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Page 1: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

NEWS | PAGE 3

Cuts to keep city tax increase at zero, Page 7

SPORTS | PAGE 20

CloudHigh 6 Low 0

NanaimoDailyNews.com

Published since 1874

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

CLIPPERS WINNING

STREAK ENDS AT 10

@NanaimoDaily

$1.25 TAX INCLUDED

EX-PRINCIPAL ADMITS THEFT

NEWS, 5

Preventing young offenders from Preventing young offenders from becoming habitual criminalsbecoming habitual criminals

Page 3Page 3

DAILY NEWS PHOTO ILLUSTRATION

Page 2: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

7180 Lantzville Rd.250-390-9089

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TOP STORY

Couple scrambles to get ready for Syrian familyPAOLA LORIGGIO THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Hours before a family of Syr-ian refugees was set to land in Ontario, the retired couple who helped sponsor them was scrambling Monday to wrap up preparations for their arrival.

Brian and Philomena Logel learned two weeks ago that the Alhajali family — Emad, his wife Razan, their daughter, Fatma, and son Mohammad — would be arriving this month, leaving them little time to finalize arrangements.

The couple managed to find the family a townhouse in Orangeville, Ont., about an hour northwest of Toronto, and were rush-ing to drop off first and last month’s rent before heading to the airport, Brian Logel said.

He said the Alhajalis will still live with them at their farmhouse on the outskirts of town for about a week until the new home is ready.

And the family will be coming over for Christmas dinner, even though it’s not a holiday they celebrate, he said.

While Brian Logel ran errands, his wife was at home cooking in case the Alhajalis are hungry when they arrive. The pair had previously said they found a halal butcher in town.

Others in the community have promised to drop off meals over the next week so that Philomena Logel isn’t shouldering the burden alone, he said.

“We’re so nervous, we’re so excited, I can’t believe it, how keyed up we are,” he said.

The Logels are part of a group co-spon-soring the Alhajalis with their local United Church.

They are working through the Anglican United Refugee Alliance, one of several organizations that have deals with the fed-eral government to allow them to sponsor

refugees from lists provided by the United Nations.

The Alhajalis are expected to arrive from Jordan on a commercial flight, rather than the government airlifts that began last Thursday as part of the Liberals’ pledge to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees by the end of February.

Emad and Razan Alhajali, both 28, have said they wanted to come to Canada specif-ically because they felt it was too dangerous for Muslims in the U.S., and Europe was turning people away. The couple is expecting their third child.

A trained nurse and midwife, Razan Alhajali has said she hopes her credentials can be recognized in her new country. Her husband has said he struggled to find work in Irbid, the northern Jordanian city where they have lived since fleeing their war-torn homeland.

Emad Alhajali’s cousin, Awad, and his family also found sponsors in Orangeville, but their application is in the early stages.

Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard presents a newly-arrived Syrian refugee with a teddy bear at

a welcome centre in Montreal on Saturday. [THE CANADIAN PRESS]

FINANCE

StatsCan says household debt level now 163.7% of disposable income in CanadaCRAIG WONG THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Canadian household debt hit a new record in the third quarter, as borrow-ing rose faster than income.

Statistics Canada said Monday the amount of household debt compared with dispos-able income rose to 163.7 per cent, up from 162.7 per cent in the second quarter.

That means the average household has roughly $1.64 in debt for every dollar of dis-posable income.

“The deterioration in the headline was expected, driven by a combination of slug-gish income growth and still-hearty bor-rowing,” Bank of Montreal chief economist Doug Porter said.

“Hot housing markets in B.C. and Ontario are driving mortgage growth, over-riding the softness in oil-producing regions. On

the flip side, the relentless decline in oil and other commodity prices is dampening income growth.”

Disposable income increased 0.8 per cent, while household credit market debt grew 1.4 per cent.

Total household credit market debt, which includes consumer credit, and mortgage and non-mortgage loans, reached $1.892 trillion. Consumer credit debt was $572.3 billion, while mortgage debt stood at $1.234 trillion.

Household debt and the housing market have been key concerns for economists and policy-markets.

Last week, Ottawa moved to cool some of the country’s hottest real estate markets with new rules to require larger downpay-ments for houses over $500,000.

TD Bank economist Diana Petramala said the new rules would likely affect only a small

segment of the overall housing market.“However, set against a backdrop of rising

unemployment, the debt-to-income ratio is still likely to continue to trek higher through 2016,” Petramala said.

The report on household debt came a day before the Bank of Canada is set to release its latest financial system review which will include an examination of household debt and potential vulnerabilities for the financial system.

Porter noted that while the household debt-to-disposable income ratio is at a new high, it likely will not dictate Bank of Can-ada policy.

“In its latest policy statement, the bank suggested that while ’vulnerabilities in the household sector continue to edge higher.’ they see ’overall risks to financial stability are evolving as expected’,” Porter said.

*All Numbers unofficial

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Page 3: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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Almost two decades ago, an RCMP officer came to Nanaimo to start a pro-gram to keep young offend-ers off the road leading to a

life of crime. Today Nanaimo’s Restora-tive Justice program is a model used

by criminologists around the world to prevent troubled teens or young offenders becoming a habitual criminals.

As an RCMP offi-cer, Randy Munro understood the cost of crime, not only to victims and society, but for the offender caught in a hopeless revolving-door cycle of crime, jail, and

more crime, with little chance of meaningful employment or social status.

While stationed at the Fort St. John detachment in the mid-1990s Munro heard about a unique approach prac-ticed in New Zealand, which made young people accountable for their actions, by facing their victims and making direct reparations.

In 1995 Northwest Territories Judge Heimo Lilles presented a paper discuss-ing how New Zealand shaming circles were used to close of three youth deten-tion centers in that country.

They featured a form of restorative jus-tice that involved offenders facing their victims and taking responsibility for their behaviour.

Munro saw this as a “better way to deal with youth in the criminal justice system.” He approached an RCMP com-munity consultative group in Fort St. John to discuss his thoughts on creating a new program for youth.

Steps were taken to develop such a system, which went into practice in May, 1996.

A form of restorative justice was already being practiced at Sparwood, but it involved offenders facing a three-mem-ber board, rather than the victim.

“That particular model I didn’t agree with,” Munro said.

He liked the Judge Lilles model, because it resulted in offenders seeing the harm their actions cause others, and led them to think of how to make things right.

“We started with youth, and then we

A way to make amendsRestorative justice program can off er clean slate for young off enders

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 20153 nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily

DarrellBellaartReporting

said: ‘Gee, we’ll try it with adults, and it worked very well.’”

A year later Munro was transferred to Nanaimo. He approached Vio-let Smith at the Nanaimo Region John Howard Society to establish a restorative justice program here.

It took time to educate the com-munity, train facilitators and find sources of funding for the new service, but in May 1998, it was operational.

The program works in ways the criminal justice system can’t.

Where a criminal tried by the state might consider the system as a faceless entity to be sneered at, restorative justice is about taking responsibility of actions.

For Jennifer (not her real name), 25, of Parksville, restorative justice meant avoiding a criminal record for an act committed during a lapse of judgment — an attempt to shoplift a bunch of carrots from a grocery store while intoxicated.

She and her boyfriend were in Nanaimo and started drinking early that day, on an empty stomach.

That afternoon they went shop-ping for some food, and she decided she wanted carrots.

“I put it in my purse, and, as I was walking out, the store mark (store security), said: ‘You’re not planning to leave the store with those car-rots, are you?’”

She immediately owned up to her mistake, and her co-operation helped steer her case to the program. Jennifer is a certified massage therapist, and as part of her contract, she agreed to provide free massages to a group of people.

Escaping the lifetime humiliation of a criminal record was a big relief for Jennifer. The lesson she learned?

“Don’t do stupid things on a whim.”

Every criminal was once a child. Usually there was a trigger event that got them started on the crim-inal path.

“Almost every person I’ve seen that has committed a crime, some-thing has gone on in their life. They might have experienced a sexual assault, they may be hungry, what-ever,” said Kim Fagerlund, Nanaimo Region John Howard Society restorative justice co-ordinator.

Criminologists understand in the vast majority of cases, such behav-iour is not malicious. Typically, it’s a cry for help.

The goal is to prevent recidivism, but a justice system designed to punish criminals, then give them a life-changing criminal record, can have the opposite effect.

Word was spreading, and by 2006, the Nanaimo program was discussed at the University of South Missouri and that same year the B.C. Crim-inal Justice Branch recognized the Nanaimo program as “sanctioned.”

This allowed the Crown to refer cases to the program, as an alterna-tive to the traditional, conflict-based legal system.

The following year, Wally Opal, then B.C. attorney-general, complimented the program as “ahead of its time,” during a visit to Nanaimo.

In 2008 it was added to as a tool for dealing with troubled youth in the Nanaimo-Ladysmith School District. In 2009 the Nanaimo model was the topic of a workshop at the Inter-national Institute of Restorative Prac-tices Conferences in Vancouver.

Munro is now retired from the RCMP, but he’s still proud of the accomplishments of the program he helped start in Nanaimo.

The benefits go beyond social. An analysis recently found it costs $271 to process a simple mischief offence under restorative justice, versus $2,629.50 in the traditional system.

Since it started, more than 4,500 people have been referred to the pro-gram, sparing them the human cost of a criminal record, while sparing taxpayers the police, court, incarcera-tion and recidivism costs.

Eighty-four per cent of those who go through the program do not re-of-fend, compared to 72 per cent of offenders released on day parole in the conventional system and 57 per cent of those under mandatory supervision.

To keep a man in jail today, it costs $157,000 annually, $218,000 for a woman.

It’s a quiet revolution that has been gaining momentum in Nanaimo, B.C., Canada and the world.

“Unless you (are) involved, or intro-duced to it, you don’t understand the successes,” Munro said.

Darrell.Bellaart

@nanaimodailynews.com

250-729-4235

While consequences are needed to teach stealing and other antisocial behaviour are wrong, a young person who acts out needs equal measures of support to get them through a dark period in their development.

Unlike traditional courts, offenders can earn forgiveness by apologizing and taking other suitable actions to wipe the slate clean with victims.

In study after study, offenders are far less likely to repeat the crime after they go through restorative justice.

The process isn’t easy for offenders, since it requires that they own up to their crime and make amends. The shame they experience in the process is often enough to make them pause before repeating the offence.

“We’ve had kids fix fences they’ve knocked down,” Fagerlund said.

And sometimes victims, realizing the offender is changing their behav-iour, become supportive, Munro said.

“If a person goes to court they never face the victim, and the victim never gets to say: ‘This is how it’s affected me,” Fagerlund said.

When a victim finds their home ransacked, their first question is why they were targeted.

Restorative justice answers that question for victims — something that seldom happens in law courts.

Fagerlund said victims get to ask that question and usually they get an answer.

“When we sit down in a forum and in walks this scrawny 14-year-old,” she said. “They can be assured that person won’t go out and hurt some-one else.”

Nanaimo’s restorative justice pro-gram was the focus of a justice sym-posium in Ottawa in 2000, and at an international conference in Winches-ter, England, the following year.

In 2002 the United Nations adopted a resolution to explore the basic prin-cipals of restorative justice in crimin-al matters,

Beverly Busson, who was RCMP deputy commissioner at the time, called the program a “best practice” while attending the Restorative Jus-tice Conference in Nanaimo in 2003.

The following year, a five-year study on the program was launched, which demonstrated significant effectiveness in cutting recidivism among offenders who take part in the program.

“Almost every person I’ve seen that has committed a crime, something has gone on in their life.”

Kim Fagerlund, John Howard Society

The Nanaimo courthouse. Restorative justice programs aim to keep

youngsters out of the criminal justice system. [AARON HINKS/DAILY NEWS]

Page 4: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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HEALTH

New $35M care facility to open in spring 2017ROBERT BARRON DAILY NEWS

The Eden Gardens project on Northfield Road will be the leading care facility in western Canada for those suffering dementia when it’s completed in April of 2017.

The new 130-bed care facility, which will cost approximately $35 million when it’s up and running, has been in the planning stages for year. It will replace the existing Nanaimo Travellers Lodge facility on Nelson Road, which has about 90 long-term care beds.

Officials from R. W (Bob) Wall Ltd., the project manager, have held a number of tours of the facility during the various phases of its construction since it began in July, with the latest on Dec. 12.

Donna Hais, the construction company’s general manager, said approximately 30 per cent of the work at the site has been complet-ed, and expectations are that the project will meet its construction deadline.

She said the facility will represent a fundamental change in care for those suffering from dementia, based on the new “Eden philoso-phy” of care.

“The idea is to provide a home setting instead of a hospital setting for the patients,” Hais said.

“Eden Gardens will have 11 people assigned to each ‘home’ in the facility, with each home hav-ing access to their own outdoor gardens, kitchens and arts and crafts rooms, and each patient

will have their own bedrooms and bathrooms.”

Hais said four tours of the site have been held so far, and the com-pany intends to provide more as construction continues.

“The way service will be provided is a big change from the Travellers Lodge, so we’re providing the tours to keep staff and families informed of what’s going on and to answer any questions they may have,” she said.

Once Eden Gardens opens, Trav-ellers Lodge’s existing facility will close, with the proceeds put toward costs of the new facility.

Robert.Barron

@nanaimodailynews.com

250-729-4234

OVERLINE

Investigation into dams issue nixed by councilSPENCER ANDERSON DAILY NEWS

Nanaimo council will now not seek an independent investigation into the city’s handling of the Colliery dams issue.

The decision comes after a call for a contract to conduct the investigation turned up zero responses.

The city had posted a request for pro-posals on its website between Oct. 28 and Nov. 19.

The proposed investigation into the controversial local issue — controver-sial because proposed alterations to the lower Colliery dam in Nanaimo’s Harewood neighbourhood were decried by some as unnecessary and costly — was included as part of a motion to construct an auxiliary spillway this summer.

At Monday’s meeting council voted unanimously in favour of a motion from Coun. Ian Thorpe to formally abandon an investigation.

Thorpe and councillors Diane Bren-nan and Wendy Pratt had spoken out in October against the proposal, arguing it

would be a divisive project and a waste of money.

Coun. Bill Yoachim, who included the call for an investigation into a motion to begin work on the lower dam, voiced echoes of frustration left over from the summer, referring to“flawed reports” that “contradicted each other.”

But he said Monday the investigation was never meant as a “witch hunt” and it was important that “healing” take place on the issue.

While Monday’s vote to abandon an investigation may mean the lower dam issue is effectively closed, council was reminded Monday that the middle Colliery dam will need to be evaluated in the future to determine whether it needs upgrades.

Nanaimo social and protective services director Toby Seward said staff will be seeking direction from councillors in the new year on studying that structure.

Spencer.Anderson

@nanaimodailynews.com

250-729-4255

Construction is well underway at the Eden Gardens site, which is located on Northfield Road in Nanaimo.

[AARON HINKS/DAILY NEWS]

◆ CRIME

Drugs, guns found after search of Nanaimo home

The Vancouver Island Emergency Response Team found drugs and guns after searching a Quilchena Crescent home in Nanaimo Monday morning.

According to a Nanaimo RCMP media release, police believed there were stolen firearms inside the house.

A 34-year-old man was arrested with-out incident.

RCMP found two shotguns and

several ounces of cocaine and crystal methamphetamine.

The man was charged with several firearms-related offences and possession for the purpose of trafficking. He will be held until he makes an appearance in Nanaimo provincial court.

“When an investigation determines there may be firearms in a residence or there is potential for violence, ERT is often utilized for the entry to minimize the risk to the general public,” Nanaimo RCMP Const. Gary O’Brien said in a statement. — DAILY NEWS

Page 5: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily NEWS 5TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

CITY

Boathouse decision is delayed to JanuarySPENCER ANDERSON DAILY NEWS

Nanaimo council put off until January endorsing a new Nanaimo boathouse and paddling centre near the Brechin boat ramp.

The concept for the boathouse near the Newcastle Island channel has been around for four years, but needs city support to proceed any further, says the society behind the proposal.

Camela Tang, president of the

Nanaimo Boathouse Society, said the project needs to embark on its next phase, including detailed design, permit and approval work and fundraising.

The aim is to have a new centre set up by 2020, Tang said.

The $3.9-million building would be paid for entirely by fundraising. Con-struction of the project would gener-ate $8 million in economic benefits for the region, the society said.

Speakers before council, including Tang, said gathering capital for the project is difficult without approval in principle from the city, despite a long list of supporters.

“Without the AIP you’re unable to do it,” Tang said. “The question we’re always asked is, ‘Have you got the city’s support yet?’”

Fellow project supporter Don Cohen echoed the sentiment.

“We’re not asking for money,” he

said. “We’re asking for approval in principle so we can raise the money.”

The project has run into less than friendly waters in the past.

It was voted down 7-1 by the pre-vious council in 2014. Some coun-cillors voiced concern Monday when approached about the project.

One concern was the future cost of the facility to the city, including servicing the site. The society has said future costs could be negotiated

with the city, however, that raised eyebrows.

“I wish there was a price tag,” said Coun. Bill Yoachim.

Some on council also questioned the location of the proposed boat-house and its impact on parking and traffic near the boat launch.

Spencer.Anderson

@nanaimodailynews.com

250-729-4255

COURTS

Former principal admits to cash theft at schoolSPENCER ANDERSON DAILY NEWS

A former Nanaimo-Ladysmith school district principal has pleaded guilty to a charge of theft.

David Street, who resigned as prin-cipal of Woodlands Secondary in May, issued a tearful apology in provincial court Monday.

Street has admitted to stealing approximately $2,320 from the school between November 2014 and March of this year. The money came from graduation fees, donations for school programs, events and fees for school sports over several weeks.

According to information read out in court, Street had a safe installed in one of the school’s administration offices and told his staff to store school money there, instead of lock-ing it in a filing cabinet as had been done in the past.

Street told his staff he did not want access to the safe. But three of his office administrators began noticing that money was missing.

RCMP began an investigation, but Street said only his staff had access to the safe.

Two of Street’s staff, who were questioned by police, decided to secretly install a motion sensor cam-era in the office where the safe was stored. Video footage gathered later showed Street entering the office and taking money from the safe and filing cabinet seven times between Feb. 25 and March 11.

Sentencing has been put off until the new year. Street read out an emotional apology to the court, indi-cating he had been dealing with alco-hol abuse and a pattern of “self-de-structive” behaviour.

“I am so very sorry for all I have done. I’m so sorry.”

Spencer.Anderson

@nanaimodailynews.com

250-729-4255

SAANICH

Boat owner off ended by district, media reports calling his longtime home ‘derelict’TRAVIS PATERSON SAANICH NEWS

The owner of the 17-metre boat that washed ashore in the middle of Cadboro Bay beach early on Dec. 5 is offended the District of Saanich and media have referred to it as derelict.

Cyril Manuel was living on the vessel, the Pacific Sun King, for six years until last Friday’s violent storm forced the 40-tonne boat to drag anchor from a spot midpoint in the bay. Prior to last week, Manuel lived in Esquimalt waters near the navy base.

“I just paid $600 to get towed here, it took me two attempts,” said Manuel, who was at the boat salva-ging tools and personal belongings Monday night. “I take offence to the term ‘derelict,’ I’ve been a boater for 15 years.”

Manuel was there with his girl-friend long past nightfall Monday as they took advantage of low tide. He interacted with sympathetic beachgoers and also posted a sign on shore asking for patience and understanding from local residents and beach visitors while he tried to recover from the situation.

“Esquimalt was squeezing me out,” Manuel said. “I was threatened by the harbourmaster, the RCMP was going to visit me. So I wasted all my money getting here and now I’m broke.”

Manuel said he is willing to do anything he can to recover the boat, and is considering giving it away.

“Take it, use it, or if anyone can help me recover it, please.”

His arrival on shore is an intense story that includes a daring escape from the Pacific Sun King. Manuel said the waves were so big, it took five minutes to get into the skiff. He then “literally surfed” the skiff to shore, with his girlfriend aboard, guiding it with a paddle through a series of huge waves.

“People try to make it look like I’m the bad one, like live-aboards are the bad ones, but I’m the one who lost a home here,” Manuel said.

Manuel said he was lucky to survive as he and his girlfriend endured the hours-long storm with waves higher than the boat. Manuel described rollers that reminded him of the film the Perfect Storm, but

had faith that his ship, built of con-crete and rebar, would endure.

“As a live-aboard anchor boater, it’s not that I was planning to leave my boat and run off. Now I’m left with no home, I’m left feeling like I’m some outcast,” he said. “I’m hearing that I’ve done terrible things to the environment, and I appreciate that. I’m a skim boarder, I should be skim boarding right now. I love the coast, I don’t want this to happen.”

Manuel said he’s put $40,000 into the boat over the past six years, out-fitting it with a durable sheet metal roof. It also has a generator and a wood stove, common features for the local anchor boater community.

“I gambled and I lost,” Manuel said.

As of Monday, Saanich workers staked the beach area around the boat with ribbon. Another boat, a sailboat about six metres long, also

washed ashore last week. It lies near Hibbins Close on the east end of Cadboro Bay.

Saanich is still assessing whether that boat is seaworthy and trying to find the owner, said outgoing Saan-ich CAO Andy Laidlaw.

Last month a trio of boats showed up in a similar storm. One sailboat was towed away by its owner. A second boat was towed back into the bay by Saanich and moored. The third was deemed a hazard for polluting the beach with hypoder-mic needles, which expedited the removal process through the federal government’s receiver of wrecks, Laidlaw said.

However, as far as the Pacific Sun King is concerned, Manuel is to be held responsible for its removal, at least for now.

“Saanich is not in a position legal-ly to deal with the removal of the boat,” said Laidlaw.

If Manuel can’t afford to remove the boat, seaworthy or not, it will have to go through a minimum 30-day process application to the receiver of wrecks, pending his approval. Saan-ich Coun. Fred Haynes says a better system is needed for dealing with grounded vessels.

“One of the problems here is it’s multi-jurisdictional – federal, provincial and municipal – and we need a way someone can adequately monitor the situation so that when a boat gets in trouble, it’s dealt with in an appropriate way,” Haynes said. “That said, there’s a romance to liv-ing on a boat, and a lifestyle, maybe it offers opportunities for people who feel it’s tough to settle in more conventional housing. The question is how suitable are they for the health of the individual.”

In the end it’s a balance of rights, Haynes added, between boaters and those homeowners who live in waterfront neighbourhoods.

For Manuel, live-aboard boating was his chance to have affordable housing.

“I consider us a community, look at all the boats (in Cadboro Bay), yet the media has formed a stand-point that we’re all derelict vessels and trouble makers,” Manuel said. “That’s not true, some of us become rough from living (this way), and having everyone hate us. I believe regardless of money or financial situation, we should all be afforded the same rights to live in this coun-try and have affordable housing.”

Cyril Manuel with his boat, ‘Pacific Sun King,’ that washed up in Cadboro Bay during the early hours of a 90 km/h

windstorm. [TRAVIS PATERSON/NEWS STAFF]

“Now I’m left with no home, I’m feeling like I’m some outcast .”

Cyril Manuel, boat owner

Page 6: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

On Monday night, Nanaimo interim city manager Tracy Samra showed she

means business, presenting a plan to council members designed to save some cash through ‘executive downsizing.’

Samra, who has been on the job mere weeks, wanted to save approximately $816,000 per year by eliminating three general managers and freezing one manager position, effective Dec. 31.

The move equates to an approximate 0.85 per cent overall tax savings and will allow council to introduce a zero per cent property tax increase for 2016.

No property tax increase. Does that get your attention?

Samra explained that of the three management positions to be elim-inated, one (corporate services) is currently vacant.

“This announcement is intended to support two desired goals. First, reduce spending at city hall by removing positions whose functions can be absorbed and effectively managed through our team of experienced department-heads, and second, assist council in meeting its objective of reducing the current tax burden on property owners by iden-tifying areas where the city can save money,” she said.

