WHOOPIE! A HARVEST TWIST
ON AN OLDFAVOURITE {page 17}
OTTAWA
News worth sharing.
Wednesday, October 5,2011www.metronews.ca
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A man accused of selling home-renovation goods and servicesthat he never delivered is beingsought by police.
Ottawa police say the manwent to victims’ homes, gavework estimates and took depositsand then either left withoutdoing the work or failed to fin-ish it.
Peel police say the man hasbeen arrested in the past for sim-ilar activities.
In Ottawa, the man publicizedhis services with flyers offeringsurprisingly good deals, which iswhat caught the attention of
Orleans resident Jacques Boyer.“I purchased a door,” Boyer
said. “Basically, I signed a contractand the delivery was to take placein August. In the beginning of Sep-tember I had no news from thecompany. I called them up andfound the phone was always offthe hook.”
Boyer did an Internet searchand found other complaints aboutthe man and his companies. Helodged a complaint with the Bet-ter Business Bureau, but now he’sgoing to the police, he said.
Charles Soberano, 38, is want-ed on 10 counts of fraud. He oper-ated companies H20 Waterproof-ing Inc., Canadian Solar EnergySolutions and Patterned ConcreteSolutions, Ottawa police say.
Warrant out for contractor Man arrested on similar charges in Peel: Police
WPIX11-TV NEWS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
One dead as copter plunges into East River
Chopper. Down
Above: Rescue workers pull a woman from the East River in New York after the helicopter she was travelling
in crashed yesterday. Eyewitnesses said the copter lifted about 7.6 metres off the ground before it dropped
into the water with surprisingly little splash. One person was killed and three were injured.
Inset: The copter is pulled out of the river.
JESSICA [email protected]
DREAM CRUISE SLIP-SLIDING INTO
THE WORLD OF DISNEY {page 15}
OCCUPIED ZONELOCAL ACTIVISTSPLAN ANTI-GREEDDEMO {page 3}
Home reno horror
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03metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011news: ottawa
St. Laurent Centre & Rideau CentreOttawa, ON
St. Laurent CentreBayshore Shopping Centre
Carlingwood Mall
For the Month of OctoberReceive a free PANDORA pink leather travel box (a $48 CAD retail value)
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As the Occupy Wall Streetdemonstrations continueinto their third week inNew York, plans are under-way to bring similar acts ofcivil disobedience to Ot-tawa.
Hundreds of New York-ers have been camping outin Manhattan’s financialdistrict to demonstrateagainst corporate greed,global warming, social in-equality and other griev-ances.
More than 700 were re-cently arrested Saturday asthey confronted police dur-ing a march on the Brook-lyn Bridge.
Similar demonstrationsare starting to spreadthrough the U.S. and othercountries, including Cana-da. Demonstrations are slat-ed for Toronto, Vancouver,
Montreal, and Ottawaamong other cities on Oct.15.
A representative identi-fied as Kevin D. from thegroup Occupy Ottawa sentMetro an email saying ameeting will be held todayto discuss a plan of action.
He wouldn’t explain thegroup’s demands, but saidthose details would be pro-vided following Thursday’smeeting.
“The support for this ac-tion in Ottawa has beenoverwhelming,” wroteKevin D. on the OccupyTo-gether.org website Monday.
“The demonstrations ofnon violent civil disobedi-ence across the U.S havecreated an unprecedentedopportunity for further ac-tion to address the fact thatthe current economic andpolitical system is notworking.” WITH FILES FROM THE CANADIANPRESS
Protesters plan Ottawa ralliesProtesters walk onto New York’s Brooklyn Bridge before police began making arrests during
Saturday’s march by Occupy Wall Street. Similar protests are being planned here in Ottawa.
STEPHANIE KEITH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Representative from Occupy Ottawa says meeting tomorrow willsee discussion on plan of action
Earnscliffe, the official residence of the British High
Commissioner, is pictured in this August 2007 photo.
JOHN JOHNSTON/FLICKR
Ottawa firefighters foughtto control a blaze lastnight at the former homeof Prime Minister Sir JohnA. Macdonald, now theresidence of the BritishHigh Commissioner.
“We’re working aggres-sively to contain the fireto the attic and we’vebrought in extra crews tosalvage and remove valu-ables,” said Ottawa Fire
Services spokesman MarcMessier.
He said the call toemergency services camein at 7:39 and from analarm company and therewere four adults home atthe time.
“Everyone is safe, therewere no injuries,” Messiersaid. He said that sincefires typically moveupward it should be possi-ble to keep the blaze tothe attic of the home. He
said there was no word onthe cause of the fire.
The building has beenthe official residence ofthe British High Commis-sioner since 1930.
The Victorian mansionwas built in 1857 and wasMacdonald’s home from1883 to 1891. WITH FILES FROM CANADIAN PRESS
SEAN [email protected]
Crews fight blaze at British High Commissioner’s home
To scan 2D barcodes inMetro, download thefree ScanLife app at2dscan.com.
On the web atmetronews.ca
The federal Liberals say thegovernmentneeds to fightharder againstmentalillness and suicide. Video atmetronews.ca/video
Cut down on your cellphoneuse — that's an order from
Health Canada. Scanthe code for the story.
For more local newsvisit metronews.ca/Ottawa
metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
04 news: ottawa
Every September, Shoppers Drug Mart® stores across Canada
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Santa Claus isn’t visitingthe malls yet, and you prob-ably haven’t hung up yourChristmas lights — but Ot-tawa charities need yourdonations now to makesure there will be enoughfood to go around thisChristmas and all winter.
This weekend, the Shar-ing and Caring Exchange ishosting Ottawa’s BiggestBake Sale at the BillingsBridge Shopping Centre,which raises money for theannual Christmas Ex-
change.“Last year, it was the
busiest Christmas thatwe’ve had,” said MarilynMatheson, executive direc-tor of the program. Morethan 25,000 people re-ceived Christmas assis-tance, including 11,573children and 2,901 seniors.
When it gets colder thecost of living goes up andmore people turn to thefood bank, said Peter Tilley,executive director of theOttawa Food Bank.
The Thanks For Givingfood drive runs at Metro,Loblaws, Your IndependentGrocer and the WestboroSuperstore this weekendand the first weekend inNovember and December.
JESSICA SMITH
Give like Christmas on Thanksgiving100The Ottawa
Food Bankneeds about 100volunteers to helpwith the ThanksgivingFood Drive thisweekend.
Gatineau police shot andkilled two pit bulls afterthe dogs attacked theirowner and then turned onthe officers, said a policespokesman yesterday.
A neighbour called 911at 8:45 a.m. Sunday to re-port a dog attack, said po-lice spokesperson Const.Pierre Lanthier. Policefound the dogs’ owner waswaiting outside of hisapartment building withsevere bites to his armsand legs when officers ar-rived.
“As police approachedthe victim, one of the pit
bulls started running to-ward the cops. He was real-ly mad and tried to jumpat the police officer. Sothey had no choice but toshoot and kill the dog,”said Lanthier.
Paramedics rushed theman to hospital and policeevacuated the apartmentbuilding because the sec-ond dog was inside.
A dog catcher tried tocontrol the pit bull andthen an officer tried to usepepper spray to subdue it,said Lanthier.
“After that the dog wasdangerous. That’s whenthe police officer used afirearm to kill that dogtoo.”
There will be an inter-nal investigation into the
shooting. Lanthier said theowner gave officers per-mission to kill the seconddog.
“When there is a situa-tion like that, you have tomake sure to protect thepublic, protect the victimand protect ourselves,”said Lanthier. “Sometimes,you can’t use your pepperspray.”
Pit bulls shot afterattack on owner
Officers have had to shoot other breeds of dangerousdogs before, not only pit bulls: Gatineau police
From left, Gay Cook, Mayor Jim Watson and Chef Judson Simpson judge last year’s
pumpkin-pie contest during Ottawa’s Biggest Bake Sale at the Billings Bridge Shopping
Centre. The Sharing and Caring Exchange is holding the fundraiser again this weekend.
CONTRIBUTED
JESSICA [email protected]
“(The pit bull) wasreally mad andtried to jump atthe police officer.So they had nochoice but to shootand kill the dog.”CONST. PIERRE LANTHIERGATINEAU POLICE SERVICE
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metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
06 news
Audiences who watchedwhooping young men setcars ablaze and loot storeslive on TV after Vancouver’sStanley Cup loss to Bostonmay soon be invited to tunein again, this time for theaccuseds’ public shamingsin prime time.
The British Columbiagovernment announced inits throne speech on Mon-day it will respectfully askCrown prosecutors to pushthe courts to allow thebroadcast of trials of sus-pected rioters.
Premier Christy Clarktold reporters she wantsthe trials aired because theeruption of violence in
downtown Vancouver onJune 15 attacked BritishColumbians' sense of safety.
“Those guys had noproblem doing their crimes
quite in public,” she saidMonday. “So I think thatthey should have no prob-lem being tried in public ei-ther.” THE CANADIAN PRESS
Russiastrengthenslaw onpedophilia Russian lawmakers yester-day gave first-roundapproval to a bill thatstrengthens punishments
for pedophilia, includingmandatory chemical cas-tration or life sentences incases of repeated offences.
The lower house, orState Duma, unanimouslypassed President DmitryMedvedev’s bill in the firstof three requiredreadings. The bill alsoneeds approval by the up-per house and Medvedev’s
signature. It imposeschemical castration forsexual crimes against mi-nors younger than 14 bythose with a previous pe-dophilia conviction. Theprocedure of chemicalcastration involves admin-istering testosterone-sup-pressing hormonesintended to curb sexualdrive. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rioters in Vancouver on June 15 overturn a car. Riots
broke out after the Vancouver Canucks lost in
game seven of the Stanley Cup finals.
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES FILE
Amanda Knox returned toher hometown of Seattleyesterday and was as over-come with emotion as shewas a day earlier in Italy,when she was acquittedon murder charges afterfour years in prison.“Thank you for being therefor me,” she tearfully toldher supporters in front of acrowd of reporters fromtwo continents.
“I’m really over-whelmed right now,” shesaid at a news conferenceminutes after she was es-corted off a British Airwaysflight out of London.
Knox’s life turnedaround dramatically Mon-day when an Italian ap-peals court threw out herconviction in the sexual as-sault and fatal stabbing ofher British roommate in2007. Yesterday a court-
room picture of Knox cry-ing after the verdict wasread appeared on the frontpages of newspapers inItaly, the U.S., Britain andaround the world.
After arriving at theSeattle-Tacoma Interna-tional Airport, Knox, now24, sobbed at the newsconference and held hermother's hand as herlawyer Theodore Simonsaid her acquittal “unmis-takably announced to theworld” that she was not re-sponsible for the killing ofMeredith Kercher.
After her parents of-fered their thanks toKnox’s lawyers and sup-porters, Knox spokebriefly, saying, “They're re-minding me to speak inEnglish, because I'm hav-ing problems with that.”
“Thank you to everyonewho's believed in me, whohas defended me, who hassupported my family,” shesaid. “My family’s the mostimportant thing to me so Ijust want to be withthem.”
Knox’s acquittal, fueledby doubts over DNA evi-dence, stunned the vic-tim's family and angeredthe prosecution, which in-sists that she was amongthree people who killedKercher, 21. But for Knox’sgrandmother ElisabethHuff, “it was like theweight of the world had
Governmentlacks info on oilsandspollution:ReportThe federal government’sinformation about green-house-gas emissions andoilsands pollution is sospotty that key decisionsare being made withoutfully understanding theconsequences, says the en-vironmental auditor.
There’s no way oftelling whether Ottawa ison track to meet itstargets for cutting green-house gases, environmentcommissioner ScottVaughan says in a new re-port.
And in the booming oil-sands area of Alberta, Ot-tawa can’t possiblyunderstand how the envi-ronment of the area is be-ing affected because itdoesn’t have basicinformation or propermonitoring tools, Vaugh-an said.
“Failure to prevent en-vironmental impacts fromthe start can lead to signif-icant problems down theroad,” he said.THE CANADIAN PRESS
Knox returns, thanks supportersArrives back in U.S. after acquittal in ItalyProsecutor could still appeal verdict
Amanda Knox talks to reporters in Seattle yesterday. Knox was freed Monday
after an Italian appeals court threw out her murder conviction.
TED S. WARREN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Border dealwill cost $1B PERIMETER. A much-bally-hooed perimeter securitydeal between Canada andthe United States willcome with a $1-billionprice tag for new borderfacilities and programs tomake trade and traveleasier, The CanadianPress has learned.
The so-called Beyondthe Border action planwill include some threedozen items the govern-ments plan to pursue to-gether.
Measures in the planinclude:• A “one-stop shopping”window for importerswho now have to dealwith up to half a dozengovernment agencies;• Less paperwork forcompanies that could re-ceive duty-free treatmentfor shipments butcurrently don’t botherbecause of the hassle;• Special visas for certainbusiness travellers andmore emphasis onfrequent-traveller andtrusted-shipperprograms;
• Detailed benchmarksthat will bring each coun-try’s food and auto indus-tries in line;• Synchronized planningat land border crossings,where there is now littleinternational co-ordina-tion. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Negligencecharges inshooting deathLOADED WEAPON. Chargeshave been laid against aman whose gun was usedby a young boy in a fatalshooting in southeastB.C. four months ago.
Fifty-one-year-oldGeorge Phillips of thecommunity of Jaffray,B.C. is accused ofcriminal negligence caus-ing death and thecareless storage of afirearm.
