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Monday, June 29, 2009

Lions look to reclaim top spot in CFL West

Wally Buono wants to reclaim top spot in the CFL West Division. Wally Buono wants to reclaim top spot in the CFL West Division. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

There's been a change of personnel and a shift of attitude on the British Columbia Lions this season.

"We're not a team anymore that has laurels placed upon us for no reason," said veteran centre Angus Reid. "That's probably a good thing.

"Being the best for a long time and being expected to be the best … human nature would start to make you believe that. Now they say we're not. Human nature now is go out and prove critics wrong."

The Lions slipped to third in the CFL West Division last season with an 11-7-0 record.

It was the first time in five years B.C. didn't finish first in th

Montreal comedy conference to honour Hangover director Todd Phillips

Cast member Heather Graham, left, and director Todd Phillips are shown at the premiere of The Hangover in Los Angeles on June 2.Cast member Heather Graham, left, and director Todd Phillips are shown at the premiere of The Hangover in Los Angeles on June 2. (Matt Sayles/Associated Press)

Montreal's annual Just for Laughs Comedy Conference will honour Todd Phillips, creator of The Hangover, as comedy director of the year this July.

The tradition of honouring the best in the business began last year and also includes an award for the best comedy writer of the year. That award goes to Etan Cohen, who penned both Tropic Thunder and Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa.

Cohen will also speak at the conference, whose roster includes talented writers such as Tami Sagher of 30 Rock, Jeremy Garelick of The Break-Up and Dan Sterling of the Sarah Silverman Program.

Etan Cohen, not to be confused with screenwriter and director Ethan Coen, wrote for Beavis and Butthead, King of the Hill and American Dad before moving into feature screenwriting. He was co-executive producer for King of the Hill and won an Annie Award for one episode.

He is now writing a humorous take on Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, set to star Sacha Baron Cohen as Holmes and Will Ferrell as Doctor Watson.

Phillips began his career as a documentary filmmaker of Frat House, which won a grand jury prize at Sundance.

He moved to features with Road Trip in 2000 and also directed Old School (2003), Starsky & Hutch (2004) and School For Scoundrels (2006).

Phillips was nominated for an Academy Award for best adapted screenplay for his screenwriting work on Borat in 2006.

The conference, scheduled for July 23 to 25, gathers comedy industry studio executives, broadcasters, agents, writers, filmmakers and comics to discuss the business of comedy.

Manitoba spends $1.4M to enhance firefighting water bombers

The Manitoba government is putting $1.4 million into upgrading its aging fleet of water bombers.

The money will mostly go to outfitting the province's seven water bombers with improved communications and navigation systems.

"Our equipment will be outfitted with enhanced vision systems for pilots to help them battle fires when visibility is low," said Conservation Minister Stan Struthers.

The upgrades are funded through Manitoba Infrastructure and Transportation. They include state of-the-art navigation, communication, satellite-tracking and infrared vision systems for pilots flying in low-visibility conditions including dust, rain, smoke and darkness.

The pilots who fly the water bombers work under difficult conditions, said Ken Giesbrecht, director of Manitoba Air Services.

"Conditions can change, smoke swirls, and they can be in virtually what they call 'instrument conditions,' where they have no reference to the ground," he said. "In that case, they need the updated avionics to make sure the altitude is correct and also [that they are] away from any towers or hills."

Despite the unseasonably cold spring and summer, the province has not been immune to forest fires. This year, as of June 25, Manitoba Conservation's Fire Program has recorded 115 fires. Of those, 63 have been caused by people.

A breakdown of fires by provincial region:

  • Northeast: 29
  • Northwest: 38
  • West: 17
  • Central: 10
  • East: 21.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Alberta least attractive province for energy investment: report

Report says Alberta's the least attractive province for oil and gas investment. Report says Alberta's the least attractive province for oil and gas investment. (CP)

A new Fraser Institute report says Alberta is the now least attractive province in Canada when it comes to oil and gas investment.

The right-wing think tank, based in Calgary, released the report on Wednesday morning.

Research for the report included surveying petroleum executives and managers from around the world.

According to the institute's rankings, Alberta has dropped below Manitoba and Saskatchewan, and even trails Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.

The institute blames Alberta's poor showing on the industry's dissatisfaction with changes to the province's royalty regime, a lack of consultation and what it calls "a growing anti-energy bias."

No change in interest rate policy at U.S. Federal Reserve

Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke (AP Photo/Lawrence Jackson)Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke (AP Photo/Lawrence Jackson)

The U.S. Federal Reserve said Wednesday that it sees the pace of economic contraction slowing, as it left interest rates unchanged.

The central bank said conditions in financial markets "have generally improved in recent months."

"Household spending has shown further signs of stabilizing but remains constrained by ongoing job losses, lower housing wealth, and tight credit," the bank said. "Businesses are cutting back on fixed investment and staffing but appear to be making progress in bringing inventory stocks into better alignment with sales."

The Fed noted that prices of energy and other commodities have risen lately, but it said that "substantial resource slack" is likely to keep a lid on prices.

The Fed's open market committee, which sets monetary policy, expects that inflation will remain subdued "for some time."

The central bank left the target for the key federal funds rate unchanged at a range of between zero and 0.25 per cent, and said it is expected to remain there for an extended period.

Toronto calls heat alert

The City of Toronto has issued its first extreme heat alert of the summer.  The City of Toronto has issued its first extreme heat alert of the summer. (CBC)

Toronto has declared its first extreme heat alert of the summer вЂ" while city services are virtually shut down by a civic workers strike.

Temperatures are forecast to reach 30 C on Wednesday and to stay in the high 20s for the next three or four days. The heat alert, the city says, will stay in place until further notice.

However, many of the city-run cooling centres вЂ" where residents and their pets can cool off and get a cold drink вЂ" are closed because of the strike by 24,000 municipal workers.

Instead the city is telling people to go to "make use of air conditioned shopping malls and local libraries as places to cool off."

A section of the Metro Toronto Convention Centre will also remain open 24 hours a day during the time the alert is in place.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Dozens die in bomb blast in Iraq

Men search for survivors buried in rubble after a deadly truck bombing Saturday near Kirkuk. Men search for survivors buried in rubble after a deadly truck bombing Saturday near Kirkuk. (Emad Matti/ Associated Press)

A truck bomb exploded as worshippers left a Shia mosque in northern Iraq on Saturday, killing more than 70 people and wounding nearly 200 in the deadliest bombing this year.

The blast near Kirkuk вЂ" a city rife with ethnic tensions вЂ" came hours after the prime minister warned Iraqis to expect more violence as U.S. troops withdraw from Iraqi cities by the end of this month, but he insisted the deadline will be met "no matter what happens."

Worshippers were leaving the mosque in Taza, 20 kilometres south of Kirkuk, following noon prayers when the truck exploded, demolishing the mosque and several mud-brick houses across the street, according to police and witnesses.

Rescue teams searched into the night to find people buried under the rubble while women begged police to let them near the site so they could search for loved ones. The U.S. military said it was providing generator lights and water at the site.

The death toll rose to at least 72 as more bodies were found beneath the debris, according to police and hospital officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to release the information.

Brig. Gen. Sarhat Qadir of the Kirkuk police force said earlier that at least 63 people were killed and 170 were wounded, but he expected the number to rise.

Witnesses said the truck was parked across the street from the mosque and they assumed the driver was praying, although Kirkuk's police chief, Maj. Gen. Jamal Tahir, said investigators were looking into the possibility it was a suicide bombing.

Many of the town's residents had fled to neighbouring Iran under Saddam Hussein's Sunni-dominated regime but returned following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.

Nobody claimed responsibility for the attack, but it bore the hallmark of al-Qaeda in Iraq or other Sunni insurgents who remain active in northern Iraq despite security gains.

The Americans have begun pulling back combat troops from inner-city outposts in Baghdad, Mosul and other urban areas ahead of the June 30 deadline set in a security pact that calls for a full U.S. withdrawal from Iraq by 2012.

But continued assassinations and high-profile explosions have heightened concerns that Iraqi forces are not ready to take over their own security.

Central Alberta farmer wants answers on how deer and moose died

A farmer in central Alberta wants answers to the unexplained deaths of nearly 20 deer and a moose.

Glenn Norman said the dead animals were found near Bowden, Alta., this spring, and fish and game officers were immediately called to investigate.