The changes “continue the trend towards flattening the organization through the reduction of senior staff” with all of the city’s department-head

positions will now report directly to the city manager.

The first question that springs to mind is why now, when a core servi-ces review is on the horizon?

The answer, according to the plan, was that making such a decision immediately would save a 0.85 per cent increase in taxes for 2016. A revised draft budget given the OK by council Monday would see 2016 municipal taxes stay flat as a result of the cuts and other significant changes in the city’s five-year finan-cial plan, but further changes could be made following the core review.

Another question from critics out there would surely be, is this really the interim city manager’s call to make?

Samra is on a six-month contract and will be a candidate for the permanent post.

The answer to that is, of course it’s her call to make. You don’t name an interim football coach and not let them have any input into the play-calling. We would be disappoint-ed if Samra simply served as a caretaker for the position. With this move (made with consultation from other staff members), she is making a very declarative statement that she means business.

That’s a good thing for the taxpay-ers. Taxes were originally supposed to increase by 1.7 per cent next year.

“I commend and compliment you (for) your efforts,” Coun. Bill Best-wick said to Samra on Monday night.

“We’re making history,” said Coun. Gord Fuller.

Of course, Nanaimo residents might be sorry if all we do is hack and slash and don’t look for the most effective way to spend those valuable tax dollars. There’s a big difference between the two.

Having a city council able to get along among themselves and staff help as well. That should be next on the list.

We mentioned previously that the hiring of Samra gave the city a head start on a fresh start.

And she’s off to a good start.

» We want to hear from you. Send comments on this editorial to [email protected].

Interim city manager shows that she means business

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OUR VIEW

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 20156 nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily

» YOUR LETTERS // EMAIL: [email protected]

History shows us hate isn’t a digital creation

London in the early 16th cen-tury does not sound like a pleasant place.

Mortality was high and life expect-ancy low. On a day-to-day basis, just keeping warm and dry would have been a struggle. Disease and death were frequent and sudden. Every so often plague turned up. There were courts, but no police. People sued each other regularly, but there was little in the way of rights or defence for accused criminals, who were rou-tinely tortured for confessions.

At times parts of the city, records reveal, smelled awful as sewage piled up. Authorities did their best to deal with it. Up in Stratford John Shake-speare, father of William, was once fined for keeping an illegal dung heap on his property. Excrement was to be dumped at the end of the street.

The interment of human remains also led to problems. It was only a wealthy minority who were buried six feet under in bucolic churchyards.

Short on cemeteries, the majority of corpses in London were packed away in underground vaults that filled quickly and created an over-powering and unbearable stench.

Paul WaltonOpinion

Associated fluids leeched into drink-ing water.

But then, when Henry VIII was put on the throne in 1509 probably no city in Europe had infrastructure even equal to that of ancient Rome, which had sewers and piped-in fresh water.

Still, the affairs of the living went on as they must. After the Hanseatic League weakened at the end of the 15th century, English merchants eagerly filled the void and began making substantial profits in contin-ental trade.

London by 1517, bad as it may have been, was hosting more and more foreign businessmen; enough that in mid-April resentment over foreigners doing business in London took a nasty turn.

A Dr. Bell was persuaded by a busi-nessman, John Lincoln, to make a public call for action. Bell did not ask that foreigners or specific groups be registered, or for certain nationalities or religions to be banned in England.

No, Bell called for foreigners to be physically attacked. A rumour then circulated that on May 1 of that year — an annual holiday — foreigners found in London were to be targeted for death.

The city must have been tense for those last two weeks of April 1517. After a few attacks on foreigners but no deaths, April 30 arrived (also Witch’s Night in Germany).

Officials, likely fearing that the murder of foreigners in London might lead to retribution against English on the continent, end prof-itable business ventures or even lead to war with its European neighbours, imposed a curfew.

But the curfew was broken and efforts to arrest offenders went awry. Thus began the anti-alien riots of 1517, also known as Evil May Day.

Reaction was swift. The king was alerted and within days the military had areas of the city in “lockdown” — to use 21st-century jargon — and dozens of rioters were arrested.

Henry VIII sat on May 5 to mete out“justice” to those arrested. The only fatalities were the dozen or so rioters he arbitrarily sentenced to death. The rest he let go.

The preferred method of execution in those times was to hang, draw and quarter — not something you’d want to see, even on The Tudors.

In many ways we have come a long way in the last 498 years. And in some ways we haven’t.

Take a peek at social media to see 21st-century anti-alien senti-ment, and where we also metaphor-ically hang, draw and quarter those we arbitrarily judge guilty of various indiscretions.

Imagine Donald Trump in the White House and Marine LePen in the Elysee Palace in 2016. Mix that up with social media, and it may be that 499 years of progress was for naught.

» Paul Walton is the night editor at ‘The Daily News.’

Page 7: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily NEWS 7TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

NANAIMO

SPENCER ANDERSON DAILY NEWS

Municipal taxes could stay flat this year after a round of cuts to city hall management positions introduced by interim city manager Tracy Samra.

Samra announced in a news release Monday that she was eliminating three senior manager positions at city hall worth $816,000 a year.

A revised draft budget given the OK by council Monday would see 2016 municipal taxes stay flat as a result of the cuts and other significant chan-

ges in the city’s five-year financial plan. Samra was quick to note that

the budget before council is provisional.

The city is under-taking a core review in the new year and it is

therefore possible that further chan-ges will be made.

News that Nanaimo residents would be greeted with a zero-per-cent tax increase in the new year was greeted warmly by council members.

Councillors Jerry Hong and Gord Fuller noted that the figure included a one per cent contri-bution in taxation for long-term infrastructure costs, termed ‘asset management,’ while at the same time lowering taxes overall.

“We’re making history,” said Fuller.“I commend and compliment you

(for) your efforts,” Coun. Bill Best-wick said to Samra.

Taxes were originally supposed to increase by 1.7 per cent next year.

Samra’s planned budget reductions, which she said were made through consultation with other staff members, will eliminate the two top positions currently below the city manager: general manager of cor-porate services — currently vacant — and general manager of commun-ity services, a position held by Tom Hickey.

A third management position, manager of community development and protective services, will also be eliminated.

Coun. Diane Brennan took issue with freezes on police and fire servi-ces across the city over the next five years. She voted against the balance of council on the third reading of the budget bylaw.

Spencer.Anderson

@nanaimodailynews.com

250-729-4255

PARKSVILLE

Community centre offi cials face tough questions about budgetCity council eventually tables motion to renew agreement with societyJOHN HARDING PARKSVILLE QUALICUM BEACH NEWS

Parksville Community and Confer-ence Centre officials faced a tough line of questioning about their 2016 budget last week, and city council eventually tabled a motion to renew its agreement with the society that operates the facility.

The 2016 budget was approved by council — the vote was 5-1 with Coun. Sue Powell opposed. The PCCC expects to have $431,258 of income in 2016, $247,294 (57 per cent) of which comes from the tax-payers of the city in the form of a subsidy.

PCCC society president Kirk Wal-per and executive director Margaret Spruit appeared before council to present the budget. They tried to do the same two weeks ago, but were asked to return with more details.

After the meeting two weeks ago, Coun. Al Greir said he would like to see council take 25 per cent of that subsidy away from the PCCC. He believed that would force the PCCC to do a better job attracting business to the facility.

Greir reiterated that stance on Monday night, but he did not press the issue or put it into a motion. Instead it was Powell who was on the offensive. She took issue with expenses and revenues in the 2016 budget that continue to climb or stay the same despite the fact the PCCC hasn’t spent that money, or received those revenues, on those particular items in years, if ever.

“What I see is a lot of overesti-mating in the budget,” said Powell. “Wouldn’t it make more sense to lower your budget outcomes? To me this sort of skews how we are doing or how we are not doing. It’s not really a true picture of where we are financially. If you are not spending that, why are you budgeting for it? It doesn’t look appropriate to keep raising it when you’re not spending that much.”

When Walper and Spruit tried to present the budget two weeks ago, there were line items that weren’t broken down into detail. The $151,991 in administrative wages, for example, are for the executive director plus three other office employees.

As for the revenue side, Spruit submitted some comments last week.

“Our marketing and promotional efforts have been paying off with an increase in demand for weddings, etc.,” wrote Spruit.

She also listed 60 non-profit groups that held events at the PCCC in 2015.

Walper spoke Monday night about the PCCC’s mandate, which was determined by the city and leans

toward the concept of community centre more than a profit-seeking conference centre model. Raising rates and/or filling more dates with bookings that pay higher rates than non-profit groups “would involve changing our mandate,” said Walper.

“What we run the risk of is squeez-ing out the non-profit community users,” he said.

While Greir voted in favour of the motion to adopt the PCCC’s 2016 budget, he was still talking about reducing the centre’s subsidy from the city, something he said taxpay-ers want.

“Most of them (residents he has spoken to) are pretty irate that we have to subsidize it to the level we do,” said Greir.

Later in the Monday meeting, councillors had a staff recommen-dation in front of them to renew the agreement keeping the same society as operators of the PCCC until the end of 2020. That didn’t sit well with Powell, who wanted to cut the term to one year instead of the five recommended.

“That’s not much stability to give the board,” said Coun. Kirk Oates, who agreed with Greir that a three-year renewal — until the end of this council’s term — was more appropriate.

Powell’s motion for a one-year renewal was defeated (a 3-3 vote) and in the end the whole issue of the renewal was tabled, leaving the PCCC society without an agreement past the end of this calendar year.

Parksville Community and Conference Centre. [PARKSVILLECENTRE.COM]

NEWS IN BRIEFBlack Press

◆ COMOX VALLEY

Five arrests follow in wake of vehicle thefts

A rash of thefts of vehicles and thefts from vehicle between Dec. 4 and Dec. 8 ended in five arrests in theComox area last week.

According to a media release from the RCMP, seven vehicles were reported stolen and many others were entered, rifled through and had items stolen. All vehicles had been left unlocked. An investigation led to the arrests of three adults and two youths as well as the recovery of all seven vehicles.

The adults have been held in cus-tody pending a court appearance. Theyouths have been released with strict conditions to their guardians, also pending a future court appearance.

All apprehended persons were from Courtenay, with the exception of one adult from Campbell River.

“This is an opportunity to remind everyone to be vigilant about locking your vehicles” says Comox Valley RCMP Insp. Tim Walton. “This is a prime example of a crime of oppor-tunity. If you don’t lock it, you will lose it.”

◆ COMOX VALLEY

North Island food bank use rises by 60 per cent

Food bank usage is up 60 per cent in the north Island, according to the manager of the Port Hardy Harvest Food Bank.

“The first half of the year, from January to May, was slightly higher, around five per cent, but the second half of the year, from June to Nov-ember, we saw a 60 per cent increase and this month we’re breaking rec-ords,” Andy Cornell said.

Cornell attributes the increase to the long-term shutdown of the Neu-cel pulp mill in Port Alice.

“Three-hundred people in the com-munity are out of work and that is having an effect on the surrounding businesses and the economy.”

The TriPort area isn’t the only place where food bank use is up. British Columbia as a whole is using food banks more. According to Food Banks Canada’s report Hunger Count 2015, more than 100,000 people in British Columbia alone used food banks in March 2015.

SAMRA

Axing city positions to fl atline budget increase

Page 8: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 20158 nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily

CHILD WELFARE

Report criticizes watchdog’s workTHE CANADIAN PRESS

VICTORIA — A bureaucrat’s report into the Children’s Ministry in British Columbia has criticized the province’s independent children’s watchdog while praising the ministry for its work after recent high-profile failures.

Bob Plecas said in his report that deaths and serious injuries to kids in care are rare, but there is a great

appetite for blaming workers and the ministry for “perceived and real failings.”

“Despite the perceptions of some, (the ministry) is not in shambles,” Plecas wrote.

The Children’s Ministry has been plagued by a “culture of relentless accusation” where a small number of high-profile cases have gained media attention and highlighted problems, he said.

Children’s representative Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond has repeatedly criticized the government’s perform-ance, and Plecas said the relationship has become strained.

Turpel-Lafond’s numerous recom-mendations over the years have over-whelmed the ministry and become “part of the bigger management problem,” he said.

He said Turpel-Lafond’s oversight role should be taken over by the min-

istry in about two years, Plecas said.“External oversight should end

when the ministry is capable of carrying out these functions, and the representative’s role should become one focused on advocacy.”

Turpel-Lafond said in a statement that without public accountability, the stories of vulnerable children would never be told and significant problems would not be addressed.

“Independent oversight of B.C.’s

child welfare system remains a necessity,” she said.

Plecas advised a multi-year plan to address the ministry’s problems with changes such as implementing quality assurance and boosting staff and funding.

He said that 20 years after it was created, the ministry is “finally find-ing its feet again,” but also struggles because it is “not equipped for this century and in need of repair.”

FORESTRY

Groups call for halt on logging in Walbran ValleyTHE CANADIAN PRESS

PORT RENFREW — Communities along the West Coast of Vancouver Island say the provincial government needs to step in to save the ancient, massive trees that grow in the Walbran Valley.

Business leaders in Port Renfrew are calling for a ban on logging the trees — some of which started life around the time of the Magna Carta in 1215.

Tofino’s council also passed a reso-lution asking provincial politicians to protect the forests from commercial logging.

Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce president Dan Hager said tourists who come to see the majestic trees have created a multimillion-dollar economy along the coast and the highest value would come from stopping the logging.

“The bottom line is it’s great for business,” he said in an interview on Monday.

Hager said many Canadian cities lay claim to having a world’s largest attrac-tion that has been built to bring tour-ists, but communities near the Walbran

Valley have the trees to draw tourists.A provincial government fact sheet

released earlier this year said one com-pany has an approved cutting permit to log one cutblock covering 3.2 hectares east of Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park. The park covers more than 16,000 hectares of forest on the west side of Vancouver Island.

The park was created in 1990, an end result of massive protests over the loss of the ancient trees.

Hager, who grew up on the Prairies, said people can’t fathom how incredible the trees are to see — some of them have a circumference of up to five metres and dwarf all who stand next to them for a photo.

“Because these trees are spectacular,” he said. “There’s almost no place in the country where trees like this are access-ible to the population.”

The Port Renfrew chamber, which represents 73 local businesses, released a statement calling on the B.C. govern-ment to immediately ban logging in the unprotected portion of the valley.

Forests Minister Steve Thomson was unavailable for comment.

CHILLIWACK

Group gathers to call for an end to family violence

MISSION CITY RECORD

Just hours after the man accused of killing Eleanor (Ele) Anthonysz and the attempted murder of her two children appeared in Supreme Court in Chilliwack, family mem-bers of the slain woman and other activists gathered outside the courthouse to call for an end to family violence.

Walter Joseph Ramsay is accused of killing Anthonysz, his ex-girlfriend, and trying to kill her 11-year-old daughter and eight-year-old son by setting their Hatzic-area mobile home on fire in April. Ramsay also faces one count of arson.

Ramsay was to enter a guilty plea and appear for sentencing Friday, but the appearance was adjourned after just a couple minutes.

“Some issues have arisen with respect to the basis for the plea and some other matters that we have not been able to resolve prior to this date,” Ramsay’s lawyer, Paul McMurray, told the court Friday morning. A date for a future court appearance was to be set Monday.

Later in the afternoon, Anthonysz’s family and commun-ity members rallied outside the courthouse.

“When you witness violence or abuse, or other behaviour that

damages women, if you accept it, your silence is a form of consent,” Lori Maginnis told the crowd.

“While we have come far, we still have a long way to go. we are at this rally to give our support to Ele’s mom and her children.”

It was also noted that two days later, on Sunday, Dec. 6, Canada would mark the National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women, which marks, in part, the shooting deaths of 14 women at l’École Polytech-nique de Montréal.

Teresa Bridge, Anthonysz’s aunt and the organizer of Friday’s rally, noted that more than 130 women

had been killed this year in Can-ada, including more than a dozen between the time the rally was announced, and when it was held.

Among those present at the rally were members of the Bikers Against Child Abuse, a group that provides support to young victims of crime.

Bridge said the group had been “amazing,” and had recently adopt-ed Anthonysz’s children into their chapter and given them their own vests and dog tags.

“They are incredible,” she said.

— WITH FILES FROM SAM BATES

AND BLACK PRESS

Man accused of killing his ex-girlfriend, trying to kill kids

Family members of Ele Anthonysz gather outside the Chilliwack courthouse

to call for an end to family violence. [BLACK PRESS]

◆ NELSON

Lost snowboarders lucky to be rescued

Two snowboarders needed to be rescued after the pair became lost on a trip to a nearby peak.

The two men visiting from Alberta, and their dog, were found cold and tired early Friday morning by Nel-

son Search and Rescue. The pair were found by a 12-member team, according to spokesman Chris Arm-strong. He said the search, which began at 5:30 p.m. Thursday after the snowboarders used limited cell service to alert the RCMP Nelson detachment, was hampered by heavy snow and gusts of wind.

“These guys tracks were getting blown in, so (rescuers) had to

predict where they went to keep searching,” said Armstrong.

The pair were finally found at 2:34 a.m., and returned to the trail head with rescuers after a nearly three-hour hike. Armstrong said the men were lucky to be found.

“They weren’t prepared for the multi-day situation they were head-ed into,” said Armstrong. — NELSON STAR

Page 9: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

Nanaimo Constituency Offi ceOpen House

4-77 Victoria Crescent, NanaimoDecember 18th, 20094:00 - 6:00 pm250-714-0630

Any donation of non-perishable item will be donated tothe Loaves and Fishes Food Bank

Season’s GreetingsI hope the kindness you’ve given to others returns many blessings andmay peace, hope, and lovefollow you and yours this coming year.

Celebration

Holiday Seasonof the

In

MerryChristmasI hope the kindness

you’ve given to others returns

many blessings and may peace, hope and love follow

you and yours this coming year.

MerryChristmas

4-77 Victoria Crescent, NanaimoThursday, December 17th, 2015

4:00 pm to 6:00 pm250-714-0630

Please join Leonard Krog MLAand Staff at his

Nanaimo Constituency Offi ceOpen House

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily B.C. 9TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

JUSTICE

Man who stole guns gets 30-month sentenceTIM PETRUK KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

KAMLOOPS — A man who paid two teens $1,000 each to drive him and more than a dozen stolen guns from Alberta to B.C., has been handed a 30-month jail sentence.

Nicholas Galbraith, 29, pleaded guilty in B.C. Supreme Court to one count of possessing a pro-hibited or restricted firearm.

He led RCMP in Kamloops on a

high-speed chase on June 20, 2014, when police saw a car being driv-en erratically across the Peterson Creek Bridge on Highway 1.

Attempts by police to pull the vehicle over on the western edge of the city were unsuccessful, and officers on the Coquihalla Highway were alerted.

However, the vehicle headed back into the city and was ditched in a parking lot, with police in pursuit.

Galbraith and two youths escaped on foot. They were captured after Galbraith dropped a bag containing a stolen 40-calibre Glock, an illegal magazine and ammunition.

A subsequent search of the vehicle turned up 12 stolen long guns.

Crown lawyer Catriona Elliott said the youths told police they’d been offered cash to drive Galbraith from Bonneyville, Alta., to the Fra-ser Valley.

“They picked up Mr. Galbraith at a Tim Hortons late at night,” she said.

“They drove without stopping except to get gas.”

Defence lawyer Jay Michi said Galbraith, who has no prior crim-inal record, has a 15-month-old son who was born while he was in custody.

The child lives in Australia with Galbraith’s girlfriend, Michi

said, noting his conviction will likely make it difficult to travel internationally.

B.C. Supreme Court Justice Dev Dley’s sentence included an order requiring Galbraith to surrender a sample of his DNA to a national criminal database. He was also handed a 10-year firearms ban.

After time already served, Gal-braith has 10 months left in his sentence.

HOMES

Tax assessments expected to riseJEFF NAGEL BC LOCAL NEWS

An unusually high number of Metro Vancouver homeowners are being warned they will get a sharply higher property assessment next month that may trigger an unwelcome property tax increase.

BC Assessment says it has sent out 37,000 early notification letters across B.C., with almost two-thirds of them going to Metro Vancouver home owners. That’s significantly more than most years.

“Early notification letters are mailed to property owners who can expect an increase of at least 15 per cent above the average increase in their local taxing jurisdiction,” said assessor Jason Grant.

“We want to ensure impacted property owners are aware of the significant increases and we welcome them to contact us. if they have any questions or concerns.”

Increases of 15 to 25 per cent will be typical for sin-gle-family detached houses in Vancouver, the North Shore, Burnaby, Tri Cities, New Westminster, Rich-mond and Surrey, Grant said.

He said typical strata residential increases will be inthe five to 10 per cent range.

B.C.

Province joins elite club of countries and U.S. statesEnvironment minister announces B.C. has joined zero-emission vehicle alliance

TOM FLETCHER BLACK PRESS

With 2,000 electric vehicles and charging stations in place and a program to keep subsidizing their purchase and use, B.C. has joined an elite club of countries and U.S. states.

Capping her second week at the United Nations climate change conference in Paris, Environment Minister Mary Polak announced Thursday that B.C. has joined the International Zero-Emission Vehicle Alliance.

The alliance hopes to reduce vehicle emissions 40 per cent by 2050, promoting use of bat-tery-electric, plug-in hybrid and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. Its members include Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, the U.K., California, Connecticut, Mary-land, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Quebec.

In 2011, B.C. replaced its earli-er $2,000 subsidy for hybrid cars with a clean energy vehicle pro-gram that pays between $2,500 and $5,000 in point-of-sale rebates for new battery electric, plug-in hybrid, fuel cell or natur-al gas vehicles.

It also offered a $500 sub-sidy for installing a dedicated vehicle charging station at home

through LiveSmart BC, a pro-gram that ended in 2014. With sufficient home service, modern electric cars can be plugged into a standard outlet.

Natural gas power has mainly been limited to short-haul truck fleets based around a central fuelling station. B.C. ran pilot projects with hydrogen fuel-cell

transit buses in Victoria and Whistler, but they were wound up after the 2010 Olympics.

Energy Minister Bill Bennett acknowledged that electric vehi-cles are mainly confined to urban areas in the Lower Mainland and southern Vancouver Island.

Asked how the program appears from rural areas, where taxpayers

with muddy pickups subsidize sleek electric cars driven by wealthy West Coasters, Bennett said the program is funded out of natural gas royalties, not general taxation. He noted that B.C. is better suited to electric vehicles than many places that burn coal or natural gas to generate electricity.

A public electric car-charing station at Egmont on the Sunshine Coast.

Safety to be improved on Highway of TearsTHE CANADIAN PRESS

VANCOUVER — British Col-umbia’s government is looking to improve transportation safety along a 750-kilometre stretch of highway renowned for the num-ber of women who have been murdered or gone missing along or near the route.

A long-awaited announce-ment for the so-called Highway

of Tears will see $3 million go towards enhancing existing transit services, expanding driv-er-training programs and helping local communities buy and oper-ate transit vehicles.

The province has earmarked $500,000 to install webcams and transit shelters along Highway 16, a remote, northern route between Prince George and Prince Rupert.

The announcement builds off a symposium held last month in Smithers, which was attended by many who have been calling for a better transportation system between communities along the highway.

Overseeing the program’s implementation is a nine-person advisory panel, made up of rep-resentatives from the province, local government, health author-

ities and First Nations groups.Eighteen women, many of

them aboriginal, have been murdered or disappeared along Highway 16 or adjacent routes since the 1970s.

» We want to hear from you.

Send comments on this story to

[email protected].

Letters must include daytime phone

number and hometown.

Page 10: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 201510 B.C.

SURREY

KEVIN DIAKIW SURREY NORTH DELTA LEADER

He was the kind of young man who would put a halt to his day just to make sure someone was OK.

