20
HALIFAX NEWS WORTH SHARING. Thursday, August 7, 2014 metronews.ca | twitter.com/metrohalifax | facebook.com/metrohalifax Limited seats sll available for the fall. Don't wait... call or click TODAY! Interior Decorang Change your life & the lives of others. Complete a 2 year diploma in just 60 weeks. successcollege.ca 902.865.8283 Counselling Services and Child & Youth Care Actor portrayals. Our Human Services programs prepare you to work as a counsellor in addicons, mental health, vicms of abuse, at-risk youth and many more. 11 *NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Transaction not required to participate in the Contest. Contest ends 9/30/14. Complete contest rules available at any branch of The Cash Store or visit www.cashstore.ca. ENTER & YOU COULD AT CASHSTORE.CA/FREEF * PA Y DA Y L OA N S A RE HIGH C OS T L O AN S . CO ST O F B O RRO W ING F OR A $ 1 0 0.00 L O AN F OR 1 4 DA Y S : $25 . 0 0. C O S T OF BORRO W ING FO R A $ 4 00 . 00 L O A N F OR 1 4 DAY S : $1 0 0.00 . PAYDAY LOANS ARE HIGH COST LOANS. COST OF BORROWING FOR A $100.00 LOAN FOR 14 DAYS: $25.00. COST OF BORROWING FOR A $400.00 LOAN FOR 14 DAYS: $100.00. Wanted by the Halifax police: your feedback Words such as “inefficient” and “reactive” stand out in a collage created from public feedback as part of Halifax Regional Police’s draft stra- tegic plan. There are also terms such as “effective” and “professional” included in the word cloud of citizen opinion on how well of- ficers are doing across the city. Whether negative or positive, police say they’re listening. “We made a conscious deci- sion that we wanted to be very, very open,” Halifax Regional Police Deputy Chief Bill Moore said Wednesday of the collab- orative process to develop the 10-year strategic plan, entitled the REenvision Project. “We went out to commun- ity groups, we had public sur- veys, we had internal surveys.” Police want even more pub- lic feedback now that the first draft of the plan is complete, and are accepting comments until Aug. 22 “Does this adequately de- scribe the police force that you would like to see in the future?” said Moore, adding changes have already been made, including to HRP mis- sion and value statements. According to the draft plan, HRP’s mission is now “work- ing together to make our com- munities safe,” the vision is “to be trusted members of our communities,” and there are five different value statements. “We really want to take those and weave them through everything we do,” Moore said. “From the people we hire, the way we recruit, the way we expect our co-workers to inter- act, the way we interact with the community.” A public presentation avail- able online states that in going to the public, HRP “may have gotten more than we bar- gained for,” and “it’s clear that there are unmet expectations.” “Sometimes that’s hard to hear,” Moore said. “(But) we need to hear it.” Public input. Force asks for the cold, hard truth about first draft of new 10-year strategic plan LOOKS WHO’S TALKING NOW... TRAVOLTA’S PRIVATE PILOT CLAIMS TO HAVE ALSO SPENT SOME TIME AS HIS PRIVATE BOYFRIEND PAGE 11 An Atlantic Canadian kind of festival The Atlantic Film Festival will highlight local talent PAGE 3 ‘More harm than good’ Experimental Ebola drug may distract from trusted methods to stop the outbreak, some health experts say PAGE 5 COMING UP ROSES The threat of rain from a brush with Hurricane Bertha held off for most of Wednesday, allowing Halifax residents to take advantage of the warm, sunny weather with outdoor activities such as a noon-time stroll through a fully bloomed Public Gardens. JEFF HARPER/METRO KRISTEN LIPSCOMBE [email protected] Read it online Visit halifax.ca/reenvisionhrp to read the strategic plan.

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HALIFAX

NEWS WORTH

SHARING.

Thursday, August 7, 2014 metronews.ca | twitter.com/metrohalifax | facebook.com/metrohalifax

Limited seats still availablefor the fall. Don't wait...

call or click TODAY!

Interior Decorating

Change your life & the lives of others.Complete a 2 year diploma in just 60 weeks.

successcollege.ca 902.865.8283Counselling Services and Child & Youth CareActor portrayals.

Our Human Services programs prepare you to workas a counsellor in addictions, mental health, victims of abuse, at-risk youth and many more.

11

*NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Transaction not required to participate in the Contest. Contest ends 9/30/14. Complete contest rules available at any branch of The Cash Store or visit www.cashstore.ca.

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PAYDAY LOANS ARE HIGH COST LOANS. COST OF BORROWING FOR A $100.00 LOAN FOR 14 DAYS: $25.00. COST OF BORROWING FOR A $400.00 LOAN FOR 14 DAYS: $100.00.

PAYDAY LOANS ARE HIGH COST LOANS. COST OF BORROWING FOR A $100.00 LOAN FOR 14 DAYS: $25.00. COST OF BORROWING FOR A $400.00 LOAN FOR 14 DAYS: $100.00.

Wanted by the Halifax police: your feedback

Words such as “inefficient” and “reactive” stand out in a collage created from public feedback as part of Halifax Regional Police’s draft stra-tegic plan.

There are also terms such as “effective” and “professional” included in the word cloud of citizen opinion on how well of-ficers are doing across the city. Whether negative or positive, police say they’re listening.

“We made a conscious deci-

sion that we wanted to be very, very open,” Halifax Regional Police Deputy Chief Bill Moore said Wednesday of the collab-orative process to develop the 10-year strategic plan, entitled the REenvision Project.

“We went out to commun-ity groups, we had public sur-veys, we had internal surveys.”

Police want even more pub-lic feedback now that the first draft of the plan is complete, and are accepting comments until Aug. 22

“Does this adequately de-scribe the police force that you would like to see in the future?” said Moore, adding changes have already been made, including to HRP mis-sion and value statements.

According to the draft plan, HRP’s mission is now “work-ing together to make our com-munities safe,” the vision is “to be trusted members of our

communities,” and there are five different value statements.

“We really want to take those and weave them through everything we do,” Moore said. “From the people we hire, the way we recruit, the way we expect our co-workers to inter-act, the way we interact with the community.”

A public presentation avail-able online states that in going to the public, HRP “may have gotten more than we bar-gained for,” and “it’s clear that there are unmet expectations.”

“Sometimes that’s hard to hear,” Moore said. “(But) we need to hear it.”

Public input. Force asks for the cold, hard truth about fi rst draft of new 10-year strategic plan

LOOKS WHO’S TALKING NOW...TRAVOLTA’S PRIVATE PILOT CLAIMS TO HAVE ALSO SPENT SOME TIME AS HIS PRIVATE BOYFRIEND PAGE 11

An Atlantic Canadian kind of festivalThe Atlantic Film Festival will highlight local talent PAGE 3

‘More harm than good’Experimental Ebola drug may distract from trusted methods to stop the outbreak, some health experts say PAGE 5

COMING UP ROSESThe threat of rain from a brush with Hurricane Bertha held off for most of Wednesday, allowing Halifax residents to take advantage of the warm, sunny weather with outdoor activities such as a noon-time stroll through a fully bloomed Public Gardens. JEFF HARPER/METRO

[email protected]

Read it online

Visit halifax.ca/reenvisionhrp to read the strategic plan.

Page 2: 20140807_ca_halifax

02 metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014NEWS

NEW

S

A 20-year-old man is facing charges after police say an argument on the Halifax waterfront early Wednesday morning turned physical.

Around 2:30 a.m., Halifax Regional Police responded to the boardwalk near the Water-front Warehouse. They found a 54-year-old man with ser-ious, but non-life-threatening, facial injuries.

Four men were arrested

nearby, including a 20-year-old Sackville man, who faces charges of aggravated assault and breach of recognizance.

Const. Pierre Bourdages said the suspect and victim don’t know each other.

Of the other three men, Bourdages said one was re-leased, one was charged with possession of cocaine and the third was charged with breach of probation. METRO

Face injury. Man charged a� er waterfront assault

Firefi ghters clean up after a forest fi re in this 2010 photo. METRO FILE

Beef up open-air burn bylaws: Halifax Fire

A few months after the prov-ince changed its rules on open-air burning, Halifax Fire is pro-posing the municipality go a step further.

New amendments to HRM’s Open Air Burning By-law passed first reading in regional council Tuesday.

“Our bylaw in some cases

would actually contradict the (provincial) regulations,” said Deputy Fire Chief Roy Hollett in an interview Wednesday.

Hollett said residents should check the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) web page to see whether it’s a “burning,” “restricted,” or “no burning” day.

Although the province al-lows residents to have a fire on the burning or restricted days until 8 a.m., Hollett said they’re proposing HRM fires stop at midnight.

“We’ve proposed to elim-inate all overnight burning,” Hollett said, adding that while DNR allows for two piles of brush, Halifax Fire is sug-gesting only one per property.

On burning days, the pro-posed bylaw states HRM resi-dents could burn brush or use a chiminea between 2 p.m. and midnight, on restricted days from 7 p.m. to midnight and not at all on “no burn” days.

Those in permit-required zones must still print a per-mit from the DNR website for burning at any time, Hollett said, but residents on proper-ties with no HRM services just need to follow the bylaw.

Hollett said burning dry, seasoned wood is ideal because it keeps smoke to a minimum.

Brush burning in winter is always best as long as you’re 75 feet from the property line, Hollett said.

“The risk of a fire getting ... into the forest decreases quite a bit when there’s a layer of snow on the ground.”

Tougher rules than province. Propose ban on overnight fi res, more than one pile

Current regulations

For chimineas and other outdoor appliances:

• Don’t place on a wooden deck or combustible platform

• Use dry fi rewood

• Keep 15 feet from any building

• Only use one at a time

Elmsdale

Four arrested in kidnappingFour people have been arrested over a kidnapping in Elmsdale. According to a release, RCMP responded to a report of a kidnap-ping at gunpoint on Aug. 5 and found the victim on a private road in Lantz. Of-ficers arrested four suspects nearby. The release states that no firearms were actually involved. METRO

Halifax police have referred an incident to the Serious In-cident Response Team (SIRT) after a woman broke her arm when an officer was trying to handcuff her.

At 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, po-lice arrested a 51-year-old woman in Dartmouth under the Involuntary Psychiatric Treatment Act out of concern for her safety. She was then taken to hospital.

While the woman was waiting, an officer tried to cuff her for safety reasons, according to a release. In the process, the woman sus-tained a broken arm.

