The record, 30 mars 2017, jeudi 30 mars 2017
[" Praxis Malawi stands to benefit from anonymous donor RECORD Gaiters Athletes Honoured at Annual Awards Banquet THE VOICE OF THE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS SINCE 1897 Page 4 Sports - Page 7 75 CENTS + TAXES PM#0040007682 THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 ET SB suspends TTFM survey By Matthew McCully t Tuesday evening\u2019s council of com- A missioner meeting, the Eastern Townships School Board (ETSB) decided unanimously to suspend administering the Tell Them From Me survey until May 4, after the board has had an opportunity to address parent concerns about the survey.The issue came up as parent commissioner Ken Waterhouse delivered the parents\u2019 committee report, pointing to concerns about consent, assuring the anonymity of the students, and setting up an ethics committee to ensure the appropriateness of the questions.Waterhouse read out a resolution drafted by the central parents committee to suspend the implementation of this year\u2019s survey.Following a discussion among the councillors, ETSB Chairman Mike Murray proposed an amendment to the parents\u2019 committee resolution.Rather than suspend its implementation this year, Murray suggested the survey be suspended until after a May 3 meeting where concerns about the survey can be addressed.That way, there would still be a window to move forward with the survey for the current school year.\u201cWe\u2019ve heard and tried to address the negative aspects, but we\u2019ve never delved into what are the benefits that apply directly to the students,\u201d Murray said.\u201cWithout listening to what the students tell us, we\u2019re less able to understand their needs.\u201d Waterhouse pointed out that \u2018without criticism, there is no improvement,\u2019 suggesting what parents want is a proper evaluation of all aspects of the survey before moving forward.CONT\u2019D ON PAGE 3 Canadian Cancer Society daffodils have arrived in L.ennoxville GORDON LAMBIE The volunteer organizers of the annual Canadian Cancer Society daffodil campaign were hard at work in the hall of Lennoxville United Church on Wednesday morning, organizing boxes for delivery.Over the course of the day runners crisscrossed the communities of Lennoxville, Cookshire, Hatley, North Hat- ley, Bury, Milby, and Ayer\u2019s Cliff to present the bundles of spring blooms that were purchased in support of the fight against cancer.In addition to having met their fundraising goals for this year, the team was able to set up a table at the Lennoxville Provigo to sell extra bundles of 10 flowers each to people who had not ordered them in advance.\"Robert Lafond is so helpful,\" said committee member Maureen Quigg, explaining that this was the first time that the order-and-delivery based team tried such an approach in Lennoxville.FE LS Signature DE L'ESTRIES @ 819-821-2212 Owners: Jules, Jacques and Cathy portesetfenetressignature.com 6-4857 boul.Bourque Hurry up, change your doors and windows and take advantage of the rebate.Just until March 31, 2017! TAX CREDIT or 20% FOR HOME RENOVATIONS UNTIL MARCH 31, 2017.CAL RÉNOVERT Printed and distributed by PressReader press reader PressReader.com + +1 604 278 4604 * ORIGINAL COPY + ORIGINAL COPY * ORIGINAL COPY + ORIGINAL COPY » ORIGINAL COPY + ORIGINAL COPY * COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW Page 2 THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 newsroom(@sherbrookerecord.com The Record The Record e-edition There for you 24-hours-a-day 7-days-a-week.Wherever you are.ccess the full edition of the stern Record as well as pecial editions and 30 days of archives.Renew or order a new 12- month print subscription and get a 12-month online subscription for an additional $5 or purchase the online edition only for $82.21.Record subscription rates (includes Quebec taxes) 1 year print: $155.91 6 month print: $81.85 3 month print: $41.57 12 month web only: $82.21 1 month web only: $7.46 Web subscribers have access to the daily Record as well as archives and special editions.Subscribing is as easy as 1,2,3: 1.Visit the Record website: www.sherbrookerecord.com 2.Click e-edition.3.Complete the form and wait for an email activating your online subscription.Weather Risky days for columnists 1 there.How\u2019s tricks?Does anyone H= that anymore?\u201cHow\u2019s tricks?\u201d Sounds Damon Runyon-esque.That\u2019s Damon Runyon, the American writer, not Damon Runyan, the Canadian actor and star of \u201cDegrassi: The Next Generation,\u201d though, honestly, what kind of parent does that to a child?It would be like if my last name were \u201cFrankenstien\u201d and I named my child \u201cBrideof.\u201d But seriously, how\u2019s tricks?That\u2019s one of those greetings I like to spring on the members of the high school yearbook club I supervise.Most of the girls in the club are from Asia, so when I come in and say, \u201cWhat\u2019s up, Doc?\u201d they just look at me.Then I ask them if they know who Bugs Bunny is, which they do, and the rest is fairly self- explanatory.l\u2019ve also tried \u201cWhat\u2019s the story?\u201d and \u201cWhat\u2019s cooking?\u201d which likewise generate blank stares.I have never tried \u201cHow\u2019s it hanging?\u201d nor do I intend to.Never once have I thought, \u201cWould it be so bad, just to see what it felt like?\u201d Also, I would like to point out that I am not generalizing about Asian girls.I write this based on my own experience knowing full well that there may be many Asian girls, perhaps the majority, who are familiar with North American greeting colloquialisms.Sorry.I'm a bit nervous, kind of stalling here actually, because I don\u2019t want to inadvertently write something that crosses the line or displays bad judgement on my part.Recently, Maclean\u2019s columnist Andrew Potter had to step down as the head of a prestigious institute at McGill University over an ill-considered and poorly substantiated blindside of Quebec society, and this week, Globe and Mail columnist Leah McLaren got the Internet in a froth when she wrote about the time she attempted to breastfeed a stranger\u2019s baby at a party.I\u2019m worried because I too have been to parties.l\u2019ve been to lots of parties.l\u2019ve done stupid things at parties.But there were never babies involved.That\u2019s not necessarily true.Babies were sometimes present.But there was no nursing.By me.I have not nursed any babies.At parties or elsewhere.I\u2019m sorry you're now picturing me nursing a baby.You see?You see how easy it is?I set out to write something specifically about not ever having breastfed strange babies at parties and then I find myself telling about that time I went to a house party and had to go to the bathroom, and I noticed that the toilet was running, so I lifted the lid to fiddle with the doodad, because toilets \u2014 how hard can they be?And then suddenly there was a geyser of water shooting out of the tank.So I put the lid back on and left.A few minutes later, I heard the owner upstairs yelling, \u201cWhat the hell!\u201d But, still, I didn\u2019t break any social mores.Just a toilet.I\u2019ve got to be extra careful, because my deadline is looming, like maybe McLaren\u2019s deadline was, and she was thinking, \u201cWell, I have to write something.\u201d Maybe like me she had tumbled down the rabbit hole of Netflix, letting hours slip away instead of writing, delighted by the entertainment yet coming away with a bloated sense of wasted time and chip crumbs down her shirt, which would make breastfeeding uncomfortable for both her and a stranger\u2019s baby, I can imagine.And that could easily get me talking about how it\u2019s odd I don\u2019t feel guilty about reading books for hours, which in turn could lead to me telling about that time I went to a party and saw a book I liked on the host\u2019s bookshelf and took it home.People do that all the time, right?Perfectly normal behaviour?Hosts expect that.If you open your home to guests, you assume you're going to lose a bestseller or two, especially in Quebec society, where people steal books because of the underground economy and instant teller machines that spew copies of pirated DVDs.And I don\u2019t feel guilty about it at all, because if I did feel guilty, or if I suspected this might be behaviour or a sweeping generalization that people might find really, really weird, I certainly wouldn\u2019t write about it.Or would I?That\u2019s why I\u2019m nervous, see?So what have we learned today?That writing a column is fraught with risk, that vigilant editors are important, that I make Asian girls uncomfortable, that breastfeeding should be handled by professionals and that you invite me to a party at your peril.Potton seeks artist for © Lousy ton M lle park artwork 2657 LE SUNNY dATISONVIIIC PdrfkK ar tWor =} \u2014= J ~-.HIGH OF 5 Record Staff and, the use of recycled materials and Potton Township Municipality.