Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Jets look
to soar
in playoffs
The Globes
Roy MacGregor
on Winnipegs first trip
to the postseason
in 19 years
GLOBESPORTS.COM
C A N A DA S N AT I O N A L N E W S PA P E R
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
ASSET OVERHAUL
ture plan.
But the move is also a response
to a common problem in modern
governance: how to pay for anything new amid a shaky economy,
aging infrastructure and few
available sources of new money.
Ontario, Page 7
................................................................
ALBERTA
GHOMESHI SCANDAL
Polls bleak
for PCs,
but voter anger
may not last
to election
................................................................
................................................................
SIMON HOUPT
................................................................
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation announced it had severed ties with two executives
implicated in the Jian Ghomeshi
scandal, as it released a damning third-party report into workplace harassment and abuse by
the former star radio host.
The public broadcaster told
staff Thursday that Chris Boyce,
the executive director of radio
and audio, and Todd Spencer,
the executive director of human
resources and industrial relations, who had been on leaves
of absence since early January,
were no longer with the corporation.
The announcement came
moments before the release of a
report by employment law firm
Rubin Thomlinson that painted
Mr. Ghomeshi as a co-worker
who consistently breached the
behavourial standard of CBC by
yelling at, belittling and humiliating others.
Management knew or ought
to have known of this behaviour and conduct and failed to
take steps required of it in
accordance with its own policies
to ensure that the workplace
was free from disrespectful and
abusive conduct, the report
says. It is our conclusion that
CBC management condoned this
behaviour.
Lawyer Janice Rubin and her
colleagues conducted 99 interviews over five months, though
Mr. Ghomeshi refused their
request to participate.
The report adds that there
was no one who had clear and
consistent authority over Mr.
Ghomeshi on a day-to-day basis
in the workplace. It concludes:
There is a flaw in the manner
in which the Q workplace was
designed. Producers, the executive producer, and Mr. Ghomeshi were all in the same
bargaining unit.
During a teleconference, CBC/
Radio-Canada president Hubert
Lacroix said the findings of this
report are troubling. Theyre disappointing. They point to lapses
in our system and concerns
about our culture.
INSIDE
Bound by children,
but not by vows
How mediation
can save a family
after the end
of a marriage
Life & Arts
................................................................
Across Canada, people who want to switch gender face long waits
for approval, few options for procedures and difficulty obtaining
hormone treatments: Were not quite hitting the mark as a country
........................................................................................................................................................................
KELLY GRANT
HEALTH REPORTER
.................................................................................
Ghomeshi, Page 8
@globeandmail
facebook.com/theglobeandmail
linkedin.com/company/the-globe-and-mail
(HDFFC|00005W /b.g
T&CO. 2015
A2
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
TIFFANY.COM
They were seen as conniving killers who were born into a life of privilege and
murdered their parents to get a multimillion-dollar inheritance. But despite the
damning facts that convicted Lyle and Erik Menendez, and the unflattering
media sensation of their trial, the brothers were spared the executioners needle by a California jury, which recommended a life sentence instead. The pair
had argued that the shotgun slayings of their father Jose, a high-flying executive, and his wife, Kitty, in their Beverly Hills mansion were acts of self-defence
following years of physical and sexual abuse. The brothers had gotten away
with it for seven months, spending lavishly on cars and trips, before Erik confessed to his psychologist. The first trial ended with a jury deadlock, but the
jury in the retrial was unconvinced by their defence. Joe Friesen
TODAYS COLUMNISTS
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
LEAH McLAREN
GARY MASON
ERIC DUHATSCHEK
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
REGULARS
SECUREDROP
................................................................
................................................................
Correction
A Wednesday obituary of Eduardo Galeano included an incorrect
birthdate. He was born on Sept. 3,
1940, not April 13 of that year as
published.
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T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
NEWS
A3
U.S. POLITICS
Presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton, centre, has coffee with members of the community at the Tremont Grille in Marshalltown, Iowa, on Wednesday.
In the United States, more than most countries, the public expects politicians to reveal themselves as people. MICHAEL B. THOMAS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
IMMIGRATION
A peace march yesterday, above, in the South African city of Durban was interrupted by anti-immigrant protesters.
Critics say President Jacob Zuma has done little to quell violence against foreigners. ROGAN WARD/REUTERS
the South African parliament on
Thursday. We condemn the violence in the strongest possible
terms. We appeal for calm, an
end to the violence and restraint.
Criminal elements should not be
allowed to take advantage of the
concerns of citizens to sow mayhem and destruction.
Mr. Zuma reminded his listeners that many of the foreigners
were refugees, and many were
helping South Africas economy
A4
NEWS
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
IAIN MARLOW
ANDREA WOO VANCOUVER
................................................................
Protesters picket outside a Sikh temple in Surrey, B.C., that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited with Stephen Harper on Thursday. BEN NELMS/REUTERS
accused Mr. Modis government
of indifference as the killings
spread. The Supreme Court of India conducted a special investigation and cleared Mr. Modi of being
complicit in the riots, though
many think his administration
was partly responsible for not
containing the violence.
Mr. Modi was once refused a
visa to visit the U.S. over concern
about his role during the riots.
Canada, however, never refused
him a visa because Mr. Modi never asked for one, said Stewart
Beck, Canadas former high commissioner in India who helped
cement Canadas relationship
with Mr. Modi.
But in British Columbia as in
Ontario, there was also jubilation
at the Indian leaders arrival.
LAW
SEAN FINE
JUSTICE WRITER
................................................................
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T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
NEWS
A5
DISCIPLINE
SEAN FINE
JUSTICE WRITER
................................................................
Ezra Levant, seen in 2010, was under investigation over remarks he made. PAWEL DWULIT/THE CANADIAN PRESS
this month. The committee
heard from the law societys
counsel and from Mr. Levants
lawyer, Robert Hawkes, each of
whom cautioned that some
charges might violate Mr.
Levants right to free speech, and
that others lacked the evidence
to convict.
And when the committee withdrew the charges, it did so with
an unsatisfactory and unclear
explanation, Justice Dawn Pentelechuk said.
JUSTICE
Eaton Centre
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least 30 years
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A6
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
NEWS
RETAIL
Beer sales
on tap
for grocers
Its a great day for people who like their
beer cold and more conveniently available,
says Premier Kathleen Wynne but convenience
stores have been left out of sales overhaul
.....................................................................................................................................
MARINA STRAUSS
ADRIAN MORROW
................................................................
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
Beer ombudsman
........................
Beer tax
.................................
.................................................
..................................................................
........................................................
Oliver Moore
IGOR TARASYUK/GETTY
IMAGES/iSTOCKPHOTO
NEWS
A7
FROM PAGE 1
Ontario: Retail
changes for beer
touted while
Hydro One sale
downplayed
.................................................................................
A8
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
NEWS
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
TRANSPORTATION
15-minute
GO rail service
to see gradual
introduction
................................................................
An investigation into former CBC radio host Jian Ghomeshi, seen in November, found he was steadily ill-tempered at work. NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS
FROM PAGE 1
Ghomeshi: Former host shared details about his own sex life
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
younger employees have securing reliable work, and establishing a career at the CBC and their
vulnerability to behaviour that is
contrary to the behavioural standard in order to maintain their
employment. The report says
younger workers eloquently
described the cost to them, financially, emotionally and otherwise,
of being professionally insecure.
On Thursday, the broadcaster
issued pink slips for 241
employees across the country,
following an announcement last
month that it would cut $15-million from its annual budget.
Mr. Ghomeshi is free on
$100,000 bail. He will be back in
court April 28. None of the allegations have been proved in
court.
A new poll indicates Jim Prentices approval rating has sunk to 22 per cent
from 50 per cent four months ago. JASON FRANSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS
FROM PAGE 1
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T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
NEWS
WILDLIFE
INVESTIGATION
Winnipeg
Ballet fires
staffer amid
police probe
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
A9
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
A seal hunt is shown in the Atlantic Ocean off Newfoundlands coast Thursday, in this picture provided by the Humane Society International/Canada.
FEDERAL POLITICS
LEGISLATION
ALBERTA
Inside
the Market
The Globes
home for
investing
insights and
analysis,
brought to
you by a
respected team
of writers.
tgam.ca/
inside-themarket
A REAL TWEET:
ten ishop
@kbishop90
I wonder
if homeless
peoplego
to heaven
8:21 PM - 15 Jan 2015
A10
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
COMMENT
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
The subject who is truly loyal to the chief magistrate will neither advise nor submit to arbitrary measures JUNIUS
ONTARIO BEER
eer Ombudsman. No two words better sum up the philosophy behind Ontarios so-called New Beer Framework. It is
youll love.
That plan, adopted by the Wynne government after a report by
former TD Financial Group CEO Ed Clark, will turn a concentrated
monopoly into a complex, multi-channel, many-tiered beast, overseen by Queens Park. The Clark report says the number of places
selling beer across the province will increase by about 30 per cent.
But the free market you know, consumer demand wont decide
where that happens. Or when. Or how. Premier Mom and Co. will
retain control. That is likely to ensure that beer remains one of the
provinces most lucrative neighbourhoods for lobbyists and party
fundraisers.
Consider the promise of beer in grocery stores. Your average gro-
................................................................
cer would be happy to start selling beer the day after tomorrow,
but the government is determined to move at the pace of a banana
A media elite?
................................................................
for the benefit of the Beer Store has long been restricted in its beer
................................................................
................................................................
itself in the flag and laud the contribution of the brave men and
women of our Armed Forces.
But when it comes to providing
appropriate services to those
same brave men and women
upon their return home, the Conservatives are missing in action.
Chris Phillips, Ancaster, Ont.
................................................................
................................................................
In my practice of psychiatry, it
was obvious that the longer a
patient was on the waiting list for
treatment after symptoms developed, the longer and more difficult successful treatment became.
In the long run, the result of this
delay by Veterans Affairs will
mean more staff and more money
will be required. In the short run,
the damaging consequences to
the ill veteran and his/her family
are most difficult to endure, and
may become insurmountable.
Not only is this a financially irresponsible way to run things, but it
is also very callous.
Archibald Wilkie Kushner, Ottawa
................................................................
Willing a coalition
................................................................
................................................................
Standard sentences
................................................................
Grounded security?
................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
EDITORIAL MASTHEAD
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
COMMENT
A11
THE GLOBE WAS FOUNDED IN 1844. THE MAIL WAS FOUNDED IN 1872.
ALBERTA ELECTION
TPP tactics
or threats?
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
GARY MASON
gmason@globeandmail.com
................................................................
CALGARY
................................................................
Follow me on Twitter:
@garymasonglobe
Russian President Vladimir Putin has referred to the Soviet collapse as a form of robbery of Russia. ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
GEOPOLITICS
SERHII PLOKHY
Professor of history at Harvard
University, 25th winner of the Lionel
Gelber Prize for his book The Last
Empire: The Final Days of the
Soviet Union
................................................................
................................................................
DEREK BURNEY
FEN OSLER HAMPSON
................................................................
A12
NEWS
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
FROM PAGE 1
Transgender: CAMH clinic approved 177 surgeries last year, up from 59 in 2010
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Chrystofer Maillet plays guitar at home in Ottawa on Tuesday. He took on $7,401.50 in debt for a double mastectomy in 2013. DAVE CHAN FOR THE GLOBE AND MAIL
an appointment on Dec. 3,
2013, nine months after his surgery the Health Services
Appeal and Review Board ruled
against him, writing that although his case was very compelling, the rules are clear. No
CAMH pre-approval, no public
funding.
By the time he made his plea
to the board, Mr. Maillet had
spent nearly a lifetime wrestling
with gender dysphoria. He grew
up in Riverview, N.B., where, as
he put it in an interview, there
werent even gay people there.
His parents still love him, he
said, but they are baffled by his
decision to become a man. His
father insists on calling him
Christine.
Really, what was I going to
do? I always wanted to be a boy.
You can see pictures that my
family took of me from the age
of three until forever. Theyre all,
like, building forts in the backyard or playing Dukes of Hazzard or playing with
Transformers. Not typical feminine or female things. I never
went for that. I never was inter-
ested at all.
About a decade ago, Mr. Maillet moved to Ottawa to make a
fresh start. Identifying as a lesbian, he fell into an abusive relationship from which he
eventually escaped. Then he
landed a federal government job,
made a small circle of friends
and gained confidence as a singer performing now and then at
pubs in the capital. Meanwhile,
he dressed as a man and introduced himself simply as Chrys.
It was during a month-long
solo hike on Spains Camino de
Santiago trail in 2010 that Mr.
Maillet finally decided to make
the medical transition to
become a man. When he
returned to Ottawa, he started
testosterone treatments, which
prompted his voice to drop, his
leg hair to thicken and his muscles to bulge. He was sad to lose
his female singing voice, but
otherwise he felt amazing.
It was like, this is exactly how
I want to feel, he said.
Unfortunately, his bulked-up
chest muscles made his breasts
larger; before long he was
said it doled out nearly $2.2-million on gender reassignment surgeries in 2014-15, up from just
more than $22,000 in 2008-09,
the year the procedures were relisted under OHIP after a 10-year
hiatus.
We certainly support people
being able to access these services closer to their own communities, Dr. McIntosh said.
Were not tied to this model of
us being the only game in town.
For its part, Saskatchewan
added a second site out of
province in Edmonton for surgery approvals last year to increase access. Newfoundland still
lists CAMH as its lone approval
site. Some other provinces, including Nova Scotia, which only
began covering gender reassignment surgeries last year, allow
family doctors to grant approvals
using the WPATH standards.
David Jensen, a spokesperson
for Ontarios Ministry of Health
and Long-Term Care, said by
e-mail that the ministry is
aware of concerns related to wait
times at CAMH and is exploring
options to improve wait times.
WEATHER
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
NATIONAL FORECAST
Daytime high, overnight low and conditions:
ccloudy
ssun
fgfog
snsnow
frfreezing rain
sfsnow flurries
hzhaze
shshowers
nanot available
tthundershowers
pcpartly cloudy
wwindy
rrain
rs-rain/snow
CANADA FORECASTS
Banff
Barrie
Brandon
Calgary
Chartown
Chicoutimi
Churchill
Corner Br
Cornwall
Edmonton
Fredericton
Gasp
Goose Bay
Halifax
Hamilton
Huntsville
Inuvik
Iqaluit
Jasper
Kelowna
Kenora
Kingston
London
Moncton
Montreal
Niagara
North Bay
Ottawa
TODAY
SAT.
SUN.
MON.
16/-2pc
16/5s
16/3s
19/3s
4/-2r
8/-3r
-3/-13pc
4/-4rs
18/5pc
16/2r
12/1r
8/-5r
-2/-9sf
9/1r
20/7s
14/2s
-4/-6pc
-13/-14pc
12/-1r
20/5pc
16/2s
14/5pc
19/8s
13/0r
17/5pc
17/7s
14/1s
19/5pc
8/-4sf
13/2s
18/-1s
9/-1pc
3/-3pc
6/-5c
-6/-13pc
1/-5sn
14/1r
11/1s
11/0pc
3/-8sf
-1/-11c
10/-1pc
18/4s
13/0s
2/-2pc
-8/-22pc
10/-3pc
19/4s
15/3s
14/3s
17/6s
7/-2pc
12/2r
16/5s
12/-1r
14/1r
7/-2pc
12/8r
8/-4r
9/1pc
2/-3pc
6/-6rs
-4/-13s
2/-6sf
14/6s
9/2pc
10/-2pc
4/-8pc
2/-10pc
5/-3pc
11/9pc
14/6s
3/-2s
-12/-21pc
11/-1pc
20/5pc
8/0r
13/6s
13/9r
6/-3pc
13/7s
14/10pc
14/5pc
14/6s
12/2s
13/4r
7/-4sf
14/5s
3/-2s
7/2c
-5/-11pc
2/-6s
9/6r
15/5s
10/1pc
5/-7s
3/-7pc
7/-1s
16/5r
10/3r
4/-1pc
-12/-15s
17/3pc
22/8s
6/-3c
9/6r
16/5r
7/-2s
8/6r
17/6r
10/2r
8/6r
Whitehorse
8/0
TODAY
Iqaluit
-13/-14
Yellowknife
5/-6
Churchill
-3/-13
St. Johns
4/-2
Edmonton
16/2
Vancouver
Regina Winnipeg
15/7
16/4
17/3
Portland
22/7
Halifax
9/1
Washington
24/13
Atlanta
22/16
New Orleans
27/22
Miami
31/23
P. George
Parry Snd
Peterbrgh
Quebec
Regina
Rimouski
S.S. Marie
Saint John
Saskatoon
Sept-Iles
St. Johns
Sudbury
Sydney
10/-2pc
12/3s
19/4s
13/1r
16/4s
10/2r
10/2s
9/2r
15/3s
7/-5r
4/-2rs
15/3s
9/-3c
SAT.