His 10-year-old stepsonfound a loaded weaponin Phillips’s home onJune 16 and pulled thetrigger, killing 17-year-old Fernie residentMichael Voth.
RCMP ruled the shoot-ing accidental. Phillips isexpected to face thecharges in provincialcourt in Cranbrook, B.C.on Nov. 9. THE CANADIAN PRESS
News in briefVancouver riot trialsmay be televised
gone.”“We all are as happy as
can be. I can't tell you howlong we've been looking
forward to this day,” Hufftold The Associated Pressoutside her home in WestSeattle, a tight-knit com-
munity a few miles acrossElliott Bay from down-town.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
“I was lookingdown from theairplane, and itseemed likeeverything wasn'treal.”AMANDA KNOX
metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
07
A woman recovering frombreast cancer says she wassubjected to a humiliatingpublic pat-down at a NewYork airport even thoughshe offered to produce doc-umentation about hermedical implants.
Business consultant LoriDorn said in a blog thatthe frisking at John F.Kennedy International Air-port added “insult to in-jury and caused me a greatdeal of humiliation.”
The Transportation Se-curity Administration laterapologized for the inci-dent.
Dorn was heading to
San Francisco last weekwhen a full-body scannerdetected her prostheses.She said she explained shehad recently undergone bi-lateral mastectomy and
had tissue expanders im-planted for breast recon-struction. A TSA agentrefused to let her retrievedocumentation from herwallet “that explains thetype of expanders, serialnumbers and my doctor’sinformation,” she said.
“I had no choice but toallow an agent to touchmy breasts in front of oth-er passengers,” Dorn said.
Dorn said she receivedan apology from a JFK offi-cial “who agreed that prop-er policy wasn’t followed.”
In its own blog, the TSAsaid it regretted the inci-dent. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fur flies asjudgesweigh in on U.K. cat spatBritish judges insist theydidn’t block a criminal’sdeportation because ofworries he would be sepa-rated from his pet cat.
The judges wereresponding to remarks byTheresa May, the homesecretary, who told an annual rally of Britain’sConservative Party that acourt had ruled a Bolivianman should be allowed to stay in the U.K., in part because he owned acat. She was citing exam-ples of human-rights legis-lation preventing thecountry’s courts fromsending foreign offenders
home.The Judicial Office,
which represents judges,said May was wrong, andthat the man was allowedto stay because of a long-term relationship with hisgirlfriend, a Britishresident.
In the court ruling,Judge Judith Gleeson hadjoked that the couple’s catwouldn’t have “to adapt toBolivian mice.”THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CONTRIBUTED
Fundy bid hoping for tide of goodwillThe campaign to have the Bay of Fundy named one of the New Seven Wonders ofNature is gearing up as the Nov. 11 deadline approaches. The bay is known forhaving the greatest tidal range in the world. Readers who want to vote for theBay of Fundy free of charge can go to votemyfundy.com or text FUNDY to 77077on any Canadian cellphone. (The cost is 25¢ per text vote.)
Bay. Watch
A composite image shows the changing sea levels of the Bay of Fundy in Nova Scotia.The bay is in contention as one of the New Seven Wonders of Nature.
Airport pat-down leadsto security climb-down
TSA agents frisk breast-cancer patient at JFK afterscanner detects implants Agency apologizes
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Apple unveils faster,more powerful iPhone
Forbes ranksCanada topsfor business Forbes ranked Canada asthe best country forbusiness yesterday, mov-ing up from fourth spotlast year, helped by alower overall taxburden.
“While the U.S. isparalysed by fears of adouble-dip recessionand Europe struggles
with sovereign debtissues, Canada’s econo-my has held up betterthan most,” the influen-tial U.S. business maga-zine wrote.
Forbes noted thatCanada ranked ninthamong the 134countries reviewed fortax burden comparedwith 23rd in the catego-ry for 2010.
Canada was the onlycountry to rank in thetop 20 in 10 of the 11categories considered byForbes. THE CANADIAN PRESS
Finance Minister Jim Fla-herty laid out what wouldhave to happen before hewould introduce new stim-ulus to support the econo-my and jobs: a newrecession.
But Flaherty said he’s“relatively confident” thatwill not happen.
The minister’s state-ments yesterday came min-
utes before the TorontoStock Exchange openedwith another big selloff andmore dark news out of Eu-rope that Greece was edg-ing closer to a debt default.
“If we had some sort ofworld recession, that wouldchange the picture dramati-cally,” Flaherty said of thegovernment’s approach.
“But I’m relatively confi-dent that what we’re goingto see in Canada is modesteconomic growth over thenext little while.” THE CANADIAN PRESS
No stimulus unless recession: Flaherty
Apple CEO Tim Cook talks about the iPhone 4S during
an announcement at Apple headquarters
in Cupertino, Calif., yesterday.
PAUL SAKUMA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Apple Inc. unveiled a faster,more powerful iPhone yes-terday in its first majorproduct event in yearswithout Steve Jobs presid-ing.
New CEO Tim Cook ledthe show after Jobs, whohas been battling healthproblems, resigned fromthe post in August.
Cook, wearing a navyblue button-down shirt andjeans, opened by calling hisnearly 14-year tenure at Ap-ple “the privilege of a life-time.” Those in theaudience clapped as he en-tered, but the reactionseemed more muted thanwhat Jobs had recently re-ceived.
Cook said the iPhone 4,which came out in June2010, sold more quicklythan previous models, butApple has just five per centof the worldwide handsetmarket.
Apple is hoping to growthat with a new model. Thenew iPhone 4S has an im-proved camera with a high-er-resolution sensor. Theprocessor is faster, whichhelps run smoother, morerealistic action games. It’s
also a “world phone,”which means that VerizoniPhones will be able to use-able overseas, just as AT&TiPhones already are.
The new iPhone alsocomes with new mobilesoftware, iOS 5, that in-cludes such features as theability to sync content wire-lessly, without having toplug the device to a Mac orWindows machine.
Apple said the newphone will come in blackor white. Its U.S. price willbe $199 for a 16 gigabyte-version, $299 for 32 GB and$399 for 64 GB — all with atwo-year service contractrequirement.
IOS 5 will also be avail-able on Oct. 12 for existingdevices — the iPhone 4 and3GS, both iPad models andlater versions of the iPodTouch.
Apple said Oct. 12 will al-so mark the launch of itsnew iCloud service, whichwill store content such asmusic, documents, appsand photos on Apple’sservers and let people ac-cess them wirelessly on nu-merous devices.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
39 million iPhones were sold inthe first six months of this year
Market momentTSX
- 73.92(11,177.91)
- 1.14¢(94.2¢ US)
- $1.94 US($75.67 US)
Dollar Natural gas1,000 cu ft
$3.638(+ $2.1¢)
Goldcontracts$1,616.00(- $41.70)
PRICES A
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DAY
Oil
Flaherty
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True AppinessDownload the METRO APP for your iPad, Android, BlackBerry and iPhone.
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voices 09metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
@beaty_boop: Why domy childrensound like air
raid sirens when they cry?
@matvail2002: But again,with a majority of the pop-ulation being in debt, nowonder why “responsabili-ty” is a taboo word forpoliticians.
@markchats: Me to 2-year-old son eating his supperwell: “You da man!” Son:“No, I’m not the man. I’mJack.” #bestthingever
@aliciaward94: Dance bat-
tling my sister, brb
@_RuxyPetris: In a man’sworld nothing makessense
@GaryChampagne: Mywife told me I wassnuffling like a hibernatingbear last night. Explainswhy I feel so tired!
@Urbandogphotog: #tatoo#glenparadis #ottawa#artist #instagram My awe-some friend and artist glenparadis featured in localpaper;http://t.co/UFX83eVj
Local tweets
RE: Gaga takes her caseto Obama, publishedSept. 28
After reading this article Ifelt the same way as LadyGaga, that bullyingshould be a hate crime.
Throughout life youalways get people saying,“It’s just a part ofgrowing up, it builds self-esteem, they like you,just ignore it, just tough-en up, just forget it.”
Those are some of thethings people say, but it’snot that easy. There’s aposter at my school I real-ly like because it says,“Whoever said don’t runfrom your problems nev-er had to face a bully.”
It is hard to gothrough life with a bullyor a memory of a bullyon your back.
Bullying can lead tomany awful things in life.So many people don’ttake bullying seriously,including teachers andother adults. If a kid isbullied in school and tellsa teacher and the teacherdoesn’t do anythingabout it, they’re basicallysaying, “Go ahead, youcan bully — it’s OK to bemean to someone.” How-ever it’s not OK. It is com-pletely wrong and peopledon’t know the effects itcan have on a person. GINA VISSER, VANCOUVER B.C.
Letters
WEIRD NEWS
Trekking on an87-year-oldmysteryA proposed expedition to MountEverest later this year could solve an87-year-old mystery: Did two Britishadventurers, George Mallory andAndrew Irvine, reach the top of themountain?
Mallory and Irvine began their as-sault on June 6, 1924. They were lastspotted around 1 p.m. on June 8,climbing an obstacle. They were, ac-cording to Scientific American, less
than a kilometre from the summit.And then the weather turned badand they were never seen again.
Their disappearance has prompt-ed many in the climbing communi-ty — and beyond — to speculate onwhat happened to the pair. Morethan a half a dozen expeditionshave scaled Everest over the years tofind the missing men and write thefinal chapter in their mysterious de-mise.
The tale of these two climbershas long fired the imagination ofTom Holzel, an Everest historian,climber and American businessman.He’s the man behind the latestexpedition, which is supposed tohead out in December.TORSTAR NEWS SERVICE
NOBODY’S RIGHTIF EVERYBODY’SWRONG
“There’s somethin’happenin’ here. What it isain’t exactly clear.”
That’s the opening linefrom the most famousprotest song of the ’60s, Buf-
falo Springfield’s For What It’s Worth. Itwas written by Stephen Stills, who wenton to Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young fame,and then went on to become old and fat,like most of the other citizens of Wood-stock Nation.
But, as my grandma used to say, if youhang around long enough, history will repeat itself,like beans for dinner.
My grandma may have been a bit rude, but she wasright. There’s a new protest movement in town. It’s
called Occupy Wall Street,and if the youth of todayweren’t so prejudicedabout classic rock, Steve’ssong would fit right in:There is somethin’happening here … andwhat it is ain’t exactlyclear. And that’s putting itmildly.
Occupy Wall Streetstarted small in a parknear the New York Finan-cial District when 100 peo-ple were arrested for beingobnoxious on or aboutSept. 24, and has growndaily, spreading to othercities in the U.S., Europeand Japan and, of course,Canada, which never
wants to be left out.Occupy Wall Street Nation, spawned by the children
of the boomer citizens of Woodstock Nation, is an eeri-ly accurate echo of the original. Stylish, young, techno-logically hip protesters drape themselves over iconicreal estate uttering incoherent slogans.
Back then it was “Smash the state” and “Hell, no, wewon’t go” and “One, two, three, four — what are wefightin’ for?” etc. Today it’s “Honk if you’re in debt,”“Tax the rich,” “99 per cent” (as in, 99 per cent arepoor; one per cent are rich) and “Compassion is evolu-tionary”… whatever that means. Slogans and stylin’are more important than policy, which is, after all,complex, boring and contentious. Ee-yew.
Like Woodstock Nation, Occupy Wall Street Nationis a shambolic coalition of leftist ideologues, all-over-the-map “anarchists,” actual poor people struggling tomake ends meet, and students who naturally supportany movement featuring free smoke, free pizza and achance to meet beautiful people with bells on theirtoes and rings in their noses.
There’s still part of me that wants to stick it to theMan, just like I did back in 1970. Until I remember thatI am the Man, man, which is a bummer. When did I getto be the Man? When I got a job? Grew up? Had a fami-ly? All of the above?
How about that? Four decades later, and it still ain’texactly clear … for what it’s worth.
JUST SAYIN’ ...PAUL SULLIVANMETRO
Read more of Paul Sullivan’s columns at metronews.ca/justsaying
“Like WoodstockNation, Occupy
Wall StreetNation is ashambolic
coalition of leftistideologues, all-over-the-map‘anarchists,’actual poor
people strugglingto make ends
meet andstudents.”
Register at metropolitanpanel.ca and take the quick poll
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Photo ofthe day
Massachusetts cranberry farmers are expecting a robust cropthis fall. Researchers said that growing conditions thissummer were optimal, with enough hot days interspersedwith the right amount of rain.
Cranberry. Harvest
Miguel Sandel of Middleborough, Mass., rakes cranberries into a loading tubeduring an afternoon harvest at the Hannula cranberry bogs in Carver, Mass., yesterday.
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George Clooney’s new film,Ides of March, takes whatsome might call a cynicallook at the state of Ameri-can politics, but thatdoesn’t mean the directorand star — ever the opti-mist — has given up on thesystem all together.
“I think it’s cyclical,” hesays. “I think we’re at a pe-riod of time where it’s prob-ably not our best momentin politics, but if you look atthe things Jefferson andAdams did to each other,the 1800 election was pret-ty rotten and evil. Thingschange and are cyclical, soI’m hopeful.”
The film, based on BeauWillimon’s play FarragutNorth, follows an idealisticyoung campaign worker
(Ryan Gosling) whose workfor a charismatic candidate(Clooney) during the Demo-cratic primary opens hiseyes to the underbelly ofpolitics.