# 1 À, LOW OF -7 collaboration with a local contractor Interested artists are invited to an in- \u2018 fu = he Potton Cultural and Heritage will be among the criteria considered by formation meeting at Mansonville Town ~ Dag / FRIDAY: | Committee is inviting artists from the jury.The work must be completed Hall on Friday, April 21, at 6 pm.Those ~~ 7 SUNNY the MRC Memphrémagog to pro- for the community\u2019s \u201cCultural Days,\" interested should confirm their pres- pose a second public artwork of Les pier- which will be held on September 29, 30, ence by calling 450-292-5698.For more \u2014 \u2014 HICH OF 7 res angulaires to be produced and and October 1, 2017 information on criteria and the 2017 \u2014 ; o- LOW OF 1 installed in André-Gagnon Park in the This project is subsidized by the schedule, please consult the following ArT A heart of Mansonville.The work must be Fonds de développement du territoire of link:www.potton.ca/pierresangulaires.4 SATURDAY: inspired by natural elements of the park the MRC de Memphrémagog and by the \u2019 ) 60% CHANCE ; OF SHOWERS .On?) mono Ben by Daniel Shelton \u2018J LOW OF -2 rage | ¥ FUNNY HOW WHEN I USER TO =X WELL, YOU GOT THE SITTING PART RIGHT.Ad pg SUNDAY THINGS TURN THINIK OF RETIREMENT) [2 &=; £ 4 SITTING IN THESUN 4 HIGH OF 7 ON A BEACH SOME- ® Ro ~4 st A, LOW OF -7 2 WHERE READING A |, Orde _ \u2014_ = BOOK.q fe a.Sa \u2014 - .5 à Nay a IR SN ta : = 8 EIRIINK = i ~~ .re SUNNY 5 2) For ne; 7 \u2014\u2014 22 5 a) \u2014 - Ay ET 5 9 (3 i 2 à 2 \u201cee px NN 2 © C7 À mai : | Assy \u2014 \u2014_ HIGHOF8 AN oe ANS 3 = \u2014\u2014 : LOW OF -4 FLA OREN = =} + A = NS 2 SN TRE ATE : hl) low Printed and distributed by PressReader press {(Jefe[dg PressReader.com + +1 604 278 4604 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW The Record newsroom(@sherbrookerecord.com THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 Page 3 She referred to the \u2018sandwich generation\u2019, who are raising their own children but also need to care for their parents.ILOCAL News Caregivers conference brings community resources under one roof By Matthew McCully day\u2019s caregivers conference at the Community Centre in North Hat- ley.In addition to a lecture on caregiv- ing and compassion fatigue by social worker Amanda Rocheleau, information kiosks were set up to inform people about the services and resources related to caregiving in the community.\u201cA lot of people don\u2019t know about the services available,\u201d said Sylvie Gilbert Fowlis, Executive Director of Lennoxville and District Community Aid, one of the community groups in attendance.Fowlis said people can often fall into a caregiving role, not realizing how overwhelming the job can become or where to turn to for support.She referred to the \u2018sandwich generation\u2019, who are raising their own children but also need to care for their parents.\u201cA lot of seniors are caregivers,\u201d she added.The conference brought 10 different community organizations together to inform locals about resources available for caregivers, including respite services and support groups.Cla to 70 people attended yester- Rocheleau\u2019s lecture on the subject of compassion fatigue, helped caregivers realize their limits and discussed the importance of self-care to be able to properly help others.She explained that compassion fatigue is the combination of a burnout (physical and emotional exhaustion) and vicarious trauma (repeated exposure to traumatic information that transforms one\u2019s sense of self and safety).Rocheleau explained to the audience how to recognize the symptoms of compassion fatigue, and offered tools and techniques to integrate self-care into their roles as helpers.\u201cThere\u2019s a lot of networking among the organizations themselves,\u201d pointed out North Hatley councillor Pauline Far- rugia.\u201cThey're all here to help, they have the same goal,\u201d she said, adding that having them under one roof to exchange ideas was beneficial to them as well as the community at large.Farrugia added that North Hatley was a good location for the conference, which has a high senior population.\u201cA lot of people want to stay here,\u201d she said.MATTHEW MCCULLY Rocheleau\u2019s lecture on the subject of compassion fatigue, helped caregivers realize their limits and discussed the importance of self-care to be able to properly help others.New development at Desranleau Park begins in May Record Staff SHERBROOKE brooke will implement a major redevelopment of Desranleau Park that is expected to continue over the next two years.The work planned in 2017 concerns R eginning in May, the City of Sher- ETSB suspends 1'l'FM survey CONT\u2019D FROM PAGE 1 the installation of a new skatepark where the tennis court is currently located.Tennis players are now invited to use the acrylic asphalt surface at Gilles- Charland Park or the crushed-rock court at Édouard-Boudreau Park.Both parks are both located near Desranleau Park.In addition, the City wants to continue the development of Desranleau Park in 2018 and 2019 with the construction of a new service building, a half-field basketball court, and volleyball courts, as well as securing the slide area.The work will take place over a three- year period at an estimated cost of a little over $800,000, of which $225,000 will be spent this year.\"The City has taken great care to consult with local stakeholders in order to respond to the needs of the population and to offer it a pleasant and friendly playground and relaxation area.An information session was also held on March 21 to explain the details of the new development to residents of the area,\" says Desranleau District Councilor Danielle Berthold.During Tuesday\u2019s meeting, more commissioners attended the meeting via Google hangout than in person.During his report, Murray referred to the $3.4 billion announced for education in the provincial budget.\u201cWhat this really means for the school board is we have finally been granted a long standing request for predictable funding for years ahead,\u201d Murray commented, saying the board can now look at staffing and spending in a wider timeframe.The education budget is a five-year plan, representing a 4.5 per cent annual increase, compared to consecutive cuts in recent years.Murray called the budget encouraging.The board pointed out that a decision regarding the class action suit filed by a Saguenay Lac St-Jean parent regarding school fees is expected to be made by April 11.The ETSB is one of 68 school boards named I'M LEARNING FRENCH Because.my brain gets a boost.CTPF Canadian Parents for F rench Join CPF - for answers and support as they discover French.WWW.CD's a Je in the class action suit, questioning the legality of some of the fees parents are required to pay, asserting that public education should be free of charge.The suit seeks punitive damages in the amount of $100 for each of the plaintiffs in the class action.The board approved the academic calendar for the youth sector of the ETSB for the coming school year.No questions were asked during question period.Michel Duval aul Consultant Serving the entire Eastern Townships CT with three publications (iP Brome County NEWS One number OU.TE | mduval@sherbrookerecord.com Townships Outlet rinted and distributed by PressRea P press [gfeleld PressReader.com + +1 604 278 46 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW Page 4 THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 newsroom(@sherbrookerecord.com The Record Praxis Malawi stands to benefit from anonymous donor By Gordon Lambie (TPM) project is the charity of choice this year for the Bishop\u2019s University Singers\u2019 Spring Concert, benefitting from added exposure through lobby access before the show and during intermission.Thanks to an anonymous donor, however, the project to establish a centre for education and sustainable community development in the Chi- langa region of Kasungu, Malawi also stands to get a significant financial boost so long as the local community gets involved.\u201cFor anybody who says they support Praxis Malawi, an anonymous donor will make a $10 donation for every ticket sold,\u201d explained Melanie Bennett- Stonebanks, Interim Director of Practice Teaching with Bishop\u2019s University and Education Coordinator for the project.\u201cIt\u2019s a prof here from Arts and Science who wishes to remain anonymous.The generousity is huge.\u201d Bennett-Stonebanks highlighted the fact that even as the TPM team grows to include an increasingly broad international representation the project depends heavily on support from the local community.\u201cThe only way we can do this type of thing is by connecting communities to communities,\u201d the Education Coordinator said.\u201cThe Eastern Townships has re- T= Transformative Praxis Malawi ally now become an integral part of this.\u201d Since beginning in 2008, the TPM project has focused on initiatives supporting Education, Health and Development through equal participation of its members on the creation of a community learning space, known by locals as \u201cthe campus\u201d.Bennett-Stonebanks said that despite being classified by the United Nations as being impoverished, local Malawian TPM members continue to challenge hopelessness and see their community as a location of possibility and opportunity as the different players work together on the \u201cbrick by brick\u201d initiative.\u201cEvery small little way helps to fill the bucket,\u201d the coordinator said, adding that the project is bringing people together across great distances in a positive way.\u201cThat\u2019s the type of thing that this project has been about since the beginning.\u201d In terms of recent developments, Ben- nett-Stonebanks said that the completion, last year, of a solar-powered \u201clearning lab\u201d on the campus has resulted in a significant step forward for the work happening on the ground.While the ongoing major target of the project remains the construction of a local elementary school, the education coordinator said that the creation of the lab has opened the door for greater educational enrichment with local teachers as well as a far more reliable line of communication year round.\u201cWe have laptops and a projector and we gave a two-week university course to six teachers, two from each of our sister schools,\u201d she said.\u201cWe\u2019re moving into a space where we\u2019re engaging more with the community and I think it will have a far-reaching impact.\u201d The funds raised this coming weekend from ticket sales as well as by other COURTESY fundraising opportunities that the project members will be offering in the lobby of Centennial Theatre will be committed to the primary school construction project specifically, with the hope of having a first classroom completed this coming summer.\u201cWe definitely would not be able to do it without the support and generousity of this community,\u201d Bennett-Stonebanks said.\u201cIt\u2019s very heartwarming.