20140411_ca_london

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Austerity measures squeezing provincial nursing jobs: Union Ontario’s finance minister painted a rosy picture of nurs- ing in the province when he visited London this week, but one would be hard-pressed to find many in the industry who agree. In the past six weeks, lay- offs were announced at St. Joseph’s Hospital and London Health Sciences Centre said it would be cutting hours equiva- lent to 27 full-time nurses. The situation is similar elsewhere in Ontario, industry insiders said. Meanwhile, the union representing Ontario nurses is battling with the government over a proposed wage cut for new hires. It paints a gloomy picture for those graduating and about to enter the workforce. “For nurses and especially newly graduated nurses, On- tario really doesn’t have the welcome mat out,” said On- tario Nurses’ Association vice- president Vicki McKenna. The government has promised there will be more jobs offered to registered nurs- es in community settings as hospital spots trickle out, but McKenna says that’s more of a pipe dream than anything. “Quite frankly, those jobs in the community tend to be part-time and casual and not well paid,” she said. Doris Grinspun, CEO of the Registered Nurses’ As- sociation of Ontario, agreed that the pickings are slim, adding she’s been in contact with Health Minister Deb Mat- thews about the challenges. A decreasing number of registered nurses directly im- pacts patients, she said. “It’s extremely shortsight- ed when the government is saying hospitals should be ... attending to very ill people with complex care needs.” While graduating nurses are guaranteed six months of work under a government initiative, not everyone is able to keep the jobs permanently. Jobs may be hard to come by now, but the industry is cyclical and Grinspun is cer- tain there will be a rebound. SCOTT TAYLOR/METRO Gloomy picture. ‘For newly graduated nurses, Ontario really doesn’t have the welcome mat out,’ says nurses’ association prez ‘This comes as ... (a) terrible shock’: PM News that former finance minister Jim Flaherty has died rocks the House of Commons PAGE 10 NEWS WORTH SHARING. At a glance Between January and September 2013 alone, more than 1,100 front- line registered nursing positions were cut in Ontario, the Ontario Nurses’ Association says. A Canadian Institute for Health Information re- port from October shows the province has the country’s second-lowest ratio of registered nurses to population. The worst ratio is in B.C. FUTURE OF IMMIGRATION IN OUR NATION DAY 5 OF METRO’S LOOK AT IMMIGRATION: STEMMING THE GLOBAL POPULATION EXPLOSION MIGHT HURT CANADA PAGE 8 USE METRO AR TO WATCH A CLIP FROM THE FEATURE Picking heart over head on Draft Day ... unlike Moneyball, the Reel Guys say. Use Metro AR to watch a clip from this football drama PAGE 17 IT’S LEMON AID Students from Western University’s Ivey business school were fanned out across London on Thursday to serve up smiles and a bit of refreshment as they put their money-making know-how toward a good cause. Story on page 5. SCOTT TAYLOR/METRO LONDON WEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 NEWS WORTH SHARING. metronews.ca | twitter.com/themetrolondon | facebook.com/themetrolondon $ 15 MILLION Tonight’s Jackpot

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Transcript of 20140411_ca_london

Page 1: 20140411_ca_london

Austerity measures squeezing provincial nursing jobs: Union

Ontario’s finance minister painted a rosy picture of nurs-ing in the province when he visited London this week, but one would be hard-pressed to find many in the industry who agree.

In the past six weeks, lay-

offs were announced at St. Joseph’s Hospital and London Health Sciences Centre said it would be cutting hours equiva-lent to 27 full-time nurses. The situation is similar elsewhere in Ontario, industry insiders said. Meanwhile, the union representing Ontario nurses is battling with the government over a proposed wage cut for new hires.

It paints a gloomy picture for those graduating and about to enter the workforce.

“For nurses and especially newly graduated nurses, On-tario really doesn’t have the welcome mat out,” said On-

tario Nurses’ Association vice-president Vicki McKenna.

The government has promised there will be more jobs offered to registered nurs-es in community settings as hospital spots trickle out, but McKenna says that’s more of a pipe dream than anything.

“Quite frankly, those jobs in the community tend to be part-time and casual and not well paid,” she said.

Doris Grinspun, CEO of the Registered Nurses’ As-sociation of Ontario, agreed that the pickings are slim, adding she’s been in contact with Health Minister Deb Mat-

thews about the challenges.A decreasing number of

registered nurses directly im-pacts patients, she said.

“It’s extremely shortsight-ed when the government is saying hospitals should be ... attending to very ill people with complex care needs.”

While graduating nurses are guaranteed six months of work under a government initiative, not everyone is able to keep the jobs permanently.

Jobs may be hard to come by now, but the industry is cyclical and Grinspun is cer-tain there will be a rebound.SCOTT TAYLOR/METRO

Gloomy picture. ‘For newly graduated nurses, Ontario really doesn’t have the welcome mat out,’ says nurses’ association prez

‘This comes as ... (a) terrible shock’: PMNews that former fi nance minister Jim Flaherty has died rocks the House of Commons PAGE 10

NEWS WORTH SHARING.

At a glance

• Between January and September 2013 alone, more than 1,100 front-line registered nursing positions were cut in Ontario, the Ontario Nurses’ Association says.

• A Canadian Institute for Health Information re-port from October shows the province has the country’s second-lowest ratio of registered nurses to population. The worst ratio is in B.C.

FUTURE OF IMMIGRATION IN OUR NATIONDAY 5 OF METRO’S LOOK AT IMMIGRATION: STEMMING THE GLOBAL POPULATION EXPLOSION MIGHT HURT CANADA PAGE 8

FUTURE OF IMMIGRATION

DAY 5 OF METRO’S LOOK AT

USE METRO AR TOWATCH A CLIP FROM THE FEATURE

Picking heart over head on Draft Day ... unlike Moneyball, the Reel Guys say. Use Metro AR to

watch a clip from this football drama PAGE 17

IT’S LEMON AIDStudents from Western University’s Ivey business school were fanned out across London on Thursday to serve up smiles and a bit of refreshment as they put their money-making know-how toward a good cause. Story on page 5. SCOTT TAYLOR/METRO

LONDONWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014

NEWS WORTH SHARING.

metronews.ca | twitter.com/themetrolondon | facebook.com/themetrolondon

$1515MILLIONTonight’s Jackpot

Page 2: 20140411_ca_london

R7

Ad Number: QKR_BAR_P168924Publication(s): Metro

This ad prepared by: SGL Communications • 2 Bloor St. West, Toronto, Ontario • phone 416.413.7495 • fax 416.944.7883 File Location: SGL_N-Z:Volumes:SGL_N-Z:Pepsi QTG_SNP:QUAKER:P42794-QuakerQuinoa:QKR_BAR_P168924.indd

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03metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 NEWS

NEW

SGoing our way? Running the 1B Kipps Lane bus to campus is part of the King’s University College group’s request. MIKE DONACHIE/METRO

LTC invites students to board meeting

Come and talk to us, stu-dents campaigning for bus service have been told.

Social work program stu-dents at King’s University

College are forming a group to lead a call for LTC service on their campus.

Right now, there’s just a shuttle bus service to West-ern University’s main cam-pus and the campaigners say it creates a hardship for students with mobility prob-lems.

They also say people are unable to stay late in the li-brary, sometimes miss parts of classes and don’t feel safe walking through streets after dark to reach city bus routes.

They want the 1B Kipps Lane bus to be rerouted to the King’s campus and are open to paying more for

their student passes.Now, Coun. Joni Baechler,

who’s a member of the Lon-don Transit Commission, has

invited the group to present their requests to a board meeting.

“I’m not a transit techni-cian in terms of optimization of system, but I think that if there is something we can do that might meet the needs of transit from a fiscal perspec-tive and meet the needs of the students, then I think as a board member I’d be will-ing to listen,” said Baechler.

“They should ask for dele-gation status at the transit commission and come with a presentation to us.”

She added: “If we can find a way to make it better, I’m certainly open to this.”

King’s University College. Councillor says she’s happy to listen to those campaigning for more bus service

Student reaction

An invitation to speak to an LTC board meeting is “fan-tastic,” campaigner David Stanley said.

• “I’m excited for the opportunity to have our concerns validated and heard at the appropriate levels,” he said.

City’s future

ReThink London enters fi nal phase“Did we hit the right notes?”

That’s what city planner John Fleming is prepared to ask Londoners as Re-Think London — the mas-sive exercise in mapping the city’s future and get-

ting input from across the board — nears completion.

Next week, city councillors will see the timetable for the last

part of a process that began in 2011, with the public engagement happening in earnest since last August.

“This plan clearly represents the desires of Londoners that we heard through the process,” Flem-ing said.

“It was the largest and most exhaustive engage-ment process for an official plan in London’s history and one of the largest and most exhaustive in Canada.”

It’s the first full-scale review of planning and development in London since 1989, and it will be presented in completed form to council in May.

But the public consul-tation won’t end there, because Londoners will be invited to take a look at the finished document and make more comments.

There will be a public participation meeting in June.

The initiative also in-cludes an advanced website with interactive maps where people can post comments.MIKE DONACHIE/METRO

[email protected]

John FlemingCONTRIBUTED

Page 4: 20140411_ca_london

04 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014NEWS

Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto contest Members of the robotics team at H.B. Beal Secondary School are busy getting ready for their big chance to shine. The Beal Raider Robotics 5024 team, which has about 25 students, won the Rookie All Star award at the First Robotics competition at the University of Windsor and that’s sending them to St. Louis, Mo., for the world championship April 23-26. On Thursday, the students were making team buttons, pictured here, to swap with other competitors. They’re having a fundraising car wash at the school from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. From left are Serene Abu-Sardanah, Jackson Lovell and Angela Lee. Mike Donachie/MetRo

The business community has spoken, and Mayor Joe Fontana says he’s listening.

The outcome of November’s big roundtable discussion at the Mayor’s Economic Pros-perity Council (MEPC), which brought together more than 100 private-sector leaders, has been made public.

Among its detailed messa-ges to the city is a simple one: Listen to us. The council, in a report released Thursday, calls for a new city hall commit-tee to give business a voice. It would be known as the eco-nomic action committee, re-porting directly to the council-lors on city hall’s investment

and economic prosperity com-mittee. Fontana said he’s all for the idea.

“I’m going to be pushing for it,” he said. “We’ve got commit-tees for all sorts, cycling and so on, so why not one that will

augment London’s economic development strategy?”

The MEPC conclusions have been put together by co-chairs John Winston, of Tourism Lon-don, and Marilyn Sinclair, of TechAlliance. They also talk of MEPC representatives from dif-ferent sectors meeting twice a year for “critical assessment of the identified projects.”

There’s also a renewed call for an enterprise centre — a specialized business incubator — and Fontana’s in favour of that, too.

“I continue to believe that we need an enterprise centre, to showcase everything the city has to offer,” he said.

The MEPC also heard related requests for advisory services, collaboration opportunities, a mentorship network and bet-ter links between the private sector and the city’s post-sec-ondary education institutions.

And Fontana’s favourite part of the MEPC process is it called for a “green light” in-stead of “red tape” for business.

“That phrase speaks vol-umes,” he said.

Welcome to city hall?

There could be a fresh welcome mat rolled out for businesses and others on the renovated first floor of city hall, council members will hear next week.

• Thecity’sputtingtogethera$180,000upgradetothefaceofthebuilding,underthebannerServiceLondon.

• Monday’sstrategicprior-itiesandpolicycommitteemeetingwilllookattheplan,whichincludesaspotforaplanningdepart-mentstaffmemberandforotherservices,includ-ingpetlicences.

