6
Kramer IMAX Theatre2903 Powerhouse Dr.
Elysium: The IMAX Experience (14A) Fri 1-3:30 Sat-Sun 1-7 Flying Monsters 3D (STC) Fri 7 Sat-Sun 4:45 Rocky Mountain Express (STC) Sat-Sun 3:30
Golden Mile3806 Albert St.
The Conjuring (14A) Fri-Thu 1:15-3:50-6:35-9:20 Despicable Me 2 (G) Fri-Thu 1:10-3:50-6:40-9:05 The Family (14A) Fri-Sat 1:10-3:45-6:30-9:10 Sun 3:45-6:30-9:10 Mon-Thu 1:10-3:45-6:30-9:10 Grown Ups 2 (PG) Fri-Thu 1:20-3:55-6:50-9:20 In a World... (PG) Fri-Thu 4:05-9:10 Kick-Ass 2 (14A) Fri-Thu 9:25 Monsters University (G) Fri-Thu 1:25-4:05-6:45 Parkland (PG) Fri-Thu 1:30-7 Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters (PG) Fri-Thu 1:10-3:45-6:35-9:15 The Smurfs 2 (G) Fri-Thu 1:15-4-6:50 The Wolverine (14A) Fri-Thu 9:15
Regina Public Library Film Theatre, 23 11 12th Ave.
Axe Giant: The Wrath of Paul Bunyan (STC) Thu 9 Foodie Film Fest (STC) Sat 7 Jiro Dreams of Sushi (G) Fri 9 Sun 7 Mussels in Love (STC) Fri 7 Sun 9 No Films Showing Today (STC) Mon-Tue The Rocky Horror Picture Show (PG) Wed 7 Stridulum (STC) Thu 7
These pages cover movie sTarT Times from fri., ocT. 25 To Thurs., ocT. 31 Times are subjecT To change.
Action/Drama
All is LostDirector. J.C. Chandor
Stars. Robert Redford
• • • • •
Robert Redford plays a sailor on a solo yacht trip on the Indian Ocean. When his boat collides with an abandoned shipping container he must use all his resources to survive. The actor is in every frame of this film and although he only speaks a dozen or so lines, manages to create a compelling persona of a man hell bent on sur-vival against increasingly difficult odds. All is Lost is more audacious than it is entertaining, but it showcases Redford’s effort-less star power. Alone and figuratively naked, he holds the screen for the entire 106 minutes. richard crouse
Comedy
Bad GrandpaDirector. Jeff Tremaine
Stars. Johnny Knoxville, Jackson Nicoll
• • • • •
It’s juvenile and tasteless but let’s not pretend the stunts the Jackass team cook up aren’t daring. In Bad Grandpa, Jackass mastermind Johnny Knoxville spins a narrative into the mix, playing a sex-obsessed octogenarian who teams up with his pre-pubescent grandson to pull provocative pranks on the unsuspecting public. Although the “story” ultimately suffers on behalf of the gags, Knoxville and young Jackson Nicoll are extraordinary, especially when they push buttons in a little miss princess pageant. sTeve gow
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15metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013 DISH
The Word
50 Shades has its brand new Christian Grey: Jamie DornanWait, Jamie who?Dornan.
Oh, from Game of Thrones?No, from Once Upon a Time, that TV series with fairy tale characters. He played the Hunstman in the Enchanted Forest and Sheriff Graham in Storybrooke, the show’s alternative universe.
Where else have I seen him?Possibly Marie Antoinette, if you were one of the six people who saw that. Or from magazine ads. He was a Cal-vin Klein model and the face (and body) of Dior Homme. But British audiences know the 31-year-old as the serial
killer on The Fall, a hit BBC series starring Gillian Ander-son. And gossip fans know him as Keira Knightley’s ex. They dated for two years.
So how’d he get cast as Chris-tian Grey?He has abs. He has experi-ence (sexing up the lady mayor on Once). And he probably came cheap. Sons
of Anarchy star Charlie Hunnam, who has a higher profile, was reportedly to be paid only $125,000 before he dropped out. Expect Dornan to get that or less.
Word is he’s Northern Irish. Does he have a sexy accent?A bit.
So is he single?Alas, no. He’s married to singer Amelia Warner, who records under the name Slow Moving Millie. They’re expecting a child soon.