\u201d Community Aid marks Meals on Wheels week That a gift of life insurance can have a far greate pac disposable income: than you might think¥as it ayXallowRyouYtoxmakeXaylarge gift than you could make from your current The CHUS Foundation will issue you official tax receipts | for premiums paid on the policies it owns.À planned ais+: a gesture for life of information on plann Aptis totdb4d00GC0.00t0000 (NRA EUR TC CCC CCS | © we Fondation duCHUS Pr Q \u201c Healthy person, à aged between 25 and & 65, wishing to make a IM considerable donation to | the CHUS Foundation but who might not necessarily , have the financial means to do so during his \\ or her lifetime.\\, FAV YY 2 contact Francois Léfeb ré at 819.820.6450 # 24752 - 0lD Le ES By Gordon Lambie 1st of April has been the 12th annual Meals on Wheels week in the Province of Quebec, recognizing the importance of the service particularly when it comes to people living with a loss of autonomy.The theme of this year\u2019s week, organized by the Regroupement des popotes roulantes, is Nourishing Home Care, one meal at a time! According to the organizing body loss of autonomy is an issue that affects more than one quarter of all seniors.On the local front, Lennoxville and District Community Aid says it reaches approximately 450 people living with a loss of autonomy in Lennoxville, Water- ville, North Hatley and the Canton de Hatley and delivers just over 9,700 meals each year to more than 175 different clients.\u201cAs the population is aging, the demand for this service continues to grow,\u201d the organization expressed in a statement issued earlier in the week, adding that there is always a need for volunteers to help deliver the meals.\u201cWhen one is in a loss of autonomy, moderate or severe, especially if one lives alone, it is very common to suffer from loneliness.The volunteer who delivers the meal is often the only visit these people have during the day.\u201d Those looking for more information about meals on wheels or Community Aid in general are encouraged to call 819-821-4779.T's week of the 26th of March to the Printed and distributed by PressReader press {defy PressReader.com © +1604 278 4604 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW The Record newsroom(@sherbrookerecord.com THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 Page 5 ih h © I Or de T° IR epor v Angala is gentle and interacts nicely with children.PHELPS AL 2 \u2014\u2014 PHELPS HELRS Smee a TN + F9 | or x = Sr - - By Clea Corman are a young student, full of potential and your own interests.You are bright and curious.You come home from school with a backpack full of homework and books to be explored.The bus drops you off and you walk the short distance to your door and go inside.Your younger siblings run over quickly to say hello before chasing each other into another room.You all share bedrooms and there are always overflowing laundry hampers.Your shirt needs to be washed, after the third day of wearing it.You clear off a small corner of the kitchen table to set up your homework.A dog comes in and whines for a pat beside your chair.You were working on a math problem.A parent comes in to start dinner while wrangling a toddler.You were interested by your science book with its many exciting facts.The television blares from the living room, punctuated by laughs from another parent.Your focus at the end of the school day is quickly fading.You had every intention of doing your homework and showing the completed work to your teacher.Frustration starts to seep in.You were writing an essay, trying to find that perfect synonym.Except you cannot find I= me try to paint you a picture.You the right word and it is the last straw.The homework goes back into the backpack, all half started but nothing finished, the books stuffed in unread.Defeated, you leave the messy table and worry how far behind this will put you in tomorrow\u2019s classes.This is the reality countless students face and why we at Phelps know how valuable it can be to have a space away from home to do school work.Phelps Aide Phelps Helps is an educational non-profit striving to reduce the elevated drop-out rate in the Stanstead area.Phelps was started in 2012 by two community members, and has grown from a single program to five unique programs, providing Stanstead area students with free tutoring, educational support and hands-on learning for both elementary and high school students.To participate in Phelps\u2019s programs or to become a volunteer send an email to info@phelpshelps.ca or call 819-704- 0799.We are currently looking for volunteers on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons.Help make our programs a success and volunteer with Phelps! For more information about Phelps or to make a donation, please visit www.phelpshelps.ca TTT ge TT pe FRONTIER ANIMAL SOCIETY Featured pet: Angala ngala is a beautiful and elegant JANG: cat who is happy and oves to be loved.She purrs the moment she is picked up.Angala was recently adopted but sadly, the resident cat did not accept her in the home so after several weeks of trying to make things work, her adopter returned her to us.Angala was beautifully behaved in the home and she is fine with the other cats in our colony.It was heartbreaking that this gentle and loving cat had to readjust to shelter living.Angala is gentle and interacts nicely with children.If you are looking for a graceful, affectionate and friendly young female cat, we hope you'll consider her.To meet Angala, or any of our other cats, we invite you to attend our open adoption clinic (for felines only) that takes place every Saturday between 10 a.m and noon at 2405 Griffin (Rte.247) in Ogden.If you can't make it Saturday, please send an email to fron- tieranimalsociety@gmail.com and one of our volunteers will be happy to arrange your visit at a time that better suits your schedule.Printed and distributed by PressReader press [43s{e(3g PressReader.com + +1 604 278 4604 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW Page 6 THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 newsroom(@sherbrookerecord.com The Record HDITORIAL \u201cOur economic plan is well-balanced, predictable, sustainable, prudent and it works,\u201d he said.\u201cWe did what we said we were going to do.\u201d TiM BELFORD ith a couple of budgets to deal with over the last two weeks I couldn\u2019t help but be reminded of the old joke about the man searching for a one-armed economist.When asked why he was looking for this oddity the man replied, \u201cSo when I asked him to explain, he could never say \u2018on the other hand\u2019.\u201d Economics is, at the best of times, a modern and slightly more intellectual version of voodoo.It is rife with incantations, rituals and continuing calls for sacrifice.Thus, when economists get together to present the nation\u2019s or the province\u2019s budget for the coming year it pays to know where they're coming Budget madness from.As far as I can see, and I did take Economics 101, there are two basic modern theories of how the economy works.First there are the Keynesians.This lot are the disciples of John Maynard Keynes a British economist who came to the fore in the 1930s and 40s.Keynes, who witnessed the depression first hand, essentially said the government should spend money to kick start the economy even if it meant running a deficit.He also said in good times the government should also pay down the debt.Most governments can get the first part right but invariably skip the paying part.The other major group is the monetarists.They draw much of their theories from Milton Firedman who said all would be made right if the government controlled the amount of money in circulation.Too much money led to inflation.Too little money led to stagnation.Unfortunately, nobody seems to ever know how much is too much or when to turn the tap off.Somewhere in the mix are those who believe in the \u201ctrickle down\u201d version of economics.This theory, once espoused by Ronny Reagan, says helping those at the top make more and more money will eventually see that prosperity gradually spread to the less fortunate.As we soon discovered it\u2019s not called \u201ctrickle down\u201d for nothing.Canada\u2019s Finance Minister, William Morneau, appears to fall in the Keynesian camp.He started out his budget speech by saying \u201cEveryday folks who work hard to provide for their families are worried about the future\u201d right before he announced a deficit for 2017-18 of $28.6 billion and predicted deficits totaling around $140 billion between now and 2022.This will bump up the accumulated national debt to over $750 billion.If the \u201ceveryday folks\u201d were worried about the future before the budget just imagine how their kids are going to feel.This is the same government, the same finance department and the same Bank of Canada that has been sounding the alarm and scolding those same everyday folks for the past year or two about soaring personal debt and the potential bursting of the housing bubble.Apparently taking out a mortgage on a house is a lot worse than refinancing a country once a year.It\u2019s not much different in Quebec.Having led the nation in debt, deficits and level of taxation since about a week after the battle of the Plains of Abraham, the province\u2019s Finance Minister, Carlos Leitao, announced a balanced budget for the coming year.He also announced the government is sitting on a $2.488 billion surplus.So far so good.But then Mr.Leitao and Premier Couillard got carried away with the \u201cwhat a good boy I am\u201d routine and announced that taxpayers would get a gift of $768 million.Not wanting to bite the hand that feeds me, it is nevertheless important to point out to Messers Leitao and Couil- lard that it\u2019s not a gift.As nice as it is to get money, what they are doing is returning something we gave them.It was our money to begin with.They are just acknowledging that they took too much in the first place and were unable to spend it all.Quebec, for a change, seems to be on the right track but ninety bucks for every man woman and child in the province won't go that far.Quebec introduces mild income tax cuts and projects balanced budget By Giuseppe Valiante THE CANADIAN PRESS s governments across Canada fund A ice with billions in deficit pending, Quebec announced a third consecutive balanced budget Tuesday containing modest personal income- tax cuts.Finance Minister Carlos Leitao's penultimate budget before next year's provincial election makes the elimination of a health tax retroactive to 2016 for Quebecers earning less than $134,000 a year.It also hikes the first income tax bracket that is exempt from tax to $14,890 from $11,635.In tabling the 2017-18 budget, Leitao called it prudent and said it reflects \u201ca determination on our part to get it done.