He said 18 deer and one moose were found, along with the remains of coyotes, foxes, owls, hawks and magpies.

A spokesperson for Alberta Sustainable Resource Development said officers quickly ruled out the animals being shot.

"I think it was malnutrition or starvation due to the winter," said Chris Kelly, a district fish and wildlife officer from Red Deer, Alta., who investigated the incident.

"If they have a hard winter, their bodies begin to shut down and even if you they eat and eat and gorge themselves their bodies have shut down to the point that they can't absorb the nutrients."

But Norman said there was plenty of hay in the pasture and it was clear from the decaying remains of the moose that it had eaten well.

Deaths 'very suspicious'

Darrel Rowledge, director for the Alliance for Public Wildlife in Calgary, said the deaths are mystifying.

"This is very suspicious. The first thing that comes to mind is some sort of poisoning," he said.

"This is strychnine or some sort of lethal poisoning. This is not mere winter kill. The odds of this are extremely remote that this would be merely winter kill."

"I could see a couple of deer dead, or four or five deer, but 18 deer? A moose? Coyotes? There's no way in the world. This is a poisoning."

Norman agrees.

He said there is no sour gas activity in the area and the only thing that makes sense is some kind of toxic substance.

"I think it's probably an antifreeze but it has to be an industrial amount of it. They likely licked it off where it was dumped."

Norman said the whole incident is eerie.

"It's disturbing. I'm used to our woods being alive and this spring ... there are only a few animals now."

"There's always a few animals die but it's death on an industrial scale."

Talks between striking paramedics, employer break down

CUPE Local 873 members have been on the picket line since April 1.CUPE Local 873 members have been on the picket line since April 1. (CBC)

Talks between B.C.'s striking paramedics and the provincial ambulance service collapsed Friday and no new date was set for them to resume.

The 3,500 ambulance paramedics have been on strike since April 1. Some remain on the job because of provincial essential-service legislation.

They're looking for faster ambulance response times, better staffing levels and wage parity with other emergency responders.

The union has asked for a seven per cent wage increase every year for three years, while the employer, the B.C. Ambulance Service, offered a three per cent hike in a one-year deal.

According to the union, B.C. ambulance paramedics are the lowest paid in the country, with an average wage of $28 per hour, compared to $31.25 in Calgary and $43.27 in Edmonton.

The province argues the wages of full-time ambulance paramedics in B.C. are on par with others in the country.

Union spokesperson B.J. Chute said Friday the ambulance service has repeatedly presented the same offer.

"This time all they did was drop the original signing bonus вЂ" they didn't even change the date on the package they presented from the one they gave us in March," Chute said in a written statement.

He added that the government's bargaining team doesn't appear to have a mandate to make any significant decisions.

"We have been pushing for an independent arbitrator to be appointed so we can settle this dispute."

With files from The Canadian Press

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Woman, 92, mugged, injured in mall parking lot

Calgary police are looking for two women who mugged a woman, 92, at a southeast shopping mall, leaving her injured on the ground.

Witnesses told police the pair approached the woman in the parking lot of Southcentre Mall at about 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday and tried to grab her purse.

Police said the victim had the strap of her purse wrapped around her wrist for security, and struggled with her attackers. That's when they punched and kicked her, said duty Insp. Rob Williams.

The attackers, described as in their 20s, left in a small blue car. One woman has a medium build, while the other is described as heavy-set.

The woman was taken to hospital with a gash to her head and a possible injury to her pelvis.

Hot off the grill: BBQ recipes for Father's Day cookouts

Shaun Smith is a writer, journalist and former chef in Toronto. He is the author of the young adult novel Snakes & Ladders. Shaun Smith is a writer, journalist and former chef in Toronto. He is the author of the young adult novel Snakes & Ladders. Nothing announces the arrival of summer quite like the smell of a barbecue wafting over a neighbourhood. Of course, that smell also means that Father's Day is coming, and since there's no better time to fire up the grill, I talked to three chefs with new barbecue cookbooks to get some recipes that dads can use to impress the family on their big day.

For my own recipe, I've prepared a succulent dry rub that combines mildly spicy heat, tartness, smokiness and subtle floral flavours. I like to use it on flank steak, an inexpensive, lean and delicious cut of beef (please note that if overcooked, flank becomes tough, so it should be served more to the rare side to maintain tenderness).

Also, for this recipe you will need a very sharp carving knife. If your kitchen knives are dull, barbecue season is the perfect reason to get them sharpened.

A dry rub is a combination of dry spices rubbed into meat as a marinade. Just before rubbing it in, I like to add a small amount of olive oil, mustard and fresh garlic to the mixture for added flavour and ease of spreading. Among other spices, the rub I've prepared below features sumac, a Mediterranean spice with a delicious floral tartness. Available at Greek markets, specialty shops and health food stores, it is well worth the effort to find this wonderful spice.

Rare-grilled flank steak with sumac dry rub

Ingredients:
  • 1 kg flank steak
Rub Mixture
  • 1 tsp. sumac
  • 1/2 tsp. each: chipotle powder, ancho chili powder, cinnamon, coriander powder, paprika
  • 1 tsp. sea salt
  • 15 turns of the black pepper mill
  • 1 large clove garlic, finely minced
  • 1 1/2 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 tsp. Dijon mustard

In a small bowl, mix the rub ingredients together into a paste with a spoon.

Lay out the flank steak on a cutting board and spoon half of the rub mixture onto one side of the steak. Using the back of the spoon, or your fingers, spread the rub evenly over the surface of the steak, rubbing it into all the crevices. Lay a piece of cling film over the steak, then flip the steak over. Coat the second side with the rest of the rub and then seal the steak with more cling film. Put the covered steak in the fridge to marinate for at least two hours or up to 24 hours.

Remove the steak from the fridge one hour before grilling. This steak cooks very fast, so make sure everything else for your meal is ready before you start. Heat your grill on high for 10 minutes. When ready to grill, dab some vegetable oil on a clean cloth and rub it on the grill. Remove the cling film from the meat and lay the flank steak on the hot grill. Close the lid and reduce heat to medium-high. Grill for five minutes, rotating the meat about 30 C at the halfway point, to create crossed searing marks. Flip the steak over after five minutes and repeat above grilling process for another five minutes.

When done, move the steak to a large cutting board and let it rest for five minutes.

Carving the flank steak

Lay the side of your knife blade flat across the grain of the meat. Hold the steak with a fork at one end and start slicing the meat from the other end as thin as you can across the grain, as though whittling a big piece of wood. The meat will be less rare at the flat ends of the steak and more bloody as you get closer to the thicker middle. (Leftovers make great sandwiches the next day.)

Arrange the slices of meat on a platter and sprinkle with sea salt. Serve with a green salad and corn on the cob. Serves four to six people.


Ted Reader's Great Canadian cedar wrap

From Napoleon's Everyday Gourmet Plank Grilling, by Ted Reader (Key Porter Books)

BBQ chef and author Ted Reader. BBQ chef and author Ted Reader. Ted Reader takes his barbecue very seriously. "I have 105 grills and smokers in my backyard," he tells me over the phone from his home in the west-end Toronto district of Etobicoke.

Reader, who previously hosted the TV cooking show King of the Q, has teamed up with Canadian barbecue manufacturer Napoleon's for his new book Everyday Gourmet Plank Grilling.

What's plank grilling?

"Cooking on planks originated in the Pacific Northwest," says Reader. "It was a common practice of the native Haida people of the region."

The method, he elaborates, entails soaking a plank (usually cedar) in water, to keep it fire-resistant, then placing it right on the grill with your food on top.

"It is a hot, fast way of infusing your food with delicious smoky flavour," says Reader. "There's no turning or poking or flipping, so it makes the whole barbecue process very low-maintenance."

For Father's Day, Reader recommends his Great Canadian Cedar Wrap recipe.

"Wraps are very thin sheets of wood that you soak and wrap around the food," says Reader. "They're very impressive when you serve them, because you cut them open on the plate and the food is smoking and has taken on the flavour of the cedar."

Kids can even get in on the act, helping Dad roll up and tie off the wrap bundles before grilling.

"Cooking should be a family affair," says Reader, who has two children, Layla, 3, and Jordan, 2, with his wife, Pamela. "Any recipe you prepare together with your family is a fun thing."