And does Twitter approve?It’s early. Fans are probably still busy Google Image-searching his name to form an opinion. But the popular @BieberSuperArmy account was among the first to weigh in with: “This will be Chris-tian Grey, his name is Jamie Dornan, let’s take a moment to thank God.” metro
METRO DISH OUR TAKE ON THE WORLD OF CELEBRITIES
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16 metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013WEEKEND
LIFE
BASIC FINANCIALMANAGEMENT WORKSHOP
• Budgeting • Savings and Investing • Financial Planning • Needs and Wants • Protecting yourself (identify theft, scam, etc.) • Credit and Debt Management
Course Schedule: November 5 - 10, 2013 February 11 - March 18, 2004
Each class is offered once a week for 6 weeks, 2 hours per class There is no cost to attend this course, and participants may be provided with transportion assistance
FOR MORE INFORMATION AND TO APPLY FOR THE PROGRAM PLEASE CONTACT:791-653 xt. 234 or [email protected]
The Online
Workshop is
available 24/7 on
the Internet
Liquid Assets
Wash down Halloween
For winemakers, fall is all
about harvesting. Brewers, meanwhile, turn to the creation of limited edition craft ales — many of which take their names and flavour cues from the season.
Local brews are hotter than Hades, with their fans applying a reverence for their stylistic differences that’s argu-ably surpassed only by those
who appreciate fine wine.What gives beer the edge
when it comes to the “cool fac-tor” is that consumer attitude regarding adding flavour ele-ments to beer is much more open minded than those of their counterparts in the wine world.
That gives breweries carte blanche to add inspiration to
their autumn ales, with many focusing on October’s official gourd — the pumpkin.
The output of most small, regional breweries is sold close to home, so visit them, or hit your local retailer, to see what’s being brewed in your own backyard.
Montreal’s McAuslan Brew-ing’s St-Ambroise Citrouille
The Great Pumpkin Ale (4 by 341 ml, $9.95 - $10.95) is avail-able across the country.
Infused with cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, clove and, of course, pumpkin, it balances its vegetal expression with an undercurrent of subtle spice. PRICES REFLECT THE RANGE ACROSS THE COUNTRY. SOME PRODUCTS MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE IN ALL PROVINCES.
LIQUID ASSETSPeter Rockwell@[email protected]
By the time you’ve carved an army of pumpkins, costumed your pint-sized ghouls and purchased bushels of candy, time for cooking up spooky grub may be in short supply. These treats don’t require much time or energy so you can still do the Monster Mash.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/HALLOWEEN SPOOKTACULAR BY MATTHEW MEAD
We all scream for scary treats
Vampire Doughnuts
Arrange a stack of honey-glazed doughnuts on a large serving tray. Use bamboo skewer to poke two fang holes in top of each, then dribble red gel food colour-ing coming out of the holes and down the sides of the doughnuts.
Goblet GraveHead to craft store and pick up a silicone skull and crossbones ice cube tray. Fill each cavity with plain Greek yogurt, then use offset spatula to smooth the tops and remove any excess yogurt from the tray. Freeze until solid (overnight is best).Let the cubes soften at room temperature for several minutes, then remove the ice cubes from the tray. Arrange cubes in a small bowl set over a larger bowl of crushed ice. Serve alongside goblets of grape juice.
Doughnut SpiderSet a chocolate glazed doughnut in centre of large serving platter. Place chocolate cake doughnut against it. Glazed doughnut forms spider’s body; the cake doughnut is the head. Place 2 chocolate doughnut holes on top of cake doughnut to form eyes (use a dab of frosting to hold them in place). Top each doughnut hole with dab of white frosting, then gently press a chocolate chip into each.For legs, arrange three sets of three chocolate doughnut holes coming off of each side of the “body” doughnut.
Candied Apple Craniums
Wash and dry 6 apples. Insert large candy stick. Set aside. Place 12 ounces of white candy melts in heat-safe bowl. Set bowl over saucepan of simmering water. Stir until the candy has melted. Dunk each apple into candy melts, spooning up sides and over the top for an even coating. Set coated apples up-right on waxed paper. Use a rolling pin to roll out Tootsie Rolls until flat. Use a paring knife to cut round eyes and a heart-shaped nose from the flattened
Tootsie Rolls. “Glue” the eyes and nose (mount the “heart” upside down) to the apples using piping gel or a bit of purchased frosting.