\u201d Recent budgets in other provinces as well as the federal budget are projecting deficits in the billions, but Leitao boasted that Quebec \u201chas its house in order.\u201d Given Quebec's overall indebtedness and infrastructure spending needs, he said the province had no choice but to balance the budget.\u201cOur economic plan is well-balanced, predictable, sustainable, prudent and it works,\u201d he said.\u201cWe did what we said we were going to do.\u201d Health and education, the two departments that suffered most of the painful cuts as the government previously balanced its books, will receive billions in THE 6 Mallory, Sherbrooke, Quebec JIM 2E2 Fax: 819-821-3179 E-MAIL: newsroom@sherbrookerecord.com WEBSITE: www.sherbrookerecord.com SHARON McCulLy PUBLISHER STEPHEN BLAKE CORRESP.EDITOR SERGE GAGNON CHIEF PRESSMAN Le (819) 569-9511 LL.(819) 569-6345 Le.(819) 569-9931 DEPARTMENTS ACCOUNTING .202200 2002 e eee (819) 569-9511 ADVERTISING .covvvvununnnn.(819) 569-9525 CIRCULATION .cvvvvunnnn.(819) 569-9528 NEWSROOM .covvnvunnnn.(819) 569-6345 KNOWLTON OFFICE 5B VicroriA STREET, KNOWLTON, QUEBEC, JOE 1V0 TEL: (450) 242-1188 Fax: (450) 243-5155 PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS GST PST 6.78 13.53 356 710 1.81 3.60 TOTAL $155.91 $81.85 $41.57 135.60 71.19 36.16 1 YEAR 6 MONTHS 3 MONTHS QUEBEC: ON-LINE SUBSCRIPTIONS 1 YEAR 71.50 3.58 7.13 $82.21 1 MONTH 649 032 0.65 $7.46 Rates for out of Quebec and for other services available on request.The Record is published daily Monday to Friday.Back copies of The Record are available.QUEBEC: The Record was founded on February 9, 1897, and acquired the Sherbrooke Examiner (est.1879) in 1905 and the Sherbrooke Gazette (est.1837) in 1908.The Record is published by Alta Newspaper Group Limited Partnership.PM#0040007682 Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to The Record, 6 Mallory Street, Sherbrooke, QC J1M 2E2 Member ABC, CARD, CNA, QCNA investment over the next several years.Leitao said schools will get an additional $3.4 billion over five years, while the health sector, which accounts for almost 43 per cent of government spending, Will also receive more money.While mild in its criticism of Ottawa when compared with the rhetoric in budgets of previous Parti Quebecois governments, Leitao did call on the federal government to do more to help out with health funding.\u201cDespite the significant gains that were made, the federal government's contribution remains insufficient,\u201d he said.\u201cOttawa must consider the pressures exerted by rising health expenditures.We are experiencing these pressures directly more than ever before and our government intends to continue making its requests to the federal government.\u201d He noted it is estimated that 26.3 per cent of Quebecers in 2036 will be 65 or over.Leitao said Quebec will end the 2017- 18 fiscal year with a $2.5-billion surplus, which will go entirely toward paying down an overall provincial debt that is projected to be $211 billion.Quebec's gross debt will increase by $3.9 billion in 2017-18.Its debt-to-GDP ratio is expected to be 52 per cent in 2017-18, down from 52.7 per cent in 2016-17, but still the second- highest in the country after Newfoundland.Leitao said Quebec's economy grew by 1.7 per cent in 2016.He projected the same growth rate for 2017 and 1.6 per cent in 2018.Quebecers will benefit from a rare reduction in personal income tax for the 2017 tax year.That will save each Quebe- cer $55.Quebec is also making the elimination of the health tax retroactive to 2016, one year earlier than scheduled.Therefore, all Quebecers making under $134,000 will save between $50 and $200 when filing their 2016 taxes.All Quebecers making more than $134,000 will pay their last health tax in 2017.Transfers from the federal government will be $22 billion in 2017-18 on total provincial revenue of $106.3 billion.PQ finance critic Nicolas Marceau criticized the budget and said the Liberals shouldn't have made the previous cuts to begin with.\u201cThis stop-and-go approach was wrong,\u201d he said.\u201cAnd they are trying to repair it now but it's only partial to the damage that was caused.\u201d Francois Legault, leader of the Coalition for Quebec's Future, said his party has calculated the Liberals \u201chave taken roughly $1,300 from Quebec families per year\u201d since returning to power in 2014.\u201cThis budget is a failure for the pocketbook of Quebec families and lacks ambition,\u201d he said.\u201cThey cut in the budget early in the mandate and then give it back as we near the election.That's not how to do it.\u201d rinted and distributed by PressRea P der press [feleld PressReader.com + +1 604 278 4604 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW The Record newsroom(@sherbrookerecord.com THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 Page 7 Local Sports Kelly Bradbury was named the female academic-student athlete of the year for third consecutive year.(Gaiters Athletes Honoured at Annual Awards Banquet By Dylan Konecny dnesday night Bishop\u2019s Univer- \\ A / sity athletics hosted their annual end of year awards ceremony to honour their student-ath- letes from the 2016-2017 academic and athletic seasons.This year\u2019s athletes of the year winners both won the award for the second time.Lee Hudson from the men\u2019s rugby team took home the honour as the Gaiters male athlete of the year for the second straight year and Edith Noble- cilla from the women\u2019s basketball team took the honour as the female athlete of the year for the second time in three years.Kelly Bradbury was named the female academic-student athlete of the year for third consecutive year.The Ray Almond award was given to volunteer men\u2019s rugby coach Mark Gandey who\u2019s also a full-time business professor in the William\u2019s School of Business.The list of award winners is as follows: Ray Almond: Mark Gandey Female Academic Student-Athlete of the Year: Kelly Bradbury, women\u2019s soccer Male Academic Student-Athlete of the Year: Mark Fitzpatrick, golf Female Freshman of the Year: Metch- line Gabelus, women\u2019s basketball Male Freshman of the Year: Andrew Neilson, lacrosse Female Athlete of the Year: Edith No- blecilla, women\u2019s basketball Male Athlete of the Year: Lee Hudson, men\u2019s rugby Football Newcomer of the Year: Keagan Hughes Marcel Lebrun Award: Mathieu De- mers Best Lineman: Matthew Ouellet De Carlo Special Teams Player of the Year: Cecil Belanger Brian Morley Defensive Player of the Year: Shayne Cowan-Cholette Offensive Player of the Year: Vincent Davignon Most Outstanding Player: Ryan Hector Men\u2019s Basketball Newcomer of the Year: Joany Castor Thadal Most Howarth Garth Smith Award: Duncan Lambert Most Valuable Player: Jona Bermillo Improved Player: Andrew Women\u2019s Basketball Rookie of the Year: Metchline Gabelus Most Improved Player: Mara Marchizotti Nancy Knowlton Award: Eva Kuhar Most Valuable Player: Edith Noblecilla Women\u2019s Soccer Rookie of the Year: Andrew Neilson Most Improved Player: Rebecca Bensi- mon Most Valuable Player: Emily Osmond Women\u2019s Rugby Rookie of the Year: Katie Quinn Most Valuable Forward: Gina Pate- naude Most Valuable Back: Meagan Parsons Miriam Cozen-McNally Memorial Award: Emily Norris Team Award: Gina Patenaude Most Improved Player: Alexia Dupuis- Gaudreault Most Valuable Player: Taylor Mer- rithew Men\u2019s Rugby Rookie of the Year: Patrick Giroux Cody Triggs Award: Shayne Crawford Coaches\u2019 Award: Josh Quirion Best Forward: Sean Smallwood Best Back: Patrick Lawton Most Valuable Player, B-Team: Thomas Cote-King Most Valuable Player: Lee Hudson Golf Rookie of the Year: Connor Lyon Most Valuable Players: Zoe Whitfield & Nick Dupuis-Gaudreault Lacrosse Rookie of the Year: Andrew Neilson Defensive Player of the Year: Shayne Jackson Team Award: Alex Tooth Most Valuable Player: Rhett Handley Women\u2019s Hockey Rookie of the Year: Katie Quinn Charles Chapman Award: Acey Maves Most Improved Player: Brooke Gorham Most Valuable Player: Acey Maves Fucale called up from Brampton Beast to Canadiens 2013 2nd Round pick backed up Carey Price for Tuesday night tilt against Stars By Dylan Konecny BRAMPTON, ONTARIO parted from the Powerade Centre for a road trip when a phone call came directly to the team bus.After Montreal\u2019s backup goalie, Al Montoya, went down in practice with an injury Tuesday morning.Needing to have a backup for their game the Montreal Canadiens had limited available options and made the call to Beast GM Cary Kaplan to recall their prospect from the ECHL to the NHL for their game that same night against the Dallas Stars.Fucale and the Beast had just departed for Cincinnati by bus to play the Cyclones the next night when the news came in.Fucale returned to the Power- ade Centre and caught a flight to Montreal to be at the Bell Centre in time for the game.Fucale, a second-round draft selection of the Canadiens, 36th overall in the 2013 NHL Entry Draft, has been enjoying a stellar season with the Beast.As a starter with the Habs\u2019 ECHL affiliate, the 2016 Spengler Cup champion has a record of 25-12-2 with a 3.17 goals- against-average and 0.898 save-percent- age.His 25 victories are fifth most in the Te Brampton Beast had just de- ECHL and he\u2019s tied for third in league shutouts with four.Several Beast skaters past and present have enjoyed time in the NHL prior to joining the Beast, including current Beast forward David Ling.With the callup Fucale became the first player to graduate to the NHL having first played on Brampton\u2019s roster.The callup was Fucale\u2019s second stint in the NHL as he was summoned once before from the Canadiens\u2019 American Hockey League affiliate, the St.John\u2019s IceCaps, back in November 2015.His current callup is a unique one as very few players make the jump directly to the NHL from the ECHL.