[SAFETY NOTE: Ted Reader says, "Always have a squeeze bottle of water close at hand when grilling with planks or wood wraps. If the wood catches fire, turn the heat down or off and spray the wood with water to put out the flames immediately. Then move the plank or wrap to a cooler part of the grill and continue grilling. If you're doing a whole bunch of wraps, a grill basket is a handy method to use."]

Ted Reader's book, Napoleon's Everyday Gourment Plank Grilling book cover. Recipe: Great Canadian Cedar Wrap

Ingredients:
  • Four 8-inch (20 cm) long x 6-inch (15 cm) wide cedar wood wraps, soaked in water
  • Eight 6-inch (15 cm) pieces of butcher's twine, soaked in water
  • Fresh cut cedar bows, soaked in water (optional)
  • Four boneless, skinless fillets of Atlantic salmon, about 4 oz. (125 g) each
  • 2 Tbsp. (30 ml) Seafood Plank Seasoning (see recipe below)
  • Two green onions, minced 1/4 cup (60 ml) thinly sliced red onion
  • 1/4 cup (60 ml) thinly sliced yellow pepper
  • 1 Tbsp (15 ml) chopped fresh dill
  • 1 Tbsp (15 ml) olive oil
  • 1 Tbsp (15 ml) lemon juice
  • 1 cup (250 ml) cooked lobster meat (if using frozen lobster meat, be sure to squeeze out excess moisture)
  • 2 Tbsp (30 ml) melted butter

Wraps are a new trend in barbecue cooking. Thin sheets of wood are soaked and then wrapped around fish and other meats. Soak it. Roll it. Grill it.

Season salmon fillets all over with Seafood Plank Seasoning, rubbing the seasoning into the meat; set aside. In a bowl, combine green onions, red onion, yellow pepper, dill, olive oil and lemon juice; set aside. In a separate bowl, combine lobster meat and melted butter, mix well to coat the lobster with the butter; set aside.

Remove cedar wrap from water and pat dry with paper towel. Look at the wrap and see which way the grain of the wood goes. Place the salmon fillet on the cedar wrap. Top with a quarter of the onion mixture and a quarter of the lobster mixture. Following the grain of the wood, roll salmon tightly in wrap to make a cigar-shaped roll; tie in two places with the wet twine. Note: You may need someone to assist you with this part. Repeat with remaining ingredients.

Preheat grill to medium to medium-low heat. Place soaked cedar bows on the grill (if using). Place wrapped salmon bundles on top of the cedar bows. Close grill lid and cook for 20 to 25 minutes, until the fish is just cooked through. (Check grill periodically to ensure the cedar bows and wraps have not caught fire.)

Remove from grill. Cut twine and fold back the wrap. Serve on wrap. Serves four.

Tips:
  1. It is necessary to roll the wraps with the grain of the wood so that the wraps do not split. Make sure the wraps have been soaked long enough to prevent splitting.
  2. Soaking the string prevents it from burning.

Recipe: Seafood Plank Seasoning

This seasoning spice blend is all you need when plank grilling, whether it is salmon, cheese, steak, tuna, breakfast, dessert, or a burger. It features a blend of sugar and spice that really makes everything nice.

Ingredients: 1/2 cup light brown sugar (125 ml) 1/4 cup coarsely ground fresh black pepper (60 ml) 1/4 cup kosher salt or coarsely ground sea salt (60 ml) 3 Tbsp granulated onion (45 ml) 2 Tbsp mustard seeds, cracked (30 ml) 1 Tbsp dried dill weed (15 ml) 1 Tbsp dill seed (15 ml) 1 Tbsp coriander seed (15 ml) 1 Tbsp lemon pepper seasoning (15 ml) 2 tsp granulated garlic (10 ml)

In a large bowl, mix all ingredients together. Transfer to a tightly sealed container and store in a cool, dry place for up to six months. Makes approximately 1.5 cups (375 ml).

From: Napoleon's Everyday Gourmet Plank Grilling. Copyright В©2009 Napoleon Appliance Corp. and Ted Reader. Reprinted by permission of Key Porter Books. All rights reserved.


Bob Sloan's Barbecued game hens "under the brick"

From Dad's Awesome Grilling Book by Bob Sloan (Chronicle Books).

Cookbook author Bob Sloan. Cookbook author Bob Sloan. "When I die, I hope to be buried with my grill tongs," jokes Bob Sloan, whose new cookbook, Dad's Awesome Grilling Book, not only provides a collection of excellent barbecue recipes, but also humorously surveys the culture of dads and grilling.

"The barbecue is a real oasis for dad," says Sloan. "It is the place where he can really feel like it's his domain, like he's a squire."

Sloan is a chef, school teacher and crime novelist who lives in Manhattan. He likes to do his grilling in the summer at his family's cottage in northern Michigan.

"We go up there for three months each year," he says, adding that on Father's Day, Dad's rightful place is at the barbecue.

"It is a place of great peace," he says. "Everyone else can do all the other work, but Dad's place is at the grill."

He and his wife, Randi, have two sons вЂ" Leo, 19, and Nate, 23 вЂ" who Sloan lovingly refers to as The Progeny. What's his only wish from them on Father's Day? "The Progeny have to laugh at all my jokes," he says, "They are obliged to, and that's opposed to their usual expressions of disdain when I try to be funny, like, 'Oh, get me out of here,' or, 'When my friends come over, please don't talk, Dad.'"

Of course, serving something great off the grill is another way to impress the family. This year, Sloan recommends cooking Tuscan-style game hens "under the brick," a method he learned from celebrity chef Mario Batali, who has a cottage in the same community as Sloan's.

"It's a fun recipe and it gives the hens a fantastic, crispy skin," Sloan says. "I like to have one of The Progeny on hand to do the ceremonial laying on of the bricks."

Book cover, chef Bob Sloan, Dad's Awesome Grilling Book. Recipe: Barbecued game hens "under the brick"

This is the traditional way of cooking small chickens in Tuscany (though of course the bricks they use in the recipe are metric).

Having the weight of the bricks on the hens while they grill makes the skin extra crispy and really amps up the flavour.

Have one of The Progeny on hand in the vicinity of the grill to perform the ceremonial laying on of the bricks.

Recipe serves four.

Ingredients:
  • One bunch of fresh basil
  • Вј cup dried rosemary
  • Two tablespoons paprika
  • Вј cup freshly ground black pepper
  • Вј cup salt
  • Вј to ВЅ cup extra virgin olive oil
  • Four Rock Cornish game hens or baby chickens (called poussins), backbones removed (have your butcher do this, if possible)
  • Four standard bricks wrapped in foil
  • Two lemons, cut into wedges, for garnish

Shot of cookbook author Bob Sloan's Game Hens - Under The Brick Style recipe. Place the basil, rosemary, paprika, black pepper, salt, and Вј cup of the olive oil in the container of a food processor or blender and pulse several times, until it becomes a smooth paste. Add more oil, a tablespoon at a time, if necessary. Rub both sides of the birds with the basil mixture and let them sit in the refrigerator for least two hours and up to 12 hours.

When you are ready to cook the birds, prepare enough coals for a two-tiered fire, hot on one side, medium on the other, or preheat your gas grill on medium-high on one side and medium on the other for 10 minutes with the lid closed.

When the coals are ready or the gas grill is hot, arrange the hens, skin-side down, on the hot side of the grill and place a foil-wrapped brick on top of each one. Do not move them for eight minutes. If a flareup occurs, cover the grill briefly until it goes out.

Turn the hens over, place the bricks on top, and cook for eight minutes more on the hot side of the grill.

Transfer the hens to the medium side of the grill and cook, skin-side up, for 10 more minutes. Turn and cook for another 10 to 12 minutes, until the hens are just cooked through and a thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the thigh reads 170 F (77 C).

Transfer the hens to a platter and serve immediately with the lemon wedges.

From Dad's Awesome Grilling Book. Copyright В©2009 Bob Sloan, Reprinted by permission of Chronicle Books LLC. All rights reserved.


Thomas Feller's Leg of Lamb With Herbs

From Barbecue by Thomas Feller (Hamlyn Books).

Author Thomas Feller. Author Thomas Feller. One doesn't immediately think of France when one thinks of barbecue. But Parisian chef Thomas Feller, whose new book Barbecue collects over 80 grilling recipes, informs me that not only is barbecue immensely popular throughout his homeland, but the word "barbecue" itself may well be of French origin.

"We have the word 'barbaq,' an old slang word for meat," Feller tells me over the phone from Paris. "It is said that the word was taken to North America by French butchers and has now returned to France as barbecue."