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17metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013 SPORTS
SPORTS
Roughriders running back Kory Sheets speaks to reporters at Mosaic Stadium on Thursday. MARCO VIGLIOTTI/METRO
Sheets stands by Cornish comments
The Saskatchewan Rough-riders head west Saturday night to face the league-leading Calgary Stamped-ers at McMahon Stadium in what could be the CFL’s most
high-profile regular-season matchup.
But in a game touted as a possible West Division final preview, most of the focus has been on the clash be-tween the teams’ running backs after Roughriders star Kory Sheets said this week that he’s a superior talent to Stamps counterpart Jon Cor-nish.
“He’s going to have a good game or I’m going to have a good game,” Sheets said on Thursday at Mosaic Stadium about the rivalry between the two running backs, noting he isn’t concerned with any re-
action from Cornish, who has mostly remained mum.
“What they (the Stamped-ers) got going on over there is not going to affect me,” he added. “I make sure I focus on here, I focus on the Saskatch-ewan Roughriders.”
After snapping a four-game losing streak earlier this month, the Riders have won their last three games, including a 35-14 victory at home over the B.C. Lions last weekend.
The Stamps have kept pace, however, stringing together a four-game win-ning streak of their own.
Something has to give on Saturday in Calgary.
“It’s going to be a big game,” Riders head coach Corey Chamblin said of the matchup.
“Like I told the guys, I don’t think I need to hype you up (to face the Stamped-ers).”
With a victory, the Riders could still catch the Stamps for first place in the West — if they beat Edmonton in their last regular-season game next weekend and Calgary falls to B.C.
Kickoff on Saturday is at 5 p.m.
CFL. With West supremacy on the line, Riders running back says he’s focused on his own game
Morgan Rielly will stay with the Leafs beyond this weekend when they facethe Blue Jackets Friday and the Penguins Saturday. CLAUS ANDERSEN/GETTY IMAGES
Young Leafs defender staying in bigsMorgan Rielly is looking for a place to live and a roommate.
The Maple Leafs’ prized rookie defenceman, all of 19, got the word Thursday mor-ning that he had made the team and won’t be returning to the Moose Jaw Warriors. Or, more to the point, the team was going to keep him past the nine-game tryout teenagers get without burning the first year of their three-year entry-level contract.
“It’s a pretty good feeling,” said Rielly. “But I have a lot left to prove. I have to keep work-
ing hard and keep getting bet-ter.”
The Leafs have asked Rielly to get a roommate, rather than live on his own.
“We would like him to find a roommate and move in with somebody,” said Carlyle. “We feel it’s imperative that a young player, 19 years old, live with somebody.”
Sidney Crosby lived with Mario Lemieux. Right now, Nathan MacKinnon is living with J-S Giguere in Colorado. With the Leafs, Tyler Bozak and Phil Kessel are roomies.
Rielly hadn’t asked anyone yet Thursday. “I don’t want to live with any old guys,” he said. “Wait and see what happens.”TORSTAR NEWS SERVICE
MARCO [email protected]
Quoted
“We’re not guarantee-ing the player is going to be here the rest of the year.”Leafs coach Randy Carlyle. If Rielly plays in 40 games this season he can speed up his eligibil-ity towards unrestricted free agency to age 26.
John Scott
Sabres’ tough guy suspendedBuffalo Sabres enforcer John Scott was suspended indefinitely by the NHL on Thursday pending a disciplinary hearing for a blindside hit to the head that levelled Boston Bruins forward Loui Eriksson.
Scott has been given the opportunity to attend an in-person hearing, which has not yet been scheduled. The hearing is offered when a suspension has the potential to exceed five games. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Pekka Rinne
Goalie out with tragic hip infection Predators goaltender Pekka Rinne will miss at least four weeks after he has another procedure on his surgically repaired hip to clear up an infection.
The Predators an-nounced Thursday that Rinne was set for arthro-scopic surgery later in the day. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Who you calling greasy?
“If you know Jon Lester, he sweats like a pig and he needs
rosin. I don’t see this as anything at all.”Boston Red Sox manager John Farrell said there was nothing but rosin — which is legal — on Jon Lester’s glove when he beat the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of the World Series. A Cardinals minor-leaguer posted a screen shot on Twitter show-ing a green substance on Les-ter’s glove. Go to metronews.ca for coverage of Thursday night’s Game 2 in Boston.