\u201cIt\u2019s really exciting to see Zach become the first Beast player move to the NHL,\u201d said Beast Head Coach Colin Chaulk.\u201cWe\u2019re creating some history and showing the players that it\u2019s not about where you start, it\u2019s where you finish.For Zach Fucale, this is the starting point in his career and we believe that this is a great step for him to get a taste in the NHL.\u201d This past year the NHL had 76 players with ECHL experience on their opening day rosters.Strangely enough Fucale was just one of two goalies to be called up to the NHL directly from the ECHL on Tuesday.Florida Everblades goalie Alex Nedeljkovic was also called up that morning to the Carolina Hurricanes on an emergency basis.Following the team\u2019s 4-1 win against the Stars, where Carey Price made 27- JL ans saves, Fucale remained in Montreal as Montoya was listed day-to-day with a lower-body injury.The Beast play the Wheeling Nailers tomorrow tonight in a crucial divisional matchup.LÉ \u2014 CANADIAN f MONTREAL CANADIENS INSTAGRAM Fucale drinking water during warm ups against the Dallas Stars Tuesday night.Printed and distributed by PressReader press {(Jefe[dg PressReader.com + +1604 278 4604 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW Page 8 THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 production@sherbrookerecord.com The Record In Memoriam BARNES, Helen - In loving memory of a dear wife, mother, grandmother, great- grandmother and aunt who left us on March 30, 2013.Always in our thoughts and hearts.RON (husband) and FAMILY March events with Richmond 50+ March 1st was like a lamb, March 2nd not so much! But March 6th found something wrong with the heating at the Richmond Melbourne United Church so all folks out for a 50+ afternoon found themselves heading back home for this week.What a beautiful, sunny Monday it was on the 13th, as twenty-six folks headed off to Au Bec Sucree in Valcourt for the annual outing with members of the Wales Home.The drive was beautiful, the dinner delicious and everyone was craving a nap afterwards.President Matty Banfill welcomed twenty-four people to a fun afternoon of \u201c500\u201d played at 6 tables on the 20th.At the end of play, high score of 5160 was earned by Hughie Lancaster and second place was taken by Marie-Berthe Skerry with 4780 points.Matty Banfill ended the afternoon of play with low score.Everyone remarked on their enjoyment of the previous Monday\u2019s activities.A delicious lunch ended the afternoon.Twenty-one people turned out on the 27th for \u201cMilitary Whist\u201d, games being played at six tables.Invited to join them were \u201cMr.& Mrs.Dummy\u201d and their daughter \u201cAlice\u201d.At the conclusion of the games, the winning table with 38 flags was that of Norma Morin, Klea Mastine, Helen Gallup and Freda Coote.With 18 flags, low score went to Linda Badger, Shirley Beasley, Helen Knowles and \u201cMrs.Dummy\u201d.During the delightful lunch, the March birthdays of Shirley Beasley and Freda Coote were celebrated.We hope you will join us next month for more cards, socializing and food galore each Monday afternoon at the Richmond Melbourne United Church.Submitted by Elizabeth Mastine and Jean >torry Ol) ES CE OI Lets LES nl Jj Discounts: 2 insertions or more: 15% off Text only: $16.00 (includes taxes) WEDDING WRITE-UPS: BIRTH NOTICES, CARDS OF THANKS, IN MEMORIAMS, BRIEFLETS: Text only: 40¢ per word.Minimum charge $10.00 ($11.50 taxes included) With photo: additional $18.50.DEADLINE: 11 a.m., day before publication.BIRTHDAY, ANNIVERSARY & GET-WELL WISHES, ENGAGEMENT NOTICES: With photo: $26.00 ($29.90 taxes included) DEADLINE: 3 days before publication.$26.00 ($29.90 taxes included) WITH PHOTO: $36.00 (841.40 taxes included) Today in History Today in History for March 30: On this date: In 1135, Moses Maimonides, the renowed medieval Jewish scholar, was born.Considered the foremost Talmudist of the Middle Ages, his most important writing was \u201cGuide to the Perplexed\u201d (1190), in which he tried to harmonize Rabbinic Judaism with the increasingly popular Aristotelianism of his day.In 1809, the Labrador Act gave Labrador to Newfoundland.This was later disputed by Quebec and a final decision was not made until 1927.In 1842, ether was first used as an anesthetic by Dr.Crawford Long in Jefferson, Ga.His patient paid $2 for the anesthesia before having a cyst removed.In 1853, artist Vincent Van Gogh was born in the Netherlands.He committed suicide in France in 1890.In 1858, the first pencil with an attached rubber eraser was patented by Hyman L.Lipman of Philadelphia.In 1867, U.S.Secretary of State William H.Seward reached agreement with Russia to purchase the territory of Alaska for $7.2 million, a deal roundly ridiculed as \u201cSeward's Folly.\u201d In 1870, the 15th Amendment to the U.S.Constitution, giving all citizens the right to vote regardless of race, was declared in effect by Secretary of State Hamilton Fish.In 1874, Louis Riel arrived in Ottawa to claim the Manitoba Commons seat of Provencher, to which he'd been elected that year.Riel, a fugitive since the 1869 Red River Uprising, took the oath of office but never entered the Commons.In 1901, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that marriages of Catholics by Protestant clergymen were valid.In 1917, all imperial lands, as well as lands belonging to monasteries, were confiscated by the Russian provisional government.In 1935, Newfoundland changed its time to three hours west of Greenwich Mean Time, and repeated 44 seconds.In 1939, Prime Minister Mackenzie King said Canada would not conscript men for foreign service.That commitment was scrapped in 1944.In 1945, the Soviet Union invaded Austria during the final months of the Second World War.In 1954, the Yonge Street subway, the first subway line in Canada, was opened by the Toronto Transit Commission.In 1972, Canadian sailors got a daily rum ration for the last time, ending a navy tradition dating back to 1667.In 1973, the U.S.military role in Vietnam formally ended when the last American prisoner was released and the last soldier withdrew.In 1978, the Ontario government banned advertising that portrayed the drinking of alcohol as a desirable thing to do and reduced the amount of beer and wine advertising a company could place on any radio or television station.In 1981, U.S.President Ronald Reagan was shot while leaving a Washington hotel.The gunman, 25-year-old John Hinckley, said he hoped to attract the attention of actress Jodie Foster.Hinckley was found not guilty by reason of insanity and sent to a mental hospital.Reagan recovered fully after surgery.Also wounded were White House press secretary James Brady, Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy and District of Columbia police officer Thomas Delahanty.Brady suffered permanent brain damage.In 1987, Vincent Van Gogh\u2019s \u201cSunflowers,\u201d painted in 1889, was sold at auction for the equivalent of $55 million.The sale came on the 134th anniversary of the artist\u2019s birth.Van Gogh sold only two paintings during his lifetime.In 1991, Patricia Bowman of Jupiter, Fla., told police she had been raped by William Kennedy Smith - the nephew of U.S.Senator Edward Kennedy - at the family\u2019s Palm Beach estate.Smith was acquitted.In 1998, Judy Buenoano died in the electric chair in Florida, the state\u2019s first execution of a woman since 1848.Prosecutors dubbed her the \u201cBlack Widow\u201d after she poisoned her husband, drowned her paralyzed son and tried to blow up her fiancee.In 1999, Nunavut\u2019s legislature and mace were unveiled in a native ceremony.In 2002, Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, died at the age of 101.In 2003, the International Ice Hockey Federation cancelled the women\u2019s world hockey championship in China over fears of SARS, which had claimed more than 85 lives around the world.In 2004, Alistair Cooke, the British-born prolific author, broadcaster who hosted \u201cMasterpiece Theatre\u201d and wrote \u201cLetter from America\u201d that ran for 58 years on the BBC, died in New York at age 95.In 2008, Dith Pran, the Cambodian-born journalist whose harrowing tale of enslavement and eventual escape from that country\u2019s murderous Khmer Rouge revolutionaries in 1979 became the subject of the award-winning film \u201cThe Killing Fields,\u201d died in New Jersey at age 65.In 2008, members of the Federation of Newfoundland Indians overwhelmingly endorsed an agreement-in-principle that gave the Mi'kmagq status as the Qalipu Mi'kmaq First Nation Band.While the deal didn\u2019t include land or a reserve, status under the act means funding for education, health, economic development and other programs.In 2010, Serbia\u2019s parliament narrowly approved a declaration condemning the 1995 Serb massacre of 8,000 Muslims in Srebrenica.In 2010, the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider, located in an underground tunnel near the French-Swiss border, was started at its highest energy level, recreating conditions at the \u201cBig Bang\u201d birth of the universe.The world\u2019s largest atom smasher set a record for high-energy collisions by crashing proton beams into each other at three times more force than ever before.; ad rieln us.Y UJ SE °, \u2014\u2014\u2014 leucan® tt RATES and DEADLINES: ANNOUNCEMENTS & NOTICES Please Note: All of the aforementioned (except death notices) must be submitted typewritten or neatly printed, and must include the signature and daytime telephone number of