Just before midnight on Dec. 4, a hit-and-run motorist ran him down on a road in Bridgeview and sped off, leaving him there to die.

Mbasuva Muukua, 26, was heading home from his construction job when a Honda Prelude struck him in the 12600-block of King George Boulevard, leaving him critically injured in the middle of the road.

Another car stopped to help him, however Muukua died in hospital shortly after.

Muukua arrived in Canada as a

refugee from Namibia, Africa five years ago. He came to Surrey to earn enough money to go to college.

From Toronto, his sister Rico Lubansa said her younger brother was extremely hard working and giv-ing to a fault.

“He didn’t have much, but he was always such a happy person,” Lubansa said Friday.

He was always putting the needs of others first, she said.

“When he was in Toronto, there was a person who didn’t even speak Eng-lish, he left everything and walked with them all the way to where they had to go,” Lubansa said. “That was the kind of person my brother was.”

She’s pleading with the man or woman who struck her brother to

come forward so the family can have some closure.

To the driver she said: “Imagine your parents receiving a casket after five years of not seeing your son,” Lubansa said. “The person that did this didn’t even take a second to just stand and think about the person lying there.

“You’ve left this family devastated, there are no smiles for us after this,” Lubansa said.

Police now believe the man was hit by a red Honda Prelude, model year 1997 to 2001.

Anyone with more information about this collision is asked to con-tact the Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502 or Crime Stoppers, to remain anonymous, at 1-800-222-8477.

Police seek information after young man killed in hit and run

REVELSTOKE

Body of missing snowmobiler found buried in snow, say copsALEX COOPER REVELSTOKE TIMES REVIEW

The body of a man found on Boul-der Mountain Thursday afternoon is that of Travis Allen Brown, the Rev-elstoke RCMP confirmed.

Brown, 42, from Drayton Valley, Alta.,, was found by two snowmobil-ers, one from Alberta and the other from Saskatchewan, who were snow-mobiling on Boulder Mountain on Thursday at approximately 2 p.m., said Cpl. Thomas Blakney.

“Approximately two kilometres from the (Boulder Mountain Cabin) one of them ended up getting stuck in deep snow,” said Blakney. “They were digging out their sled when they observed what they thought was a handlebar sticking out of the snow with a helmet on it.”

The two men dug out the snow-

mobile and found Brown in the pro-cess. They notified police, who later attended the scene with Revelstoke Search & Rescue, and brought the man’s body off the mountain.

Blakney said Brown was found in a densely treed location. He had his beacon on and it was still transmit-ting when he was found.

Blakney said he did not know how Brown ended up where he did or how he died. The cause of death is being investigated by the RCMP and the BC Coroners Service.

The discovery came the day after the search for Brown  was suspended. He was reported missing Monday morning after he failed to return home from a solo snowmobiling trip to Revelstoke on the weekend. RSR spent three days searching the area by ground and in the air.

Page 11: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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EDUCATION

School district works to save young livesCRAIG SPENCE LADYSMITH CHRONICLE

Suicide. It’s a word we don’t like to say — especially when we fear someone we love may be thinking of it — as if breaking its taboos might somehow

make it real.But in the Nanaimo-Ladysmith School Dis-

trict they speak about suicide openly and sys-tematically because the experts know when you talk about it with staff, students, parents — and especially young people who may be fixating on it — they can save lives.

“It’s not an easy conversation to broach,” said SD68 Assistant Superintendent Bob Esliger. “When a student approaches, staff have to have the training and skill to enter into the conversation.”

It’s crucial that staff and even students have a clear idea what needs to be done when they feel a student is at risk. “We want to make certain that staff have a full understanding of our protocol and full and complete training to intervene.”

Misconceptions around suicide; who’s at risk and when to get that difficult message to get across. But it’s one that needs to be emphasized routinely. For instance, parents and teachers may not realize how early sui-cidal ‘ideation’ can take place.

Elementary counsellor Trina Norgan says it’s not only distraught teens to be concerned about.

“We see students very young, by Grade 3, making comments about suicide,” she said. “Certainly by Grade 5 or 6 when students are 11 or 12 years old.”

Like everyone else who deals with issues of suicide prevention, Norgan came to the same point: if you suspect a child, or anyone else for that matter, is at risk, you have to ask.

“Asking that question does not prompt students to start thinking about it,” Norgan said. Secondary counsellor Scott Christian-son agreed. “In my experience when they are asked the question, they generally feel a sense of relief,” he said.

I t’s not good enough to ask a child if they are thinking of ‘harming’ themselves,

either. They might be, and say so, but they might also be thinking of going farther.

Students who are showing signs of suicidal ideation, or who are actually talking about it, are often ‘crying out for help,” Esliger said. When the call comes, you need to answer, and  know where to get help.

That’s where the SD68 protocol kicks in. Staff and students need to know that there are steps that can be taken, which will help students who are at risk, otherwise the likely response for a cry for help will be avoidance.

Esliger refers to the HELP acronym, which is part of the protocol: If you are Hurting, or suffering Emotional pain, or Loss, we have to develop a Plan to see you through it.

Nanaimo-Ladysmith school district has built a close relationship with the Vancouver Island Crisis Society, which operates the Vancouver Island Crisis Line, over more than a decade. Together they have developed an integrated and comprehensive approach.

Lindsay Wells, public education program co-ordinator with VICS, says the approach is multi tiered, beginning with counsellors, youth workers, teachers and administrators in schools. Students are brought into the loop too, said Wells.

“We’ve got programs for students as early as Grade 5 and going right on up to Grade 12 so that everybody has a role to play and some knowledge of what to do.”

For Esliger the objective is a school system that encourages youth to speak up on their own behalf, or on behalf of others. And after more than a decade, the program is working.

Every fall a district meeting is convened where counsellors, youth workers and other school staff from every school attend a meet-ing where the district’s suicide protocol is reviewed and emphasized.

One person from that meeting then takes the same message to every school at a staff meeting.

“We’re creating an environment where kids are coming to us,” he said. And students are responding; reports of students at risk have become more frequent. “Every year they have gone up and last year was the highest they’ve ever been,” Esliger said. “That’s the best thing, because they’re talking.”

But what about parents? Is enough infor-mation and support getting to them so they will recognize the signs of a child caught up in suicidal ‘ideation’; and do they know what to do if they suspect their own child is in trouble?

People who work with teens and pre-teens in trouble agree that the more parents

are brought into the loop, the better the response can be. Having basic knowledge

about symptoms and information about what to do and where to go for help when those symptoms are displayed, can save lives.

“Sometimes it’s not so easy for kids to talk about what’s going on for them, so as parents, we’re wanting to watch for those changes, and then we’re wanting to try to find ways to find out what’s really happening with that kid,” said Lindsay Wells, public education program co-ordinator with the Vancouver Island Crisis Society.

She and others, who deal with the issue of suicide, wants to dispel the ‘myth’ that

suicide is something a young person decides to do suddenly, on impulse.

“The thing about suicide is not just one thing will bring somebody there, it’s a com-bination of things,” Wells said. “There’s a very well known myth that suicide is an impulsive act for kids; no, that’s a myth.”

So parents, friends and others who have ongoing relationships with young people can often spot warning signs as the events that are bringing a person down begin to weigh on them.

“These things are like rocks in a bag, and every single person that is walking around the earth has got a bag full of struggles, and the rocks in the bag represent our struggles,” Wells explained.

The metaphor is so powerful, it’s used in parent training sessions offered by VICS. “We demonstrate that, where we will actually throw rocks in a bag, and we do it for the parent training,” Wells said.

“The more rocks that go into a person’s bag, that don’t get unpacked — and what we mean by unpacked is talked about — you see how that bag gets heavier and more difficult to carry.”

What’s inside can be a mix of things. “We look at things with our kids like loss, like trauma, and also we look at things like

belongingness: do I fit in at school? Do I have a socialgroup that I belong to? And that’s where the bullying piece can come in,” Wells said.

“Things like withdrawal: Is my child in the room all the time with the door shut? Are they participating in the family, are they talking?”

There are resources for parents on vicrisis.ca (click the ‘Access the Main Site’ link in the upper right cor-ner of the opening page to get to the main web site).

Under the ‘About Suicide’ menu item is a FAQ that includes the acronym IsPathWarm, which lists factors that may indicate a youth at risk: Ideation, Substance abuse, Purposelessness, Anxiety, Trapped, Hopelessness, Withdrawal, Anger, Recklessness, Mood changes.

The biggest alarm bell of all, though, is verbaliz-ation or other forms of representation that suggest suicide as something a child is thinking about.

“If your child is talking about, joking about, draw-ing pictures about, writing poetry about death or dying or suicide, we want to take that very seriously and that includes any kind of suicidal thought that could appear on social media,” Wells said.

That’s when a conversation needs to be broached, and the bag of rocks lightened.

“That’s our message to kids and to parents, is that we need to find safe places to unpack,” Wells said, “and parents need to either be the people to unpack to, or if that doesn’t feel comfortable, we want to get our kids connected to someone they can unpack to.”

The youth has to be asked directly if they are thinking of suicide so they can talk about it.

“That’s a scary question, and a lot of people think ‘If I ask that question, I’m going to put the thought into that person’s mind.’”

Wells said that’s not the case. “It’s the most import-ant question to be asked,” she said. “It tells the young person, ‘I’m OK to go here.’”

Parents who find themselves in this situation shouldn’t hesitate to contact the Vancouver Island Crisis Line at 1-888-494-3888.

“We can do a risk assessment over the phone. We can talk to their child, if they’d like to put their child on the phone.” They can even do crisis texting and crisis chat.

“We want people reaching out for support instead of keeping all those rocks, all those struggles inside,” Wells said – that includes young people who may be at risk, and parents, who are afraid for their kids.

For interested parents there are workshops avail-able in the spring and autumn.

“They can contact the Crisis Society or go on our web site, we put up dates there for when our next programs are. We have many different workshops and programs that people can sign up for.”

Parents need options when they suspect a child might be wrestling with thoughts about suicide.

[FILE PHOTO]

“If your child is talking about, joking about, drawing pictures about, writing poetry about death or dying or suicide, we want to take that very seriously and that includes any kind of suicidal thought that could appear on social media.”

Lindsay Wells, public education program co-ordinator

Page 12: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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COP21

Impact of climate deal on Canada remains to be seenAnswers more likely to emerge from upcoming meeting between PM and premiers

BOB WEBER THE CANADIAN PRESS

Canadians may not notice immedi-ate effects from an international agreement on climate change.

But experts say the deal agreed to by 200 world leaders pushes the country further down a path that will profoundly change how people heat their homes, earn their livings and get from one place to another.

“I think we’re talking about trans-forming the Canadian economy,” Erin Flanagan of the clean-energy think tank Pembina Institute said Monday.

“It requires changes to our mobil-ity, our consumption, our fundamen-tal economics around oil and gas.”

The Paris conference is important mostly because it’s the first time that many countries have agreed that cli-mate is a global issue, said Mark Jac-card, an energy economist at Simon Fraser University.

“Almost all international players said we are part of the solution now,” he said. “We never had that.”

Even though reductions announced by various countries won’t limit a rise in temperature to the agreed-on 2 C, it’s a start, said Jaccard.

“It puts in place hope for the future.”

For Canadians wondering how much saving the planet is going to cost them, answers are more likely to emerge from an upcoming meeting between Prime Minister Justin Tru-deau and the premiers, which he has promised within the next 90 days.

“What really matters for the people in their living room is what we do in terms of policy development when we get back from Paris,” said Chris Ragan of the Ecofiscal Commission, an independent group of economists and business representatives.

While items such as a price on carbon draw the biggest headlines, Ottawa could just as easily turn to regulatory measures that don’t hit taxpayers directly, Jaccard said. Cali-fornia has successfully used low-car-bon fuel standards to lower its green-house gas emissions.

“You can design regulations that are quite economically efficient and give incentives for innovation.”

Industry says it’s ready.“Within Canada, we are committed

to improving our performance,” said Tim McMillan, president of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers. “We’re investing in tech-

nology to do things more efficiently.”Just as long as everyone plays

along, McMillan added.“This is a global challenge and if

this (agreement) has the strength to bring other countries along to improve their performance, it’ll be successful.”

The agreement contains a promise to monitor the climate performance of each signatory country every five years.

Some provinces are likely going to have to do more than others, said Flanagan, depending on how hard and how expensive it is for them to reduce emissions.

“It’s appropriate for some provinces to do more (and) for the question of burden-sharing to be centred around where can we find the cheapest reductions. Some provinces will take the lead on electricity. Some will take the lead on transportation. Some will

take the lead on oil and gas.”Alberta Environment Minister

Shannon Phillips said Albertans will start to see the implications on their pocketbooks in the province’s next budget. Over the next three months, consultations are to be held on everything from carbon tax rebates to helping coal mining towns shift their economies.

“We will be having conversations with Albertans on what those rebates look like and how they are delivered, adjustments for small business, municipalities and First Nations,” she said. “We will be having lots of conversations with industry on this topic of performance standards.”

Chief Bill Erasmus of the Dene Nation, left, during a demonstration to support indigenous populations at the COP21,

United Nations Climate Change Conference in Le Bourget, north of Paris, France, on Wednesday. [AP PHOTO]

TRADE

U.S. meat label law may be repealed by SenateMIKE BLANCHFIELD THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The U.S. Senate may introduce legislation by midnight Monday night to repeal its controver-sial meat labelling law that Canada has vigorously complained about — possibly averting a trade war.

Or it may not.In any event, Canada is poised to

retaliate after winning a major ruling from the World Trade Organization last week that clears the way for more than $1-billion in punitive tar-iffs to be imposed on the U.S.

And that could mean a rotating set of steep tariffs on a wide range of American goods flowing into Canada.

“Products for retaliation could include agricultural products, such as cattle, pork, apples, rice, maple syrup and wine, as well as non-agri-cultural products, such as jewelry, office chairs, wooden furniture and mattresses,” said John Babcock, a trade department spokesman.

John Masswohl, of the Canadian Cattleman’s Association, was pushing hard for repeal in Washington last week, but on Monday he wasn’t pla-cing any bets.

“We heard every rumour there was to hear. We heard the COOL rider is in, we heard it’s out. We heard that it was in, it was out, and then back in,” said Masswohl.

Regardless of what happens in Congress, Masswohl and others are expecting Canada to move full steam ahead with a Friday meeting of the WTO where it and Mexico will receivethe final authority to impose the punitive tariffs.

Ron Davidson, of the Canadian Meat Council, said the government has compiled a list of target products by focusing on states where COOL is supported.

Saskatchewan Agriculture Minister Lyle Stewart said Monday there’s no guarantee COOL will be repealed so he’s pushing Ottawa to continue moving towards punitive measures.

◆ ST. GEORGE’S, GRENADA

Man charged with murder in death of N.B. woman

Police in Grenada have charged a man with non-capital murder in the death of a New Brunswick woman who dis-appeared more than a week ago on the small Caribbean island.

Assistant Supt. Sylvan McIntyre of the Royal Grenada Police Force says Akim Frank appeared in court Monday in St. George’s to face the charge.

McIntyre says the charge is laid in cases where the victim is not involved in civic or national duties.

The 26-year-old Frank turned himself in Friday after being wanted in connec-tion with the disappearance of Linnea Veinotte, a mother of two young boys who was last seen jogging with her dog.

McIntyre says Veinotte’s cause of death was determined to be blunt force trauma to the chest and lower limbs as a result of being struck by a vehicle.

— THE CANADIAN PRESS

“This is a global challenge and if this (agreement) has the strength to bring other countries along to improve their performance, it’ll be successful.”

Tim McMillan, Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers president

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COURTSFiscal priority for feds is to pay off debt THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — The federal govern-ment won’t jeopardize its goal of balancing the budget in 2019 to improve its ability to pay back the debt, Finance Minister Bill Morneau said Monday.

The Liberals, who had promised to keep annual deficits under $10 billion, have recently started emphasizing instead their commit-ment to keep the debt-to-GDP ratio on a downward trajectory every year until the end of its mandate.

Experts have said the debt-to-GDP ratio — which is calculated by divid-ing total federal debt by the overall size of the economy, as measured by nominal GDP — will be an easier target to meet.

Following his speech Monday before the Toronto Region Board of Trade, Morneau said the government won’t singularly focus on one of its three economic goals — to grow the economy, reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio and balance the books by the next election — at the expense of others.

“We need to think of the three of them together,” he said.

Duff y says he resisted scenario created under Harper PMO to repay controversial expensesJENNIFER DITCHBURN THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Sen. Mike Duffy says he resisted “at every opportunity” a scenario laid out for him by the former Prime Minister’s Office to tell the public he had made a mis-take and was repaying his Senate expenses.

Five days into the former Conserv-ative senator’s testimony, defence lawyer Donald Bayne has arrived at the most politically charged issue of the trial — the $90,000 payment.

Nigel Wright, the one-time chief of staff to former prime minister Ste-phen Harper, secretly repaid Duffy’s contested Senate expenses in 2013.

The negotiations between the PMO, Duffy and his lawyer over the repay-ment have formed the basis of the bribery charge that the senator faces. Duffy has pleaded not guilty to 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery.

The key question for the judge to consider is whether Duffy was coerced into going along with a scheme concocted by powerful polit-ical operatives, or whether he was a

participant in setting the parameters for repayment.

As Bayne went through emails between PMO staffers in February 2013, Duffy said he was unaware at the time they were discussing a scenario where he would say he had made a mistake with his expenses and commit to repay them.

“Again, to be clear, was the scenario yours?” Bayne asked.

“Not mine, didn’t contain my views of what had gone on. It was com-pletely at odds, 180 degrees from what I believed,” Duffy said.

Duffy has maintained that he did not break any rules when he claimed living and travel expenses based on the premise that his primary resi-dence was in Prince Edward Island.

Testifying in August, Wright told the court that he put pressure on Duffy to agree and say he was repay-ing his expenses. But he also detailed how Duffy, through his lawyer, placed conditions upon him doing so during negotiations, including ensuring Duffy was never out of pocket.

Earlier in the day, Bayne finished reviewing a series of Senate contracts with Duffy that also triggered crim-inal charges. Duffy arranged for for-mer broadcast colleague Gerry Dono-hue to receive $65,000 in contracts, and Donohue in turn paid out tens of thousands to other service providers on Duffy’s direction.

According to Duffy, he needed help deciphering what his own govern-ment was doing and getting traction for his policy ideas.

In one case, Duffy organized a con-sulting contract for a former Prince Edward Island political operative, Peter McQuaid. He said McQuaid

would help give him “ammo” for the weekly Conservative caucus meetings.

Duffy was particularly worried about safeguarding the equalization system for Prince Edward Island.

“I needed someone who knows what arguments worked for the fed-eral government in the past and how can I argue with the current gov-ernment that the status quo must at least be maintained,” Duffy said.

Duffy said that Donohue, a former labour executive for a broadcast technicians union, would also give him advice on how to raise issues successfully with Harper.

“How do I go and tell the boss that he’s wrong? As a professional nego-tiator, Mr. Donohue advised me on that,” Duffy said.

Both McQuaid and Donohue pro-vided verbal advice to the senator.

A third figure, former Parliament Hill journalist and ministerial aide Bill Rodgers, was paid to help Duffy sort out what the government was really doing on certain policies, versus what ministers said during caucus meetings.

DUFFY

RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS

Commission to table fi nal report on legacy todayKRISTY KIRKUP THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which documented the legacy of Canada’s residential schools, is set to present its final report today to the par-ties in the class-action settlement that led to its creation.

Justice Murray Sinclair, who has led the TRC’s exhaust-ive investigation over the past six years, said each mem-ber of the agreement will receive a copy of the massive findings to complete the commission’s obligation.

The Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement was reached after former residential school survivors took the federal government and churches to court with the support of the Assembly of First Nations and Inuit organizations.

The arrangement was designed to help repair the last-ing damage caused by the schools, and — in addition to compensating survivors — to explore the truth behind the government-funded, church-operated assimilation program that existed in Canada from the 1870s to 1996.

After unveiling its summary in June, which included the key finding that the residential school system facili-tated nothing short of “cultural genocide,” the TRC will now release hard copies of the full report.

“Children were abused, physically and sexually, and they died in the schools in numbers that would not have been tolerated in any school system anywhere in the country, or in the world,” it says, noting that the record-ed number of deaths is 3,201, but that the true number is likely much higher.

Each copy of the report weighs about 25 pounds, Sinclair estimates. But that’s nothing compared to the work’s emotional heft.

“Every time I stand in front of a crowd — particularly of survivors, but a crowd generally — and I talk about the issue of residential schools, I always wonder if I can get through it,” Sinclair said.

Page 14: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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NEWS IN BRIEFThe Canadian Press

◆ WINNIPEG

Security staff at largest city hospital in tentative deal

A tentative contract deal has been reached for security staff at Winnipeg’s Health Sciences Centre.

The agreement between the Manitoba Government and General Employees’ Union and the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority still needs to be ratified.

Union president Michelle Gawronsky says security employees are to vote on the proposal Tuesday and Wednesday.

She says it will be back to the bar-gaining table if the deal isn’t approved.

A strike date has been set for Dec. 22.Security staff at the hospital have gone

without a new contract for roughly 3 1/2 years. Gawronsky says their big-gest concern is retention.

◆ RIVIERE-DU-LOUP, QUE.

No charges in deadly 2014 Quebec seniors’ home fi re

The Crown says there will be no crim-inal charges in the fire that killed 32 people at a seniors’ residence in Quebec nearly two years ago.

Crown prosecutor Annie Landreville made the announcement at a news conference this afternoon in Riviere-du-Loup. The decision came after provin-cial police submitted a report into the January 2014 tragedy in L’Isle-Verte, in eastern Quebec.

A report by coroner Cyrille Delage last February cited a lack of training and of emergency plans as some of the reasons so many people died.

The co-owner of the home rejected responsibility last April for the fatal blaze.

◆ TORONTO

Selling pot in liquor stores makes sense, says premier

It would “make a lot of sense” for Ontario’s government-run liquor stores to sell marijuana if the federal Liberals make good on their promise to legal-ize pot, Premier Kathleen Wynne said Monday.

The new federal government’s throne speech earlier this month included a pledge to “legalize, regulate and restrict access to marijuana,” following up on a long-standing pledge by Justin Tru-deau’s Liberals.

The Liquor Control Board of Ontario, which has 650 stores across the province and a virtual monopoly on alcohol sales, has the experience and expertise to sell legalized marijuana in a responsible way, said Wynne.

◆ SOUTH GLENGARRY, ONT.

Bus driver charged with careless driving in crash

Police have charged a 64-year-old bus driver with careless driving following a summer crash on an Ontario highway that injured more than 20 people.

About 45 people were on board the double-decker bus travelling from Montreal to Toronto in late June when it crashed into the back of a tractor-trailer near on Highway 401.

Four people were seriously injured.Sean Hughes, a spokesman with Coach

USA North America that owns Megabus, said the bus driver has been suspended until the issue is resolved.

Gary Graham, of Lombardy, Ont., is to appear in a Cornwall, Ont., court on Jan. 26.

Page 15: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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EUROPE

Far right French party sees gains despite poor results in electionSYLVIE CORBET AND ELAINE GANLEY

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS — Zero. That was the score of France’s National Front in critical weekend elections, almost as surprising as its front-runner status going into the vote.

Yet, while voters may have denied the anti-immigration party the leadership of any of the country’s regions, it picked up more votes than ever before, leaving oppon-ents scrambling for a strategy to counter it.

Sunday’s runoff in regional elections became a national ref-erendum on the far right, which led handily in six of 13 regions after the first round a week ear-lier. The National Front has for decades been a thorn in the side of the French political class, the kingmaker in vote after vote. But since it began an image change in 2011 under party leader Marine Le Pen to scrub away the stigma of anti-Semitism clinging to it, the National Front has become a threat for both left and right.