Biz makes its demands — and mayor agreesEconomic prosperity. Fontana will push for new advisory committee and enterprise centre

MikE [email protected]

Page 5: 20140411_ca_london

05metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 NEWS

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There was a mighty wind, but that didn’t stop Ivey School of Business students from push-ing lemonade sales at what seemed to be almost every cor-ner of the city Wednesday and Thursday.

They were using the tried-and-true moneymaker for the annual Hunter Straker and Ivey Give LemonAid fundrais-er. Proceeds go to the United

Way’s Innovation Fund.In all, 601 students divided

into 80 teams were armed with only $50 in seed money, a cardboard lemonade stand they had to make themselves, a pitcher and a set of markers.

They then set out to raise as much money as possible in 48 hours. The attention they got spanned the globe with Jamai-can sprinter Usain Bolt tweet-

ing his support for a team.Brigitte McIntyre, a first-

year Ivey student, was on Western University’s campus Thursday with fellow business students spreading the gospel of the lemon. “It’s windy, but it’s nice weather,” she said. “So we’re doing a good job so far.”

Last year, the students raised $108,013 for the United Way. Scott taylor/Metro

Fundraiser. turning lemons into aid

London Food Bank co-executive director Glen Pearson issued a call Thursday for a solution to ending poverty and hunger that doesn’t involve food banks. Scott taylor/Metro

Food bank not answer to poverty: agency leader

The food bank model is broken, a key figure at the London Food Bank says.

The idea behind it is out-dated, and what was a tempor-ary stopgap measure when it began 27 years ago is no longer the answer to ending hunger in London an impassioned Glen Pearson said Thursday.

Pearson, the food bank’s co-founder, kicked off the 27th an-nual Spring Food Drive with a call to arms for the community to band together and find solu-tions to poverty at the grass-roots level.

Part of that solution could mean closing the agency three years from now. “There was al-ways this tenacious belief that

when this recession is over, gov-ernments will come back, busi-nesses will come back, employ-ment will begin to rise again and people will be able to make their own way,” Pearson said before a crowd of students at King’s University College. “And at the end of that recession in the ‘80s, it did not happen.”

Pearson described the 1990s as great times, but rather than the number of people using the food bank decreasing, they held steady or rose. Since then, the numbers have spiked.

“I ask you, what is tempor-ary about that?” Pearson said.

Pearson said the newly mint-ed London Poverty Research Centre will take the issue on with the goal of returning in time for the Thanksgiving Food Drive with a new model to feed and sustain families that need help.

He also was adamant that while the timeline to close the food bank is three years, it won’t go anywhere if there are still hungry families with nowhere to turn. The closure

would not affect partner agen-cies that receive supplies from the food bank.

“The answer isn’t in Ottawa, the answer isn’t in Queen’s Park, the answer isn’t even in city council,” Pearson said. “The answer is in us, defending the right for the human family to have dignity and to live.”

Changes. London organization will close if new model found

Scott [email protected]

At a glance

The 27th Annual Spring Food Drive

• Friday-April21. People are being asked to fill bags with food and drop them off at fire stations and grocery stores.

• Lastyear. The London Food Bank distributed 37,856 kilograms of food to 20 social agencies and networks as a result of the drive. More than $2.5 million worth of food was donated last year.

Page 6: 20140411_ca_london

06 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014NEWS

Traffic detours coming. Threat of rain to delay Wharncliffe Road closureRain forecast for this weekend has forced the city to postpone emergency repairs at Wharn-cliffe Road and Riverside Drive.

The intersection was ex-pected to close Sunday into Monday morning as crews re-paired a storm sewer. The work has now been pushed back to May 4 and 5.

When the closure rolls around, city officials are advis-

ing drivers to avoid the inter-section all together.

Eastbound Riverside Drive traffic will be detoured north at Woodward Avenue to Oxford Street.

Westbound traffic on River-side will only be able to turn right at the intersection. The same will be true for drivers headed north and south on Wharncliffe. meTRo

Ontario’s governing Liberals are promising to provide lim-ited coverage of infertility ser-vices to more women who are struggling to get pregnant.

They say they plan to help would-be parents pay for one cycle of in vitro fertilization for all forms of infertility starting early next year.

But the province won’t cover the costs of drugs and other services associated with IVF, which can cost thousands of dollars.

Health Minister Deb Mat-thews wouldn’t say exactly how much of the IVF costs will be covered, but estimates On-tario will pay out $50 million annually once the program is fully implemented.

She says the government hasn’t decided yet whether it will offset the costs through a tax credit or through the On-tario Health Insurance Plan.

The Liberals made an elec-

tion promise in 2007 to make fertility monitoring available earlier in life and make treat-ment “more accessible and af-fordable.”

Thursday’s announcement by the minority Liberals comes ahead of their spring budget, which would lead to an elec-tion if defeated by the oppos-ition parties. The Canadian PRess

in vitro. ontario promises help for infertile women

Deb Matthews TorsTar News service

Budget shortfall

CBC cancels plan for London radio stationPlans to launch a CBC radio station in London have been killed as the Crown corporation makes cuts to meet a massive budget shortfall.

The broadcaster will “maintain its presence and news-gathering capabilities” in regions like London but “planned expansions have been cancelled,” according to a statement.

The CBC has previously said the London plans were on hold and that they fit into the company’s “2015 strategy” for growth. meTRo

More coverage on page 14

335 events in 2013

LCC gave local economy $15.5M boost: ReportHow much is the London Convention Centre worth to the local economy?

A whopping $15.5 mil-lion, according to the facil-ity’s 2013 annual report.

People who come to the centre for events spend, on average, $301 a day on accommodations, transportation, food, drinks and shopping, the report says.

Adding up all the years, convention centre events have meant $107.6 mil-lion for the economy, the report says.

The centre hosted 335 events in 2013 alone. meTRo

From left, Amanda Hickey, with a Matthew Trueman work titled Eight; Monica Lindenfield with her own piece, Up With Gravity; Silvia Langer with an untitled work by Izzeldinn Kojour; and Jeremy Jeresky with A Horse As A Horse Is A Horse Of Course by Nancy Gray. Mike DoNachie/MeTro

Sometimes art can change — or save — a life.

“I was an addict right from nine years old,” artist Monica Lindenfield said. “It just snowballed from there,

where I had to have that big-ger, better high.

“But when I discovered painting, I could kind of put that part of my life into paint-ing and get away from myself.

“It gave me a safe out.”It’s a powerful story,

brought to the fore by Up With Art, the mélange of arts and culture happening at the Palace Theatre on Saturday.

It will raise money for Unity Project, a program that offers shelter and housing support to those in need.

The organization helped Lindenfield during her tough time, and she’s among the

artists who have a combined 85 works of art on sale in Up With Art.

Lindenfield uses a style she calls “drop gravity.” She drops and throws paint at the canvas to create abstract works.

And she’s talented, said Jeremy Jeresky, whose New School of Colour art centre gives free training and sup-port to Unity Project clients.

“I would say she has an innate and yet provocative sense of colour,” he said.

a brighter picture for the homelessUp With Art. Fundraiser to support Unity project’s work

Four key parts of Up With art

Up With Art

It starts at 6:30 p.m. Satur-day at the Palace Theatre (710 Dundas St.), and includes music, film, poetry and performances.

• Visitupwithart.caformoredetails.

MikE [email protected]

1keep your bids quietThe silent auction in-cludes 30 works donated by 13 collectors, plus items by renowned local artists and pieces created by youth, Unity Project residents and people experiencing poverty. 3

Recognition for inspiration

Each year, the event honours someone with the My Life In Colour Award. The winner, according to the organ-izers, will be “special, artful, influential and inspirational.”2

Win some prizesA raffle includes a quilt created by the Unity Project’s Chuck Lazenby, and a Tom Benner draw-ing. There are door prizes, too, including a painting by Jeremy Jeresky. 4

The ambitious targetUp With Art, it is hoped, will raise $75,000 to sup-port the Unity Project’s Life Skills program. It helps vulnerable people with health and well-ness issues, improves employment skills and more.

Page 7: 20140411_ca_london

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Page 8: 20140411_ca_london

08 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014FEATURE

What will Canada look like in 2017 as it becomes 150 years old? What will it look like be-yond that?

The tide of immigration will continue, but some think the flow will become more of a trickle as the years pass.

“I think it’s a fair assump-tion to think that there will be a lower level of immigration than the current level,” said Western University sociology professor Roderic Beaujot.

Politicians may say Canada needs immigration “especially at election time,” Beaujot said. But, the problem is, demog-raphers and economists aren’t necessarily preaching the same message, he said.

Beaujot also sees the need to stem population explosions around the world as having an adverse effect on immigration.

“The world can’t sustain this continuous growth that we have,” he said. “The popula-tion has to live within the ecol-ogy. For that alone, it may slow down.”

Such thoughts are worlds away for two young women,

who recently became Canadian citizens.

Paula Garcia’s family came to Canada from Colombia sev-en years ago. Soon, the 23-year-old university student will be able to give back to the country that took her in, all while ful-filling a dream of her own.

She plans to be an elemen-tary school teacher, in part, because she wants to offer chil-dren the best possible future.

“I love kids, so that’s what I thought would be the best thing for me,” she said. “I have the possibility to do this here now.”

The citizenship ceremony, Garcia said, was wonderful, and while the test she had to pass to get there was difficult, it was fair. She earned an A.

She was one of 62 people who became citizens at a March 26 ceremony in London.

Maria Qureshi, 32, original-ly from Pakistan, was there too.

She held a small Canadian flag in her hand and had a smile on her face, after taking the oath. “It’s like nervous ex-citement,” she said. “I had tears in my eyes when they first an-nounced that we’re citizens, and I loved the judge’s speech.

It was amazing.”Citizenship Judge Nor-

mand Vachon quoted inspira-tional leaders such as Nelson Mandela, Mother Teresa and Mahatma Gandhi in his wel-coming speech to the new Can-adians.

Qureshi said the long wait for that day was difficult, but boasted that she too aced the citizenship test. “I studied extra hard for it, and I took it really seriously,” she said proudly. “So I scored full marks on it.”

In Canada, she said she hopes for a better future be-cause she has a better chance of

being successful.That was the common

thread among many at the ceremony.

They just want a fair chance to forge a good life for them-selves, their children and, of course, to be key players in the Canada of tomorrow. That’s what Vachon urged them to do.

He told them to find a job, keep a job, make sure their chil-dren are clothed, fed, warm and in school. He suggested they get to know their neighbours and become active, along with knowledgeable, in politics.

Perhaps most importantly, he told them to make this coun-try better than it was when they found it.

The STory of US: ImmIgraTIon In Canada, ToLd In fIVe ParTS

532 4 Day 5The future and beyond

Day 3Where we come from, where we go

Day 2What Canada wants vs. what it gets

Day 4Happy times, hard times

OnlineLive the stories of three immigrants in our five-part video series at metronews.ca1Day 1

Change and effect

Immigrants: Canada’s 150th birthday and beyond

Newcomers. Ready to shape the future, even if number of people arriving slows

SCOTT [email protected]

Freedom, peace, the op-portunity to build a better

life. It’s simple to see why

people from other countries care about immigration and are passionate about its future.

But what about the average Canadian? Is im-

migration — the influx of people with different ways of doing things — a posi-tive or a negative thing?

Much of it depends on who you’re asking, one expert said.

“Judging by the stu-

dents I meet every year in Ottawa, who come from several parts of the coun-try, the young generation has a more progressive and more open-minded notion (of immigration),” said University of Ottawa

Canadian history professor Pierre Anctil.

More rural areas tend to be less accepting, Anctil said. Though there are exceptions to that rule, he added. SCott taylor/Metro

Canadian opinion

Offering their take

Looking into the future Here’s what some of the people Metro talked to over the past five days said about where they’ve come from and what they hope to see in coming years.