the contact person.Can be e-mailed to: clas- sad@sherbrookerecord.com - They will not be taken by phone.DEADLINES FOR DEATH NOTICES: For Monday's paper, call 819-569-4856 between 1 p.m.and 5 p.m.Sunday.For Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday's edition, call 819-569-4856 or fax 819-569-1187 (please call to confirm transmission) or e-mail: production@sherbrookerecord.com between 9 a.m.and 5 p.m.the day prior to Record number is called.Rates: Please call for costs.1 800 561-9643 www.leucan.qc.ca Association for children with concer Ad the day of publication.The Record cannot guarantee publication if another Printed and distributed by PressRea der press [feleld PressReader.com + +1 604 278 4604 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW The Record newsroom(@sherbrookerecord.com THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 Page 9 TOWNSHIPS\" CRIER TOWNSHIPS If you want to drink, that\u2019s your business.If you want to stop, we can help.Call Alcoholics Anonymous 1-888-424-2975, WWW.aa.org NORTH HATLEY Saturday, April 1 at 3 p.m.at St.Elizabeth\u2019s Church (3115 Capelton Road) ES- TRIA presents the students of the chamber music classes of Pauline Farru- gia (Bishop\u2019s University) and Carmen Picard (Université de Sherbrooke).Admission is free and everyone is encouraged to come and support these young and talented musicians.More information at www.sainteelisabeth.ca SOUTH DURHAM Brunch at South Durham United Church on Sunday, April 9 from 10 a.m.to 1 p.m.Menu includes ham, sausage, scrambled eggs, pancakes, maple syrup, toast etc.Everyone welcome! NEWPORT VT.Osher Lifelong Learning Lecture series introduces their Spring 2017 season on Wednesday, April 5: Allen Yale presents \u201cSalem City - À Counterfactual History\u201d from 1:00 \u2014 2:00 p.m.Lectures are held at the Hebard State Office Building in downtown Newport, 2nd FL Conference Room.Admission charged, season passes available.Dessert, coffee, tea, and conversation follows.More details on www.learn.uvm.edu/osher or contact Suzi, 802-673-9499 or suzi_dix@sympa- tico.ca LENNOXVILLE Pass It On! Clothing Exchange at Oasis Christian Centre, 219 Queen Street, Sherbrooke.Free used clothes.All are welcome! Distributing: Thursday, March 30 from 3 p.m.to 9 p.m., Friday, March 31 from 3 p.m.to 9 p.m., and Saturday, April 1 from 9 a.m.to 12 p.m.For more information, please contact Stephanie Goddard at 819-564-1377 or info@oasiscentre.ca.STANSTEAD 5th annual Jamboree for the benefit of the Children\u2019s Wish Foundation will be held on Saturday, April 1 at the Stanstead Legion from noon to midnight.Hot dogs and hamburgers will be available to purchase.Admission charged.All proceeds donated to the Children\u2019s Wish Founda- ton.For more information contact the Stanstead Legion at 819-876-5844.Please come out and support such a worthy cause.SAWYERVILLE On April 1, country music legends Hank Williams and Patsy Cline are coming to Sawyerville with Ralph Steiner and Laura Teasdale performing their not-to-be- missed tribute show at the Sawyerville Community Centre at 7:30 p.m.The show imagines Hank & Patsy making beautiful music together.Get your tickets in advance by calling Elaine Lebourveau 819-563-8700.This is a benefit for the Eaton Corner Museum.LENNOXVILLE 1st Lennoxville Scouts Mechoui Fundraiser on Saturday, April 15, 6 p.m.to 8 p.m., at the AN.AF.unit #318, \u201cThe Hut,\u201d 300 St.Francis Street, Lennoxville.Come and enjoy a delicious meal of Beef, Chicken Pork, salads and dessert prepared by the Hut and served by your own 1st Lennoxville Scouts.Tickets available at Clarke & Sons, SWM Peinture or from any 1st Lennoxville member.Info: 819- 562-4969.Admission charged, 4 under free.LENNOXVILLE HCC Senior luncheon will be held at noon on Thursday, March 30 at Hope Community Church, 102 Queen St., Lennoxville.Entrance from parking lot, wheelchair accessible, elevator available.Everyone welcome.The next luncheon will be held on April 27.SHERBROOKE Prom Fairy Family Bingo, Sunday, April 2 PLEASE NOTE NEW LOCATION: Alexander Galt Cafeteria 1700 College, Sherbrooke.The action starts at noon with the opening of the canteen and the games; bottle caps, Spinning wheel and Fairy Drop.Bingo starts sharp at 1:30 p.m.and bring your dabbers.An adult and child winner each game.10 games in total to be played.For more information look up our event page on Facebook at www.facebook.com/events/734545053380 691/ WATERVILLE The Waterville-North Hatley United Church will hold their annual Pancake Breakfast on Saturday, April 1 from 8:30 a.m.to 11 a.m.Breakfast consists of pancakes, egg frittata, sausage, fruit cup, muffin and tea, coffee or juice.Admission charged.LENNOXVILLE Cribbage tournament to be held at A.N.A.F.Unit #318 \u201cThe Hut\u201d, 300 St.Francis, Lennoxville on Thursday, April 6.Registration at 7 p.m.Profits to go to the the Breakfast Program at L.E.S.Everyone welcome, bring your partner.LENNOXVILLE Mililtary Whist will be played at \u201cThe Hut\u201d, A.N.A.F.Unit #318, 300 St.Francis Street, Lennoxville, on Wednesday, April 5 at 1:30 p.m.To reserve a place for yourself or a table for 4, please contact Cheryl Bradley at 819-569-2067.LENNOXVILLE The annual pre-Easter supper will be held at \u201cThe Hut\u201d, A.N.A.F., Unit #318, 300 St.Francis Street, Lennoxville, on Saturday, April 8 at 6 p.m.Roast beef dinner with all the fixings.To reserve, please call Doreen Morissette at 819-821-2967 no later than April 4.KNOWLTON Join Townshippers\u2019 Association for a free Intro to Poetry writing workshop at the Brome County Historical Society, 130 Rue Lakeside, Lac-Brome on Thursday, April 6, 1:30 p.m.to 4 p.m.Offered through the \u201cOur Stories\u201d project to commemorate Canada\u2019s 150th Anniversary of confederation, with the participation of the Government of Canada.Dates/info: www.Townshippers.org/Canadal50 or under events at www.Facebook.com/Townshippers Register for the event on facebook [select going] or call Townshippers\u2019 at 819-566- 5717 (toll-free 1-866-566-5717).RICHMOND Richmond Legion Br.#15 Ladies Auxil- lary will be having their annual Flea Market and Bake Sale on April 1 from 9 a.m.to noon.If anyone has anything to donate please bring to the Legion on Friday morning, thank-you.LENNOXVILLE The Bishop\u2019s University Fine Arts Collective, composed primarily of faculty members from the University\u2019s department of Fine Arts, joins creative forces with the faculty of Champlain College- Lennoxville\u2019s Visual Arts Program for an exhibition at Uplands Cultural and Heritage Center, on display from April 2 to May 21, 2017.Participating faculty members from Bishop\u2019s University include Jim Benson?, Tim Doherty, Micheline Durocher?, Mona Godbout?, Darren Millington and Regine Neumann, while Cynthia Touchette, Lisa Driver, Lucy Do- heny, and Kevin McKenna will represent Champlain College-Lennoxville.The public is invited to meet the artists during the opening vernissage on Sunday, April 2 between 2 p.m.and 4 p.m.at Uplands, 9 Speid Street in Sherbrooke (Borough of Lennoxville).LENNOXVILLE The Bishop\u2019s/Champlain Refugee Student Sponsorship Committee will be holding a Furniture Pre-Sale on Saturday, April 8 from 8 a.m.to noon in the old arena on the Bishop\u2019s University campus.We have already received substantial donations of furniture that we need to sell in order to make room to set up for our regular Garage Sale, which will take place on Saturday, May 13.LENNOXVILLE The mission team is hosting a fundraiser at Hope Community Church (HCC) to raise funds for our trip on Friday, March 31, 5-8 p.m.There will be spaghetti, salad and cupcakes.Admission charged.You can pay at the door.Plus there will be a used book and DVD sale on site.Everyone is welcome to come out and support us.This column accepts items announcing events organized by churches, service clubs and recognized charitable institutions for a $7.00 fee, $10.00 for 2 insertions of same notice, $13.00 for 3 publications.Maximum 35 words.If you have more than 35 words the charge will be $10.00 per insertion.Requests should be mailed, well in advance, to The Record, 6 Mallory, Sherbrooke, Quebec, J1M 2E2, be signed and include a telephone number and payment.Telephone requests will not be accepted.Admission charges and trade names will be deleted.No dances.A religious divide THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 Dear Annie: My husband, who is serving in the Army, is loving and caring and is a wonderful father to his two children.He works hard for his family.He just has one flaw: He has a very strong contempt for the Roman Catholic Church.My family raised me Catholic, but I left the church because of a lack of interest.I consider myself a part- timer (attending during holidays).When I brought up about how he felt about getting married in a church, he went into a tirade.I never brought up the subject again.When our son was born, I considered having a baptism at my church because it\u2019s a tradition in my family \u2014 and he threatened to leave.I asked him why he has such strong feelings about this, wondering whether something happened in his past.He finally told me that when he was a child, he was close to a priest who ended up taking advantage of him.It was a shock.He requested that I not share this with anyone.I decided to honor his wishes.Now I just had my daughter.His family and my family would like to have a baptism, but I do not want to go against his wishes.Forget about having it in a non- Dear Annie Catholic way, because I'd end up disappointing my family.I am torn between what my family wants and what my husband wants.I hate being the middle woman and just don\u2019t want to do it at all.