It has made inroads in a series of recent elections, and experts declared after the Dec. 6 first round of voting that the anti-immigration

party had become a third force in French politics, along with the conservative right and the gov-erning Socialists.

The Socialists moved to the front line to block the party in two key regions — where Le Pen and her popular niece were running — by withdrawing their own candidates. And it worked. The northern Socialist bastion under threat from Marine Le Pen fell to the conserv-ative right, as did the southern region of Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur where 26-year-old lawmaker Marion Marechal-Le Pen had held the edge, and she too lost.

The deft tact was costly for the Socialists — who got nothing

in return from the conservative right and who will have no one on the leadership councils in those regions for six years. In contrast, the left and right joined forces in 2002 to block party founder Jean-Marie Le Pen, Marine’s fire-brand father, from winning the presidency.

There was no real victor in Sunday’s vote. The political map changed, with wins in seven regions by the conservative right and five by the Socialists — who once controlled almost all regions — and one to a candidate unaffili-ated with a political party.

Politicians on left and right sounded the alarm, saying that French ills, from joblessness to inequality and a political system that fails to undo the problems — all considered National Front electoral fodder — must be cured, and quickly.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls tore into the party between the two rounds, saying it could lead the country into civil war.

Marine Le Pen blamed such scare tactics and a political system that tries to lock out “patriots” for the party’s losses. But she conceded nothing.

LE PEN

New Liberal government in N.L. swears in 12 cabinet ministers

THE CANADIAN PRESS

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Newfoundland and Labrador’s new Liberal government was sworn in with a 12-member cabinet whose main focus will be dealing with the province’s projected $1-billion defi-cit, says Premier Dwight Ball.

Ball, who becomes the province’s 13th premier, named nine men and three women to his cabinet on Monday.

“Our province is facing a difficult fiscal reality,” said Ball. “One that will require a collective leadership and will also require the resolve of our cabinet and the engagement of all Newfound-

landers and Labradorians. This is my government’s top priority.”

Ball said the government will release a fiscal update on Dec. 22 and the legisla-ture will sit in early March.

He named former businesswoman Cathy Bennett to the all-important finance portfolio. Bennett was also given responsibilities in six other areas including as president of the Treasury Board as well as minister responsible for the public service commission and the status of women.

The Liberals won a strong majority, taking 31 of a possible 40 seats, in last month’s provincial election.

Page 16: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

On behalf of all of us at The Nanaimo Daily News and The Salvation ArmyThe Nanaimo Daily News and The Salvation Army, we would like to express a great big Thank YouThank You to all of our readers and advertisers for coming out to help make this Christmas much better for those less fortunate.This year, more than ever, our 13th annual Give & Go13th annual Give & Go felt like magic. We were able to depend on those businesses that have

been with us from the beginning, plus a lot of new businesses came on board to support us with loaded up trucks and drove through with donations like we’ve never seen before.

United RentalsUnited Rentals guided our donors in with the lights that they graciously lent us. The Runners of CompassionThe Runners of Compassion kept the traffi c fl owing. Thank you to Sign ZoneSign Zone for the highway signs and TC TradesTC Trades for getting our very large Give & Go banner up to promote our event. We also welcomed Nanaimo’s fi nest fi refi ghtersNanaimo’s fi nest fi refi ghters and their truck to help us with this great night.For those who wished to stop and enjoy the festivities, they were treated to hot chocolate or coffee courtesy of TimTim Horton’sHorton’s, and an M&M MeatsM&M Meats burger barbecued up with the help of our friends from Steve Marshall FordSteve Marshall Ford.Your car was unloaded by the the strong backs of our own Nanaimo ClippersNanaimo Clippers and VI RaidersVI Raiders while you listened to

some magical Christmas tunes supplied by V3 MediaV3 Media.To show our gratitude, we gave out Thrifty FoodsThrifty Foods bags fi lled with goodies from Canadian Tire, Sears, Heli Jet, Browns Canadian Tire, Sears, Heli Jet, Browns Socialhouse, Wendy’s, McDonalds, Coastal Community Credit Union, Costco, Coast DistributingSocialhouse, Wendy’s, McDonalds, Coastal Community Credit Union, Costco, Coast Distributing, Frontrunners, Van Frontrunners, Van Houtte Coffee, Nanaimo Clippers, Woodgrove Centre, Cabela’s,Houtte Coffee, Nanaimo Clippers, Woodgrove Centre, Cabela’s, and of course chocolates courtesy of our favourite chocolate lady, ChristineChristine, from Bernard CallebautBernard Callebaut. Most of these folks have been helping us since the beginning.Nothing tops the night off like the joy you see when businesses like St. Jean’s CannerySt. Jean’s Cannery pull in with a skid fi lled with canned fi sh, a truckload of donations from Steve Marshall Ford, Cornerstone Tile, Saywell ContractingSteve Marshall Ford, Cornerstone Tile, Saywell Contracting and Canadian TireCanadian Tire. The list goes on and on because we simply can’t keep up with it all. We also understand that it is not just the businesses themselves but their employees that gathered or donated a lot of the gifts and we thank them for that as well.

The support that the businesses in Nanaimo give us left us not only grateful but overwhelmed. The Salvation ArmySalvation Army truck that we normally get close to fi lling was overfl owing.I’m sure that we’ve missed several businesses in this thank you but it was a busy night with many giving hearts driving through and we appreciate all of you who thought enough to give.To everyone involved and everyone that donated, Thank You! A special thanks to all of the volunteers for To everyone involved and everyone that donated, Thank You! A special thanks to all of the volunteers for taking care of the set up! Nanaimo Daily News stafftaking care of the set up! Nanaimo Daily News staff for all the help behind the scenes and with the “Thank you Bags”.

We wish you all the best this holiday season, please take pride in knowing that you helped make someone else’s Christmas special this year.

“Merry Christmas and we sure hope to see you all again next year at Give & Go “Merry Christmas and we sure hope to see you all again next year at Give & Go Nanaimo!”, Cathy Webster, event co-ordinator.Nanaimo!”, Cathy Webster, event co-ordinator.

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 201516 www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily 17TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

Page 17: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

On behalf of all of us at The Nanaimo Daily News and The Salvation ArmyThe Nanaimo Daily News and The Salvation Army, we would like to express a great big Thank YouThank You to all of our readers and advertisers for coming out to help make this Christmas much better for those less fortunate.This year, more than ever, our 13th annual Give & Go13th annual Give & Go felt like magic. We were able to depend on those businesses that have

been with us from the beginning, plus a lot of new businesses came on board to support us with loaded up trucks and drove through with donations like we’ve never seen before.

United RentalsUnited Rentals guided our donors in with the lights that they graciously lent us. The Runners of CompassionThe Runners of Compassion kept the traffi c fl owing. Thank you to Sign ZoneSign Zone for the highway signs and TC TradesTC Trades for getting our very large Give & Go banner up to promote our event. We also welcomed Nanaimo’s fi nest fi refi ghtersNanaimo’s fi nest fi refi ghters and their truck to help us with this great night.For those who wished to stop and enjoy the festivities, they were treated to hot chocolate or coffee courtesy of TimTim Horton’sHorton’s, and an M&M MeatsM&M Meats burger barbecued up with the help of our friends from Steve Marshall FordSteve Marshall Ford.Your car was unloaded by the the strong backs of our own Nanaimo ClippersNanaimo Clippers and VI RaidersVI Raiders while you listened to

some magical Christmas tunes supplied by V3 MediaV3 Media.To show our gratitude, we gave out Thrifty FoodsThrifty Foods bags fi lled with goodies from Canadian Tire, Sears, Heli Jet, Browns Canadian Tire, Sears, Heli Jet, Browns Socialhouse, Wendy’s, McDonalds, Coastal Community Credit Union, Costco, Coast DistributingSocialhouse, Wendy’s, McDonalds, Coastal Community Credit Union, Costco, Coast Distributing, Frontrunners, Van Frontrunners, Van Houtte Coffee, Nanaimo Clippers, Woodgrove Centre, Cabela’s,Houtte Coffee, Nanaimo Clippers, Woodgrove Centre, Cabela’s, and of course chocolates courtesy of our favourite chocolate lady, ChristineChristine, from Bernard CallebautBernard Callebaut. Most of these folks have been helping us since the beginning.Nothing tops the night off like the joy you see when businesses like St. Jean’s CannerySt. Jean’s Cannery pull in with a skid fi lled with canned fi sh, a truckload of donations from Steve Marshall Ford, Cornerstone Tile, Saywell ContractingSteve Marshall Ford, Cornerstone Tile, Saywell Contracting and Canadian TireCanadian Tire. The list goes on and on because we simply can’t keep up with it all. We also understand that it is not just the businesses themselves but their employees that gathered or donated a lot of the gifts and we thank them for that as well.

The support that the businesses in Nanaimo give us left us not only grateful but overwhelmed. The Salvation ArmySalvation Army truck that we normally get close to fi lling was overfl owing.I’m sure that we’ve missed several businesses in this thank you but it was a busy night with many giving hearts driving through and we appreciate all of you who thought enough to give.To everyone involved and everyone that donated, Thank You! A special thanks to all of the volunteers for To everyone involved and everyone that donated, Thank You! A special thanks to all of the volunteers for taking care of the set up! Nanaimo Daily News stafftaking care of the set up! Nanaimo Daily News staff for all the help behind the scenes and with the “Thank you Bags”.

We wish you all the best this holiday season, please take pride in knowing that you helped make someone else’s Christmas special this year.

“Merry Christmas and we sure hope to see you all again next year at Give & Go “Merry Christmas and we sure hope to see you all again next year at Give & Go Nanaimo!”, Cathy Webster, event co-ordinator.Nanaimo!”, Cathy Webster, event co-ordinator.

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 201516 www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily 17TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

Page 18: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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NEWS IN BRIEFThe Canadian Press

◆ RAMMALAH

Uprising justifi ed: Palestine leader

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas referred to the last three months of violence Mon-day as a “justified popular uprising.”

Abbas’s comments came as a new poll shows wide-spread Palestinian support for ongoing attacks on Israelis. Later Monday, a Palestinian from east Jerusalem rammed his car into a crowded bus stop, wounding nine before bystanders shot him dead.

Israeli leaders have accused Abbas and other Palestinian leaders of inciting the violence with incendiary rhetoric.

“We cannot ask the youth why they are going out (to revolt),” Abbas said in Ramallah. “They just despaired of the two-state solution.”

◆ BUENOS AIRES

Bus carrying cops crashes; 43 dead

At least 43 police offi-cers were killed Monday when a bus in a convoy in northern Argentina blew a tire and veered off the side of a bridge, falling at about 20 metres in an accident that brought the sad state of the South American nation’s roads into focus.

The bus was one of three carrying police near Salta, a city about 1,500 kilo-metres north of Buenos Aires.

Security Minister Patri-cia Bullrich, who toured the scene, told reporters that an initial investiga-tion found that the right tire of the bus ruptured.

◆ BALTIMORE, MD.

Man accused of militant support

A Maryland man is in federal custody after being charged with try-ing to provide support to militants in the Islamic State group and receiving money allegedly intended for carrying out a ter-rorist attack on U.S. soil, authorities said Monday.

Mohamed Elshinawy, 30, is charged with trying to provide material sup-port to a foreign terrorist organization, obstruction of agency proceedings, and misleading investiga-tors by making false state-ments and falsifying or concealing material facts. He faces up to 31 years in prison if convicted on all counts.

Page 19: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

MATT CALKINS THE SEATTLE TIMES

Thomas Rawls broke his ankle and is done for the year. Kam Chancellor bruised his tailbone and was done for the game.

DeShawn Shead sprained his ankle. Michael Bennett jammed his toe. The trainers were as active as the players themselves.

A cursory glance might prompt you to think that the Seahawks are in trouble, especially with the void Rawls leaves in the running game. But 13 weeks of evidence suggest otherwise.

Based on the way Seattle has over-come injuries this year, this team should be perfectly fine.

That may sound like an oversimpli-fication, but you can’t ignore what has transpired so far. If one were to say that the Seahawks would be without Marshawn Lynch and Jimmy Graham at the most critical junc-

ture of the season, most fans’ minds would have instantly shifted to 2016. But Seattle not only survived the loss of those titans, it thrived in their absence.

Next man up is one thing. This has been next man up, up and away.

“There is no reason for us to focus on the guys we lost,” Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said. “We understand and we love those guys, but that’s not where the focus goes. It goes to the next thing that’s in hand.”

Since the middle part of 2011, the Seahawks’ offense was defined by and centered around Lynch as the lead ball carrier. So given quarterback Russell Wilson’s struggles in the early part of the season, you’d have thought Marshawn’s injuries would serve as a death blow to this team’s quest for points.

Instead, it provided the opportunity for Rawls to showcase himself as one of the NFL’s better running backs. The rookie averaged a league-leading 5.6 yards while tallying four 100-yard games. The Seahawks have lost just one game with Rawls as a starter.

Meanwhile, it appeared that the Hawks had finally learned how to consistently incorporate Graham into the offense before he suffered

a season-ending knee injury vs. the Steelers in Week 11. The tight end had four receptions for 75 yards before going down early in the fourth quarter and was a key cog behind what many feel was Wilson’s finest regular-season performance.

But to lose him right before the Seahawks go to Minnesota and play what looked to be the toughest road game left on their schedule? Brutal.

Well, brutal for the Vikings at least.Sans Graham, the Seahawks have

scored 92 points in their last nine quarters. They had 38 vs. the Vikings, 35 Sunday vs. the Ravens, and 19 in the final quarter vs. the Steelers. Doug Baldwin has emerged as a Pro Bowl candidate. Tyler Lockett has 13 receptions for 194 yards and two touchdowns in his past two games. And Wilson looks like the best damn football player in the world.

It’s been an astonishing turnaround given how Seattle sacrificed a Pro Bowl lineman to acquire Graham

in the first place, but perhaps that’s just part of this team’s makeup. At this point, it would be an insult to assume they’d be hampered by injuries. Of course, it helps that the Seahawks have as close to a break as you can get in the NFL over the next two weeks. The combined record of the Browns (Dec. 20) and the Rams (Dec. 27) is 8-18, and both games will play at CenturyLink Field.

The Seahawks hope that Wilson will continue to play somewhere close to the stratospheric plane he has been on lately, and that the team can solidify a playoff spot before Lynch comes back. And if Beast Mode is healthy, Seattle may suddenly morph into the most feared team in the NFC playoffs.

But even if health continues to be an issue for this team, it may not impede success. The Hawks have found a way throughout the season. No reason to think they won’t con-tinue doing so moving forward.

KEEP ON

ROLLIN’

Why the Seahawks can overcome losing Thomas RawlsSPORTS INSIDEToday’s issue

Clippers 20

Canucks, NHL 21

Baseball, NBA 22

CFL 23

Scoreboard 24

Tennis 27

Soccer 28

19 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily

Page 20: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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BCHL HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL

Dolphins take second place at Duncan tourneyDAILY NEWS

The Dover Bay Dolphins lost 90-64 in the championship game of the annual Cowichan Welcome Back high school boys’ basketball tourna-ment Saturday to the host Cowichan Thunderbirds.

The Dolphins — Nanaimo’s long Quad A team — led by senior guard Quinn Mirau and Grade 11 provin-cial team member Ryan MacDonald, edged out Callum Gemma and the Nanaimo Islanders 53-51 in the tournament semifinal to reach the championship game.

The Dolphins, who will host the Quad A Vancouver Island champion-ship tournament this year, also beat the Belmont Bulldogs 79-44 in their tournament-opening game.

The Islanders, who play at the Triple A Level, dropped the Quad A Claremont Spartans 73-45 in their first game. They finished fourth in the tournament after falling 58-49 to the Lambrick Park Lions in the bronze medal game.

The Wellington Wildcats won the consolation portion of the tourna-ment with a 76-61 victory over Bel-mont in their final game.

TRIPLE A LEAGUE RESUMESNanaimo’s Triple A teams are back

in action tonight for Vancouver Mid-Island League play as the NDSS Islanders, ranked No. 7 in B.C., host the John Barsby Bulldogs at 7 p.m.

Wellington also plays on the road against the Ballenas Whalers at 7 p.m. The Wildcats beat the Wood-lands Eagles last week 93-35 thanks to a strong performance from Grade 11 forward Alex Staniforth.

Winning streak over, Clippers put themselves in a favourable place

When Sheldon Rem-pal scored that goal Saturday night, that gorgeous, bring-you-out-of-your-seat,

lacrosse-style goal, you had to think the Nanaimo Clippers were just going to roll to their 11th straight win.

A third-period letdown, however, put an end to that and the streak ended at 10 with a 7-4 loss to the West Kelowna Warriors Saturday night.

Sure, there are issues that need to be corrected. Their rough second-period the night earlier that saw three quick goals result in the yanking of goalie Evan Johnson, and the four goals allowed in the third period by back-up goalie Jakob Wal-ter against West Kelowna Saturday are two of them.

But goaltending and defensive issues are easy to skim past if the result is a win.

And for 10 games, no matter if the Clippers would put forth a stellar defensive effort or merely outscore their problems, that may be what happened.

In that case, Saturday’s loss might just be what this team needed.

It’s an opportunity for Mike Van-dekamp to rip into his team for a

lacklustre performance without his players collectively rolling their eyes after yet another win.

A streak-ending loss like Saturday’s was, and on home ice no less with a 3-1 lead blown, isn’t something the Clippers can look past.

It may be something they look back at to see what happens when they get a little cocky.

Because that’s exactly what happened.

Consider this team 11 games ago.Barely clinging to a division lead at

12-11-0-1 in a division most assumed they could run away with this sea-son, they were relying solely on the

production of their top line to pro-vide offence and going into the fetal position if that didn’t happen.

They were in the middle of the pack in the 17-team B.C. Hockey League, not striking fear into many oppon-ents like they were a year ago.

It’s nice what a 10-game winning streak can do for you.

Because now, the hold an eight-point lead over the Powell River Kings in the division and in a tie for third place overall in the BCHL.

Secondary scoring is coming, too, with wingers Chris Dodero, Zach Court and Nolan Aibel finding their grooves offensively.

Oh, and the top line hasn’t gone anywhere.

Rempal continues to dominate every shift — he’s got an eight-point lead for first place in the league scoring race, on pace for a 122-point season with 63 goals in what could be the greatest season-long individ-ual performance Clippers fans have ever seen.

Linemates Devin Brosseau and Matt Hoover are fourth and sixth, respectively, in BCHL scoring and when you consider the Clippers only had one player in the top 20 last season (Brendan Taylor was 20th overall), it’s evident how good this line really ies.

Vandekamp also recently chal-lenged Yanni Kaldis to really, truly be a No. 1 defenceman and he responded on Friday with a two-goal, two-assist game and has surpassed NHL prospect Dante Fabbro in BCHL defenceman scoring.

All things said, the Clippers have put themselves in as good a spot as they ever could have asked for, espe-cially with the way the season started out.

They host the Victoria Grizzlies Wednesday night in their last home game before Christmas, and when they do they will look to move to 6-0 over their south-Island rivals this season.

Impressive, right?

Nanaimo Clippers captain Devin Brosseau celebrates his goal Friday night

against the Merritt Centennials at Frank Crane Arena. [SCOTT MCKENZIE/DAILY NEWS]

» Scott McKenzie is the sports editor at the

Nanaimo Daily News.To offer comments on

this column or to submit a story idea, send

an email to:

[email protected].

Scott

McKenzie

Daily News

Page 21: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily SPORTS 21TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

CANUCKS WORLD JUNIORS

Vancouver Canucks rookie Jared McCann hasn’t been scoring at the rate he was early in the season. [THE CANADIAN PRESS]

Jared McCann’s slump is keeping him up at nightThe 90-minute rule doesn’t

apply to rookies.After any loss, the rule of

thumb in the NHL is to promptly deal with a setback, learn from it, be better and move on. It’s a 90-minute process for the regular-season mara-thon and veterans get it because it’s a rite of passage.

Rookies? Not really. Jared McCann? Not at all. He needs more like nine hours, maybe more.

The problem for the Vancouver Canucks’ tightly wound rookie cen-tre is akin to solving a Rubik’s Cube. Properly aligning every side to a solid colour can’t occur when one wrong move affects others. And because McCann had early success — five goals in his first nine games — and approaches every night like it’s Game 7, the scoring droughts, positioning problems and losses weigh him down and he becomes misaligned.

In McCann’s world, going a dozen games without a goal, and scor-ing just once in the last 20, is well beyond unacceptable. It’s keeping him awake at night, and de-briefing exchanges with his dad via text mes-saging are becoming more frequent.

“There have definitely been some tough nights with sleeping and it’s never easy,” McCann said Monday.

“The compete in you comes out and you always want to win. But I’ve got to learn to let things go, sometimes. It’s a long season, but I’m a rookie and I can’t speak to how things go, but I’m learning how to get over games and improve my defensive habits. I know I can play better. I’m over-thinking things and always try-ing to be perfect. I’ve got to get back to the way I’ve always played. Not taking anything for granted — and when I get chances, bury them.”

Throw in Show Me Week and it’s a telling time for the 19-year-old Stratford, Ont., native. As long as he competes hard against the Minnesota Wild on Tuesday and again Thursday in Philadelphia and Friday in Detroit, he won’t be loaned to Team Canada

for the world junior tournament before Saturday’s roster freeze. That should be of some comfort.

But if Linden Vey and Alex Friesen are real recall options in case McCann is dispatched, then he has to channel those comparisons to a young Joe Sakic to solidify his Can-ucks roster spot.

Representing your country is great; so is the NHL.

“I feel like I play better when I put pressure on myself,” added McCann. “I expect a lot. I’m really grateful being part of this organization and being here, because they put a lot of faith in me and others didn’t in the past. I feel like I owe them, and I don’t want to let anybody down.”

That’s the chip-on-the-shoulder stuff that sets McCann apart. He thought he should have been picked higher than 24th overall in 2014 and thought he could crack an NHL roster when others believed he was a year away.

When McCann combines his speed with smarts, plays in traffic, finds his linemates and releases a quick and accurate wrist shot, he’s a multi-di-mensional threat. His backhand pass off the sideboards here on Nov. 25 found the stick of Radim Vrbata and in a flick of the wrist, the Canucks tied the game, en route to a 3-2 victory.

McCann also had four shots that night and won 54 per cent of his draws. He hasn’t even had an assist in the last eight games and that’s where linemates Vrbata and Chris Higgins have had to be voices of reason.

“What we try to tell him, even shift to shift, is to forget what you did and try not to do it again,” Higgins said

of making mistakes. “And that’s a really hard lesson for young guys to learn, because they’re usually dom-inant in junior or college. Defence can produce offence and it’s trying to convince the young guys of that.

“But he’s got a lot of good things going for him. He wants to get better and maybe takes it a little too ser-iously sometimes. But his desire is strong, and that’s all you can hope for.”

Higgins should know. At 32, he has just two goals in 17 games after recovering from a preseason foot fracture. He was 22 and impression-able in Montreal when first aligned with Saku Koivu. Higgins’ goal totals of 23, 22 and 27 in the first three years with the Canadiens centre came from watching, learning and executing.

“It’s why I’ve lasted this long,” said Higgins. “If you come into this league thinking you know every-thing, you’re in a lot of trouble. Just seeing him (Koivu) compete every night on every level really rubbed off on me, and stays with me.”

Willie Desjardins believes McCann will get another second-unit power-play look at some point because of the enticing elements he can provide. The Canucks coach doesn’t dwell on McCann’s six goals and three assists in 29 games, or the notion that he can’t compete consistency at this level. He believes that as McCann gets stronger and improves his pos-itional play, he’s going to be some-thing special.