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18 metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013SPORTS
HON14344_05 P&S Winter Campaign - Newsprint EN – HON14344_05J14344_05
14344_05
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METROHalifax, Ottawa, Toronto, London, Winnipeg, Regina, Saskatoon, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver
Should you fi nd a lower advertised price within thirty (30) days before or after the purchase of qualifying tires from a participating Honda dealer, present the Honda dealer where you purchased or intend to purchase qualifying tires with proof of the advertised price and they will match the lower price. Off er does not apply to quotes or advertised prices from outside Canada, online auction sites, wholesalers, online retailers that have no physical stores in Canada, closeout/liquidation/clearance sales, advertising errors or misprints or restricted off ers. Subject to stock availability. Qualifying tires must be purchased and installed at a participating Honda dealer in Canada. Advertised item must: (i) be an in-stock brand, excluding Bridgestone, be of the same brand, size, model, sidewall, speed and load rating; (ii) be sold through an authorized retailer located in Canada; and (iii) be in Canadian dollars. Lowest Price Guarantee does not apply to costs associated with labour, valve stems, mounting/balancing, disposal fees and taxes. Some restrictions apply. Off er subject to change or cancellation without notice. Ask your Honda dealer for details.
Low prices for low temperatures.
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HON14344_05J.indd 1 2013-10-07 11:49 AM
Jake Virtanen is not recogniz-able to every Canadian junior hockey fan, but NHL scouts def-initely know his name.
The 17-year-old Calgary Hit-men winger is expected to be among the top selections in next summer’s NHL draft.
“I’d be very surprised if he wasn’t,” said Washington Cap-itals Western scout Terry Rich-ardson. “In my opinion, he’s a top 10, top 15 for sure. I don’t
get to see all the kids, of course, actually in Eastern Canada, but this kid’s good. He’s big. Strong. He’s what everybody wants.”
Virtanen, a New Westmin-ster, B.C., native who grew up in the Fraser Valley communities of Langley, and Abbottsford, is helping his cause this week, as he’s a big reason why the Hit-men remain in first place in the WHL’s Western Conference.
He has five goals in his last
four games and recorded his first WHL hat trick in a 6-3 win over the Lethbridge Hurricanes on Sunday. With eight goals and four assists in 14 games, he continues to progress from a rookie season in which he gen-erated 16 goals and 18 helpers.
“My 16-year-old season was pretty good,” said Virtanen, who stands six-foot-one and weighs 210 pounds.
“I finished strong. I had a
strong second half of the sea-son. I get drafted this year, so (the draft) is in the back of my mind. It’s obviously one of the biggest years of my life.
“So I’m really looking for-ward to (doing well) this season. It’s a huge challenge for me.”
Virtanen has not set any specific goals while he attempts to help the Hitmen reach the Memorial Cup, though he’s hopeful for a chance to play
for Canada’s entry at the world junior tournament during the Christmas holidays. But he is eager to live up to his pre-draft billing.
NHL Central Scouting has listed him as a player to watch, ranking him among only seven WHL A-level skaters. Mean-while, International Scouting Services has ranked him No. 4 on its list of top 2014 prospects.the canadian press
climbing the rankings. hitmen winger shooting for big draft year
Jake Virtanen Brad Watson/Calgary
Hitmen/Ho-tHe Canadian Press
Heat forward LeBron James took time to review last season’s playoff errorswhile on vacation with his family. maddie meyer/getty images
King James insists he’s still got plenty of work to do
LeBron James was desperate for some time away from basket-ball, so he packed up his family for a vacation this summer. Sun and sand. Rest and relaxation.
Pen and paper, too.It didn’t take long until
the NBA’s MVP took a break from taking a break.
C o n -s i d e r e d the best p layer in the
game, James remains obsessed with getting better. That’s why, on the verge of starting his 11th professional season and fourth with the Miami Heat, James fully expects the 2013-14 campaign to be his best one yet. He knows there’s no shortage of challengers aiming to knock both him and his team off their respective mountaintops.