Jamie Martinez (from Colombia): “The first thing that we need to do is to have equity here. It means if the population of Colombians is two per cent (in Canada), every company needs to have two per cent Colom-bians working there.”

Shirley Edwards (from United Kingdom): “It takes a number of years to settle and integrate into a new country. Be patient, though. Know that when you need sup-port (you can) ask for it (and) it will come. That’s what community is for. That’s the Canada we now call home.”

Priscilla Bunke (From Nigeria): “My hope for the future is to be able to follow my career and help my children achieve their potential in our chosen country.” Metro

JaimeMartinez

Priscilla Bunke

ShirleyEdwards

Paula Garcia’s family came to Canada from Colombia seven years ago. Soon, the 23-year-old university student will be able to give back to the country that took her in, all while fulfilling a dream of her own. scott taylor/metro

A Statistics Canada paper says one of three situations, all depending on a number of factors and formulas, will play out for immigration through 2036.

• Low projection:Sixim-migrantsperthousandpopulationeachyear;wouldbethelowestraterecordedsinceearly1990s.

• Medium projection:7.5immigrantsperthousandpopulationeachyear;matchestheaveragean-nualimmigrationrateforearly1990stolate2000s.

• High projection:Nineimmigrantsperthousandpopulationeachyear;matcheshighestraterecordedsince1991.

Research

See that symbol? It means you can scan this image with your Metro News app to see a video clip featuring more immigrants who’ve made Canada home.

Young people more open to immigrants: Prof

Page 9: 20140411_ca_london

09metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 NEWS

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Morgentaler Clinic to close this summer

The contentious issue of abor-tion in New Brunswick arose Thursday after the Morgen-taler Clinic in Fredericton said it will close at the end of

July, a decision the facility’s manager said was the result of the province’s refusal to fund the procedure at clinics.

Simone Leibovitch said the clinic, which has been in operation for 20 years, has been providing abortions even though it has lost about $100,000 over the last decade.

“Dr. Morgentaler’s policy was always such that no woman would ever be turned away

from having an abortion, and we followed that policy,” Leibo-vitch told a news conference.

“The reality is we can’t con-tinue to stay open and provide abortions that are not publicly funded. It’s impossible.”

Abortion isn’t covered by medicare in the province un-less two doctors certify in writ-ing that it is medically neces-sary. In addition, it must be performed by a specialist in an

approved hospital. “As far as I’m concerned,

the solution to this problem is up to the government of New Brunswick,” Leibovitch said. “They need to repeal Regula-tion 84-20. It is a barrier to health care. It’s always been a barrier to health care.”

The regulation was intro-duced in 1984 and has been a source of controversy. In 2002, Dr. Henry Morgentaler

launched a lawsuit in a bid to force the provincial govern-ment to pay for the procedure at clinics. The case has been in limbo since Morgentaler died last May.

New Brunswick Health Min-ister Hugh Flemming refused to comment on the matter, cit-ing the court proceedings.

In the legislature, Liberal Opposition Leader Brian Gal-lant said he is pro-choice and

called on the government to study the issue of access to abortion.

Jula Hughes, a law profes-sor at the University of New Brunswick and a supporter of the Morgentaler Clinic, said she fears women will look for less reputable places to terminate a pregnancy once the facility shuts down. “That would just be horrific beyond contempla-tion,” she said. The Canadian Press

New Brunswick. Controversial abortion clinic set to close, citing a lack of funds

A victory for protestersStudents in Taiwan protesting against a trade pact with China cheer after re-ceiving assurances that the pact, which they see as endangering the island’s autonomy, would be reviewed. Thursday saw the end to the protesters’ 24-day occupation of Taiwan’s Parliament. ChiAng Ying-Ying/the AssoCiAted press

Nigeria

Child bride kills groom and friendsA child bride forced into marriage in Nigeria killed a groom and three of his friends with a poisoned meal, police said Thursday.

Fourteen-year-old Wasila Umaru was married last week to 35-year-old Umaru Sani, according to assistant superintendent Musa Magaji Majia.

Over the weekend, the groom invited a dozen friends to celebrate at his village. Umaru told police she bought rat poison at a village market and used it

to prepare a dish of rice.“The suspect confessed

to committing the crime and said she did it because she was forced to marry a man she did not love,” Majia said.

The groom and a friend died the same day. Two other victims died later in the hospital. Umaru is co-operating with police and likely will be charged with culpable homicide, Majia said.

According to the UN children’s agency, 50 per cent of Nigerian girls in rural areas are married before they turn 18. The assoCiaTed Press

Page 10: 20140411_ca_london

10 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014NEWS

Suspended senator Patrick Brazeau pleaded not guilty on Thursday to several char-ges, including assault and cocaine possession.

Police arrested the 39-year-old in Gatineau, near Ottawa, at around 4 a.m. Thursday following a domestic assault call. Po-lice say they arrived to find Brazeau and a woman in a “physical altercation.” A 50-year-old man was also at the house.

Brazeau was charged with two counts of assault, uttering death threats, co-caine possession and breach of conditions. He briefly appeared in court wearing handcuffs. He did not look at reporters.

He also has one charge of assault and one charge of sexual assault outstanding from 2013.

Brazeau was to be held in custody overnight and was

due to reappear in court Fri-day morning for a bail hear-ing.

Crown prosecutor Syl-vain Petitclerc said he asked to keep Brazeau in custody to assure the safety of others and because he breached bail conditions.

“We cannot just let him go free as a bird like that,” he said, adding that de-pending on the bail hearing, Brazeau could be kept in custody again or be released with certain conditions.

A huge pile of what ap-peared to be Brazeau’s be-longings were strewn all over the back door of his girlfriend’s house, including photographs, his Certificate of Indian Status card, cloth-ing and CDs.

Gatineau police say the 50-year-old man also on the scene will be charged with assault. Lucy SchoLey/metro in ottawa

Brazeau arrested on charges of assault, cocaine possession

Patrick Brazeau is escorted into the Gatineau Court House on Thursday. Sean KilpatricK/the canadian preSS

Jim Flaherty died suddenly Thursday at age 64, less than a month after retiring from his post as Canada’s finance minister.

Flaherty, who spent eight years in the role, had been ill for some time, though that was not cited as a reason for his re-signation.

The news rocked the House of Commons, as politicians mourned the loss of a finance minister who trudged through a financial crisis and recession and balanced the once rocky Canadian budget.

“Today is a very sad day — for me, for our government and for all of our country. I learned a short time ago that our col-league, my partner and my friend Jim Flaherty has passed away suddenly today,” Prime Minister Stephen Harper told MPs in a Parliament Hill com-mittee room with his wife Lau-reen in tears by his side.

“This comes as an unexpect-ed and terrible shock to Jim’s family, to our caucus and to Laureen and me.”

Question period was sus-pended Thursday after the news broke. The usually rau-cous chamber was in a lull, with politicians hugging, cry-ing and mourning together.

“It was very, very sombre, sad, but shocking, obviously,”

said NDP MP Paul Dewar, add-ing that, unlike other finance ministers, Flaherty brought a certain levity to the usually stressful environment. “He had that twinkle in his eye and he had a great sense of humour that brought something to the

House of Commons and the politics, which is all too often not there.”

Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird expressed his con-dolences in a written statement Thursday, calling Flaherty a “good friend and colleague for

over two decades.”“Jim was a mentor to me

throughout my time at Queen’s Park from a very young age,” wrote Baird. “I could always rely on Jim to be a devout friend through tough times, and an encouraging figure

through good.”Former Parliamentary

Budget Officer Kevin Page, now a professor at the University of Ottawa, spent extensive time on the job with Flaherty and although the two butted heads on several issues, Page acknow-ledged how good a finance min-ister Flaherty was.

“It’s a loss for the country for sure,” said Page. “It’s just an exhausting job, but he certainly rose to the occasion.”

Flaherty’s family offered a statement before asking for privacy.

“We appreciate that (Flaherty) was so well sup-ported in his public life by Canadians from coast to coast to coast and by his inter-national colleagues,” it said. treVor Greenway anD Joe LoFaro/metro in ottawa, with FiLeS From torStar newS SerVice

‘Very sad day.’ Death of former finance minister stuns Parliament Hill

Jim Flaherty dead at 64

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty receives a standing ovation from Health Minister Tony Clement, left, and other caucus members as he tables the federal budget in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in 2006. tom hanSon/the canadian preSS

Quoted

“I could always rely on Jim to be a devout friend through tough times, and an encouraging figure through good.”Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, in a statement expressing his condolences.

UN study

Murder rates dip globally, stay high in Africa, AmericasGlobal murder rates have declined slightly, but remain very high in the Americas and parts of Af-

rica, according to a new UN study released Thursday.

Homicide rates in south-ern Africa and Central America are more than four times higher than the global average of 6.2 victims per 100,000 people, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime report said. the aSSociateD preSS

access to information. report shows tory staffers interfered with requestsThe Information Commissioner of Canada has found evidence of “systemic interference” with access to information requests by three Conservative staff members, and suggests bring-ing in the police.

But the Public Works De-partment, where the interfer-ence occurred, says it won’t be referring the matter to the RCMP because police did not lay charges in a similar case.

Suzanne Legault delivered her second report Thursday following an investigation into

cases that date back to 2009 in the office of cabinet minister Christian Paradis, who was Pub-lic Works minister at the time.

She had already found against staff member, Sebastien Togneri, in a previous investi-gation, but found that Togneri and two of his colleagues inter-fered in five other instances.

Togneri, Jillian Andrews and Marc Toupin had all insisted on changes or modifications to government records that bureaucrats had already cleared for release. the canaDian preSS

Page 11: 20140411_ca_london

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Page 12: 20140411_ca_london

12 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014NEWS

Sure, we’ve all been on a road trip, but imagine one that sets out to visit 90 cities in 10 weeks — oh, and did we men-tion it’s all to celebrate Can-adian students helping other youth around the world to ac-cess education?

Starting Friday, Free the Children ambassador Spen-cer West, along with friends from the band Neverest, 11-year-old activist Hannah Alper and cast members from Degrassi, are visiting schools across the country as part of the We Create Change Tour.

This unique trip is billed as a “mini We Day” — Free the Children’s annual event inspiring youth to get in-volved and make a difference in their community and the

world.“Fifty-seven million chil-

dren are still denied access to education,” said West, who lost both his legs at the age of five. “I’ve had the chance to speak with young people around the world, who dream of changing their lives and the lives of their families through education.”

As a sponsor, Metro will follow the tour as it makes its way across the country, with West sharing with readers how students across Canada have inspired him with their efforts to help those who haven’t had an opportunity to go to school

Visit metronews.ca to follow our interactive map chronicling West’s journey.METRO

We Create Change Tour. Free the Children ambassador Spencer West leading group visiting schools across Canada over 10 weeks

Road trip to touch 90 cities

Free the Children ambassador Spencer West, along with friends from the band Neverest, 11-year-old activist Hannah Alper and cast members from Degrassi, will be visiting schools across the country, starting Friday, as part of the We Create Change Tour. Metro will be following the “mini We Day” tour as it makes its way across the country.CONTRIBUTED

Pollution in China

Breath of French air fetches $860 Beijing artist Liang Kegang returned from a business trip in southern France with a small item of protest against his home city’s choking pollu-tion: a glass jar of clean, Provence air.

He put it up for auc-tion before a group of about 100 Chinese artists and collectors late last month, and it fetched 5,250 yuan ($860).THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Arctic flight

Pilots fired after flying off courseFirst Air, a northern air carrier, said it has fired two pilots after they flew a plane so far off course on a routine Arctic flight that it took about 20 min-utes to get back.

