Winnipeg Free Press

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Issue date: Sunday, February 16, 2014
Pages available: 30

NewspaperARCHIVE.com - Used by the World's Finest Libraries and Institutions

Logos

About Winnipeg Free Press

  • Publication name: Winnipeg Free Press
  • Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba
  • Pages available: 30
  • Years available: 1872 - 2025
Learn more about this publication

About NewspaperArchive.com

  • 3.12+ billion articles and growing everyday!
  • More than 400 years of papers. From 1607 to today!
  • Articles covering 50 U.S.States + 22 other countries
  • Powerful, time saving search features!
Start your membership to One of the World's Largest Newspaper Archives!

Start your Genealogy Search Now!

OCR Text

Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 16, 2014, Winnipeg, Manitoba C M Y K PAGE 2 ONCE OVER A2 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 2 3 4 5 6 7 WINNIPEG FREE PRESS SUNDAY 1355 Mountain Avenue Winnipeg, Manitoba, R2X 3B6 PHOTO REPRINTS SWITCHBOARD ADVERTISING FP. Advertising@ freepress. mb. ca EDITORIAL NEWSROOM 204- 697- 7301 HOW TO REACH US Winnipeg Free Press est 1872 / Winnipeg Tribune est 1890 VOL. 142 NO. 97 . THE WEATHER Today: afternoon snow HIGH - 9 C, LOW - 13 C Monday: mostly cloudy HIGH - 2 C, LOW - 7 C . INDEX Comics B13 Entertainment A11- 14 Horoscope B15 Miss Lonelyhearts A15 Movies A13 Puzzles B14 Sports B1 Television B15 This City A8- 9 Wired A15 Your Opinion A10 IN THE EVENT OF A DISCREPANCY BETWEEN THIS LIST AND THE OFFICIAL WINNING NUMBERS, THE LATTER SHALL PREVAIL. . Lotto 6/ 49 Winning numbers Saturday were : 1, 8, 37, 39, 44 and 45. Bonus number was 21. The estimated jackpot was $ 13,000,000. The guaranteed prize draw number ( exact match only) was 63519136- 01. . Western 6/ 49 Winning numbers Saturday were: 10, 13, 17, 32, 33 and 34. Bonus number was 35. . Pick 3 Saturday's winning number was: 368. Friday's winning number was: 912. . Extra Saturday's winning number was: 5511184. Friday's winning number was: 1964280 . . Lotto Max Winning numbers Friday were: 6, 8, 11, 16, 17, 19, 24. Bonus number was 29. The jackpot of $ 50,000,000 was carried over. . Western Max Winning numbers Friday were: 1, 4, 16, 25, 35, 37, 39. Bonus number was 18. NO PAPER MONDAY The Free Press will not publish Monday, Louis Riel Day. The circulation and display advertising departments will be closed. Classified advertising are closed today but open Monday, 12: 30 p. m. to 3 p. m., for obituary notices only at 204- 697- 7384. Regular office hours in all departments resume Tuesday. 2010 Winnipeg Free Press, a division of FP Canadian Newspapers Limited Partnership. Published seven days a week at 1355 Mountain Avenue, Winnipeg, Manitoba R2X 3B6, PH: 204- 697- 7000 A member of the Manitoba Press Council The persons in these photos are of interest to police and might be able to provide information about criminal offences. These images are released for identification purposes only. The subjects might or might not be responsible for the crimes indicated. If you are able to identify anyone in the photos, call Winnipeg Crime Stoppers at 204- 786- TIPS ( 204- 786- 8477), text TIP170 and your message to CRIMES ( 274637), or leave a secure tip online at www. winnipegcrimestoppers. com. Click . TRENDS / Bike down the river The 14th annual Ice Bike Race takes place today. From 11: 30 a. m. to 2: 30 p. m., cyclists will race down the Red River Mutual Trail at The Forks. The event is open to bikers of all ages, from elite racers to new riders to unicyclists. But, be careful. The course is full of obstacles any cyclist could come across in Winnipeg, including snow, ice, gravel and pavement. Racers might even come across the rare sasquatch. Register at Woodcock Cycle, or online at http:// wfp. to/ T3W. All proceeds from the event will be donated to the Manitoba Lung Association. Franco- Fun Day This Louis Riel Day, you can have a bilingual blast. On Monday, the Manitoba Children's Museum will celebrate the holiday by hosting its fifth annual Franco- Fun Day. Join the francophone fun and celebrate French- Canadian culture from 11 a. m. to 3 p. m., with bilingual staff and special guests. Spend the day in a dance workshop led by Centre Culturel Franco- Manitobain or enjoy a fiddle performance. Kids will have a chance to make their own supersweet maple- syrupin- snow treats. The museum is located at 45 Forks Market Rd. MoMondays, no problems MoMondays is coming to Winnipeg this week. MoMondays is an open mic night for professional motivational speakers, and anyone else who has a story to share. At each event, six to eight speakers will tell a few personal stories before you're given a chance to tell your own. Drop by Sam's Place, a caf� at 159 Henderson Hwy., at 6 p. m. to grab some motivation and, perhaps, offer some wisdom of your own. Come with a group or by yourself. Either way, admission is free. So, they think they can act? On Wednesday, seven local celebrities will take to the stage to show off their acting chops. Hosted by Ace Burpee, So You Think You Can Act is a fundraiser for Sarasv�ti Productions, a theatre company that hopes to inspire positive social change through its performances. Locals like Free Press columnist