11/2pc
13/2s
17/2s
8/-1r
15/0r
6/0c
9/2s
8/-2pc
13/1pc
3/-8s
6/-1c
12/-1s
5/-4pc
SUN.
16/4pc
13/7pc
14/7s
13/2pc
7/-3rs
8/-1pc
9/2pc
7/-2pc
8/-2pc
3/-8pc
1/-1rs
13/5pc
1/-4pc
MON.
17/6pc
12/3r
11/5r
10/2c
6/-2s
9/3pc
6/-1r
7/1pc
9/0s
3/-4pc
0/-2sn
10/2r
2/-3s
Warm Front
Thunder storm
Cold Front
Freezing rain
Occlusion
Thund Bay
Thompson
Timmins
Toronto
Val dOr
Vancouver
Victoria
Waterloo
Whistler
Whitehorse
Windsor
Winnipeg
Yellowknife
WORLD FORECASTS
TODAY
Boston
18/10
Toronto
20/7
Phoenix
28/15
Houston
27/20
Jet Stream
Rain
Trough
Montreal
17/5
Chicago
23/11
Denver
12/3
-30
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
40
Snow
TODAY
SAT.
SUN.
MON.
22/0s
11/1pc
15/-1s
20/7s
12/0pc
15/7s
14/7pc
19/6s
15/2pc
8/0s
21/9s
17/3s
5/-6pc
10/0s
6/-6r
12/-3pc
16/4s
9/-2r
16/9s
16/7s
17/4s
17/3s
11/1pc
17/8s
19/-1s
5/-6s
13/1r
4/-10sn
15/3pc
11/8r
12/4s
17/9s
16/8s
11/8r
19/5s
11/2pc
13/9r
9/-2r
4/-6sf
8/-1r
8/-7pc
10/1r
12/5r
7/2r
17/10pc
17/9s
14/4r
19/6pc
10/1pc
17/7r
7/-3rs
5/-7pc
Acapulco
32/23s
Amsterdam 12/4pc
Anchorage 9/3pc
Ankara
18/7s
Athens
19/14s
Atlanta
22/16r
Baghdad
30/18s
Bangkok
35/28s
Beijing
22/12c
Beirut
20/15s
Belgrade
25/12pc
Berlin
12/1pc
Bermuda
21/20c
Boston
18/10r
Bridgetown 29/25c
Brussels
13/5pc
Budapest
21/9r
Buenos Aires 20/11r
Cairo
25/14s
Cape Town 23/14s
Chicago
23/11pc
Copenhagen 10/2s
Dallas
28/17t
Denver
12/3t
Edinburgh 14/4pc
Geneva
16/10r
Hong Kong 26/24pc
SAT.
SUN.
MON.
31/22s
13/5s
9/4r
19/7s
21/13pc
27/18c
30/19s
35/29s
20/8pc
20/15s
13/5r
11/4pc
22/20r
20/7s
29/25pc
13/5s
14/3r
21/12s
27/15s
23/14s
19/10pc
12/5s
28/16t
14/3r
14/4pc
14/8r
27/24pc
31/23s
12/5pc
10/1pc
16/6s
20/12pc
23/18t
31/19s
36/29s
23/11s
20/17s
14/6s
14/4pc
22/18s
15/6pc
29/25r
14/5s
14/5pc
22/12s
29/18s
24/15pc
18/10r
12/4pc
27/12s
13/1pc
14/5c
18/9r
27/24pc
31/24s
12/6s
10/0c
13/4r
17/11pc
27/13t
34/21s
36/29s
23/12pc
24/18s
16/8pc
11/3pc
21/19c
10/9r
29/25r
13/5pc
14/5r
22/12pc
33/19s
23/15pc
15/5r
11/4s
23/11s
13/2c
14/4s
19/8pc
26/23t
Honolulu
25/22r
Houston
27/20t
Istanbul
18/13s
Jerusalem 17/9s
Johanburg 20/12pc
Karachi
37/26s
Kiev
15/5pc
Las Vegas 27/15s
Lisbon
18/11pc
London
14/5pc
Los Angeles 27/14s
Madrid
21/9r
Manila
35/26t
Miami Beach 31/23pc
Montego Bay29/24s
Moscow
9/1pc
Myrtle Beach 25/18c
Nashville
26/15pc
New Delhi 37/24s
New Orleans 27/22t
New York 20/13r
Nice
17/13pc
Orlando
28/20t
Oslo
12/0pc
Palm Spr
33/17s
Paris
16/7c
Phoenix
28/15s
Rome
20/12r
S. Francisco 19/10s
Salt Lake
17/5pc
Sao Paulo 25/18r
Seoul
19/11pc
Singapore 31/27t
Stockholm 8/2r
Sydney
27/19r
Tokyo
18/11s
Vienna
18/7r
Warsaw
13/3pc
Washington 24/13r
SAT.
SUN.
MON.
25/23s
27/19t
19/11pc
18/10s
18/11r
35/26s
12/2r
30/17s
17/11pc
14/5s
25/14s
20/5r
35/26pc
30/24t
29/24s
10/0r
25/18pc
27/18c
38/24s
25/21t
24/10s
17/14pc
28/21t
14/1pc
34/18s
15/6pc
32/16s
20/12pc
17/11pc
19/6s
27/20r
15/10r
31/27t
11/3pc
19/16r
19/15r
12/3pc
10/3r
27/14s
25/22r
31/18pc
13/8r
20/14s
17/10r
35/26s
10/4r
30/17s
18/11c
14/6pc
23/14s
19/6pc
35/27t
31/24t
30/25pc
8/0c
23/20t
26/18pc
40/26s
27/21t
15/10pc
17/13pc
30/22t
13/1pc
34/18s
16/6s
32/17s
18/10r
16/11pc
19/6s
26/19t
19/6r
31/27t
10/3c
18/16r
18/14r
13/5pc
11/3r
19/14c
25/22pc
28/17pc
14/10s
25/14s
20/12pc
35/25s
9/2r
31/17s
19/12s
14/7pc
21/13s
22/9s
34/25t
31/24t
29/25t
7/0c
26/19t
21/9t
40/26s
30/19pc
13/11r
17/13s
29/21t
14/1s
33/17s
15/7s
32/17s
19/11s
15/11pc
20/7s
24/19t
19/7pc
31/26t
10/2pc
19/16c
17/12pc
13/5r
11/2r
24/15t
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T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
NEWS
A13
UKRAINE
GREECE
COURTS
Former
rap mogul
to stand trial
on murder
charges
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................
BRIAN MELLEY
RAQUEL MARIA DILLON
LOS ANGELES
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
Riot police, who had red paint thrown on their shields, face off against leftist protesters at a rally in Athens seeking the abolition of new high-security
prisons. The police responded with tear gas and stun grenades. ALKIS KONSTANTINIDIS/REUTERS
RELIGION
LAURIE GOODSTEIN
................................................................
Step Outside
Every September, teenagers from across Canada choose to step
outside of their comfort zones at NJC. While studying Canadian
Grade 12 and AP curriculum from their new home in Switzerland,
they explore a dozen countries, debate in the Model UN, pause in
Flanders Fields, network at the Canada-Swiss Chamber of
Commerce, ski the Alps, cycle through vineyards and play hockey at
the base of the Matterhorn. Academic preparedness, international
exposure and guidance expertise lead to acceptances from the finest
universities across Canada and abroad. New independence within a
small school community enables them to understand who they are
and realize how their passions and talents will one day contribute on
a global scale.
Neuchtel Junior College | Founded 1956
Grade 12/GAP | Co-Ed | www.njc.ch
PERSUASION
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
SECTION B
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Report on Business
JCClark
Investments.
S&P/TSX
DOW
S&P 500
DOLLAR
GOLD
OIL
GCAN 10-YR
15,386.77 (-64.10)
18,105.77 (-6.84)
2,104.99 (-1.64)
82.10 (+0.80)
1,198.00 (-3.30)
56.71 (+0.32)
1.367% (+0.028)
STREETWISE ENERGY
REAL ESTATE
Calloway REIT
to acquire
SmartCentres
Ed Clark says province will rein in fees for dealers from stock sale of power utility
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
billion.
Investment banks typically
earn a percentage in the mid-single digits from IPO proceeds, although giant-sized IPOs for hot
tech stocks like Facebook have
paid as little as 1.1 per cent. One
banker familiar with the governments plans said Hydro One
could grind down fees to the
low 3-per-cent range, similar to
what Twitter paid on its 2013 initial share offering.
Hydro One, Page 5
................................................................
TAMSIN McMAHON
REAL ESTATE REPORTER
................................................................
Construction worker Andrew Eva in Edmonton: The winter was slow ... but now theres nothing. JASON FRANSON FOR THE GLOBE AND MAIL
ECONOMY
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Hewers of wood,
drawers of water
Drop in energy-sector investment ripples through economy and the provincial election campaign
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
BIG NUMBERS
$5-billion
Albertas 2015-16 deficit
................................................................
0.4%
Expected 2015 GDP growth
................................................................
5.7%
Projected unemployment rate
McKenna, Page 7
.....................................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
................................................................
Magna, Page 8
................................................................
TIM KILADZE
NIALL McGEE
................................................................
Alberta, Page 8
STREETWISE
BARRIE McKENNA
wo seemingly disparate
events this week expose a
stark truth about what the world
wants from Canada.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra
Modi was in Ottawa to buy some
uranium to fuel the countrys
nuclear plants.
And in Winnipeg, a Saudi-U.S.
group bought whats left of the
Canadian Wheat Board, the
governments former grain marketing monopoly.
To much of the world, Canadians are what they always have
been hewers of wood and drawers of water.
Ottawa has a strategy of diversifying our trade relations into
distant and fast-growing markets,
including Asia and the Middle
East, while demanding better
access for investors and knowledge-based exporters.
But in the end, what many of
these countries really covet is our
wheat, uranium, oil, iron ore,
nickel and potash.
Mr. Modi, for example, wants to
transform India into a manufacturing powerhouse. He talked
this week about wanting Canada
to become a key partner in
every facet of its economic development. But when he was asked
by a reporter what India wanted
from Canada in ongoing bilateral
trade talks, he seemed to have
mainly our natural resources on
his mind.
AUTOMOTIVE
GREG KEENAN
AUTO INDUSTRY REPORTER
................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
@globebusiness
facebook.com/theglobeandmail
linkedin.com/company/the-globe-and-mail
B2
REPORT ON BUSINESS
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
ECONOMY LAB
The transparency in party finances has been an overall benefit for our democracy, though there were plenty of
critics who predicted devastating consequences for Canadas political parties. PATRICK DOYLE/BLOOMBERG
ments record when election time
arrives.
Sometimes it might be useful
for public authorities to be able
to arrest us because they think
we might be engaged in criminal
activity. But because such discretion can be abused, we subject
their powers of search and arrest
to rules and hold them accountable for abuses.
Central banks used to have
enormous unfettered discretion
to adjust interest rates, a power
they thought was indispensable
to their effectiveness. Weve
largely tamed that power, too,
requiring increased transparency
in their plans and decisions.
In Ottawa, the discretion that
political parties enjoyed to accept
corporate and trade-union funding is gone. The resulting transparency in party finances has
been a boon, although there were
plenty who predicted devastating
consequences for our political
parties.
In international affairs, Ronald
Reagan famously summed up the
principle at work when discussing whether the Soviet Union
could be trusted to follow
through on its nuclear disarmament commitments. Trust, Mr.
Reagan said, but verify. In other
words, get the Soviets to agree to
certain targets and objectives and
give them some discretion in
how to achieve them, but at the
same time make sure you have
the means to establish objective-
DISCLOSURES A WEEKLY ROUNDUP OF ODDS AND ENDS FROM THE WORLD OF BUSINESS
9 BY IAN MORFITT
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Gold mining
on the silver screen
Finger-lickin
good coffee
That coffees
out of this world
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
ET CETERA
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
DILBERT
REPORT ON BUSINESS
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................
Deputy Editor:
Mark Heinzl
Investment Editor:
Darcy Keith
Senior Editors:
Michael Bird
Nicole MacAdam
Roula Meditskos
Claire Neary
Assistant Editors:
Michael Babad
Gillian Livingston
Aron Yeomanson
Feedback:
rob@globeandmail.com
JOURNALISM
Globe and
Mail wins six
SABEW Best
in Business
awards
................................................................
STAFF
................................................................
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
REPORT ON BUSINESS
REGULATION
ENERGY
North
Montney
gas route gets
NEB approval
B3
Ontario in a better bargaining position than in the past with Bruce Power, critics argue
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................
Bruce Power and its shareholders fear the provinces schedule for refurbishment would require the company to idle
reactors before the end of their commercial life. NORM BETTS/BLOOMBERG
We continue to work with the
province to turn the policy and
intention of Ontarios Long Term
Energy Plan into action, James
Scongack, Bruces vice-president
for corporate affairs, said in an
e-mail, and are committed to
being a low-cost source of reliable and clean electricity for decades to come through continued
investment in our site.
The two sides had hoped to
wrap up negotiations by the end
of 2014 and submit the refurbishment plan for approval from the
Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, according to a briefing
note Greenpeace obtained under
the Access to Information Act.
The memo prepared by the
IESOs predecessor, Ontario Power Authority (OPA) said the
province had established a timeline under which Bruce and OPG
would take units off-line sequentially in order to maintain secure
supply and keep costs down.
An agreement with Bruce Power would need to be executed in
B4
REPORT ON BUSINESS
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
MEDIA
DAVID FRIEND
................................................................
Disney cartoon Phineas and Ferb has long been viewed in Canada on the Family Channel, but will move to Coruss
Disney Channel in September. DISNEY CHANNEL/THE CANADIAN PRESS
swapped hands last year.
Family Channel was passed to
DHX after the creator and distributor of kids programs got
CRTC permission to buy three
specialty TV channels that Bell
Media was required to sell when
it bought Astral Media.
As part of that transaction,
Corus (CJR.B)
Close: $17.58, up 51
LAW
A Toronto legal startup that offers law firms an artificially intelligent (AI) search engine that
can scour thousands of documents in the due diligence
phase of corporate mergers and
acquisitions is partnering with a
major player in the U.S.
Toronto-based Kira Inc., whose
Kira Diligence Engine is used by
blue-chip firms such as Torys
LLP, says it has a new partnership with New York-based Intralinks Holdings Inc. that will see
Kiras AI software put to work in
many more major corporate
deals.
Intralinks, which is listed on
the New York Stock Exchange, is
a large provider of what are
REGULATION
JANET McFARLAND
................................................................
STAMPEDE GROUP
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT | STRATEGIC COUNSEL | INTERNATIONAL TRADE | ISSUES MANAGEMENT
Business attire
The launch of Canadas new federal-provincial securities regulator is facing a further delay until
at least the end of this year as
officials now say they will not
publish the agencys long-awaited regulations until some time
this summer.
The new Co-operative Markets
Regulator, which will oversee
securities regulation in provinces
that opt to join the system, was
initially supposed to be up and
running on July 1 this year. But
delays in drafting legislation and
regulations for the agency have
pushed the deadline back significantly.
A notice issued Thursday by
ministers for the participating
governments said the latest plan
is to republish an updated version of draft legislation for the
agency some time this summer
along with the detailed regulations laying out how it will operate. The legislation was originally
published last September.
There is no new deadline for
the launch of the agency, but the
notice said the drafts coming this
summer will be open for a 120day comment period, which will
likely end late this year. The
launch will follow any revisions
in the model after a review of the
public input.
The announcement said the
legislation will be republished
with the regulations because
many stakeholders including
securities lawyers and public
companies that will operate under the new regime complained
last year they could not properly
comment on the broad legislation creating the agency without
also seeing the regulations that
will fill in the details about how
it will operate.
The ministers are committed
to taking the time necessary to
develop an appropriate legisla-
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
REPORT ON BUSINESS
INFRASTRUCTURE
FROM PAGE 1
Hydro One:
This is a
yield-hungry
market
The St. Lawrence River span, which replaces an existing bridge, will be a public-private partnered project
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
B5
................................................................