The Boeing 737 left Rankin Inlet, Nunavut, on a routine flight to the territorial capital of Iqaluit on March 31. It was carrying 19 passen-gers and four crew when something went wrong. THE CANADIAN PRESS

Cuban Twitter program

U.S. panel orders probe of USAIDThe U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee asked the U.S. Agency for International Develop-ment (USAID) on Thursday to turn over all records about the secret Cuban Twitter program as part of a broader review of the agency’s civil-society efforts worldwide.

The request included copies of messages the U.S. government or its contractors transmitted to subscribers in Cuba.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Quoted

“Fifty-seven million children are still denied access to education.”Spencer West

See that symbol? It means you can scan the photo below using your Metro News App. Fasten your seatbelt. Free the Children has created a cartoon to let you in on all the We Create Change Tour details.

Chinese artist Liang Kegang poses with his jar of fresh air in an art gallery in Beijing. DIDI TaNg/THE aSSOCIaTED PRESS

Dellen Millard. Suspect facing two more murder charges, including dad’sA Toronto man accused of killing a Hamilton, Ont., fath-er who disappeared after tak-ing a pair of prospective buy-ers for a test drive has now been charged with murder in the death of his own father and another woman.

Dellen Millard has been charged with first-degree murder in the deaths of Wayne Millard and Laura Bab-cock, with whom Dellen was romantically linked, Ontario provincial police said Thurs-day.

Mark Smich is also charged with first-degree murder in Babcock’s death.

Millard, 28, and Smich, 26, are charged with first-degree murder in the death of Tim Bosma, who vanished May 6, 2013 after leaving home in his pick-up with two men. He had posted the truck for sale online.

His remains were found about a week later burned be-yond recognition at a south-western Ontario farm belong-ing to Millard.

Millard is also charged with forcible confinement and theft of a vehicle in Bosma’s death.

Investigators have said the

two accused know each other but wouldn’t say how. Both have appeared in court to face the new charges, police said.

OPP said Thursday they charged Christina Noudga, 21, with being an accessory after the fact in that case.

Police believe Bosma was killed the same night he went missing, but haven’t said where it happened.

After Millard’s arrest, To-ronto police reopened their investigations into his fath-er’s 2012 death, which had been ruled a suicide, and Bab-cock’s disappearance, also in 2012.

Babcock was last seen on June 26 of that year. She was reported missing by her ex-boyfriend two and a half weeks later. THE CANADIAN PRESS

Military cadets answer U.S. call of cyber dutyIf Douglas MacArthur or Ulysses S. Grant went to the U.S. Military Academy today, they might be testing their defensive skills hunched in front of a computer screen.

A team of caffeine-fuelled cadets spent long days this week in a computer lab try-ing to fend off threats cooked up by experts at the National Security Agency. The annual Cyber Defence Exercise will determine which of the five service academies can create computer networks that can best withstand the four-day barrage.

The 14-year-old exercise lacks the lore of Army-Navy football but not the inten-sity. Not only does the ex-ercise dovetail into the mil-itary’s broader strategy of staying ahead of the curve in cyber operations, but the West Point cadets relish the chance to test their comput-er skills against their peers.

“This is the Army-Navy game for our electrical en-gineering and computer sci-ence departments … this is our chance to beat the other service academies,” said Ca-det Jason DeCoursey.

DeCoursey was one of about 30 senior cadets crammed in a windowless computer lab at the academy on Wednesday.

The exercise is essentially a high-tech game of capture the flag: The NSA team at-tempts to capture “tokens” embedded in the academies’ networks.

The academies for Army, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard and Merchant Marine com-pete, and the one that does

the best job fending off the barrage of cyberattacks is de-clared the winner.

Air Force won last year and was clearly the team cadets here measure them-selves against. By midday Wednesday, Air Force was ahead, but barely. Army de-fences were holding up well after a nerve-racking breach the day before and cadets were keeping up with the long hours. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tim Bosma case

120As many as 120 investigators worked on the case, executing more than 15 search warrants and production orders, and fol-lowing up on more than 700 tips.

A United States Military Academy cadet checks computers at the Cyber Research Center in West Point, N.Y., Wednesday. The West Point cadets are fending off cyberattacks as part of an exercise. MEl EvaNS/THE aSSOCIaTED PRESS

Page 13: 20140411_ca_london

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Page 14: 20140411_ca_london

14 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014business

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The Canadian Broadcasting Corp. said it will cut 657 jobs over the next two years as it deals with a big budget shortfall. Peter Power/the canadian Press

CBC cutting 657 jobs after hit of losing HNIC

The CBC is slashing 657 pos-itions over two years and will no longer pursue broadcast rights to professional sports as it grapples with a massive budget shortfall.

The public broadcaster an-nounced a swath of cuts Thurs-day that will shave $130 mil-lion from its 2014-2015 budget and spur a new mandate “to reimagine itself” as the media landscape changes.

CBC president Hubert La-croix detailed the news at a town hall meeting for em-ployees that outlined financial challenges including a soft-

ened advertising market, dis-appointing ratings for CBC-TV, “much lower-than-expected” ad revenues from Espace mu-sique and CBC Radio 2, and the loss of NHL broadcast rights to Rogers Media.

“There’s no easy way to de-liver news like this,” Lacroix said in prepared remarks that were posted online moments after his private address.

“I know many of you are sad. I know there will be many questions. We will answer them straight up, both in our Q&A session today, in the meetings that will follow, and as things take shape over the coming days.”

Spokesman Ian Morrison, of the watchdog group Friends of Canadian Broadcasting, blamed the budget troubles on “a hostile” Conservative government that reduced the CBC’s funding appropriation by $115 million back in 2012. THE CaNadIaN PRESS

Budget. The public broadcaster has been dealt serious blows by loss of Hockey Night in Canada and ‘hostile’ government cuts

Market Minute

DOLLAR 91.50¢ (-0.48¢)

TSX 14,308.00 (-127.58)

OIL $103.40 US (-$0.20)

GOLD $1,320.50 US (+$14.60)

Natural gas: $4.63 US (+$0.07) Dow Jones: 16,170.22 (-266.96)

English vs. French

Walmart will not be ‘Le Magasin Walmart’ in Que.A judge has ruled that major retailers do not have to modify their commercial trademark English names into French, as the prov-ince’s language watchdog had hoped.

The watchdog had sug-gested that a store like Wal-mart, a household name in Quebec with no French equivalent, could change its signage to “Le Magasin Walmart.” THE CaNadIaN PRESS

The Sriracha factory has been named a public nuisance. scott olson/Getty imaGes

A Southern California city has declared the factory that produces the popular Sriracha hot sauce a public nuisance.

The Irwindale City Coun-cil’s action Wednesday night gives the factory 90 days to make changes to stop the spicy odours that prompted complaints from some resi-dents last fall. Declaring a public nuisance will allow city officials to enter the factory and make changes if the odours persist after the

deadline.The decision came de-

spite testimony by air-qual-ity experts that progress was being made toward a resolution. The South Coast Air Quality Management Dis-trict said its inspectors have taken air samples inside the plant, and believed the infor-mation gathered should al-low the factory and the city to resolve their differences.

Attorney John Tate, who represents Sriracha maker Huy Fong Foods, Inc., said

the company had been work-ing with the AQMD on its filtration system since the complaints first arose. He said the company was com-mitted to finding long-term solutions by June 1.

He called the public nuis-ance declaration a demon-stration of “the city flexing its muscle and thumbing Huy Fong in the eye.”

A call to Irwindale City Attorney Fred Galante was not immediately returned. THE aSSOCIaTEd PRESS

Sriracha factory pecked by Irwindale in heated spat

Page 15: 20140411_ca_london

If we were to rank food flavours that are largely hostile to our taste buds, lemons would have to rank near the top with sour keys and horseradish. But that’s an admittedly sophisticated opinion, hardened by years spent emptying bowls, cups and plates. Combining flavours and whatnot.

To get to the kernel of a lemon’s appeal, we need to return to ground zero for citrusy flavour country and put them in the hands of babies. The results are obviously adorable, but there’s something suspicious about the ones that appear to like it. Or perhaps they’re just old souls.

MetroTube

ANDREWFIFIELDmetronews.ca

Babies let their taste buds do the talking

ZOOM

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METRO AUGMENTED REALITY

Indoor cloud artis mist-ifying

A Dutch artist is taking the creative industry by storm ... with his indoor clouds. Berndnaut Smilde, 35, from Amsterdam, Netherlands, uses a smoke machine and clever lighting to create nimbuses of various shapes in empty spaces. An exhibition of his artworks, Antipode, is now on at London, U.K.’s Ronchini Gallery until June 14.METRO

Artist’s viewpoint

“It always takes awhile to get a cloud where I

want it. Their ephem-erality is what I like the most. They just appear for a few seconds and then it falls apart.”Berndnaut Smilde, based in Amsterdam

YOUTUBE SCREEN GRAB

President: Bill McDonald • Vice-President & Group Publisher, Metro Eastern Canada Greg Lutes • Editor-in-Chief Charlotte Empey • Deputy Editor Fernando Carneiro • National Deputy Editor, Digital Quin Parker • Managing Editor Angela Mullins • Managing Editor, News & Business Amber Shortt • Managing Editor, Life & Entertainment Dean Lisk • Retail Sales Manager Joshua Green • Distribution Manager Rob Delvallet • Vice-President, Sales and Business Development Tracy Day • Vice-President, Creative and Marketing Services Jeff Smith • Vice-President, Finance Phil Jameson • METRO LONDON • 350 Talbot Street Main Floor London ON N6A 2R6 • Telephone: 519-434-3556 • Fax: 888-474-3094 • Advertising: 519-434-3556 Ext. 2223 • [email protected] • Distribution: [email protected] • News tips: [email protected] • Letters to the Editor: [email protected]

1 Solidarity. You know that one relative we all enable? The “victim” that alienates

everyone, wants no part of the family, but still feels entitled to financial support as if restitu-tion for their “emotional scars”? We pity them but eventually just stop taking their calls. It’s sad. In unrelated news, the Parti Québécois was convincingly defeated in Quebec’s provin-cial election.

2 Wrecking Ball. Some think that Miley Cyrus is just a wild child, but she’s really a

freedom-fighter advocating sexual equality. Cyrus says “Guy rappers grab their crotch all f---ing day and have hos around them... but if I grab my crotch and have hot model b---hes around me, I’m degrading women? ... But I’m part of the evolution of that. I hope.” So there it is: Miley Cyrus is the evolution of female empowerment. As well, probably a growing trend of parents home-schooling their daughters.

3 #MarchMadness. The NCAA men’s basketball finals saw the University of Connecticut Huskies defeat the Ken-

tucky Wildcats. It marked the first time a 7th and 8th seed met in the finals but was no less satisfying. We saw high energy, great dunks, some violent unsportsmanlike conduct, and terrific in-depth analysis. And that was just from the other guys at the bar.

4 #DayofPink. This year’s “international day against bullying, discrimination,

homophobia and transphobia in schools and communities” took place this week with tre-mendous support. The best hope to deter a bully is to educate them and others about how to deal with them. We can draw from our own experiences as almost all of us can relate to being bullied: Some by the big kid at school, others by their boss, and some by Revenue

Canada. (That last one was a cry for help. They’re killing me!)

5 U Conn’t beat ’em. The day after their boys won it all, U Conn’s undefeated women’s team scored a convincing vic-

tory over Notre Dame’s also undefeated ‘fighting Irish’ to bring home the championship. Both teams set new standards

for their schools, and for women everywhere. But I can’t help think that somewhere at the heart of all this, stands Miley Cyrus. (What? Too much?) #Uconn

6 Holy week. Two upcoming religious holidays include Pass-over for the Jews, and Easter for Christians. Both share a

historical bond celebrated with wine and feasts and family members gathering to remind each other of things long for-gotten. Like the time they went to a party and woke up at the zoo, lost the family savings in a Ponzi scheme, or declared grandpa mentally incompetent to gain control of his estate. All the while, sharing blessings of peace. Happy holidays!