But as much as cam-paign signs and Beltway jar-gon make up the scenery ofIdes of March, Clooneywants to make clear thatthis is not a political film —at least not the way he seesit.
“I thought of this as afilm about moral choices,not about political strife,”he says. “I thought it was afun moral tale, and onceyou put it in politics it sortof amps up the problems.There isn’t a person youhave met that hasn’t beenmet with moral questions.Everyone makes moralchoices to better them-selves and hurt othersalong the way, whether the
means justifies the ends.” In fact, he maintains, the
political setting is actuallyincredibly incidental — es-pecially considering cur-rent events. “It could havebeen better in Wall Street,”he offers.
With acclaimed filmslike Confessions of a Dan-gerous Mind and GoodNight and Good Luck on hisresumé, Clooney is provingjust as adept as a director ashe is as an actor.
So how different is theClooney behind the camerato the one audiences know?Not very.
“He’s pretty much thesame guy as GeorgeClooney the actor,” hejokes. “Basically the sameheight, same hair. Prettymuch the same.”
As for his on-camerawork for the film, surelyClooney used some real-life
models in portraying a top-ranking politico, right? Notso much, he insists.
“No, there reallyweren’t” any existing pub-lic figures used for this ba-sis of his character, Clooneysays. “There’s just so manyways to get in trouble withthis answer. There wereenough examples that wejust picked little pieces ofwhatever we wanted.”
But he maintains thatviewers going out lookingfor those real-world corol-laries are wasting theirtime. “People think it’sabout the John Edwardsthing, but this was writtenbefore the John Edwardsthing even broke,” Clooneyoffers as an example.
It’s all part of the percep-tion problem people havewith movies — especiallypolitical movies — andtheir place in culture,
Clooney explains. “Films don’t lead the
way. In general it takesabout two years to get afilm made,” he says.
“People think that filmssomehow are trying to leadsociety. Mostly we’re re-flecting the moods andthoughts that are going onin our country and aroundthe world. If this film re-flects some of the cynicismthat we’ve seen in recenttimes, that’s probably good.It’s not a bad thing to hold amirror up and look at someof the things we’re doing.It’s not a bad thing to lookat how we elect our offi-cials.”
Clooney waxes politicalIdes of March reflects cynicism of the times, says actor-turned-director That’s ‘probably good’
HANDOUT
Presidential politics: George Clooney
directs and stars in Ides of March.
Scene in brief
One for all and all forone: Athos, Porthosand Aramis wereswashbuckling theirway down the redcarpet in London forthe world premiereof The Three Muske-teers in 3D. The trioof actors taking onthe legendary charac-ters — Matthew Mac-fadyen, RayStevenson and LukeEvans — were joinedat yesterday’s launchby Logan Lerman,who plays their hot-headed colleague,D’Artagnan.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ralph Fiennes, David Cronenbergto receive career honours at
London Film Festival
METRO WORLD NEWS IN HOLLYWOOD
“I thought of this asa film about moralchoices, not aboutpolitical strife.”GEORGE CLOONEY
scene 11metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
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ORDINARY PEOPLE, EXTRAORDINARY CIRCUMSTANCES
If thepremise ofReal Steel
sounds famil-iar, it’s be-cause the lasttime you saw
it was in black and white,coming to you from theTwilight Zone.
“The Twilight Zoneepisode called Steel withLee Marvin, written byRichard Matheson, was inthe ’60s,” says Real Steeldirector Shawn Levy.
“It was about a robotboxing promoter, a guywho owns robots andfights them for money.From there we beefed itup.”
In its original run theanthology series mixedand matched science fic-tion, comedy, supernatu-
ral and occult stories usu-ally featuring ordinarypeople in extraordinarycircumstances.
Hosted by Rod Serling,it was must see TV with acatchy theme song, whichinfluenced thousands ofwriters and directors.
Three series and amovie have officiallyclaimed the TwilightZone name but dozens ofother films have been ei-ther directly — or indi-rectly — inspired by theshow.
Submitted for your ap-proval, here is a list ofmovies that owe a debt toone of the greatest televi-sion shows ever.
The 1996 KyleMacLachlan thriller TheTrigger Effect was a re-working of a classicepisode called The Mon-sters Are Due on MapleStreet, which shows theeffects of a power failureon a neighbourhood.
Named the best Twi-
light Zone episode byTime Magazine, the showis still shown in class-rooms to illustrate howlethal a mix intoleranceand panic can be.
The film pays tribute toits television roots byplacing its main charac-ters at the corner ofMaple and WilloughbyStreets, a reference to an-other famous episode, AStop at Willoughby.
The Cameron Diazmovie The Box was a re-make of Button, Button, astory from the series’1980 reinvention andChild’s Play, the moviewhich introduced themurderous doll Chuckyseems to have looked to a1963 episode called Liv-ing Doll for inspiration.
Two towering artists ofmodern horror can countthe Twilight Zone as semi-nal to their work.
The show perfected theuse of the twist ending,which M. Night Shya-
malan would later incor-porate into his work.
His most famous film,The Sixth Sense hasechoes of Occurrence atOwl Creek Bridge, a 1964episode about a man whois revealed to be dead.
In Danse MacabreStephen King called theshow “damn near immor-tal” and it’s been hintedthat his novel Christine(later made into a movie)was inspired by the dri-verless car episode AThing about Machines.
IN FOCUSRICHARD [email protected]
Rod Serling pauses for a cigarette and coffee between
scenes during filming of The Twilight Zone in 1961.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Three series and amovie haveofficially claimedthe Twilight Zonename but dozens ofother films havebeen either directly— or indirectly —inspired by theshow.
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As Feist celebrated her35th birthday earlier thisyear with an intimate din-ner among friends, shewas momentarily distract-ed by the intense flicker-ing of a television in anearby room.
The images werebizarre — motorbikes on astage accompanied by py-rotechnics and music.Whatever it was seemedoutlandish and jarring.What, she wondered,could be the spectacle?
It wasn’t until she gotcloser to the televisionthat the frenetic, choreo-graphed commotion madesense. It was the telecast ofthe Grammy Awards. Onlythree years earlier, she was
part of that scene, per-forming 1234, the songthat would make the for-mer indie artist a globalsensation — in a differentout-of-context perform-ance. Now, watching theawards, the images shesaw confirmed how surre-al that experience hadbeen — and how she justdoesn’t fit into that poppy,musical world.
“The Grammys, and themagnitude of that spot-light, it wasn’t a placewhere I felt at home. Likewhat I do doesn't reallyhappen there,” Feist saidduring a recent interviewas she sat on a quiet patioat her downtown Manhat-tan hotel. “It’s such a po-
tent and brief moment,and it doesn’t really speakto the truth of what tour-ing and being a musicianis. It’s mostly fanfare, in-
flated and very intense. Iwasn’t feeling very com-fortable in that kind of set-ting.”
Now that Feist is releas-
ing Metals, the follow-upto her breakthrough, her-alded 2007 album, The Re-minder, she’s back in hercomfort zone. Her fourth
album has a darker tone,but still has that other-worldly, mystical qualitythat has made her one ofmusic’s more original voic-es.
“It’s just heading into amuch more personal andbold and more uncompro-mising direction, takingall kinds of risks, which Irespect,” says her longtimecollaborator Chilly Gonza-les, one of the album’s pro-ducers and songwriters. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The countdown is over Withnew album Metals, Feist carves outa very different voice from 1234
Back into the spotlight
Feist has abandoned the lighter 1234 direction and gone much darker on her new album.
CHARLES SYKES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The album
What to expect from the
album.
New CD Musically, sheveers somewhat from TheReminder with songs thatseem weightier. There isno magically delightfulsong like 1234.
scene 13metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
How do you make the 12thseason of a reality showfeel fresh? By bringing insome fresh judges.
Season 12 of The BiggestLoser airing on Citytv, andstepping in where JillianMichaels left her sneakersare tennis superstar AnnaKournikova and personaltrainer Dolvett Quince. ForKournikova, the opportu-nity to coach instead of becoached was one she
didn’t want to miss out on.“I was the one that went
after this opportunity,” theformer No. 8 player in theworld says. “I’ve used mybody as a tool my wholelife on a tennis court. In-stead of listening to all theinformation that wasthrown at me, (I’m now)voicing it to the contest-ants and sharing it withthem.”
The tough-girl trainingstyle of former coach Jil-lian Michaels was a hitwith viewers, butKournikova isn’t stressedabout taking over.
“I didn’t feel any pres-sure,” she says. “I didn'tfeel like I was replacinganyone or trying to fill in
anybody’s shoes. We allhave our own styles. I’mnot trying to prove myselfby any means. I’m just
there to do my part of thejob, which is train and ed-ucate the contestantsabout (a) healthy lifestyle.”
For those viewers waryabout Kournikova — abuxom blonde who hasn’tfound much recent successon the court — taking thereins, she’s eager to set therecord straight.
“Listen, I get criticizedand judged all the time,”she says. “But to be a top10 tennis player in theworld, I must have beendoing something right.And I came from SovietUnion from really nothing.That’s how I tell the con-testants I can relate tothem. I know what it’s liketo be judged and criticized,whether it’s because ofyour weight or how youlook. People have all thesepreconceived notions andI’m OK with that. The onlything I can control is I canwork hard (and) be thebest human being I can.”
This season, contestantswill face off in a Battle ofthe Ages competition,with Kournikova coachingthe over-50 crowd.
“Obviously the oldergroup is the most difficultfor me because they haveless energy. They’re muchmore set in their own wayso it’s a lot more difficultto change someone’s men-tality who’s in their 50s or60s.
Regardless of the chal-lenges, she says she got re-ally invested in eachcontestant’s personalgrowth.
“You literally becomefamily with these people,”she says.
®RegisteredTrademark of the Bank of Nova Scotia.®1Used byAmex Canada Inc. under license fromAmerican Express. *No purchase necessary.Contest Sponsors:AmexCanada Inc. and the Bank of Nova Scotia (“Scotiabank”).The Contest Period starts at 9:00 a.m. ET on October 3, 2011 and ends at 7:00 p.m.PT on November 30, 2011.Thecontest is open to all residents of Canada who have reached the age of majority in their province/territory of residence on or before October 3, 2011.To enter, purchase in asingle transaction, $1,000.00 CDN equivalent inAmerican ExpressTravellers Cheques at any Scotiabank branch during the Contest Period.There is one (1) prize available tobe won consisting of $10,000CDN cash deposited into a Scotia Money Master® Savings Account. Odds of winning depend on the number of eligible entries received.Winner must correctly answer a mathematical skill-testing question.To opt out of automatic entry into this Contest, email your request with your full name and address tothe Independent Contest Organization at: [email protected]. For complete rules and regulations including information about how to make a nopurchase entry visit www.scotiabank.com/travellerscheques or your local Scotiabank branch for details.
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Former tennis star defends her sub-par record Says a winning attitude will help Biggest Loser contestants
Kournikova is no loser
Anna Kournikova is now helping Americans lose
weight on the show Biggest Loser.
FILE PHOTO/GETTY IMAGES
MEREDITH [email protected]
METRO WORLD NEWS IN NEW YORK
Spreading theModern success TELEVISION Modern Fami-ly is sandwiched by a pairof shows. Suburgatorypokes fun at suburbanlife with a surprisingsweetness, while HappyEndings — airing the sec-ond episode of its secondseason — is a buoyantcomedy that is helped bythe chemistry of its cast
Citytv, ABC
NBC embracesnew comedies SITCOMS Since when didWednesday nightsbecome such a hotbedfor comedy? Well, itmight have something todo with the introductionof two winning new NBCsitcoms, Free Agents andUp All Night.
NBC
THE CANADIAN PRESS
TV watch listCowell’s ego takes a hitSimon Cowell admits heregrets saying ratings lessthan 20 million for theU.S. version of The X Fac-tor would be a failure.
The show’s Septemberdebut earned 12.5 millionviewers, which was lessthan the premiere of thecomedy Modern Family,the leader of the nightwith 14.5 million viewers.
The X Factor held those
numbers for the secondepisode.
In week two, ratingshovered around 12 millionviewers for each of theepisodes.
“I’m not going to lie. Iwanted 20 million whenwe launched,” says Cowell,“but now I’m kind of backin the real world and I’mseeing this grow naturally.I’m as happy as I’ve ever
been.”The show is Cowell’s ba-
by. Besides being a judgeon its panel, he is its cre-ator and an executive pro-ducer.
“We’re not in Russiawhere you have one show.This is life. If you’re com-petitive and it spurs youon, I kind of get excited byit.”THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
X-Factor fails to reach Simon’s lofty ratings goals Loses out to sitcom
Simon
Cowell
FILE PHOTO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Doing what you haveto do in Hollywood
Thomas Jane
ALL PHOTOS GETTY IMAGES
Thomas Jane talks about the seedy side of life as an aspiring actor in L.A. Hung star Thomas Jane isbeing remarkably frankabout his early days in Hol-lywood, telling the L.A.Times that he used to per-form sexual favours formen to get by.
“When I was a kid outhere in L.A., I was home-less. I didn’t have any mon-ey and I was living in mycar. I wasn’t averse to go-ing down to Santa MonicaBoulevard and letting aguy buy me a sandwich.Know what I mean?” he re-veals. “You’re a lot moreopen to experimentationas a young man. And forme, being a young artistand broke in Los Angeles, Iwas exploring my sexualidentity.”
In his own defense, Janepoints to a long history ofsuch work in Hollywood.