Feller has written more than two-dozen cookbooks and owns the catering company Thomas In My Kitchen. He does most of his al fresco grilling in Provence, where he frequently travels with his wife, Emmanuelle, and their two daughters, Suzanne, 3, and Louise, 1, to visit his parents in Uzes. This Father's Day, he feels a perfect family treat would be to grill a whole leg of lamb with herbs.

"This is a very traditional kind of dish," he says, "but normally we make it in the oven. On the barbecue, it gives wonderful results."

As seen below, part of the recipe's secret is the trick of using a bunch of fresh thyme as a basting brush.

"I learned that method as an apprentice in Strasbourg," he says. "When you are cooking, it is the fat that gives the smell and the taste, so it is good to baste the meat with some infused oil. When you brush on the oil with the thyme, the meat takes the delicious flavour of the herb."

Book cover, Thomas Feller's Barbecue. Recipe: Leg of lamb with herbs

Preparation Time: 30 minutes

Marinating Time: Two hours

Cooking time: 1 Вј hours, serves six

Ingredients:
  • One small leg of lamb about 3 lb (1.5 kg)
  • One standard pack fresh thyme for brushing meat
For the marinade:
  • 10 sprigs flat-leaf parsley
  • 10 sprigs cilantro
  • Three sprigs sage
  • Three sprigs rosemary
  • Вѕ cup olive oil
  • Six to seven tablespoons of dry white wine
  • Three cloves of garlic, chopped
  • Sea salt
  • Freshly ground black pepper

Author Thomas Feller's leg of lamb BBQ recipe. Strip the leaves from all the herbs and coarsely chop them. Pour the olive oil and the wine into a large dish, then add the herbs and garlic, salt and pepper. Thoroughly mix all the ingredients together.

Put the leg of lamb into this marinade, coating it well with herbs. Leave for two hours at room temperature, turning it often. Refrigerate if preferred, but remove and allow to return to room temperature before cooking.

Light the barbecue, place the grill to heat over the flames, and when you have nice hot embers place the leg of lamb in the centre of the heat source. Brown it on all sides, using the bunch of thyme to brush it frequently with marinade.

After about 1Вј hours cooking, wrap the lamb in aluminum foil, check with a meat thermometer for doneness and leave to rest for 15 minutes on a corner of the barbecue. Carve it into slices and serve immediately.

Hot tip: Be careful not to place the lamb too near the embers as the skin is very fatty and might catch fire and flare up. Serve the lamb with a salad and a caper sauce with tomato or onion marmalade.

From Barbecue. Copyright В©2008 Hachette Livre. Reprinted by permission of Octopus Books USA. All rights reserved.

Transcript: Paul Sullivan's view of citizen journalism

Paul Sullivan is a longtime journalist and former editor of what used to be a citizen journalism site: Orato.com. This transcript is part of an interview with Ira Basen for the CBC Radio Sunday Edition documentary News 2.0. Series air date on CBC Radio: Sunday, June 21 and Sunday, June 28, 2009.


IB: So tell me about Orato.com? What is it? Why is it? How did it start? What's the story behind it?

PS: Orato means "I speak" in Latin and the idea was to create a platform for people to bear witness in the first person. I was always keen on the idea of the first person because I think it's the easiest way to tell a story. It's this is what happened to me and it's in some ways the most honest way to tell a story.

I don't want to over simplify but it allows people to have a natural narrative structure that they might not always have, otherwise they have to get into the pyramid style or some other kind of foreign structure that's very intimidating. The whole traditional journalism, all the rubric and stuff attached to traditional journalism is very intimidating for ordinary people and in some ways it's exciting but ordinary people also I think need to be able to join in a public conversation and it's been very difficult to do that because they don't control the means of information product right?

But now there's no excuse. Everybody is online; everybody can interact at any time of the day or night. One of the things that…well, there's a lot of knowledge, there's a lot of wisdom, there's a lot of expertise, a lot of information in our communities that for one reason or another hasn't been tapped and I think that citizen journalism is the mechanism by which that information will be gathered and disseminated and it adds great value to the public conversation.

IB: Now you've sort of answered this already but what was the gap you were trying to fill with Orato? What was missing out there that you think needed to be filled with this?

PS: The voices of people who aren't official journalists and the information that they bring to the table, the thoughts, ideas, reflections that they have to contribute. It was classic when I was in the newspaper business or in the radio business or in the television business; we'd all have something called "talk back or feed back or letters to the editor" in which at the end of the week we'd feature three or four people's voices; letter to the editor - four or five people a day.

There are hundreds of thousands of people that have ideas, that have contributions to make, that have stories to tell that just weren't getting into any of the traditional media or any of the mainstream media and I've always thought that that's a rich source of information that we need to have and we weren't getting it. Pollsters were providing, if you like, the vox populi through a very I don't know limited mechanism that's very unsatisfying and "add your comments at the end" can be processed and aggregated in a really powerful way now so that that information is accessible.

I think the thing about citizen journalism is it buttresses the democracy; it strengthens the democracy by making it more and more difficult to control or limit the mechanism of expression.

The other thing is that yes, there is a huge prejudice among journalists about the customer or the reader or the viewer or the visitor or the audience or whoever they are. There is some kind of a amorphous of differentiated mass of idiots if we're going to be honest and I've always really hated that a lot and chaff against it because I don't know my own proclivities if you like have been to communicate with people out there but just by saying "out there" alone sort of draws a metaphorical line between us and them and there is no " us and them" really. I mean it's okay to be trained, it's okay to be skillful, it's wonderful to be talented, all of those things are very important but that doesn't mean that the value of the information and the people who aren't trained, skilled and talented isn't important as well or that they need to have the means to express it. Plus there are all kinds of skill and talent and information that we're missing, lots of it. There are all kinds of arguments for why we shouldn't let ordinary people practice journalism or something like that and I can argue about each one of those because as far as I'm concerned they're all specious, they're all designed to create or to sustain a sense of elite information masters that's spurious right?

IB: But what you're talking about is really kind of the gatekeeper function of journalism right? That there's a gate and we will tell you whether you can walk through that gate or not and that seems to be what you're sort of ramming against…

PS: We've got rules junior!

IB: Okay, but you were for many years the ultimate gatekeeper. How do you square that?

PS: I was "Mr. Gatekeeper" yeah, you know "I once was lost and now I'm found" "I was blind but now I see". Well, I don't know I'm not sure that I had the personality to be the gatekeeper, I kept letting people in, I kept letting things in and other things out. A real gatekeeper hoards and I'm not a good hoarder. A good gatekeeper builds standards and codes of behaviour and all of that kind of stuff and frankly I kept looking for ways to break the rules, not make the rules. So I would keep moving from gate to gate to try and figure out what was going on here and the more time I spent opening and closing gates, the less inclined I was to do that.

IB: But is there anything legitimate about the gatekeeper function?

PS: I'm thinking…uhm, is there anything legitimate about the gatekeeper function? That's if you make species equivalencies such as "the gate equals the truth". I'm not sure that there's any value to that equivalency. Now this is not to say that there aren't skilled communicators and there but if you argue that the best thing to do is to get all the skilled communicators in a room together and have them tell me things and decide what I'm qualified to know and what I'm not qualified to know, I'm not sure that that's the right idea.

IB: But does the gate not help weed untruth? I mean that's one of the philosophical underpinnings of the gate is that through this process, we will be able to get the best available version of the truth. At least it's the best way of getting that.

PS: Well, that's the last line of defense isn't it? That's the last resort of a desperate community. I'm not sure whether it's true or not. I'd like to tell a story about a story; can I do that?

IB: Okay, but first…you must of while you were a gatekeeper, you must have blocked out a lot of stuff that was not true and you must have in the process of being an editor you must have made lots of things a lot better and yet you seem to see now no value in that. Even at the conference I saw you at, you lamented the number of trees that were killed in pursuit of your journalistic career. I mean there must have been some value in what you did all those years.

PS: Well, I'm sure that this would not make me popular with all of my ex-colleagues but most of the things that I did were internal. I would prevent people or try to prevent people or encourage people to tell the truth as opposed to what they were doing and what they were doing was they were pursuing a point of view or they were trying to tell a story with a motive. All of the kinds of stuff that ordinary people do all the time only its not sanctioned, it's not glorified as truth telling. It's just what they think, it's their opinion and so 99% of the stuff that would come over the transom was, as far as I could tell, relatively well constructed opinion but that's all it was. I mean you get some guy, he talks to…he decides what to emphasize in the story, he decides who to talk to, he decides what facts to leave in, what facts to leave out and I would negotiate with him.