7 In memoriam. The passing of Hollywood icon Mickey Rooney revived reports of elder abuse that left him al-

most destitute. @peoplemag tweeted: “Mickey Rooney’s fu-neral delayed by family fighting” which prompted George Lopez to tweet “I didn’t know Mickey Rooney was Mexican?” That aside, his physical stature never diminished his artistic lar-gesse, and that body of work, not his financial es-tate, is his true legacy. #RIP

MILEY DROPS BALL ON FEMALE POWER

THE METRO LIST

Mike Benhaimmetronews.ca

Follow The Metro List on

Twitter @TheMetroList

COURTESY BERNDNAUT SMILDE/RONCHINI GALLERY

15metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 VOICES

Mystery pointsto the ominous

Ultimately, “there is a defi nite ominous element of my work,” the artist says, pointing to the clouds’ mystifying quality. “There is something un-graspable about clouds, which I think is really interesting,” Smilde says.

“For this reason, people have been creating myths and meanings around clouds for centuries,” he concluded.METRO

Page 16: 20140411_ca_london

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17metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 SCENE

SCENE

Denis Leary, Frank Langella and Kevin Costner star in Draft Day, which opens today. CONTRIBUTED

Richard: Mark, the message behind Draft Day is that technical ability is one thing, but having heart is more im-portant. It’s a key message for the story but vital when considering the movie as a whole. This film is technic-ally proficient, but loads of

technically proficient flicks aren’t as entertaining as this one. This movie works par-ticularly well because it has heart, just like the players that Kevin Costner’s char-acter tries to recruit for his football team.

Mark: Which makes the movie the opposite of Money-ball, which celebrates ration-ality and scientific method. I much preferred Costner’s flawed, slightly desperate soul over Brad Pitt’s techno-crat. But there were other reasons I liked the movie. Having it take place on one day gives the film an ur-gency that really pulls you in. And there were some nice directorial flourishes, too.

I haven’t seen split screen used so well in a long time. And let’s not forget a strong supporting cast.

RC: Like Moneyball, Draft Day scores authenticity points by casting a number of sports figures and insiders playing themselves, but you’re right, the supporting cast of profes-sional actors really scores a touchdown. I enjoyed seeing Frank Langella playing the anything-for-a-buck owner of the Browns and Ellen Burstyn and Dennis Leary as Sonny’s mother and grumpy coach respectively, are both great. Sean Combs didn’t even bother me. Of course, this really is Kevin Costner’s movie. He’s easy to watch

at the best of times but par-ticularly so when he’s in the genre that works best for him, and that’s sports mov-ies.

MB: And it’s hard to watch Costner in this without think-ing about his iconic sports roles in Field of Dreams or Bull Durham. In fact, this is often where players wind up — as coaches and managers. So there’s a through line to the character to appreciate. The only thing that both-ered me was that I am not a football fan. I’ve never seen a game. So all the negotiations were like watching a game of chess without any idea how the pieces are moved. Could you follow the technical de-

tails of the trades? Or were you wishing for subtitles?

RC: Subtitles might have helped a bit, but for me it didn’t matter if I followed the intricacies of the draft day business because I think the underlying emotion that comes along with changing someone’s life by drafting them into the NFL — I found those scenes powerful.

MB: Director Ivan Reitman has had a tendency to lapse into sentiment and bathos, but he keeps these tenden-cies nicely in check. I loved Costner, but I was also im-pressed at the sure handed direction. Reitman’s working at the top of his game.

Finding feeling in football. Kevin Costner brings a lot of heart to this fi lm about a down-on-his-luck NFL general manager hinging his future on one big trade

Reel Guys

RICHARD CROUSE AND MARK BRESLIN

This Dra� Day is full of dramaSynopsis

On the day of the NFL Draft, Cleveland Browns general manager Sonny Weaver Jr. (Kevin Costner) is faced with some tough choices. His team is not doing well, sports radio talking heads are beating him up for ruining the franchise his late father — the legendary coach Sonny Weaver Sr. — built up and his girlfriend (Jennifer Garner) is angry with him. His future and possibly the future of the team hinges on one deal: a massive trade for hotshot quarterback Bo Callahan (Josh Pence).

• Richard: •••••

• Mark: •••••

See that symbol? It means you can scan the photo below with your Metro News app to see a video clip of Tom Welling and Kevin Costner in Draft Day

Page 18: 20140411_ca_london

18 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014

No purchase necessary. Contest open to residents of Canada, excluding Quebec, who have reached the age of majority (18) years of age or older. Odds of winning depend on the number of eligible entries received. Ten (10) Prizes are available to be won, consisting

of two tickets to see ‘Transcendence’ during it’s run of engagement (approximate retail value $26). Skill testing question required.Contest closes April 11, 2014 at 11.59PM (EST). To enter and for complete contest rules visit www.clubmetro.com

Inside Llewyn Davis. Did that marmelade tabby cat ever come back?With Inside Llewyn Davis newly available for home viewing, it’s time to answer the question that has vexed pet lovers and conspiracy nerds for months.

What did the Coen Bros. do to that poor, bedraggled cat?

If you haven’t yet seen the movie, my top film of 2013, and you consider feline misfor-tune to be a spoiler, please stop reading now and watch Inside Llewyn Davis on DVD or Blu-ray. Enjoy the movie, and come back later.

For the rest of us, it’s time to take a cold, hard look at the big furry mystery of the mar-malade tabby named Ulysses that dogs New York folk singer Llewyn Davis (Oscar Isaac) in the film. The two become in-separable companions after the couch-surfing Llewyn accident-ally locks Ulysses out of the apartment of his genial hosts the Gorfeins, who are both at work. The more Llewyn tries to unload his cat problem onto somebody else, the more Ulys-ses draws near.

Then the cat decides, as cats are wont to do, that it’s time to be on its own. Events transpire to have Llewyn driving a car on the lonely highway between Chicago and New York, a light snow falling. He’s fighting fa-tigue from lack of sleep, barely

watching the road.Suddenly, something small

and furry crosses in front of the windshield. BAM! A shocked Llewyn realizes he’s hit some-thing. He pulls the car over to side of the road and examines the front bender. There’s blood all over it.

Then he looks behind the car and sees a small animal, ob-viously injured, dragging itself toward a stand of trees.

There is no logical reason to assume that this is Ulysses. In fact, logic would suggest other-wise. But such is the power of film that we instinctively as-sume the injured animal is Llewyn’s cat. We feel terrible

for it, more than we might for some random roadkill.

I suspect that a lot of cat lovers hated the scene. I also suspect that writers/directors Joel and Ethan Coen realized this might happen, and tried to avoid being tagged as cat haters. I asked them in an inter-view about the roadside inci-dent when Inside Llewyn Davis premiered theatrically last De-cember. They denied having any murderous intentions to-ward tabbies, although they did say that cats are way less eager to be movie stars than dogs are.

“It’s funny, but we weren’t even thinking that while shooting (the road scene),” Ethan said. “We were think-ing Llewyn hit some kind of animal. But the cat is so estab-lished in the movie, everybody who watches it is determined to turn that creature into the cat.”

“Which is understandable,” Joel interjected. “It’s a random animal. Maybe it’s a cat, maybe it’s a raccoon. It’s hard to see. We wanted it to be very ob-scure.”

“We wanted to not know,” Ethan.

“Not that it matters, but the creature that we actually shot with was a small dog.”peter howeLL/torstar News servIce

+Ratings and synopses courtesy of Rotten Tomatoes. For more movie reviews, trailers and news go to RottenTomatoes.com.

Ratings: Certified Fresh: Fresh: Rotten: Audience response: Audience anticipation for the film:

Action/Adventure

The Raid 2Director. Gareth Evans

Stars. Iko Uwais, Yahan Ruhian

He thought it was over. After fighting his way out of a building filled with gangsters and madmen, rookie Jakarta cop Rama thought it was done and he could resume a normal life. He couldn’t have been more wrong. Formidable though they may have been, Rama’s opponents in that fateful building were nothing more than small fish swimming in a pond much larger than he ever dreamed possible.

94 %Audience:Critics:

Rotten Tomatoes scoreTM

76%

Drama/Horror

OculusDirector. Mike Flanagan

Stars. Karen Gillan, Brenton Thwaites

Ten years ago, tragedy struck the Russell family, leaving the lives of teen siblings Tim and Kaylie forever changed when Tim was convicted of the brutal murder of their parents. Now in his 20s, Tim is newly released from protective custody. But Kaylie is convinced her par-ents’ deaths were caused by something else altogether: a malevolent supernatural force unleashed through the Lasser Glass, an antique mir-ror in their childhood home.

94 %Audience:Critics:

Rotten Tomatoes scoreTM

89%+

Animation

Rio 2Director. Carlos Saldanha

Stars. Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg

It’s a jungle out there for Blu, Jewel and their three kids in RIO 2, after they’re hurtled from that magical city to the wilds of the Amazon. As Blu tries to fit in, he goes beak-to-beak with the vengeful Nigel, and meets the most fear-some adversary of all — his father-in-law.

96%Audience:

60 %Critics:Rotten Tomatoes scoreTM

+

Llewyn Davis and his cat Ulysses. contributed

Page 19: 20140411_ca_london

19metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 scene

Remembering Mickey Rooney: Five great filmsMickey Rooney might be best remembered for his ceaseless ups and downs, his dramatic failures and his many come-backs. But Rooney’s roller-coaster melodrama — he was married eight times and quickly spent the fortune he amassed — wouldn’t have mattered if he hadn’t also had genuine, enduring talent.

In the late 1930s and early 1940s, while under contract to MGM, Rooney was one of the most popular stars on the

planet. At just 19, he was the top box-office draw.

In Rooney’s subsequent decades, things would rarely come as easily as his early stardom. But across movies, Broadway and television, his manic energy rarely flagged. Rooney, who died Sunday at age 93, remained working into his 90s, still driven to “put on a show.”

Here are five of Rooney’s most memorable movie roles.The AssociATed Press

A Midsummer night’s Dream (1935)The production of Max Reinhardt and William Diet-erle’s Shakespeare adaptation had to be rearranged after Rooney broke his leg while skiing, enraging Warner Bros. head Jack Warner. But as the mischievous sprite Puck, Rooney (who did the play on stage before the movie) excelled in the dreamy film and it remains one of his finest and most enchanting performances.

A Family Affair (1937)It’s the film that birthed Rooney’s most famous role: Andy Hardy. Rooney would play Hardy, an all-American trouble-making boy, 14 more times over the next decade and again in the attempted revival Andy Hardy Comes Home in 1958. The films were hits. But while Rooney was portraying an idealized American boy — chasing girls (Judy Garland in three films) and getting lectures from his judge father (Lionel Barrymore in A Family Affair) — the young actor was leading the more tempestuous life of a child star.

Boy’s Town (1938)Spencer Tracy starred as the kindly priest Father Edward J. Flanagan, who ran a home for underprivileged boys. But Rooney shared top billing with Tracy, playing the school bully and pool shark, Whitey Marsh, who — with maximum corniness — is reformed in the end. For his per-formance, Rooney won a special Juvenile Oscar, an honour that was given to performers under the age of 18 from the 1930s to the 1960s, starting with Shirley Temple.

national Velvet (1944)

As a former jockey (a common role for the diminutive Rooney), the actor starred opposite an 11-year-old Elizabeth Taylor in her screen debut. The adaption of Enid Bagnold’s tale was Rooney’s last film before heading to war, a rare two-year gap in his otherwise constant output.