................................................................
Ottawa announced Wednesday that a consortium led by SNC-Lavalin and Grupo ACS was chosen as the preferred
proponent for construction of the new bridge over the St. Lawrence River. SIGNATURE ON THE SAINT-LAWRENCE GROUP
BRIDGE PROBLEMS
LOCATION
Autoroute
Bonaventure
MONTREAL
Victoria
Bridge
New le des
Soeurs Bridge
New bridge
for St. Lawrence
Reconstruction
and widening
of A-15
BROSSARD
Champlain
Bridge
Nuns
Island
Alignment
with A-10
of the business.
SNC officials declined to comment Thursday. The shares rose
1.7 per cent in Toronto trading to
close at $43.60.
Chief executive officer Robert
Card has said the company is increasingly confident it has improved project delivery and risk
management in the infrastructure and construction unit. But
questions were being raised
Thursday about just how aggressive it had to be in its Champlain
bid to secure the contract.
You dont want to be destroying your future profitability just
to show the market that you still
have the ability to win work,
said Dundee Capital Markets analyst Maxim Sytchev. Would they
be as aggressive if they had $20billion worth of backlog? Probably not.
Questions remained Thursday
as to what the federal government would do with the Champlain Bridge project in the event
SNC is convicted of corrup-
tion charges.
Under current federal procurement rules, SNC would be
banned, or debarred, from bidding on federal work for 10 years
and the government could terminate the existing bridge contract
with the company. More likely,
Ottawa would pursue the contract and impose oversight and
monitoring measures on the construction and subsequent maintenance.
Federal ministers insist theyve
prepared for that contingency.
But this is largely new territory
for Canada.
The government is bound to
run into conflicts between its
desire to promote companies like
SNC-Lavalin and maintain some
sort of debarment or responsible
supplier regime, said Brenda
Swick, a lawyer at McCarthy
Ttrault in Toronto who specializes in international trade and
government contracting. The
problem for the government is
they havent thought it out.
History
The Champlain Bridge is the
newest of Montreals four
prominent South Shore
spans, but it is the first to
descend into decrepitude. The
bridge, which opened to traffic in 1962, has two main sections: the short steel
cantilever portion that is
most recognizable and in
decent shape and a long nondescript section built from
prestressed concrete that was
innovative for its time but is a
maintenance nightmare.
..........................................................
Jurisdiction
The federal government owns
the entirety of two major
Montreal bridges and half of
another through inertia and
quirks of history, geography
and politics. The first major
federal span was the Jacques
Cartier Bridge, which was
built in the 1920s as a project
of the federally owned Port of
Montreal. The Champlain was
built to pass over the federal
St. Lawrence Seaway. Ottawa
and the province occasionally
discuss selling the bridges to
Quebec. Predictably, they disagree on price tag.
..........................................................
Trouble
The first major cracks in the
design of the Champlain
Bridge appeared in the 1990s,
when the prestressed concrete
deck was replaced and a
drainage system was installed
to slow down the corrosive
damage caused by salty water.
Even then, irreversible damage was noted. A 2011 report
found repairing the bridge for
a long-term future was difficult, if not impossible.
Les Perreaux
INTERNET
BRIAN WOMACK
................................................................
Bloomberg News
................................................................
Microsoft (MSFT)
Close: $42.16 (U.S.), down 10
................................................................
Yahoo (YHOO)
Close: $45.78, up 5
................................................................
BRIAN
SOLIS
BRITTANY
WILLIAMS
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BEGG
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MILLER
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REPORT ON BUSINESS
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
SUSAN KRASHINSKY
MARKETING REPORTER
................................................................
A Hyundai video featuring Genesis cars writing a message from a 13-year-old girl in Houston to her father in space has attracted attention online.
astronaut Buzz Aldrin. It held a
contest for the chance to go to
space camp in Florida, and 22
people were chosen for a ride
on one of the Netherlandsbased Space Expedition Corp.s
commercial space flights.
Just last week, power equipment manufacturer Andreas
Stihl AG released a video reminiscent of the blockbuster film
Gravity, in which marooned
astronauts used a fire extinguisher to propel themselves
through the void. In Stihls version, its leaf blower does the
job.
Were trying to separate ourselves from the competition.
You put yourself in space and
you put yourself above everyone
else, said Stihl Canadas marketing manager, Jeff Loosemore.
The video was made in
France, but has received so
much attention that Stihl Canada plans to promote it online as
well.
Space gives you a high-tech
appeal youre insinuating
that theres a lot of technical
design behind the equipment,
he said. With space, theres a
lot of messaging that you can
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MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
OF FIERA CAPITAL
CORPORATION
AIRCRAFT
00 Challenger 604 Low Time, Canadian
CBN. 10 pax, 4000 range. Immed. $5.8M
USD. J. Spears 416-203-0600, jaspears.com.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
ONTARIO HOTELS 50, 103, 180 Rooms.
1.5 hr. GTA. Flagged, Strong ROI.
www.larrymckenzie.ca 519-673-7822.
Profitable GTA Wood Recycling
Business for sale. Revenue $2.5 Million.
Contact - jerald.alexander@sympatico.ca
or 416-587-6084
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T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
REPORT ON BUSINESS
B7
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
EMERGING MARKETS
stan Times.
Overall, Canadian business
appears to need more convincing
about India.
Its not exactly bank friendly,
Brian Porter, chief executive of
Bank of Nova Scotia said of India
when I met him in Washington
last fall, a sentiment he repeated
last week. We dont have longterm aspirations for our Asia business right now, Royal Bank of
Canada chief executive David
McKay told a Wall Street audience
last month. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper at the end of
2009 talked of two-way trade between Canada and India reaching
$15-billion in five years or now,
in 2015. Its not going to happen.
Merchandise trade between Canada and India was about $6.3-billion, according to the Asia Pacific
Foundation of Canada.
Canadians should not assume
that Mr. Modi will show up in
Canada with a key to his kingdom. The Indian Prime Minister
meets billionaires almost weekly
INVESTMENT
KIM MACKRAEL
JACQUELINE NELSON
DAVID BERMAN TORONTO
................................................................
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, seen addressing an audience in Toronto on Wednesday, said he understands
the need for predictability and consistency in government decisions and regulations. FRED LUM/THE GLOBE AND MAIL
Minister Stephen Harper was
also present for the meeting.
He was very appreciative of
the welcome hes received here
in Canada [and expressed] lots
of optimism for future business,
Tim Gitzel, CEO of Cameco
Corp., said in an interview
Thursday afternoon. Saskatchewan-based Cameco concluded a
deal this week to supply India
with hundreds of millions of dollars in uranium over the next
five years.
Mr. Modi is seeking to promote
foreign investment to fund infra-
AGRICULTURE
FROM PAGE 1
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
ERIC ATKINS
................................................................
Bunge (BG)
Close: $86.65 (U.S.), down 30
B8
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
REPORT ON BUSINESS
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
FROM PAGE 1
FROM PAGE 1
Calloway:
Ties go back
to early 2000s
................................................................
Andrew Eva knows it wont be as easy finding a job in the oil and gas sector than it was before prices started going down. JASON FRANSON FOR THE GLOBE AND MAIL
FROM PAGE 1
A NEW REALITY
DRILLING RIGS IN OPERATION
400
United States
1,600
300
1,200
200
800
100
400
Canada
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
15
ALTA.
SASK. NFLD.
CAN.
GDI
B.C.
QUE.
MAN. MAR.*
ONT.
*Maritimes
................................................................
FROM PAGE 1
Aston Hill: Company was known for having a high expense base
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
C1
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
Cloud 10 signage throughout Toronto Pearson International Airport informs American Express card
members and non-card members alike of the benefits of membership including priority access
through security lines for members.
Thanks to a Real Food Grant from Hellmanns, Camille J. Lerouge School in Red Deer was able to
renovate its cafeteria saying bye bye deep fryer by running over the schools deep fat fryer
with a monster truck, and introducing healthy and nutritious food choices.
Cloud 10
has enhanced the
reputation
of American
Express as
a customercentric and
customerexperiencefocused
brand.
David Barnes
is vice president
of advertising
and communications at
American
Express
51%
INCREASE IN CARD
APPLICATIONS
COMPARED TO
FORECAST
24%
INCREASE IN THE NUMBER OF
PROSPECTS AGREEING THAT
AMERICAN EXPRESS OFFERS
THE BEST CARD FOR TRAVEL
The Real
Food Movement has
driven
affinity for
the brand
because its
an issue of
fundamental
importance
to our core
market.
Gina Kiroff
is marketing
manager at
Unilever
34%
INCREASE IN
AVERAGE CARD
MEMBER SPEND AT
AIRPORT RETAILERS
#1
HELLMANNS IS NOW THE NUMBER ONE SELLING MAYONNAISE BRAND IN CANADA
Online? Visit cassies.ca and cleansheet.ca for more information. See all of the winning campaigns from this series online at globeandmail.com/adv/cassies2015
ABOUT THE AWARDS
CANADIAN ADVERTISING
SUCCESS STORIES
The CASSIES is Canadas only
awards show recognizing the
business effectiveness of advertising as demonstrated by
rigorous published cases. The ICA (Institute of Communication Agencies) is the driving force behind the event, which
is hosted by Strategy magazine and supported in Quebec by
the AAPQ (Association des agences de publicit du Qubec)
and APCM (Association des professionnels de la communication et du marketing).
Now celebrating its 22nd anniversary, the CASSIES reflect
the ICAs long-standing dedication to the advertiser-agency
partnership and continuous learning. Winning cases must
successfully navigate a demanding two-tier examination by
senior-level judges. All told, more than 500 success stories
have been published in the Case Library at cassies.ca.
The Globe also supports young creative talent and effective advertising in Cannes with the Young Lions and Young
Marketers competitions and the Globe Creative Effectiveness Prize.
UNCOVERING THE BOLD
VISION, BRAND NEW IDEAS
OF CANADAS NATIONAL
MARKETING COMMUNITY
Strategy delivers on this tagline via a monthly magazine, daily
news, events and initiatives with industry partners like the
CASSIES. Strategy also covers media news through Media in
Canada Daily and tracks creativity on stimulant. From Agency
of the Year to the Creative Report Card rankings, strategy is
the benchmarker of the industry. Check out strategyonline.ca
and stimulantonline.ca for Canadas most innovative and
impactful marketing ideas.
B10
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
REPORT ON BUSINESS
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
EURO ZONE
WASHINGTON
................................................................
TICKER
................................................................
RAILWAYS
CN to upgrade lines
in Western Canada
................................................................
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Miners hit their helmets on the ground during a protest outside the Ministry of Development in Athens on Thursday. ALKIS KONSTANTINIDIS/REUTERS
MINING
ATHENS
................................................................
Eldorado (ELD-T)
Close: $6.11, down 18
................................................................
AUTO MAKERS
BANKING
CHRISTINA REXRODE
PETER RUDEGEAIR
JUSTIN BAER
................................................................
Citigroup (C)
Close: $54.02 (U.S.), up 81
Goldman Sachs Group (GS)
Close: $200.21 (U.S.), down 89
................................................................
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
REPORT ON BUSINESS
B11
Globe Investor
QUICK HITS
INFRASTRUCTURE
................................................................
EQUITIES
Investors more
bearish: survey
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
DAVID KENNEDY
................................................................
................................................................
The Eglinton Crosstown light-rail line in Toronto is just one of many infrastructure megaprojects around North
America that Canadian firms will look to take advantage of over the next decade. KEVIN VAN PAASSEN/THE GLOBE AND MAIL
SNC-LAVALIN (SNC)
STANTEC (STN)
$ 60
$ 38
47
33
34
28
M J
2014
J A S O N D J F M
2015
M J
2014
J A S O N D J F M
2015
................................................................
................................................................
Close: $43.60, up 71
Close: $31.77, up 35
$ 44
$ 20
38
14
32
8
M J
2014
J A S O N D J F M
2015
M J
2014
J A S O N D J F M
2015
................................................................
................................................................
Close: $13.26, up 15
EXCHANGE-TRADED FUNDS
................................................................
E-COMMERCE
RETAIL
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
CLARE OHARA
WEALTH MANAGEMENT REPORTER
................................................................
E-TRADING
B12
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
GLOBE INVESTOR
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
THURSDAYS MARKETS
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
WHAT HAPPENED
..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Bay Street declines Canadian stocks fell as energy bears won a scuffle in the ongoing
battle against bulls who expect a recovery in crude oil prices to limit long-term damage to the countrys major oil and gas industry. The biggest drags were Canadian Natural Resources, which lost 2.8 per cent, and Suncor Energy, which fell back 1.5 per cent.
..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Wall Street falls U.S. stocks ended marginally lower as lingering worries about
upcoming corporate earnings reports offset enthusiasm about a trio of soaring Wall
Street debuts. Apple closed 0.5 per cent lower while General Electric ended down 0.7
per cent. SanDisk lost 4.5 per cent after its forecast.
..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
15,386.77
-64.10
-0.41%
208,304,617 VOL
+5.16% YTD
TSX
INDEXES AND SUB INDEXES
.................................................................................
CLOSE
CHG
S&P/TSX Composite
15,386.77
S&P/TSX 60
896.60
S&P/TSX Completion
1,003.11
S&P/TSX SmallCap
601.19
S&P/TSX Venture
705.59
Cons Discretion
179.58
Cons Staples
460.61
Energy
239.34
Financials
254.61
Health Care
137.54
Industrials
193.05
Info Tech
55.30
Materials
226.16
Metals & Mining
714.65
Real Estate
301.81
S&P/TSX Global Gold
164.24
S&P/TSX Global Mining
64.64
S&P/TSX Income Trust
202.03
S&P/TSX Preferred Share
731.48
Telecom Serv
126.00
Utilities
236.17
-64.10
-4.30
-2.27
-.83
.34
-.68
-2.22
-2.45
.19
.51
-.63
-.34
-2.92
-10.31
.76
-3.15
-.76
1.86
-2.24
.41
.23
%CHG
YTD%
.................................................................................
-.41
5.16
-.48 4.88
-.23 5.99
-.14 3.83
.05
1.45
-.38 4.88
-.48 4.89
-1.01 8.25
.07
.52
.37 32.48
-.33
-.09
-.61 15.76
-1.27 4.96
-1.42 4.38
.25 12.07
-1.88 12.65
-1.16
4.19
.93 8.32
-.31 -9.61
.33 -1.84
.10 4.05
.................................................................................
14700
15385
CLOSE
.................................................................................
13600
15330
M
2014
10
2015
11
12
A.M.
P.M.
............................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................
S&P 500
............................................................................................................................
............................................................................................................................
2,104.99 9
18,105.77 9 -6.84 9
-1.64 9
-0.08% 9
+2.24% YTD
-0.04% 9
89,515,996 VOL 9
+1.59% YTD
65.73
48.96
64.42
56.03
15.83
.46
1.66
.45
.23
1.28
40.84
40.07
53.98
70.47
15.40
-2.76
-1.48
-1.23
-1.21
-2.47
79.53
16.15
54.69
103.40
11.73
2.9
2.1
2.0
1.9
1.3
.................................................................................
44.59 -10.0
57.87 -6.9
45.36 -4.5
43.54 -3.9
17.94 -3.6
.......................................................................................
1985
INTERNATIONAL INDEXES
17300
.................................................................................
CLOSE
CHG
11998.86
27739.71
7060.45
11611.70
45480.23
5007.79
5224.49
1272.90
1061.60
54674.21
2139.90
4194.82
5917.60
19885.77
9398.60
-232.48
120.89
-36.33
-166.70
217.29
-3.23
-29.86
-2.45
9.27
-244.53
19.94
110.66
40.30
16.01
-29.95
%CHG
YTD%
.................................................................................
1830
16000
M
2014
M
2014
2015
M
2015
..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
MARKET BREADTH
% change indicates increase / decrease from 13-week average
..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ADVANCE
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .%CHG
. . . . . . . . . . .VOL
. . . . . .(000S)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .DECLINE
. . . . . . . . . . . . . %CHG
. . . . . . . . . . . . .VOL(000S)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .UNCH.
. . . . . . . . . . . .%CHG
. . . . . . . . . . . .VOL(000S)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TOTAL
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .NEW
. . . . . .HIGH
. . . . . . . . . .%CHG
. . . . . . . . . . . . . NEW
. . . . . . .LOW
. . . . . . . . .%CHG
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .VOL(000S)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .%CHG
.......