“I don’t think he has changed a lot and is better now than he was early,” said Desjardins. “The league is better after 20 games, and it’s hard for him to get into those spaces when he gets the puck. When he gets it, you’re looking for something to happen. I want him to think that every night and that he can contribute. You have to keep your confidence up.”

[email protected]

Twitter.com/benkuzma

Point’s return gives Canada extra depthJOHN CHIDLEY-HILL THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — It’s rare that Brayden Point gets overshadowed.

Head coach Dave Lowry announced that Point was cleared to resume contact drills with Canada’s junior team on Sunday, but less than an hour later the Vancouver Canucks gave forward Jake Virtanen permis-sion to join the national roster ahead of the world championships.

Virtanen’s addition grabbed the headlines, but Point being cleared to play after wearing a non-contact yellow jersey throughout selection camp to avoid doing damage to an injured shoulder is also big news for Canada.

“It’s exciting,” Point told reporters on Sunday. “It’s exciting to see what the lines are going to be so I’m look-ing forward to it.”

Both Point and Virtanen were on Canada’s gold medal-winning team last year, with Virtanen making the NHL in November while Point returned to the Western Hockey League’s Moose Jaw Warriors.

Point has continued to develop as a dynamic, play-making centre and is fifth in the WHL’s points race with 18 goals and 25 assists. He led the league in points after 19 games, but dropped after injuring his shoulder in Moose Jaw’s 4-1 loss to the Prince Albert Raiders on Nov. 17.

He hasn’t played since then but practised at Canada’s selection camp in Toronto before heading to Imatra, Finland, on Monday night for more training and pre-competition exhib-ition games.

“Pointer’s been fantastic for us,” said defenceman Joe Hicketts, who also returns from Canada’s cham-

pionship team and regularly has to play against Point with the Victoria Royals. “He’s probably one of the best players in our league, if not the best.

“He’s got vision, he’s got skill, he’s got speed and I think he brings all the elements you look for on the big international ice.”

Point — who says he’s happy to play at either his natural position at centre on the wing — had two goals and two assists for Canada at last year’s world junior championship. His return, along with Virtanen’s assignment to the team, adds depth to Canada’s forward corps, taking pressure off the presumptive top line of the returning Lawson Crouse and world junior rookies Dylan Strome and Mitch Marner.

“I think it’s going to be a fast, skilled team,” said Point.

“That’s what (Lowry) has been wanting and I think it’s going to be fast.”

Point looked to be 100 per cent while practising with Canada last week but did not play in its two exhibition games on Saturday and Sunday against an all-star team of university players from across Canada.

Brandon Wheat Kings forward Jayce Hawryluk also wore a yellow jersey, practising alongside Point on Friday before playing against the Canadian Interuniversity Sport team.

“He’s probably one of the best players in our league, if not the best.“

Dave Lowry, head coach

NHL

Oilers win sixth straight gameKEN POWTAK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON — Andrej Sekera scored 41 seconds into overtime to lift the Edmonton Oilers to their sixth straight win, 3-2 over the Boston Bruins on Monday night.

Cam Talbot made 47 saves, and Jor-dan Eberle and Ryan Nugent-Hop-kins scored first-period goals for Edmonton. The victory halted an eight-game losing streak in Boston for the Oilers, fresh off a 5-0 home-stand — their best since 1987.

The Oilers won the overtime face-off, rushed into the Boston zone and Sekera won it with a wrister from the slot after backup goalie Jonas Gus-tavsson stopped one shot.

The Bruins had tied it on Brad Marchand’s goal with 4:38 to play in regulation. Matt Beleskey also scored for Boston, which has earned at least one point in each of its last 16 games against the Oilers (13-0-3).

Gustavsson made 21 saves. Top goalie Tuukka Rask had the night off in the midst of a hot stretch, posting a 6-0-2 mark in his last eight starts.

The Oilers entered 4-10-1 on the road.

Marchand tied it with a rising wris-ter inside the left post from the right circle. It was his team-leading 15th of the season. Edmonton challenged that Boston was offside, but the call stood. The Bruins had excellent scor-ing chances in the opening minutes of the game, but the Oilers grabbed a 1-0 lead when Eberle scored off a rebound from the edge of the crease at 8:29 of the first period.

In the initial 6 1/2 minutes, Talbot came across the crease to make a sliding pad stop off the rebound of Beleskey’s shot when the puck caromed off a skate. He also made a right-pad save on Brett Connolly’s wrister from the right circle, and Torey Krug unloaded a shot off the crossbar before Eberle’s goal.

Edmonton made it 2-0 when Nugent-Hopkins scored on his own rebound 13:58 into the first. Bruins defenceman Zdeno Chara lost his balance trying to play a puck in the corner, and Eberle set up Nugent-Hopkins in the slot.

Ben Kuzma

The Province

Page 22: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 201522 SPORTS

BASEBALL

NBA

Even on bad days, Pete Rose still signs After appeal to Major League Baseball, former star slugger, manager remains banned from the game

Pete Rose wasn’t in the mood to say much Mon-day, understandable after Commissioner Rob Man-fred slammed the door

shut on what almost surely will be his last chance at getting back into baseball.

It was, however, still a work day. So Rose dutifully sat at a folding table outside the Mandalay Bay casino, pulled out a bag of assorted pens and quickly got down to the business at hand.

He signed a black bat, on special this day for just $299. A few fans wandered in, drawn by the two young men in Pete Rose jerseys who barked out his availability to anyone walking by.

“Pete Rose, here today guys,” one yelled. “He’s the hit king of baseball. Come meet a living legend.”

If Rose was devastated by Manfred’s denial of his request to be allowed back in baseball, he didn’t show it. Wearing a white Cincinnati Reds cap, he chatted amiably about the game with a reporter but said he would wait another day to gather his thoughts before talking about the decision.

A lifetime ban really does mean lifetime now, though, something that

has to be jarring for Rose. At the age of 74 he’s not going to get another chance to appeal his ban for betting on baseball, nearly three decades after he was first exiled.

“Mr. Rose has not presented cred-ible evidence of a reconfigured life,” Manfred wrote.

By reconfigured, Manfred meant that Rose remains an unrepentant

bettor, wagering on all kinds of sporting events, including baseball. That it’s legal in the sports book just an escalator ride away from where he signs autographs is properly noted, but labeled as irrelevant by the commissioner.

If Rose was talking, he might note he has long since taken responsib-ility for his actions. He might point

out he has served many years of his sentence, and that he was welcomed by the Fox network to be a part of its team of analysts at the World Series without anyone in baseball saying a word.

Or he might just note the blatant hypocrisy of those who run the sport today.

They are the same people who embrace daily fantasy play by declaring it’s not gambling, which is almost as laughable as was Rose’s longstanding denial he bet on baseball. Then again, Major League Baseball has a financial stake in daily fantasy, which is every bit as much a threat to the moral fabric of the game as the bets Rose made on the Reds.

He might also wonder why the kings of the steroid era, who near-ly destroyed the game with their jacked-up numbers, are still wel-comed with open arms. That includes Barry Bonds, who begins employ-ment in a few months in Florida as a hitting coach for the Marlins with baseball’s blessing.

There’s a ball for that, which Rose will gladly sell you for $199. On it he writes: “Hits 4,256. Steroids 0.”

For $100 more, he’ll sell you a per-sonally inscribed baseball that says “I’m sorry I bet on baseball.”

It’s a bit tacky, yes, but a guy has to make a living. So 20 days a month, Rose sits for four to five hours a day at Mandalay Bay, where people who remember Charlie Hustle in his prime stop by to get some memora-bilia and chat for a few minutes.

“Steroid users can get in the Hall of Fame and they directly affected the game so why not Pete Rose?” asked Cliff Cho, a sales manager at a Las Vegas BMW dealership who bought a baseball for Rose to sign. “And just because he bet on the Reds doesn’t mean he didn’t get 4,256 hits.”

There’s no doubt Rose has the numbers to be in the Hall of Fame, of course.

Without the baggage of betting, he would be elected on the first ballot, though he won’t ever get the chance because the Hall has ruled him — unlike Bonds and the others — ineli-gible for a vote.

There’s also no doubt Rose has been his own worst enemy in his bat-tle with the sport he loves. For years he refused to admit he bet on base-ball, and Manfred claims that in their meeting earlier this year Rose was not entirely honest with him when questioned about recent disclosures that he bet on baseball while a play-er-manager with the Reds in 1986.

Rose can be arrogant, and he can becoarse. If you’re easily offended, you probably don’t want to have dinner with him.

But is he really a threat to the integrity of the game as Manfred suggests?

Hardly, no matter how the sanctimonious people who run base-ball try to make it look.

A look at the Warriors’ streak — one of the best everJOSE COLORADO THE PROVINCE

The streak is dead. The Golden State Warriors’ historic 24-0 run to begin the 2015-2016 NBA campaign came to a screeching halt in a 108-95 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks on Sat-urday night.

Much has been made of the run including how it is to be viewed in the history books, Stephen Curry’s place amongst the world’s – and even all-time – greats and the devastating effectiveness of ‘small-ball’ when given the proper personnel.

Let’s take a look at it all.

24 or 28?This much is certain: the Warriors

shattered the previous mark (15) for the most wins to begin a season.

But after that it gets murky.The NBA currently recognizes two

different win streaks – the overall (can be multiple regular seasons) and the single-season. That means – depending on how you look at it – the Warriors either won 24 straight games (this season only) or 28 con-secutive contests (counting the last four regular season wins from the previous year).

This discrepancy caused many dif-ferent interpretations of what record was actually set on Saturday.

The longest win streak in NBA history is the 1971-1972 Los Angeles Lakers who rallied off 33 straight games in a single season, as did LeBron James and the Miami Heat in the 2012-2013 season with 27 wins.

And with five losses in its cham-pionship postseason from last year and six months of layover in between, one would be hard-pressed to say that the Warriors run can

be summed up to anything but 24 games.

Two different seasons, two different scenarios. The overall mark seems like a stretch by the league and respective media outlets.

127 three-pointersHowever you slice it, one thing is

for certain – Stephen Curry was on another level during those 24 games.

The shooting assassin has bombed 127 three-pointers so far this season. That’s more than the entire Brooklyn Nets (111), three fewer than the Min-nesota Timberwolves (130), five fewer than the Miami Heat (132) and seven fewer than the Memphis Grizzlies (134) as an entire team.

The all-time record for made threes in a season is 286 – set by none other than Curry, one year ago. The baby-faced guard is on pace to obliterate his former mark with 400-plus makes this year.

What’s more is that of the five all-time best marks for made threes in a single season, Curry holds three of them already.

At this rate Curry will force the Internet to somehow have to outdo itself from last season.

He did what?Curry’s wandering act into video

game-esque status has prompted some of the game’s most revered players to take notice and even con-sider his potential on the all-time greats mantle.

5×5One thing that was accentuated,

other than Curry and a blitz of three-bombs during the run, has been the indispensable value of Draymond Green who may have vaulted himself ahead of Klay Thompson as the War-riors’ second-best player.

This season Green has improved in nearly every single statistical category.

He’s tallied three triple-doubles and narrowly missed out on two more (by two assists, then one assist).

Green seems to be ideal fit for the Warriors’ small-ball system. As a hybrid forward, Green is strong enough to bang with the big boys down low but also smart and quick enough to facilitate offensive sets and expose the foot speed of defenders on the other end.

On Dec. 11, the forward became just the 16th player in NBA history to

have a five-by-five game (five or more totals in points, assists, rebounds, steals, blocks) when he notched 24 points, 11 rebounds, eight assists, five steals and five blocks.

Those numbers put him in an even more exclusive grouping as he became just the third player in 40 seasons (the other two: Hakeem Olajuwon and Derrick Coleman) to record at least 20 points, 10 rebounds, five assists, five steals and five blocks when he faced the Boston Celtics.

72-10All things considered, the Warriors

still look primed to challenge that legendary number — 72 wins, set by Michael Jordan and the 1995-1996 Chicago Bulls. Health will play a big factor — as always — but for a team that has gotten off to an unparal-leled start in the 69-year history of the league, it’s unlikely it will try to rest players and waste such a rare opportunity.

And for that, basketball fans around the world can be thankful that they may be in for one of the more thrilling regular seasons in league history.

CURRY

Pete Rose appears at an autograph signing event Monday in Las Vegas. [AP PHOTO]

Tim Dahlberg is a national sports

columnist for The Associated Press.

Write to him at [email protected] or at

twitter.com/timdahlberg.

Tim Dahlberg

The Associated Press

Page 23: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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CFL

NBA

MLB

Eskimos name Maas new head coachJOHN KOROBANIK THE CANADIAN PRESS

EDMONTON — When Jason Maas was offered the position of head coach of the Grey Cup champion Edmonton Eskimos there was no hesitation whatsoever before he said yes.

The former Eskimo quarterback was introduced Monday as the team’s new head coach, replacing Chris Jones who left to become vice-presi-dent of football operations, general manager and head coach of the Sas-katchewan Roughriders.

Maas, with three Grey Cup rings to his credit — two while playing for Edmonton — said the opportunity was simply too good to pass up.

“I’m thrilled, I’m very passionate about the city and I’m glad to be back,” Mass told a news conference in the Eskimos dressing room.

“My goal was always at some point to come back to Edmonton.

“This is always where I wanted to end up.”

Even he admitted, however, he didn’t expect it to happen so quickly. He’s only been coaching three years since retiring in 2011.

He was quarterbacks and receivers coach for the Toronto Argonauts from 2012 to ’14 and this past sea-son was offensive co-ordinator and quarterbacks coach with the Ottawa Redblacks who lost the Grey Cup to Edmonton.

“I understand the expectations of Edmonton,” he said.

“I would prefer to come into a situation with great personnel and great staff and great people and when you’re 14-4 and you’ve won the Grey

Cup I believe it’s obvious you have that here.”

Maas said he will be making announcements in January on assist-ant coaches.

Still to be worked out between the Eskimos and the Redblacks is the

issue of compensation. Traditionally CFL teams have not asked for com-pensation when coaches leave for better opportunities but Ottawa has asked.

Hervey, who did not ask for com-pensation from Saskatchewan when Jones left, said he had no comment to make on the situation.

Maas spent nine years with Edmon-ton, 2000-05 and 2008-2010, helping them to Grey Cup wins in 2002 and 2005 and was the Eskimos outstand-ing player in 2001 and 2004.

Returning to Edmonton, he said,

will also provide the opportunity to reunite his family in a city they love.

“It’s been a long journey. It’s been four years of us being apart, with an understanding wife and kids, to allow me to have my passion for football and to realize a dream and a goal,” he said.

Although he and general manager Ed Hervey were teammates on the Eskimos and remain good friends, Hervey said that wasn’t a big factor in his decision.

“The process was very thorough. Many may feel that because we’ve had an existing relationship with each other that it was a slam dunk decision,” he said.

“There were many qualified candi-dates out there but I felt that where our organization is moving forward, this is a seamless transition for us.

“Some may question if there’s experience there but I take a look at his background, not only how he prepared as a player, how he prepared as a position coach, but the excellent job he did as offen-sive co-ordinator in his recent position.”

In Ottawa, Maas installed an offen-sive system that saw the team lead in the CFL in offensive yards, passing yards and rushing touchdowns and his guidance helped veteran quarter-back Henry Burris become the league’s leading passer and the CFL’s Most Outstanding Player.

It was that ability to work well with young players and veterans alike, to earn their respect and get them to accept his offensive schemes was one of the factors that appealed to Hervey.

Jason Maas is introduced as the new head coach of the Edmonton Eskimos on

Monday in Edmonton. [THE CANADIAN PRESS]

“My goal was always at some point to come back to Edmonton.“

Jason Maas, Eskimos head coach

Giants add free agent pitcher CuetoJANIE MCCAULEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO — Even after signing Jeff Samardzija to a large, long-term contract last week, the San Francisco Giants had their eye on Johnny Cueto — they’ve been watching and admiring him from afarfor years.

The Giants’ upgraded rotation sure is taking shape, with the 2014 World Series champions agreeing Monday with Cueto on a $130 million, six-year contract to add another top-tier starter.

“Johnny has always been, and right-ly so, very high on our list . . . high onour short list,” Giants general man-ager Bobby Evans said. “He’s some-body we’ve admired for a long time.”

Cueto is set to join a rotation led by left-hander Madison Bumgarner and new addition righty Jeff Samardzija, who was introduced Friday after for-malizing his $90 million, five-year contract — one week after the team lost out to the Diamondbacks on ZackGreinke.

Cueto turned down a $120 million, six-year contract from Arizona late last month. The Giants began talks with Cueto’s representatives dur-ing last week’s winter meetings in Nashville.

Cueto’s deal was pending a physical,the team said, and contains a team option for 2022.

Cueto is expected to travel from the Dominican Republic on Tuesday to the Bay Area and take a physical Wednesday.

Pacers ease by travelling Raptors 106-90JIM JOHNSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

INDIANAPOLIS — Jordan Hill and Monta Ellis helped Indiana pull off a big come-from-behind win with hopes of getting the Pacers back to their winning ways.

Hill had season highs of 20 points and 13 rebounds, Ellis had 18 points and the Pacers beat the Raptors 106-90 on Mon-day night to end Toronto’s four-game winning streak.

“We have our ups-and-downs sometimes,” Hill said. “We’ve got to shake them off and continue to play.”

That’s exactly what Indiana did, even when it looked as if the Raptors were going to run away with another win.

Indiana used a 39-4 run in the first half to climb out of a 21-point deficit and Lavoy Allen made two free throws to give the Pacers a 29-28 lead at the 11:38 mark in the second quarter.

Indiana took a 44-30 lead when Ellis converted a three-point play with 4:08 remaining in the first half.

“He’s a mid-range assassin,”

C.J. Miles said. “He’s made big shots his whole career and he’s been stepping up the last few games for us.”

Miles added 17 points for the

Pacers, who have won two of three games and snapped a five-game skid against Toronto, including a 106-99 loss in the season-opener on Oct. 28.

As the Pacers search for a way to end the team’s worst stretch since losing three straight to start the year and get back to winning games, Hill and Ellis stepped up in a big way.

Ellis made a three-pointer early in the third quarter to put Indi-ana ahead 64-46 before Toronto went on a 10-0 run. Ellis scored on a lay-up to stop the spurt and later made a free throw when Lowry was called for a technical to give the Pacers a 67-56 lead with 4:43 left in the third.

“The biggest thing was we got a win,” Ellis said. “Hopefully we can string some wins together while we’re back at home and get this thing back on the win-ning track.”

Indiana got off to a slow start and Toronto jumped out to a big lead right from the start.

Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan each finished with 20 points and gave the Raptors a spark early on.

Lowry made two three-pointers and a basket and DeRozan scored a basket and a three to put the Raptors ahead 15-3 early in the opening quarter.

Indiana Pacers guard Monta Ellis puts up a shot between against the

Toronto Raptors on Monday in Indianapolis. [AP PHOTO]

Page 24: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

EASTERN CONFERENCEATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OTL SL GF GA Pts Home Away Last 10 StrkMontreal 31 20 8 2 1 100 70 43 11-4-2-0 9-4-0-1 5-4-1-0 W-1Detroit 31 16 9 5 1 79 79 38 10-6-3-0 6-3-2-1 5-1-3-1 L-2Ottawa 31 16 10 2 3 97 93 37 8-4-1-3 8-6-1-0 5-5-0-0 W-1

METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OTL SL GF GA Pts Home Away Last 10 StrkWashington 29 21 6 2 0 89 63 44 11-3-1-0 10-3-1-0 8-1-1-0 W-2N.Y. Islanders 31 18 8 3 2 89 72 41 11-4-2-0 7-4-1-2 8-0-1-1 W-3N.Y. Rangers 31 18 9 2 2 90 72 40 12-4-1-0 6-5-1-2 2-6-1-1 L-3

WILD CARDBoston 29 16 9 3 1 93 80 36 6-7-2-0 10-2-1-1 6-1-2-1 L-1New Jersey 30 15 11 1 3 74 75 34 7-6-1-2 8-5-0-1 4-3-1-2 L-1

Pittsburgh 29 15 11 1 2 68 71 33 8-5-0-2 7-6-1-0 3-4-1-2 L-2Tampa Bay 31 15 13 1 2 73 69 33 7-6-0-1 8-7-1-1 6-4-0-0 W-1Florida 30 14 12 3 1 76 74 32 7-6-2-0 7-6-1-1 6-4-0-0 L-1Philadelphia 30 12 12 4 2 62 83 30 5-5-2-2 7-7-2-0 6-3-0-1 L-1Buffalo 31 13 15 1 2 74 84 29 7-8-1-0 6-7-0-2 5-4-0-1 W-2Carolina 30 12 14 3 1 74 92 28 6-6-2-1 6-8-1-0 5-4-1-0 W-2Toronto 28 10 13 1 4 64 76 25 5-5-1-2 5-8-0-2 5-4-0-1 W-2Columbus 32 11 18 2 1 75 95 25 4-8-2-1 7-10-0-0 3-4-2-1 L-4

WESTERN CONFERENCECENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OTL SL GF GA Pts Home Away Last 10 StrkDallas 30 22 6 1 1 102 79 46 11-3-0-0 11-3-1-1 6-2-1-1 L-1Chicago 31 17 10 4 0 85 75 38 12-3-1-0 5-7-3-0 6-2-2-0 W-2St. Louis 31 17 10 3 1 78 75 38 9-6-2-0 8-4-1-1 4-4-1-1 L-1

PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OTL SL GF GA Pts Home Away Last 10 StrkLos Angeles 30 19 9 1 1 78 66 40 11-5-0-0 8-4-1-1 7-1-1-1 L-2Arizona 30 14 14 2 0 81 95 30 7-4-1-0 7-10-1-0 4-5-1-0 L-1Edmonton 31 14 15 2 0 85 92 30 9-5-1-0 5-10-1-0 7-2-1-0 W-6

WILD CARDMinnesota 28 15 7 6 0 73 66 36 10-3-1-0 5-4-5-0 5-2-3-0 W-1Nashville 30 15 10 4 1 80 79 35 9-4-1-1 6-6-3-0 4-4-2-0 L-1

Winnipeg 30 14 14 1 1 82 91 30 8-4-1-0 6-10-0-1 5-5-0-0 L-1Vancouver 31 11 12 7 1 79 86 30 5-6-3-0 6-6-4-1 3-5-1-1 L-1San Jose 29 14 14 1 0 75 78 29 4-9-0-0 10-5-1-0 3-6-1-0 L-6Colorado 31 14 16 1 0 85 88 29 4-7-1-0 10-9-0-0 6-4-0-0 W-2Calgary 29 13 14 1 1 78 103 28 10-5-0-0 3-9-1-1 7-2-1-0 W-5Anaheim 29 11 13 4 1 56 73 27 8-5-3-1 3-8-1-0 5-4-1-0 L-1

NHL

Note: winning team is credited with two points and a victory in the W column; a team losing in overtime or shootout receives one point which is registered in the respective OTL or SOL column.

Buffalo 2 Detroit 1Edmonton 3 Boston 2 (OT)Ottawa 5 Los Angeles 3Tampa Bay 2 Columbus 1Washington 4 Pittsburgh 1

Chicago 4 Vancouver 0Colorado 3 St. Louis 1N.Y. Islanders 4 New Jersey 0

Edmonton at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.

Florida at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.New Jersey at Buffalo, 7 p.m.Carolina at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.San Jose at Montreal, 7:30 p.m.Tampa Bay at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.Vancouver at Minnesota, 8 p.m.Calgary at Nashville, 8 p.m.St. Louis at Winnipeg, 8 p.m.Columbus at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.Colorado at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.

Ottawa at Washington, 7 p.m.Pittsburgh at Boston, 8 p.m.