“I’m nitpicking now, ob-viously, at my
own game,” James said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I want that. I want to be uncomfortable. I want to continue to push the envelope and get to a point where I feel like I’m trying to master every-thing. Now, I can’t be the great-est at everything. There’s better rebounders than me. There’s better passers than me. There’s better scorers than me. But I want to be able to maximize my potential in everything I
do.”On vacation, and with a notepad at
his side, James broke down
every Heat p layoff
game, every
mo-
ment of post-season matchups last season against Milwaukee, Chicago, Indiana and San An-tonio.
“I push myself,” James said. “There are ways I can get better. I would write down the exact time, the exact play, the exact quarter, the plays where I could have did something better.”
At six-foot-eight and 250 pounds, a marriage of size and speed that many covet, the real-ity is that James probably is not going to get much better phys-ically. Where James is getting better, those around him say, is in the thinking department.the associated press
NBA. League’s MVP says he took time out of busy summer to develop basketball IQ
Complete player
“Some skills may get sharper, but where his growth is going to take off ... is mentally.”Heat forward Shane Battier, on the development of James’ basketball IQ
NBA
Raptors extend contracts of Ross, ValanciunasThe Toronto Raptors have exercised the third-year team options on the entry-level contracts of centre Jonas Valanciunas and guard Terrence Ross, extending the deals through the 2014-15 season.
The Raptors had until next Thursday to exercise their option on both players.
The seven-foot, 257-pound Valanciunas joined the Raptors after being selected fifth overall in the 2011 NBA draft and spending the 2011-12 season playing overseas.
He was named to the
2012-13 NBA all-rookie second team after finishing the year ranked third among rookies in rebounds (6.0), blocks (1.26) and field goal percentage (.557). Valan-ciunas also ranked seventh among rookies averaging 8.9 points in 23.9 minutes.
A native of Utena, Lithu-ania, Valanciunas became the fifth rookie in franchise history to start on opening night.
Ross, a six-foot-seven, 197 pound forward, was selected eighth overall in the 2012 draft. Last season he posted averages of 6.4 points, 2.0 rebounds and 17.0 minutes in 73 games. He shot .332 (65-196) from beyond the arc and finished fifth among rookies in made three-pointers.the canadian press
NFL
Manning back after injury scareFantasy football owners and Denver Broncos fans can rest easy: Peyton Man-ning is back.
Manning returned to practice Thursday after the Broncos held him out a day earlier because of a minor ankle injury he sustained in Denver’s loss at Indianap-olis last weekend.
It was his first skipped practice since joining the Broncos 19 months ago, the result of the pounding he took in his homecoming at Indianapolis last weekend along with the coaches’ desire to give him a day’s rest as the midpoint of the season approaches. the associated press
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19metronews.caWEEKEND, October 25-27, 2013 PLAY
LOCATION: Classes are held at ACERT
at 425 Winnipeg Street (across from the Regina Food Bank)
FOR MORE INFORMATION AND TO APPLY FOR THE PROGRAM, PLEASE CONTACT:
791-6533 ex.231 or [email protected]
WORKPLACE LITERACY PROGRAM FOR NEWCOMERSThis program assists newcomers
(refugees & immigrants) to enhance their employment skills through workplace literacy development.
Program content includes:• Employability & Essential
Skills• Resumes/Cover Letters
• Job Searching• Networking & Employer
Connections
SCHEDULE:Dates – October 29, 2013 – February 14, 2014Days & Times – Monday to Friday 9am-3pm
Cost: There is no tuition cost to attend, materials and supplies are provided.