She is facing a charge of assaulting a police officer.

Because the incident re-sulted in injuries following police involvement, SIRT has launched an investigation.METRO

SIRT. Woman breaks arm while being cu� ed by cop

Kingston

Autopsy set for puppy killed during break-inThe body of a puppy found inside a Kingston, N.S., home after a break-in has been sent to Truro for an autopsy.

Rosebud, a five-month-old boxer/pitbull cross, was found dead by her owners, Matthew Dominey and Shane Cor-bin, when they returned home on Aug. 4. RCMP are investigating.

Dominey said the back door of the house had been pried open.

The couple found Rose-bud dead in the bathtub, both hind legs broken and a juice jug over her head.

“They didn’t take any-thing,” he said. “But they killed the dog.”

Dominey said anyone who would kill a defence-less animal poses a risk to the community.

“I can’t think of any reason why anyone would do something like this,” he said. “It’s obviously someone with a very dis-gusting mind to do such a brutal thing.”

Dominey said police told him about the aut-opsy on Wednesday and he’s hoping it will help with the investigation.

The pair adopted Rosebud in March, and the SPCA has offered to cremate her at no charge.

Anyone with any information is asked to contact Kingston RCMP. KINGS COUNTY NEWS

Rosebud is seen sleeping in this undated photo. CONTRIBUTED

[email protected]

Page 3: 20140807_ca_halifax

03metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014 NEWS

%OFF50FINAL CLEARANCEall spring & summer merchandise

ONEWEEKONLY

From films that made their way to Cannes to flicks with familiar Halifax faces and places, the newly expanded local program for the 34th Atlantic Film Festival (AFF) promises to be “unabash-edly” Atlantic Canadian.

Wayne Carter, execu-tive director of the festival, said the Atlantic Canadian program includes 87 films running from Sept. 11 to 18, including the “NextGen Shorts” for young directors and an Atlantic broadcast program.

“(The films) speak about the region that we live in, and … if you’re from here, it’s like seeing friends,” Carter said.

The Atlantic Gala on Sept. 12 features prominent Hali-fax director Andrea Dorf-man’s Heartbeat, starring lo-cal musician and poet Tanya Davis in her first movie.

“I really love that there’s a blending of all the artis-tic communities in Halifax. It’s small enough,” Dorf-man said after the launch. “There’s so much musical talent ... For me it’s just the perfect place to be making films.”

Haligonians will recog-nize many real locations in the city used for the film, Dorfman said, as well as a fake music store in the old Turnstile Pottery location on Agricola Street.

Davis’s character always wanted to be a musician, but has settled for a medi-ocre job and relationship. The film follows her journey as she “moves toward her heartbeat” and begins tak-ing chances, Dorfman said.

“It’s way different to be standing in front of a cam-era performing than on a stage,” said Davis. “I felt very vulnerable, but I was also really excited.”

A new Atlantic Spotlight program features Relative Happiness, which appeared at Cannes and is based on

the Lesley Crewe novel set in small-town N.S., along-side a National Film Board of Canada documentary on Newfoundland politician Danny Williams.

Dillon Garland, 21, said he is “very excited” to make his festival debut this year with Last Day of Fall in the NextGen category.

“I got cold chills because

this is something I’ve really wanted for a long time,” said the Centre for Arts and Tech-nology grad.

Garland said he’s gotten lots of advice and support

from the Halifax film com-munity since he moved here from Barrington Passage four years ago.

“I can’t find that any-where else.”

Preview. Atlantic Film Festival expands Atlantic Canadian program, highlights local talent

Filmmaker Andrea Dorfman, left, and poet/singer/songwriter Tanya Davis pose for a photo after the Atlantic Film Festival’s announcement of its Atlantic Canadian film selections on Wednesday. Davis stars in Dorfman’s new film Heartbeat, which will premiere at the festival. jeff harper/metro

Halifax ‘just the perfect place to be making films’

halEy [email protected]

Online

The full festival lineup will be released Aug. 20. Go to atlanticfilm.com for tickets.

Quoted

“Everybody wants everybody to succeed.”Filmmaker Dillon Garland

Page 4: 20140807_ca_halifax

04 metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014NEWS

Wolfville will become “the epicentre of epicurean de-light” when Devour! The Food Film Fest arrives this fall, mayor Jeff Cantwell said Wednesday.

“When you bring in world-class chefs and world-class critics to a town of 4,300 people, it has an energy that we don’t see all the time in Nova Scotia,” he said while schmoozing at the Bicycle Thief’s outdoor champagne bar.

The Halifax waterfront restaurant, where sparkling

wine was flowing and oysters were ready for serving, set an idyllic scene for Wednesday’s revelation that culinary tele-vision personality Anthony Bourdain will host Devour’s opening night Nov. 12. Bour-dain is best-known for CNN’s Anthony Bourdain Parts Un-known, The Travel Channel’s Anthony Bourdain: No Reser-vations and The Layover and his role as judge on ABC’s The Taste.

He’s also the New York Times bestselling author of Kitchen Confidential: Adven-

tures in the Culinary Under-belly.

Bourdain picked his fa-vourite foodie film for open-ing night — 1994’s Eat Drink Man Woman — and will both interact with the audience and hold a book-signing. The kick-off gala, dubbed Order of Good Cheer, will also feature 12 of Nova Scotia’s top chefs.

“Our 2014 program in-cludes more workshops, more chef collaborations, … (and) the beginning of a new-found relationship with the Berlin Film Festival,” Howell

said, with chefs visiting from Montreal, New Orleans and many more.

The full food and film line-up will be announced as part of the Toronto International Film Festival this September, he said. Kristen Lipscombe/metro

regulator closes Deep panuke gas platform to investigate fire

The Deep Panuke production platform is pictured in a handout photo. An electrical fire on the Deep Panuke natural gas platform off Nova Scotia is being investigated by the regulator for the offshore oil and gas industry.Encana corporation/tHE canaDian prESS

The regulator for the off-shore oil and gas industry is investigating an electrical fire on the Deep Panuke natural gas platform off Nova Scotia.

The platform has stopped operations while Encana and the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board investigate the cause of the fire.

Board spokeswoman Kathleen Funke said a trans-former caught fire on Sun-day evening and a sprinkler system extinguished the blaze.

The platform, operated by Dutch-based SBM Off-shore, had an electrical fire on Jan. 19, 2013, that also resulted in a temporary shutdown of its operations.

Safety reports obtained by The Canadian Press said a failure to conduct annual maintenance inspections was the underlying reason behind that fire.

The report was one of three that flagged electric-al problems aboard Deep Panuke, located about 250 kilometres southeast of Halifax.

Funke said it is too early to determine whether there is any link between the fires and the earlier electrical problems.

A spokesman for Encana also said it is too early to comment on whether the latest fire was similar to the previous incident.

Jay Averill said no one was injured in the fire, there was no risk to the en-vironment and no person-nel were evacuated.

He said in an email the company is doing its own investigation to determine the exact cause of the fire.

“All system checks have

been completed and, in consultation with the regu-lator, we have begun the start-up process to get Deep Panuke back on line,” he wrote.

Funke said the decision on when to bring the plat-form back into operation rests with Encana.

“However, the board can supersede this decision if our chief safety officer and CEO do not believe it is safe to operate. The board does not permit unsafe oper-ations at any time,” she added in an email.

SBM couldn’t be reached for comment.the canaDian press

Electrical accident. No one hurt, no impact on environment: Encana representative

Order of Good Cheer

The kick-off gala, dubbed Order of Good Cheer, will feature 12 of Nova Scotia’s top chefs.

Michael Howell, Executive Director of Devour!The Food Film Fest, announcesspecial guest Anthony Bourdain during a press conference at the BicycleThief on Wednesday. JEff HarpEr/MEtro

Wolfville to welcome tV personality anthony bourdain

Atlantic Canada

Economic performance soft in 2014: ReportA think-tank is describing Atlantic Canada’s economic performance so far this year as weak.

The Atlantic Provinces Economic Council says a variety of economic condi-tions, including labour mar-kets, retail spending and new home construction,

have fared poorly across the region in 2014.

Employment dropped in three of Atlantic Canada’s four provinces, while national levels grew by 0.7 per cent.

New Brunswick experi-enced higher unemploy-ment in 2014, but still fell below 2008 levels.

The council says this is partly the result of changes to federal programs, includ-ing the Temporary Foreign Worker Program.the canaDian press

Annapolis watershed

Fall tests found elevated fecal coliform countsA water quality report conducted last fall on three rivers in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley found elevated fecal coli-form counts.

The Environment Department says 59 of the 65 samples taken last Sep-tember and October had

elevated fecal coliform bacteria counts.

The tests were carried out in the Annapolis, Cornwallis and Habitant rivers.

Environment Minister Randy Delorey says the report is a reminder coli-form bacteria and other potential contaminants may be found in surface water open to elements such as weather, animal activity and malfunc-tioning septic systems.the canaDian press

Lock up

Cops report rise in thefts from cars in DartmouthA recent increase in thefts from vehicles has police in Halifax reminding people to lock their cars and take their valuables with them if the car is be-ing left unattended.

A release from Halifax Regional Police states that there have been 21

reports in the last three weeks of thefts from vehicles in the Dartmouth North, Woodland and Creighton Park areas.

The release states that in most cases, the vehicles were left unlocked with high-value objects left in plain sight.

Police say if it’s neces-sary to leave valuable items such as GPS units or cellphone chargers in the vehicle, lock them in the trunk before getting to your destination. metro

Investigation

The investigation into a 2013 fire on the platform concluded that annual test-ing of electrical equipment using heat-detection equip-ment was needed.

Page 5: 20140807_ca_halifax

05metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014 NEWS

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Experimental Ebola drug sparks debate

The use of an experimental drug to treat two Americans diagnosed with Ebola is rais-ing ethical questions about who gets first access to un-proven new therapies for the deadly disease. But some health experts fear debate over extremely limited doses will distract from tried-and-true measures to curb the growing outbreak — like more rapidly identifying and isolating the sick.

The World Health Organ-ization is convening a meet-ing of medical ethicists next week to examine what it calls “the responsible thing to do” about whatever sup-plies eventually may become available of a medicine that’s never been tested on people.

At least one country in-volved in the outbreak is in-terested in the drug: Nigeria’s health minister said at a news conference that he had asked U.S. officials about access.