TSX
Venture
New York
Nasdaq
628
287
2,064
1,280
-19.81
-33.53
2.08
-4.11
155,072
63,421
1,876,586
725,403
1,000
417
2,337
1,431
24.96
238,556
-14.59
63,561
22.47 2,590,709
3.99
863,903
687
1,680
415
292
-1.46
8.81
3.86
-6.93
25,892
42,147
74,832
71,205
2,315
2,384
4,816
3,003
27 -49.56
13 -34.98
143 -19.03
118 39.58
93 92.18
22 -37.85
28 -70.54
22 -70.01
419,520
169,129
4,542,127
1,660,511
6.13
-11.15
-7.74
-18.04
-1.90 +22.37
0.44 +17.52
-0.51 +7.53
-1.42 +12.96
0.48 +5.41
-0.06 +5.74
-0.57 +22.27
-0.19 +5.66
0.88 +34.26
-0.45 +9.33
0.94 +11.71
2.71 +29.68
0.69 +9.82
0.08 +13.95
-0.32 +4.62
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
VOLUME
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
TSX
TSX VENTURE
NYSE
NASDAQ
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
$
%
VOL
YTD
CHG CHG
000S %CHG
CLOSE
.................................................................................
$
%
VOL
YTD
CHG CHG
000S %CHG
CLOSE
.................................................................................
$
%
VOL
YTD
CHG CHG
000S %CHG
CLOSE
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
Bank of America
Petroleo Bras Sa Petr
Spdr S&P 500 E.T.F.
General Electric
Ishares Msci Emerg Mk
Nokia
Petroleo Bras Sa Petr
Alcoa
Citigroup
Mrk Vectr Gold Miners
Applied Materials
Cisco Systems
Intel
Apple
Sandisk Corp.
Microsoft
Horizon Pharma plc
Micron Technology
Powersh QQQ E.T.F.
Netflix Inc.
.12
.9
-.21 -2.3
-.64 -7.5
.24 2.6
-.46 -5.1
-.01 -.0
-.60 -1.5
.20 1.3
-1.16 -2.8
-.11 -.5
5001
4657
4461
3720
3324
3143
3067
3012
2956
2718
24.4
-19.4
-18.6
-14.6
22.2
1.3
8.6
-2.1
13.7
5.2
1.82
4.69
1.51
4.50
1.66
2.10
1.05
2.93
4.99
3.34
.08 4.6
-.09 -1.9
.01
.7
-.08 -1.8
.14 9.2
.20 10.5
-.02 -1.9
-.05 -1.7
.07 1.4
-.11 -3.2
6297 109.2
1621 25.1
1005 -10.1
867 38.0
624 13.7
487 -12.5
449 -27.6
239 33.2
198 20.5
178 26.5
15.79
8.68
210.37
27.28
43.46
7.77
8.58
13.45
54.02
19.74
-11.7
18.9
2.4
8.0
10.6
-1.2
13.2
-14.8
-.2
7.4
CLOSE
$
CHG
%
CHG
VOL
YTD
000S %CHG
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
GAINERS
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
TSX VENTURE
NYSE
NASDAQ
.................................................................................
TSX
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
$
%
VOL
YTD
CHG CHG
000S %CHG
CLOSE
.................................................................................
$
%
VOL
YTD
CHG CHG
000S %CHG
CLOSE
.................................................................................
$
%
VOL
YTD
CHG CHG
000S %CHG
CLOSE
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
Koppers Holdings
Philip Morris Internat
Mesabi Trust
Sinopec Shanghai Petr
Shake Shack Inc.
Korea Electric Power
Eros International PL
58.Com Inc.
Csop Ftse China A50 E
Marinemax Inc.
Identiv, Inc.
12.40 3.45 38.6
1565 -10.7
Travelzoo Inc.
13.57 3.29 32.0 2291
7.5
Netflix Inc.
562.05 86.59 18.2 14904 64.5
Capitol Acquis. Corp.
13.80 1.80 15.0
0 37.3
Audience, Inc.
6.19
.74 13.6
428 40.7
Trivascular Technolog
8.95
.95 11.9
749 -28.8
Atara Biotherapeutics
53.28 5.53 11.6
176 99.2
Panera Bread
182.89 18.97 11.6 2766
4.6
Heat Biologics
7.69
.75 10.8
196 67.5
Minerva Neurosciences
5.83
.52 9.8
127 -3.2
1.04 12.6
2.59 9.2
.37 5.3
.21 4.3
1.05 4.2
.27 4.2
8.33 4.1
.21 3.7
1.22 3.3
.35 3.3
1329 165.1
71 67.0
1276 45.2
207 26.8
511 -3.0
1096
6.8
1 34.4
66 32.8
192 -15.2
359 -33.3
2.05
2.10
1.66
3.62
12.50
1.19
1.58
1.40
1.43
1.82
.25 13.9
.20 10.5
.14 9.2
.24 7.1
.75 6.4
.07 6.3
.08 5.3
.07 5.3
.07 5.2
.08 4.6
167 48.6
487 -12.5
624 13.7
1 24.8
2 25.0
73 25.3
46 -10.7
10 -29.7
25 14.4
6297 109.2
22.65
84.96
15.68
52.06
61.59
21.39
18.64
67.57
22.70
25.16
2.17 10.6
568
6.83 8.7 23590
1.24 8.6
103
3.51 7.2
28
4.12 7.2 1800
1.33 6.6 1367
1.11 6.3
118
3.85 6.0 3130
1.27 5.9
48
1.37 5.8
560
-12.8
4.3
-9.3
77.5
n-a
10.5
-11.9
62.6
n-a
25.5
CLOSE
$
CHG
%
CHG
VOL
YTD
000S %CHG
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
LOSERS
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
TSX
TSX VENTURE
NYSE
NASDAQ
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
$
%
VOL
YTD
CHG CHG
000S %CHG
CLOSE
.................................................................................
$
%
VOL
YTD
CHG CHG
000S %CHG
CLOSE
.................................................................................
$
%
VOL
YTD
CHG CHG
000S %CHG
CLOSE
.................................................................................
.................................................................................
DHX Media
DHX Media
Callidus Capital Corp
HBP NYMEX NatGas Bear
Amaya Inc.
Novadaq Technologies
Northern Blizzard Res
Precision Drilling
ENERGY INDEXPLUS Divi
Hydrogenics Corp.
UGE International
Decisive Dividend
CohBar Inc.
VersaPay Corporation
Bacanora Minerals
Blackline GPS
Aveda Trans. & Energy
North Arrow Minerals
Chesapeake Gold
Kennady Diamonds Inc.
Argan, Inc.
Gulfmark Offshore
Global X Brazil Finan
Ocwen Financial
Coeur Mining, Inc.
Matador Resources
Aspen Aerogels, Inc.
Penn Virginia Corp.
Harsco Corp.
Natural Grocers by Vi
68 -23.2
4461 -18.6
94 -10.3
1898
.4
1691 -6.4
0
2.1
190
11.0
3324 22.2
6 -3.3
3 -2.4
1.02
1.65
1.07
1.40
1.60
2.00
2.15
1.01
1.93
4.50
-.36
-.15
-.08
-.09
-.10
-.10
-.09
-.04
-.07
-.16
-26.1
-8.3
-7.0
-6.0
-5.9
-4.8
-4.0
-3.8
-3.5
-3.4
20
1
41
69
111
1
44
79
1
10
-27.1
65.0
n-a
-.7
92.8
-14.9
-4.4
98.0
-5.4
-2.2
131 -2.9
1498 -34.4
1 -7.7
9571 -48.5
3439
11.4
5487 34.7
17 -13.7
5996
11.2
1111 -16.2
167 -5.8
%
CHG
VOL
YTD
000S %CHG
1550
n-a
7709 -11.2
1459 233.7
1 69.4
456 99.2
100 12.9
4
6.7
4036 -5.9
2686 -12.5
404 -25.5
CLOSE
$
CHG
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CLOSE
. . . . . . . . . . . .CHG
. . . . . . . .%CHG
.......
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CLOSE
. . . . . . . . . . . .CHG
. . . . . . . .%CHG
.......
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CLOSE
. . . . . . . . . . . .CHG
. . . . . . . .%CHG
.......
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CLOSE
. . . . . . . . . . . .CHG
. . . . . . . .%CHG
.......
TSX HIGHS
COM DEV International
DH Corporation
DIRTT Envrionmental
Dominion Diamond
F.A. Morningstar Intl
First Asset Energy Gi
Hartco
iShares Emrg. Mkts Fu
Kinaxis Inc.
Kirkland Lake Gold
Nobilis Health Corp.
Parkland Fuel Corp.
Pollard Banknote Limit
Regal Lifestyle Commu
Richelieu Hardware
Russ. 1000 Eq. Wt. US
Tricon Capital Group
U.S. Dividend Growers
UrtheCast Corp.
ZCL Composites
7.35
TSX LOWS
BMO S&P/TSX Laddered 12.04
Canickel Mining
.11
Connacher Oil and Gas
.01
Corvus Gold Inc.
.65
GeneNews
.57
HBP S&P500 VIX Sh.Ter
2.99
HBP S&P500 VIX ST Fut
5.95
Horizon US 7-10 Yr Tr
48.87
Horizons Act Float Pr
9.16
Horizons Active Prefe
9.27
Horizons Active Prefe
9.27
iShares S&P/TSX N.A.
19.02
iShares S&P/TSX Prefe
14.77
iShares S&P/TSX Prefe
14.70
Kelso Technologies In
4.37
Marret High Yield Str
.08
Mega Uranium
.08
North American Pallad
.07
.98
16.17
8.22
.73
.08
.43
.05
-.17 -14.78
-.11
-.68
-.12 -1.44
.00
.00
-.01 -11.11
-.02 -3.37
-.01 -10.00
.06
.02
.85
.35
.24
.03
.48
.34
.48
.36
2.05
1.82
.10
.83
.04
.05
.02
.01
.10
-.01
-.01
.07
.25
.08
.01
.00
.02
NYSE HIGHS
Alliance Data Systems
Autoliv Inc.
Cigna Corp.
Energizer Holdings
Goldman Sachs
Ibonds Dec 2018 Corpo
Ishares Ibonds Dec 20
Ishares Mid-Cap Growt
Prosh Ultra Japan E.T
Proshares Ultra Ftse
Usana Health Sciences
Wabco Holdings
299.93
124.05
132.80
142.06
200.21
101.91
103.87
169.38
102.81
107.21
120.70
126.69
5.06
42.89
7.58
22.77
22.80
10.66
3.37
34.14
30.90
5.98
9.28
26.54
7.35
9.69
66.85
20.64
11.79
9.90
2.42
.21 4.33
.14
.33
-.32 -4.05
.36
1.61
.20
.88
.08
.76
.02
.60
.48 1.43
2.59
9.15
-.14 -2.29
1.04 12.62
.11
.42
.15 2.08
.20
2.11
.60
.91
.35 1.72
.07
.60
.00
.00
.08 3.42
-.05
-.08
-.05
-.01
-.01
-.03
-.04
-.23
-.96
-.03
-.05
.02
-.11
.02
-.11
-.38
-.01
-.01
-.06
-.68
-.66
-29.03
-33.33
-1.52
-5.00
-1.32
-3.72
-1.93
-.33
-.54
.22
-.58
.14
-.74
-8.00
-5.88
-11.76
-44.00
15.00
6.82
25.00
26.32
-2.86
-2.04
22.41
13.89
4.60
5.26
.00
75.00
.11
1.07
.16
.04
.02
.04
.01
.02
.20
.11
.01
.02
.03
.01
.02
.06
.02
.05
9.90
-.01
-.08
-.08
-.01
-.01
-.01
-.01
-.01
-.02
-.02
-.01
.00
-.01
-.01
.00
-.01
-.03
-.02
-.10
-8.33
-6.96
-33.33
-22.22
-25.00
-11.11
-50.00
-40.00
-6.98
-16.00
-33.33
.00
-14.29
-50.00
.00
-15.38
-60.00
-25.00
-1.00
.00
.00
-.01 -25.00
-.05 -5.56
-2.27
2.07
2.58
.48
-.89
.06
.08
-.03
.62
3.58
-.79
4.12
-.75
1.70
1.98
.34
-.44
.06
.08
-.01
.61
3.45
-.65
3.36
................................................................
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
GLOBE INVESTOR
B13
STOCK ANALYSIS
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................
RANK STOCK
TICKER
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
CHR.B-T
5.96
IT-T
16.28
ESL-T
52.55
NVC-T
11.00
EXE-T
7.72
MAL-T
13.73
TCL.A-T
17.44
TIH-T
33.93
VLN-T
18.90
VRX-T
252.82
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
TED DIXON
NUMBER CRUNCHER
teddixon@inkresearch.com
................................................................
OUTLOOK
Industrials
Technology
Technology
Health care
Health care
Industrials
Industrials
Industrials
Industrials
Health care
SUNNY
SUNNY
SUNNY
SUNNY
SUNNY
SUNNY
SUNNY
SUNNY
SUNNY
SUNNY
INSIDER
PRICE COMPOSITE
VALUATIONS COMMITMENT MOMENTUM
RANK
722.3
1,057.7
1,376.9
730.3
679.8
799.2
1,361.6
2,629.5
414.7
86,175.9
83.0
5.1
5.5
1.8
75.7
67.2
85.8
37.5
96.2
3.3
56.7
99.0
93.3
95.9
90.9
86.3
69.4
82.5
77.2
82.3
95.1
95.5
94.4
95.7
64.6
76.7
78.6
88.1
54.6
96.3
99.3
98.1
96.8
96.6
95.9
95.8
95.2
94.3
94.0
93.6
Screen run on April 10, 2015, share prices as of April 15, 2015. Source: INK Research
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
Price momentum
6 based on three-, six- and 12month returns.
Next, each V.I.P. category rank
is equally weighted to determine
a composite ranking.
The screen
Our universe includes some 800
TSX-listed stocks that meet minimum size and liquidity requirements. To make the final grade, a
stock in the group must trade
over $3 and have a market cap of
at least $250-million. We begin by
SECTOR
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
................................................................
In context
The percentile V.I.P. category and
composite rankings of the top 10
are shown versus all other stocks
in the market. Rankings are between 0 and 100 the higher the
better. A composite ranking over
90 goes into the top decile sunny category. A composite ranking between 70 and 90 goes into
the next two deciles, or the
mostly sunny category. Keep in
mind that even if a stock is in the
sunny category, it could still rain
on your portfolios parade. Diversification remains key.
................................................................
What we found
Chorus Aviation Inc. leads the
pack. Chorus provides Air Canada feeder and regional services
through its Jazz operations. The
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
EYE ON EQUITIES STOCKS THAT SHOULD BE ON YOUR RADAR SCREEN 9 BY DAVID LEEDER AND LUKE KAWA
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
$US 590
$ 10.5
$ 13.25
$ 60
$ 54
495
8.5
12.5
52
48
400
6.5
11.75
44
42
305
4.5
M J J A S O N D J F M
2014
2015
11.0
M J J A S O N D J F M
2014
2015
36
M J J A S O N D J F M
2014
2015
36
M J
2014
J A S O N D J F M
2015
M J
2014
J A S O N D J F M
2015
For more analyst opinions on these and other stocks, Globe Unlimited subscribers can read our upgrades and downgrades roundup at tgam.ca/inside-the-market
ROB 100 LARGEST STOCKS FROM THE TSX COMPOSITE BY MARKET CAPITALIZATION
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................
CLOSE
CHG %CHG
................................................................
CHG %CHG
................................................................
................................................................
-.72 -1.93
.73
.56
-.37 -.74
-.27 -.65
.09
.36
-.06
-.13
.01
.01
.30
.46
-.39 -2.47
-.67 -1.23
-.17 -1.39
.03 1.12
-.86 -1.21
.23
.77
1.07 2.70
-.10 -.67
.20
.69
-.32 -1.59
-.38 -.47
-1.16 -2.76
CLOSE
12.96
.12
.93
229.66 -2.51 -1.08
132.99
-.17
-.13
39.63 -.27 -.68
72.77 -.48 -.66
148.68 1.86 1.27
23.02
-.41 -1.75
56.17 -.52 -.92
35.87 -.05 -.14
96.18
.34
.35
494.85 -4.86 -.97
32.37
-.16 -.49
71.00
.75 1.07
6.11
-.18 -2.86
17.82
.31 1.77
41.41
.04
.10
91.67
-.17
-.19
64.42
.29
.45
15.83
.20 1.28
667.90 -2.60 -.39
+Finning International
24.92 -.22 -.88
+First Capital Realty
19.77
.03
.15
First Quantum Mineral
16.00
-.18 -1.11
+Fortis Inc.