I would say "well no I think these facts are more important then those facts" so we'd have a little fact find and sometimes I'd prevail, sometimes I'd go to the wall and say no, no, I want it that way and sometimes I wouldn't. I'd give him something but it was a negotiated truth at best and it was between two people who were trapped in their social, cultural, economic and political skins and we were those lenses and that's what we saw.

Some guy came in from left field let's say or never mind a guy, a woman from left field, left field being I don't Indo-Canadian community somewhere and they start talking about how we're all a bunch of racists and we don't understand what we're talking about, we would try to eradicate that irritation. Sometimes…we'd try to do it politically correctly because that's how we behaved, we were civilized

Living in the Moment

Living in the Moment
 by: Paul Bauer
This week's wisdom is on the power of living in the moment. That ability we all have to be present...allowing all this moment offers us, and all we have to offer it. Years ago, I used to be a very future-oriented and forward-thinking person. Always saying to myself and others, "Tomorrow's gonna' be so much better than today...I can't wait!" - While not even realizing that first, I wasn't even dealing with the realities of what I needed to face in the present - not enough money, not loving my work, looking for others to validate my level of excitement...and a host of other externally validating needs that I had at the time.
What I didn't realize was that I was literally draining my energy from the present out into the future. I remember saying to myself things like, "I'll have more tomorrow if only this would change" or "If I only had more intuition...I wish I had more wisdom...maybe tomorrow..." Without realizing that I was spending all my energy hoping for something better to happen next week or next year, instead of listening to my intuition and taking a breath to be present.
Buddha taught his students to be here now - in this moment. For this is the only moment we have - as you're reading this wisdom now - this is the only moment you have. This is the place where God is, in this space of time, a time like no other - a time to listen to your Heart, not just your mind - and trusting your Heart's wisdom like you would a trusted friend or loved one. As you read this, think of all the wonderful things you have to be grateful for today. Your health, your job, your intellect, your physical body (your own temple), your home, your friends...the list is as infinite as you are.
Take a moment to reflect...to embrace the real you - the True you that honors people and is creative, the True you that is sacred, as are your Dreams in life...
Pause for a moment...
Breathe...
Listen to the song inside you...that wonderful resonance inside you that longs to be heard...
And when you listen to its sweet call, you are present, you are loved, you are infinite, you are divine. Allow this magnificent feeling to wash over you...to move through you...as if you were on a beautiful sandy beach of your Dreams...smelling the salt sea air...feeling the gentle tradewinds move through your hair...feeling the soft sand at your feet...feeling grounded...
Allowing any stress you may have to just effortlessly wash away with with flow of the tides... Remembering that you are part of the azure ocean before you...it is your Source and you are its beginning...
Feeling present...feeling grounded...allowing this moment to be you...
And you are better for this...
And so it is...
As you make your way today, remember this feeling. This feeling that you have all you need to create what you desire already inside you. Knowing that you are on purpose...embracing each moment for its sweetness and beauty - even when it seems difficult. As you do this, you will attract what you most passionately desire.
I wish you many blessings,
Paul Bauer

Horse Training 101

Horse Training 101
 by: Ray La Foy
Each horse is different in how it learns and how it reacts to outside stimuli. Certain methods of horse training may apply to some horses, but it does not mean that it will be effective to all breeds of horse.
To start horse training you must develop a communication system with the horse. This might take time. In the same way as children may not fully grasp the idea of things at an instant, baby horses in training may not get every pressure, pat or way of holding the reins at once.
When you apply a certain pressure, you expect a certain response. During horse training, you must make the horse understand that a certain pressure should elicit a corresponding response. We don't expect full compliance in the beginning, but as time goes by, these actions will be part of the horse's vocabulary.
Throughout the course of the horse training, one by one these actions will be added to his vocabulary. But these actions should still be broken down into minute details that the horse can take in one at a time. Learn how to pace with each individual horse. Training is something that should be done slowly and surely.
You must also learn how to "speak" to your horse in a way that it will be able to comprehend. This manner of speaking would mean fewer words and more body language.
Horses are herd animals. They learn well by imitating the leaders of the herd. You should be that "leader" your horse will follow. Patience is a key in training your horses.
You must also take into consideration that no one, animal or human, learns well when under stress. You should not force lessons into your horse during horse training. They don't appreciate the yelling and whipping, especially if they do not know what all the harshness is for. Unlike humans who can speak their minds, horses resort to more physical responses. And you certainly wouldn't want your horse to whirl, kick, strike and do out of hand movements.
You must create an environment wherein the horse can learn on its own, aside from the horse training that you give it. It is also important to see the difference between having been able to teach the horse something and it just accepting it. If a horse is relaxed when you do something, this does not necessarily mean that it is trained. This might just mean to it as another thing a human being normally does. Resistance at first is needed in order to see that the horse recognizes that something new is being taught to him.
The horse's daily training routine should not be based on a set of particular things you want to teach to the horse. It should be based on how your horse reacts to your actions. Don't teach something new to it without reviewing what it already knows.
Most importantly - don't force your horse to go on horse training if it doesn't feel well. A good routine does not only maintain the horse's attention level, but also its comfort level.

The Trust We Must Have to Manifest What We Truly Desire

The Trust We Must Have to Manifest What We Truly Desire
 by: Paul Bauer
Some of my greatest teachers have taught me that faith and trust are two of our most powerful allies. True belief in your ability to create results in your life is based upon this trust. We know that the first step of manifesting what you desire is to breathe deeply and get centered - therefore quieting the mind. Allowing this calmness to flow through you...
As the book Conversations with God (a deeply spiritual, non-religious book) teaches us, Our thoughts are expressions of the Divine - of God - that we are at the same time the Source and the receiver. Now, this may seem a bit too powerful for some to either understand or admit.
But think just for a moment, if we are given the free will as we have been given - would it make any sense that our thoughts (prayers) would be separate from the Creator? How are we any different?
We carry the seeds of Creation inside of us - we are Spirit embodied. Breathe deeply and ask yourSelf:
"How does this feel when I hear it?" "How can I Create?"
Living from Trust means to remind ourselves that we have this creative Force within us, and trusting that our thoughts turned into action with purpose will manifest what we desire.
Trust allows our original intuitive thought be like a seed that takes hold in the fertile soil of our imagination and is given nurturing by our actions and successive thoughts (more water and sunshine). As this seedling grows, we notice how Trust allows this seedling to reach its true potential. The only things that stop this seedling from reaching its True heights are fear and doubt.
When fear and doubt begin to creep into your garden, let this be a reminder to breathe deeply,counting from 1 to 8 as you breathe in... hold for a count of four, release on the out breath for a count of 8, hold for a count of four and repeat.
You might find it interesting to know that the word "Breath" and the word "Spirit" have the same meaning in many of the oldest languages in the world. In our culture, we have been taught to separate Spirit from Self, when the truth is we are embodied Spirit.
All we really need to remember this truth is to quiet our minds and let go of the constant chatter of the ego.
Calming your mind and knowing that You are the thinker of your thoughts, not the thoughts themselves is the key to understanding your True nature. With each breath, you breathe life into your Dreams and desires. As you breathe deeply and allow the Life Force to flow through you, your seeds of greatness will take hold in your imagination and become real.
Allowing yourself the ability to imagine different ways of manifesting your desire, Trust in your ability to Create. Trust in your ability to re-connect with your Source. Trust that, as the famous guided imagery expert Bellaruth Naperstek says "something wonderful is about to happen." Give yourself the "Space" to breathe, imagine and create.
You already have the seeds of your greatness inside you. All you need to do is to water them (Trust) and allow the Sun (Source, connecting with others who you trust) to shine upon them. You will feel a renewed sense of Energy as it flows through you.
As you sense this Energy, be grateful - for gratitude begets more of what you are thankful for. I like to put it this way, "Thank and Grow Rich."