“As James Dean said,you’re going to have onearm tied behind your backif you don’t accept people’ssexual favours.” METRO
“You’re a lot more open toexperimentationas a young man.”THOMAS JANE
Pattinson saysTwilight feltanti-climaticSOUNDS LIKE A JEALOUSYISSUE. With filming onthe Twilight filmsbehind him, Robert Pat-tinson admits he’s a bitdisappointed with howit all ended, accordingto Hollyscoop.
When Pattinson andKristen Stewart filmedtheir final scene, therewas still another day offilming left for thecrew, he explains.
“The wolves actuallywrapped the wholemovie, so our bit wassuch an anti-climax be-cause it was the end ofa week of night shoots,”Pattinson says. “Butthey had the last everday the next day. Sowhen it was our last bit,no one clapped or any-thing.” METRO
Wilde still notover divorcefrom RuspoliSELF MEDICATING. OliviaWilde’s divorce fromItalian Prince Tao Rus-poli was finalized latelast week, according toUs Weekly.
The pair, who wedwhen the actress was 19years old, filed fordivorce in March aftereight years of marriage.
While the exes haveremained on goodterms, the process stillhasn’t been easy.
“I got a divorce and self-medicated with food,” Wilde told Nylon maga-zine in Ju-ly. “But Ifigurethat’sbetterthanself-med-
Talking points
“Definitelydid not getup in themiddle and" walk out of interview"contrary to headline oncnnsi.com. Answered lastquestion and left.”
“Did youhearabout theblondelesbian? Shekeeps having sexwith MEN!.”
“TheKardashians= the
Gabors! Iknew I'd seen
this movie before!”
@andyroddick
@JennyMcCarthy
@BetteMidler
“Ah, au-tumn inLA, when
the stage-hands spray
the leaves such pretty col-ors.”
@conanobrien
Celebrity tweets
icating with crackcocaine.” METRO
Spears lets an engagement hint slip?AND PEOPLE ASK ‘WHYSHOULD WE STILL CARE?’Maybe all of the engage-ment rumors about herand Jason Trawick havebeen sinking in with Brit-ney Spears, as the singerflubbed when referring toher boyfriend during a re-cent radio interview inthe U.K.
When asked aboutdressing up in costumes— her sons had recentlyhad a Spider-Man-themed
birthday party — Spears said, “Actuallyme and — I was goingto say my husband —my boyfriend, we do that every oncein a while. We’re
goobs. I’m so em-barrassed.”
So was it just a Freudian
slip or a hint atsome bignews tocome?
METRO
While he may be a happynewlywed, Seth Rogen isdefinitely not jumping in-to starting a family.
“All my friends are hav-ing kids and my sister justhad a baby last year, and itmakes me not want tohave kids,” the 50/50 startells iVillage. “It’s very nicejust playing with (my sis-
ter’s baby) and then assoon as it becomes diffi-cult, you just hand it off.”
As for his relationshipwith new wife LaurenMiller, Rogen says he’sdone a lot of growing up.
“I’d like to say that shetaught me how to tidy up,but that’s been the exactopposite.” METRO
Seth Rogen resistshaving children
Seth Rogen
3life
travel 15metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
*Book by October 12, 2011 (11:59 p.m. MT) for travel on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays from November 1 to December 15, 2011. Fare is available on non-stop flights only. Fares on other days may be higher. Taxes, fees and surcharges are extra where applicable. Advertised fares only apply to flights marketed and operated wholly by WestJet, and are not applicable when travelling with our code-share, interline or other airline partners. Seats at these fares are limited and may not be available on all flights. New bookings only. 100% non-refundable. Offer combinable with other fares. Flights may not operate on certain days. All fares shown are one way. See westjet.com for details. †Overweight and oversize bags subject to a charge. Subject to change without notice.
Give this fare a squeeze. Non-stop to Orlando
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When my four-year-old-daughter Riley and I ar-rived at the Disney Dream’shome port in Port Canaver-al, Fla., we knew we werein for the vacation of a life-time. In fact, Riley was con-vinced we were setting sailfor Never Land!
In reality, we wereboarding the newest vesselin the Disney Cruise linecollection and setting sailfor a two-day adventure toDisney’s private island inthe Bahamas; CastawayCay.
The Disney Dream is thethird ship in the DisneyCruise Line fleet.
Once aboard, we under-stood quickly why theynamed this classic oceanliner the Disney Dream.The name says it all: abreathtaking Grand Atri-um, elegance and luxuryon each deck, silhouettedby Disney character detailat every turn. The state-rooms, waterslides, restau-rants, kids clubs and stageshows were classic Disneyimagineering. We stayedin a spacious, DeluxeOceanview Stateroom withveranda. Roomy enough tosleep four, this stateroomboasted a queen-size bedwith below-bed storage,convertible sofa, split bathand private balcony.
Cruising is all aboutgreat food and we dinedlike Disney Princesses, asRiley would say.
The rotational dining ap-
proach allowed us to enjoya different restaurant everynight. The restaurants arethemed — which Rileyloved. The Enchanted Gar-den boasts a garden-in-spired decor with a menuthat allows you to selectchoices from around the
world including Riley’sfavourite fish, pan-searedsea bass.
The Animator’s Palate,the main dining room, waslike being inside a Disneyanimation studio. Thewalls were adorned withtools of the trade, the inte-rior magically transformedinto a live under-sea, inter-active adventure withCrush the Turtle from Find-ing Nemo. And Crush gotpersonal, dude. He wouldswim from tank to tankasking questions of the din-ers that generated somegnarly laughs. There werealso many casual dining op-tions on board.
Riley and I have somany Disney Dream mem-ories including the spec-tacular Pirates of theCaribbean Show, a pirate-themed deck party that in-cluded pre-show gameshosted by swashbucklingscallywags. The pirateshow was so realistic thatRiley was convinced wehad entered Never Landand were captured by Cap-tain Hook. Following theshow, Buccaneer Blast, amusically synced fire-works show lit up thenight sky. Another of Ri-ley’s favourite memories?The Oceaneer’s Club, anactivity centre for kids
aged three to 10. This su-pervised play centre ishome to Disney-style imag-inative worlds. And whilethe little buccaneers are atplay, there is a lot to do forthe adults. The District isan adults-only entertain-ment area, complete withlounges and nightclubs.
Riley and I landed backhome with a trunkful ofmemories. My most cher-ished? My little girl cud-dling up to me midship inan oversized golden throneon our final day and whis-pering that her favouritepart of this magical journeywas spending time withme.
A dream come trueCruising on the Disney Dream ship a real treat for this Metro writer’s little princess
The Disney Dream is a ‘dream’ for kids, but also has plenty to keep adults happy,
such as lounges, nightclubs and fine dining.
COURTESY DISNEY
New Canadian art pavilionin Montreal reflects bustling
cultural scene.
Travel in brief
With a little researchand planning, familytrips can be fun-filledand hassle-free. Plan Ahead: Use the In-ternet, travel guidesand personalrecommendations toresearch attractions,book a hotel or reservetickets. Frequent Stops: Forlong road trips sched-ule regular stops alongthe way. Double Check: Beforeyou depart ensure theentire family has every-thing they need.NEWS CANADA
Ruth and Riley
16 travel metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
4 locations in OttawaFlight Centre Bank St 100 Bank Street
Flight Centre Bayshore Centre 100 Bayshore Dr
Flight Centre Glebe 763 Bank Street
Flight Centre Place D’Orleans Mall 110 Place D’Orleans Drive
flightcentre.ca Visit us in store.1 866 827 2214 Join our Insider Club for hot deals. Text YOW to
131 600Conditions apply. Ex: Ottawa. *Ex. Montreal Air only prices are per person for return travel unless otherwise stated. Package, cruise, tour, rail & hotel prices are per person, based on double occupancy for total length of stay unless otherwise stated. All-inclusive vacations include air. 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. ◊Price is per person for quad occupancy (2 adults & 2 children ages 2-17). ‡One (1) Park n Fly voucher available per booking and while supplies last. Valid for travel before Dec 31, 2011. Booking must include roundtrip airfare departing YUL and minimum 4 nights accommodation. c6=canjet, ws/wsv=westjet, aa=american, sa=south african, la=lan, ua=united, ggv=gogo, swg/wg=sunwing, acv/ac=air canada, vat/ts=transat, thn=holiday network, nol=nolitours. † We will beat any written quoted airfare by $1 and give you a $20 voucher for future travel. “Fly Free” offer applies only where all “Lowest Airfare Guarantee” criteria are met but Flight Centre does not beat quoted price. Additional important conditions apply. For full terms and conditions visit www.flightcentre.ca/lowestairfareguarantee-flyfree. Head office address: 1 Dundas St W Suite 200, Toronto, ON. Call for retail locations. ONT. REG #4671384
Airfares Canada & USA All-inclusive Vacations Florida
Jamaica $42*
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Toronto one-way $49 Travel Oct 24/ac + taxes & fees $50
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Varadero $85* Travel Oct 27 - Nov 3/wg + taxes & fees $290
Vancouver one-way $189 Travel Oct 10/ws + taxes & fees $81
Fort McMurray one-way $269 Travel Oct 19/ac + taxes & fees $91
Miami $295 Travel Oct 18 - Nov 1/aa + taxes & fees $122
St Maarten $298* Travel Nov 11 - Nov 18/ts + taxes & fees $321
New York $299 Travel Oct 18 - Nov 1/dl + taxes & fees $126
Honduras Christmas $495* Travel Dec 19 - Dec 26/ts + taxes & fees $290
Bangkok $499 Travel Oct 18 - Nov 2/ua + taxes & fees $482
Toronto Family Special 3 Nights 4-Star
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per person based on family of 4. Departs Oct 6-24/ggv.
New England Fall Colours Air + Car $375* Alamo + taxes & fees $122
INCLUDES roundtrip airfare from Montreal to Boston and 7-day car rental. Departs Oct 18/ggv/dl.
Las Vegas Air + 3 Nights + Cirque du Soleil $439 Circus Circus + taxes & fees $128
INCLUDES accom on the Strip. BONUS tickets to select Las Vegas shows included. Departs Nov 14/ggv/dl.
Puerto Plata 7 Nights 3.5-Star
$266* Allegro Puerto Plata + taxes & fees $403
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Panama 7 Nights 4-Star $412* Royal Decameron Golf, Beach Resort & Villas + taxes & fees $327
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Mayan Riviera 7 Nights 4-Star $559 Sandos Caracol + taxes & fees $320
Departs Nov 10/sqv/ws.
Orlando Family Special Air + 7 Nights
$169◊* Champions World Resort + taxes & fees $292
INCLUDES roundtrip airfare from Montreal and accom near theme parks. Price per person based on family of 4. Departs Oct 29/ggv/ts. ADD 5-day Walt Disney World Resort Magic Your Way Base Ticket for
$271/adult, $251/child (ages 3-9).
Orlando Long Stay, Air + 21 Nights $479* Champions World Resort + taxes & fees $292
INCLUDES accom near theme parks. Departs Nov 4/ggv/ts. ADD 21-day economy car rental for $14 per day.
Miami Air + 3 Nights $499 Marco Polo Beach Resort + taxes & fees $138
INCLUDES resort-style accom along Miami Beach. Departs Oct 10, 17, 22/ggv/dl. ADD Everglades airboat for $68.
Fort Lauderdale Air + 7 Nights $579 Ocean Sky Hotel and Resort + taxes & fees $192
INCLUDES accom at a beachfront location with an oceanfront swimming pool. Departs Nov 15/wsv/ws. UPGRADE to 4-star Il Lugano Hotel for $47 per night.
Florida Keys Air + 4 Nights + Car $729 Ocean Pointe Suites + taxes & fees $123
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St. John’s because it’sthe perfect blend ofold and new, wherecity meets nature.The ruggedlandscapes and thefriendly locals inviteyou into what is oneof North America’soldest cities. A cityfull of adventuroustales and legends.They also play hostto one of the best fes-tivals I have ever at-tended…The GeorgeStreet Festival. It isan incredible partythat spans severalcity blocks andincludes over 20pubs within the his-toric district of St.John’s. An unforget-table experience thatI have had the pleas-ure of enjoying sev-eral times and knowI will take pleasurein again.
TORSTAR NEWS SERVICE
My favourite spot in Canada
JONATHAN SCOTT: ST. JOHN’S N.L. DREW SCOTT: WHISTLER, B.C.Being a Vancouver Boy,Whistler is one of myfavourite spots in Canadaas it’s an outdoorwonderland. In less than3.5 hours you can be out-side in the summer hik-ing the trails, mountainbiking through thepaths, or canoeing onThe River of GoldenDreams. For winter funyou’ll find me on the skihills, andif mylegs gettoo tiredfromsnow
boardingI'll try totake in a
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The PropertyBrothers
food 17metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
Key Lime Smoothie
Treat yourself to a tasteof the tropics with thissmoothie. Featuringheart-healthy walnutsand chock-full ofomega-3s and fibre-richavocado, this breakfastreplacement will giveyou the fuel you need.