39.01 -.14 -.36
+Franco-Nevada Corp.
59.34 -.96 -1.59
+George Weston
104.16 -.49 -.47
+Gildan Activewear
39.08 -.32
-.81
+Goldcorp Inc.
24.16 -.38 -1.55
+Great-West Lifeco
37.02
.20
.54
H&R Real Estate Invest
23.25
.23 1.00
Hudson's Bay Co.
27.40 -.08 -.29
+Husky Energy
27.45 -.42 -1.51
+IGM Financial
45.59 -.58 -1.26
+Imperial Oil
54.90 -.08
-.15
+Industrial Alliance
44.44
.58 1.32
+Intact Financial
93.30
-.11
-.12
+Inter Pipeline
31.31
.27
.87
+Jean Coutu Group (PJC 27.57
.11
.40
+Linamar Corp.
76.56 -1.90 -2.42
+Loblaw Companies
63.35 -.50 -.78
CLOSE
CHG %CHG
+Magna International
+Manulife Financial
+MEG Energy Corp.
+Methanex Corp.
+Metro Inc.
+National Bank of Cda
+Onex Corporation
+Open Text
+Paramount Resources
Pembina Pipeline Corp
Peyto Exploration
+Potash Corp. of Sask.
+Power Corp of Canada
+Power Financial Corp.
PrairieSky Royalty
Progressive Waste Sol
+Quebecor Inc.
Restaurant Brands Int
RioCan Real Estate In
+Rogers Commun
CLOSE
CHG %CHG
................................................................
66.52
22.08
24.90
69.01
36.71
48.96
72.38
71.12
36.70
42.14
36.64
40.36
33.73
37.73
33.20
36.17
33.56
47.88
28.90
42.03
-.13 -.20
-.20 -.90
.26 1.06
-2.16 -3.03
-.19
-.51
.80 1.66
-.65 -.89
-.23 -.32
-.18 -.49
.16
.38
.10
.27
-.09 -.22
-.27 -.79
-.01 -.03
-.56 -1.66
-.50 -1.36
.18
.54
.03
.06
.19
.66
-.07
-.17
CLOSE
CHG %CHG
+ Free annual reports for companies with this symbol. Reports mailed next business day, subject to availability. To order, call 1-800-965-6199 or visit www.companyspotlight.com/partner/?cp_code=GAM1 or fax 1-800-617-7678 including ticker symbols for companies
requested. Companies wishing to participate in this service, please contact Scott Moody at 1-804-327-3440.
CURRENCIES
CANADIAN DOLLAR / U.S. EXCHANGE RATE
BONDS
GOVERNMENT OF CANADA BOND YIELD CURVE
..............................................................................................................
..............................................................................................................
..............................................................................................................
Last 12 months
COMMODITIES
THOMSON REUTERS / JEFFERIES CRB INDEX
$ 0.83
$ 0.95
320
Most Recent
1 Week Ago
4 Weeks Ago
4%
0.82
0.89
2%
0.81
260
0.83
0.8
0%
200
M
2014
M
2015
0.79
0.77
M J
2014
A S O
N D J
F M
2015
F M T W T
3
Months
Years
10
30
Oil prices marked gains for their sixth day running amid
signs that U.S. production, a key driver of the global supply glut, may be on the cusp of easing. Copper notched up
its strongest gain in four weeks. The Thomson Reuters/
Jefferies CRB Index rose 2.14 points to 226.29.
......................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................
..............................................................................................................
CLOSING PRICES
CANADA
..............................................................................................................
..............................................................................................................
....................................................
....................................................
PRICE
CHG
....................................................
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CAD
. . . . . . . . . . . . .USD
. . . . . . . . . . . .GBP
. . . . . . . . . . . . EUR
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JPY
. . . . . . . . . . . CHF
. . . . . . . . . . . . .MXN
. . . . . . . . . . . AUD
.....
YIELD
CHANGE
....................................................
....................................................
2 Year
5 Year
10 Year
30 Year
2 Year
5 Year
10 Year
30 Year
PRICE
CHG
....................................................
Nickel US$/lb
Wheat CBOT US$bsh
Lumber KD W. S-P-F, Mill US$
Framing Lumber Composite
Corn CBOT US$bsh
Soybeans CBOT US$bsh
Canola InStr Vn 1Cda C$ tnne
Feed Barley Lthbr. C$ tnne
Feed Wheat ThdrB C$ tnne
5.83
4.91
269.00
336.00
3.76
9.66
476.10
216.00
229.00
0.07
0.02
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.01
-13.50
0.00
0.00
1 CAD=
1 USD= 1.2191
1 Br pd= 1.8206
1 Euro= 1.3124
1 Yen= 0.0102
1 Sw fr= 1.2751
1 Peso= 0.0803
1 AUSD= 0.9511
0.8203
1.4934
1.0765
0.0084
1.0459
0.0659
0.7802
U.S.
0.58
0.81
1.37
2.02
+0.018
+0.031
+0.023
+0.031
Rates
YIELD
CHANGE
0.48
1.30
1.89
2.58
0.02
0.01
0.00
+0.04
Rates
....................................................
RATE
CHG
0.75
2.85
Unch.
Unch.
....................................................
RATE
CHG
0.25
3.25
Unch.
Unch.
....................................................
....................................................
B14
REPORT ON BUSINESS
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
Globe Careers
LEADERSHIP LAB
................................................................
................................................................
NICOLE GALLUCCI
................................................................
n my position, I am routinely
asked how I manage entitled
millennials.
Heres the thing: I dont find
millennials difficult to work
with; in fact, they are the reason
I am excited to get out of bed
and go to work every day. I am
motivated and mentored by millennials. Approaching 50 and
having lived a reasonably conservative, follow-the-rules, dontrock-the-boat life, I am now redefining success for myself in
work, in life, and in everything
in between. I credit the millennials in my midst my children
and my team at work for my
recent choices.
While people in my generation
often need a reminder to don
their own oxygen mask before
helping others, millennials
innately put on their own mask
first. Is that entitlement? Perhaps
but there is so much more to
the equation.
Millennials have grown up
more connected to the world
and are more aware of global
issues. They understand how
quickly things can change. As a
result, they are not prepared to
succumb to a job or life that
does not serve their spirit. They
know life is too short.
I am not going to tell you that
millennials have it all figured out
(show me a generation that
does), but I do think they have a
lot to offer. Daily, I am humbled
by what they teach me.
Here are five things Ive
learned from the millennials in
my life:
PESHKOVA/GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
ETIQUETTE
WORK FORCE
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
ESTELLE METAYER
................................................................
CHIEF NURSING
OFFICER
Are you an
enthusiastic patient
centred leader?
The Blind River District
Health Centre (BRDHC), a
multi-site healthcare provider
along the north shore of Lake
Huron is looking for
you!
If you are that person BRDHC
is seeking a Chief Nursing
Officer. To find out more about
this exciting position go to
www.brdhc.on.ca
Are you interested in joining one of Canadas top 100 employers for
2015?
Apply today at www.cpsbc.ca/about-us/careers.
.....................................................................................................................................
KAT SIENIUC
................................................................
JEREMY
CATO
MATT
BUBBERS
PETER
CHENEY
JEREMY
SINEK
Buyers using
digital tools are
forcing dealers to
change their ways
of doing business
Canadians adore
the humble
hatchback or
is that a compact
utility vehicle?
PAGE 7
PAGE 2
PAGE 3
PAGE 5
...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
A special issue about trends and innovation, inspired by The Globes annual auto summit
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
SECTION E
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Globe Drive
National Edition
BRAND STRATEGY
The
halo
effect
High-end vanity vehicles
supercars like the new Ford
GT and Acura NSX are
central to brand building
JEREMY CATO
................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
@Globe_Drive
facebook.com/globedrive
E2
GLOBE DRIVE
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
TECHNOLOGY
MATT BUBBERS
................................................................
Balancing cost and weight is a priority for McLarens 570s. The carbon fibre tub that forms the base of the passenger compartment weighs just 80 kilograms.
SAFETY
FEATURES
FOOTPRINT
MATERIALS
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
DESIGN
JORDAN CHITTLEY
WINDSOR, ONT.
................................................................
ONLINE
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
GLOBE DRIVE
E3
REDLINE
BY THE NUMBERS
The car-buying journey has
three phases: thinking,
researching and buying. On average, the thinking phase takes
30 days. Researching takes 22
days. Buying, 18.
PETER CHENEY
pcheney@globeandmail.com
..........................................................
................................................................
..........................................................
The shark-attack style of car sales has gone out the window in the age of the Internet. GETTY IMAGES
tive purchases. By the time they
bought a car, many had visited
at least half a dozen dealerships
in their quest for information.
According to research by Google, more than 75 per cent of all
car buyers now use the Internet
as their primary research tool,
and a growing number visit only
a single dealership before they
buy.
Bruno Lucarelli, an auto industry consultant and former head
of eBay Motors, says few dealers
were prepared for the way the
Internet would reshape their
business. In 2004, when Lucarelli was an executive with Autotraders online operation, he
learned that 75 per cent of the
car dealers in his area (New
York and New Jersey) didnt
have websites.
Theyd always done business
the same way, Lucarelli says.
You brewed your coffee,
opened the front door and wait-
ONLINE
PrairieChevrolet.com
UP TO
FINANCE FROM
0 84
%
FOR
V8
engine
426
4.7
seconds
horsepower
YEARS/40,000 KM
COMPLIMENTARY
OIL CHANGES ^
0-96 km/h in
Max. HP:
5,250
OR
Powertrain Warranty:
Max. Torque:
5/160k
420
years / km
lb.-ft.
YEARS/160,000 KM
POWERTRAIN
WARRANTY ^^
YEARS/160,000 KM
ROADSIDE
ASSISTANCE ^^
ON NOW AT YOUR PRAIRIE CHEVROLET DEALERS. PrairieChevrolet.com 1-800-GM-DRIVE. Chevrolet is a brand of General Motors of Canada. Offers apply to the finance of a 2015 Camaro, equipped as described. Freight ($1,650) and PDI included. License,
insurance, registration, administration fees, dealer fees, PPSA and taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to
qualified retail customers in Prairie Chevrolet Dealer Marketing Association area only. Dealer order or trade may be required. * Offer available to qualified retail customers in Canada for vehicles from April 1 through April 30, 2015. 0% purchase financing
offered on approved credit by TD Auto Finance Services, Scotiabank or RBC Royal Bank for 84 months on all new or demonstrator 2015 Camaro models (except Z28). Participating lenders are subject to change. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down
payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Example: $40,000 at 0% APR, the monthly payment is $476.19 for 84 months. Cost of borrowing is $0, total obligation is $40,000. Offer is unconditionally interest-free. Freight and air tax ($100,
if applicable) included. Licence, insurance, registration, PPSA, applicable taxes and dealer fees not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offer which may not be combined with certain other offers. GMCL may modify, extend or
terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. Registered trademark of The Bank of Nova Scotia. RBC and Royal Bank are registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. ** $5,250 is a
combined total credit consisting of $750 Owner Cash (tax inclusive) and a $4,500 manufacturer to dealer cash credit (tax exclusive) on Camaro 1LT, 2LT, 1SS, 2SS and ZL1, which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease
and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $4,500 credit which will result in higher effective interest rates. Discounts vary by model. Offer applies to eligible current owners or lessees of any model year 1999 or
newer car that has been registered and insured in Canada in the customers name for the previous consecutive six (6) months. Credit valid towards the retail purchase or lease of one eligible 2015 model year Chevrolet car, SUV, crossover and pickup models
delivered in Canada between April 1 and April 30, 2015. Credit is a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) and credit value depends on model purchased: $500 credit available on all Chevrolet Spark, Sonic, Cruze, Volt, Trax, and Malibu (except
LS) models; $750 credit available on other Chevrolet vehicles (except Colorado 2SA, Camaro Z28, Malibu LS, Silverado 1500 and Silverado HD). Offer applies to eligible current owners or lessees of any Pontiac/Saturn/SAAB/Hummer/Oldsmobile model year
1999 or newer car or Chevrolet Cobalt or HHR that has been registered and insured in Canada in the customers name for the previous consecutive six (6) months. Credit valid towards the retail purchase or lease of one eligible 2015 model year Chevrolet car,
SUV, crossover and pickups models delivered in Canada between April 1 and April 30, 2015. Credit is a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive): $1,000 credit available on Chevrolet Spark, Sonic, Cruze, Volt, Trax, and Malibu (except LS) models;
$1,500 credit available on other Chevrolet vehicles (except Chevrolet Colorado 2SA, Camaro Z28, and Malibu LS). Offer is transferable to a family member living within the same household (proof of address required). As part of the transaction, dealer may
request documentation and contact General Motors of Canada Limited (GMCL) to verify eligibility. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. Certain limitations or conditions apply. Void where
prohibited. See your GMCL dealer for details. GMCL reserves the right to amend or terminate offers for any reason in whole or in part at any time without prior notice. Requires 6.2L V8 engine and 6-speed manual transmission. Based on GM testing.
Whichever comes first. Conditions and limitations apply, see your dealer for details. ^ The 2-YearScheduled LOF Maintenance Program provides eligible customers in Canada who have purchased, leased or financed a new eligible 2015 MY Chevrolet, Buick or
GMC vehicle (excluding Spark EV) with an ACDelco oil and filter change, in accordance with the Oil Life Monitoring System and the Owners Manual, for 2 years or 40,000 km, whichever occurs first, with a limit of four lube-oil-filter services in total, performed at
participating GM dealers. Fluid top-offs, inspections, tire rotations, wheel alignments and balancing, etc., are not covered. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives available on GM vehicles.
General Motors of Canada Limited reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. Additional conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ^^ Whichever comes first. See dealer for details.
E4
GLOBE DRIVE
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
TECH SPECS
FORD GT
ACURA NSX
..........................................................
..........................................................
..........................................................
..........................................................
Horsepower: 600-plus
Horsepower: 550-plus
..........................................................
..........................................................
..........................................................
..........................................................
Drive: Rear-wheel
Drive: All-wheel
..........................................................
..........................................................
..........................................................
..........................................................
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
PORSCHE
GENERAL MOTORS
FERRARI
MCLAREN AUTOMOTIVE
PORSCHE GT3 RS
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
Price: $200,700
Price: $85,095
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
Handcrafted by Racers.
The new Mercedes-AMG GT.
A Daimler Brand
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
GLOBE DRIVE
E5
BRAND STRATEGY
...................................................................................
JEREMY SINEK
................................................................
...................................................................................
backs in the market. Scion revealed its first sedan, the subcompact
iA in Canada, it will be sold as
the Toyota Yaris sedan. And the
four-door Yaris (which is built-inlow-cost Mexico) will be positioned as more upscale than the
hatchback of the same name
(which is imported from France).
Honda revealed that the nextgen Civic will include (for the first
time since 2004) a hatchback version. The hatch will be a five-door,
and while its too soon to talk
pricing, it will be imported from
Hondas British plant, so its likely
to be priced above the sedan.
Auto makers we spoke with disagreed on whether hatchbacks
cost more to manufacture, but
Honda Canada product planner
Hayato Mori noted that sedans
higher volumes give them an
economies-of-scale edge. Given
hatchbacks lower sales volumes,
most manufacturers will concentrate on the more profitable
models, which tend to be the
higher trims.
................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
MERCEDES-BENZ
MERCEDES-AMG GT S
................................................................
HONDA
MAZDA
TOYOTA
BMW
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
HONDA FIT
MAZDA3 SPORT
TOYOTA PRIUS c
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
*Starting price for a 2015 Aston Martin GT manual Coupe is $104,000. Freight/PDI of $6,995,
air tax $100, OTS $29.20, green levy $1000, dealer admin fee, license, insurance and taxes
extra. Factory order is required for entry level vehicles. Please contact us for more details.
Phone: 416.530.1880
Phone 905.417.1170
Phone: 514.334.9910
Phone: 403.208.6262
Phone: 604.734.2905
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
GLOBE DRIVE
E7
TECHNOLOGY
Your car,
the computer
................................................................
TED KRITSONIS
................................................................