rodpedersen.com
Regina Sports news first
CANADA`S CANADA`S CANADA`S CANADA`S CANADA`S CANADA`S ###1 SPORTS1 SPORTS1 SPORTS
Across1. __ __ the land6. Gomer Pyle’s mil. division10. Wild swine14. Brenda __, Re-porter (Classic comic strip)15. Arctic seabird16. Majestic17. Bing Crosby/Bob Hope comedy, “Road __ __” (1947)18. Catherine __ (Henry VIII’s sixth/last wife)19. Moon goddess20. ‘Spiders from Mars’ fellow in 1970s music: 2 wds.23. Peer Gynt’s mother24. Homer Simpson’s outbursts!25. The Queen, less formally28. “Be quiet!” ...in a library, variantly31. Paul Gauguin’s painting retreat35. “Survivor” strat-egies38. Inflexibility-after-death, __ mortis39. __ race40. Important industry42. Previously, poetic-ally43. Hidden away loot45. Leonard Cohen’s “First We Take __”47. Birkin bag com-
pany49. Music style50. South Dakota dam51. To, archaically53. Apiece55. “Hair” snippet: “They’ll be __ __ __ __ when they see me in my toga...”61. Town, colloquially
62. Cabbage: French63. Provide with weapons65. Seed’s protector66. WKRP worker67. Mick Jagger, for one68. Not polite69. Coastal birds [var. sp.]70. Empty apartment
sign: 2 wds.Down1. Items-on-paper, e.g.2. _ __ _ (Totality)3. World __ _, 1914 to 19184. Paper crafting5. Some amphibians6. Mail org. in The States
7. Character in Paula Abdul’s “Opposites Attract” video, MC __ Kat8. Skincare company9. Bugs Bunny’s veggie10. Aykroyd’s “The Blues Brothers” (1980) co-headliner11. Musical compos-
ition12. “If it __ broke...”13. Electronics co.21. Positive/negative22. “__ & Greg”25. Wetland26. Off to _ __ start (Held up)27. Chapel area29. Cleanser’s soapy target30. “Don’t you love __ __ she’s walking out the door...” - The Doors32. “Can __ Witness” by Marvin Gaye: 3 wds.33. Text in Judaism34. Ms. Ryan (Granny on “The Beverly Hillbillies”)36. The Parthenon goddess37. Kitchen part41. Form44. Import illegally46. It used to be called York48. Groucho Marx fa-cial feature, hip-style52. Additional54. Discharge55. Specialist56. Dry57. Of two minds58. Areas of action59. British prison60. River in Nor-mandy61. Tavern64. Convened
Horoscopes
Aries March 21 - April 20 You may wish that everything in your life was perfect but if it was, you would soon grow bored. With that in mind, don’t get angry if little things go wrong today.
Taurus April 21 - May 21 If you have something important to say, say it now if you want your words to have impact. However, if you’re critical of someone, they might be critical of you too.
Gemini May 22 - June 21 If you know what you want today, you will find a way to get it, even though you may have no idea how to get from here to there. Neptune, planet of imagination, will guide your thoughts and your footsteps.
Cancer June 22 - July 23 Give yourself a break today, not least because the Sun in your fellow Water sign of Scorpio is going to bring remarkable new opportunities your way. The more rest you get now, the more you will accomplish later.
Leo July 24 - Aug. 23 The most important thing now is that you keep your enthusi-asm level high. The planets warn that you may be tempted to take life a bit too easy and if you do then your plans will come to nothing.
Virgo Aug. 24 - Sept. 23 At times throughout the day you will wonder if you can believe what you see and hear. But, it’s true: some people are behaving so badly you must have nothing to do with them.
Libra Sept. 24 - Oct. 23 You will only have time to act today. That applies especially to work and financial matters where you must follow your instincts — even if what they tell you seems strange.
Scorpio Oct. 24 - Nov. 22 Resist the urge to look back when you should be looking forward. The Sun in your sign means you can start anew, no matter how many issues are nagging at you from the past.
Sagittarius Nov. 23 - Dec. 21 You may be concerned that you did not work hard enough to iron out a relationship problem and, yes, maybe that is true, but it’s too late now. The chance will come again when the time is right. Stop worrying.
Capricorn Dec. 22 - Jan. 20 Why do people seem to think and speak and act in slow motion? Whatever the reason, you have to live in the same world, so try not to get uptight. Think of your blood pressure.
Aquarius Jan. 21 - Feb. 19 Your mind may be alive with possibilities but those around you seem dead to your good ideas. You don’t need their help or approval. You can get where you need to be on your own.
Pisces Feb. 20 - March 20 OK, so you made a mistake. The important question is: what did you learn from it? One thing, for sure, is that failure isn’t as painful as you thought it would be. Pick yourself up, brush yourself of and keep going. SALLY BROMPTON
Yesterday’s Crossword
Crossword: Canada Across and Down BY KeLLY ANN BuchANANSee today’s answers at metronews.ca/answers.
Yesterday’s Sudoku
How to playFill in the grid, so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1-9. There is no math involved.
Sudoku
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306.522.6612 • bennettdunlopford.com770 Broad Street, Regina
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