Babes in Arms (1939)This big-screen version of the Broadway musical paired Rooney and Judy Garland. Rooney earned his first lead actor Oscar nom-ination for the film, which show-cased his song-and-dance talent with numbers like The Lady Is a Tramp and Good Morning, later featured in Singin’ in the Rain.

Page 20: 20140411_ca_london

20 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014scene

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Mustang Drive-In -London2551 Wilton Grove Rd.

Captain America: The Winter Sol-dier (PG) Fri-Sun 8:35 Tue 8:35 Need for Speed (PG) Fri-Sun 10:50 Tue 10:50 No Films Showing Today (STC) Mon Wed-Thu Noah (14A) Fri-Sun 8:30 Tue 8:30 Oculus (14A) Fri-Sun 10:50 Tue 10:50

Hyland Cinema240 Wharncliffe Road

South

Diego Star (STC) Sun 1 The Lunchbox (PG) Fri 3-8:45 Sat-Sun 3-7 Mon 5-9 Tue 3-7 Wed 1-7 Thu 3-8:45 Mistaken for Strangers (G) Fri 7 Sat-Sun 9 Mon 1 Tue 9 Wed 5 Thu 7 Le Week-end (14A) Fri-Sat 1-5 Sun 5 Mon 3-7 Tue 1-5 Wed 3-9 Thu 1-5

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Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG) No Passes Fri-Thu 1-3:50-7-9:45 Divergent (PG) Fri-Thu 6:50-9:40 Draft Day (PG) Fri-Thu 1:10-3:40-7:10-9:30 Heaven Is for Real (PG) Wed-Thu 12:50-3:20-7:05-9:25 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (G) Fri-Tue 12:50-3:20 Muppets Most Wanted (G) Fri-Thu 1:05-3:30

Noah (14A) Fri-Wed 12:55-3:45-6:55-9:40 Thu 12:55-3:45 Non-Stop (PG) Fri-Tue 7:05-9:25 Oculus (14A) Fri-Thu 1:15-3:35-7:15-9:35 Rio 2 (G) No Passes Fri-Thu 1-3:25-6:45-9 Transcendence (PG) No Passes Thu 8

Western FilmRoom 340, UCC Building, Argo (14A) Fri-Thu 9:50

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7:20-9:50 Rio 2 (G) Sat-Sun 3:50 Rio 2 3D (G) Fri 6:50-9:20 Sat-Sun 12:45-6:50-9:20 Mon-Thu 6:50-9:20 Son of God (PG) Sat-Sun 12-3:10 Transcendence (PG) Thu 8

Cineplex Odeon West-mount & VIP Cinemas755 Wonderland Road

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300: Rise of an Empire 3D (18A) Fri 10:20 Sat 10:10 Sun 10:25 Mon 9:50 Tue 10:20 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG) No Passes Fri 3:40 No Passes Sat 12:25-3:30 No Passes Sun 12:20-3:30 No Passes Tue 3:40 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG) No Passes Fri 6:50-10 No Passes Sat-Sun 6:40-9:50 No Passes Mon 6:35-9:40 No Passes Tue 6:50-10 No Passes Wed 6:35-9:40 No Passes Thu 6:40-9:50 No Passes Fri 4:20-7:30-10:35 No Passes Sat 1:10-4:20-7:30-10:35 No Passes Sun 1-4:10-7:20-10:25 No Passes Mon 7:10-10:10 No Passes Tue 4:20-7:30-10:35 No Passes Wed 7:10-10:10 No Passes Thu 7:20-10:25 No Passes Fri 4:10-7:10-10:05 No Passes Sat-Sun 1:10-4:10-7:10-10:05 No Passes Mon 8:30 No Passes Tue 4:10-7:10-10:05 No Passes Wed 8:30 No Passes Thu 7:10-10:05 Divergent (PG) Fri 3:30-6:40-9:50 Sat 12:30-3:40-7-10:10 Sun 3:30-6:50-10:05 Mon 6:45-9:50 Tue 3:30-6:40-9:50 Wed 6:45-9:50 Thu 6:50-10:05 Star & Strollers Screening Wed 1

Draft Day (PG) Fri 4:40-6:40-9:30 Sat-Sun 1:40-4:40-6:40-9:30 Mon 7:30 Tue 4:40-6:40-9:30 Wed 7:30 Thu 6:40-9:30 The Grand Budapest Hotel (14A) Fri 3:40-7:40-10:30 Sat 12:45-3:40-7:40-10:30 Sun 12:45-3:40-7:40-10:25 Mon 8 Tue 3:40-7:40-10:30 Wed 8 Thu 7:40-10:30 Heaven Is for Real (PG) No Passes Wed 1:20-7:20-9:50 No Passes Thu 7:30-10 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (G) Sat 12:05 Sun 12:10 Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D (G) Fri 5:15-7:45 Sat 2:35-5:05-7:40 Sun 2:40-5:20-7:50 Mon 7:20 Tue 5:15-7:45 Muppets Most Wanted (G) Fri 5-7:40-10:25 Sat 11:55-2:30-5:10-8-10:40 Sun 12:40-4:45-7:30-10:15 Mon 7:25-10:05 Tue 5-7:40-10:25 Wed 7:25-10:05 Thu 7:40-10:30 Need for Speed 3D (PG) Fri 9:30 Sat 10 Sun 9:30 Mon 9:20 Tue 9:30 Wed 9:20 Noah (14A) Fri 3:40-7-10:10 Sat 12:40-4-7:10-10:20 Sun 12:30-4-7:10-10:20 Mon 6:50-9:55 Tue 3:40-7-10:10 Wed 1:10-6:50-9:55 Thu 7:10-10:20 Rio 2 (G) No Passes Fri 3:50-6:30 No Passes Sat 11:45-2:15-4:45-7:20 No Passes Sun 12:50-3:40-6:30 No Passes Mon 6:30 No Passes Tue 3:50-6:30 No Passes Wed-Thu 6:30 Star & Strollers Screening, No Passes Wed 1 Rio 2 3D (G) No Passes Fri 4:40-7:15-9:55 No Passes Sat 12:15-2:45-5:20-7:55-10:30 No Passes Sun 12-2:30-5:05-7:40-10:15 No Passes Mon

7-9:30 No Passes Tue 4:40-7:15-9:55 No Passes Wed 7-9:30 No Passes Thu 7-9:15 Royal Opera House - The Sleeping Beauty (STC) Sun 12:55

Transcendence (PG) Thu 9:30

SilverCity London1680 Richmond St

Bad Words (14A) Fri 12:30-2:40-4:50-7-9:30 Sat 3-5:25-7:45-10:25 Sun 12:30-2:40-4:50-7-9:30 Mon 12:55-3:05-5:15-7:25-9:55 Tue 7:25-9:55 Wed 3:10-5:20-7:30-9:55 Thu 12:45-2:55-5:05-10:35 Star & Stroll-ers Screening Wed 1 The Battery (STC) Thu 7:30 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG) No Passes Fri 7:15-9:30 No Passes Sat 7:25-9:30 No Passes Sun-Thu 7:15-9:30 Captain America: The Winter Soldier — An IMAX 3D Experience (PG) No Passes Fri-Sun 12:20-3:25-6:45-9:45 No Passes Mon-Thu 12:25-3:25-6:45-9:45 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG) No Passes Fri-Thu 12:35-3:50-7-10 City of Ember (PG) Sat 11 Divergent (PG) Fri 12:25-3:20-7-9:55 Sat 1:05-4-7:05-10:05 Sun 12:15-3:10-7-9:55 Mon-Thu 12:50-3:45-7-9:55 Draft Day (PG) Fri-Tue 1:35-4:10-7:15-9:50 Wed 4:10-7:15-9:50 Thu 1:35-4:10-7:15-9:50 Star & Strollers Screening Wed 1 The Grand Budapest Hotel (14A) Fri

1-3:15-5:30-7:45-10 Sat 1-3:15-5:30-7:55-10:15 Sun 1-3:15-5:30-7:45-10 Mon-Tue 1-3:15-5:30-7:50-10:05 Wed 1:10-3:25-5:40-8-10:15 Thu 1-3:15-5:30-7:50-10:05 The Metropolitan Opera: Prince Igor Encore (STC) Sat 12 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (G) Fri 12:40 Sat 1:30 Sun-Thu 12:40 Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D (G) Fri 2:50 Sat 3:40 Sun-Thu 2:50 Muppets Most Wanted (G) Fri 12:20-2:50-5:20-7:50-10:20 Sat 12:20-5:20-7:50-10:20 Sun 12-2:30-5-7:30-10 Mon-Wed 2:15-4:55-7:25-9:55 Thu 2:15-4:55 Noah (14A) Fri 12:45-3:40-6:40-9:40 Sat 11:15-2:15-6:40-9:40 Sun 12:45-3:45-6:40-9:40 Mon-Wed 12:45-3:40-6:40-9:40 Thu 12:45-3:40-7:30-9:40 Non-Stop (PG) Fri 10:15 Sat 10:25 Sun-Thu 10:15 Oculus (14A) Fri 1:05-3:35-6:55-10:15 Sat 11:15-1:45-4:25-6:55-10:15 Sun-Tue 1:05-3:35-6:55-10:15 Wed 1:05-3:35-6:55-10:20 Thu 1:05-3:35-6:55-10:15 Rio 2 (G) No Passes Fri 1-3:35-5:10-7:40 No Passes Sat 11-11:40-2:10-4:45-7 No Passes Sun 11:55-2:25-4:50-5:10-7:40 No Passes Mon-Tue 1-3:35-5:10-7:40 No Passes Wed 12:55-3:35-5:10-7:55 No Passes Thu 1-3:35-5:10-7:40 Rio 2 3D (G) No Passes Fri-Sat 12:30-2:55-5:20-7:45-10:10 No Passes Sun 12:15-2:40-5:05-7:30-9:55 No Passes Mon-Thu 12:30-2:55-5:20-7:45-10:10 Transcendence (PG) Thu 7:45-10:30

Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Contributed

These pages cover movie sTarT Times from fri., apr. 11 To Thurs., apr. 17. Times are subjecT To change.

Page 21: 20140411_ca_london

21metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 scene

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CBS moved swiftly Thursday to replace the retiring David Letterman with Comedy Cen-tral’s Stephen Colbert, who will take over the Late Show next year and do battle with Jimmy Fallon and Jimmy Kimmel for late-night tele-vision supremacy.

Colbert, 49, has been host-ing The Colbert Report since 2005, in character as a fic-tional conservative talk-show host. The character will re-tire with The Colbert Report.

“Simply being a guest on David Letterman’s show has been a highlight of my ca-reer,” Colbert said. “I never dreamed that I would fol-low in his footsteps, though everyone in late night fol-lows Dave’s lead.”

Letterman, who turns 67 on Saturday, announced on his show last week that he would retire some time in 2015, although he hasn’t set a date. CBS said Thursday that creative elements of Col-bert’s new show, including where it will be based, will be announced later.

Mayors of New York and Los Angeles have already publicly urged the new Late Show host to choose their city. New York would appear to have the clear edge, since Colbert is already based in New York and CBS owns the Ed Sullivan Theater, where the Late Show has been taped since Letterman took over in 1993.

Letterman offered his en-dorsement Thursday. “Ste-phen has always been a real friend to me,” he said. “I’m very excited for him, and I’m flattered that CBS chose him. I also happen to know they wanted another guy with glasses.”

It’s a rapidly changing period for that time slot. Fal-lon took over for Jay Leno on NBC’s Tonight show in February, and has dominated the ratings since his arrival, with Letterman and Kimmel running neck-and-neck for second. Chelsea Handler has also said she is about to end

her talk show on E! Enter-tainment Television.