HOCKEY NFL SOCCER NBAEASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBCleveland 15 7 .682 —Chicago 14 8 .636 1Toronto 16 10 .615 1Indiana 14 9 .609 11/2Charlotte 14 9 .609 11/2Miami 14 9 .609 11/2Boston 14 10 .583 2Orlando 13 11 .542 3Detroit 14 12 .538 3Atlanta 14 12 .538 3New York 11 14 .440 51/2Washington 10 13 .435 51/2Milwaukee 10 15 .400 61/2Brooklyn 7 17 .292 9Philadelphia 1 25 .038 16

WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBGolden State 24 1 .960 —San Antonio 21 5 .808 31/2Oklahoma City 16 8 .667 71/2L.A. Clippers 15 10 .600 9Dallas 14 11 .560 10Memphis 14 12 .538 101/2Houston 12 13 .480 12Utah 10 13 .435 13Phoenix 11 15 .423 131/2Portland 11 15 .423 131/2Denver 10 14 .417 131/2Minnesota 9 14 .391 14Sacramento 9 15 .375 141/2New Orleans 6 18 .250 171/2L.A. Lakers 3 21 .125 201/2

Chicago 115 Philadelphia 96Dallas 104 Phoenix 94Denver 114 Houston 108Indiana 106 Toronto 90L.A. Clippers 105 Detroit 103 (OT)Memphis 112 Washington 95Miami 100 Atlanta 88Orlando 105 Brooklyn 82Portland 105 New Orleans 101San Antonio 118 Utah 81

Miami 100 Memphis 97Oklahoma City 104 Utah 98 (OT)Phoenix 108 Minnesota 101Toronto 96 Philadelphia 76

Cleveland at Boston, 7:30 p.m.Denver at Minnesota, 8 p.m.Houston at Sacramento, 10 p.m.Milwaukee at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

Dallas at Indiana, 7 p.m.Charlotte at Orlando, 7 p.m.Miami at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m.Boston at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.Minnesota at New York, 7:30 p.m.Memphis at Chicago, 8 p.m.Portland at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.Philadelphia at Atlanta, 8 p.m.Washington at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.New Orleans at Utah, 9 p.m.Phoenix at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.Milwaukee at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.

WHLWESTERN CONFERENCEB.C. DIVISION GP W L OL SL GF GA PtKelowna 31 23 7 1 0 122 90 47Victoria 32 20 10 1 1 110 73 42Pr. George 31 19 10 1 1 104 89 40Kamloops 28 14 10 3 1 105 92 32Vancouver 33 10 19 2 2 94 120 24

U.S. DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtSeattle 30 18 10 2 0 103 87 38Everett 29 17 10 0 2 78 62 36Spokane 31 16 12 2 1 104 104 35Portland 30 15 15 0 0 103 96 30Tri-City 31 12 18 1 0 93 118 25

EASTERN CONFERENCEEAST DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtBrandon 32 19 10 1 2 120 90 41Pr. Albert 31 18 10 2 1 96 94 39Moose Jaw 31 16 10 4 1 112 101 37Regina 32 15 13 2 2 97 107 34Saskatoon 30 11 16 3 0 87 124 25Swift Current 31 10 17 3 1 74 96 24

CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PtCalgary 35 21 12 1 1 116 108 44Red Deer 32 21 11 0 0 117 92 42Lethbridge 31 20 11 0 0 127 95 40Edmonton 33 13 17 3 0 92 111 29Medicine Hat 31 10 18 2 1 99 126 23Kootenay 33 6 25 2 0 62 140 14

No Games Scheduled.

Calgary 5 Red Deer 2Medicine Hat 5 Edmonton 4Saskatoon 2 Regina 1 (SO)Vancouver 4 Victoria 2

Kamloops at Regina, 6 p.m.Kelowna at Swift Current, 6 p.m.Lethbridge at Prince Albert, 6 p.m.Medicine Hat at Edmonton, 7 p.m.Red Deer at Kootenay, 7 p.m.Prince George at Seattle, 8:05 p.m.Portland at Tri-City, 8:05 p.m.

Kamloops at Brandon, 6 p.m.Kelowna at Moose Jaw, 6 p.m.Lethbridge at Saskatoon, 6:05 p.m.Victoria at Vancouver, 8 p.m.Everett at Spokane, 8:05 p.m.

No Games Scheduled.

BCHLISLAND DIVISION GP W L T OTL GF GA PtNanaimo 34 22 11 0 1 137 110 45Powell River 31 18 12 0 1 111 84 37Cowichan 33 16 12 2 3 116 148 37Victoria 36 13 19 0 4 93 109 30Alberni Valley 33 13 17 2 1 97 123 29

MAINLAND DIVISION GP W L T OTL GF GA PtChilliwack 32 22 6 1 3 133 74 48Wenatchee 34 20 9 3 2 116 78 45Langley 32 18 13 1 0 123 102 37Coquitlam 34 14 15 1 4 107 135 33Pr. George 34 8 24 0 2 79 150 18Surrey 33 5 27 1 0 82 167 11

INTERIOR DIVISION GP W L T OTL GF GA PtPenticton 33 29 3 1 0 142 68 59Salmon Arm 32 20 8 2 2 134 89 44W.Kelowna 34 19 13 0 2 133 125 40Vernon 35 15 18 0 2 147 114 32Trail 33 15 18 0 0 97 132 30Merritt 35 10 23 0 2 118 157 22

Alberni Valley 4 Trail 2

Chilliwack 5 Merritt 2Surrey 3 Langley 3Trail 7 Cowichan Valley 3West Kelowna 5 Victoria 3

Penticton at Vernon, 7 p.m.

Cowichan Valley at , 7 p.m.Vernon at Trail, 7:30 p.m.

Victoria at Alberni Valley, 7 p.m.

Cowichan Valley at Alberni Valley, 7 p.m.Surrey at Coquitlam, 7 p.m.Prince George at , 7 p.m.Merritt at Vernon, 7 p.m.Penticton at West Kelowna, 7 p.m.Chilliwack at Wenatchee, 7:05 p.m.Powell River at Langley, 7:15 p.m.Salmon Arm at Trail, 7:30 p.m.

AMERICAN CONFERENCEEAST W L T Pct PF PAx-New England 11 2 0 .846 402 253N.Y. Jets 8 5 0 .615 325 256Buffalo 6 7 0 .462 316 301Miami 5 8 0 .385 264 331

NORTHCincinnati 10 3 0 .769 354 229Pittsburgh 8 5 0 .615 344 260Baltimore 4 9 0 .308 278 326Cleveland 3 10 0 .231 240 357

SOUTHIndianapolis 6 7 0 .462 275 356Houston 6 7 0 .462 259 291Jacksonville 5 8 0 .385 326 357Tennessee 3 10 0 .231 253 326

WESTDenver 10 3 0 .769 281 225Kansas City 8 5 0 .615 331 243Oakland 6 7 0 .462 299 326San Diego 3 10 0 .231 250 334

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEAST W L T Pct PF PAWashington 6 7 0 .462 281 307Philadelphia 6 7 0 .462 301 322N.Y. Giants 6 7 0 .462 338 320Dallas 4 9 0 .308 230 305

NORTHGreen Bay 9 4 0 .692 317 245Minnesota 8 5 0 .615 258 255Chicago 5 8 0 .385 272 314Detroit 4 9 0 .308 267 336

SOUTHy-Carolina 13 0 0 1.000 411 243Tampa Bay 6 7 0 .462 288 322Atlanta 6 7 0 .462 279 295New Orleans 5 8 0 .385 323 397

WESTx-Arizona 11 2 0 .846 405 252Seattle 8 5 0 .615 340 235St. Louis 5 8 0 .385 210 271San Francisco 4 9 0 .308 188 315x - clinched playoff berth; y - clinched division

WEEK 14

N.Y. Giants 31 Miami 24

Carolina 38 Atlanta 0Cleveland 24 San Francisco 10Green Bay 28 Dallas 7Jacksonville 51 Indianapolis 16Kansas City 10 San Diego 3New England 27 Houston 6New Orleans 24 Tampa Bay 17N.Y. Jets 30 Tennessee 8Oakland 15 Denver 12Philadelphia 23 Buffalo 20Pittsburgh 33 Cincinnati 20Seattle 35 Baltimore 6St. Louis 21 Detroit 14Washington 24 Chicago 21

Arizona 23 Minnesota 20WEEK 15

Tampa Bay at St. Louis, 8:25 p.m.

N.Y. Jets at Dallas, 8:25 p.m.

Atlanta at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.Buffalo at Washington, 1 p.m.Tennessee at New England, 1 p.m.Kansas City at Baltimore, 1 p.m.Carolina at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.Houston at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.Chicago at Minnesota, 1 p.m.Green Bay at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.Cleveland at Seattle, 4:05 p.m.Cincinnati at San Francisco, 4:25 p.m.Miami at San Diego, 4:25 p.m.Denver at Pittsburgh, 4:25 p.m.Arizona at Philadelphia, 8:30 p.m.

Detroit at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m.

PASSESQuarterbacks who have thrown 250 or

more NFL touchdown passes (x-active):1. x-Peyton Manning 5392. Brett Favre 5083. x-Tom Brady 4254. x-Drew Brees 4215. Dan Marino 4206. Fran Tarkenton 3427. John Elway 3008. Warren Moon 2919. Johnny Unitas 29010. x-Eli Manning 28311. x-Philip Rivers 275

1. Edmonton, Eberle 7 (Gryba, David-son) 8:292. Edmonton, Nugent-Hopkins 8 (Eberle, Nikitin) 13:58

— Rinaldo Bos, Hendricks

4:47, McQuaid Bos (hooking) 15:33, Hall Edm (boarding) 15:58, Seidenberg Bos (holding) 19:21.

3. Boston, Beleskey 4 (Krejci, Chara) 13:29

— Letestu Edm (tripping) 19:50.

4. Boston, Marchand 15 (Ferraro, Bergeron) 15:22

— Marchand Bos (hooking) 2:23.

5. Edmonton, Sekera 3 (Eberle, Nugent-Hopkins) 0:41

— None.

Edmonton 12 3 7 2—24Boston 11 18 20 0—49

— Edmonton: Talbot (W, 4-8-1). Boston: Gustavsson (L, 5-2-1). Power

— Edmonton: 0-3; Boston: 0-3.Attendance — 17,565 at Boston, Mass.

No Scoring. — Savard Clb (holding) 1:21,

1. Tampa Bay, Marchessault 3, 11:112. Columbus, Dubinsky 5 (Calvert, Foligno) 16:46

— Garrison TB (holding) 2:10.

3. Tampa Bay, Boyle 8 (Killorn) 6:13 (sh) — Callahan TB (hooking)

5:51, Columbus bench (too many men) 14:14.

Shots oTampa Bay 10 13 6—29Columbus 7 7 12—26

— Tampa Bay: Bishop (W, 13-9-2). Columbus: Korpisalo (L, 0-1-0). Power

— Tampa Bay: 0-2; Columbus: 0-2.Attendance — 12,494 at Columbus, Ohio.

1. Washington, Backstrom 10 (Oshie, Alzner) 3:532. Washington, Carlson 5 (Chimera, Beagle) 7:043. Pittsburgh, Malkin 14 (Lovejoy, Kes-sel) 13:59

— Oshie Wash (interference) 16:04, Dumoulin Pgh (unsportsmanlike conduct) 18:56.

No Scoring. — Cole Pgh (holding) 7:53,

17:25.

4. Washington, Oshie 9 (Backstrom) 8:505. Washington, Oshie 10 (Backstrom, Carlson) 19:11 (pp)

— Laich Wash (hooking) 6:28, Maatta Pgh (hooking) 17:50, Malkin Pgh (tripping) 18:37.

Washington 10 14 10—34Pittsburgh 15 16 14—45

— Washington: Holtby (W, 19-4-1). Pittsburgh: Fleury (L, 13-10-2). Power

— Washington: 1-4; Pittsburgh: 0-2.Attendance — 18,520 at Pittsburgh, Pa.

1. Los Angeles, McBain 2 (Carter, Lucic) 14:21

— Los Angeles bench (too many men) 5:10, Kopitar LA (tripping) 14:41.

2. Ottawa, Hoffman 16 (Zibanejad) 2:293. Ottawa, Turris 13 (Karlsson, Stone) 3:584. Ottawa, Karlsson 7 (Zibanejad) 6:03.5. Ottawa, Hoffman 17 (Lazar) 14:346. Los Angeles, Toffoli 12 (Martinez, Quick) 17:47 (pp)

— Wiercioch Ott (tripping) 8:07, Wiercioch Ott (hooking) 17:20, Gaborik LA (tripping) 18:28.

7. Los Angeles, Muzzin 4 (Lucic, Kopitar) 10:008. Ottawa, Zibanejad 5 (Ryan, Hoffman) 12:11

— Lazar Ott (tripping) 4:40, Doughty LA (slashing) 19:05.

Los Angeles 10 12 14—36Ottawa 6 8 7—21

— Los Angeles: Quick (L, 16-8-1). Ottawa: Anderson (W, 14-9-3). Power

— Los Angeles: 1-3; Ottawa: 0-4.Attendance — 17,829 at Ottawa.

No Scoring. — Zetterberg Det (hooking)

3:30, Gorges Buf (hooking) 8:44, Smith Det (high-sticking) 19:59.

1. Detroit, Richards 2 (Datsyuk, Helm) 4:01

— Tatar Det (holding) 18:29.

-lainen) 15:463. Buffalo, Larsson 1 (Weber) 16:47

Buffalo 9 9 12—30Detroit 6 13 14—33

— Buffalo: Johnson (W, 8-9-1). Detroit: Mrazek (L, 9-5-3). Power

— Buffalo: 0-3; Detroit: 0-2.Attendance — 20,027 at Detroit.

G A PtKane, Chi 19 27 46Benn, Dal 20 20 40Seguin, Dal 15 25 40Hall, Edm 14 20 34D. Sedin, Vcr 13 20 33Karlsson, Ott 6 26 32Gaudreau, Cal 12 19 31Cammalleri, NJ 11 19 30Klingberg, Dal 5 25 30Tarasenko, StL 18 11 29H. Sedin, Vcr 9 20 29Panarin, Chi 9 20 29Giroux, Pha 11 17 28Wheeler, Wpg 10 18 28Kuznetsov, Wash 9 19 28Ryan, Ott 9 19 28Krejci, Bos 9 19 28Bergeron, Bos 9 19 28Duchene, Col 15 12 27

ENGLANDPREMIER LEAGUELeicester City 16 10 5 1 34 22 35Arsenal 16 10 3 3 29 13 33Manchester City 16 10 2 4 32 17 32Manchester United 16 8 5 3 21 12 29Tottenham 16 6 8 2 26 14 26Crystal Palace 16 8 2 6 21 15 26Watford 16 7 4 5 18 16 25West Ham 16 6 6 4 25 21 24Liverpool 16 6 6 4 20 19 24Everton 16 5 8 3 29 21 23Stoke 16 6 5 5 13 14 23Southampton 16 5 6 5 21 19 21West Brom 16 5 5 6 16 21 20Bournemouth 16 4 4 8 20 31 16Newcastle 16 4 4 8 18 31 16Chelsea 16 4 3 9 18 26 15Swansea 16 3 5 8 15 24 14Norwich 16 3 5 8 18 28 14Sunderland 16 3 3 10 17 30 12Aston Villa 16 1 3 12 13 30 6

Leicester City 2 Chelsea 1

Aston Villa 0 Arsenal 2Liverpool 2 West Brom 2Tottenham 1 Newcastle 2

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIPBlackburn 0 Nottingham Forest 0

FRANCE

Nancy 1 Valenciennes 0

GERMANY

Arminia Bielefeld 0 St. Pauli 0

Rot-Weiss Erfurt 0 Magdeburg 2

GREECESUPER LEAGUELevadiakos 0 PAOK Thessaloniki 0

ITALYSERIE ALazio 1 Sampdoria 1

SERIE BNovara 4 Trapani 1

PORTUGALLA LIGAAcademica de Coimbra 4 Belenenses 3MOVES

BASKETBALLThe top 25 teams in The Associated

through Dec. 13, total points based on

one point for a 25th-place vote and previ-ous ranking):

1. Michigan St. (64) 11-0 1,621 12. Kansas (1) 8-1 1,499 23. Oklahoma 7-0 1,409 74. Kentucky 9-1 1,385 55. Iowa St. 9-0 1,370 46. Maryland 9-1 1,353 67. Duke 8-1 1,271 88. Virginia 8-1 1,132 109. Purdue 11-0 1,082 1110. Xavier 10-0 1,062 1211. North Carolina 7-2 1,023 312. Villanova 8-1 865 913. Arizona 9-1 860 1314. Providence 10-1 724 1515. Miami 8-1 622 1716. Baylor 7-1 605 1617. Butler 8-1 562 1818. SMU 7-0 560 1919. Louisville 7-1 534 2220. West Virginia 8-1 466 1421. G. Washington 9-1 256 —22. UCLA 7-3 213 —23. Cincinnati 8-2 197 2324. Texas A&M 8-2 152 —25. UConn 6-3 47 —

Gonzaga 44, South Carolina 42, Oregon 37, Colorado 21, Vanderbilt 18, Wichita St. 17, Dayton 14, UALR 14, Pittsburgh 12, Georgetown 8, Utah 7, Notre Dame 4, Texas 4, Iowa 3, Northwestern 3, Syracuse 3, Army 1, Florida 1, Houston 1, Marquette 1.

1. Jordan Spieth USA 11.852. Jason Day AUS 11.293. Rory McIlroy NIR 11.194. Bubba Watson USA 8.265. Henrik Stenson SWE 7.576. Rickie Fowler USA 7.387. Justin Rose ENG 7.248. Dustin Johnson USA 6.349. Jim Furyk USA 5.8710. Patrick Reed USA 4.7611. Sergio Garcia ESP 4.6712. Adam Scott AUS 4.6113. Zach Johnson USA 4.5014. Branden Grace SAF 4.2315. Hideki Matsuyama JPN 4.1616. Brooks Koepka USA 4.1117. Louis Oosthuizen SAF 4.0318. Kevin Kisner USA 4.0319. Danny Willett ENG 3.9320. Matt Kuchar USA 3.8421. Shane Lowry IRL 3.6522. Paul Casey ENG 3.5723. Kevin Na USA 3.5724. J.B. Holmes USA 3.5325. Jimmy Walker USA 3.4527. Martin Kaymer GER 3.3926. Marc Leishman AUS 3.3732. Byeong-Hun An KOR 3.1928. Thongchai Jaidee THA 3.1930. Russell Knox SCO 3.0831. Bernd Wiesberger AUT 3.0532. Phil Mickelson USA 3.0133. Victor Dubuisson FRA 3.00

GOLFNHLLEAGUE OFFICE — Suspended Anaheim F Nate Thompson three games an illegal check to the head of Carolina D Justin Faulk.CAROLINA — Assigned D Michal Jordan to Charlotte (AHL) for conditioning.

— Recalled Fs Gemel Smith and Cole Ully from Idaho (ECHL) to Texas (AHL).

— Assigned F Zach Nastasiuk from Grand Rapids (AHL) to Toledo (ECHL).TAMPA BAY — Recalled Fs Joel Vermin and Yanni Gourde from Syracuse (AHL).

MLBAMERICAN LEAGUESEATTLE — Agreed to terms with RHP Steve Cishek on a two-year contract.TEXAS — Claimed 1B Andy Wilkins off waivers from Seattle.

CFL — Named Jason Maas

coach.WINNIPEG — Signed OL Jace Daniels to a two-year contract extension.

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 201524 SPORTS

NFL

Beckham breaks late tie, Giants beat Dolphins 31-24STEVEN WINE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI — With the score tied in the fourth quarter, Odell Beckham Jr. somehow slipped 5 yards behind the secondary.

That turned out to be the winning margin for the New York Giants.

Beckham’s 84-yard touchdown reception put the Giants ahead to stay with 11 minutes to go, and they forged a three-way tie atop the NFC East by beating the Miami Dolphins

31-24 on Monday night.New York’s Eli Manning went 27 for

31 for 337 yards and four scores. His passer rating of 151.5 was his highest since 2009.

The Giants (6-7) broke a three-game losing streak and are tied with the Redskins and Eagles for the lead in their woeful division.

“It’s fun to win,” coach Tom Cough-lin said. “It does keep us alive.”

The Dolphins (5-8) were math-ematically eliminated from the play-

off race, extending their post-season drought to a franchise-record seven consecutive years.

“Obviously this is not where we want to be,” quarterback Ryan Tannehill said, “but here we are.”

The Dolphins topped 20 points for the first time since October, but couldn’t keep up with Beckham, who had seven catches for 166 yards and two scores. The 100-yard game was his sixth in a row, a Giants record.

“They got it to a star player, and

he made plays for them,” Dolphins defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh said.

Beckham missed one series when he went to the locker room due to cramping, but didn’t let that slow him down. And with the score 24-all, he took advantage of broken cover-age to score the go-ahead touch-down. Cornerback Jamar Taylor and seldom-used safety Shamiel Gary were the closest defenders, but Man-ning hit Beckham in stride at mid-

field and he sprinted to the end zone for his 12th TD this year.

Safety Reshad Jones blamed the breakdown on miscommunication.

“The corner was supposed to follow up and go over the top,” Jones said, “which he didn’t.”

Beckham outplayed his close friend and former LSU teammate, Miami’s Jarvis Landry, who made 11 catches for 99 yards but was flagged for a costly personal foul penalty with his team trailing in the fourth quarter.

Page 25: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily DIVERSIONS 25TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

TUESDAY, DEC. 15

10 a.m. to noon Drop-in Science Studio at

Departure Bay Eco School is a place where

kids of all ages can explore a variety of hands-

on activities like our marble wall, keva blocks,

wind tunnel, microscopes and more! $4. 3004,

Departure Bay Rd.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 16

7 p.m. Open Mic Acoustic night with Dave

Marco, Smoke ‘n’ Water Restaurant, Pacific

Shores Resort, 1-1600 Stroulger Rd., Parksville

THURSDAY, DEC. 17

8 p.m. Schayde Dame, Cara McCandless at

the Longwood Brewpub. Live at Longwood,

free live music series every Thursday at the

Longwood brew pub. 5775 Turner Rd.

FRIDAY, DEC. 18

7 and 9 p.m. Two comedy shows at The

Laugh Lounge, 150 Skinner St., Nanaimo.

Tickets $10 at The Old City Station Pub.

SATURDAY, DEC. 19

2 p.m. Put a little country in your Christmas.

Free concert with Moonshine Mollies under

the Christmas tree in Diana Krall Plaza.

7:30 p.m. The Emperor’s New Clothes

prremiers at the Bailey Studio, 2373 Rosstown

Rd., Nanaimo, Runs through Dec. 31. Tickets

$16; New Year’s Eve, $25. For specific times,

other information: www.nanaimotheatre-

group.ca or 250-758-7224.

SUNDAY, DEC. 20

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Last Minute Shopper’s Craft

Fair. Qualicum Beach Community Hall, 644

Memorial Ave., Qualicum Beach.

MONDAY, DEC. 21

4 p.m. Halbe Hall Monday Market, 8369 North

Island Highway, Black Creek. Wide variety of

vendors of fresh produce and baked goods,

arts and crafts andan on-site chair massage.

Free event.

TUESDAY, DEC. 22

7-8:30 p.m. Winter Wonderland on Ice Teen

Skate for ages 13-18. Free event at Ocean-

side Place arena, 830 West Island Highway,

Parksville.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 23

7 p.m. Open Mic Acoustic night with Dave

Marco, every Wednesday at Smoke ‘n’ Water

Restaurant, Pacific Shores Resort, 1-1600

Stroulger Rd., Parksville

THURSDAY, DEC. 24

8 p.m. Live at Longwood, free live music series

every Thursday at the Longwood brew pub.

5775 Turner Rd., Nanaimo.

FRIDAY, DEC. 25.

Merry Christmas!

