COUSCOUS P Prepared in five minutes, tthis staple in North A African cuisine is a quick rreplacement for rice or pasta
PPAGE AG B11
POLOZ SOLUTION TO YOUTH JOBLESSNESS NO SOLUTION PAGE A4
Red Deer Advocate TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 2014
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Money, money, money OTTAWA PROMISES $2.3B TO ALBERTA IN GAS TAX BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
Therese Rolheiser makes a soft landing off a small jump at the Clearview sledding hill in Red Deer on Monday. Although the temperature was at about -15 C at the time and the windchill was rated at -25 C, Rolheiser and her siblings Sophia, and Anthony and their friends Rylyn and Kaeden Boorman and Helaina Lang found the snow irresistible. The group just had to get out and get in some early season sledding on the neighborhood hill.
Winter has arrived BY BRENDA KOSSOWAN ADVOCATE STAFF What a difference a few centimetres of snow makes. People who hadn’t yet got around to getting their winter tires were lined up to for the switch on Monday morning. People who had been thinking of putting up Christmas decorations last weekend were flocking into the stores for new supplies. And everywhere around were the sights and sounds of people scraping their decks and sidewalks, snowplows scraping roadways, and cars and trucks
sliding on unanticipated patches of ice. “I love it,” said Louise Pusiak, seasonal department supervisor for the Canadian Tire store on the north side of Red Deer. Formerly from Niagara Falls, Ont., Pusiak said she has fallen in love with Alberta winters and the way Halloween merges almost seamlessly into Christmas. She said snowfalls over the weekend seem to have awakened the Christmas spirit along with a sudden demand for shovels, scrapers, heavy boots, Christmas lights and — new this year — a panoramic projector that plays ani-
mated scenes on the side of the house. All of those goods are going off the shelves as quickly as they can be stocked, while the automotive department is booked ahead for two weeks by people in need of winter tires, said Pusiak. Her pickup truck got its winter boots about two weeks ago, she said. At the other side of the city, Rick Foster, shop manager at Don’s Tire and Automotive, said his first customer of the day beat him to work at 6:30 a.m. and more customers lined up behind him.
Please see WEATHER on Page A2
EDMONTON — Alberta and Ottawa have signed an expanded deal to deliver $2.3 billion in gas tax funds to help municipalities build infrastructure. But federal Employment Minister CENTRAL ALBERTA Jason Kenney em- MUNICIPALITIES phasized the fed- BENEFIT A3 eral government would frown on that money being used to bankroll new arenas for NHL teams. “We’ve been clear that in terms of federal infrastructure dollars we’re not interested in supporting professional sports venues,” Kenney told a news conference Monday. “We would encourage (municipalities) to spend those funds on community-based initiatives.” Kenney made the comments after he and federal Health Minister Rona Ambrose joined Alberta Municipal Affairs Minister Diana McQueen to announce the Federal Gas Tax Fund will be renewed for the next 10 years. The fund, created in 2006, delivers funds to municipalities to spend as they see fit on infrastructure. The renewed deal allows for a wider range of spending, including sports facilities. It can also be used for water and wastewater plants, public transit, roads, bridges, airports, disaster mitigation, broadband connectivity, and culture and tourism projects.
Please see MONEY on Page A3
‘I thought maybe one more guy would help’ JOE LOWIS MANNED ANTI-AIRCRAFT BATTERY
The sound of approaching German planes was unmistakable to Joe Lowis and his anti-aircraft gun crew. All too familiar was the din of exploding bombs that followed that morning in France in 1944. “Two or three went off,” the 97-yearold Lacombe veteran recalls of the attack. “One landed about 100 feet from our gun. But it didn’t go off.” Understandably not comfortable
WEATHER 30% Flurries. High -16. Low -25.
FORECAST ON A2
manning a gun pit a stone’s throw from an awfully big piece of unexploded ordnance, a battery member phoned headquarters for permission to move their 40-mm Bofors gun. Permission denied. Headquarter brass did helpfully give them the go-ahead to build a sand bag wall around the unexploded bomb. Lowis still shakes his head at the memory. At 27, he was older than a lot of the young men under his charge in the 112th Light Anti-Aircraft Battery.
Please see LOWIS on Page A2
INDEX Two sections Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A3 Business. . . . . . . . . . . . . A8,A9 Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A5,A6 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . B8,B9 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B4 Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . .A11 Sports. . . . . . . . . .B5-B7,B10
Photo by PAUL COWLEY/Advocate staff
Joe Lowis, of Lacombe, served in an anti-aircraft battery in the Second World War and saw action in Europe.
Michaels wins Giller Prize for debut novel Sean Michaels of Montreal won the $100,000 Scotiabank Giller Prize for his debut novel ‘Us Conductors.’ Story on PAGE A11
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