Volvo is pinning its turnaround hopes on the XC90, a crossover SUV. Its just one example of luxury car makers jumping into the SUV market. VOLVO
INDUSTRY TRENDS
JEREMY CATO
................................................................
BRAND STRATEGY
ONLINE
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Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest APR payment. For example, lease a vehicle with a value of $61,500 / $76,900 at 1.9% / 2.9% APR for up to 36 months with $6,999 / $6,799 down payment or equivalent trade-in: monthly payment
is $598 / $698, total lease obligation is $28,527 / $31,927, optional buyout is $30,845.50 / $39,175. Some conditions apply and a mileage restriction of 48,000 km over 36 months applies. A charge of 25 / 30 cents per km over mileage
restriction applies plus applicable taxes. Or purchase finance a new (in-stock) 2015 Jaguar XF AWD / 2015 Jaguar F-TYPE Convertible* at a purchase value of $61,500 / $76,900 with an annual percentage rate (APR) of 0.9% / 2.9% for
up to 60 months, monthly payment is $1,047.83 / $1,375.05, cost of borrowing is $1,369.80 / $5,603 or an APR of 0.9% / 2.9%, and total to be repaid is $62,869.80 / $82,503 for qualified buyers, on approved credit (OAC) from an approved
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Offers valid only at participating retailers. Please visit your Jaguar Retailer or Jaguar.ca for details. 2015 Jaguar Land Rover Canada ULC.
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
SECTION L
BEYOND
MOMMY
WARS
OUT OF STEP
The simplistic shuffle
of Desert Dancer PAGE 2
Redefining what
it means to be
a stay-at-home
parent PAGE 3
L I F E E D I T O R : K AT H RY N H AY WA R D
A RT S E D I T O R : J A R E D B L A N D
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
BOUND
TOGETHER
Kids make divorce that much more
complicated. Erin Silver details
how with the help of a mediator
she let go of the past and built
a new relationship with her ex
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
@Globe_Health
facebook.com/globelifestream
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faster
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WHEN YOU SPEND $50 OR MORE ON
ALMOST ANYTHING IN THE STORE.*
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L2
FILM
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
OPENING TODAY
MONKEY KINGDOM
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
##
Desert Dancer
Directed by Richard Raymond
Written by Jon Croker
Starring Reece Ritchie, Freida Pinto,
Tom Cullen, Marama Corlett,
Simon Kassianides
Classification: 14A; 98 minutes
##
................................................................
REVIEWED BY
GEOFF PEVERE
................................................................
Freida Pinto and Reece Ritchie star as dancers resisting Irans strict cultural regulations through their secret dance troupe.
(Freida Pinto) shows up to audition for the crew knocking
them sideways with her sinuously unbridled eroticism youd be
forgiven for thinking that Bob
Fosse was alive and undercover
in Iran.
Like Jon Stewarts Rosewater,
Desert Dancer contextualizes
Islamic Iran as a kind of bullying
ideological schoolyard where the
cool kids basically fish-out-ofwater American types are regularly beset by the ruling orders
thugs, who patrol the halls of
state and street like high school
monitors with you-know-who on
their side. Indeed, as Ghaffarian
and his free-expressive hipster
cohorts gather both creative
momentum and a sense of
counter-revolutionary purpose,
Authors' Brunch
Sunday, 26 April 2015 at 10:00 am
Vanity Fair Ballroom, 2nd Floor, King Edward Hotel
Tickets are $50, and must be purchased in advance
by calling us at (416) 361-0032
Crime Seen
by Kate Lines Random House Canada
Beyond the Reach is adapted from the novel Deathwatch by Robb White.
REVIEW
REVIEWED BY
BRAD WHEELER
................................................................
ONLINE
Find more reviews of movies
opening this week at
tgam.ca/arts
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
L3
................................................................
................................................................
Ben Holt and his kids, Tom, 9, and Kate, 7, at their home in North Vancouver. As a Web developer, Ben is able to
find freelance work, so he made the choice to stay at home with Tom and Kate. JOHN LEHMANN/THE GLOBE AND MAIL
its time for school pickup,
chauffeuring the kids around to
activities, cooking dinner and
taking care of basic housework.
Bens still working on expanding
his dinner repertoire, mostly
through trial and error. After the
rest of the family has gone to
bed, Ben often stays up (sometimes as late as 2 a.m.) to catch
up.
Are you a stay-at-home dad? If
Im at home when the kids are
home, then Im a stay-at-home
parent, Ben says. Hes the one
hosting play-dates, assisting with
the baseball team and serving as
class rep for parent council.
Best part: I really enjoy the
walk to and from school when
the kids just talk about their
days, Ben says.
Hardest part: Leaving his downtown social life behind. Spur-ofthe-moment coffees with old
friends and colleagues can now
take more than a week of planning. Ben still does make that
happen once in a while, bringing
his laptop downtown and working from coffee shops. He also
belongs to a mountain-biking
group that gets together once or
twice a month.
Down the road: Ben sees both
him and Jitka working full-time
jobs outside the house at some
point, but hes in no rush.
................................................................
BRAIN STORM
THE EXPERTS
................................................................
................................................................
................................................................
THE READERS
................................................................
L4
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
GENDER EQUALITY
ERIN ANDERSSEN
................................................................
Hillary Clinton has been trumpeting the gains made by female executives,
but that will be cold comfort for women mired in poverty. DOUG MILLS/NYT
returning to work and the single
mom moving to get her daughter
into a better school. She is now
waving the banner of feminism.
It feels a little late. Over the
past eight years, weve read Sheryl Sandbergs Lean In, watched
the number of women surpass
men in university degrees, and
witnessed a shift in bread-winning and greater equality in parenting. Its not perfect, of course,
but when Clinton tells female
leaders in Silicon Valley that this
is the best time in history to be a
woman, shes telling us what we
already know. Shes following,
not leading.
On the positive side, by putting
it out there so overtly, her opponents will have little choice but
to engage in a social policy
debate framed by gender. But increasingly, its not Silicon Valley
feminism thats needed in North
America. Worrying about the percentage of female executives is
valid, but professional women in
those places of power can, for the
most part, take care of themselves.
The persistent problem for the
most vulnerable women and
their families isnt landing promotions. Its poverty. Inextricably
linked to that poverty is race as
has been tragically highlighted by
recent events across the United
States. The single mom in Clintons ad, at least, has the ability
to move: What about the ones
who are trapped in poor neighbourhoods and cant? According
to U.S. labour statistics, roughly
half of all children living with single moms live below the poverty
line. (In Canada, households
headed by single mothers are
also the most likely to be poor.)
Its not male advantage that
preoccupies these families; its
money. Currently, the most invogue anti-poverty strategy
thrust at women has been marriage, which is not only sexist but
simplistic, failing to recognize
that poverty is often a barrier to
marriage, as well as a factor in
the stress that breaks couples up.
A new analysis of numbers from
the U.S. Bureau of Labour Statistics found that women work in
jobs that pay below-poverty
wages twice as often as men; this
pattern held up even for millennial women.
While American women are
now slightly more likely to have
university degrees than men,
thats not true for Hispanic or
native American women. As inequality widens within and between generations, and more
jobs become temporary or parttime, feminism needs to advocate
for evidence-based policies that
target these problems. Good child
care, for instance, cant be cast as
a womans issue or sold as a
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L6
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
REPRODUCTIVE CHOICES
LEAH McLAREN
................................................................
Annegret Raunigk holds one of her 13 children, Lelia. She is pregnant with quadruplets after undergoing in vitro fertilization. PATRICK LUX/DPA/PICTURE-ALLIANCE
known as egg freezing) as a viable insurance policy to extend
their short window of fertility.
Petropanagos points to low pregnancy success rates roughly 12
per cent in the U.S. and 8 per cent
to 10 per cent in Britain and
Europe. Its not guaranteed, she
warned, so you can spend all
this time, energy and money
investing in egg freezing and
think youre covered, and when it
comes down to it 10 years down
the line, the IVF wont result in a
live birth.
At least one part of the process
has improved. Egg freezing success rates have dramatically improved in recent years due to a
technique called vitrification a
flash-freezing process that protects the shell of the egg by
replacing egg fluid with a kind of
antifreeze that doesnt freeze and
crack the eggs.
Prior to vitrification, egg free-
zing didnt work very well, particularly for women with older (and
hence, more fragile) eggs. When
it first started in 1986, the practice
was spectacularly unsuccessful,
Dr. Gillian Lockwood, a fertility
specialist at Midland Fertility
Services in Britain, told me in an
interview last year. But its
important to remember that
those low overall success rates
take into account the 20-odd
years when the process was
essentially experimental.
Lockwood, who has seen seven
frozen-egg babies born to her
own patients, is a leading proponent of social egg freezing as an
option for women wishing to
extend their window of fertility.
Vitrification has been a gamechanger, she says, adding that
many of her colleagues across
Europe are now using ova from
frozen egg banks for patients and
finding the results are exactly the
same.
Yes, its expensive it can cost
more than $15,000 for drugs, egg
retrieval, storage and IVF, so
clearly its not for everyone. But
given that the news on egg freezing has been exceptionally good
of late, why is there persistent
doom and gloom and debate over
whether women ought to do it if
they can afford it? For every
encouraging message we get
about the practice, there seems to
be another official caution. Last
October, for instance, the Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society declared social egg freezing
an option for women. But around
the same timem in the United
States, the American Society for
Reproductive Medicine and the
Society for Assisted Reproductive
Technology advised against it,
because of the cost and low success rates.
Last year, I spent time with a
THE QUESTION
................................................................
THE ANSWER
................................................................
WFP/Joelle Eid
................................................................
www.wfp.org/Syria or text
RELIEF to 45678 to donate $10.
Join us
on Facebook
follow us
@WFP
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
L7
KYLA FOX
HEALTH ADVISOR
................................................................
RESEARCH
sound is produced.
A similar effect can be created
by pressing two hands together
at the palm, then quickly separating them.
The imager wasnt able to
determine whats in the cavity,
air or a gas released by surrounding tissues. Nor can Kawchuk be completely sure the
OSTEOPOROSIS
Middle-age women who lose weight could be losing bone density, too
................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
SHEREEN LEHMAN
................................................................
both correlated with bone density loss in the spine and hip,
LeBoff said.
So while weight loss can
have beneficial effects on a number of cardiovascular and other
health outcomes, its important
to consider skeletal health, particularly in women in whom
weight loss can result in bone
loss and since women are at a
markedly increased risk for fractures, she said.
Dr. Kathryn Diemer, director of
the Bone Health Program at the
Washington University School of
Medicine in St. Louis, said its
important for obese patients to
lose weight, and there are ways
to prevent bone density loss.
Walking is very important for
these patients, for example, she
said.
In addition, Diemer suggests
taking calcium, getting vitamin D
levels checked and monitoring
bone density.
................................................................
Reuters
L8
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
Foster Hewitts voice not emanating from the radio until 9 p.m., I
would already be tucked in bed.
A cereal company offered pictures of Leafs players in exchange
for a certain number of box tops,
and Mom obliged. My package
arrived while I was home from
school with chicken pox. I
remember spreading the pictures
CHALLENGE CROSSWORD
2
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
24
CRYPTIC
Across
1 She plays with a key
in a lock (7)
5 Order cabs about one
its essential (5)
8 Admission price note
needs changing (9)
9 At the start avoid
upsetting eggs (3)
10 Creatures with feet going
in two directions (4)
12 Bob indicates a more
direct route (5,3)
14 Fairly slight resistance
encountered inside (6)
15 A new paper to be
published (6)
17 Legal actions taken
by a traveller (8)
18 A bird others turn to? (4)
21 Show some consideration
for age (3)
22 Makes me cry, this
school subject (9)
24 A revolting individual
seen in flight (5)
25 Stray U.S. serviceman
returns in female attire (7)
Challenging Facts
The Facts & Arguments essay turns
25 in June. To help us launch our
silver-jubilee year were issuing a
challenge: The week of June 8 to 12,
well run the best five personal
essays we receive on the theme
Moment of Truth. Maybe for you it
was the straw that broke the
camels back, or perhaps you
reached a pivotal point and made a
huge change in your life quit your
job, left your spouse, moved home
or away. Your deadline is 6 p.m. on
May 15. Please read the advice at
tgam.ca/essayguide before starting,
and send your submissions to
facts@globeandmail.com.
SUDOKU
10
................................................................
You are South, both sides vulnerable, and the bidding has gone:
23
25
Down
1 Unusually eager to
give consent (5)
2 Some notice a sign
of nerves (3)
3 See a key agent (4)
4 Trivial cause of offence (6)
5 He suffers from a lack
of balance (8)
6 Random inspection
for any rash
development? (4,5)
7 A novel division of
the church (7)
11 Sheridans
competitors (3,6)
13 Good man rebuilt a
crock for racing? (5,3)
14 French chemist late
on his way up (7)
16 Get up for wild
dances (6)
19 In the bay wrecked
ship sinks deep (5)
20 Part of a building birds
may be on it (4)
23 Sartorial obligation
perhaps (3)
QUICK
Across
1 Chief god of Roman state (7)
5 Rational (5)
8 Final terms (9)
9 Trite quotation (3)
10 Large heavy book (4)
12 Decisive argument (8)
14 Lackey (6)
15 Painter (6)
17 Persuasive flattery (4,4)
18 Medieval tied labourer (4)
21 Reverential wonder (3)
22 Create a stir (4,5)
24 Artful expedient (5)
25 Fraud (7)
Down
1 Short trip for pleasure (5)
2 Tap gently (3)
3 Domesticated (4)
4 To fluster (6)
5 Person of prominence (8)
6 Begin to burn (5,4)
7 Easy gentle pace (7)
11 Situation with unseen
hazards (9)
13 A clear soup (8)
14 Put in an unremembered
place (7)
16 Yearn (6)
19 Questionable (5)
20 Property obtained by theft (4)
23 Compete (3)
Yesterdays Cryptic
Across: 1 Plankton, 5 Eats,
9 Pixie, 10 Turn out, 11 Control
panel, 13 Resume, 14 Prison,
17 Lamentations, 20 Distant,
21 Naomi, 22 Sand, 23 Coolness.
Down: 1 Pope, 2 Anxious,
3 Kleptomaniac, 4 Option,
6 Adorn, 7 Settling, 8 Proportional, 12 Preludes, 15 Syncope,
16 Castro, 18 Mason, 19 Kiss.
Yesterdays Quick
Across: 1 Notional, 5 Warm,
9 Merit, 10 Caution, 11 Make ends
meet, 13 Minnow, 14 Maroon,
17 Shock tactics, 20 In truth,
21 Abate, 22 Nook, 23 Embedded.
Down: 1 Numb, 2 Terrain,
3 On the lookout, 4 Ascent,
6 Arise, 7 Monotony, 8 Substantiate, 12 Emission, 15 Orchard,
16 Fathom, 18 Outdo, 19 Heed.
INSTRUCTIONS
Fill in the grid so that each row of nine squares, each column of nine
and each section of nine (three squares by three) contains the
numbers 1 through 9 in any order. There is only one solution to each
puzzle.
KENKEN
INSTRUCTIONS
1. Each row and each column
must contain the numbers 1
through 6 without repeating.
2. The numbers within the
heavily outlined boxes, called
cages, must combine using the
given operation (in any order) to
produce the target numbers in
the top-left corners.
3. Freebies: Fill in single-box
cages with the numbers in the
top-left corner.
2015 KENKEN Puzzle LLC. KENKEN is a registered trademark of Nextoy, LLC.
Dist. by UFS, Inc. www.kenken.com
BASEBALL The
Blue Jays fall back to earth in another loss to the Tampa Bay Rays, Robert MacLeod reports PAGE 4
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
SECTION S
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Globe Sports
EDITOR: SHAWNA RICHER
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
@GlobeHockey
facebook.com/theglobeandmail
th
14
Annual
Barbara Bank
Community
Honouree
Platinum Sponsor
MANTELLA
LUNCHEON
Tuesday, May 5th, 2015
Fairmont Royal York Hotel, Toronto
Audrey Guth
Inspirational Story
Honouree
Diamond Sponsor
Barbara & Henry Bank
Jeanne Beker
Business
Honouree
Gold Sponsors
Wendy & Elliott Eisen, Bryna Goldberg &
Howard Harris, Dr. Bernard & Carole Zucker
Since 1946
CORPORATION
S2
GLOBE SPORTS
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
HOCKEY NHL
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
BLUES
ERIC DUHATSCHEK
eduhatschek@globeandmail.com
................................................................