There is no proven treat-ment or vaccine for Ebola, which so far has infected more than 1,700 and killed more than 930 in West Africa.

“How many times have we found magic therapies that ended up ... doing more harm than good?” cautioned Uni-versity of Minnesota profes-sor Michael Osterholm, who advises the U.S. government on infectious disease threats.

“Vaccine and drug treat-ment right now is not going to be the main way you bring this to a stop,” he added.thE associatEd prEss

‘The responsible thing to do.’ Ethical questions raised amid deadly outbreak about who gets access to treatment

A shot in the dark

Scientists stress there’s no way to tell if the experiment-al drug ZMapp really made a difference for two U.S. aid workers infected in Liberia.

• “We don’t even know if it works,” stressed Dr. Anthony Fauci of the Na-tional Institutes of Health.

Russia

Russia, Canada trade sanctions over UkraineCanada on Wednesday slapped fresh sanctions and travel bans on several top Russian and Ukrainian politicians and groups with ties to President Vladimir Putin’s government, as Moscow responded with tit-for-tat sanctions of its own.

Canada’s latest round of sanctions, imposed in co-ordination with the U.S. and EU, came amid reports Russia is massing troops along the Ukrainian border.

But Putin quickly retaliated, ordering state au-thorities to come up with a list of agricultural products from countries that have imposed sanctions on Rus-sia. Those imports will be banned or restricted for up to a year. thE canadian prEss

Italy

Concordia captain called ‘unworthy’ as safety lecturerA Rome university profes-sor is facing a disciplinary hearing after inviting the captain of the shipwrecked Costa Concordia cruise liner to lecture students on emergency procedures.

The dean of Rome’s Sapi-enza University, Luigi Frati, voiced anger Wednesday at the professor’s decision to invite Capt. Francesco Schettino to give a seminar, calling it an “inappropriate and unworthy choice.”

The university dismissed the “pathetic excuses” of-fered by the professor, Vin-cenzo Mastronardi, when confronted by the dean.

Schettino is being tried for manslaughter and other crimes over the 2012 capsize of the Concordia, in which 32 people died.thE associatEd prEss

The editor of a weekly maga-zine says a Kenyan man who once offered former U.S. president Bill Clinton 40 goats and 20 cows for his daughter Chelsea’s hand in marriage has been killed by an elephant.

Dorothy Jebet, editor of the Kass Weekly, said Wednesday journalist Godwin Chepkurgor

was attacked by an elephant herd while on assignment for the magazine. Jebet says Chep-kurgor was attacked from be-hind Friday by a bull elephant that scooped him up with its trunk and threw him in the air.

Jebet said the journalist landed on sticks that pierced his stomach. thE associatEd prEss

Kenya. offered goats and cows for chelsea clinton, man killed by elephant

Oscar Pistorius’s older brother Carl remains in an intensive care unit in a South African hos-pital and is on a ventilator after a serious car crash last week.

The Pistorius family said in a statement Wednesday that Carl Pistorius was still in ICU in Pretoria “due to the serious nature of the injuries sustained

in the accident,” and said he was “showing signs of improve-ment.” Carl reportedly sus-tained multiple fractures Friday in a head-on highway collision.

Oscar Pistorius is due to re-turn to a Pretoria courthouse on Thursday for the start of final arguments in his murder trial. thE associatEd prEss

south africa. Brother of oscar pistorius still in icU after highway collision

Messages of peace and hope in HiroshimaA girl prepares to release paper lanterns bearing messages of peace in the Motoyasu River near the Atomic Bomb Dome in Hiroshima, Japan, on Wednesday, as Japan marked the 69th anniversary of the atomic bombing of the city. Kyodo News/tHe associated press

Page 6: 20140807_ca_halifax

06 metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014NEWS

Alberta Premier Dave Han-cock on Wednesday called for the RCMP to review the use of provincial aircraft after his predecessor Alison Redford re-signed her legislature seat amid a festering controversy over her travel expenses.

The developments came ahead of the release of the prov-incial auditor general’s report into government travel slated for Thursday.

In a letter published in the Edmonton Journal and Calgary Herald, Redford acknowledged she made mistakes before quit-ting as premier last spring to sit as a Progressive Conserva-tive backbencher. She said her resignation as a member of the legislature for Calgary-Elbow was effective immediately.

Hancock said there is ma-terial in the auditor’s review that police should look at.

“The report identifies a number of areas of concern and I think in the interests of com-pleteness and in the interests of the public being fully satisfied that everything appropriate has been done, that it’s appropriate to ask that certain issues in the report be investigated,” he said Wednesday in a teleconference with reporters.

Hancock refused to discuss details of the auditor’s findings before they are released pub-licly. But last week, the CBC re-ported that a leaked copy found that passenger lists on govern-ment aircraft were altered so that then-premier Redford could fly alone.

An RCMP spokeswoman said she was limited in what she could say about Hancock’s re-quest. Sgt. Josee Valiquette said she didn’t believe the Mounties had received an official request yet. She was unable to say what the procedure would be under these particular circumstances. The Canadian Press

effective immediately. redford resigns legislature seat amid expense scandal

Former Alberta premier Alison Redford Jeff McIntosh/the canadIan Press

Lac-Megantic

Railroad responsible for derailment sells locomotives Dozens of locomotives once owned by the railroad responsible for last year’s deadly derailment in Lac-Megantic, Quebec have been sold at an auction in Maine.

Auctioneer Adam Jokisch says 35 locomotives sold for anywhere from $10,000 to $15,000 to upward of $200,000 apiece on Tuesday.

All but seven loco-motives were owned by Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railways, which went bank-rupt after a runaway oil train exploded and killed 47 people in Lac-Megantic.

The auction will help pay back $3.7 million owed to Maine-based Bangor Sav-ings Bank, which had liens on 24 of the locomotives.

The auction was sup-posed to include the lead locomotive from the train that derailed, but it was pulled at the request of Quebec Provincial Police. The Canadian Press

Brampton, Ont.

Council calls for police probe into mayor’s expensesPolice should investigate audit findings that the mayor of Brampton, Ont. broke expense rules more than 250 times, including on business-class flights, premium hotel rooms and cellphone IQ quizzes, the city’s council voted Wednesday.

The audit of several years worth of expenses by Mayor Susan Fennell turned up $172,608 in spending that breached city policies, although $41,027 was re-paid. A further $156,000 of expenses may have broken rules but auditors did not have enough information to make a determination.

In a statement, Fennell said she accepts much, but not all, of what the audit found. Among the Deloitte audit findings, Fennell racked up $220 in cellphone charges for 44 IQ quizzes. Fennell told the auditors the wireless company would credit her account for the quizzes. The Canadian Press

The company that owns a gold and copper mine in British Col-umbia where a tailings pond burst, sending a massive wave of water and potentially toxic silt into surrounding water-ways, has been formally or-dered to clean up the site and prevent more material from escaping.

But government officials acknowledged Wednesday they still didn’t know exactly what spilled out or how the breach will affect surrounding lakes and rivers, where salmon spawn, locals get their drinking water and tourism operators take their customers.

A tailings pond dam at Im-perial Metals’ Mount Polley Mine, about 600 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, failed on Monday, sending 10 mil-lion cubic metres of water and 4.5 million cubic metres of toxic silt into Polley Lake and

Quesnel Lake.The breach prompted a ban

on drinking or bathing in water from surrounding lakes and riv-er, which was still in effect on Wednesday, though the com-pany has insisted the water in the tailings pond was safe and the solids that spilled out were “relatively benign.”

The province’s Environment Ministry announced Wednes-day that the company received a “pollution abatement order” a day earlier.

Under the terms of the or-der, Mount Polley Mine was re-quired immediately take steps to prevent more waste from es-caping into nearby creeks and lakes. The company was also ordered to conduct an environ-mental assessment and submit a clean-up action plan Wednes-day, with a more detailed plan due by the end of next week.

The province also ordered the company to provide a de-tailed assessment of the ma-terials released, including the

anticipated impact on the en-vironment.

Company president Brian Kynoch apologized to local resi-dents on Tuesday and appeared to downplay the potential dan-gers posed by the spill, saying the water released from the pond was very close to drinking water. He added that mercury had never been detected in the water and arsenic levels were low.

Grand Chief Stewart Phil-lip of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs said the presence of heavy metals in the tailings could be devastating to salmon.

Quesnel Lake and the Quesnel River are considered important breeding grounds for wild salmon, as are other nearby creeks.

“It couldn’t happen at a worse time: the Quesnel sal-mon run is expected to pass by in a couple of weeks,” said Phillip.

Craig Orr, the executive director of the group Water-shed Watch, said debris could impede salmon migration, while heavy metals such as copper could either kill the salmon or harm the fish.The Canadian Press

Mine company ordered to plug tailings pond breach

An aerial view shows debris going into Quesnel Lake, caused by a tailings pondbreach near Likely, B.C. Jonathan hayward/the canadIan Press

Proud moms show off bikini bods at edmonton rallyTanis Jex-Blake, centre, takes part in a bikini protest along with supporters in Edmonton on Wednesday. Jex-Blake, a mother of five, says she was tanning on a beach west of the city last week when three young people pointed at her stomach and called her — quote — “nasty” and “gross.” She later posted an open letter on Facebook describing how she’s proud of her scars, not ashamed. Her story has made news in several countries and other women have been proudly sending her photos of their imperfect bellies. Some moms at the Edmonton rally say they decided to show up wearing two-piece swimsuits for the first time in years. Jason franson/the canadIan Press

Likely, B.C. President of Imperial Metals apologized to residents living downstream from the toxic flood

Page 7: 20140807_ca_halifax

07metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014 NEWS

2014 Hfx No. 426793SUPREME COURT OF NOVA SCOTIA BETWEEN: THE TORONTO-DOMINION BANK PLAINTIFF- and –

DARLENE M. STEEVES (AKA DARLENE M. DORT) AND RAYMOND CHARLES POWELL DEFENDANTS

NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION

TO BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION pursuant to an Order for Foreclosure, Sale and Possession granted by the Court, unless before the time of sale the amount due to the plaintiff on the mortgage foreclosed, plus costs to be taxed, are paid:

PROPERTY:ALL that certain lot, piece of parcel of land situate, lying and being in Halifax County, Nova Scotia, and known as Civic No. 243 Third Avenue, Lakeview, Nova Scotia, property identification number 40417578 and described in a Mortgage dated November 2, 2014 and registered at the Halifax County Land Registration Office as Document No. 99890676.TOGETHER WITH an easement ad described in Book 4459, at Page 1140.SUBJECT TO an agreement regarding water usage as described in Book 4296 at Page 1157.This property has been migrated pursuant to the Land Registration Act.A copy of the description of the property, as contained in the mortgage foreclosed, is on file at the Sheriff's office and may be inspected during business hours.Date of Sale: August 28, 2014Time of Sale: 12:30 p.m.Place of Sale: The Law Courts, 1815 Upper Water Street, Halifax, Nova ScotiaTerms: 10% deposit (payable by cash, certified cheque or Solicitor's trust cheque) at the time of sale, remainder within 15 days upon delivery of deed.