Friday, June 12, 2009

Malawi's top court approves Madonna's 2nd adoption

Madonna holds her adopted son, David Banda, as they meet with the boy's biological father, Yohane Banda, earlier this year in Liliongwe, Malawi. The picture was made available by Madonna's publicist.Madonna holds her adopted son, David Banda, as they meet with the boy's biological father, Yohane Banda, earlier this year in Liliongwe, Malawi. The picture was made available by Madonna's publicist. (Tom Monroe/Associated Press)

Madonna can adopt a second child from Malawi, the southern African country's highest court ruled Friday, overturning a lower court decision it said was out of touch with the times.

Chief Justice Lovemore Munlo, reading the three-judge panel's ruling, also said the singer's commitment to helping disadvantaged children should have been taken into account when deciding on Madonna's request to adopt three-year-old Chifundo (Mercy) James.

Madonna has founded a charity, Raising Malawi, which helps feed, educate and provide medical care for some of Malawi's more than one million orphans, half of whom have lost a parent to AIDS.

Children's welfare groups had expressed concern that rules meant to protect children were being bent because of Madonna's celebrity, and perhaps out of gratitude for what she has done for Malawi, one of the world's poorest and most AIDS-ravaged countries.

Madonna's lawyer, Alan Chinula, said he called his client after the ruling.

"It's the wee hours of morning in New York but she is excited at the news," Chinula said. "As her lawyer I am happy that this has settled this contentious issue."

Chinula said he would now turn to arranging a passport for Chifundo, which could take several days, and was awaiting word from Madonna on travel plans for the girl. The adoption may not be final for some time.

Madonna had appealed after the lower court ruled she could not adopt the girl because the singer had not spent enough time in Malawi. The lower court said residency rules had been bent when Madonna adopted her son David from Malawi last year.

The appeals court said that was a narrow interpretation based on old laws.

"In this global village a man can have more than one place at which he resides," Munlo said in the ruling, which took more than an hour to read in court Friday. "The matter of residence should be determined at the time of application of the adoption. In this case, Madonna was in Malawi not by chance but by intention. She is looking after several orphans whose welfare depends on her. She can therefore not be described as a sojourner."

The ruling also said the judges saw only two options for Chifundo, "either to stay at the orphanage without the love of family and live with the possibility of destitution or be with Madonna where she is assured of love.

"Every child has the right to love."

Iranian voters head to the polls

Iranians headed to the polls on Friday in a highly scrutinized presidential election that pits hardline leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad against reformist candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi.

An estimated 45,000 polling stations opened nationwide Friday morning. State television encouraged people to vote and broadcast video footage of past elections, nationalistic songs and pictures of Iranians fighting against Iraq in the 1980-88 war.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei cast his ballot minutes after the polls opened, as is customary at presidential elections. He urged voters to get out and vote early.

"As far as I see and hear, passion and motivation is very high among people," said Khamenei. "We expect people at packed polling stations to be able to choose the best choice for heading the executive branch for four years."

The rowdy campaign reached a crescendo in the past few days with duelling rallies by supporters of Ahmadinejad and Mousavi, that drew tens of thousands into the streets of Tehran. Fervent, youthful supporters of Mousavi accused the president of undermining Iran's international standing with his confrontational style and of devastating the economy.

Possible runoff

There are four candidates in the running вЂ" former Revolutionary Guard commander Mohsen Razai and former parliamentary Speaker Mehdi Karroubi trail the leading two candidates. The winning candidate has to secure more than 50 per cent of the vote, which many analysts say is unlikely in the first round of voting.

If none of the candidates can secure this margin, a runoff election between the top two vote-getters will be held on June 19. Consequently, the support of the two trailing candidates could be crucial to the frontrunners. Razai is expected to draw conservative voters, and Karroubi has a largely moderate base.

Ahmadinejad, meanwhile, has broad support among rural and working poor voters, while Mousavi has much of the middle-class and urban vote.

Mousavi looks to be mounting a strong challenge to Ahmadinejad, whose once high approval ratings have flagged as a sinking economy drags down his popularity with it. Mousavi has the backing of former president Mohamed Khatami, who was elected in 1997 and 2001.

Mousavi has criticized Ahmadinejad's foreign policies as provocative, and says he will seek to better Iran's relationship with the international community, particularly with its neighbours in the Middle East and the United States. U.S. President Barack Obama has spoken of improving ties with the Islamic nation.

All candidates are in favour of continuing Iran's national nuclear program, which has given many citizens a sense of national pride. None of the candidates recognize Israel as a nation.

Regardless of who wins, the outcome is expected to have at best a modest impact on issues like the nuclear development program and foreign policy at large.

As supreme leader, Khamenei has the final word on all state matters, as mandated since 1979's Islamic revolution. But analysts say he may show flexibility if there is broad public support for a moderate agenda.

Still, the president has influence over some domestic affairs, such as the economy, and serves as Iran's highest-ranking envoy on the international stage.

Sudden surge

Political scientist Sadegh Zibakalam told CBC's Margaret Evans he finds it hard to explain the surge in support for Mousavi, Iran's prime minister from 1980 to 1988. Mousavi has maintained a low profile in recent years.

"Who knows him to begin with? The man has been prime minister [but] during the past 20 years no one's heard of him."

But he believes Mousavi's challenge may be too strong for Ahmadinejad to withstand.

"It appears that an earthquake, a flood, an avalanche is coming that is much more powerful than the one that brought Khatami to power.

"We are surprised, we are baffled, but it is coming."

With files from The Associated Press

2 killed in Gander Bay collision

Two people died Thursday night in central Newfoundland when two vehicles collided on a regional highway.

The Gander Bay-area collision occurred around 8 p.m. RCMP said the two people died at the scene, and had been in the same vehicle.

The driver of the other car was rushed to hospital in Gander, but his life is not threatened, the force said in a statement. He had been alone in the vehicle.

The collision, on Route 331 near Rodgers Cove, prompted the closure of a section of the highway for several hours on Thursday night.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Red Wings practise with purpose

A well-rested Chris Osgood is all smiles at Monday's practice. A well-rested Chris Osgood is all smiles at Monday's practice. (Paul Sancya/Associated Press)

The Detroit Red Wings returned to the ice Monday for an intense practice, with Chris Osgood having caught up on his sleep and Brad Stuart having caught up on his laundry.

The Red Wings were rewarded Sunday with a rare day off following Saturday's 5-0 pounding of the Pittsburgh Penguins in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup final, which Detroit leads 3-2.

And while Stuart worked on his spin cycle, Osgood, Detroit's starting goaltender in all 21 playoff games and a legitimate Conn Smythe Trophy candidate as top playoff performer, enjoyed a lengthy nap.

"I'm banking some sleep here," Osgood told reporters Monday at Joe Louis Arena, where the Red Wings practised prior to travelling to Pittsburgh for Game 6 on Tuesday (CBC, CBCSports.ca, 8 p.m. ET).

No snooze buttons were pushed at practice, though, not with Detroit poised to clinch the Stanley Cup for the second straight season and fifth in the past 12.

"We haven't had a lot of practices like that the last couple months," Stuart said of the brisk pace set at Monday's practice. "It's good to get out there to make sure your body is working."

Pavel Datsyuk showed no lingering effects from a sore foot вЂ" reports hinted it was broken вЂ" in his first full practice since returning to the lineup Saturday night.

"He looked really good," Red Wings head coach Mike Babcock said.

Datsyuk, Detroit's leading point-getter and a Hart Trophy finalist, was terrific in Game 5, posting two assists and providing a much-needed spark following a seven-game absence.

"I was really impressed with Pavel out there," Babcock said. "The other day, when he was practicing and he was going to play, I didn't think he looked great.

"As the game went on, I thought he got more confident, and it is pretty apparent now."

Also apparent is that if the Red Wings win Game 6, they will hoist the Stanley Cup on the road and in the same building вЂ" Pittsburgh's Mellon Arena вЂ" for the second time in as many years, something unseen since the Montreal Canadiens at the Boston Garden in 1977 and 1978.

"We're comfortable on the road," Red Wings forward Kirk Maltby said. "A lot of times, we say we wish we could bring our road game home because a lot of times we play better on the road."

Perhaps. But the home team has prevailed in each of the first five games.

The Red Wings won both Games 1 and 2 at Detroit by a score of 3-1 and lost both Games 3 and 4 at Pittsburgh by a score of 4-2 before halting the trend with a convincing 5-0 pounding of the Penguins in Game 5 at Detroit.

"It is up to us to respond to play the kind of hockey we know we can play," Red Wings forward Kris Draper said of hostile reception expected at Mellon Arena.