SATURDAY, DEC. 26

6-8 p.m. Saturday Music at New York Style

Pizza in Nanaimo. Once again, New York Style

dishes up their award-winning pizza and their

legendary Manhattan salad, along with Marty

Steele playing swinging jazz, blues, and classic

rock favourites on his keyboards.

FOR BETTER OR WORSE

GARFIELD

ANDY CAPP

ZITS

CROSSWORD

MOST UNUSUAL

ACROSS1 Clumsy person5 Studies hard10 Raised, as livestock14 Santa’s laugh15 New staffer16 Honolulu feast17 At a good distance18 Extraterrestrial19 “If all __ fails . . .”20 Red-in-the-middle sirloins22 Complete collections23 Flower stalks24 Garlands worn at a 16

Across26 Very bad reputation30 Computer memory

measures34 Unpaid TV ad, for short37 Dollar bill38 Washington on a dollar

bill39 English, to a Hungarian43 Turf-gripping shoes44 Anti-pollution org.45 Letter add-ons: Abbr.46 Flies like an eagle47 Stroked, as a cat50 Use a keyboard52 Narrow shelf56 Concerning59 1, 3, 5, 7, etc.63 Hint in a whodunit64 “So long, amigo!”65 Cry of dismay66 “Toodle-oo!”67 Nearby68 Adhesive on a roll69 Metal piece on a cowboy

boot70 “__ to you” (common

toast)71 Hurricane centers

DOWN1 Scorches2 Lite, on food labels3 Chicago airport4 Starting scale notes

5 Shoot the breeze6 Make angry7 Diva’s solo8 In a timid way9 Good judgment10 “Gesundheit!”11 Reign over12 Toward the sunrise13 Membership fees21 Tax form ID25 “__ to differ”27 Becomes hazy, with “up”28 Raggedy doll

29 Brawl31 Mouse catcher32 Henhouse products33 Looks at34 Sgt.’s subordinates35 Fly alone36 Vicinity38 Biting fly40 Wide grin’s width41 __-bitsy42 Well-put47 Sell from a pushcart48 Shade tree49 Argue the issues51 Hunt illegally53 Postpone54 Vineyard fruit55 Letters before tees56 Play segments57 Open-handed hit58 Ballerina’s skirt60 Designer Christian61 Tip of an airplane62 Practical applications

PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED

HAGAR HI AND LOIS

» EVENTS // EMAIL: [email protected]

Page 26: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 201526 DIVERSIONS

HarbourviewVolkswagen

www.harbourviewvw.com

CRYPTOQUOTEWORD FIND

PREVIOUS SUDOKO SOLVED

SUDOKU

ARIES (March 21-April 19) Enjoy

those around you. You could be a

bit taken aback by what goes on in

your immediate circle. People seem

to be unpredictable but full of fun.

If you can take part of the day off,

you will happily finish up your holi-

day shopping. Tonight: Out till the

wee hours.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You

are on top of your game. You are

likely to see a personal matter

in a different light because of a

situation happening around you.

Through someone else’s experi-

ence, you’ll gain a new insight. Take

the lead in an important project.

Tonight: Some late-night shopping.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Reach

out to someone at a distance. How

you feel and the way in which you

receive this person’s news could

be rather important. Detach before

making any snap judgments. Your

ingenuity is likely to prove to be a

solution-finder. Tonight: Expect to

be greeted warmly.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) One-

on-one relating will prove to be

quite effective. You might hear so

much news all at once that you

are likely to feel overwhelmed.

Your creativity bubbles up when

dealing with a child, love interest or

a creative project. Tonight: Throw

yourself into the moment.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Defer to

others, and be direct in how you

deal with them. When you are able

to detach, you will be surprised

by how you view the big picture.

You could have too much energy

for your own good. Try to be as

productive as possible. Tonight: Go

along with a friend’s ideas.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You

understand a lot more than you

might want others to know. Focus

on what an associate or loved one

is doing. Be direct in how you han-

dle a money issue. You will need to

rein in any impulsive desires you

have right now. Tonight: Take a

break from your routine.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You

might be a lot more forceful

than you realize. You could push

someone to his or her limit, or vice

versa. Deal with anger before you

say something you might regret.

Usually you are quite dynamic, but

not necessarily right now. Tonight:

Wrap up some holiday errands.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You

might not be aware that you’re

sitting on some anger. Be more

in touch with your feelings, and

try to address them sooner. The

unexpected occurs around a per-

sonal or domestic matter. Don’t

worry so much about a certain

situation. Tonight: Order in. Make

it easy.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

Don’t hold back as much as you

have been. Enjoy your immediate

circle of friends. A loved one might

give you an earful once you start

to chat. Maintain an unbiased per-

spective, and don’t take any com-

ments personally. Tonight: Meet

a friend and buy a new item or two.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Tap

into your financial knowledge. Your

intuition will tell you what way to

go if you are questioning which dir-

ection to head in. A boss or some-

one you look up to seems to be in

a bad mood. Maintain a positive

outlook, even if he or she cannot.

Tonight: Treat yourself now.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

Your energy soars, especially after

someone you care about compli-

ments you. You might feel as if you

are on top of what you must do. A

surprising event or invitation could

be quite fun to be involved with.

You like unpredictability. Tonight:

As you like it.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Know

that you need to say less and be

a good listener. Use caution with

your finances, as you easily could

make an error. Someone you

look up to will offer you so many

options that you might not be sure

which way to turn. Stay in touch

with your feelings. Tonight: Not to

be found.

YOUR BIRTHDAY(Dec. 15) This

year you will gain through com-

munication. A neighbor or relative

could play a significant role in your

year. You will experience moments

of sudden insight revolving around

a loved one. You will broaden your

immediate circle of friends, and this

expansion will serve you well. If you

are single, you most likely will meet

someone through work or through

a friend. This relationship will be

very special. If you are attached,

you’ll need to keep your significant

other in the loop, or else he or she

will feel left out. Your romantic life

will be unpredictable but exciting.

BORN TODAY Actor Don Johnson

(1949), architect Gustave Eiffel

(1832), actor Adam Brody (1979)

HOROSCOPEby Jacqueline Bigar

BABY BLUES

BC

BLONDIE

The Canadian dollar traded Monday

afternoon at 72.79 cents US, up 0.02 of a cent

of a cent from Friday’s close. The Pound Ster-

ling was worth $2.0794, down 1.30 cents while

the Euro was worth $1.5089, down 0.13 of a centt.

Canadian Dollar

Barrel of oil

$36.31

+$0.69

Dow Jones

17,368.50,

+103.29

NASDAQ

4,952.23

+18.76

S&P/TSX

12,695.49

-94.46

SOLUTION: SPORTING PLEASURE

Page 27: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

NARSF Programs has a 34 hr/wk opening

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www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily CLASSIFIEDS/SPORTS 27TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

TENNIS

Serena Williams is magazine’s 2015 Sportsperson of YearTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Serena Williams is Sports Illustrated’s Sportsperson of the Year — the first female athlete honoured on her own by the maga-zine in more than 30 years.

Williams came within two match-es of tennis’ first calendar-year Grand Slam since 1988, a bid that ended with a semifinal loss at the U.S. Open.

In all, the 34-year-old American went 53-3 during 2015 with five titles, including at the Australian Open, French Open and Wimble-don. Williams was No. 1 in the WTA rankings all season.

“She was the most deserving person for the award. She had an amazing year. The way she won her events; the fact that she’s done this for so many years at such a high level,” said Paul Fichtenbaum, editor of the Sports Illustrated Group. “She was a ter-rific candidate in a year of terrific candidates.”

The cover photo of Williams — in high heels, sitting on a throne — was “her idea, intended ... to express her own ideal of femininity, strength, power,” managing editor Christian Stone wrote on SI.com.

Monday’s announcement marks a switch to the formal name of the SI award; past recipients were touted as Sportsman or Sportswoman of the Year.

“We just felt this was a natural evolution . . . We’re not making a

huge deal out of it,” Fichtenbaum said. “It just feels like the right time to make the change.”

Runner Mary Decker in 1983 was the last female athlete to earn the magazine’s award by herself.

The U.S. women’s national soccer team was picked by SI in 1999; speedskater Bonnie Blair in 1994 and gymnast Mary Lou Retton in 1984 were co-honorees with male Olympians. In 2011, Tennessee women’s basketball coach Pat Summitt shared the award with Duke men’s coach Mike Krzyzewski.

“Men’s sports has dominated until recently, when women’s sports has grown in popularity, and the competition is better than ever,” Fichtenbaum said. “There’s more of a focus on women’s sports now. It’s grown considerably. Spe-cifically why? I’m not sure.”

Other tennis players honoured by SI were Arthur Ashe in 1992, Chris Evert in 1976, Billie Jean King in 1972.

WILLIAMS

Page 28: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 201528 SPORTS

SOCCER

As aura fades, Man U. will fear global brand is damaged along with poor resultsROB HARRIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Manchester United is increasingly being viewed as a successful commercial machine with a football club

tagged on. It’s not only injured club captain Wayne Rooney who is fading as a force, the whole club is losing its aura too.

The fear within the United board-room will be if the lucrative global brand erodes as a result of the foot-ball produced by Louis van Gaal’s team which is currently unappealing to the Premier League’s worldwide audience.

It might not be Van Gaal’s team for much longer if the level of dis-content in the stands at Old Trafford remains so vocal.

The 64-year-old Dutchman is doing little to offer a glimmer of hope with downbeat public comments that are being increasingly ridiculed by supporters, who are allowed to air grievances on the in-house television channel.

“I want to manage the expecta-tion,” said the manager of a club which became so accustomed to glory under Alex Ferguson, when accepting anything but the best was off the agenda.

“It is not as easy as everybody thinks.”

For the record 20-time champion of English football, this was far from the bravado displayed by United when they are flogging the club to Wall Street investors or any company willing to pay millions of pounds to cover their products with Red Devils branding.

The logo was once a hallmark of success but United has already stut-tered through two seasons without a trophy in the post-Ferguson era: First under David Moyes and subse-quently Van Gaal.

United appears to have lost the air of supremacy regained during Fer-guson’s 26-year reign.

Who fears United now? Not even Bournemouth, the newest member of the elite.

A first-ever league match against the southern seaside club ended with United being embarrassed 2-1 on Saturday. This was an opponent that was playing in the fourth tier only seven years ago and docked 17 points for its financial mess.

It wasn’t even a case of plucky Bournemouth snatching a freak vic-

tory. The Cherries deserved all three points. A draw would have flattered United.

“Who scores the winning goal shall win,” a defiant Van Gaal said after the latest loss when injuries were blamed for losing to a team with perhaps the most debilitating collection of side-lined players in the top flight.

The world’s second wealthiest team should never have been in a position where it had to give both full backs their full Premier League debuts in the match.

As $3 billion United has struggled for goals the strikers discarded by Van Gaal have being showing just how lethal they can be: Summer sale Javier Hernandez has 15 in 12 games for Bayer Leverkusen and James Wilson has scored twice in his three games since joining Brighton

on loan. Bournemouth was not even the only humiliation of the week. It followed a Champions League hum-bling at Wolfsburg and the ignominy of instead being in Monday’s second-ary draw for the knockout round for the second-tier Europa League.

It will seem even more painful in February when Manchester City is playing in the Champions League and United is in the backwaters of Thursday night continental competi-tion. Steadily as well, City is catching its more illustrious neighbour off the field. Although its manager’s position seems no more secure than Van Gaal’s — Bayern Munich coach Pep Guardiola is being talked about as replacing Manuel Pellegrini’s incon-sistent title-challengers for next season — the club seems calmer and more stable.

Internationally, City is also catch-ing up with United by adopting a more innovative approach. United generated almost $600 million in 2014-15 as its commercial operation continues to add to its global array of

sponsorships. But City is only $70 million behind and expanding globally in a more innovative way with partner clubs in Australia, the United States and Japan and now Chinese investors taking a 13 per cent stake in the Abu Dhabi-owned club.

United vice chairman Ed Wood-ward, the public voice of the owning Glazer family, has remained silent all season just when the fans seek answers about the future of the team and his often-haphazard handling of transfers and botched deals.

United is far from being in full crisis mode. The team remains fourth in the Premier League with the best defensive record. But too often, Van Gaal’s priority seems to be avoiding defeat.

Goalless draws aren’t why compan-ies are so keen to associate them-selves with United. The squad assem-bled by Van Gaal and Woodward just lacks the flair and experience displayed by United’s salesmen in scoring so many sponsorships.

Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal, left, and assistant manager Ryan Giggs, look across the pitch before a match

between Bournemouth and Manchester United in Bournemouth, England on Saturday. [AP PHOTO]

“It is not as easy as everybody thinks.“

Louis van Gaal, manager

Barcelona, Arsenal to meet again GRAHAM DUNBAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NYON, Switzerland — The Cham-pions League draw produced some familiar pairings Monday with defending champion Barcelona facingArsenal and Paris Saint-Germain again taking on Chelsea.

Barcelona eliminated Arsenal in the 2010 quarterfinals and in the round of 16 in 2011, and beat the English club in the 2006 final.

Arsenal will host the five-time champions on Feb. 23 after advancingto the knockout round for the 16th straight season. The Gunners will be hoping to end a five-year losing streakat the round-of-16 stage.

French champion PSG and Chelsea will be meeting for the third consecu-tive season in the knockout phase. Chelsea won in the quarterfinals in 2014 but PSG advanced from the round of 16 last season.

PSG, which set a competition rec-ord conceding only one goal in its group, could be the favourite against Chelsea for the first time.

“This is the third year we play against Chelsea so it has become some kind of a ‘clasico’ for us,” PSG president Nasser Al-Khelaifi said.

“We will be ready.”Also, five-time champion Bayern

Munich will play away first against 2015 runner-up Juventus, while rec-ord 10-time champion Real Madrid will face Roma.

Bayern beat the Italian champion Juventus in the quarterfinals when it last won the trophy three seasons ago

“We might have hoped to be luckier in this draw but I like our team in Europe so far,” Juventus vice-presi-dent Pavel Nedved said.

Still, there was one fresh look in theeight pairings as the two newcomers to the knockout rounds were drawn together: Gent will host Wolfsburg first in Belgium.

“It appears doable, without taking the rival lightly,” Wolfsburg manag-ing director Klaus Allofs said.

Also, it was: PSV Eindhoven vs. Atletico Madrid; Dynamo Kyiv vs. Manchester City; and Benfica vs. Zenit St. Petersburg.

City’s first leg in Kyiv will be played in an empty stadium because Dynamohas been sanctioned by UEFA for racist incidents involving fans.

The first legs will be played on Feb. 16-17 and 23-24, with the second legsscheduled for March 8-9 and 15-16.

AL-KHEKAIFI

’Betrayed’ and ’ashamed’ Mourinho turns on Chelsea playersTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LEICESTER, England — Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho turned on his players after the team’s latest loss in its dreadful Premier League title defence, saying Monday he felt “betrayed” and accusing them of not trying their best.

“If I was a player, I’d be giving a lot more,” Mourinho said after a 2-1 loss to surprise leader Leicester that left

Chelsea one point off the relegation zone after 16 games. Chelsea, which won the Premier League by eight points and with three games to spare last season, has lost nine games so far and is 20 points off the lead.

“All last season I did a phenomenal work and I brought them to a level that is not their level, it is more than they really are,” said Mourinho, who appeared at a loss to explain Chel-sea’s regression.

“I feel my work was betrayed,” he added as he criticized the defending for Leicester’s goals.

Asked if Chelsea can still qualify for the Champions League, Mourinho said: “We can’t finish top four, but we can still finish top six because so many teams are dropping points. But at the moment we’re in a zone where I feel ashamed.”

Even before the Leicester loss, Mourinho acknowledged he is in

the toughest spell of his managerial career.

“The only thing I can say is that I want to be the manager,” Mourinho said. “I have no doubts and I think you know me well enough to know that I am not afraid of a big chal-lenge and in this moment it is a real-ly big challenge.

“I want to stay and I hope (Chelsea owner) Mr. (Roman) Abramovich and the board want me to stay.”

Page 29: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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Nancy Reagan, wife of Ronald Reagan, former President of the United States, sent a direct, simple

message to those who were tempted to take illegal drugs.

Her advice was “Just say ‘no.’” So what has this message to do

with the ongoing controversy about assisted death in Canada and the United States?

Quebec, a Roman Catholic prov-ince, has always been ahead of the rest of Canada in social change. Now it appears that it won’t be too long before Quebec will be the first prov-ince to allow assisted death. But for the rest of Canada, those opposed to it will use every legal measure to defeat this procedure. So is there any way that the two opposing forces, for and against assisted death, can ever be resolved?

The main argument used by those who vociferously oppose assisted death is that the slippery slope theory will prevail. Namely, that the infirm, elderly and those approaching death, who do not want their lives to be terminated, will have no say in the decision and be forced to have a leth-al injection.

How could this scenario be pre-vented? Albert Einstein remarked that, “Explanations should be as simple as possible, but no simpler.” So can this continuing dilemma be made simpler?

Surely it doesn’t take someone trained in bioethics, a psychologist or a spiritual leader to make this prob-lem simpler. If there is one ounce of common sense left in this country the only logical answer is the “NO” or “YES” solution.

Let’s assume that an individual is 100 per cent against assisted death and wants to be assured it will never happen to him. Surely there are enough lawyers who feel the same way who could draft a binding legal document.

It would state that under no cir-cumstance could assisted death be used when an individual had signed such a document.

In other words, a legal document that leaves no “ifs” “ands” or “buts” in the decision.

If this legal document still failed to appease fears, a simple hand or neck bracelet could be worn, similar to the “Do Not Resuscitate” one, stating they refused assisted death.

So what about those who feel it is their right, and no one else’s right, to decide how they wish to end their lives. Here again a legal document could be made available which allows a signature on the dotted line and no “ifs” “ands” or “buts.”

I believe Albert Einstein would agree this approach is simple, but not too simple. Politicians, doctors and religious organizations would not be able to deny the “YES” right to those who request it.

So will this happen? Probably not! As sure as night follows day the gov-ernment will continue to waste mil-lions of dollars on endless committee hearings. The money could be better spent on medical care.

Are Einstein and this medical journalist wrong to expect a simple answer? In effect, those opposed to assisted death don’t want a simple answer or any answer. In the end assisted death is a religious issue claiming it cannot be condoned for anyone under any circumstances.

If that is the case those of us who wish to end our lives with the help of a physician are denied. And desperate people will continue to choose the alternative, suicide.

This is a tragic situation that no family should have to face.

As I’m a member of “Dignitas,” lethal injection is available to me in Switzerland if I ever need it.

But in a democratic society, what about those who cannot afford the one-way ticket?

It is unconscionable that assisted death should even be an issue when a simple “NO” or “YES” would suffice. Unfortunately, common sense has become an uncommon commodity in North American society and this continues to prolong the agony of the dying.

It is also unconscionable that the organization “Dying with Dignity” has lost its charitable status which makes its operation more difficult.

For comments go to: [email protected].

Dr. W. Gifford-Jones

The Doctor Game

A ‘yes’ or ‘no’ should suffi ce in fi nal decision

AGING

Advanced age does not have to limit treatmentLINDSEY TANNER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO — Irwin Weiner felt so good after heart surgery a few weeks before turning 90 that he stopped for a pastrami sandwich on the way home from the hospital. Dorothy Lipkin danced after getting a new hip at age 91. And at 94, William Gandin drives himself to the hospital for can-cer treatments.

Jimmy Carter isn’t the only nona-genarian to withstand rigorous medical treatment. Very old age is no longer an automatic barrier for aggressive therapies, from cancer care like the former president has received, to major heart procedures, joint replacements and even some organ transplants.

In many cases, the nation’s most senior citizens are getting the same treatments given to people their grandchildren’s age — but with dif-ferent goals.

“Many elderly patients don’t necessarily want a lot of years, what they want is quality of life,” said Dr. Clifford Kavinsky, a heart specialist at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago. “They want whatever time is left for them to be high quality. They don’t want to be dependent on their family. They don’t want to end up in a nursing home.”

Treatment for Carter, 91, has included surgery, radiation and a new cancer drug with fewer side effects than traditional chemother-apy. It seems to be working — Carter announced Dec. 6 that brain scans show no signs of the melanoma that was found in August.

The nation’s 90-and-up popula-tion, about 2 million people, nearly tripled in recent decades, and the pace is expected to continue. Many are struggling with more than one age-related illness that make them poor candidates for aggressive and often costly care. But plenty remain robust enough to give it a try.

Some 90-year-olds are fitter than some 60-year-olds but they say other considerations need to be in the mix.

At MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, the oldest patients are evaluated by geriatricians — special-ists in medical care of the elderly —

to make sure they’re able to tolerate harsh treatments. Physical and men-tal health are assessed; so is social support — whether there are family members or friends available to help during treatment and recovery.

“We do believe that cancer care should not be limited by age,” said Dr. Beatrice Edwards.

While many elderly patients are healthy enough to tolerate conven-tional treatments, advances includ-ing more targeted, less toxic drugs and minimally invasive surgery techniques are opening the door to others.

Dr. Joseph Lamelas, Weiner’s sur-geon at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach, Florida, used a new-er approach, implanting a new valve through a small incision on the right side of the chest.

After four days in the hospital last January, Weiner was back home in Boca Raton, Fla., and was well enough to have two big 90th birthday celebrations less than a month later.

Organ transplants are less com-mon but not unheard of in the very old. Since 2013, there have been more than 100 kidney transplants in patients aged at least 80, including one in an 88-year-old, according to the United Network for Organ Shar-ing. Its records show that since 1987, the nation’s oldest kidney transplant recipient was a 96-year-old.

There are generally no strict age limits on transplants. Dr. Dorry Segev, a Johns Hopkins Medicine transplant specialist, said frailty is a more important factor and his centre measures it rigorously, including assessing patients’ grip strength, walking speed and muscle mass.

Ethical issues complicate decisions on providing treatments costing tens of thousands of dollars to the very old and life expectancy has to be con-sidered, Kavinsky said.

“When you start doing procedures on a 90-year old, you have someone who has already exceeded the aver-age lifespan in America,” he said. “How far should we go to keep them going?”

Dr. Joseph Dearani, chairman of cardiac surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, said a good gauge is whether treatment would likely help patients live well for at least another two years.

Aortic valve surgery patient Irwin Weiner, 90, and partner Lauree Gableat at

their home in Boca Raton, Fla., on Friday. Very old age is no longer an automatic

barrier for aggressive therapies. [AP PHOTO]

“We do believe that cancer care should not be limited by age.”