DATED at Halifax, Nova Scotia, the 28 day of June, 2014.

Aaron WardWickwire HolmBarristers and Solicitors2100-1801 Hollis StreetHalifax, Nova Scotia B3J 2X6

________________________________ALLAN COLEYSheriff in and for the County of Halifax

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Afghanistan

Afghan soldier hid in stall before shooting generalAn Afghan soldier who killed a U.S. two-star gen-eral and wounded 15 other people hid in a bathroom with a NATO assault rifle, then opened fire when a group of officers from international forces passed by, an Afghan military of-ficial said Wednesday.

As U.S. and Afghan officials investigated the attack Tuesday that killed, Maj. Gen. Harold J. Greene, the highest-ranked U.S. of-ficer to be slain in combat since 1970 in the Vietnam War, authorities reported two other so-called “insid-er” attacks the same day.

In the deadliest of the attacks, an Afghan police officer killed seven of his colleagues at a checkpoint, then stole their weapons and fled in a police car late Tuesday in the Uruzgan provincial capital of Tirin Kot, provincial spokesman Doost Mohammad Nayab said.The AssociATed press

A string of car bombs tore through busy shopping streets in several Baghdad neighbourhoods Wednesday night killing 51 people as the army announced one of its airstrikes killed 60 militants in the northern city of Mosul.

Baghdad police said the first attack cme from a pair of car bombs that exploded in the densely populated Shiite neighbourhood of Sadr City, killing 31 people, followed by another bomb in the nearby area of Ur that claimed an-

other 11 lives.Nine more people were

killed in the southeast of the city shortly afterward by two more car bombs.

Baghdad has been on edge since Sunni militants led by the radical Islamic State group conquered large swaths of the country’s north, including the second largest city of Mosul.

While the fighters have stopped short of advancing on the capital there has been a steady campaign of car bombs in the city.

The attack came as state-run television announced a rare government victory with an airstrike in Mosul that killed some 60 suspected mil-itants.

The report, which cited unnamed intelligence offi-cials, could not be independ-

ently verified, nor did it say whether any civilians had been killed in the strike on the northern city of Mosul. It did state that the strike freed about 300 people held by the Islamic State group at a downtown Mosul prison.

A Mosul resident, speak-ing anonymously, told The Associated Press that families of the prisoners rushed to the site to help their relatives after the airstrike.

“The prison was partly damaged in the airstrike,” he said. The AssociATed press

Iraq. Densely populated areas targeted by militant Iraqi Sunnis for car-bomb attacks

More than 50 dead following Baghdad car-bomb attacks

Lebanon -Syria

Lebanese deaths have slowly increased during the country’s conflict with Syria, necessitating the need for aid packages.

• 17 soldiers are dead and another 22 missing

• Saudi Arabia has pledged $1 billion in aid to Lebanon

New 24-hour ceasefire sparks syrian withdrawalSome Syrian militant fight-ers have begun withdrawing from the Lebanese town they captured five days earlier as a new 24-hour ceasefire was announced Wednesday, according to the Lebanese army and the Muslims clerics that medi-ated the deal.

It is not clear how many militants are actually leav-ing the border town of Arsal and previous ceasefires have collapsed, but three more captured Lebanese soldiers

were released as part of the agreement, according to the mediators in a televised press conference.

“Most of the gunmen have begun moving toward Syria,” said Sheik Hussam al-Ghali, a member of the Association of Muslim Scholars group that brok-ered the cease-fire in what has been the most serious spillover to date from Syr-ia’s civil war.

Lebanon’s former prime minister, meanwhile, an-

nounced that Saudi Arabia is granting another $1 bil-lion in aid to the Lebanese army to support its fight against militants.

Fighting in Arsal first began on Saturday when militants from Syria over-ran the town, which lies near the border with Syria. They seized Lebanese army positions and captured a number of soldiers and policemen, demanding the release of a prominent Syr-ian rebel commander, Imad

Ahmad Jomaa, who was ar-rested in Lebanon earlier that day.

At least 17 Lebanese sol-diers have been killed and another 22 — as well as an unknown number of police-men — have been declared missing.

An initial truce was brok-ered on Tuesday, but clash-es broke out again after the militants opened fire on Lebanese troops the next morning.

A senior Lebanese secur-

ity official confirmed that the three soldiers were re-leased and said the army has agreed to a new cease-fire to allow for more nego-tiations and for aid to enter Arsal. He confirmed some militants were starting to withdraw but the army was insisting all of them leave.

“Our conditions are clear. We will accept nothing else than a complete withdrawal and the release of all soldiers and policemen,” he said.The AssociATed press

Airstrikes

“The prison was partly damaged in the airstrike.”Anonymous Mosul resident

Leaders burned in effigy Activists of Socialist Unity Center of India, SUCI, burn effigies of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and U.S. President Barack Obama during a protest against Israel’s attack on Gaza in Kolkata, India, Wednesday. Bikas Das/The associaTeD press

Page 8: 20140807_ca_halifax

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A court has ruled that a Hong Kong tycoon can sue Google over its autocomplete results suggesting he has links to or-ganized crime.

In a judgment released Wednesday, the court dis-missed the Internet search giant’s objections to tycoon Albert Yeung’s defamation lawsuit.

Yeung filed the lawsuit after Google refused to re-move autocomplete sug-gestions such as “triad,” as organized crime gangs are known in China, which popped up with searches on his name.

The billionaire’s busi-ness empire includes an en-tertainment company that produces films and manages some of the city’s biggest ce-lebrities.

He argues that his repu-tation has been “gravely in-jured” and wants compensa-tion.

Judge Marlene Ng dis-agreed with Google’s law-yers, who argued Yeung was better off asking the websites where the defamatory infor-

mation was published to re-move it. She said Google had the ability to censor material.

“Any risk of misinforma-tion can spread easily as users forage in the web. The art is to find the comfortable equilibrium in between,” she said in her ruling.

It’s the latest legal head-ache for Google over its search service. Earlier this year, the European Union’s

top court ruled that Google and other search engines must respond to requests seeking removal of links to personal information.

Last year, a German court ruled in favour of a nutrition-al supplements company and its owner who sued Google to remove autocomplete terms suggesting links to Scientol-ogy and fraud.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Defamation? Hong Kong tycoon sues Google over his autocomplete results

Albert Yeung, left, and his wife in 2009. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS fIlE

Rover missing? A new phone app could helpThis illustration shows how a new smartphone app Finding Rover works. Any worried pet owner who has spent days hanging posters, making phone calls and knocking on neighbours’ doors hopes there’s a more scientific way to find a lost dog.That became a reality when facial recognition technology success-fully reunited a pet at san Diego County Animal services with its owners. The website keeps a database of photos from the three county shelters and tries to match eight distinctive facial markers on dogs with images uploaded by users searching for lost pets. eyes and noses are important areas that differentiate pooches, including eye size and their position near the snout. fInDIngROvER.COm/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In 2025, self-driving cars could be the norm, people could have more leisure time and goods could become cheaper. Or, there could be chronic unemployment and an even wider income gap, human interaction could become a luxury and the wealthy could live in walled cities with ro-bots serving as labour.

Or, very little could change.A new survey released

Wednesday by the Pew Re-search Center’s Internet Pro-ject and Elon University’s Im-agining the Internet Center found that, when asked about the impact of artificial intel-ligence on jobs, nearly 1,900 experts and other respondents were divided over what to ex-pect 11 years from now.

Forty-eight per cent said robots would kill more jobs than they create, and 52 per cent said technology will cre-ate more jobs than it destroys.

Respondents also varied widely when asked to elab-orate on their expectations of jobs in the next decade. Some said that self-driving cars would be common, elim-

inating taxi cab and long-haul truck drivers. Some said that we should expect the wealthy to live in seclusion, using ro-bot labour. Others were more conservative, cautioning that technology never moves quite as fast as people expect and humans aren’t so easily re-placeable.

“We consistently under-estimate the intelligence and complexity of human beings,” said Jonathan Grudin, princi-pal researcher at Microsoft, who recalls that 40 years ago, people said that advances in computer-coding language were going to kill program-ming jobs.

Even as technology re-moved jobs such as secretar-ies and operators, it created brand new jobs, including

Web marketing, Grudin said. And, as Grudin and other sur-vey responders noted, 11 years isn’t much time for significant changes to take place, anyway.

Respondents in this latest survey generally agreed that the education system is fail-ing to teach the skills that students need for the future. Smith said some survey re-spondents criticized the sys-tem for promoting memor-ization of tasks rather than creativity, teaching a “Henry Ford education for a Mark Zuckerberg economy.”

Also, the senior researcher with the Pew Research Cen-ter’s Internet Project said some respondents concluded that jobs that don’t require specifically human traits — such as empathy, ingenuity or resourcefulness — are at risk for being replaced, includ-ing low-skill blue-collar jobs or even white-collar jobs that have people performing re-petitive tasks.

Respondents offered a few theories about what might happen if artificial intelligence takes over some positions and fewer jobs are created.

Judith Donath, a fellow at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society, foresees chronic mass unemployment with the wealthy living in “walled cities, with robots pro-viding the labour.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Are we headed towards a robotpocalypse? The future’s not ours to see

Profits down 19%

no blockbuster profits for Cineplex Some box-office flops and a lack of family movies left Cineplex Inc. suffering the fallout during the first few months of summer movie season. THE CANADIAN PRESS

No crystal ball here

Aaron Smith, senior researcher with the Pew Research Center’s Internet Project, said the results were unusually divided.