\u2014 The Torn Middle Woman Dear Torn: Instead of considering yourself the \u201cmiddle woman,\u201d you might want to think of yourself as the leader of the pack.Take it upon yourself to find a counselor with whom you and your husband can discuss this matter and with whom your husband might continue to meet one-on-one.He must address the anger and hurt that this horrible trauma inflicted on him.The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests offers many resources, from free downloadable literature to a directory of support groups.Visit http://www.snap- network.org for more information.Dear Annie: I was disappointed in your response to the 25-year-old woman whose friend wants to go to parties given by men she doesn\u2019t really know.The friend admitted that she didn\u2019t know the people throwing one party that well but said they would have \u201cgood beer and hot guys.\u201d You told the letter writer to \u201cloosen up\u201d and be \u201cless judgmental.\u201d Do you not read the news or watch TV?Last night on TV, it was said that people are now encouraged to take a bottle opener with them and never drink from a container that is al: ready open.It is too easy to slip drugs into a drink at a party, and you should be especially careful if you don\u2019t really know the people handing out the drinks.Too many young women are being drugged without their knowledge.One of the new drugs cannot be tasted and can put you into a coma.One young woman showed up at the emergency room in a coma.She had been somewhere, drunk what she thought was a simple Mountain Dew and ended up in a coma.My advice is to never go to a party where you don\u2019t know the people well and only drink a drink that you have opened.Those were my rules for my kids.\u2014 Safe Is Best Dear Safe: I agree that safety is paramount, and I'm printing your letter here to endorse that point.How ever, I stand by my advice that \u201cMurky Waters\u201d ought not to dismiss her best friend\u2019s new friends out of hand, even if she doesn\u2019t want to go out to parties with them.We could all stand to be less judgmental.Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearan- nie@creators.com.Printed and distributed by PressReader press [43e{e(3g PressReader.com + +1 604 278 4604 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW Page 10 THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 production(@sherbrookerecord.com The Record CELEBRITY CIPHER ALLEY OOP .} SEE! THIS BEING {5 BUT by Luis Campos ( A WOMAN?THAT WILL - Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and present.A WORK JUST AS WELL IS THAT Each letter in the cipher stands for another.\u201c+ FOR MY PURPOSES! ë| > SHE'S ON?\u201cCANRWOROAC HK OIA WECCAS TBWW BZ UK LTBWA ZYVASC RSC BSA BZ OIA ZVSAWO RLOBYW VS OIA HEWVSAWW, HVTT DRMOBS.\u201d \u2014 YBH TBXA a gocomics.com oo pre ue ; Previous Solution: \u201cI've never booed anybody in my whole life.In the arena, ARLO they're doing something | can\u2019t do.\u201d \u2014 Bruce Dern - WE HAVE A FOLLY I WANT 'BE CAREFUL WHAT TODAY'S CLUE: X Sjenbs LIKE TO CHECK : SPEAKING .EQUIPPED KITCHEN, BOT NO TO GO OÙ ! ROUND FOOD! I'M GOING ON THE BOAT {WITH YOU! YOO WISH FOR OF ARLO AND WHILE I'M OUT, THE BOAT?DA REALITY CHECK SHOPPING! (re DUDE ABIDES WANNA GO FOR A WALK.MAN?UGHETIPUAG [BORYOR SedIpuy 1910 OU \"SIN AD LES Johnson #o PL HEN T LEAVE A THAT'S VE PLHAT DO YOU THINK THE TOOTH | 7 LEAVE HER.A COUNTERFEIT | TOOTH UNDER MY RIGHT, FAIRY WOULD DO IF GRAMNIE DOUARBILL PILLOW, THE TOOTH LEFT HER FALSE TEETH FAIRY LEAVES ME UNDER HER PILLON 7 A DOLLAR BILL, © 2017 UFS, Dist.by Andrews McMeel for UFS A MORE ATTENTION va TO ME SINCE 62) SN I WAS \u20ac À RECONFIGURED TO RÉSEMBLE HERMAN E-mail: ThavesOne@aol.com ©2017 Thaves/Dist.by Andrews MeMeel Synd.| a Ss \u2014 AN ATM! peu 330 Haves GRIZWELLS | WHY DONT WE SING COUNTRY 50H65 AROUND THE OLY NBC COUNTRY 5 HaN ABOUT ONE WI | \u2014 CAMPFIRE ?765 D EU REAUY LOUD 50\\65 \u2014_\u2014e| WANT To AND 1915 OF 3| ANG?FESTINE _ : y DANCING ?= & F A QA Eh A 2 2 \\ A 3 Ad) NRW CYAN : / N £0 ACN 7 j WES.(flo NLA ve 0 yr SouP TO NUTS C = ©2017 Rick Siromoski Dist.by Andrews McMeel Syndication Email: soup2nutz@cox.net T LOST ON à TeCHNICALIT®.\u201cLook at this birth certificate \u2014 it\u2019s parchment.\u201d e Heart and Stoke @ .with dietitians.{ike shopping with Food Guide.q ry shopping Check symbob based on na SERRE Go groce ducts with the Heat articipating product te every P 3 Information and donations: PAS {514) 259.3422 or 1.800.361.3504 REACT NOW! : V www diabete.qc.ca Printed and distributed by PressReader press [43e{e(3g PressReader.com + +1 604 278 4604 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW pro when you C0 ars, who evalua Fou = | aww heatthchedk g LL classad(@sherbrookerecord.com The Record CALL SHERBROOKE: (819) 569-9525 BETWEEN 8:30 A.M.AND 4:30 P.M.E-MAIL: classad@sherbrookerecord.com OR KNOWLTON: (450) 242-1188 BETWEEN 9:00 A.M.AND NOON 035 For Rent CLASSIFIEDS ONLINE! WWW.sherbrookerecord .com 100 Job Opportunities SEEKING IN-HOME CAREGIVER, assist senior woman in Bromont in private home.Keep records of daily activities, provide personal care; plan, prepare and serve meals; housekeeping and maintain.Room and board, vacation 1 day/month, first year 4% wages.English speaking.Completion of secondary school, first aid and CPR training.Min.one year experience as full time care giving home support, and related occupation.Temp employment contract of 2-4 years, 40 hrs/week, $13.15 per hour.Please send cv to sdionp3@gmail.com 190 Cars For Sale CLASSIFIEDS ONLINE! WWW.sherbrookerecord .com Make your classified stand out, add a photo for $10.per day.Deadline: 2 days before publication.Drop by our office in Sherbrooke or Knowlton.819-569- 9525.classad@ sherbrookerecord.com 275 Antiques WE BUY from the past for the future, one item or a household, attic or basement, shed or garage.We like it all, give us a call.819- 837-2680.294 Events CLASSIFIEDS ONLINE! WWW.sherbrookerecord.com CLASSIFIED THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 PAGE 11 DEADLINE: 12:30 P.M.ONE DAY PRIOR TO PUBLICATION OR MAIL YOUR PREPAID CLASSIFIED ADS TO THE RECORD, 6 MALLORY, SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC J1M 2E2 Richmond County W.I.Annual County Meeting - March 25, 2017 The annual general meeting of the Richmond County W.I.was held on Saturday, March 25, 2017 at St.Andrew\u2019s Church Hall in Melbourne.President, Joyce Cinnamon, called the meeting to order at 9:30 a.m.by all repeating the Mary Stewart Collect followed by the singing of O\u2019Canada in keeping with the 150th Anniversary.A moment of silence followed for deceased W.I.member, Marjorie Lancaster.Motion: A motion was made to change the order of the agenda.Moved by: Estelle Blouin, 2nd by: Matty Banfill.All in favour.A total of 28 members answered the roll call.Joyce thanked branches for their work and Craig and Fran Dewar for donating prizes for a drawing to raise money for Richmond County W.I.Reminder that dinner was supplied by Group\u201992.The minutes of the semi-annual meeting were approved as read.Business Arising: QWI Handbook - Vera attended a meeting to go over the new QWI Handbook.There were many errors and it will need to be rewritten.Nothing further has happened so will probably not be voted on at Provincial.Interbranch Competition - Some members felt that the pattern for this was very difficult to make.Member Information Sheets from each branch are to be given to Joyce Cinnamon.Still collecting pop can tabs, soup can labels & bread tags.Vera mentioned that now you can keep the outside plastic bag from the 4L milk bag.Vera will collect these and send them on to make mats.Correspondence was read.This consisted of letter from the Richmond Volunteer Center with four tickets to their recognition evening, thank you from the two recipients of the QWI Bursaries and a thank you from Jean Storry for her Abby Pritchard Throw.Treasurer\u2019s Report: Vera Hughes, acting treasurer, gave the treasurer\u2019s report.A copy was given to each branch.Bills were presented for expenses for the Church Hall Rental and the printing of the booklets.Motion: A motion was made to pay all bills.Moved by: Estelle Blouin, Seconded by: Norma Morin.All in favour Secretary\u2019s Report: Mona McGee gave the Secretary\u2019s Report.President\u2019s Report: Joyce Cinnamon gave the President\u2019s Report.Committee Chair Reports were read.Patricia Keenan-Adank gave the Agriculture Report.Vera Hughes gave the Education & Personal Development report.Health & Community Living was given by Matty Banfill.Publicity report was given by Mona McGee Motion: A motion was made for the adoption of all reports as read.Moved by: Susan Mastine, Seconded by: Fran Dewar.All in favour Mona McGee for Richmond Young W.I.distributed the new program books to each branch.A small break was held and Classifieds (819) 569-9525 we were served a refreshing SUDOKU green tea & mint beverage by Group\u201992.DIFFICULTY RATING: Yer ire New Business: Joyce presented Muriel Duffy 4 9 6 3 1 with a Life Membership.Resolution on In-Active 8 Membership Fees was discussed.Motion: Richmond County W.I.do not agree with the resolution presented by O|R © On Chateauguauy Huntingdon County for the QWI member- ship assessment fee for inactive members.Moved by: Muriel Duffy, seconded by: Elizabeth Mastine.co Motion passed.Joyce announced anniver- 9,715 ~~ 0 LINO N= OD = saries for the following groups: Group\u201992 -25 yrs; Spooner Pond - 80 yrs; RYW.I - 70 yrs; 4 93 78 Melbourne Ridge - 95 yrs.Joyce Cinnamon\u2019s name will 3/30 © 2017 Dist.by Andrews McMcel Syndication for UFS be given to the Richmond Volunteer Center as the volun- PREVIOUS SOLUTION teer for Richmond County W.I.The QWI annual open con- 692173 811/45 vention will be held on May 27, 2017.The County will pay HOW TO PLAY: 813|7]4/1/5]9/2)6 expenses for Joyce Cinnamon to Fach row, column 5111416, 2 91|31/71|8 attend.Groups who have no and set of 30Y- delegate at the Provincial Î - ete numbers N 4/7/815/6/312/91 Convention, should send in a bei 9 without 12169114 71853 proxy vote with someone else.A copy of this form is in the 3/9/118/9/21416|7 QWI Handbook.918,5/2,7,1/6]/3/4 7,413/9/8 6/5]/1]2 112/6|3|5/4]7|8|9 (450) 242-1188 Richmond County will participate in the Richmond Canada Day Parade.Members are to meet on