B1 REBELS AVENGE LOSS TO ’CANES
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EVEN GREAT CHEFS STRUGGLE TO MAKE GLUTEN-FREE PASTA
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RED DEERIANS ENJOY CARNAVAL
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ROOM, SCHITT’S CREEK DOMINATE CANADIAN SCREEN AWARDS
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Kings crowned champs BY DANNY RODE SPECIAL TO THE ADVOCATE Kings 3 Titans 0 NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — The 2016 Canadian Colleges Athletic Association men’s volleyball championship final matched up the two winningest programs in CCAA history — the RDC Kings, who had 11 championships, and the Limoilou Titans, who had 10. The last time the two met the Kings recorded a heart-stopping 3-2 victory over the Titans in 2006 at Limoilou in Quebec City. On this occasion it was all RDC as they downed the Titans 25-16, 25-15, 27-25 before close to a full house at Douglas College Saturday. “We were pretty clinical, especially in the first two sets,” said Kings head coach Aaron Schulha, who won his second national title in the last three years. The Kings looked as they would run away with the third set as well, taking a 21-17 lead, but the Titans battled back to it at 23-23. It was tied at 25 when middle blocker Tom Lyon came up with a key block, then Ty Moorman connected on an ace and the celebration began. “We called a time out late in that set and I told the guys the next five, six, seven points would be the hardest ones they will ever play for,” said Schulha. “We let them tie it then Tommy made that huge block, which was fitting looking back on the year he had.”
Contributed photos by ERWIN KUHR
ABOVE: Members of the RDC Kings celebrate after defeating the Limoilou Titans to win the CCAA Championship Saturday. RIGHT: The Kings hold up the CCAA men’s volleyball championship in celebration.
Please see KINGS on Page A8
Historic McIntosh House to become a spa
Dry conditions prompt Rocky area to start wildfire preparations BY MARY-ANN BARR ADVOCATE STAFF
NEW OWNERS COMMITTED TO RETAINING PROPERTY AS IT IS BY MARY-ANN BARR ADVOCATE STAFF A historic home in downtown Red Deer that recently sold will continue to be cared for as one of the city’s important links to its past. A new business — a spa — will be located at McIntosh House, at 4631-50 St., and the contents of the home, some of which are antiques, will be auctioned off in April. The previous owner of the home, Trudy Madole, passed away in 2014. She had operated a bed and breakfast in the house, and also lived there. The house, which was sold a few months ago by her family, had been listed for sale at $519,900. McIntosh House has three floors and a full basement, and is considered Victorian, or early Edwardian era. It has 869.5 square metres (9,360 sq ft) of floor space. It’s fine and beautiful work is considered a testament to the skills of master bricklayer Julius McIntosh, who used brick made locally to build the home for himself and his family in 1906. Julius’s grandfather and great grandfather developed the McIntosh apple. “It really is a stunning house,” said Janet Pennington, City of Red Deer Heritage Community Development Co-ordinator. Pennington, along with a senior planner from the city, and a provincial government conservation ad-
visor, have met with the new owners. The Advocate was unable to make contact with the unidentified owners. Please see HOME on Page A8
Please see WILDFIRES on Page A8
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INDEX NEWS A2-A3, A5, A7-A8 COMMENT A4 BUSINESS A9-A10 SPORTS B1-B4 FOOD B5, B7 CLASSIFIED B6-B7 COMICS B8 ENTERTAINMENT B9 ADVICE B10
Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff
The McIntosh House located at 4631 50 St. formerly operated as a bed and breakfast has been sold.
For the fourth year in a row, the Rocky Mountain House Forest Protection Area is starting up wildfire preparations a month earlier, and already firefighters have had to respond to dry conditions. A two-acre fire, caused by humans, was extinguished on Wednesday. In last year’s wildfire season, 60 per cent of wildfires in all of Alberta were human-caused. Barry Shellian, area information co-ordinator for the Rocky Forest Area, said that the entire province is going into dry conditions, as witnessed by a large grass fire near Cochrane last week. “We had a very warm and dry summer last year and a very mild winter this year.” A number of fire bans, restrictions and advisories have already been declared in parts of Southern Alberta. In areas of the Rocky Forest where the snow has gone, the fire hazard is already moderate. Shellian said the Rocky Forest Area is considered to be an older forest and it’s the driest he’s seen it because of accumulative dryer conditions. “It’s dry enough that we can have a prescribed fire now.” Over Christmas there was a smaller fire that needed to be put out north of Rocky Mountain House by Medicine Lake. That fire was also human caused and while people may think they can leave a ground fire to go out on its own, the material just below the surface is very dry, Shellian said.
LOTTERIES
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SATURDAY LOTTO 649: 6, 27, 30, 34, 35, 42, Bonus 16 WESTERN 649: 13, 22, 25, 26, 41, 42, Bonus 1
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SUNDAY EXTRA: 2610422 Numbers are unofficial.
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