CALGARY
................................................................
The Blues Vladimir Tarasenko, right, celebrates after scoring as the Minnesota Wilds Mikael Granlund, left,
watches on Saturday in St. Louis. Tarasenko finished tied for fifth in this years goal-scoring race. JEFF ROBERSON/AP
Follow me on Twitter:
@eduhatschek
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
CANUCKS
Canucks goalie Eddie Lack makes a save on the Flames Joe Colborne at
Rogers Arena in Vancouver on Wednesday. RICH LAM/GETTY IMAGES
trailed after two periods.
Calgary, in fact, had not pulled
off its third-period magic trick in
two months.
We wish we could do it in the
first period, defenceman Dennis
Wideman said. Wed prefer to go
into the third period with the
lead.
The precise answer of how is
elusive. Wideman cited an unrelenting spirit. Were going to
keep coming, were going to keep
coming.
The Flames this season were
outscored in first periods 54-70
and 75-71 in the second. In the
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
BLACKHAWKS
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
GLOBE SPORTS
S3
HOCKEY NHL
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
CANADIENS
Ottawa Senators forward Mark Stone, left, grimaces after being slashed by Montreal Canadiens defenceman
P.K. Subban during Game 1 of their first-round series on Wednesday in Montreal. RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS
viet star Valeri Kharlamovs ankle
in the 1972 Summit Series, but the
motivation surely originates from
a similar place.
The game not only encourages
such behaviour, in some ways it
demands it. Those twigs arent
just for shooting pucks.
The stick-swinging annals are
full of pivotal moments and the
post-slash situation is this: the
Habs are up 1-0 in the series, their
best defenceman has escaped further punishment, the Sens inspirational goal scorer is diminished
by an injury just as Montreals is
set to return from one (Max Pacioretty could figure Friday in
Game 2 and if not, in Sundays
Game 3).
Its advantage Montreal, earned
the old-fashioned way: by any
means necessary.
The shorthand is to play a guy
hard, and if someone gets
injured in the process, well, its a
big-boy sport.
The Habs know this better than
most.
Chris Kreiders inopportune
slide into goalie Carey Price in the
Eastern Conference final between
Montreal and the New York Rangers last year derailed the formers hopes.
A year earlier, Sens defenceman
Eric Grybas suspension-worthy
hit in Game 1 subtracted influential Montreal centre Lars Eller
from the equation; the series
soon descended into chaos, and
the Canadiens limped away in
defeat.
Now the Habs have donned the
black hats, thanks to Subban.
Teams engage in a high level of
off-ice politicking in any playoff
series, and the Sens lobbying
offensive was impressive.
Revealing the exact nature of
Stones injury a microfracture to
his right wrist and unspecified
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
DRAFT
JAMES MIRTLE
jmirtle@globeandmail.com
................................................................
TORONTO
................................................................
Follow me on Twitter:
@mirtle
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Derick Brassard and Ryan McDonagh scored in the first period and Henrik Lundqvist made
the goals stand up as the New
York Rangers won the opener of
their playoff series with the
Pittsburgh Penguins 2-1 Thursday night.
New York shut down Pittsburghs top threats, Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, for a
fourth straight victory over the
Penguins in the postseason. The
Rangers won the final three
in the opening 20 minutes, McDonoughs slapper from midpoint sneaked past Fleury.
Although New York kept control early in the second period,
Comeau lifted the Penguins
within one, knocking in a
rebound with congestion around
Lundqvists crease for his first
career playoff goal. That perked
up the Penguins, with Malkin
and Brandon Sutter getting dangerous chances, and Lundqvist
flashing his right pad to thwart
Maxim Lapierre.
Fleury also was strong at the
S4
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
GLOBE SPORTS
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
The Blue Jays Devon Travis is upended at second base by the Rays David
DeJesus in Toronto on Thursday. FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS
Last year, Reyes injured his
hamstring in the first game of the
season, missed 16 games and was
plagued by leg soreness the rest of
the way.
Reyes came back to play in 145
games, but he committed a
career-worst 19 errors, the most of
any American League shortstop.
In 2013, his first season with the
Blue Jays, Reyes tore up his ankle
during an awkward slide into second base and was sidelined for
more than two months.
Reyes had a spring to his step
this season and the switch hitter
was sporting a .333 average
through the first nine games
while displaying good range at
shortstop.
But there was a dark cloud lingering over the horizon in recent
days.
Reyes let it be known Saturday
in Baltimore he was suffering
from a sore left oblique muscle,
NHL PLAYOFFS
FIRST ROUND
DIVISION SEMIFINALS
(Best-of-7)
All Times Eastern
EASTERN CONFERENCE
ATLANTIC DIVISION
MONTREAL (1) VS. OTTAWA (WC)
(Montreal leads series 1-0)
Wednesdays result
Montreal 4 Ottawa 3
Fridays game
Ottawa at Montreal, 7 p.m.
TAMPA BAY (2) VS. DETROIT (3)
Thursdays result
Detroit at Tampa Bay
Saturdays game
Detroit at Tampa Bay, 3 p.m.
METROPOLITAN DIVISION
NY RANGERS (1) VS. PITTSBURGH (WC)
(N.Y. Rangers lead series 1-0)
Thursdays result
N.Y. Rangers 2 Pittsburgh 1
Saturdays game
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 8 p.m.
WASHINGTON (2) VS. NY ISLANDERS (3)
(N.Y. Islanders lead series 1-0)
Wednesdays result
N.Y. Islanders 4 Washington 1
Fridays game
N.Y. Islanders at Washington, 7 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
CENTRAL DIVISION
ST. LOUIS (1) VS. MINNESOTA (WC)
Thursdays game
Minnesota at St. Louis, 9:30 p.m.
Saturdays game
Minnesota at St. Louis, 3 p.m.
NASHVILLE (2) VS. CHICAGO (3)
(Chicago leads series 1-0)
Wednesdays result
Chicago 4 Nashville 3 (2OT)
Fridays game
Chicago at Nashville, 9:30 p.m.
PACIFIC DIVISION
ANAHEIM (1) VS. WINNIPEG (WC)
Thursdays result
Winnipeg at Anaheim
Saturdays game
LATE WEDNESDAY
CANADIENS 4, SENATORS 3
Bennett) 19:30
Penalties None.
Shots on goal by
Calgary
Vancouver
10 10 10 30
13 4 13 30
GOLF
First Period
9 17 7 33
8 19 12 39
PGA-RBC HERITAGE
At Hilton Head, S.C.
a Amateur
First Round
Matt Every
Graeme McDowell
Sangmoon Bae
Kevin Kisner
Scott Langley
Morgan Hoffmann
Matt Kuchar
Cameron Smith
Troy Merritt
John Merrick
Ben Martin
Ian Poulter
32-3466
34-3266
32-3567
36-3268
33-3568
32-3668
35-3368
32-3668
33-3669
33-3669
36-3369
33-3669
Graham DeLaet
36-3369
Pat Perez
Johnson Wagner
Ricky Barnes
Jim Renner
Bo Van Pelt
Joost Luiten
Louis Oosthuizen
Charlie Beljan
Sean OHair
Branden Grace
Alex Cejka
Andres Gonzales
Hudson Swafford
Brendon de Jonge
Zac Blair
Justin Thomas
James Hahn
Lucas Glover
Stewart Cink
Aaron Baddeley
Daniel Summerhays
a-Scott Vincent
Dudley Hart
Charley Hoffman
Bill Haas
36-3369
34-3569
33-3669
35-3469
35-3469
34-3569
35-3469
32-3769
35-3570
34-3670
35-3570
36-3470
34-3670
35-3570
34-3670
35-3570
35-3570
35-3570
36-3470
37-3370
35-3570
36-3470
37-3471
38-3371
35-3671
Nick Taylor
David Hearn
Mike Weir
Adam Hadwin
a-Corey Conners
37-3572
36-3773
36-3874
35-4075
38-3977
..........................................................
Robert MacLeod
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
EAST DIVISION
EAST DIVISION
y-Atlanta
y-Cleveland
x-Chicago
y-Toronto
x-Washington
x-Milwaukee
x-Boston
x-Brooklyn
W L
60 22
53 29
50 32
49 33
46 36
41 41
40 42
38 44
Pct GB
.732
.646
7
.610 10
.598
11
.561 14
.500 19
.488 20
.463 22
Indiana
Miami
Charlotte
Detroit
Orlando
Philadelphia
New York
38
37
33
32
25
18
17
.463
.451
.402
.390
.305
.220
.207
Boston
Tampa Bay
Baltimore
Toronto
New York
W
6
6
5
5
3
L
3
4
4
5
6
Pct GB
.667
.600 1/2
.556
1
.500 11/2
.333 3
W
8
7
3
3
3
L
1
2
5
5
6
Pct GB
.889
.778
1
.375 41/2
.375 41/2
.333 5
W
5
4
4
4
3
L
5
5
5
6
6
Pct GB
.500
.444 1/2
.444 1/2
.400 1
.333 11/2
CENTRAL DIVISION
Detroit
Kansas City
Chicago
Cleveland
Minnesota
Oakland
Houston
Los Angeles
Texas
Seattle
Atlanta
New York
Washington
Miami
Philadelphia
W
6
6
4
3
3
L
3
3
6
6
7
Pct
.667
.667
.400
.333
.300
GB
21/2
3
31/2
W
5
5
5
3
2
L
3
3
4
6
7
Pct GB
.625
.625
.556 1/2
.333 21/2
.222 31/2
W
7
6
6
4
3
L
2
3
4
5
7
Pct
.778
.667
.600
.444
.300
CENTRAL DIVISION
WEST DIVISION
NBA
MLB
Winnipeg at Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.
VANCOUVER (2) VS. CALGARY (3)
(Calgary leads series 1-0)
Wednesdays result
Calgary 2 Vancouver 1
Fridays game
Calgary at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
ON DECK
Chicago
St. Louis
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
WEST DIVISION
Colorado
Los Angeles
San Diego
Arizona
San Francisco
Thursdays results
Thursdays results
Wednesdays results
Toronto 12 Tampa Bay 7
Cleveland 4 Chicago White Sox 2
L.A. Angels 10 Texas 2
Baltimore 7 N.Y. Yankees 5
Minnesota 3 Kansas City 1
Houston 6 Oakland 1
Washington 10 Boston 5
Detroit 1 Pittsburgh 0
L.A. Dodgers 5 Seattle 2
Fridays games
All Times Eastern
Chicago White Sox (Samardzija 01) at Detroit (Price 1-0), 1:08 p.m.
Atlanta (Teheran 2-0) at Toronto
(Hutchison 1-0), 7:07 p.m.
Baltimore (U.Jimenez 1-0) at
Boston (J.Kelly 1-0), 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Warren 0-1) at Tampa Bay (Karns 1-1), 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland (Kluber 0-1) at Minnesota (Pelfrey 0-0), 8:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Weaver 0-2) at Houston (R.Hernandez 0-1), 8:10 p.m.
Oakland (Gray 1-0) at Kansas City
(Guthrie 1-0), 8:10 p.m.
Texas (Gallardo 1-1) at Seattle
(Happ 0-0), 10:10 p.m.
GB
1
11/2
3
41/2
Wednesdays results
Miami 6 Atlanta 2
N.Y. Mets 6 Philadelphia 1
Chicago Cubs 5 Cincinnati 0
St. Louis 4 Milwaukee 2
San Diego 3 Arizona 2
Colorado 4 San Francisco 2
Washington 10 Boston 5
Detroit 1 Pittsburgh 0
L.A. Dodgers 5 Seattle 2
Fridays games
All Times Eastern
San Diego (Shields 1-0) at Chicago
Cubs (Hammel 1-0), 2:20 p.m.
Milwaukee (Nelson 1-0) at Pittsburgh (Locke 1-0), 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia (OSullivan 0-0) at
Washington (Scherzer 0-1),
7:05 p.m.
Miami (Phelps 0-0) at N.Y. Mets
(Colon 2-0), 7:10 p.m.
Cincinnati (Cueto 0-1) at St. Louis
(Wacha 1-0), 8:15 p.m.
Colorado (K.Kendrick 1-1) at L.A.
Dodgers (Kershaw 0-1), 10:10 p.m.
Arizona (Collmenter 0-2) at San
Francisco (Peavy 0-1), 10:15 p.m.
44
45
49
50
57
64
65
ON TELEVISION
WEST
y-Golden State
y-Houston
x-L.A. Clippers
y-Portland
x-Memphis
x-San Antonio
x-Dallas
x-New Orleans
W L
67 15
56 26
56 26
51 31
55 27
55 27
50 32
45 37
Pct GB
.817
.683
11
.683
11
.622 16
.671 12
.671 12
.610 17
.549 22
Oklahoma City
Phoenix
Utah
Denver
Sacramento
L.A. Lakers
Minnesota
45 37
39 43
38 44
30 52
29 53
21 61
16 66
.549
.476
.463
.366
.354
.256
.195
POOCH CAF
BLISS
SPEED BUMP
BETTY
22
28
29
37
38
46
51
Wednesdays results
Toronto 92 Charlotte 87
New Orleans 108 San Antonio 103
Chicago 91 Atlanta 85
Houston 117 Utah 91
Dallas 114 Portland 98
Boston 105 Milwaukee 100
Oklahoma City 138 Minnesota 113
Miami 105 Philadelphia 101
Cleveland 113 Washington 108 (OT)
Brooklyn 101 Orlando 88
Detroit 112 New York 90
Memphis 95 Indiana 83
Golden State 133 Denver 126
Sacramento 122 L.A. Lakers 99
End of regular season
PLAYOFFS
FIRST ROUND
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Toronto vs. Washington
Saturdays game
Wash. at Toronto, 12:30 p.m. ET
Tuesday, April 21
Washington at Toronto, 8 p.m.
Friday, April 24
Toronto at Washington, 8 p.m.
Sunday, April 26
COMICS
CORNERED
22
23
27
28
35
42
43
BIZARRO
FRIDAY
All Times Eastern
(Subject to change)
AUSTRALIAN RULES
FOOTBALL
66AFL: Essendon vs. Carlton,
TSN2, 11:30 p.m.
AUTO RACING
66F1: Bahrain Grand Prix Practice,
TSN2, 10:55 a.m.
66NASCAR Sprint Cup: Food City
500 qualifying, TSN 2, 4:30 p.m.
BASEBALL
66MLB: Chicago White Sox at Detroit, SN Ontario, East, West, Pacific, 1 p.m.
66MLB: Atlanta at Toronto, SN1,
7 p.m.
GOLF
66Champions: Greater Gwinnett
Championship, Golf Channel,
12 p.m.
66PGA: RBC Heritage, Golf Channel, 3 p.m.
66LPGA: LOTTE Championship,
Golf Channel, 7 p.m.
HOCKEY
66NHL Playoffs: Ottawa at Montreal, CBC, 7 p.m.; N.Y. Islanders at
Washington, SN Ontario, East,
West, Pacific, 7 p.m.; Chicago at
Nashville, SN Ontario, 360, East,
West, Pacific, 9:30 p.m.; Calgary at
Vancouver, CBC, 10 p.m.
RUGBY
66Super Rugby: Chiefs vs. Crusaders, SN World, 3:30 a.m.;
Waratahs vs. Hurricanes, SN
World, 12:30 a.m. (Sat.)
66NRL: Brisbane, Saint-George, SN
World, 5:30 a.m.
TENNIS
66ATP: Monte Carlo Masters,SN1,9 am
T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
GLOBE SPORTS
S5
BASKETBALL NBA
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
RAPTORS
The Toronto Raptors Kyle Lowry knows he and DeMar DeRozan will be the teams focal point during the playoffs. NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS
point, 11-rebound night in a
recent victory over the Houston
Rockets.
Efficient, sharpshooting performances by both in their season-finale win over the Charlotte
Hornets suggested that just
maybe, DeRozan and Lowry are
finally about to put it together at
the same time, as the No. 4-seeded Raptors open the playoffs
against the No. 5 Washington
Wizards on Saturday.
I think we can go as far as
playing until June, Lowry said to
the same question. Weve just
got to go out there and concentrate and think about the things
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
PLAYOFFS
BRIAN MAHONEY
................................................................
to Houston.
On Sunday, Atlanta plays host
to Brooklyn, Portland visits Memphis and the Los Angeles Clippers welcome San Antonio for
the opener of what appears to be
the marquee first-round series.