Sunday, July 2, 2017 at 1:45 p.mon Adam Street to ride on the float.Bars are now available for 60, 65 & 70 years of service, instead of certificates.Reminder that there is free advertising space available in the Advocate.Branches can now get their own Abby Pritchard Throws.Election of Officers: Muriel Duffy acted as Chairperson for the Election of Officers and declared all offices vacant.Susan Mastine, Melbourne Ridge W.I., read the list from the nominating committee.All officers will remain the same as last year except for the treasurer\u2019s position.Motion: Susan Mastine moved the nomination of Vera Hughes as Treasurer.Seconded by: Norma Morin, Vera accepted.All others accepted to stay on in their positions.Motion: Susan Mastine moved to accept all nominations.Seconded by: Rhoda Warden New Slate of Officers for 2017 - 2018 is: President: Joyce Cinnamon, President- Elect: Cindy Jackson 1st Vice President: Sui Min Jim, Secretary: Mona McGee Treasurer: Vera Hughes Patricia Keenan-Adank Education & Personal Development: Vera Hughes Health & Community Living: Matty Banfill, Publicity & Awareness: Mona McGee , Agriculture: Lunch was served by Group\u201992 W.I.Tickets were sold on the three drawings and the winners were: 1st: Shirley Beasley; 2nd: Vera Hughes; 3rd: Estelle Blouin.Louise Perkins, Cleveland W.I.introduced guest speaker, Susan Freeman, Volunteer for the Day Centre in Richmond.Susan spoke about the Day Centre and the programs and services they offer.Day Centre is available to people who are in their own homes or private rooms.She stressed that people need to use these services that are available.Many needs are covered and the staff is very qualified.There is an English day - every Friday from 10:00 to 2:00.Lunch and transportation are available at a minimal cost.Telephone numbers were given out on who to contact.Trans Appel was then discussed.This service is available to anyone at a small charge.You need to call them a day ahead to set up a schedule with them.Semi Annual Meeting: The semi-annual meeting will be held on Monday, Sept.25th, 2017 at 9:30 a.m.at the St.Andrews Church hall.Group \u201892 W.L is in charge of snacks.As there was no further business Joyce Cinnamon adjourned the meeting at 1:50 p.m.with all singing the Hymn of All Nations.Submitted by: Mona McGee, Publicity Convenor, Richmond County W.I.E-mail your social news to classad@sherbrookerecord.com 4 1,604 278 4604 Printed and distributed by PressReader press [(efe[df PressReader.com + COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW Page 12 THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 Your Birthday THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 Rethink your position, goals and plans.Put more energy behind the ideas that excite you the most.Consider what you know already and sign up for courses or internships that will help you achieve your goals.Preparation will lead to greater opportunity and will ensure your success.ARIES (March 21-April 19) \u2014 A change may be required, but you should look before you leap.Not every opportunity will be as equally beneficial.Question what\u2019s being offered and make intelligent choices.Don\u2019t feel pressured; take your time.TAURUS (April 20-May 20) \u2014 Emotions will surface, forcing you to take part in situations that concern you.Voice your opinion, but be sure to have facts to back up your allegations.GEMINI (May 21-June 20) \u2014 The changes you enforce now will set a standard for what\u2019s to come.If you want to bring about greater stability, believe in the quality of your plans and put them in action.CANCER (June 21-July 22) \u2014 An old partner will be your savior if you listen to the warnings being offered.Be cognizant of someone trying to benefit at your expense.LEO (July 23-Aug.22) \u2014 Use your energy wisely and control your emotions in situations that can influence your position or reputation.Be prepared to make reasonable compromises to reach your goals.VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept.22) \u2014 Get involved in functions that interest you and take part in challenges that will encourage you to work alongside like-minded individuals.An emotional revelation will help you move forward.LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.23) \u2014 Domestic, personal and joint finances look promising, as long as you don\u2019t go over your budget.Common sense, discipline and moderation will help you avoid stressful financial issues.SCORPIO (Oct.24-Nov.22) Communication with someone you deem responsible and hard-working will help you assess your situation and come to terms with what needs to be done.SAGITTARIUS (Nov.23-Dec.21) \u2014 At networking functions, you will be tempted to brag and make promises you may not be able to keep.Stay focused on what is and isn\u2019t doable to avoid embarrassment.Romance is highlighted.CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) \u2014 Assess your situation and evaluate your relationships with individuals who lack common sense or have behaved erratically.Stay focused on obtaining greater stability in your personal life and relationships.AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.19) \u2014 Helping others can be healing, but can also lead to you being taken for granted.Set boundaries so you don\u2019t wind up resentful.It\u2019s how you handle situations that will make the difference.PISCES (Feb.20-March 20) \u2014 What you do for others will be appreciated and reciprocated.Compromise will help you overcome any concerns you have about what\u2019s fair.Pursue your dreams avidly.newsroom(@sherbrookerecord.com The Record THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 More bad luck North 03-30-17 balanced à KQ1054 VKJ72 elsewhere #16 qq: iN 3 By Phillip Alder West Fast Edward Ugel, a sales and marketing .; J .0 ; ; expert, said, \u201cWorrying about gray hair when your weight\u2019s soaring out of con- $ KQ104 $853 trol is like mowing your lawn while your *J9874 \u201c5 h *Q106 house is on fire.\u201d Sout Yesterday, we had a deal in which a 2 A9 bad trump break was mitigated by a VYAB643 lucky lie in a side suit.Here is another.¢ A972 South was in six hearts.What did he do ® A5 after winning the first trick with the Dealer: North diamond ace: Vulnerable: Both North might have jump-rebid four hearts with his six-loser hand.South South West North East immediately bid what he hoped he 14 Pass could make.He knew that moving 29 Pass 3% Pass slower probably wasn\u2019t going to help 6Y Pass Pass Pass him, so he kept the defenders in the dark.Opening lead: + K South had a possible loser in each red suit.However, if the trumps were behaving, he rated to take 12 tricks via four spades, five hearts, one diamond and two clubs.But after cashing his heart ace and leading a second heart, West\u2019s club discard was a blow.Now declarer had to eliminate all of his diamond losers before East could ruffin and lead a diamond to his partner\u2019s queen.How could South do that?The only chance was to find East with four spades.Then if the suit was played CROSSWORD without loss, when East ruffed the fifth spade, declarer would be discarding his last diamond.If East had four spades to his partner\u2019s two, he was twice as likely to hold the spade jack.So South bravely played a spade to his nine.When it won, he cashed the spade ace, led a club to the king and pitched his three low diamonds on the spades to sneak home.Across 1 \u201cYeah, sure!\u201d 6 Some CPAs and MBAs 10 __ bean 14 What choir members have to carry 15 Lined up, with \u201cin\u201d 16 2001 Winslet/Dench title role 17 Hero makers 18 Window shopper\u2019s buy 19 Bottle part 20 Double-helix molecules 21 Stat for which Babe Ruth\u2019s 457 is the single-season record 23 Site of many Ansel Adams works graphically represent 42 Labyrinth 43 Plop down 44 Legal scholar 45 \u201cObsessable series\u201d movie channel 47 What \u201ctwo\u201d meant to Paul Revere 49 Bow __ 51 Billboard charts 56 Tart vodka cocktails 60 Petunia part 61 Greenish blue 62 Use the escalator, about half the time 63 Plant swelling 64 What a stet cancels 25 Online chortle 65 Alternatively 26 Wide awake 66 Cheap mags 28 Joan __ 67 Old jet-set jets 32 Aplenty 68 Bob or dog attachment 36 Carmelite, perhaps 69 Canines, e.g.38 Muffin topper 39 What the groups of circled letters Down WIEIAIK FI1ISITIS E|P]| 1] |C| 1 rrigated grain field AIX[LIERTATCIC[ TER IRIICIE] 5 timmy once WIIIPIEIRIBILIAIDIE A|G!|E|D| 4 Italian cookie flavor- : \u2019 ing A[TIOIN[A|L WIE S|T|S|I|D E 5 Filmmaker Craven S|ITIE|T H|EIN 6 Holly Golightly\u2019s creator PIEIP I [SIO|LIAITIE AIM] A 7 Place for annual A|MJO|C|O M|O|S|H M|P|E|G| pledging W|I [R[1|N[G|c|o[L|O|R[C|O|D|E| 8 Chaplin of \"Game of Thrones\u201d EILIKISEAN|A|P|E O|A|K|E|[N| 9Balloon DIEIB OlUITISIEILIL E|A|T 10 Elite Eight survivors 11 War god AJA|U PIE|LIT 12 Target of many a WIAIRIBIRIIIDIE NIUIA|NI|C|E| New Year\u2019s resolution 13 Poses EIUIR|[O WI I|DIEIS[P[RIE[A[D 21 Floor installers B|R|E|DF [o]V][I]N Ie RIG IY] 22 savior of Scout and Jem, in \u201cTo Kill a Mock- B|A|LJ|E NIA[T|E|S TIO[E [S| ingbird\u201d 24 Filly, eventually 27 Mild rebuke 29 End of a ball game?30 Great American Ball Park team 31 COLA component 32 69-Across holders 33 Vet school subj.34 Joel\u2019s \u201cCabaret\u201d co-star 35 Hinted-at hidden meanings 37 AFC East team 40 Sis or bro 41 Grade of excellence: Abbr.46 Cab alternative 48 Opposite of guzzled 50 Cube\u2019s dozen 52 Expectant mom\u2019s words 53 Inscribed pillar 54 Lead on 55 Blockbuster 56 Some TV screens 57 They work better when they focus 58 Dairy Queen order 59 Lucky streak 63 Skillful, facetiously 6 17 18 [9 10 K 16 18 19 21 22 25 26 27 28 | 129 |30 |a1 32 |33 [34 |35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 |53 |54 |55 56 |57 [58 59 61 62 63 64 I~ 66 67 | 68 69 rinted and distributed by PressRea P der press [feleld PressReader.com + +1 604 278 4604 COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW "]
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