• InsimilarPewsurveysabouttheInternetoverthepast12years,theretendedtobegeneralconsensusamongtherespondents,whichincludedresearchscientistsandarangeofotherthoughtleaders.

Market Minute

DOLLAR 91.63¢ (+0.39¢)

TSX 15,202.09 (+14.38)

OIL $96.92 US (-$0.46)

GOLD $1,308.20 US (+$22.90)

Natural gas: $3.94 US (-$0.01) Dow Jones: 16,443.34 (+13.87)

Que sera, sera. Experts are split on the impact robots will have on labour by 2025, new study finds

Page 9: 20140807_ca_halifax

09metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014 VOICES

Star Media Group President John Cruickshank • Vice-President & Group Publisher, Metro Eastern Canada Greg Lutes • Editor-in-Chief Charlotte Empey • Deputy Editor Fernando Carneiro • National Deputy Editor, Digital Quin Parker • Managing Editor, Halifax Philip Croucher • Managing Editor, News & Business Amber Shortt • Managing Editor, Life & Entertainment Dean Lisk • Regional Sales Director, Metro Eastern Canada Dianne Curran • Distribution Manager April Doucette • Vice President, Content & Sales Solutions Tracy Day • Vice-President, Sales Mark Finney • Vice-President, Finance Phil Jameson • METRO HALIFAX • 3260 Barrington St., Unit 102, Halifax NS B3K 0B5 • Telephone: 902-444-4444 • Fax: 902-422-5610 • Advertising: 902-421-5824 • [email protected] • Distribution: [email protected]• News tips: [email protected] • Letters to the Editor: [email protected]

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METRO AUGMENTED REALITYPlight of the Puffi n

An Atlantic puffi n checks its surrounding before ducking under the rocks to feed its chicks in a burrow on EasternEgg Rock, a small island off the coast of Maine. ROBERT F. BUKATY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MetroTube

We still don’t know what he says, but he apparently eats GoPros

From bike helmets to surfboards, the pint-sized GoPro lens seems like the go-to device for those wishing to capture their athletic and adventurous feats. Another feat? Managing to chow down on the camera. One little and adorable fox was brave enough to take on the challenge. And luckily for our viewing pleasure, the camera was still rolling. Not so lucky was the destroyed camera, or its owner. (TheOpenLens/YouTube)

REBECCAWILLIAMS [email protected]

GETTY IMAGES

The Audubon Society wants bird lovers to contribute research to a project scientists hope will help save Atlantic puffi ns from starvation in Maine.

There are about 1,000 pairs of the seabirds, known for their multi-coloured beaks, in Maine.

Audubon says the number of puffi n fl edging chicks has declined in the last two years, possibly because their key food source, herring and hake, are leaving for cooler waters. While

the puffi n enjoys healthy numbers in places such as Newfoundland, they are on the threatened species list in Maine.

Audubon maintains three webcams on Seal Island in outer Penobscot Bay, one of the key puffi n habitats in Maine. Volunteers are being asked to watch the birds and answer questions about their feeding behaviour.

“(We’re) hoping to advance the science as well as entertain the viewers,” said Steve Kress of the Audubon Society. “There are some questions that can be better answered through lots of people viewing.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tourist help sought by scientists to stop puffin starvation

My fellow concert-goers can go to hell.Each summer I can’t focus on the divine

bands, the heavenly music, or the right path to the pulled-pork taco stand. Why? Because every con-cert is overrun with lost souls — empty husks who gorge themselves on watery beer, lurch toward the stage as if nobody else is there, and yell “Whooo!!!” for what are clearly roadies tuning the guitars.

Over the years boorish concert-goers have left me disillusioned and angry. Hell is other patrons.

Fortunately, I had a revelation recently that brought me back from the Dark Side of the Moon. Travelling over The Wall and through the Court of the Crimson King, I came upon the Divine Con-cert Hall, seven levels of concert-themed revenge that let me know there is Justice For All, eventually. Behold the Seven Levels of Concert Hell. (I know there are normally nine rings, but cutbacks.)

First Circle: The Sulkers. Sin: People who sit scowling, arms folded, because their boyfriend or girlfriend had the nerve

to grant them free admission to a concert but (sniff) they don’t like the band. Punishment: Thrust onto hell’s Jumbotron, where they are dumped for all eternity on the “Breakup Cam.”

Second Circle: The Spillers. Sin: Con-cert-goers who slosh beer down your back be-cause they bought a tray of five Coors Light for their buddies in the front row. Punishment: They can order beer, but the plastic cup has a big crack in it.

Third Circle: The Requesters. Sin: Yelling out a request repeatedly despite the band’s setlist taped to the stage and a multi-million-dollar light show timed to the music. Punishment: Satan grabs their wrist

and whacks their hand against their forehead, saying, “Why don’t you stop hitting yourself?” for all eternity.

Fourth Circle: The Talkers. Sin: People who natter like they’re providing descriptive video (“HERE THEY COME ... I LOVE THIS SONG! ... SO AWESOME!”). Punishment: Eternity as a

mime, in mime hell. Fifth Circle: The Phoners. Sin: People who endlessly use

their phone, especially for selfies while facing away from the stage. Punishment: Drowning in the shallow pool of their own ego while Satan’s minions take Instagram photos tagged #YODO.

Sixth Circle: The Blockers. Sin: People who arrive late, then push to the front. Punishment: Access granted to the Pearly Gates, but St. Peter never takes their name because there’s a guy in front with a girl on his shoulders.

Seventh Circle: The Singers. Sin: Concert-goers who treat your left ear like it’s their shower head, belting out tunes so loud it’s like you paid $130 for a pro-am duet. Punishment: Britney Spears without autotune.

That’s hell in a nutshell. And I haven’t even warned you about the most ironic punishment of all: The least remorseful hell-dwellers must listen to the song Ironic on repeat while a person next to them says, “You know what’s really ironic is that Ironic isn’t even ironic!” May God (as portrayed by Alanis Morissette in Dogma) have mercy on your souls.

THE SEVEN LEVELS OF CONCERT HELL

HE SAYS

John Mazerollemetronews.ca

The two-faced bird

Most people only know a puffi n when it is “dressed up” for the breeding season and would hardly recognize it in its plainer winter garb.

• After the breeding season, the adult puffi n sheds the colourful plates on its bill and around the eyes and moults the feathers on its head and neck.

• The look is so diff erent that people once thought it was a diff erent species.

EDJAMESON.COM

Page 10: 20140807_ca_halifax

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There’s something to be said for those who go for what they want.

Take Katie Kelly. Young and driven, Kelly is a promo-tions guru who has worked for a variety of local radio and television stations.

In her current post with C100 and 101.3 The Bounce, she added producing to her resumé when she branched out into Bell Aliant’s on-de-mand world.

Properly prepped and experienced, it was time to press play on her own dream. On June 9, the first episode of her show Pop Culture ap-peared on the Community One channel.

“I proposed the show, so now I can take it in any dir-ection I like, which is really cool,” says Kelly.

Pop Culture is a locally produced show that high-lights everything from fash-ion to fitness, and the direc-tion lies solely in the hands of Kelly.

“I produce it and I can find and pick whomever I want as guests,” she says. “What’s really cool is that it’s com-pletely local, which is my fa-vourite part.”

The show highlights guests ranging from famed local chefs such as Richard Ju-

lien, known to most as Chef Live, to powerhouse entrepre-neurs such as Fred Connors.

Once Kelly selects a guest to spotlight, she researches how best to make their tal-ents fit within the show’s par-ameters — and because it’s

available on demand, viewers can watch it at their leisure.

“So this isn’t a show you have to wait for every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. You can watch it whenever you want,” she ex-plains. “For those who have Bell Aliant, FibreOP, there is a button on their remote that takes you to the on-demand area.”

Whether you take it all in during a Pop Culture mara-thon or want to stay up-to-date with each new episode, which drops every Monday, Kelly’s show will be available whenever you choose.

Not a Bell Aliant custom-er? There is website access at bellaliant.net.

As season one comes to a close — the last episode comes out Aug. 25 — Kelly has already rolled her success into a regular segment on CTV Atlantic Morning.

With planning for Season 2 already underway, Kelly is excited about where she can take us next.

“It would be really cool if it was picked up by regular cable. Any opportunities that this show brings me — that’s the goal.”

Pop Culture. Katie Kelly created her own show on Community One to focus on things she likes, from fashion to fi tness

As creator, host and producer, Katie Kelly gets to choose all the guests for her weekly Pop Culture show on Community One. CONTRIBUTED

Quoted

“What’s really cool is that it’s local, which is my favourite part.”Katie Kelly, host of Pop Culture,a Bell Aliant show available on demand

Popping her way onto TV

BACKSTAGEPASSJenna [email protected]

Pop-up TV

Pop Culture is available on demand on Bell Aliant’s Community One channel.

• Where. bellaliant.net/communityone

• When. New shows are available every Monday through Aug. 25.

• Who. Local promotions guru Katie Kelly created the show from scratch.

Page 11: 20140807_ca_halifax

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The Word

I shoulda stuck with movies, O.C. star Barton tells U.K. paper

Guys, Mischa Barton has some regrets — namely taking the role of Marissa Cooper on The O.C.

In hindsight, Barton tells Metro U.K. that she should “probably not” have accepted the role that made her famous.

“It’s something I came so close to not doing. I had a really great thing with film. People say, be grateful for what you have, but it certainly (was) not the kind

of thing I was expecting it to be. I’ve kind of seen it all,” she says, punctuating her statement, I can only imagine, with a weary sigh and a drag on a Gitanes.

Two more surprising details emerge from this interview: One, Barton is only 28 years old, and two, she has a tenuous grasp of the English language.

Case in point: “I just like to be seen for the hard-working actress that I am and not for a bunch of extraneous press. In gen-eral people are super-quick to harbour on the gossipy stuff and less on how much work goes into it,” she says. “It’s really tough when you are young in this business. People blow a lot of hot air at you.”

I … OK.

METRO DISHOUR TAKE ON THE WORLD OF CELEBRITIES

Charlie Sheen

Charlie’s o� the market according to his new ring

Charlie Sheen’s fiancée, porn star Brett Rossi, clearly likes it, because she put a ring on it.

Sources tell Radar Online that Sheen has been wearing a “man’s engagement ring” at Rossi’s insistence. I’m usu-ally against male jewelry on principle, but I can under-stand her concern. This is Charlie Sheen, after all.