• 1/2 avocado• 1/2 small banana• 175 ml (3/4 cup) coldwater• 75 ml (1/3 cup)walnuts, chopped intohalves or crumbs• 75 ml (1/3 cup) low-fatcoconut milk• 30 ml (2 tbsp) honey• Juice of 1 fresh lime
In a blender or using ahand blender, combine allingredients and processuntil smooth, about 1 min.THE CANADIAN PRESS/AVOCADOS FROM MEXICO
Drink of the week
Pumpkin Sticky Tof-fee Puddings WithCranberry Caramel
“Who doesn’t love a warm,ooey-gooey, delicious au-
tumn-spiced toffee pud-ding that's got the caramelsauce with cranberries?The tart of the cranberriesand the sweetness of thecaramel, warm with allthose autumn spices
Harvest sweetsPumpkin & cranberries are ideal ingredients for fall
desserts Try these Pecan Pumpkin GingerbreadWhoopie Pies and Pumpkin Sticky Toffee Puddings
Ingredients:
Puddings• 500 ml (2 cups) all-purpose flour• 10 ml (2 tsp) baking pow-der• 1 ml (1/4 tsp) baking soda• 5 ml (1 tsp) cinnamon• 3 ml (3/4 tsp) ground gin-ger• 0.5 ml (1/8 tsp) ground all-spice
• 0.5 ml (1/8 tsp) groundcloves• 2 ml (1/2 tsp) salt• 125 ml (1/2 cup) unsaltedbutter, melted and cooled• 175 ml (3/4 cup) packedlight brown sugar• 175 ml (3/4 cup) cannedpumpkin puree• 50 ml (1/4 cup) buttermilk• 2 large eggs• 5 ml (1 tsp) vanilla extract• 125 ml (1/2 cup) driedcranberries
Cranberry Caramel Sauce• 250 ml (1 cup) sugar• 45 ml (3 tbsp) heavycream• 45 ml (3 tbsp) unsaltedbutter• 45 ml (3 tbsp) dried cran-berries
Garnish• 250 ml (1 cup) whippedcream• 50 ml (1/4 cup) dried cran-berries
Which came first, the cup-cake or the macaron? Ordid pie beat them in therace to be the trendy treatof the moment?
Maybe it doesn’t matter.Because the hot sweet‘now’ is the whoopie pie:Delicious oversized cake-like cookies sandwiching afluffy, sugary filling.
While chocolate cookieswith vanilla frosting aretraditional, whoopie piescome in just as many wildflavour combinations ascupcakes, macarons andpies.
For a fall whoopie pie,
there’s no better place tolook than to threefavourite cold-weatherflavours — gingerbread,pumpkin and pecan pie.Gingerbread lends itselfperfectly to the shell of awhoopie pie. It is, after all,still cake.
And pumpkin marriesso beautifully with thespices of gingerbread thatit couldn’t be left out.
But for the filling, youwant to get away from tra-ditional fluffy vanilla frost-ing. So this recipe opts fora praline cream cheese fill-ing and edges rolled in
toasted chopped pecansfor a treat that’s reminis-cent of a creamy pecanpie.
Preparation:
1 Heat your oven to 180 C(350 F). Line 2 large bak-ing sheets withparchment paper.
2 In a medium bowl, siftthe flour, bakingpowder, baking soda,salt, cinnamon, groundginger, cloves andallspice. Set aside.
3 In the bowl of anelectric mixer, beat but-ter, oil, brown sugar,molasses and vanilla.Add orange zest,candied ginger andeggs, beat to combine.Beat in pumpkin puree.Stir in flour mixture untilit is thoroughly mixed.
4 Drop the dough inmounds (50 ml/1/4 cupfor large or 30 ml/2 tbspfor small) onto the pre-pared baking sheets,leaving several centime-tres/inches betweeneach one for spreading.You should be able tomake 20 or 40 cakes, de-pending on whetheryou want small or largewhoopie pies. Bake thepies for 15 to 20 minutes
Ingredients:
Cakes• 550 ml (2 1/4 cups) all-purpose flour• 5 ml (1 tsp) bakingpowder• 2 ml (1/2 tsp) baking soda• 5 ml (1 tsp) salt• 5 ml (1 tsp) cinnamon• 10 ml (2 tsp) ground gin-ger• 2 ml (1/2 tsp) groundcloves• 2 ml (1/2 tsp) ground all-spice• 125 ml (1/2 cup or 1 stick)unsalted butter, room tem-perature• 125 ml (1/2 cup)vegetable oil• 500 ml (2 cups) packed
dark brown sugar• 45 ml (3 tbsp) molasses• 5 ml (1 tsp) vanilla extract• Zest of 1 orange• 30 ml (2 tbsp) minced can-died ginger• 2 eggs• 1 can (398 ml/14 oz)pumpkin puree
Filling• 2 pkgs (each 250 g/8 oz)cream cheese• 250 ml (1 cup) Marshmal-low Fluff• 125 ml (1/2 cup or 1 stick)unsalted butter, room temp• 125 ml (1/2 cup) packedbrown sugar• 5 ml (1 tsp) vanilla extract• 250 ml (1 cup) toastedchopped pecans
This recipe makes 10 small or 20 large whoopie pies.
MATTHEW MEAD/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE CANADIAN PRESS H/O
throughout that cake is de-licious,” chef Lynn Craw-ford says enthusiasticallyof her creation.
Preparation:
1 Preheat oven to 200 C(400 F). Spray muffin panwith non-stick cookingspray.
2 Puddings: In bowl,whisk flour, baking pow-der, baking soda, spicesand salt. In a separatebowl, whisk butter,brown sugar, pumpkinpuree, buttermilk, eggsand vanilla. Add to dryingredients and stir untilcombined. Divide batteramong muffin cups.Bake until tester comesout clean, about 20 min-
utes. Let cool in pan be-fore turning out.
3 Sauce: In saucepan,cook sugar overmedium-low heat, stir-ring until melted. Cookcaramel, gently swirlingpan, until deep golden.
Remove from heat andcarefully add cream andbutter. Return to heatand simmer, stirring, un-til caramel is dissolved.Remove from heat andstir in dried cranberries.
4 To serve, slice puddingshorizontally in half. Pourcranberry caramel saucebetween layers. Topwith a large spoon ofwhipped cream and asprinkle of cranberries.THEC ANADIAN PRESS/LYNN CRAWFORD
or until cakes feel slight-ly firm to the touch. Letthem fully cool beforefilling.
5 Filling: In the bowl of anelectric mixer, beattogether the creamcheese, Fluff, butter,brown sugar and vanillauntil smooth. Drop alarge spoonful onto flat
the side of half of thecakes. Use a second caketo top each, pressing flatsides together.
6 Place pecans in a large,wide bowl, then rolledge of each whoopiepie in pecans to coat. Re-frigerate in an airtightcontainer. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Many of us have had dayswhen 5 p.m. rolls aroundand we have little to showfor it.
In his new book, 18Minutes: Find Your Focus,Master Distraction, andGet the Right Things Done,management consultantPeter Bregman teachesthat it’s not about tacklingeverything on our plate —it’s about choosing what toput our energy into.
“We love to procrasti-nate, and distraction isthe golden ring of pro-crastination because wethink we are gettingthings done,” he says.
“We are answering 40emails and we think wehave been incredibly pro-ductive until we stop andsay, ‘Did I really need toanswer all of thoseemails?’ In a world thatwill take what it can fromus, we need to be morestrategic than ever aboutwhat we want to give it.”
His 18-minute plan canhelp you figure out how tobest manage your workday.
Take five minutes in themorning: “The five minutes in themorning is to get centredand ask yourself, ‘What isit that I most want to ac-complish today?’ I trans-fer those things onto mycalendar.
There is a tremendousamount of evidence thatpoints to the fact that if youdecide when and whereyou are going to do some-thing, you’ll do it. If youjust say, ‘I am going to do itsometime today,’ you won’tend up doing it. So there Iam really deciding what Iwant to get done and whereI am going to do it.”
Take one minute every hour: “Every hour I stop for one
minute and ask myself twoquestions: ‘Am I spendingmy time in the right wayright now?’ And: ‘Am I be-ing who I most want to beright now?’
“Those two questionsend up being this fantasticproductive interruption.Those questions will bring
me back to ‘What is that Iam trying to accomplishfor the day?’”
Take five minutes at the endof the day: “At the end of the day Ispend five minutes andask myself, ‘What did Ilearn from today? What
worked, what didn’twork?’
“Then also, who I wantto ask a question to, who Iwant to update, who Iwant to thank for some-thing they did to me. Ithink of these as my learn-ing minutes and my grati-tude minutes.”
In his new book, author Peter Bregman explains howto avoid the ‘golden ring of procrastination,’ find yourfocus and get things done — in only 18 minutes a day
18 minutes to a better me
It only takes minutes a day to better manage your workday.
ISTOCK IMAGES
“In a world thatwill take what itcan from us,we need to bemore strategicthan ever aboutwhat we want togive it.”PETER BREGMAN,MANAGEMENT CONSULTANT
METRO WORLD NEWS IN NEW YORK
The Catholic Immigration Centre and World Skills are offering a FREE program to assist International Medical Doctors to pass the Canadian medical licensing exams and obtain medical residency.
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metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
19
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ASSISTANT MANAGER
Bring your 2 years of experience in retail staff management to this full-time position at our Ottawa store. As a dynamic leader and strong communicator in
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Please send your resume, by October 14, 2011, indicating the title of the position of interest, to: Joanne Greenough, 1200 St-Laurent Blvd., Suite 177, St-Laurent Centre, Ottawa, Ontario, K1K 3B8. Fax: 613-238-8788. E-mail: [email protected]
Only those selected for an interview will be contacted. We are committed to employment equity.
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I graduated from the Uni-versity of Lethbridge witha BSc in computer science.The IT job market is a dog-eat-dog world and I alwaysknew that a simple BSc de-gree would not be enoughto get my foot in the door,which is why I decided toenhance my degree withco-op experience.
A university educationteaches you theory, where-as a co-op lets you applythose theories to the realworld. I contacted the U ofL career centre, researchedpotential employers andapplied to the positionsthat appealed to me.
I completed a 12-monthco-op work term with theGovernment of Alberta asa project assistant for theMinistry of Employment
and Immigration.Throughout my work
term, I was pleasantly sur-prised with the challeng-ing work and the level ofresponsibility I was given.My colleagues valued thework I did and my supervi-sor always encouraged meto take advantage of anylearning opportunities.
This co-op experienceadded significant value tomy university studies andgave me a head start in mycareer. A co-op work-termoften serves as a “testdrive” for both employersand students to evaluate ifthey’re suitable for employ-ment upon graduation.
My advice to fellow stu-dents and recent graduatesis to look for a positionthat offers you an opportu-nity for learning and ad-vancement. Research theemployer so you are ableto articulate what you canbring to the table and
what you hope to achievefrom the experience.
My advice to schoolsand career centres is to in-crease awareness of co-op.
Where I am now
During my last semester, Ireceived a job offer from amajor energy company asan IT analyst.
But that was not mydream job. Ever since myco-op work term with theGovernment of Alberta,I’ve wanted to work in thepublic sector. So when theMinistry of Employmentand Immigration office of-fered me a position as abusiness analyst a year lat-er, I seized the opportuni-ty. I provide consultingand project leadershipservices in order to meetbusiness needs.TALENTEGG.CA, CANADA’S ONLINECAREER RESOURCE FOR STUDENTSAND RECENT GRADS, WANTS TOHEAR YOUR STUDENT VOICE. SHAREIT AT TALENTEGG.CA.
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What I learned
Research employers tofind out which ones offerwhat you’re looking for,whether it’s training, men-torship, lots of responsibil-ity — or all of the above.Test drive employers dur-ing co-op terms and intern-ships to see if you like them(and if they like you).Try to work in a variety of industries and organiza-tions to find out what kindof work you enjoy doing.
theory on employmentcontracts. That is, employ-ers often bargain for exces-sive protection, no matterhow junior or administra-tive the employee. Howev-er, in seeking suchprotection, they some-times get none at all.
In 1992, Tom Masonsigned an employmentcontract with his employerChem-Trend Ltd., whichcontained a non-competeclause preventing himfrom dealing with its cus-tomers for one year afterhe left the company.
Mason did not hearabout the contract againuntil 17 years later whenhe was suddenly fired.
When Mason learnedthat companies were hesi-tant to offer him jobs, fear-ful they could be sued dueto his non-compete clause,he went to court to askthat it be declared invalid.
An Ontario judge con-cluded that the clause wasclear and that Mason wasbound by what he signed.
Employers collectively
sighed in relief since mostcourt cases strike downthese clauses based on thecourts’ interpretation ofwhat is fair, and not whatthe contract actually states.
Mason appealed andthat is exactly what theOntario Court of Appealfound. Chem-Trend’s con-tract was drafted in a man-ner that was unfair toMason and consequently,it was invalid.
Similarly, the AlbertaCourt of Appeal recentlyrefused to enforce the non-compete clauses in the em-
ployment contracts ofthree traders at the foreignexchange firm Globex.
What is importantabout this case is not thefact that the contractswere struck down but theCourt’s ruling that an em-ployee who is wrongfullydismissed should be re-lieved from complyingwith post-employment re-strictions, such as a non-compete or non-solicitclause regardless of howthey are drafted.DANIEL LUBLIN IS AN EMPLOYMENTLAWYER WITH WHITTEN & LUBLIN LLP.
20 work & education metronews.ca
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This is the tale of tworecent appeal cases,which together con-firm my “Kitchen Sink”
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DANIEL LUBLINDAN@CANADA EMPLOYMENTLAWYER.COMTWITTER: @DANLUBLIN
‘KITCHEN SINK’ APPROACH TO CONTRACTS CAN FAIL
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4sports
sports 21metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
On the sec-ond day ofthe 2011NHL draft,Bryan Mur-ray drewsome guf-faws from
the draft table floor. TheSenators GM had just trad-ed his third-round selec-tion to Columbus for theenigmatic Nikita Filatov, aonce highly touted Russ-ian prospect who had fall-
en from grace and whomany thought was boundto play this season in theKHL.