The Spurs beautiful basketball
overwhelmed James and the
Heat in last years finals and carried them to 21 wins in their final
25 games this season and
couldnt put a dent in their deficit in the West standings. They
ended up with the No. 6 seed
after losing in New Orleans on
the final night of the regular season, with a 55-27 record that was
a game worse than the Clippers,
who surged to a 56-26 finish with
seven successive victories.
Wed love to have been in the
[No.] 2 or [No.] 3 seeds whatever it may be and started at
home, the Spurs Tim Duncan
said. But we have been on just
about every route possible
throughout the years. This will
be another journey and hopefully it will be a fun one.
Thats what the Warriors want.
And with an MVP favourite in
Roses return
Derrick Roses injury problems
began in the opener of the 2012
postseason, when he tore his
anterior cruciate ligament. He
returned from his latest surgery
to help the Bulls finish with four
straight victories to earn the No.
3 seed in the East.
................................................................
How healthy?
The winner of the Trail BlazersGrizzlies series would be in line
to meet the Warriors, and either
would be a threat if healthy. But
Marc Gasol, Mike Conley and
Tony Allen of Memphis limped to
the finish, Arron Afflalo joined
Wesley Matthews on the sideline
in Portland, and its hard to tell
which team is in good enough
Texas two-step
The reward for James Harden
and the Rockets after earning the
No. 2 seed? A matchup against a
Dallas team that won 50 games.
The Rockets outscored the
Mavericks just 402-398 in their
four meetings and Dallas had
double-digit leads in three of
them.
................................................................
Who wins?
James is trying to finally win one
in Cleveland. The Spurs are trying to finally win back to back.
And the Warriors and Hawks
were better than both teams over
the course of the season, so even
the experts are having a hard
time with that question. This
year, Ive got to be honest with
you, Barkley said. Theres probably seven teams that could
actually win the championship
and Id be like, Im not surprised
they won it.
................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
KNICKS
SCOTT CACCIOLA
NEW YORK
................................................................
S6
S T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
Canadas Ghislaine Landry, left, runs past Australias Emilee Cherry during their World Rugby Womens Sevens
Series match in Barueri, Brazil, on Feb. 8. Landry is one of Canadas best scorers. NELSON ALMEIDA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
FROM PAGE 1
It is in part a response to an
injury-plagued season last
year. On the field, Tait said Landry produces offence in any
instance. She can create something out of nothing, Tait said.
Landry has likened it to a big
green chess board. Every time
you look, its going to be a different picture, she said. If I do
this, what are they going to do?
And if I do that, what are they
going to do?
What Canada needs to do, if it
is to be contender for gold and
not just vie for bronze, is defeat
New Zealand. Canada has finished third in the past six tournaments and has only reached
two finals in three seasons. The
first was the last tourney of
2012-13, when New Zealand
FOOTBALL VIKINGS
(SANDY)
John Auston, geologist, world traveller, philanthropist, avid photographer,
beloved husband, brother, devoted father and grandfather, died Sunday
morning in Vancouver after a long and valiant fight with non-Hodgkins
lymphoma. He was 77.
John was born in Charlottetown, PEI, grew up in Montreal with his
siblings David and Shirray, and attended McGill University, where he
studied geology. A 40-year veteran of the mining industry, he spent
much of his career in Toronto with the Selection Trust Group of London
(which in 1981 became the minerals arm of British Petroleum). His working
life took him and his family to Sydney, Australia; Denver, Colorado;
Melbourne, Australia; and ultimately Vancouver. John was also President
and CEO of Ashton Mining of Canada and, prior to that, President and
CEO of Granges, Inc. In recent years, he sat on the boards of Cameco,
Eldorado Gold and the BC Cancer Foundation.
In addition to his esteemed mining career, John pursued many passions.
His home office, filled with hundreds of books and over fifty photo
albums, is evidence of his rich life, including his travels to over 30
countries, his large, boisterous family and his love of photography. One
of his daughters told him his artful eye was so good, it made life look
better than it was.
But this was not how he viewed it. John loved everything about life,
especially his beloved wife and life partner of 56 years, B.J. Auston;
his four children, Victoria Auston (Jim Sinclair), Katy Southerland (Ned),
John Auston, Jr., Genevieve Cole (Steve); and, his six grandchildren,
Malcolm and Ellen Southerland, Julian Auston-Sinclair, Lucy, Josephine
and Phoebe Cole.
John guided them all with the highest of standards, the most moral
of voices, and the greatest generosity of spirit. He was a sage and a
philosopher too, a true Renaissance man.
This enduring passion for living is part of what kept John alive and
fighting for 14 years, tirelessly raising awareness and significant funding
as a board member for the BC Cancer Foundation, resulting in a research
award in his name.
His lust for life, his unwavering ability to take the high road and the long
view, the enormity of his lion-like heart and his willingness to give of it,
will never be forgotten. We will work hard to carry forth his spirit and
follow his fine example, all the while knowing that in his wake the world
has lost some of its lustre and for now feels a little less grand.
Today while the blossoms still cling to the vine, Ill taste your strawberries
and drink your sweet wine. A million tomorrows shall all pass away, ere I
forget all the joy that is mine today.
In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the BC Cancer Foundation
or to the Paul Sugar Palliative Support Foundation. The BC Cancer Agency
and the North Shore Hospice are two remarkable organizations full of
caregivers whose skill and compassion lengthened and deepened the
quality of Johns life. Special thanks to Dr. Diego Villa and Dr. Joseph
Connors for their many years of superior care. The Auston family is
eternally grateful to all these many dedicated healthcare professionals.
A celebration of Johns life will be held in Vancouver at the end of May.
Please refer to www.mckenziefuneralservices.com for further information.
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
FOOTBALL ARGOS
ERNIE BALTZ
Ernie died Friday, April 10, at
home. He was 84. Zoe and
family wish to thank everyone
for their care, friendship and
kindness during Ernies illness.
From the "Bunker Boys" of the
Central Y to dear old school
chums, and Bill McKecknie,
Andrew Whiteman, volunteers
from the ROM and St. Mikes
Hospital. Also, all of the
wonderful Nurses and Doctors
for their special loving care. A
family remembrance will be held
later this spring. Donations in
Ernies memory can be made to
The Oak Ridges Moraine Land
Trust or The Niagara Escarpment
Biosphere Conservancy.
..........................................................................................................................................................................................................
DAN RALPH
................................................................
Johnson admits hes not entirely familiar with Canadian football, but says hell adjust quickly.
All I know is I get a running
start, which should be an advantage, and its only three downs,
so you have to be prepared and
ready, he said. But really, football is football.
You put the pads and cleats on
and go out and do what you have
to do.
Johnson helped Muskegon
High School win state championships in 2004 and 06. In 2007, he
was Michigans top football
recruit and chose USC after being
recruited by the likes of Texas,
Florida, Michigan, Ohio State,
Michigan State and Notre Dame.
Johnson amassed 138 catches
for 1,750 yards and 20 TDs with
the Trojans. He also returned 22
punts for 312 yards (14.2-yard average) and a TD and 56 kickoffs
for 1,351 yards (24.1-yard average).
Johnson had four catches for 82
yards and two TDs in USCs 38-24
win over Penn State in the 2009
Rose Bowl as the Trojans became
the first team in history to win
three straight Rose Bowl games.
The San Francisco 49ers selected Johnson in the sixth round
No. 182 over all of the 2011 NFL
draft before releasing him before
the season. Johnson then joined
the Philadelphia Eagles practice
roster before being promoted to
the active roster in late in the
season.
But he suffered a broken and
dislocated ankle during training
camp and spent the 2012 season
on injured reserve before being
released on April 11, 2013. He
signed with the Seattle Seahawks
Galbraith, Sheldon W.
C.M., O.ONT.
Canadian Figure Skating Coach
May 24, 1922 - April 14, 2015
Peacefully in his 93rd year at
Eagle Terrace Care Home in
Newmarket on Tuesday, April
14, 2015. Beloved husband of
the late Jeanne. Loving father of
Jeannie (Phil Branston), Brian
(Beth), Barbara, Mary Louise
Teakle and predeceased by his
daughter Kathy. Dear Papa of
Andrea, Chris, Rebecca, Travis,
Dylan, Jamie, Kailey and "Big
Papa" of Madison, Jackson, Jack
and Blake.
A Funeral Service will be held in
the chapel of the THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME, 530 Industrial
Parkway South, Aurora
905-727-5421 on Monday at
11:00 a.m. Cremation to follow.
In lieu of flowers, in memoriam
donations may be made to
Southlake Regional Health
Centre Foundation.
On line condolences
may be made at
www.thompsonfh-aurora.com.
NOTICES
Call 1-800-387-9006
Fax 416-585-5698 or
1-866-355-4155
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advertising@globeandmail.com
Business Hours:
All times are EST
Mon - Fri 8:30am - 5:30pm
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T H E G LO B E A N D M A I L
F R I D AY , A P R I L 1 7 , 2 0 1 5
S7
DEATHS
DEATHS
DEATHS
ADRIENNE LILLEY
TORONTO
APRIL 12, 1935 - APRIL 13, 2015
It is with profound sadness but much relief that we announce the passing
of Adrienne Lilley (ne Grime) after a courageous and lengthy battle with
debilitating health issues. Predeceased by her mother and father, Ada
Irene and Henry Grime, survived by her brother, George Henry (Monika),
sister, Barbara (Fred), and former husband, Ken (Wendy). Loving
and adored mum to Ileana (George), Jacqueline (Steve) and Michael.
Cherished grandma to Michael and Adrienne. Beloved friend to many.
Adrienne was born and raised in Liverpool, England where she later
graduated as an SRN from the Royal Liverpool Infirmary. In 1961, she
moved to Winnipeg to join her husband. As a military wife, Adrienne
began a series of moves to Ottawa, Chatham (NB), Montreal and
Germany. In 1972, she settled in Ottawa with her family and, in 1987,
Adrienne moved to Toronto, making this her final home.
Adrienne was exceptional; elegant, gracious, warm, thoughtful, patient
and compassionate beyond compare. She was the epitome of all things
true and good. Adrienne had the ability to put people at ease with her
gentle and caring ways. She lived each day to the fullest, always with
an optimistic outlook. Among her many interests, she was passionate
about travelling, reading, cooking, theatre and helping others. First and
foremost, though, came her family. She was a devoted wife, mother
and grandmother. Adrienne was deeply invested in the happiness and
welfare of her children and grandchildren, making each feel truly special
for their uniqueness, and each equally loved.
Adrienne was a nurse at the Winnipeg General Hospital, and later in life
was a much sought after private caregiver for the elderly, as well as a
coordinator for domiciliary nursing care. Adrienne also spent time as a
travel tour guide for groups to South America.
Indicative of her genuine regard for others, these were Adriennes final
thoughts:
Do not stand at my grave and weep,
I am not there.
I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow
I am the diamond glint of snow
I am the sunlight on the ripened grain
I am the gentle autumns rain.
When you awaken in the mornings hush,
I am the swift uplifting rush
Of quiet birds in circled flight.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry,
I am not there.
I did not die.
(Mary Elizabeth Frye)
The family wishes to extend a sincere thank you to the superlative care
and support Adrienne received from the staff at SunnyBrook Hospital. A
special thank you to Blair Henry and Dr. Shojania. A private cremation will
take place, with no visitation or service. In lieu of flowers, donations to
SunnyBrook Hospital, c/o the Ethics Centre, would be most appreciated.
Dear sweet mum, may you rest in peace.
ENGAGEMENTS
RAY HOLLINGS
March 22, 1927 - April 17, 2002
In loving memory of our
dearest Ray
Always in our hearts
We miss you
June, Bill, Jenny, John, Brenda,
Sean, Jade, Adam, Emma,
Nicholas
PAPE/FOSTER
FUNERAL SERVICES
SUNDAY
BUTCHER, Eileen
HUMPHREY, Lois B.
Service Friday 3 p.m.
Leaside United Church
LINDRE, Elsa
HELP WANTED
ELECTRICIAN P.L.C., troubleshooting
skills for food mfr. GTA 3 shifts
weekly rotation: Mon.-Fri. PH:
416-733-2696 up to 9 p.m. $25/ hr+
MacNEILL, Byrdie A.
Service Saturday 11 a.m.
MOTORCYCLES
2008 Honda CBR1000RR. For sale
for $1,350 runs Perfectly Oil has
been changed Regularly. Paint is in
excellent condition. If interested
email (djarrett98@gmail.com)
HELP WANTED
BAKERY SALES $90K-$120K.
Min. 2 yrs outside sales to retail chains or
food service; or Confectionery. Phone
416-733-2696 to 9 p.m. Food Industry
Recruiters in confidence.
"Electro-Mechanic"; flexible hrs. & duties; TO. Food Mfr. $20-30 per hour.
Ph Andy: (416) 733-2696 to 9:30 p.m.
SHIVA
KULBAK (MILLER), Trisha - 16 Sadot Court,
Thornhill, Ontario.
KOHAN, Fred - 105 Everden Road.
KOROTKOVA, Rozalia - 91 Townsgate Drive,
Apt. 610, Thornhill, Ontario.
SIEGEL, Norm - 180 Charles Street,
Thornhill, Ontario.
SAVLOV, Bertha - 645 Castlefield Avenue.
HIRSCHBERG, Emilia - 8 Covington Road, # 1108.
SERNAKER, Sandy - 88 Bideford Avenue.
FISHER, Harry - 484 Steeles Ave. West, # 502,
Thornhill, Ontario.
MINDEN, Albert - 160 Elmhurst Avenue.
416-663-9060
Advertise where
the best qualified
candidates are.
www.benjamins.ca
To place a
Birth,
In Memoriam
To advertise, phone
or
1.866.999.9237
TO SUBSCRIBE CALL
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FOOD R&D CHEF - Manufacturer.
seeks culinary, science, min. 3 yrs. R&D.
$60K-$73K. PHONE: 416-733-2696 to 9
p.m. Food Industry Recruiters
Death Notice
THURSDAY
MAIROVITZ, Rose - 12:30 Pardes
Shalom Cemetery.
FRIDAY
APLYN, Earl - 11:00 Pardes Shalom Cemetery.
LOTS, ACREAGE
Future Development Site - 27 acres to
be designate employment land. East
Gwillimbury, Southwest corner of
Greenlane and Woodbine.
georgevranko@gmail.com
THURSDAY
FISHER, Harry - 1:00 Chapel.
MINDEN, Albert - 2:30 Chapel.
FRIDAY
Private Arrangements
FUNERAL SERVICES
DOIDGE, Kenneth
CLASSIFIED
IN MEMORIAM
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SAM ROBERTS
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Sheila Kitzinger, seen in 2007, wanted women to be aware of childbirth options. She also campaigned against
female genital cutting, the handcuffing of pregnant prisoners and restrictions on midwifery. MIKE FLOKIS/GETTY IMAGES
practices were quite harmful to
women and babies and even fathers.
It is partly because of these
detrimental practices, she
added, that there was a resurgence of interest in home birth
and free-standing birth centres
and midwifery.
Ms. Kitzinger was born Sheila
Helena Elizabeth Webster in
Taunton, Somerset, England, on
March 29, 1929, to Alec Webster, a
tailor, and the former Clare Bond,
a nurse who worked in an early
family-planning clinic. She
trained to teach drama but
switched to social anthropology
at Ruskin and St. Hughs Colleges
at Oxford, where she met Uwe
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BRUCE WEBER
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Joel Spira invented the first domestic light dimmer when he was
puttering in his Manhattan apartment. DONNA CHIARELLI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mr. Spiras innovation, but they
were unsuitable for home use.
Large and unwieldy, they consumed great amounts of energy
and gave off a lot of heat, so they
were restricted to certain commercial functions, such as regulating the stage lights in theatres.
Mr. Spiras idea was to replace a
rheostat, which controlled the
current flow in an industrial dim-
LIVES LIVED
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Deanna Michelle
Christie
World traveller, marine seismic
observer, auntie, knitter. Born on
July 21, 1969, in Vulcan, Alta.; died
on Dec. 8, 2014, in Hereid, Norway,
of cancer, aged 45.
Deanna became fluent in Norwegian and a part of her community of Alesund. She was a
founding member of a craft
group, Strikken og Drikken,
which translates as Knitting and
Drinking. The local newspaper
published an article about the
group and the knitted caps they
made for African premature
babies. Although their groups
name was somehow omitted,
Deanna revelled in what she
deemed her allotted 15 minutes
of fame. The world is a lesser
place without her joie de vivre.
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