Beatrice Edwards, MD

Page 30: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

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Celebrate Th e Season Without Digestive Problems

Have you heard the saying “you are what you eat?” What we should be saying is we are what we digest. Even if we are making every eff ort to eat high quality foods, our bodies must be able to break down, absorb, and assimilate these foods. An estimated 40% of the population have some type of digestive issue. Many factors contribute to this decline including poor food choices, poor food preparation, toxins, and aging. Poor digestion can start with symptoms of heartburn, indigestion and fatigue, and lead to long-term diseases such as arthritis, diabetes, fi bromyalgia and irritable bowel syndrome.A pH balanced diet aids in digestion and also general well being. We should aim for our meals to be composed of 80% alkaline foods and 20% acid forming foods. Meats and carbohydrates are acid forming, while fruits and vegetables are alkalizing. Start with adding a fresh green salad and at least one steamed vegetable to your current regime. Choose organic fruits and vegetables whenever possible. Th ey do not carry the toxins and pesticides that are hard to break down by the liver. It is still important to use a veggie wash solution to rinse off product, even with organic choices, to remove parasites. Choose meat and dairy products without steroids and antibiotics.Natural enzymes are destroyed by 116 degrees or more of heat. Meats, grains, and processed foods are all prepared at far higher levels. Without the enzymes in food, our digestive organs must work much harder to break down and absorb foods. Raw foods are an important aspect of your diet as not only do they have their enzymes intact, but also have a high water content to keep us hydrated. Do not boil vegetables. Instead, steam or stir-fry wherever possible to leave some fi rmness. In addiction, this will keep enzymes and nutrients intact.Smaller meals on a more frequent basis are helpful for digestion as the stomach only produces so many enzymes to help break down your meals. Make sure you chew your food suffi ciently, and give your body ample time to digest. Drinking water throughout the day is always recommended but try to limit liquids at mealtime as it dilutes enzymes and can cause indigestion.If your diet is fairly healthy but you are still having symptoms, taking a digestive enzyme with meals can be very helpful. Choose a full spectrum enzyme that breaks down proteins, starches, and fats with larger meals. Probiotics are also important for gut health. Since most ailments begin in the gut, it only makes sense to make sure your fi rst line of defense is working optimally. Pick a probiotic that has strains for both upper and lower intestines. Th is will support digestion and absorption of nutrients and regulate your bowels as well. Apple cider vinegar is also helpful for pH balancing your system and increasing digestion. Drink 15ml prior to meals to help indigestion, gas and bloating.Yours in Good Health,Samaya HolmesRegistered Holistic Nutrionist

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 201530 DIVERSIONS/ENTERTAINMENT

Debt counselling for ‘Ray’ may be helpful for him

Dear Annie: A group of us have been friends for more than 40 years. We graduated from high school together, but while the rest of us went to college, started careers and settled down with families, “Ray” was smoking pot, partying and working paycheck to paycheck in an entry-level job. He was so wrapped up in “doing his own thing” that it never occurred to him to have a relationship.

Now we are nearing retirement age. The rest of us are able to take time to travel, pursue our interests and spend time with our families. Ray is still living hand to mouth. And every time we get together or see his Facebook page, he is grip-ing about how hard his life is and how much he envies us.

We’d like to point him toward services that might be able to help him a little bit and show him how to make a realistic budget. The services have to be free, though, because Ray won’t take “charity”

from the rest of us, and if he has to pay for anything, he won’t be able to afford it. There’s no guarantee he’d take advantage of even a free referral, but we are tired of hearing him carrying on about the life that, after all, he chose for himself.

Do you know of any free resour-ces that could rescue someone who’s always been clueless about money?

— Ray’s FriendsDear Friends: It’s romantic to

“live for the moment,” but that doesn’t mean you cannot also plan for your future. You undoubted-ly know that, even with outside assistance, Ray might not change his ways. It would require an entirely new mindset, and that takes effort that he seems unwill-ing to make. You can look into Debtors Anonymous at debtorsan-onymous.org, or get information on local credit counselling through the Federal Trade Commission at consumer.ftc.gov. (Search “choos-ing a credit counsellor.”)

Dear Annie: I am responding to the letter from “W.,” whose neigh-bour constantly complains about the noise from her townhouse, even though she’s not doing any-thing particularly noisy.

The neighbours living in the condo below me used to phone and yell at me for practically any noise.

They complained about the way I walked in my home even though I went barefoot most of the time to assuage them. They went to bed at 8:30 p.m. and expected me to shut down then, as well.

They spoke to an attorney who told them I wasn’t breaking any noise ordinances, but they still called incessantly to complain and were sometimes verbally abusive. So I spoke to my own lawyer. He suggested that I ignore them, but I told him I was being harassed, bul-lied and verbally abused and that I was not going to put up with it. If they were that sensitive, then they should have not moved into a con-do with neighbours living above them. The lawyer and I resolved it by presenting them with his busi-ness card and informing them that any future complaints were to be directed to him. If they complained directly to me, it would lead to a lawsuit for harassment.

— N.C.Dear N.C.: Threatening to sue

someone is always an option in this country, although we think it should be a last resort. Too many people think it is the first step.

Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Cre-ators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

Kathy Mitchell & Marcy SugarAnnie’s Mailbox

◆ BOSTON

Cosby fi res back at women suing him for defamation

Bill Cosby is firing back at seven women who are suing him for defam-ation, accusing them of making false accusations of sexual misconduct for financial gain.

Cosby filed counterclaims in federal court Monday, alleging the women

made “malicious, opportunistic, and false and defamatory accusations” of sexual misconduct against him. Cosby is seeking unspecified monetary damages.

In his counterclaim, Cosby says the women have “engaged in a campaign to assassinate” his reputation and charac-ter. He says their campaign is “nothing more than an opportunistic attempt to extract financial gain from him.”

— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Deal gives Bell customers Netfl ix accessTHE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Bell’s Fibe TV sub-scribers will now be able to access Netflix through their set-top box.

Bell has been aggressively mar-keting its Internet-protocol TV ser-

vice in Ontario and Quebec as an alternative to a cable subscription since its launch in 2010.

The Netflix app joins Bell’s own video-on-demand streaming ser-vice, CraveTV, which launched in December 2014.

Netflix has disrupted the trad-itional TV subscription business model by offering thousands of hours of existing movies and TV shows as well as original content for as low as $7.99 a month for its basic plans.

Page 31: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

money for Emma’s rehab, under the title “Emma Salisbury: Dance Again.”

As of this week, the donations total more than $24,000, with dollars still coming in two months after the campaign first took off.

Emma is the first patient in Western Canada to use the MyndMove technology, which was developed by MyndTec Inc. of Mississauga, Ontario.

At the clinic in Kitsilano, therapist Lynn Dawson was trained to use the device six months ago.

“She’s done really well because she came here with absolutely no movement in her left arm and now there is some movement, without any stimu-lation at all” Dawson said. “It’s been a way to allow Emma to access these muscles again, to give them a kickstart.”

It’s all part of the goal to get Emma dancing again.“The thing about Emma is she’s a very hard worker

and a focused girl, really determined in everything she sets her mind to,” said Laura Choroszewski, a board member with the Royal City dance company.

“She had a goal to be a dancer and I believe that she will succeed.”

@NanaimoDaily

www.nanaimodailynews.com

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12 nanaimodailynews.com@NanaimoDaily

AMANDA LEE MYERS

AND JUSTIN PRITCHARD

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — At

least two heavily armed attackers

opened fire on a banquet at a social

services centre for the disabled

Wednesday, killing 14 people and

seriously wounding more than a

dozen others in a precision assault

that looked “as if they were on a

mission,” authorities said.

Hours later, police hunting for

the killers riddled a black SUV

with gunfire in a shootout three

kilometres from the late-morning

carnage, and a man and woman

with assault rifles, handguns and

“assault-style clothing” were killed,

San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod

Burguan said.A third person who was spotted

running near the gunbattle was

detained, but Burguan said it was

unclear if that person had anything

to do with the crime.

It was the nation’s deadliest mass

shooting since the attack at a

school in Newtown, Connecticut,

three years ago that left 26 chil-

dren and adults dead.

Police shed no light on the

motive for the massacre, but David

Bowdich, assistant director of

the FBI’s Los Angeles office, said

the bureau is looking at several

possibilities, including workplace

violence and terrorism. He did not

elaborate.The attackers invaded the Inland

Regional Center and began shoot-

ing around 11 a.m.

They opened fire in a con-

ference area that the San Ber-

nardino County Department of

Public Health had rented out

for a banquet, said Marybeth

Feild, president and CEO of the

non-profitcentre.

Police spokeswoman Sgt. Vicki

Cervantes said witnesses reported

seeing one to three gunmen.

“They came prepared to do what

they did, as if they were on a mis-

sion,” the police chief said.

Burguan said that someone had

left the county employees’ event

after “there was some type of dis-

pute,” but investigators were not

sure whether that had anything to

do with the subsequent massacre

in the Southern California city of

214,000 people about 100 kilo-

metres outside Los Angeles.

Authorities also found a potential

explosive device at the social ser-

vice centre.As gunfire echoed through the

large three-building complex, sev-

eral people locked themselves in

their offices, desperately waiting to

be rescued by police. Some texted

their loved ones or telephoned

them and whispered to them what

was going on.

Ten of the wounded were hos-

pitalized in critical condition, and

three were in serious condition,

Fire Chief Tom Hannemann said.

FBI agents and other law enforce-

ment authorities converged on the

centre and searched room to room

for the attackers, but they had

apparently escaped.

One witness, Glenn Willwerth,

who runs a business across the

street, said he heard 10 to 15 shots

and then saw an SUV with blacked-

out windows pull out “very calmly,

very slowly” and drive off.

Triage units were set up out-

side the centre, and people were

wheeled away on stretchers.

Others walked quickly from a

building with their hands up so

that police could search them and

make sure the attackers weren’t

trying to slip out.

Stores, office buildings and at

least one school were locked down

in the city, and roads blocked off.

About four hours later, with

police looking for a dark SUV,

officers staking out a home in

the nearby city of Redlands saw a

vehicle matching that description.

They tried to pull it over, the SUV

crashed, and a gun battle broke out

around 3 p.m., authorities said.

One officer suffered a minor injury.

President Barack Obama was

briefed on the attack by his home-

land security adviser. He said it

was too early to know the shooters’

motives but urged the country to

take steps to reduce mass shoot-

ings, including stricter gun laws

and stronger background checks.

Attack at centre for the disabled kills 14, injures many moreAuthorities search an area on Wednesday following a shooting that killed multiple people at a social services centre

for the disabled in San Bernardino, Calif. [JAMES QUIGG/THE VICTOR VALLEY DAILY PRESS VIA AP]

“They came

prepared to do what

they did, as if they

were on a mission.”

Jarrod Burguan,

San Bernardino police chief

Ottawa declares fi sh habitat at site

of proposed coal mine in Alberta

THE CANADIAN PRESS

The federal government has declared

dozens of streams and rivers in a scen-

ic section of southwestern Alberta as

critical habitat for an endangered trout

species.Wednesday’s announcement was

welcomed by environmentalists, but it

might complicate plans for a mountain-

top coal mine proposed for the area.

The Alberta Wilderness Association

immediately said it would drop a lawsuit

against Ottawa that sought to force

the federal government to issue the

order. Under law, critical habitat for

native cutthroat trout was supposed to

have been declared more than a year

ago under the previous Conservative

government.“We’re happy that we likely do not

have to follow through with it,” said

Brittany Verbeek, the association’s con-

servation director.

CALIFORNIA ATTACK

Shooters appeared

to be ‘on a mission’

Buy a Gift of Knowledge for Yourself or Someone You Love.

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PUBLISHED SINCE 1874

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Subscribe to the Daily News today! 250-729-4248Draw date is Wednesday, Dec. 23rd, 2015

m

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also receive a $25 Gift Card to

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entered to win a beautiful cultured pearl necklace fromSkin La

Dr. Dan Marwood is part of the profess

Laser Clinic. He brings with him a backgrou

well as his expertise as an ER Physician. An

provides fl awless, professional and virtually paifl

derm injections.

Botox is used to treat many age related symptoms suc

and crows feet around the eyes, bunny lines around the

neck and smoker’s lines around the mouth.

Juvederm filler replenishes volume to help smooth wrinkles.fi

Common area for Juvederm are cheeks, nasalabial lines, lip lin

approach with cosmetic injectables is to start conservatively The results should be

and look natural.

Dr. Marwood also provides and supervises Sclerotherapy treatments for unsightly s

veins.

ATISSE” is a new product, which lengthens, thickens and darkens the eyelashes.

1212 nanaimodailynews.com

awa declares fish habitat afiproposed

NADIAN PR

ederof s

ion ol habs.nesdamed bt compoal min

Alberta Wilderness Assoc

rop a lawsuit

at sought to force

overnment to issue the

er law, critical habitat for

utthroat trout was supposed to

en declared more than a year

der the previous Conservative

ment.e happy that we likely do not

follow through with it,” said

Verbeek, the association’s con

rector.

drop a law

@Nanai

North AMANDA LEE MYERS

AND JUSTIN PRITCHARD

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — At

least two heavily armed attackers

opened fire on a banquet at a social

services centre for the disabled

Wednesday, killing 14 people and

seriously wounding more than a

dozen others in a precision assault

that looked “as if they were on a

mission,” authorities said.

Hours later, police hunting for

the killers riddled a black SUV

with gunfire in a shootout three

kilometres from the late-morning

carnage, and a man and woman

with assault rifles, handguns and

“assault-style clothing” were killed,

San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod

Burguan said.A third person who was spotted

running near the gunbattle was

detained, but Burguan said it was

unclear if that person had anything

to do with the crime.

It was the nation’s deadliest mass

shooting since the attack at a

school in Newtown, Connecticut,

three years ago that left 26 chil-

dren and adults dead.

Police shed no light on the

motive for the massacre, but David

Bowdich, assistant director of

the FBI’s Los Angeles office, said

the bureau is looking at several

possibilities, including workplace

violence and terrorism. He did not

elaborate.The attackers invaded the Inland

Regional Center and began shoot-

ing around 11 a.m.

They opened fire in a con-

ference area that the San Ber-

nardino County Department of

Public Health had rented out

for a banquet, said Marybeth

Feild, president and CEO of the

non-profitcentre.

Police spokeswoman Sgt. Vicki

Cervantes said witnesses reported

seeing one to three gunmen.

“They came prepared to do what

they did, as if they were on a mis-

sion,” the police chief said.

Burguan said that someone had

left the county employees’ event

after “there was some type of dis-

pute,” but investigators were not

sure whether that had anything to

do with the subsequent massacre

in the Southern California city of

214,000 people about 100 kilo-

metres outside Los Angeles.

Authorities also found a potential

explosive device at the social ser-

vice centre.As gunfire echoed through the

large three-building complex, sev-

eral people locked themselves in

their offices, desperately waiting to

be rescued by police. Some texted

their loved ones or telephoned

them and whispered to them what

was going on.

Ten of the wounded we

pitalized in critical condition, and

three were in serious condition,

Fire Chief Tom Hannemann said.

FBI agents and other law enforce-

ment authorities converged on the

centre and searched room to room

for the attackers, but they had

apparently escaped.

One witness, Glenn Willwerth,

who runs a business across the

street, said he heard 10 to 15 shots

and then saw an SUV with blacked-

out windows pull out “very calmly,

very slowly” and drive off.

Triage units were set up out-

side the centre, and people were

wheeled away on stretchers.

Others walked quickly from a

building with their hands up so

that police could search them and

make sure the attackers weren’t

trying to slip out.

Stores, office buildings and at

least one school were locked down

in the city, and roads blocked off.

About four hours later, with

police looking for a dark SUV,

officers staking out a home in

the nearby city of Redlands saw a

vehicle matching that description.

They tried to pull it over, the SUV

crashed, and a gun battle broke out

around 3 p.m., authorities said.

One officer suffered a minor injury.

President Barack Obama was

briefed on the attack by his home-

land security adviser. He said it

was too early to know the shooters’

motives but urged the country to

take steps to reduce mass shoot-

ings, including stricter gun laws

and stronger background checks.

“They came

prepared to do what

they did, as if they

were on a mission.”

Jarrod Burguan,

San Bernardino police chief

d s subtle

spider

T of the wounded were hos-Attack at centre for the disabled kills 14, injures many moreAuthorities search an area on Wednesday following a shooting that killed multiple people at a social services centre

for the disabled in San Bernardino, Calif. [JAMES QUIGG/THE VICTOR VALLEY DAILY PRESS VIA AP]

t

n-

Shooters appeared

to be ‘on a mission’Shooters

I ACTTACKA AT

NEWS | PAGE 3

Rain High 14 Low 9 CONTROVERSIAL

MAILOUT MET WITH CRITICISM

NEWS | PAGE 3NanaimoDailyNews.com

Published since 1874

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015

@NanaimoDaily

TAKING A TOLL

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www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily NEWS 31TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2015

Community helps Emma to dance againTechnology aids teen dancer get back on her feet in battle against health problems

TOM ZILLICH SURREY NOW

“It wasn’t quite the summer we had planned, let’s put it that way.”

Caitlin Salisbury sighed and looked over at her daughter Emma, whose slight smile

couldn’t hide the reality of the situation on a rainy Mon-day afternoon recently.

A wheelchair sat in a corner of the family’s Surrey home and the red-haired teen wore a plastic brace on her left shin and ankle. She has trouble moving her left arm but, thankfully, her right arm is just fine. Her legs are a work in progress, and she’s now able to walk short distances.

Nobody saw this coming last May, when the family returned home from vacation in Hawaii.

For Emma, 15, the month-long holiday was a welcome breather before another busy summer of dance classes. It was going to be another step in her journey to become a professional dancer, something the Surrey teen has dreamed about since she was a preschooler.

Emma was fine the entire time in the South Pacific, but when the family arrived home, she felt really lethar-gic — kind of like she had a case of the flu.

When random rashes started to appear on her body and the fevers got worse, it was time to visit a doctor. When the blood tests came back from the lab, the news wasn’t good, It was lupus. Sadly, the worst was yet to come.

Emma Salisbury began dancing 13 years ago, at the age of two. By the age of 11, however, she put

on her first tutu, in a manner of speaking, and, in the process, became a ballerina, something her mother had always wanted.

She spent many hours a day at Panorama School of Dance, whose travelling company was planning a trip to Disneyland. A trip to Toronto was also in Emma’s future, as she accepted a scholarship into the National Ballet School of Canada. She spent her entire Grade 8 year there, living and learning, taking that next step.

Dance classes were put on hold in June, following Emma’s lupus diagnosis. Chemotherapy treatments were due to begin shortly.

Just one week later, the situation worsened the mor-ning after she returned home from hospital.

“I was lying down on the couch in the other room,” Emma recalled. “I got a severe headache and that’s when I felt this huge elastic snap, that feeling, right on my brain.”

A blot clot had formed, leading to a stroke — some-thing rare in a teenager but apparently quite common in someone with lupus. The stroke caused left-side paralysis of Emma’s arm and leg.

The double-whammy of a lupus diagnosis and associat-ed stroke left Emma and her family reeling.

Caitlyn and her husband Derek, a firefighter and paramedic, took time off from work.

“We researched all these therapies but none of it’s cov-ered through our benefits, although she is on some great programs like the At Home program through the gov-ernment, but it doesn’t pay for anything quote-unquote unproven, anything new,” Caitlin said.

This includes MyndMove, a new, made-in-Canada form of functional electrical stimulation (FES) designed to improve purposeful movement of a client’s arm and hand. With the device’s electrodes attached, the client attempts to move an upper limb with the help of a therapist.

At the Neuromotion physio clinic in Vancouver, Emma has been receiving MyndMove treatments for the past couple of months, along with sessions on the Lokomat gait-training treadmill to help her walk again.

“We’re starting to see results,” Caitlin said optimistically.

But the treatments don’t come cheap — close to $4,000 for every 10 sessions, with a recommended 40 sessions to start with.

The significant expense is why family friend Kelly Ewing launched an online GoFundMe campaign to help raise

SURREY

Emma Salisbury lifts her left arm with the help of physiotherapist Lynn Dawson and a

device known as MyndMove at the Neuromotion rehabilitation clinic in Vancouver.

[TOM ZILLICH]

Page 32: Nanaimo Daily News, December 15, 2015

Share the Joy This Season!

#001 #002 #003 #004

#007 #008 #009 #010 #011

#006

#012

Holiday Greetings Holiday Greetings 22001155

#005

Happy 1st Christmas toAbby Noonan!Congratulations, Rick and Barbara. We wish you all a blessed holiday.Love, Auntie Kelly________________________

Merry Christmas tothe Wilson Family! Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons________________________

Happy Kwanzaa tothe Smith Family! We’re so grateful foryour friendship. Your neighbors, Jim & Sue________________________

Adam & Andrea Hayden,Wishing you a blessed and happy Hanukkah. Thanks for sharing the holidays with us!Mark & Gina Wells

Welcome Home,Wesley Carter!We’re so proud and grateful to be spending Christmas with you. Thank you for your service and for a being a wonderful son.Love, Mom & Dad________________________

Merry Christmas tothe Wilson Family! Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons________________________

To Our Good FriendEmily Andrews,We wish you all the best at Christmastime and all year!With Love FromJames, Lily, Heather & Ryan________________________

Merry Christmas tothe Wilson Family! Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons

Merry Christmas tothe Wilson Family! Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons________________________

Dear Melissa Gallagher,Thanks for bringing somuch joy to our lives. We couldn’t ask for a betteraunt and friend.XOXO, Lynne & Tim________________________

Merry Christmas,Grandma Joan!We wish we could be there to celebrate with you. Miss you and love you!Hugs & Kisses,Grace & Junior Miller________________________

Merry Christmas tothe Wilson Family! Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons

Thanks to Our Customers!Best wishes for a very happy holiday season from The Perks Coffee Team!________________________

Merry Christmas tothe Wilson Family! Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons________________________

Merry Christmas toPastor Joe Franklin!Thanks for all you give to your parishioners and this community.With gratitude and best wishes,Helen & Frank Miller________________________

Merry Christmas tothe Wilson Family! Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons

Merry Christmas,Lisa & Eddie BarclayGuess what? I’ll be “home for the holidays” soon! Can’t wait to see everyone.Love, Jenna________________________

To Gary Anders,Thank you for all that you do. You are a truly wonderful person.Merry Christmas FromNora Blake & Kurt Peters________________________

Merry Christmas tothe Wilson Family! Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons________________________

Happy 1st Christmasto Abby Noonan!Congratulations, Rick and Barbara. We wish you all a blessed holiday. Love, Auntie Kelly

NAME ______________________________________________________________________________

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Message (Maximum 25 characters per line):

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❐ ____ If you would like to add a graphic, please indicate the corresponding number here.

TOTAL COST: Option A – $15.75 Option B – $26.25

Method of payment: ❐ Cheque ❐ Visa ❐ MasterCard

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DEADLINE: Friday, December 18, 2015 at 5 pm

Holiday Greetings ORDER FORMTell your friends, neighbors and loved ones how much you care this holiday season with a personalized message in our Holiday Greetings section. This special feature will appear in print and online Tuesday, December 22, 2015.

Option A $15 plus taxup to 5 lines, no graphicSample:Merry Christmas to the Wilson Family!Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons

Customize your greeting with a holiday graphic!

Merry Christmas to the Wilson Family!Thanks for being such great neighbors and friends. We’re looking forward to more good times in 2016! Best wishes, The Hansons

Option B $25 plus taxup to 5 lines, plus graphicSample:

Ways to Place Your Ad!Place your ad online, by phone or by mail by 5 pm Friday, December 18!

1. Call Michéle 250-729-4203 Monday-Friday 9 am-5 pm to place your order by phone.

2. Mail or Drop Off completed order form with payment to the following address: Nanaimo Daily News B1 – 2575 McCullough Road, Nanaimo BC V9S 5W5

3. Email your order to [email protected]

THIS SPECIAL FEATURE WILL APPEAR IN PRINT AND ONLINE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2015

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Best wishes, The Hansons________________________

Happy Kwanzaa tothe Smith Family!We’re so grateful foryour friendship.Your neighbors, Jim

rs and friends. We’relooking forward to more goodtimes in 2016!Best wishes, The Hansons________________________

To Our Good FriendEmily Andrews,We wish you

XOXO, Lynne & Tim________________________

Merry Christmas,Grandma Joan!We wish we could be there tocelebrate with you. Miss you

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riends. We relooking forward to more goodtimes in 2016!Best wishes, The Hansons________________________

Merry Christmas toPastor Joe Franklin!

To Gary Anders,Thank you for all that you do.You are a truly wonderful person.Merry Christmas FromNora Blake & Kurt Peters________________________

Merry Chris

Tell your friends, neighbours and loved ones how much

Tell your friends, neighbours and loved ones how much

you care this holiday season with a personalized message

you care this holiday season with a personalized message

in our Holiday Greetings section. in our Holiday Greetings section.

www.nanaimodailynews.com @NanaimoDaily TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 201532