“Brett forced Charlie to wear the wedding band,

which he is wearing as an engagement ring,” a source says.

“Charlie continues to hang around with other women, which infuriates Brett. It’s disrespectful to their relationship, and Brett wants to make it clear that Charlie is off the market.”

Whether it’s to make it clear to the other women or to Sheen himself, I’m not sure.

Twitter

@ElizabethHurley • • • • • I confess I’d score a big, fat zero in any chem-

istry or physics test. Have agreed to sit in on my son’s holiday tuition classes. Horror.

@tyrabanks • • • • •Sometimes u gotta sit back & reflect on the many great things that have come ur way. Thx @VictoriasSecret for that early career luv.

@AlbertBrooks • • • • •Just changed all my passwords to 043w590z9awo2391poiw93. Let the Russians figure that one out!

John Travolta ALL PHOTOS GETTY IMAGES

Travolta’s private pilot planning tell-all book about ‘our little secret’

A man who claims to have been John Travolta’s boy-friend for six years is plan-ning to publish a tell-all book about the relationship, the National Enquirer reports.

“I’d stay in the room next to John in luxury hotels,” Greg Gotterba, who acted as Travolta’s private pilot at the time, tells the tabloid. “Sometimes he’d bring women along as beards. But

he would ask me to join him in his suite and we’d spend the nights together. It was our little secret.”

Gotterba says his relation-ship with Travolta ended shortly before the star mar-ried Kelly Preston.

“I feel sorry for Kelly. She’s a lovely person,” he adds. “She’s in the middle of all this, and it’s unfair to her.”

No fourth A� eck on way, despite Garner’s comfy garb To be fair, Jennifer Garner has spent a good chunk of the last decade pregnant, so it’s understandable that some tabloids would jump to the conclusion that she and Ben Affleck are expecting once again just because she was spotted wearing a number of loose-fitting tops recently. Despite claims by OK! and Star that there’s a fourth Affleck child on the way, Garner’s rep insists that the reports are “not true.” Jennifer Garner

NED EHRBAR Metro in Hollywood

Page 12: 20140807_ca_halifax

12 metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014LIFE

LIFE

This season, the most fash-ionable men come in small swimwear packages. Chaps

are dropping the baggy board shorts in favour of a snugger look. British high street retailer Deben-hams has seen sales of tiny trunks rise by 242 per cent — a stark contrast to the women’s trend for conserv-ative ’50s-style costumes.

Clearly men are taking a tip from the ‘bare it all’ male celebrities like David Beck-ham, David Gandy, and even Giorgio Armani.

If you can’t beat ’em, throw on a pair of micro swim shorts.

He wore an itsy bitsy teenie weenie pair of swim trunks

Are you prepared to make a splash in something a little less subtle? ISTOCK

Significant shrinkage. Today’s poolside loungers are leaving little to the imagination

Olympic swimming great Michael Phelps, on a come-back that could take him to the Rio Games, is teaming up with a swimwear manu-facturer to develop a line of competitive swimming equipment.

Phelps launched his comeback in April after a 20-month retirement as a free agent after his deal with longtime sponsor Speedo ex-pired at the end of 2013.

On Tuesday, as Phelps

geared up for Wednesday’s start of the US champion-ships in Irvine, Calif., Aqua Sphere announced that the 18-time Olympic gold medal-ist and coach Bob Bowman had signed on help develop new products for the com-pany.

It currently designs and manufactures swimwear, wetsuits, eyewear, and acces-sories for triathletes, open-water, and fitness swimmers.AFP

Gold medal gear. Phelps teams with Aqua Sphere to develop suit line

Michael Phelps said he expects to be competing in a new suit made by Aqua Sphere next January. AFP / CHRISTOPHE SIMON

Trends Report

Every season inspires hair trends, from highlights to lowlights and even Splash-lights, but why not take it one step further and go for a more eye-catching hair change-up? Go to Trends Report to check out how singer Kesha has been transforming her tresses all summer for some inspira-tion.

• Online. Follow Irene on Twitter at @MetroIreneK or In-stagram: kuanirene; metronews.ca/voices/trends-report

RICHARDPECKETTMetro World News

Intymen Stripes Swim Bikini, $40.96. INTYMEN.COM

Dan Ward Printed Swim Shorts, $220. MRPORTER.COM

ASOS Swim Trunks, $19.35. ASOS.COM

Orlebar Brown Swim Shorts, $205. MRPORTER.COM

Page 13: 20140807_ca_halifax

13metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014 LIFE

DESIGNCENTREKarl [email protected]

Whether you’re living in a dorm or off -campus this year, being able to prepare your own meals is the most cost-eff ective — and often the tastiest — way to eat. Here’s a lineup of aff ordable and stylish countertop appliances to get you through the school year.

Bon appetit!

Five a� ordable food appliances

Tea kettleWith the price of this baby, you can now afford to upgrade your tea blends. Traditions 1 Litre Automatic Electric Kettle, $12, CanadianTire.ca

Popcorn popperPopcorn is cheap but the entertainment and snack factor is priceless. West Bend’s Air Crazy Corn Popper, $19, BedBathAndBeyond.ca

Coff ee makerSingle-brew coffee is easy, less messy and the coffee capsules come in a large variety of flavours. Keurig B130 DeskPro Brewing System, $113, Amazon.ca.

Toaster ovenHeat bagels, toast or even leftover pizza for breakfast. Hamilton Beach’s 2-in-1 Toastation not only warms toast but has oven capacity,$50, HamiltonBeach.ca

Microwave ovenWarm up the leftovers you stole from home last Sunday. Danby 0.7 Cubic Feet Microwave Oven, $60, HomeDepot.ca

Belkin and JCS have teamed up on a smartphone compat-ible slow cooker which can be controlled remotely from the next room, or even the next city.

Slow cooking is definitely moving back into fashion and, over the holiday sea-son, slow cookers were one of the biggest kitchen appli-ance gifts, particularly in the U.S. However, while they’re a great way of making the per-fect stew or making the most of beans and pulses, using one can be time-consuming.

The Crock-Pot Smart Slow Cooker uses Belkin’s WeMo smart power system and smart-

phone app so that you won’t need to hang around in the kitchen as it comes up to pressure, as its status can be monitored and adjusted sim-ply through swipes and taps on a handset.

As well as the smart fea-tures, the Crock-Pot also has traditional manual controls for taking a more hands-on approach and for those mo-ments when the Wi-Fi router needs resetting and the home network goes down.

The Crock-Pot Smart Slow Cooker enabled with WeMo is available to order now in

the U.S. for $129.99. AFP

That’s one smart cooker. Crock-Pot with app lets you tap in to cook dinner

Remote cookery

• As well as being able to fire up the cooker and shut it down again, the app offers control over the tem-perature and cooking time — great if you’re held up on the way home.

• You can pause the cooker and adjust it so that the cooking time coincides with turning the key in the front door.

• The temperature controls also include a warm setting so that something that was cooked the night be-

fore can be gently and automatically reheated from a distance.

The fi rst smartphone-controlled slow cooker.

BUSINESS WIRE

Page 14: 20140807_ca_halifax

14 metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014LIFE

1. In a Dutch oven, reduce by half the wine, sake, and lemon juice with the le-mongrass. Add the lychee juice. Cool.

2. Heat the butter in a heavy-bottom frying pan. Season the chicken breasts with salt and pepper. Brown them on both sides. Put them into the lychee stock. Marinate for 4 hours on the counter, so all the flavours are infused into the chick-en. Add the chicken bouil-lon to the marinade. Heat to 194 F (90 C), cooking slowly

for 20 to 25 minutes. The in-ternal temperature should be 167 F (75 C). Remove the chicken breasts at this point and keep them warm. Reduce the cooking liquid

by half.

3. In a saucepan, reduce the cream by half. Mix cold water with the thickener (veloutine or potato starch)

in a separate bowl. Add it, a little at a time, to the cook-ing liquid to achieve the de-sired consistency (wait for the boil because the starch only begins to work at this

point). Add the reduced cream and adjust the sea-soning. Add the lychees and chicken breasts and heat for a few minutes to 194 F (90 C).

4. Serve with rice and sprinkle with chives. recipes from berries and other small fruit by jean-paul grappe (fitzhenry & Whiteside, 2014)

Give poultry a hint of the exotic with lychee and lemon grass

This recipe makes four servings. Pierre Beauchemin

Keep the cherries at room tem-perature for an hour before cooking so they burst open.

1. Heat 1 oz (30 g) of butter in a sauté pan. Add the parsnips, 1/4 cup (60 ml) of water, salt and pepper, and cover. Simmer gently so the parsnips steam. They are perfectly done when they are fork tender.

2. In a heavy-bottom frying pan, heat the rest of the butter. Add the parsnips, green beans, carrots, and ground cherries. On medium heat, sauté them for 4 to 5 minutes, until the

cherries burst open and release their juice. Add the chives.

3. Sprinkle the chervil leaves on top and serve hot.

side. Vegetable trio with ground cherries

For your phone

Wilton Cake Ideas & More (iPhone/iPad/Android; free)

You’ll find more than 4,000 wild and elaborate cake ideas in this fun-to-browse catalogue that spans floral de-signs, cartoon characters, and a surprising mix of sherbet pops, cookies, and cupcakes.

MIND THE APPKris Abel@RealKrisAbel [email protected]

• 1/3 cup (80 g) unsalted butter• 12 oz (360 g) parsnips, in rounds• Salt and freshly ground pepper• 8 oz (240 g) green beans• 12 oz (360 g) carrots• 7 oz (200 g) ground cherries• 3 oz (20 g) chives, minced• 1/3 oz (10 g) chervil leaves

Cookbook of the Week

A berry delicious way to cook

Jean-Paul Grappe, a chef and professor since 1956, is a respected francophone culinary professional and one of the most well-known chefs in Quebec.

In his book Berries and Other Small Fruit, Grappe presents 60 recipes that will allow you to savour berries in ways you never imagined.