CBS chose not to break the mould: CBS, ABC and NBC will all compete at 11:35 p.m. with shows hosted by white males. CBS, which has an older audience and gener-ally seeks personalities with the widest appeal possible, is taking a chance with a per-

sonality whose show has a much more specific appeal. But, like Fallon and Kim-mel, Colbert is popular with young men and active on the Internet and social media.

“Our discussions really centred on finding the most talented, the most creative (choice), the person who was going to conduct the most interesting interviews and be the most interesting per-

son himself, and that’s what led us to Stephen,” said Nina Tassler, CBS entertainment chairman. She said CBS con-sidered several candidates, but did not name them.

Colbert’s show won the Emmy for best variety series last year and has earned two Peabody Awards. It’s another big move for a Jon Stewart

protegé: Colbert worked on The Daily Show for eight years before getting his own program, and John Oliver is about to launch a weekly show for HBO later this month.

The decision opens up a hole on Comedy Central’s schedule. The network said in a statement Thursday that “we look forward to the next eight months of the ground-breaking Colbert Report and wish Stephen the very best.”

Stewart told New York magazine on Wednesday night that Colbert would be terrific for Letterman’s job. Stewart said he likes what he does and Colbert has a better opportunity to broaden out

his comedy than he would.“He is a uniquely talented

individual,” Stewart said. “He’s wonderful in Colbert Report, but he’s got gears he hasn’t even shown people yet. He would be remark-able.”

The choice of Colbert quickly drew the ire of a real-life conservative talk-show

host. Radio’s Rush Limbaugh said Thursday that CBS “has just declared war on the heartland of America. No longer is comedy going to be a covert assault on trad-itional American values, con-servatives. Now it’s just wide open.”

Limbaugh mispronounced Colbert’s name as col-bert,

instead of the proper pronun-ciation, col-bear.

The man Colbert is re-placing was a target for con-servatives, too. Letterman made Republican favourite Sarah Palin a frequent target of his barbs.

Tassler declined comment on what Colbert’s ascension will mean for Craig Fergus-on, who follows Letterman’s show in the 12:35 a.m. time slot and was considered a candidate for Letterman’s job.

Colbert would likely enter into some friendly competi-tion with Fallon. Colbert ap-peared on Fallon’s first To-night show, one of a line of personalities in a gag involv-ing people who had to “pay up” on a bet about whether Fallon would ever get the To-night gig.

Brad Adgate, an analyst for Horizon Media, described Colbert as “the best talk-show host available.” He said CBS wanted to move quickly to make its choice for Letter-man’s replacement before next month’s meeting with advertisers in New York about the upcoming season’s schedule.

“When you’ve got fire in the belly, you move fast,” Tassler said. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Colbert to take over Letterman spot

Stephen Colbert onstage during StePhest Colbchella Rocktaugustfest in 2012. CBS announced Thursday Colbert will succeed David Letterman as the host of The Late Show. Jason DeCrow/InvIsIon/THe assoCIaTeD Press FIle

Late Show. CBS chooses popular political satirist to helm talk show

Late-night churn

It’s a rapidly changing period for that time slot. Fallon took over for Jay Leno on NBC’s Tonight show in February, and has dominated the ratings since his arrival, with Letterman and Kimmel running neck-and-neck for second. Chelsea Handler has also said she is about to end her talk show on E! Entertainment Television.

Colbert endorsed by his old boss

“He is a uniquely talented individual. He’s wonder-ful in colbert Report, but he’s got gears he hasn’t even shown people yet. He would be remarkable.”Jon stewart told New York magazine that Colbert would be terrific for Letterman’s job.

Page 22: 20140411_ca_london

22 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014scene

The Word

Naya Rivera, Big Sean put the ‘ex’ in Rolex

Naya Rivera and Big Sean have called off their engage-ment. But their breakup is no placid, cordial conscious uncoupling. It’s more of a tweet-accusations-of-theft kind of uncoupling.

Rapper Big Sean’s rep said that it was his decision to call off the engagement, denying rumours that he’d cheated. Sources told TMZ that he called things off because Rivera, who stars on Glee as Santana, was too

controlling and jealous.Rivera herself felt no

need to get her side of the story out through anonym-ous sources: She went straight to the Internet. In a now-deleted tweet, she wrote, “@bigsean stealing rolexes from a lady’s house now. Maybe cuz I’m on Glee and making more money or something. #triflin.”

Burn! But the story doesn’t end there. Sources told TMZ that the watch was actually Sean’s and he just lent it to Rivera. We look forward to more deleted tweets in response.

Regardless, neither is likely to languish in single-hood for long: Rivera seems to have gone up a cup size or two of late. And hey, Big Sean has a Rolex now.

Melinda TaubMetro World News

METRO DISHOUR TAKE ON THE WORLD OF CELEBRITIES

The new issue of Rolling Stone, outApril 24. Mark Seliger/rOlling StOne

Rolling Stone flubs U.S. Constitution ‘tattoo’ on Louis-Dreyfus’s back

Julia Louis-Dreyfus better hope her latest tattoo is a temporary one.

The cover image of next month’s Rolling Stone maga-zine featuring the Veep star depicts a nude Louis-Dreyfus with a tattoo of the U.S. Consti-tution signed by John Hancock across her back. The problem is Hancock signed the Declara-tion of Independence, not the Constitution.

Louis-Dreyfus jokingly blamed the blunder on Mike McClintock, the fictional Veep character played by Matt Walsh who serves as communications director to Louis-Dreyfus’ Vice-President Selina Meyer on the HBO comedy series.

“Yet another Mike (expletive)-up,” the 53-year-old actress posted Wednesday on Twitter. “Dummy.”

The National Constitution Center in Philadelphia mocked the flub by tweeting a photo of the cover alongside such founding fathers as George Washington and Benjamin Franklin in Signers’ Hall with the words, “Thanks for the shoutout but no Hancock

here.”Rolling Stone spokes-

woman Melissa Bruno said the Declaration of Independence is on the other side of Louis-Drey-fus’ body, but they couldn’t fit in the signatures. The AssociATed Press

Lena Dunham getty iMageS

Dunham was crushed to

realize she’s straight

While being honoured at the Point Foundation awards earlier this week, Dunham praised her lesbian sister and admitted to a tinge of sexual orientation-centred jealousy, according to E! Online. “I have always felt a strong and emotional connection to the members of the LGBTQ community,” Dunham says. “It was actually a huge disappointment for me when I came of age and realized that I was sexually attracted to men. So when my sister came out I thought, ‘Thank God, someone in this family can truly represent my pas-sions and beliefs.’”

Page 23: 20140411_ca_london

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Complementary � avours: Lamb Racks with Salsa Verde

1. Rub lamb all over with Salsa Verde (see left) and season with salt and pepper. Cover and stand 30 minutes, or refrigerate for up to 12 hours. If you put lamb in the fridge, take it out 30 minutes before cooking so it can reach room temperature before going into the oven.

2. When you are ready to eat, preheat oven to 230 C. Transfer lamb to an oven tray or heavy cast iron dish and roast for 16-20 minutes or until it is done to your preference. Remove

the dish from the oven, cover it with aluminum foil and then place a couple of clean cloths over the top to keep it warm while it rests for 10-15 minutes.

3. Slice between ones to separ-ate lamb rack into cutlets and serve accompanied by an extra dish of Salsa Verde. WATCH THE ANNABEL LANGBEIN FREE RANGE COOK MONDAY TO THURSDAY AT 5:30 P.M. EST, STARTING APRIL 28 ON GUSTO TV, CAN-ADA’S NEW FOOD & LIFESTYLE CHANNEL. VISIT GUSTOTV.COM FOR FULL PROGRAM LINE-UP AND MORE GREAT RECIPE IDEAS.

Serving up a fancy meal that will impress the toughest critics doesn’t have to take much eff ort. Annabel Langbein, who brings good food into today’s fast-paced world, shows us how with a spring-friendly recipe

from her cookbook The Free Range Cook

This recipe serves six. ANNABEL LANGBEIN

THE FREE RANGE COOKAnnabel Langbeingustotv.com

Condiment

Salsa Verde• 1 1/2 cups (2 handfuls) pars-ley leaves, de-stemmed

• 1 handful (about 40) chives, chopped

• 1 cup extra virgin olive oil

• 1/4 cup capers

• 3 cloves garlic

• 4 tbsp lemon juice

• 2 tsp Dijon mustard

• ground black pepper

• 1/4 small red onion, chopped

• 1 small tin (8-10) anchovies, drained

• yolk of one hard boiled egg

Purée all the ingredients in a food processor until smooth. Salsa Verde keeps in a covered jar in the fridge for about a week or it can be frozen. ANNABEL LANGBEIN, GUSTOTV.COM

Makes 2 cups. ANNABEL LANGBEIN

Ingredients

• 3 lamb racks, trimmed, or 6 lamb back straps or 3-4 lamb rumps• 4 tbsp Salsa Verde• fl aky salt and ground black pepper

GustoTV

New Zealand’s Annabel Langbein is one of the great culinary masters airing on GustoTV. Canada’s newest TV channels, Gusto features cooking and culinary travel shows each night, hosted by chefs and foodies from around the world, as well as here at home. For more de-tails, check your local listings or visit gustotv.com.

Liquid Assets

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Though the Napa and Sonoma Valleys made it

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Paso Robles may not be the easiest region to pronounce (it’s pah-sow-row-bless), but it’s producing some of the most

original wines on the U.S. west coast from dozens of differ-ent grape varieties. Located between Los Angeles and San Francisco, it’s also the home to many of Cali’s most straight forward and consistent whites and reds made from main-stream fruit.

Liberty School’s 2010

Cabernet Sauvignon ($19.99 - $21.99) is a gutsy, dark berry-driven red that makes a great pairing with everything from pepper steak to casual meats.

For more on fair dates head to calwine.ca. PRICES REFLECT RANGE ACROSS THE COUNTRY. SOME PRODUCTS MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE IN ALL PROVINCES.

LIQUID ASSETSPeter Rockwell@[email protected]

Page 24: 20140411_ca_london

24 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014SPORTS

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The London Knights are one loss away from having an un-planned five-week vacation.

In a situation the Knights have dreaded since they were awarded the Memorial Cup, they lost 6-3 to the Guelph Storm and now are down 3-1 in the best-of-seven conference semifinal series.

A loss Friday in Guelph and they will be heading to the Me-morial Cup as host team wait-ing for the tournament to begin May 16. If a sixth game is neces-sary, it will be Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Budweiser Gardens.

Scott Kosmachuk and Zack Mitchell, with two each, Ben Harpur and Robby Fabbri scored for the Storm. Dakota Mermis, Gemel Smith and CJ Yakimowicz scored for the Knights.

In the opening period, the Knights showed their lack of depth on defence as the first Guelph goal was directly a re-sult of rookie Aiden Jamieson’s giveaway and, minutes later, Tim Bender took a needless delay-of-the-game penalty for flipping the puck over the glass.

Again, the Knights left goal-ie Jake Patterson on his own several times and trailed 2-0 at the end of the period.

However, the Knights scored once in the second — they missed on a penalty shot by Max Domi — and had their best 20 minutes in five periods at home in the series.

The final period was simply a disaster, with Patterson be-ing replaced by backup Justin

Tugwell after the fifth Guelph goal. They also missed a second penalty-shot attempt.

The Knights are missing stal-wart overage defencemen Zach Bell (broken leg) and Brady Aus-tin (mononucleosis) for this ser-ies and it shows.

Meanwhile, earlier in the day, the Toronto Maple Leafs announced they had signed Knights forward Ryan Rupert to a three-year entry-level con-tract. He was a sixth-round se-lection in 2012.