"It is going to be a great atmosphere. We have to make sure we have a great start to settle down quickly."

Detroit faced a somewhat similar situation in the Western Conference semifinal, but lost 2-1 in Game 6 at Anaheim before eliminating the Ducks on home ice in Game 7.

"It is tough always [when] you have another team on the other side of the ice who are just as desperate as you are and throwing everything they have at you," Red Wings defenceman Niklas Kronwall said. "Sometimes, I think we just haven't played well enough and haven't stayed focused enough.

"We have been a little nervous at times. Hopefully, we learn from that."

With files from The Associated Press

Monday, June 8, 2009

Air Canada reaches tentative deal with 3 unions

Air Canada said late Monday that it has reached tentative deals on pension funding moratorium and collective agreement extension with three of its unions.

The airline said in a release late Monday it reached the agreements with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, the Canadian Auto Workers union and the Canadian Airlines Dispatchers Association.

Collectively, they represent 16,500 employees or more than 60 per cent of its unionized workforce in Canada.

The pension deal calls for a 21-month moratorium on pension funding, the company said. The agreement is subject to a number of terms and conditions, including Air Canada obtaining new financing and each union being granted an equity stake in the company.

The three unions also agreed to extend or renew the terms and conditions of their collective agreements for a period of 21 months from the expiry of their current agreements in 2009.

"These agreements with three of our unions represent an important milestone in providing stability for our company during this challenging period," Air Canada president and chief executive Calin Rovinescu said in the release.

"The pension funding solution and labour stability are key conditions precedent to obtaining critical new financing for the Company," he said. "While we continue to see very difficult credit markets during this deep recession, we are in discussions with several potential lenders who are assessing our financing needs."

Earlier this month, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty appointed former Ontario judge James Farley to mediate between Air Canada and its unions and retirees over the carrier's proposal to halt its pension contributions until early 2011.

There have been reports that Air Canada might have to seek bankruptcy protection for the second time this decade unless it can reduce costs, including delaying large pension payments due in July and August.

The Air Canada Pilots Association and the Canadian Union of Public Employees, representing flight attendants, were not part of Monday's announcement, Air Canada said.

Lind powers Blue Jays in Texas

Adam Lind, right, celebrates Monday with teammate Vernon Wells in a 6-3 Blue Jays win.  Adam Lind, right, celebrates Monday with teammate Vernon Wells in a 6-3 Blue Jays win. (Matt Slocum/Associated Press)

The Texas Rangers lead the major leagues with 89 home runs, yet Adam Lind got the better of them not once but twice.

Lind hit a pair of two-run home runs off previously unbeaten Scott Feldman to power the Toronto Blue Jays past Texas 6-3 at Rangers Ballpark on Monday night.

Lind homered to right field off Feldman in the second inning and to left field in the fourth and already has equalled his career high with 11 home runs this season.

Feldman (5-1) was charged with four runs and seven hits with two walks and two strikeouts over seven innings.

The right-hander had earned the win in his last three starts, and Texas had won the last six games he had pitched.

Marco Scutaro had three hits and one run batted in while Aaron Hill counted the other RBI for the Blue Jays (33-27).

Scott Rolen also had three hits, and Vernon Wells reached base three times and scored twice.

Toronto starter Casey Janssen pitched 5 1/3 innings, permitting three runs вЂ" one unearned вЂ" on six hits and two walks with six strikeouts.

Janssen (2-2), a crafty right-hander with five pitches in his repertoire, took the mound with an 0-2 mark in five career appearances versus the Rangers.

Jason Frasor and Brandon League combined for 2 1/3 innings of scoreless relief before closer Scott Downs recorded the final four outs for his eighth save.

Marlon Byrd and Jarrod Saltalamacchia had a run batted in apiece for the Rangers (33-24).

Toronto took a 4-0 lead on Lind's home runs, but Texas trimmed the deficit with three runs in the bottom of the sixth inning.

Hank Blalock walked, Nelson Cruz singled and David Murphy reached safely on Hill's fielding error to load the bases for Byrd, who singled off Scutaro's glove to cash in a run.

Cruz then scored on a wild pitch from Janssen, who was replaced by Frasor at that point.

Saltalamacchia promptly stroked Frasor's first offering into right field for an RBI single that sliced it to 4-3.

But in the top of the ninth inning, the Blue Jays loaded the bases off reliever Jason Jennings on a double by Rolen, a walk to Lyle Overbay and a single from Kevin Millar.

That brought Darren O'Day to the mound, and he surrendered an RBI single to Scutaro and a run-scoring sacrifice fly to Hill.

With files from The Canadian Press

Friday, June 5, 2009

France urges prudence in search for crashed plane's debris

French search planes have not yet been able to confirm that any debris spotted in the Atlantic Ocean belongs to the crashed Air France Flight 447, officials said Friday, urging searchers to be "extremely prudent" in identifying any wreckage.

No evidence has yet been retrieved from the Airbus A330 that disappeared off radar screens and crashed into the Atlantic Ocean between eastern Brazil and western Africa, said French Transportation Minister Dominique Bussereau.

The flight was en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris with 216 passengers and 12 crew on board when it flew through stormy weather and disappeared.

Bussereau said he regretted that Brazilian search teams had widely publicized on Thursday that they had recovered parts of the plane's debris. The wooden cargo pallet plucked from the sea was never on the plane, officials later said.

"French authorities have been saying for several days that we have to be extremely prudent," Bussereau said. "Our planes and naval ships have seen nothing."

French air force Col. Thierry Bon said that flotsam has been spotted in the search area but there is no way to yet confirm if it is part of the plane.

"Aircraft are making visual recognitions on the different contacts but currently I am not sure that those contacts are really part of the aircraft," Bon said.

Ramon Borges Cardoso, general director of the Brazilian Aerospace Control Department, said debris believed to be from the plane has indeed been spotted. It has just not yet been retrieved.

Earlier in the week, search planes spotted a trail of wreckage that contained what's believed to an orange life-vest, pieces of metal and an airliner seat. A separate debris field about 90 kilometres to the south was amid a 20-kilometre oil slick and contained what's believed to be a seven-metre piece of the plane.

But Cardoso said Friday Brazilian officials no longer believe the oil slick came from the crashed Airbus.

Probability of finding remains decreasing

From a retrieval perspective, Cardoso said, Brazilian search teams are focused on recovering the remains of the people onboard.

"With every moment, the probability of finding the bodies decreases because more than 100 hours have passed since the accident and that possibility is more remote each time," he said.

No bodies or body parts have yet been reported.

Among the passengers were vacationers, newlyweds, a group of business people returning from a trip they had been sent on as a reward for their work, an 11-year-old boy returning to England alone, and Canadian Brad Clemes, 49, a Coca-Cola executive who was born and raised in Guelph, Ont., and lived in Belgium.

Brazil's air force was flying some relatives of victims from Rio de Janeiro to the military's search command post in the northeastern city of Recife so they could tour the operation and ask questions on Friday.

Any debris or human remains that are recovered will be taken to the air force base in Recife.

Finding debris will also become more difficult with the passing days, according to French officials. Over time, the debris will continue to spread out and sink into the deep, mountainous ocean, which has strong currents in the area.

Bussereau said the search is continuing and from the French investigation team's perspective, the priority is on finding the plane's black boxes.

Two deep-water submersibles are not expected in the remote area until next week.

Airbus issues advisory

Meanwhile, European plane-maker Airbus sent an advisory to all operators of the A330 reminding them of how to handle the plane in conditions similar to those experienced by Flight 447.

The French agency investigating the crash said the doomed flight had faced turbulent weather and inconsistency in the speed readings by different instruments meant "the air speed of the aircraft was unclear."

In such circumstances, flight crews should maintain thrust and pitch and вЂ" if necessary вЂ" level off the plane and start troubleshooting procedures as detailed in operating manuals, said Airbus officials.

Experts say that jetliners need to be flying at just the right speed when encountering violent weather. If they are flying too fast, they run the risk of breaking apart. If they are going too slowly, they could lose control.

Issuing the document "no way implicates any blame" on possible problems with the aircraft or the flight crew onboard, said Airbus spokesman Justin Dubon.

The French Accident Investigation Agency said Thursday that automatic messages received from the plane failed to show how fast it was going. But the agency warned against "hasty interpretation or speculation" about the crash.