Among the dishes served up in this release are Blueberry Potato Crepes, Roasted Pork Tenderloin with Gentian Wine Sauce, Duck Montmorency with Cherry Syrup, Plum and Mascarpone Shortcakes, and more. metro

Ingredients

• 6 tbsp (90 ml) white wine• 6 tbsp (90 ml) sake • Juice of 2 lemons• 4 stalks of lemongrass• 1 cup (250 ml) lychee juice, fresh or unsweetened canned• 1/2 cup (120 g) unsalted butter• Salt and freshly ground pepper• 4 skinless chicken breasts • 2 chicken bouillon cubes, homemade or store-bought• 1 1/2 cups (375 ml) heavy cream (35%)• 2 1/2 oz (75 g) veloutine or potato starch• 32 lychees, fresh or unsweet-ened canned • 2 oz (40 g) chives, minced

This recipe serves four to six. Pierre Beauchemin

prep timeABOUT 30 minUTes

Lychee and Lemon Grass Chicken. Using fruit to accent dishes offers a whole new taste

Page 15: 20140807_ca_halifax

Let YourImagination

Soar!

Let YourImagination

Soar!

(902) 423 88701521 Grafton Street • HalifaxMon to Sat 9:30am - 6pmwww.MaritimeHobbies.comLike us on Facebook

METRO CUSTOM PUBLISHING Buy LocaL

In business for almost 70 years, Maritime Hobbies and Crafts is Canada’s oldest hobby and craft store.

Maritime Hobbies has everything you can imagine, plus more. It carries radio-control products, trains, plastic models, kites, crafts, puzzles, rockets “and all kinds of fun little knick-knacks for people,” says manager Greg Hatt. “There’s never a short-age of things to look at when you’re here.”

While customers love the variety of

product offerings, the customer service is something else that stands out.

The employees are all very knowledge-able as their passion is their profession, meaning they understand what custom-ers are looking for and provide insightful help.

And if Maritime Hobbies doesn’t have what you are looking for, the staff is pleased to place special orders.

Since opening in 1946, Maritime Hob-

bies has always been located in downtown Halifax, and has been in its present-day location for about 20 years.

To find out what the newest products and specials are, drop in to the store, or check out Maritime Hobbies’ Facebook page, which is filled with great photos.

Maritime Hobbies is located at 1521 Grafton St., across from the Spring Garden Road Memorial Library, and is open Mon-day to Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.

All kinds of fun at Maritime Hobbies

Whether it’s a part for a new motorcycle or an antique, such as an exhaust, handlebars, brakes, oil, tires, fabrication, chances are Toad’s Cycle Works has what you are looking for.

“We carry a lot of hard to find, rare trinkets,” says owner Collin Roach.

In fact, the shop has new parts for motor-cycles as far back as the 1940s.

If Toad’s doesn’t have the part you are look-ing for, it can most likely get it within two days at a competitive price.

Toad’s was established in 1979 by Roach’s father, Raymond, who was nicknamed Toad and for whom the company is named.

The staff have various levels of expertise and, as a result, customers receive great advice and friendly service.

Besides parts, Toad’s won awards for custom builds under Raymond Roach. Toad’s Cycle Works is keeping that legacy alive with its own custom builds.

Toad’s is located just 10 minutes away from Mic Mac Mall at 30 Lake Major Rd., which is just off Main Street in Dartmouth. During the sum-mer, it is open Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Winter hours will be announced at a later date.

Doing it rigHt witH toAD’s

Page 16: 20140807_ca_halifax

METRO CUSTOM PUBLISHING Buy LocaL

The local food movement is alive and well in downtown Dartmouth, and it’s showing up in different ways, from restaurants to commun-ity spaces.

At The Canteen, owner Renée Lavallée is dishing up sandwiches using locally-made ingredients.

“We try to use as much local as humanly possible,” she says, rattling off a list of the local suppliers she uses, including Oulton’s Farm for meats, Noggins Corner Farm Market for vegetables, and the Speerville Flour Mill for flour, which The Canteen uses to bake its own sandwich breads every day.

Lavallée thinks it’s vital to use local in-gredients because it helps support the local economy, it helps people reconnect with their food, and it just tastes better.

“I think if it’s grown locally and it hasn’t been shipped on a truck or a plane for weeks, then it’s obviously going to taste a hell of a lot better than if it has been shipped for a long time,” Lavallée says.

The Wooden Monkey is another restaurant focusing on using locally-sourced ingredients. While it has been a staple of the restaurant scene in Halifax, it opened another location at 40 Alderney Dr. almost two years ago.

“There is a strong local food movement here,” says Tim Rissesco, the executive direc-tor of the Downtown Dartmouth Business Commission. “You see it at the Alderney Landing Farmers’ Market and the Commun-

ity Oven on the weekends, and you see it downtown.”

The Park Avenue Community Oven is located at the Dartmouth Common. It is a volunteer-run, public, wood-fired oven that

can be rented out. The space is an important community gathering point, as evidenced by its recent use as the Family Picnic spot for a Pride event. Fresh pizzas supplied by Portland Street’s Big Life were baked using the oven.

A cash mob might sound like a bad thing, but it’s actually a great thing.

Brenda Dooks knows this first-hand. She is the owner of Uptown Girl Fashion Boutique and Primitive Goose Handcrafts on Portland Street in downtown Dartmouth. Uptown Girl sells a mixture of new and used high-end ladies wear, primitive furniture and craftwear.

This past winter was tough on sales for the business, but a staffer at Weldon McInnis, a law firm on Ochterloney Street, sensed this and organized for a cash mob to hit the busi-ness on a chosen day in late May.

A cash mob is a take on the idea of a flash mob, except when people gather for a cash mob, they will spend their money at a designated business. In this case, people committed to spending $20 or more at Uptown Girl.

On the chosen day, the cash mobbers gathered at the town clock where a bagpiper piped them up to Uptown Girl. In total, about 50 people participated.

“After the winter we had, a little cash in-flux really, really helped a whole lot,” Dooks says.

Not only did it provide sales, but it also drummed up publicity for the business and provided an emotional lift for Dooks.

She says the cash mob says a lot about the close-knit downtown Dartmouth business community.

“We pull together to support each other,” Dooks says, noting that people in the busi-ness community often spread the word to customers about other businesses in the area.

This doesn’t surprise Tim Rissesco, the executive director of the Downtown Dart-mouth Business Commission.

“The businesses are all pulling on the same rope and are welcoming of people and new ideas,” he says. “It is exciting to watch the downtown bloom.”

dIg Into downtown dartmouth

A cash mob descended upon Uptown Girl, a retailer on Portland Street, in late May.

Community supports one another

LocaL ingredients taste better and heLp economy

The Park Avenue Community Oven is a volunteer-run, public, wood-fired oven that can be rented out for bookings.

All it takes is a quick walk around down-town Dartmouth to know it’s a creative community. With community art and murals, there is a creative energy perme-ating the downtown.

Dig a little deeper and you will discover art galleries such as the Dart Gallery on Portland Street and the Craig Gallery in Alderney Landing.

You might even come across some live theatre through OneLight Theatre. OneLight is putting on a multi-arts festival showcasing Aboriginal artists at Alderney Landing Aug. 21-24.

“We are a happening downtown,” Coun. Gloria McCluskey wrote in an email. “It is … a great place to live and work, but if you work in Halifax, travel is so convenient with the ferry and busses right there.”

Tim Rissesco, the executive director of the Downtown Dartmouth Business Commission, says something magical is happening in downtown Dartmouth.

“There is an eclectic vibe here,” Ris-sesco says.

“People can try new things, express themselves in new ways and find suc-cess in downtown Dartmouth.”

Creative energy and eCleCtiC vibe

Page 17: 20140807_ca_halifax

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Page 18: 20140807_ca_halifax

18 metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014SPORTS

Milos Raonic wasn’t perfect, but he’s still alive at the Rog-ers Cup.

Raonic had his serve go-ing amid some erratic shots as he came back to beat American Jack Sock 4-6, 7-6 (2), 7-6 (4) on centre court Wednesday night at Rexall Centre in Toronto.

Fans chanted “Let’s go Mi-los” between points, cheer-ing on the last Canadian left in the field. On Tuesday, all four men who played sin-gles were eliminated, and Eugenie Bouchard bowed out in Montreal.

Raonic stunted that mo-mentum with 15 aces that helped offset some struggles in returning Sock’s serve. He won 79 per cent of his first-serve points but was broken in the first set to cause the 23-year-old to fall behind.

In the second set, Raonic held serve before blowing out Sock in the tiebreak. He needed another tiebreak to finish off the match.

“There was a little sliver of an opening and I managed to squeeze my way through,” Raonic said immediately after the match.

Raonic will face Julien Benneteau of France on Thursday night. Benneteau upset 11th-seeded Ernests Gulbis Wednesday after beat-

ing former world No. 1 Lley-ton Hewitt in the first round.

By edging Sock, Raonic

can keep his recent momen-tum going.

He won last week’s Citi

Open in Washington by beat-ing Vasek Pospisil in the first-ever all-Canadian final a month after becoming the first Canadian to reach the Wimbledon semifinals.

Raonic came into the week tied for his career high in the rankings at No. 6.THE CANADIAN PRESS

Milos Raonic serves against Jack Sock on Wednesday night at Rexall Centre in Toronto. DARREN CALABRESE/THE CANADIAN PRESS

Canada has a ray of hope in RaonicRogers Cup. Canadian tennis star claws back against Sock to keep Canadian contingent alive at Rexall Centre

Maria Sharapova blows kisses after her 4-6, 6-3, 6-1 win over No. 27 Garbine Muguruza of Venezuela on Wednesday in Montreal. STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES

AUGMENTED REALITY → Scan the image with your Metro

News app to view a gallery of Wednesday’s action in Toronto and Montreal.

→ See the full instructions on Metro’s Voices page.

Toronto Blue Jays’ right fi elder Jose Bautista gets a big fi st bump from third base coach Luis Rivera on his two-run home run in the second inning on Wednesday night at Rogers Centre. ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE/TORSTAR NEWS SERVICE

Jays back in the AL East chaseRight-hander Drew Hutchison allowed only a home run and a walk over 8-2/3 innings and Jose Bautista homered and drove in three runs on Wednesday as the Toronto Blue Jays snapped a four-game losing streak with a 5-1 win over the Baltimore Orioles.

Hutchison (8-9) struck out eight and walked one to win for the second time in his past three starts.

A second-inning home run by Chris Davis was the only Ori-oles hit against him.

The Blue Jays had 12 hits.

Hutchison was removed for closer Casey Janssen after he walked Nick Markakis with two out in the ninth. Janssen retired Manny Machado to end the game. THE CANADIAN PRESS

Motorsports

Three Nova Scotians called to Maritime HOFA trio of Nova Scotians will be inducted into the Maritime Motorsports Hall of Fame.