Rupert said one of his first moves might be getting a new vehicle, replacing his 12-year-old Volkswagen Jetta.

“She’s got 376 (thousand

kilometres) on her,” Rupert said. “End of the line for it so hopefully looking at some-thing. Preferably a truck, but we’ll see.”

Rupert spent some time thanking his family, the Hunter brothers and his minor hockey and junior B coaches.

“I can’t forget anybody.” How about your teammate,

linemate and 10-minute older twin brother Matt?

“Usually, I am speaking as both of us together,” he said, laughing at his omission. “That’s why you probably al-ways hear us speak as ‘we’ or ‘our.’ It’s going to be different saying ‘I’ for once.”

London Knights goalie Jake Patterson watches as a shot slips past the crease Thursday against the Guelph Storm at Budweiser Gardens. ANGELA MULLINS/METRO

Knights a loss away from long layo� OHL playoff s. Storm put Knights on ropes with London defence folding under increased workload

Western Mustangs

Bird, Ort and Breen to take their places on Wall of ChampionsThree former players headline the inductees into this year’s Western Mustangs Wall of Cham-pions.

This year’s class is made up of Larry Bird, Derek Krete and Reg Ort in the player category; Joe Breen (awarded posthumously) and Gary Jubenville in the builder category; and the 1994 Vanier Cup champion-ship team in the team category.

The inductees will be honoured Friday night at the Wall of Cham-pions dinner, taking place in the Great Hall at Somerville House at Western.

Bird played in 1969-70 and was later inducted into Saskatch-ewan Roughriders Plaza of Honour in 2002. Krete was an all-Canadian linebacker in 1994 and 1996, also winning the President’s Trophy in 1996 as top defensive player in the country.

Ort, from 1948-51, starred in three sports at Western — football, wrestling and hockey — and was awarded the Claude Brown Trophy as Western’s male athlete of the year in 1952.

Breen, in 1929, was the first head coach of Mustang football team. Jubenville was video coordinator and team manager from 1991-2009.DAVE LANGFORD/METRO

Game 4

36Storm Knights

DAVE [email protected]

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25metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 SPORTS

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“Number one job site” based on six-month average online job postings for period ending February 28, 2014. Comparison between Workopolis and all other major paid online job boards. Does not include online classifi ed sites or job posting aggregator sites. Statistics provided by WANTED Technologies. © 2014 Workopolis.

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UFC

GSP seeks comeback after knee surgery Former UFC champion Georges St-Pierre says his knee surgery went well and the rehab that looms ahead won’t impact his decision on whether to return to mixed martial arts competition.

The 32-year-old Mont-real fighter’s left knee was operated on Wednesday in Los Angeles. He had reconstructive surgery on the other knee in Decem-ber 2011.

“I climbed Everest once before and I’m going to climb it again — if I want to,” St-Pierre told The Canadian Press on Thurs-day. “It’s not a problem for me.... Anyway I didn’t plan to come back to com-petition before 2015.

“And if I want to come back, when I want to come back, I’ll do it again. I’ll have all the tools to do it again. I’m not going to be less strong or less athletic — I’m going to be just bet-ter.” the canadian press

Pirates sail past CubsPittsburgh Pirates third baseman Pedro Alvarez rounds the bases after hitting a three-run home run in the seventh inning against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on Thursday. The Pirates won 5-4. Brian Kersey/Getty imaGes

Don’t rule out Niagara Falls as a potential future home of the Buffalo Bills.

Several officials told The Associated Press that a newly formed Bills stadium task force of public and pri-vate leaders seeking to bol-ster the team’s long-term viability is considering sites that would put it closer to the team’s burgeoning On-tario fan base.

“We’re looking at Niag-ara County,” Lt. Gov. Robert

Duffy told the AP this week. “We’re open to looking at a number of venues.”

Niagara Falls Mayor Paul Dyster confirmed Niagara County was discussed as an option during the inaugural meeting last week of the newly formed New Stadium Working Group committee.

Duffy made clear “that all options should be on the table,” Dyster said, adding that includes Niagara Coun-ty and even Batavia, about halfway between Buffalo and Rochester.

That goes beyond the group’s initial directive, which was first limited to seeking potential stadium sites in Erie County, where Buffalo is located.

Another idea is having the Bills relocate their head-quarters to the University at

Buffalo campus in the Erie County town of Amherst, where a new practice facility would be built and shared with the school’s football team. That proposal would satisfy a long-term need for a Mid-American Conference program seeking to broaden its profile.

Though not a member of the working group, New York state Sen. Tim Ken-nedy told the AP he is aware of the preliminary discus-sions tying the Bills and the school. the associated press

Looking to relocate. A task force is considering a number of potential locations that could be the new home of the Bills

Could the Buffalo Bills be moving to Niagara Falls?

Quoted

“We’re open to looking at a number of venues.”New York Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy

Page 26: 20140411_ca_london

26 metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014SPORTS

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Bill Haas putts on the first green during the first round of the Masters on Thursday in Augusta, Ga. Haas is trying to do what his father, Jay, couldn’t do — win a major. He is in good position after a 4-under 68 for the opening-round lead. Scan the above image using the Metro News app to view a photo gallery of other golfers on the greens, as well as a couple of celebrities cheering on their significant others. Andrew redington/getty imAges

Making Haaste to the top of the leaderboard

With dad in his ear, Bill Haas turned in the best round of his Masters career Thursday.

Now he wants to do what his father never could — fin-ish the job.

Haas birdied the final hole for a 4-under 68 and the open-ing-round lead, the first time he has broken 70 in five ap-pearances at Augusta National.

His father, Jay, played in the Masters 22 times, with five top-10 finishes topped by a tie for third in 1995. He is staying with his son this week and providing valuable advice on the practice range.

“I never remember think-ing, ‘Man, I wish I could hit this shot for my dad,’” Bill Haas said. “But I do know that

there’s times I’m like, ‘I wish my dad could hit this shot for me.’”

Jay Haas never won a major despite having plenty of suc-cess on the PGA Tour.

Maybe his 31-year-old son can take care of that family oversight.

“I think he deserves a ma-

jor in his career as good as he played,” Bill Haas said.

Defending champion Adam Scott has his major title and got off to a strong start in his quest to stay dressed in green.

Scott rolled in a testy putt to save par at the 18th, and finished with a 69, one shot off the lead.

“It was a nice way to walk off, not shooting 70,” Scott said.

Louis Oosthuizen and Bub-ba Watson, another owner of a green jacket, matched Scott with a 69.

Playing in their first Mas-ters, Jimmy Walker, Kevin Stadler and Jonas Blixt were among those shooting 70, making their way around the course just fine despite some unfamiliarity with the revered layout. The AssociATed Press

The Masters. Bill Haas attempting to win green jacket for his golfing family

Graham DeLaet of Weyburn, Sask., lines up a putt during the first round of the Masters on Thursday. Andrew redington/getty imAges

Canadians in Augusta

It was a tough first round for Graham DeLaet of Weyburn, Sask. DeLaet bogeyed six of his first seven holes and opened at 8-over 80.

• MikeWeirofBright’sGrove,Ont.,whowonthegreenjacketin2003,shotafirstroundof1over.

Page 27: 20140411_ca_london

27metronews.caWEEKEND, April 11-13, 2014 PLAY

Across1. __. Coach5. Actor Christian9. __ boom14. __ Superstack (Sudbury landmark)15. Soprano’s show-stopper16. Actress Dianne17. Corn: French18. As in recent news... Vancouver Island tree which might be the second largest of its kind in Canada: 2 wds.20. Ratify22. Ms. Zellweger23. Concerns for students: 2 wds.26. Elvis record label29. E. __ (Bacteria)30. __ __ one’s laurels32. Ice Age creature36. Awry37. Turkish title, variantly38. Actress Hilary41. Mr. Preminger42. Valley of BC, Bella __44. Ontario: __ Bay, dubbed the ‘sixth Great Lake’46. __-__ dress48. $1.00 coin bird, Common __49. Teaching deg.50. #43-Down’s win-ner gets presented with a what to wear?: 2 wds.56. Waters: Spanish58. Get away

59. They define The Group of Seven63. Hip-Hop house64. Hamilton CFL player65. Functions66. Pretty material67. “Later, alligator!”: 2 wds.

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Down1. Target: 2 wds.2. Debacle3. Book genre4. Learn __ __ (Dog training basic)

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Zeta-Jones is from10. France/Belgium river11. Ancient Egypt’s beautiful Queen12. Q. “__ ‘_’ the 9th letter?” A. “Aye.”13. Midpoint [abbr.]19. Sideways glance

21. Puerto __24. Sugar substitute, Sweet’_ __25. Wangle27. __ Rica28. Mr. Williams of “Happy Days”31. Urban air problem32. Twin-crystal33. _ __ day’s work34. Reality TV ‘rela-tionship’35. Powder39. Inert gas40. Nunavut: __ Inlet (Iqaluit area which was a WWII air base for the United States)43. Golf: Masters Tournament locale in Georgia45. Genetic stuff [pl.]47. Ms. Ullman, for short51. Jacob’s Biblical twin’s52. Gladiator’s 35153. ‘K’ of DKNY54. Sagas55. Singer/songwriter from Burlington, ON who currently has a country version out of the Avicii hit “Wake Me Up”57. Crocodile Dun-dee’s ‘hi’59. Mil. officers60. Ouch!, in French61. Pressure meas.62. ‘Ballad’ suffix

Yesterday’s Sudoku

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

Sudoku

Horoscopes

Aries March 21 - April 20 The influence of Neptune, planet of deception, in your chart warns you could give away too much information about yourself. Be generous with your time and, if you can afford it, with your money but keep your secrets to yourself.

Taurus April 21 - May 21 Why are you trying to swim against the tide when you know it’s a battle you are destined to lose? You may not agree with the way things are going but you have no choice but to go with it, for now.

Gemini May 22 - June 21 Someone you have always thought of as a rival will surprise you today by being not just friendly but also open and honest on a personal level. Is it a trick? No it is not.

Cancer June 22 - July 23 If you want to make a success of something, get assistance. According to the planets, you have taken it as far as you can on your own. Now you must share the load with others.

Leo July 24 - Aug. 23 Over the next week you will think more and more about your career and long-term ambitions. The need to make money may be a motivating factor but the most important thing is that do what you love.

Virgo Aug. 24 - Sept. 23 You seem to be in everyone’s good books at the moment, which makes you suspicious. The simple fact is some people like you for who you are, so stop being negative.

Libra Sept. 24 - Oct. 23 If you say something you know to be untrue today, the planets warn you will be found out. There is absolutely no reason you should lie or give false information.

Scorpio Oct. 24 - Nov. 22 You may not understand why so many people are singing your praises but you must have done something to warrant being the centre of attention. Milk the applause.

Sagittarius Nov. 23 - Dec. 21 You may be on top of your game but a week or so from now your energy may dip, so don’t make too many plans and certainly don’t take on any more chores. If anything, you need a rest.

Capricorn Dec. 22 - Jan. 20 Something unexpected will happen today and because you like everything to happen at the right time, chances are you will be thrown out of your stride. Good. It’s not healthy to get too set in your ways.

Aquarius Jan. 21 - Feb. 19 The more open you have been in recent weeks, the more you need to spend some time by yourself now. This is a time for thinking and for coming to terms with your feelings. You can’t do that at a party.

Pisces Feb. 20 - March 20 You may have to take a detour today but that’s OK. You will reach your chosen destination so don’t be impatient. It’s what you see and hear and feel along the way that makes the journey worth it. Sally BROMPTON

Yesterday’s Crossword

Crossword: Canada Across and DownBy Kelly aNN BuchaNaN

See today’s answers at metronews.ca/answers.

Page 28: 20140411_ca_london

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