The question is, willMurray have the lastlaugh?
For his part, the 21-year-old Filatov is elated to bein Ottawa knowing this isa good opportunity — andpossibly his last — to shinein the NHL. The sixth over-all pick in 2004, Filatovhas had a checkered startto his professional career.He has only appeared in 44NHL games, netting amere six goals, three ofwhich came in one game.He had a rocky relation-
ship with former BlueJackets’ coach Ken Hitch-cock, who felt the young-ster lacked commitmentto team defence, and Fila-tov spent a good chunk oflast season in the Ameri-can Hockey League.
So, as the 2011-12 sea-son is about to launch,why should Sens fansthink anything will be dif-ferent in Ottawa? It mightnot, but in the bigger pic-ture, this is a move thatcomes with very little risk.
Filatov is in the finalyear of a two-way contractthat pays him nearly $2.2million at the NHL leveland $65,000 if he’s sent to
the minors. If he can ap-proach the level of playthat made him such ahighly regarded pick — 20goals and 45 points over afull season would be re-spectable — Murray willbe anointed a genius. Atworst, Ottawa discarded athird-round pick in a draftwhere the club had accu-mulated a league-high 12selections.
In pre-season, Filatovhad mixed results. He dis-played great hands and vi-sion, picked up threeassists and showed he iselusive in traffic and canstickhandle his way out ofa phone booth. On the
downside, he failed toscore, something he’llhave to do with regularityto help an offence-chal-lenged club and be viewedas a valued contributor.
We know he has thetools. He was the No. 1-ranked European junior in2008 and was selectedahead of talents Tyler My-ers, Jordan Eberle, TylerEnnis and the Senators’Erik Karlsson.
As it stands, Filatov willopen the season on the leftor right side of Jason Spez-za. Regardless, he’ll be in aposition to succeed. Sensfans and the organizationhope he’ll seize it.
Filatov’s upside too much for Sens to resistTHE HOCKEY
NEWSMURRAY [email protected]
This is what Adrian Beltreenvisioned when he signedwith Texas in the off-sea-son. Balls jumping off hisbat in October, the Rangersmaking another run for thepennant.
Beltre hit three straighthome runs and the defend-ing AL champions ad-vanced again, beating theTampa Bay Rays 4-3 inGame 4 yesterday to wintheir playoff matchup.
Beltre put on a showthat few others havematched, helping Texastake the best-of-five seriesand ending the Rays' re-markable run to the wild-card spot. Tampa Bayovercame a nine-gamedeficit against the BostonRed Sox in the wild-cardstandings in September.
“From my point of view,Texas gave me the bestchance to put a ring on myfinger,” Beltre said. “And Iam just two steps awayfrom it. Hopefully that hap-pens.”
Ian Kinsler led off the
game for Texas by homer-ing on the second pitchfrom rookie Jeremy Hel-lickson.
Beltre came into thegame in a 1-for-11 slumpbefore breaking loose formaybe his best day as a pro.
“I think besides my firstbig league hit, this is rightup there,” said the slugger,who spent last season withthe Red Sox.
Beltre became just theseventh player to homerthree times in a post-seasongame, and the first sinceAdam Kennedy of the An-
gels in 2002.Beltre connected in his
first three at-bats. Given achance to tie the big-leaguerecord of four homers in a
game, he hit a routine fly-out in the eighth.
Neftali Feliz gave up arun in the ninth inning be-
fore closing for his thirdsave of the series, preserv-ing the victory for MattHarrison.
Beltre hit solo shots offHellickson in the secondand fourth innings, andadded another solo driveagainst Matt Moore in theseventh.
Sean Rodriguez scoredall three runs for the Rays.He drew a one-out walkand scored on Casey Kotch-man's single in the ninth,but Feliz retired the nexttwo batters.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tampa Bay’s Cinderella season fizzles Beltre carries Rangers with historic day at the dish
The Rangers celebrate their American League Division Series win over the Rays yesterday in St. Petersburg, Fla.
MIKE CARLSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rays’ autumn luck expires
RANGERS RAYS
4 3
Quoted
“We were notable to make theprogress that wehoped we could
make and wewere not able to
continue thenegotiations”
NBA COMMISSIONER DAVIDSTERN YESTERDAY AFTERNEARLY FOUR HOURS OF
TALKS BETWEEN OWNERSAND PLAYERS ENDED
WITHOUT GAINING GROUNDON A NEW DEAL.
THE NBA CANCELLED THEREMAINDER OF THE PRE-
SEASON YESTERDAY AND WILLWIPE OUT THE FIRST TWOWEEKS OF THE REGULARSEASON IF THERE IS NOLABOUR AGREEMENT BY
MONDAY.
Scan code for more sports.
5Texas won for the fifthstraight time in theplayoffs at TropicanaField. The Rangerseliminated Tampa Bayin five games last year,winning three times inthe Rays’ stadium.
National League
Pinch-hitter Ben Francisco
broke open a scoreless
game with a three-run
homer in the seventh
inning and closer Ryan
Madson earned the save as
the Philadelphia Phillies
beat the St. Louis Cardinals
3-2 last night for a 2-1 lead
in their NL playoff series.
22 sports metronews.ca
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
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MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
SOCCER
TENNISNFLEAST DIVISION
GP W L T PF PA PtMontreal 13 8 5 0 406 323 16Winnipeg 13 8 5 0 317 309 16Hamilton 13 7 6 0 378 356 14Toronto 13 3 10 0 263 371 6
WEST DIVISION
GP W L T PF PA PtCalgary 13 8 5 0 364 348 16B.C. 13 7 6 0 367 273 14Edmonton 13 7 6 0 312 317 14Saskatchewan 13 4 9 0 275 385 8
WEEK 15Friday’s gameAll times EasternWinnipeg at Hamilton, 7:30 p.m.Saturday’s gameCalgary at B.C., 10 p.m.Monday, Oct. 10Toronto atMontreal, 1 p.m.Saskatchewan at Edmonton, 4:30 p.m.
CFLAMERICAN CONFERENCEEAST
W L T Pct PF PABuffalo 3 1 0 .750 133 96New England 3 1 0 .750 135 98N.Y. Jets 2 2 0 .500 100 95Miami 0 4 0 .000 69 104
SOUTHW L T Pct PF PA
Houston 3 1 0 .750 107 70Tennessee 3 1 0 .750 88 56Jacksonville 1 3 0 .250 39 85Indianapolis 0 4 0 .000 63 108
NORTHW L T Pct PF PA
Baltimore 3 1 0 .750 119 57Cincinnati 2 2 0 .500 80 74Cleveland 2 2 0 .500 74 93Pittsburgh 2 2 0 .500 64 72
WESTW L T Pct PF PA
San Diego 3 1 0 .750 91 85Oakland 2 2 0 .500 111 113Denver 1 3 0 .250 81 111Kansas City 1 3 0 .250 49 126
NATIONAL CONFERENCEEAST
W L T Pct PF PAWashington 3 1 0 .750 83 63N.Y. Giants 3 1 0 .750 102 87Dallas 2 2 0 .500 99 101Philadelphia 1 3 0 .250 101 101
SOUTHW L T Pct PF PA
New Orleans 3 1 0 .750 127 98Tampa Bay 3 1 0 .750 84 77Atlanta 2 2 0 .500 90 105Carolina 1 3 0 .250 89 102
NORTHW L T Pct PF PA
Green Bay 4 0 0 1.000 148 97Detroit 4 0 0 1.000 135 76Chicago 2 2 0 .500 94 98Minnesota 0 4 0 .000 77 96
WESTW L T Pct PF PA
San Francisco 3 1 0 .750 94 75Seattle 1 3 0 .250 58 97Arizona 1 3 0 .250 86 87St. Louis 0 4 0 .000 46 113Monday’s resultTampa Bay 24 Indianapolis 17WEEK FIVESunday’s gamesArizona atMinnesota, 1 p.m.Oakland at Houston, 1 p.m.Kansas City at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.Philadelphia at Buffalo, 1 p.m.NewOrleans at Carolina, 1 p.m.Cincinnati at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.Tennessee at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.Seattle at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.Tampa Bay at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.San Diego at Denver, 4:15 p.m.N.Y. Jets at NewEngland, 4:15 p.m.Green Bay at Atlanta, 8:20 p.m.Open: Baltimore, Cleveland, Dallas,Miami, St.Louis,WashingtonMonday, Oct. 10Chicago at Detroit, 8:30 p.m.
NHL
PRE-SEASONYesterday’s resultsAt HelsinkiAnaheim 4 Jokerit 3 (OT)AtMannheim, GermanyBuffalo 8 AdlerMannheim 3AtHamburg, GermanyLos Angeles 5 Hamburg 4Monday’s resultAt Zug, SwitzerlandEV Zug 8N.Y. Rangers 4
REGULAR SEASONTomorrow’s gamesAll times EasternPhiladelphia at Boston, 7 p.m.Montreal at Toronto, 7 p.m.Pittsburgh at Vancouver, 10 p.m.Friday’s gamesAnaheim vs. Buffalo at Helsinki, Finland, 1p.m.N.Y. Rangers vs. Los Angeles at Stockholm,Sweden, 1 p.m.Tampa Bay at Carolina, 7 p.m.Ottawa at Detroit, 7 p.m.Nashville at Columbus, 7 p.m.Chicago at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
MLSEASTERN CONFERENCE
GP W L T GF GA PtKansas City 32 11 9 12 47 40 45Philadelphia 31 10 7 14 41 34 44Columbus 32 12 12 8 38 41 44Houston 32 10 9 13 40 40 43New York 31 8 7 16 47 42 40D.C. United 30 9 10 11 46 46 38Chicago 31 7 8 16 40 40 37Toronto 32 6 13 13 33 56 31New England 31 5 14 12 35 51 27
WESTERN CONFERENCEGP W L T GF GA Pt
x-Los Angeles 31 18 3 10 46 23 64x-Seattle 31 16 6 9 51 33 57x-Salt Lake 31 15 10 6 43 32 51Dallas 31 13 11 7 36 34 46Colorado 32 11 9 12 42 40 45Portland 31 11 13 7 38 44 40Chivas USA 32 8 12 12 40 39 35San Jose 31 6 11 14 33 40 32Vancouver 30 4 16 10 29 50 22x—Clinched playoff berth.Note: Three points for awin, one for a tie.Last night’s resultLos Angeles at NewYorkTomorrow’s gameAll times EasternSalt Lake at Vancouver, 9:30 p.m.Saturday’s gamesSan Jose at NewEngland, 7:30 p.m.Philadelphia at Seattle FC, 10 p.m.Wednesday, Oct. 12FC Dallas at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.D.C. United at Vancouver, 10 p.m.Friday, Oct. 14Houston at Portland, 10:30 p.m.Real Salt Lake at Colorado, 10:30 p.m.Saturday, Oct. 15NewYork at Sporting Kansas City, 4 p.m.Toronto FC at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.Columbus at NewEngland, 7:30 p.m.Chicago at D.C. United, 7:30 p.m.Vancouver at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m.San Jose at Seattle FC, 10:30 p.m.Sunday, Oct. 16Chivas USA at Los Angeles, 9 p.m.
ATPRAKUTEN JAPANOPENAt TokyoSingles — First RoundMilos Raonic, Thornhill, Ont.,. def. YuichiSugita, Japan, 6-7 (4), 6-3, 7-6 (1).Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. Go Soeda, Japan,6-3, 6-2.David Ferrer (3), Spain, def. Kei Nishikori,Japan, 6-4, 6-3.Bernard Tomic, Australia def. Viktor Troicki(5), Serbia, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (1).Ivan Dodig, Croatia def. JuanMonaco (8), Ar-gentina, 6-2, 2-6, 7-6 (1).Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, def. Lukasz Kubot,Poland, 6-3, 3-6, 7-5.Alex Bogomolov, Jr., U.S., def. Jarkko Niemi-nen, Finland, 6-4, 6-4.David Nalbandian, Argentina, def. LukasRosol, Czech Republic, 6-1, 6-1.Tatsuma Ito, Japan, def. Dudi Sela, Israel, 6-4,3-6, 6-3.Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, def. Robin Haase,Netherlands, 6-3, 7-6 (5).Doubles — First RoundAndy and JamieMurray, Britain, def. PabloAndujar, Spain, andMilos Raonic, Thornhill,Ont., 7-5, 6-7 (2), 10-6 (tiebreak).