Motorcycle competitor Gary McKinnon, drag racing competitor James (Jim) Morrison and motorsports builder and competitor William (Art) Steeves are three of 10 new inductees to join the hall of fame as the Class of 2014 at a Nov. 16 ceremony in Charlotte-town, P.E.I.

McKinnon has been racing since 1971 and last year posted his fastest lap ever at Atlantic Motorsports Park at age 62, Morrison has been racing for five decades and has won more national titles than any other Maritimer, while Steeves overcame a broken neck to keep racing and has officiated the biggest races on the eastern seaboard.

The 10 additional inductees brings the total number of Hall of Famers up to 92, a Maritime Motor-sports Hall of Fame news release says.KRISTEN LIPSCOMBE/METRO

AUS basketball

Duffi e named Axemen coachNew Brunswick native Kevin Duffie has been tapped by Acadia University to take on the position of head coach for the Axeman basketball team.

Duffie replaces Steve Bauer, who has joined the national women’s basket-ball program.

“This is about Acadia Axemen basketball continu-ing to strive to get better,” Acadia director of athletics Kevin Dickie said in a news release Wednesday.

Duffie spent six seasons as Acadia’s assistant coach in Atlantic University Sport, joining the staff just one year after winning a Can-adian Interuniversity Sport silver medal as a student-athlete. He has also served as Basketball Nova Scotia’s technical director.

“I believe the program is heading in the right direction,” Duffie said in the release. “We have a great group of current players and recruits.”

The Axemen, who have made the Final 8 three of the last four years, open their season Oct. 3 at home. KRISTEN LIPSCOMBE/METRO

On Wednesday

15Blue Jays Orioles

Page 19: 20140807_ca_halifax

19metronews.caThursday, August 7, 2014 PLAY

ENTER & YOU COULD

PAYDAY LOANS MADE EASYYou’re pre-approved for up to $1,500**

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PAYDAY LOANS ARE HIGH COST LOANS. COST OF BORROWING FOR A $100.00 LOAN FOR 14 DAYS: $25.00. COST OF BORROWING FOR A $400.00 LOAN FOR 14 DAYS: $100.00.

Across1. Grind to _ __6. Shopping estab.9. Colorado resort14. Lenny Kravitz’s alias in his early career, __ Blue15. Yes: French16. Depart17. Celebrity chef off erings19. __ fork20. Toronto’s Univer-sity and Danforth, e.g.21. Communication syst.22. __-neck sweater23. Bird bill24. “Every __ You Take” by The Police26. Verdi opera29. Movie category31. Nice money amount: 2 wds.33. Alien sitcom35. Gomer __ (Jim Nabors role)36. Inventor Mr. Whitney37. “Electric Pow Wow Drum” DJ crew from Ottawa: 4 wds.42. Baby for Kanga43. Viva voce44. Letters for T-shirt sizes45. __ of Parliament47. Ex-Montreal baseball team51. Parkay, for one52. PEI part56. Compass pt.57. Scandinavian rugs59. Record co.

60. Wholly __ __ part61. Warship-related63. Joey __, New-foundland’s fi rst provincial Premier, in 194965. Laud66. Apple devices platform

67. __ Bay, New-foundland68. “This is __ __ sudden!”69. Medical pros70. Canadian guitarist Mr. CookDown1. Denys __ (Canadian

movie director)2. Vacuum†cleaner company3. Particular proto-zoan4. Monetary units in Albania5. From A __ _ (Step-by-step)

6. Archie Comics character7. “__, Fran and Ollie” (Classic puppet TV show)8. Poetic contraction9. And10. St. Lawrence __11. 100th Anniver-

sary! Calgary luxury hotel which opened in 1914: The Fairmont __12. Ms. Longoria13. Mr. Beatty18. Paddle22. Pops in the freezer for a bit24. Rocky __ (Sylves-ter Stallone role)25. Texter’s sign-off 27. Mr. Hill of “The West Wing”28. During30. Spring month in Montreal32. Considered34. “__ Bueller’s Day Off ” (1986)35. Chum37. Son of folk legend Woody38. Work hard39. City in Quebec40. Islets41. Gladiator’s 56046. Lorde song48. Eva and Juan in “Evita” (1996)49. Kitchen’s tears inducers50. E-Mail getter, say53. Squeezed fruit54. Gather55. Naught58 Choir voice60. “_ __ is me.” (Sniff , sniff )61. PBS funding org.62. GNR’s Mr. Rose63. Gentleman’s title64. President after JFK

Yesterday’s Sudoku

How to playFill in the grid, so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1-9. There is no math involved.

Sudoku

Horoscopes by Sally Brompton

AriesMarch 21 - April 20Something out of the ordinary will happen today that you will be able to take advantage of. A few days from now you will be singing your own praises!

TaurusApril 21 - May 21The planets will give you the chance to be of service to someone who does not share your strength of character.What you do for others now will, one day, come back to you.

GeminiMay 22 - June 21 Today’s Sun-Mercury link will do wonders for your confi dence and popularity. Just remember that it’s not possible to accept each and every invitation.

Cancer June 22 - July 23 Money isn’t everything but it has its place in the world and with more of it you’d be able to do some of the things you have dreamed about. Use your talents in a more focused way.

Leo July 24 - Aug. 23The planets will give a major boost to your self-belief over the next 24 hours and before the day is over you will have started something that has the potential to transform your life.

Virgo Aug. 24 - Sept. 23 Cosmic activity in Leo may at times make you doubt yourself but today you have enough mental energy to overcome that negative outlook.

LibraSept. 24 - Oct. 23You’ll come into contact with people who share your ideals.They’ll also boost your belief that you can make a diff erence by working with others.

ScorpioOct. 24 - Nov. 22A career change is likely soon.Whether it is a change you make or a change that is forced on you remains to be seen but if you do feel so inclined then make the fi rst move.

SagittariusNov. 23 - Dec. 21No matter how busy you may be you won’t be satisfi ed until you have booked a vacation or promised friends that you’ll visit them over the weekend. Travel brings out the best in you.

Capricorn Dec. 22 - Jan. 20You have fears that can hold you back from fulfi lling your potential, but today’s infl uences will help you confront them and overcome them.

AquariusJan. 21 - Feb. 19If there is someone you want to get closer to, you must let them know how you feel. On the work front, too, the more you open up to others, the more they will want to do for you.

Pisces Feb. 20 - March 20You may be the sort who spends more time dreaming than doing but today the planets will inspire you to take a more hands-on approach.

Yesterday’s Crossword

Crossword: Canada Across and Down by Kelly Ann Buchanan AUGMENTED REALITY

Stuck on 12 Across? Scan this image with your Metro News app for today’s

crossword and Sudoku answers. It’s OK. No one’s watching.

→ See the full instructions on Metro’s Voices page.

Online

See today’s answers at metronews.ca/answers

Page 20: 20140807_ca_halifax

WAS: $19,144*

SAVE: $4,154*

NOW: $14,990*

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TOFLORIDA WITH PURCHASE

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TOFLORIDA WITH PURCHASE

WAS: $19,144*

SAVE: $4,154*

NOW:$14,990

FLORIDA WITH PURCHASEFLORIDA WITH PURCHASE

WAS: $32,394*

SAVE: $6,404*

NOW: $25,990*WAS: $18,224*

SAVE: $4,254*

NOW: $13,990*

WAS: $27,649*

SAVE: $9,650*

NOW: $17,990*

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TO FLORIDA WITH

PURCHASE

$32,394*

SAVE: $6,404*

NOW:$25,990WAS: $18,224*

SAVE: $4,254

NOW:$13,990

2013 HYUNDAI ACCENT GL5 DOOR, AUTO, A/C, POWER GROUP

2013 HYUNDAI SONATA GLSAUTO, A/C, POWER GROUP

60 BAKER DRIVE, UNIT - D 465-7500oreganshyundaidartmouth.com

*Free trip for two to Florida or Vegas with the purchase of a O’Regan’s Dartmouth Hyundai Certifi ed used vehicle. Deal available on in-stock units only with O’Regan’s fi nancing. Taxes and fees not included. Includes minimum trade value of $1000 for cash for clunkers. All vehicles are Green Light certifi ed with low kms. Off er ends August 29, 2014 . See O’Regan’s Dartmouth Hyundai for details.

O’REGAN’S DARTMOUTH HYUNDAI

2014 HYUNDAI SANTA FEPREMIUM AWD, AUTO, A/C, POWER GROUP, AWD

WAS:SAVE:

NOW:

2014 HYUNDAI SANTA FEPREMIUM AWD,

$153*BW 3

LEFT

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TOFLORIDA WITH PURCHASE

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TOFLORIDA WITH PURCHASE

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TO FLORIDA OR LAS VEGAS WITH PURCHASE

GREEN LIGHT Certified CLEARANCEHYUNDAI

MINIMUM $1000 TRADE VALUE

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TO FLORIDA WITH

PURCHASE

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TO

$136*BW 7

LEFT

2014 HYUNDAI TUSCON GL AWDAUTO, A/C, POWER GROUP, AWD

$89*BW 5

LEFT

2013 HYUNDAI ACCENT GL4 DOOR, AUTO, A/C, POWER GROUP

$25,990*WAS:SAVE:

NOW:

2014 HYUNDAI SANTA FEAUTO, A/C, POWER GROUP, AWD

2013 HYUNDAI ACCENT GL4 DOOR, AUTO, A/C, POWER GROUP

$83*BW 3

LEFT

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TOFLORIDA WITH PURCHASE

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TOFLORIDA WITH PURCHASE

WAS:SAVE:

NOW:

AUTO, A/C, POWER GROUP

*Free trip for two to Florida or Vegas with the purchase of a O’Regan’s Dartmouth Hyundai Certifi ed used vehicle. Deal available on in-stock units only with O’Regan’s fi nancing. Taxes and fees not included. Includes minimum trade value of $1000 for cash for clunkers.

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TOFLORIDA WITH PURCHASE

FREE TRIP FOR 2 TOFLORIDA WITH PURCHASE

WAS: $27,509*

SAVE: $4,519*

NOW: $22,990*

$0DOWN $0DOWN

$0DOWN

$0DOWN$122*

BW 3LEFT

$0DOWN

ORDH-0229-August Buy Back Metro OBC.indd 1 2014-08-06 4:15 PM