With files from The Associated Press

Daughter of accused white supremacists made racist remarks at age 4, aunt testifies

A controversial child custody battle involving alleged white supremacist parents resumed in Winnipeg on Thursday with a focus on the lifestyle the couple exposed their children to.

But before the hearing even began, it wasn't the children or the parents who were the subject of the discussion in court but a media outlet that broadcast information it was not supposed to.

Global TV admitted it had identified the parents involved in the case, thereby violating a court-imposed publication ban.

Representatives for the province and Child and Family Services (CFS) argued the television station should be expelled for what they called a clear breach of privacy laws.

Representatives from Global flew in from Vancouver to personally appear in court as a show of remorse and to apologize. A lawyer for the station said the broadcast of the names, which remained on the broadcaster's website for more than four days, was an accident.

The judge ruled that Global could stay but only on the condition it no longer use any documents or photographs as part of its reporting on the ongoing story.

No evidence of harm from broadcast: CFS

CFS officials admitted there was no evidence of any manifest harm caused by broadcasting the information. However, the province could still proceed with criminal contempt charges that could result in Global being fined and even jail time for the

At least 30 people dead in blast at Pakistan mosque

An attack at a northwestern Pakistan mosque during Friday prayers carried out by a suicide bomber has left at least 30 people dead, a government official said.

Upper Dir district coordination officer Atif-ur-Rehman said many more were wounded in the blast.

The attack is part of a wave of violence along the Afghan border in recent days just as the army says it is close to defeating Taliban militants in the Swat Valley.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the mosque blast.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Not enough evidence to link man to beating, Labrador judge finds

A judge in Labrador has dismissed charges of aggravated assault against a man accused of two brutal beatings that occurred in his Happy Valley-Goose Bay home.

Anton Russell, 27, was charged after two men were found unconscious in August in the house where Russell had been staying.

Police found the beating victims had been drinking and had passed out before someone beat them with an iron poker. Both sustained severe injuries, and one is still recovering.

Russell, who could not be found for two weeks, was charged with two counts of aggravated assault.

But on Monday, Judge William English dismissed the charges, finding that there was no physical evidence linking Russell to the beatings.

As well, the witnesses all failed to identify Russell during a preliminary hearing. One of the victims was too intoxicated to remember his attacker, while the other could not be located to testify.

Another witness, who had also been severely intoxicated, could only describe an attacker who was wearing a white hoodie while standing over the victims.

Outside the court, Russell said he was blamed for the crime not because of the evidence, but because of his reputation. He is well-known to police in Happy Valley-Goose Bay.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Mickelson to return before U.S. Open

Phil Mickelson's wife, Amy, is battling breast cancer.Phil Mickelson's wife, Amy, is battling breast cancer. (David Cannon/Getty Images)

Phil Mickelson plans a brief return to the PGA Tour in time to play in the U.S. Open.

The world's No. 2 player suspended his schedule indefinitely upon announcing two weeks ago that his wife, Amy, had been diagnosed with breast cancer.

Recent tests have given them hope the cancer was caught early, with more tests scheduled over the next month.

Mickelson intends to return next week at the St. Jude Championship in Memphis, Tenn., then play the following week in the U.S. Open at Bethpage Black, according to a person informed of the plans.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because Mickelson had not announced his decision.

"We heard there was a possibility he would play," St. Jude Championship spokesman Phil Cannon. "That would be great."

A frequent runner-up

Mickelson is a sentimental favourite at every U.S. Open, where at age 38 he already has tied the record for most runner-up finishes with four. He is especially popular in New York, and his presence at Bethpage Black figured to bring an emotional and raucous response.

He has never finished worse than fourth in his four U.S. Opens held in New York.

But his return might not last long.

Mickelson first thought surgery for his 37-year-old wife could happen as early as a few weeks since the announcement, but that has been pushed back for another month.

Her treatment and recovery will dictate whether he plays in the British Open, or how much he plays at all the rest of the summer. Mickelson already has won twice this year and is No. 5 in the FedEx Cup standings.

Amy Mickelson is among the most popular wives in golf, mingling with friends and fans with equal ease as she follows her spouse around the course. The support has been overwhelming, with phone calls and messages and from players, and visible support on tour.

Saturday at Colonial, the PGA Tour Wives Association worked with the tour and title sponsor Crowne Plaza to promote "Pink Out," in which players, wives, officials and fans were encouraged to wear pink to salute Amy.

Ian Poulter was dressed in pink from head to toe and most players wore some form of pink.

Vijay Singh, one of Mickelson's fierce rivals, wore a pink shirt. Even the CBS Sports crew wore the colour in support.

'We are overwhelmed by love'

"We have been home watching the golf at Colonial surrounded by loved ones," Amy wrote Saturday on her husband's website. "Every time we see a player, caddy, announcer or fan wearing pink, we are overwhelmed by the love and support we feel.…

"The 11 days since we received the diagnosis have been very difficult, but this incredible gesture helps us feel so much stronger."

Mickelson typically plays the week before a major to work into a competitive mode, but he has not done that in the last two years when Memphis moved into that spot on the schedule.

The last time he played the St. Jude Championship was in 2001, when he missed the cut.

Mickelson was treated like a rock star in his last appearance at Bethpage Black, a public golf course on Long Island. It was held nine months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, and Mickelson had yet to win a major.

Starting the final round five shots behind, Mickelson got to within two shots of Tiger Woods on the back nine before Woods pulled away for a three-shot victory.

Mickelson won the first of his three majors at the 2004 Masters, and he finally delivered for the New York area in 2005 when he won the PGA Championship at Baltusrol in northern New Jersey.

A native of San Diego, Lefty has become so smitten with New York that he takes a trip there every year with his family, and recently joined Liberty National golf club, across the Hudson River in New Jersey.

"I love all that's going on there," he said last month. "It's a very sports-minded city, a very cultural city, an energetic city."

Inquiry ordered into police tethering of Victoria teen

Willow Kinloch appeared outside a courthouse in May of last year after being awarded $60,000 in a lawsuit she filed against Victoria police. Willow Kinloch appeared outside a courthouse in May of last year after being awarded $60,000 in a lawsuit she filed against Victoria police. (CBC)

B.C.'s police complaint commissioner has called a public inquiry into the actions of two Victoria police officers who tied up a drunken 15-year-old girl in a cell for hours four years ago.

Stan Lowe said Monday he has decided it is in the public interest to hold the hearing, even though a police investigation conducted by Vancouver police and Victoria Police Chief Jamie Graham found allegations of improper conduct against the two officers were unsubstantiated.

Lowe's three-page statement said constables Ryan O'Neill and Brian Asmussen have been accused of committing disciplinary faults under B.C.'s Code of Professional Conduct Regulations вЂ" including abuse of authority and neglect of duty.

Lowe was appointed police complaints commissioner earlier this year.

Willow Kinloch was arrested for being drunk in public in May 2005 and spent several hours in a padded cell.

Video evidence viewed by jurors at a civil trial showed Kinloch, who weighed about 100 pounds, lashed to the cell door with her hands cuffed behind her back and her tethered feet pulled up tight to the floor.

She was awarded $60,000 from the lawsuit, but police and the city appealed and last March they reached an undisclosed out-of-court settlement.

No date has been set for the inquiry, which will examine the allegations of abuse of authority and neglect of duty.

Victoria police call inquiry 'burden'

The Victoria Police Department said Monday it will co-operate with any reviews in the Kinloch matter, but said the case has undergone significant past reviews.

Sgt. Grant Hamilton said the case has already been the subject of a criminal review, an internal investigation, two independent use-of-force reviews and a civil trial.

"The [police complaint commissioner's] decision will unfortunately burden the public with significant legal costs in relation to an incident that occurred over four years ago and has already been thoroughly reviewed," Hamilton said in a statement.

The officers are accused of abuse of authority relating to the jailing of Kinloch and using unnecessary force by applying a restraining device and leaving it in place under circumstances that are abusive and oppressive.

The officers also face two neglect-of-duty allegations that relate to failing to diligently monitor the welfare of Kinloch вЂ" including determining if the continued use of the tether was necessary вЂ" and failing to notify provincial Children and Family Development Ministry officials after police couldn't find Kinloch's parents.

The Victoria Police Department has made several policy and equipment changes since the Kinloch incident, Hamilton said.

The department "has upgraded surveillance camera technology, amended its policies regarding youth in custody and has increased accountability and supervision in the cell area regarding police and civilian employees," he said.