ATP-WTACHINAOPENAt BeijingMen’s Singles — First RoundJo-Wilfried Tsonga (1), France, def. GrigorDimitrov, Bulgaria, 7-6 (5), 7-5.Tomas Berdych (3), Czech Republic, def. Jur-genMelzer, Austria, 7-5, 7-5.Mikhail Youzhny, Russia, def. Nicolas Alma-gro (4), Spain, 6-3, 6-2.Marcel Granollers, Spain def. Gilles Simon(5), France, 6-2, 6-1.Zhang Ze, China, def. Li Zhe, China, 6-1, 6-3.AlbertMontanes, Spain def. Paul Capdeville,Chile, 6-3, 6-3.Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, def. TommyRobredo, Spain, 6-3, 7-6 (0).Fabio Fognini, Italy, def. Grega Zemlja, Slove-nia, 6-4, 6-1.Ivan Ljubicic, Croatia, def. TeymurazGabashvili, Russia, 7-5, 7-5.Juan Carlos Ferrero, Spain, def. Thomaz Bel-lucci, Brazil, 6-1, 7-6 (4).Women’s Singles — Second RoundCarolineWozniacki (1), Denmark, vs. JarmilaGajdosova, Australia, 6-2, 6-3.Vera Zvonareva (3), Russia, def. Klara Za-kopalova, Czech Republic, 6-3, 4-6, 6-2.Maria Kirilenko, Russia, def. SamStosur (6),Australia, 7-5, 1-6, 7-5.Marion Bartoli (8), France, def. ChristinaMcHale, U.S., 6-2, 6-1.Carla Suarez Navarro, Spain, def. AndreaPetkovic (9), Germany, 6-4, 6-4.Virginie Razzano, France, def. Roberta Vinci(15), Italy, 7-6 (7), 6-0.Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Russia, def. MariaJoseMartinez Sanchez, Spain, 6-2, 6-3.Flavia Pennetta, Italy, def. Daniela Hantucho-va, Slovakia, 6-2, 6-1.
DIVISION SERIESAll times Eastern(Best-of-5 series)
AMERICAN LEAGUEN.Y. YANKEES (E) VS. DETROIT (C)(Detroit leads 2-1)Last night’s resultN.Y. Yankees at DetroitMonday’s resultDetroit 5 N.Y. Yankees 4Tomorrow’s gamex-Detroit at N.Y. Yankees, 8:07 p.m.TEXAS (W)VS. TAMPABAY (WC)(Texaswins 3-1)Yesterday’s gameTexas 4 Tampa Bay 3Monday’s resultTexas 4 Tampa Bay 3
NATIONAL LEAGUEPHILADELPHIA (E) VS. ST. LOUIS (WC)(Philadelphia leads 2-1)Yesterday’s resultPhiladelphia 3 St. Louis 2Sunday’s resultSt. Louis 5 Philadelphia 4Tonight’s gamePhiladelphia (Oswalt 9-10) at St. Louis (Jack-son 12-9), 6:07 or 8:07 p.m.Friday’s gamex-St. Louis at Philadelphia, 5:07 or 8:07 p.m.MILWAUKEE (C) VS. ARIZONA (W)(Milwaukee leads 2-0)Last night’s resultMilwaukee at ArizonaTonight’s gamex-Milwaukee (Wolf 13-10) at Arizona (Saun-ders 12-13), 8:07 or 9:37 p.m.Friday’s gamex-Arizona atMilwaukee, 5:07 or 8:07 p.m.x — if necessary.
RANGERS 4, RAYS 3Texas ab r h bi Tampa Bay ab r h biKinsler 2b 4 1 1 1 Jnnngs lf 4 0 1 0Andrus ss 3 0 0 0 BUpton cf 4 0 0 0JHmltn cf-lf 4 0 0 0 Longori 3b 4 0 0 0MiYong dh 3 0 0 0 Zobrist 2b 4 0 1 0ABeltre 3b 4 3 3 3 Damon dh 4 0 0 0Napoli c 4 0 1 0 Shppch c 3 0 1 0N.Cruz rf 4 0 0 0 Fuld ph 1 0 0 0DvMrp lf 3 0 1 0 SRdrgz ss 2 3 1 0Gentry pr-cf 0 0 0 0 Ktchm 1b 4 0 2 2Morlnd 1b 3 0 0 0 EJhnsn pr 0 0 0 0Joyce rf 4 0 1 1Totals 32 4 6 4 Totals 34 3 7 3Texas 110 100 100 4Tampa Bay 010 100 001 3DP—Tampa Bay 1. LOB—Texas 6, Tampa Bay 7.2B—S.Rodriguez (1), Joyce (1). HR—Kinsler(1), A.Beltre 3 (3).
IP H R ER BB SOTexasM.HarrisonW,1-0 5 5 2 2 2 9D.Holland H,1 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0M.AdamsH,3 2-3 0 0 0 0 1Ogando H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1Feliz S,3-3 1 1 1 1 1 1Tampa BayHellickson L,0-1 4 4 3 3 1 1M.Moore 3 1 1 1 1 2Jo.Peralta 2-3 0 0 0 2 0W.Davis 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 1Umpires—Home, Greg Gibson; First, BrianGorman; Second,Marvin Hudson; Third,MarkCarlson; Right, Dale Scott; Left, Kerwin Dan-ley.T—3:05. A—28,299 (34,078).
PHILLIES 3, CARDINALS 2Philadelphia ab r h bi St. Louis ab r h biRollins ss 4 0 2 0 Furcal ss 5 0 1 0Utley 2b 4 0 1 0 Craig lf 3 1 0 0Pence rf 3 0 0 0 Pujols 1b 5 1 4 0Howard 1b 4 0 0 0 Brkmn rf 4 0 0 0Victorn cf 4 1 1 0 Freese 3b 5 0 1 1Mayrry lf 4 0 0 0 YMolin c 5 0 1 1Polanc 3b 4 0 1 0 Lohse pr 0 0 0 0Ruiz c 3 1 1 0 Theriot 2b 5 0 4 0Hamels p 2 0 0 0 Jay cf 1 0 0 0BFrncs ph 1 1 1 3 Punto ph 1 0 0 0Worley p 0 0 0 0 Schmkr cf 0 0 0 0Bastrd p 0 0 0 0 JGarci p 3 0 0 0Lidge p 0 0 0 0 Salas p 0 0 0 0Madson p 1 0 0 0 Hollidy ph 1 0 1 0Chamrs pr 0 0 0 0Motte p 0 0 0 0Totals 34 3 7 3 Totals 38 2 12 2Philadelphia 000 000 300 3St. Louis 000 000 101 2DP—Philadelphia 1. LOB—Philadelphia 6, St.Louis 14. 2B—Rollins (3), Pujols 3 (3). HR—B.Francisco (1). SB—Rollins (2), Pujols (1),Berkman (1), Theriot (1).
IP H R ER BB SOPhiladelphiaHamelsW,1-0 6 5 0 0 3 8Worley H,1 1 3 1 1 1 0Bastardo H,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0Lidge 0 2 0 0 0 0Madson S,1-1 1 2-3 2 1 1 0 0St. LouisJ.Garcia L,0-1 7 6 3 3 2 3Salas 1 0 0 0 0 0Motte 1 1 0 0 0 1Worley pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.Lidge pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.HBP—byHamels (Berkman).WP—J.Garcia.PB—Y.Molina.Umpires—Home, Jerry Layne; First, AngelHernandez; Second, Gary Cederstrom; Third,Chad Fairchild; Right, JerryMeals; Left, ChrisGuccione.T—3:13. A—46,914 (43,975).
BASEBALLMLB—Fined St. Louismanager for criticizingan umpire in a televised interview during Sun.night’s game. Suspended free agentminorleague OF Timo Perez, Oaklandminor leagueOFMitchell LeVier, free agentminor league COscar Rodriguez & free agentminor leagueRHPKelvin Santana 50 games for violatingtheminor league drug program.
AMERICAN LEAGUEK.C.ROYALS—Announcedstrength&condition-ingcoachTyHillwon’t returnnextseason.NamedRyanStonebergstrength&conditioningcoach.
NATIONAL LEAGUEL.A.DODGERS—Declined2012 cluboptionson3BCaseyBlake&RHPJonGarland. Sent INF-OFEugenioVelez outright toAlbuquerque (PCL).
FOOTBALLNFLMINNESOTAVIKINGS—SignedFBRyanD’Impe-rio frompractice squad.WaivedTEAllenReisner.NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS—Signed S RossVentrone to the practice squad.SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Placed DTWillTukuafu on the injured reserve list. Signed SColin Jones from the practice squad, SignedWR JohnMatthews to the practice squad.SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—Released FB EddieWilliams. Placed LBMattMcCoy on injured re-serve. Signed LB Jameson Konz from the prac-tice squad and LBDavid Vobora.
HOCKEYNHLLEAGUEOFFICE—NamedDanMarr director ofcentral scouting.BUFFALOSABRES—Signed DMattMacKenzieto a three-year, entry-level contract.CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS—Signedvicepresident-generalmanagerStanBowmanto3-yrcontractextensionthrough2015-16season.AssignedFJeremyMorintoRockford(AHL).AgreedtotermswithFBrandonSaadon3-yrcontract.COLUMBUSBLUE JACKETS—Assigned F RyanRussell to Springfield (AHL).DETROITREDWINGS—AssignedGJoeyMac-Donald, FChrisConner,DGarnetExelby,DLoganPyett&DDougJanik toGrandRapids (AHL).NASHVILLE PREDATORS—Assigned F KyleWilson toMilwaukee (AHL).NEWJERSEYDEVILS—Traded C David Steckelto Toronto for a 2012 fourth-round draft pick.Reached an affiliate agreementwith Kalama-zoo (ECHL) for the 2011-12 season.N.Y. ISLANDERS—Agreed to termswith CRyan Strome on a 3-yr, entry-level contract.TAMPABAY LIGHTNING—Assigned F DanaTyrell to Norfolk (AHL). Placed DMattiasOhlund on injured reserve.VANCOUVER CANUCKS—Claimed RWDaleWeise off waivers from theN.Y. Rangers.
LACROSSEMLLDENVEROUTLAWS—Named Tony Seamangeneral manager.
TRANSACTIONS
5drive
drive 23metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
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By comparison
Ford Fiesta Base price: $14,500All-new sedan andhatchback modelsare easy on the eyesand easy on gas.
Hyundai AccentBase price: $14,700New sedan andhatch feature 138 hpplus 5.9 l/100 kmcombined rating.
Chevrolet SonicBase price: $15,000(est.)2012 Aveo replace-ment offers lots ofpower plus good fu-el economy.
WHEELBASE MEDIA
The new Yaris might have less of a wow factor than cars such as the new Hyundai Accent, but the Yaris’s style is practically without flaw.
Others have developed more modern powertrains, however, which seems out of step for Toyota, which is normally seen as the natural leader.
It used to be that picking asmall car was pretty easy:there just weren’t thatmany candidates, plainand simple.
Now it’s like trying topick a puppy from thepound.
There are plenty of cutechoices with all kinds ofbark and sass, and more
keep arriving every day itseems.
In that respect, the Yariswas more of an old dogthan a young pup, but theupgrades for the 2012model year at least keep itfresh enough to belongwith newcomers such asthe Mazda2, Hyundai Ac-cent, Chevy Sonic and FordFiesta.
The first-generationYaris that lasted for fivemodel years wasn’t the
liveliest runner on thetrack, but a roomy interiorand low price kept it onthe front burner. As well,the tiny Toyota could be
had in two or four-doorhatchback body styles, aswell as a four-door sedan.
There’s no word if atrunk-equipped Yaris will
again be built, but bothhatches return in slightlyenlarged formats.
The upgraded, crisper-looking Yaris will remainamong the more popularsmall-car picks, even asthe entire category addsvariety at a steady clip.
Indeed the pound is get-ting bigger and the newpups are getting every-one’s attention, but atleast the Yaris now hasenough bark to be noticed.
Toyota’s old dog still barks
BASE PRICE:
$15,000
Toyota Yaris
What you should know
about the 2012 Toyota
Yaris:
Types: Two- /four-door,front-wheel-drive sub-com-
pact hatchback.Engine (hp): 1.5-litre DOHCI4 (106).Transmission: Five-speedmanual; four-speedautomatic (opt.).Mileage: 7.0 l/100 km city,5.7 highway (automatic).
MALCOLM [email protected] MEDIA
24 drive metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
Starting from
1.9%†
Purchase Financing24 Months APR
Offer valid on all 2006 – 2010 CR-V models.
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†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.
A3 has a mainly-satisfied owner community2006 to 2011 Audi A3SECOND
GEAR
JUSTIN [email protected]
Audi’s entry-level model,the A3, is a five-doorhatchback with four- orsix-cylinder power, avail-able Quattro AWD and allthe flexibility andfunctionality of an upscaleGerman mini-wagon.
The A3 has beennicknamed the BeverlyHills GTI in some circles,referencing itsVolkswagen-based under-pinnings and engines.
Feature content includ-ed upgraded audio, heatedleather, navigation,folding rear seats, apanoramic sunroof andplenty more.
EngineLook for VW Group’stwo-litre turbo four-cylin-der with 200 horsepower, or a 3.2-litre V-6 with 250. Quattro wasstandard with the six-cylinder en-gine and available on four-cylinderunits later in the A3’s life.
Common issuesHard, inconsistent or “slop-py” shifting from theDirect Shift Gearbox (DSG)may be caused by a faultycomputer control or“mechatronics” unit,which controls thisadvanced transmission.Long-term reliability of theDSG gearbox is currentlyunclear. If you’re happydriving a manual, stick toyour guns.
Note that sporadic accel-eration or a “lumpy” feel tothe engine’s power deliverycould be related to faulty orfailing ignition coils.
VerdictThere are more affordableand reliable ways to getaround than the A3 —though a largely satisfiedowner community suggeststhat the potential issues arefar outweighed by therewarding year-round driv-ing experience and luxury.
What owners likeExisting A3 owners typical-ly rave about styling, buildquality, comfort levels, all-season trac-tion and even fuel efficiency on mod-els with the four-cylinder engine.Good ride and handling characteristicsround out the package.
What owners dislikeOwners say the A3 won’t provethe most comfortable way to haularound four or five adults, and the centreconsole chews nicely into the driver’s right-side knee space. Owners of earlier modelstypically wished for Bluetooth compatibility,and many report “weak” factory tires.
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r-to
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s, w
hic
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e ded
uct
ed f
rom
the
neg
otia
ted
pri
ce b
efor
e ta
xes.
Am
ounts
vary
by
vehic
le.
See
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r re
taile
r fo
r co
mple
te d
etai
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§2
011
Ram
15
00 C
rew
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Lar
amie
show
n.
Pri
ce i
ncl
udin
g ap
plic
able
Con
sum
er C
ash
Dis
count:
$3
6,1
95
. P
rici
ng
incl
udes
fre
ight
($1,
40
0),
air t
ax
(if
applic
able
), t
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levy
and
OM
VIC
fee
. P
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excl
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any
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arges
and
other
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able
fee
s an
d ta
xes.
See
bot
tom
of
the
ad f
or r
ange
of p
oten
tial
ret
aile
r fe
es.
Ret
aile
r or
der
/tra
de
may
be
nec
essa
ry.
Ret
aile
rs m
ay s
ell
for
less
. Loy
alty
Bon
us
Cas
h is
off
ered
on
mos
t new
20
11 a
nd
20
12 C
hry
sler
, Je
ep,
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ge
and
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els
(with
the
exce
ption
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20
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Dod
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Cal
iber
Can
ada
Val
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Pac
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and
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Plu
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Car
avan
Can
ada
Val
ue
Pac
kage,
Gra
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Car
avan
Car
go
Van
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urn
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anad
a Val
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kage,
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15
00 R
eg C
ab [
4x2
& 4
x4],
Ram
Chas
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Cab
, Je
ep W
rangle
r 2
-doo
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por
t, P
atri
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por
t [4
x2
& 4
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and
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4x4
]) a
nd
is d
educt
ed f
rom
the
neg
otia
ted
pri
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taxe
s. E
ligib
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clude
thos
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at h
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red
into
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, Je
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Dod
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or R
am v
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old
Key
Lea
se w
ith
a m
aturi
ty d
ate
from
Oct
ober
1,
20
11 a
nd
forw
ard.
Som
e co
nditio
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apply
. S
ee y
our
reta
iler
for
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ple
te d
etai
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The
Bes
t B
uy
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l is
a r
egis
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d tr
adem
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of C
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SIR
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SIR
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Rad
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SCAN HEREFOR MORE GREAT OFFERS
+Your local retailer may charge additional fees for administration/pre-delivery that can range from $0 to $1,098 and anti-theft/safety products that can range from $0 to $1,298. Charges may vary by retailer.
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26 play metronews.caWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011
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Across
1 0075 Swelled head8 Acknowledge12 Reed instrument13 Cattle call14 Options list15 Bean spiller?17 Curved lines18 Left the chair19 Nickelodeonspillages21 Afternoon affairs24 Lennon’s lady25 Use a paper towel28 Scorch30 Can. neighbor33 The whole thing34 Aquatic flora35 Kennedy or Koppel36 Crafty37 Greenish blue38 At the home of(Fr.)39 It’s the word41 Lemon coating43 Oklahoman46 Passion50 Piece of work51 Cape Cod city54 Greek cheese55 Lamb’s dam56 Apportion (out)57 In need of liniment58 Gender59 Old portico
Down
1 Goes up and down2 Death notice3 NASA scrub4 Lower in rank5 Ostrich’s cousin6 Obtained
7 Ahs’ mates8 Forcefully9 Martini ingredient10 Erstwhile11 Wimpy sort16 Rhyming tribute20 Unmatched22 With skill23 “— and spice and...”25 Existed26 Under the weather27 Old Chrysler29 Hindu princess31 Witness32 Wood-shaping
tool34 Pinnacle38 Data holders40 Recant42 “Platoon” setting43 Couch44 Oil cartel45 Deli loaves47 Song for two48 “Beetle Bailey”dog49 Perlman of“Cheers”52 Great wonder53 Actor Harrison
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 your kiss,and read even more kisses,online atmetronews.ca/kiss.
Luke, I love you oh so much,its impossible to explain.These past almost twoyears, seeing you everydayno matter what, and livingwith each other for over ayear, going everywhere andmaking memories, etc.,have been the best times ofmy life. *MUAH* ^.^ ?1.19.2010 ?OLIVIA
Stoopid Face I know youcan never be all mine, butwhen I have you for thosefew moments in our lives,it's amazing. My doublebed is lonely with only me.Miss you. R A B B I T
My Jamaican HunHun!! al-most half a decade later i'mstill so into u and still don'tknow why! & this i want thewhole world to know!!andno matter what i just wantto tell U that U're the best &better than all the rest. justso U know..with us it's nev-er off the table!AdvanceHappy Bday Mahal! JB
KISS
Yesterday’s answer
Today’s horoscope
You write it!
Write a funny captionfor the image above andsend it [email protected] — the winning caption will bepublished in tomorrow’sMetro.
Caption contestTHEMBA HADEBE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SERGEI GRITS/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESSFor today’s crossword answersand for expanded horoscopes, go to metronews.ca
“Ican’t
believe thetalked meinto this.”
JOHN
WIN!
Aries March 21-April 20 It’sone of those days when you wouldrather be anywhere but where youare supposed to be. Chin up.
Taurus April 21-May 21 Noth-ing you do is ever wasted. Your bigbreakthrough WILL come.
Gemini May 22-June 21 Itmay seem as if certain people arebeing deliberately obstructive, andmaybe they are, but why shouldthat be? Think about it.
Cancer June 22-July 22 Thereis no need to worry about the fu-ture. You may not have gotten thebreaks you wanted, but that’s life.
Leo July 23-Aug.23 No matterhow unsettling the changes thatare taking place may be, they areall for the best in the long-term.
Virgo Aug. 24- Sept. 22 Some-times, it can be all too easy to getdepressed, so focus on things thatbring a smile to your face.
Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 23 The se-cret to happiness is to keep movingforwards. It’s all about self-motiva-tion. Go for it.
Scorpio Oct. 24-Nov. 22 Youmade an error of judgment andneed to make amends to thosewho followed your advice and lost.
Sagittarius Nov. 23-Dec. 21 Most of the time your hunchesare spot on, but if you trust yourinstincts today, it may all go wrong.
Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 20Your relationship with people inauthority is more important thanusual, stay in their good books.
Aquarius Jan. 21-Feb. 18You may think someone is keepingsomething from you, and maybethey are. It doesn’t have to be bad.
Pisces Feb. 19-March 20. Letcertain people know that you willnot allow them to get rich at yourexpense. SALLY BROMPTON
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PAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HERE
TMThe Hyundai nam
es, logos, product names, feature nam
es, images and slogans are tradem
arks owned by H
yundai Auto C
anada Corp. †Finance offers available O
.A.C
. from H
yundai Financial Services based on a new 2012 Elantra L 6-Speed/2012 Sonata G
L 6-Speed/2012 Accent L 5D
r 6-Speed/2012 Tucson L 5-Speed/2012 Santa Fe 2.4L GL A
uto with an annual finance rate of 2.9%
/0%/2.9%
/0%/0%
for 72/60/72/60/60 m
onths. Bi-w
eekly payment is $122/$188/$106/$169/$219. N
o down paym
ent is required. Cost of B
orrowing is $1,577/$0/$1,406/$0/$0. Finance offers include D
elivery and Destination of $1,495/$1,565/$1,495/$1,760/$1,760, fees, levies, charges and all applicable taxes (excluding H
ST). Registration, insurance, PPSA
and license fees are excluded. Delivery and destination charge
includes freight, P.D.E., dealer adm
in fees and a full tank of gas. Financing example: 2012 Elantra L 6-speed for $17,380 at 2.9%
per annum equals $122 bi-w
eekly for 72 months for a total obligation of $18,692. C
ash price is $17,380. Cost of B
orrowing is $1,577. Exam
ple price includes Delivery and D
estination of $1,495, fees, levies, charges and all applicable taxes (excluding HST). R
egistration, insurance, PPSA
and license fees are excluded. †Prices for m
odels shown: 2012 Elantra Lim
ited/2012 Sonata Limited/2012 A
ccent GLS 5D
r/2012 Tucson Limited/2012 Santa Fe Lim
ited is $24,330/$31,600/$18,830/$34,245/$37,695. Delivery and D
estination charges of $1,495/$1,565/$1,495/$1,760/$1,760, fees, levies, charges and all applicable taxes (excluding HST) are included. R
egistration, insurance, PPSA
and license fees are excluded. ΩFuel econom
y comparison based on com
bined fuel consumption rating for the 2012 A
ccent 5Dr 6-Speed M
anual (4.9L/100km), m
anufacturer’s testing and 2011 AIA
MC
combined fuel consum
ption ratings for the sub-compact vehicle class. ‡A
utoPacific Vehicle Satisfaction Award for B
est Com
pact Car aw
arded to the 2011 Elantra Sedan. Fuel consum
ption for 2012 Elantra L 6-speed m
anual (HW
Y 4.9L/100KM; C
ity 6.8L/100KM)/2012 Sonata G
L 6-Speed (HW
Y 5.7L/100KM; C
ity 8.7L/100KM)/2012 A
ccent L 5Dr 6-Speed (H
WY 4.9L/100KM
; City 6.7L/100KM
)/2012 Tucson L (HW
Y 6.5L/100KM; C
ity 9.1L/100KM)/2012 Santa Fe 2.4L 6-Speed A
utomatic FW
D (C
ity 10.4L/100KM, H
WY 7.2L/100KM
) are based on Manufacturer’s testing. A
ctual fuel efficiency may vary
based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for com
parison purposes only. †O
ffers available for a limited tim
e and subject to change or cancellation without notice. See dealer for com
plete details. Dealer m
ay sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order m
ay be required. πBased on the A
ugust 2011 AIA
MC
report. G
overnment 5-Star
Safety Ratings are part of the U
.S. National H
ighway Traffic Safety A
dministration’s (N
HTSA’s) N
ew C
ar Assessm
ent Program (w
ww
.SaferCar.gov). ∆
See your dealer for eligible vehicles and full details of the Graduate R
ebate Program. ††H
yundai’s Com
prehensive Limited W
arranty coverage covers most vehicle com
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anship under normal use and m
aintenance conditions.
5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty
HyundaiCanada.com
Limited model shown
SELLING PRICE: $17,380ELANTRA L 6-SPEED. DELIVERY, DESTINATION & FEES INCLUDED.
PLUS HST.
DOWNPAYMENT
$0AND
BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$122†OWN IT
FINANCING FOR 72 MONTHS
2.9%WITH
HIGHWAY 4.9L/100 KM
58 MPG
1 DESIGN2012 ELANTRA SEDAN2011 AUTOPACIFIC BEST COMPACT CAR‡
DOWNPAYMENT
$0AND
FINANCING FOR 60 MONTHS
0%BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$169†OWN IT WITH SELLING PRICE: $21,895
TUCSON L 5-SPEED. DELIVERY, DESTINATION
& FEES INCLUDED. PLUS HST.
HIGHWAY 6.5L/100 KM
43 MPG
2012 TUCSON4 VERSATILITY STYLISH CROSSOVER UTILITY VEHICLE
2012 SONATA5-STAR SAFETY RATING
FINANCING FOR60 MONTHS
DOWNPAYMENT
0% $0BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$188†OWN IT WITH AND
HIGHWAY 5.7L/100 KM
50 MPG
SELLING PRICE: $24,400SONATA GL 6-SPEED. DELIVERY,
DESTINATION & FEES INCLUDED.PLUS HST.
AWARDED THE HIGHEST GOVERNMENTCRASH SAFETY RATING
U.S. NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION2 SAFETY
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FINANCING FOR 72 MONTHS
DOWNPAYMENT
2.9% $0BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$106†OWN IT WITH AND
SELLING PRICE: $15,130ACCENT L 5DR 6-SPEED. DELIVERY, DESTINATION & FEES INCLUDED.
PLUS HST.HIGHWAY
4.9L/100 KM 58 MPGΩ
Limited model shown
Limited model shown
GLS model shown
FINANCING FOR 60 MONTHS
DOWNPAYMENT
0% $0BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
$219†OWN IT WITH AND
SELLING PRICE: $28,395SANTA FE 2.4L GL AUTO. DELIVERY, DESTINATION & FEES INCLUDED.
PLUS HST.HIGHWAY
7.2L/100 KM 39 MPG
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ARE HERE2012THE
5 REASONS WHY HYUNDAI IS THE BEST-SELLING CAR BRAND IN CANADA.BESTSELLING
Limited model shown
PAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HEREPAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HEREPAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HEREPAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HEREPAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HEREPAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HEREPAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HEREHyundai Pembroke1945 Petawawa Blvd.
Pembroke, 613-735-5636
Bank Street Hyundai2788 Bank St.
Ottawa, 613-739-7530
Harmony Hyundai 293 Pigeon St.
Rockland, 613-446-2220
Pathway Hyundai1375 Youville Dr.
Orleans, 613-837-4222
Myers Hyundai164 Robertson Rd.
Ottawa, 613-721-4567
Hyundai on Hunt Club390 Hunt Club Road West
Ottawa, 613-688-3600
Myers Kanata Hyundai400-2500 Palladium Dr.
Kanata, On 613-592-8883