Alison Gillmor, CTV's Kris Laudien and former Bombers player Obby Khan will try to prove they have what it takes to be actors. So You Think You Can Act starts at 7 p. m. at the Gas Station Arts Centre at 445 River Ave. Tickets are $ 25. Flying high to help kids On Friday, aerial and acrobatic troupe Take Flight will flip and fly to give arts education opportunities to the city's at- risk youth. Circus for Circus, a cabaret- style fundraiser to support the Circus and Magic Partnership ( C. A. M. P.) will be held at the Manitoba Theatre for Young People. C. A. M. P. provides at- risk youth with opportunities to learn and express themselves in a healthy way. The event begins at 7 p. m. and includes music and aerial performances. Tickets are $ 25 and can be purchased at circusforcircuseorg. eventbrite. ca. Donations are also welcome. You love to write, right? Yes, February is I Love to Read Month, but readers need something to read. This is your chance to give them that. A number of Winnipeg Public Library branches have started story murals this month. It's up to the kids to finish them. They can continue the story where someone else left off and let the next person finish what they start. They can join the storytelling at the Henderson, Millennium, Pembina Trail, River Heights, St. Vital and West End libraries. The story murals are open to children up to 12 years old. N EW YORK - Traditionally, the American male was measured against the stoic hero who shook off all doubts, vanquished all foes and offered women a muscular shoulder to cry on. But that was before feminism, gay- rights activism, metrosexuals. Husbands took on a greater share of housework and child care. The military welcomed women and gays. A romantic movie about gay cowboys, Brokeback Mountain , won three Oscars. And last week, the ground shifted under the hypermasculine realm of America's most popular pro sport - the National Football League, it seems, will soon have its first openly gay player. Off the playing field, in their daily lives, countless men are trying to navigate these changes. For some, it's a source of confusion and anxiety. " Men are conflicted, ambivalent," said James O'Neil, a psychology professor at the University of Connecticut who has written extensively on men's struggles over gender roles. " On one hand they've been socialized to meet the old stereotypes," he said. " On the other hand, particularly for men in their 30s and 40s, they begin to say, ' That's not working for me. It's too stressful.' They're looking for alternative models of masculinity." But for other Americans, the upheaval is a good thing. " Ultimately, confusion about modern masculinity is a good thing: It means we're working past the outmoded definition," wrote journalist and blogger Ann Friedman in a nymag. com article last fall titled What Does Manhood Mean in 2013? After the Second World War, at least on the surface, there seemed to be an overwhelming consensus of what American manhood was all about. It was typified by Gary Cooper and John Wayne on the movie screen, by the GIs on America's foreign battlefields, by the executives with homemaker wives and no corporate worries about gender diversity. The feminist movement that emerged in the 1960s fractured this consensus and fuelled significant, though gradual, changes in perceptions of gender roles and stereotypes. By now, although women remain underrepresented as CEOs, they comprise nearly half the enrolment in U. S. medical and law schools, and are being welcomed into military combat units. Over the same period, perceptions of manhood and masculinity also have evolved. Surveys show husbands are handling far more housework and child care than they used to, though still less than their wives. Soccer icon David Beckham proved a male sports star with a celebrity wife could embrace nail polish and flamboyant fashion without losing his fans. " The women's movement showed that women didn't want to be restricted by their gender role, and it's opened things up for men to not be restricted as well - they can be stay- at- home dads, they can be nurses," said Bonnie Grabenhofer, a vice- president of the National Organization for Women, though from her perspective the pace of change has been " agonizingly slow." Fatherhood remains a key element in the discussion of masculinity, and there seems to be broad support for encouraging fathers to be more engaged in child- rearing than they were in the past. As evidence, Christopher Brown, president of the National Fatherhood Initiative, notes the military is investing more energy these days in supporting soldiers' roles as parents. " Fathers are really embracing that broader role," said Brown. " It's become accepted that they can share more of the work, and more of the joy." Among the growing ( but still small) cohort of stay- at- home dads is Ben Martin of Brookline, Mass., husband of a physician. " I'm going to do what's practical, what's right for my family," said Martin, 35. " I like to think of that as a trait that a lot of men would appreciate." Still, Martin says he knows few other stay- home dads. " I get curious looks sometimes when I drop the kids off at school," he said. " It's a little isolating at times." Gays, as well as heterosexuals, have played a role in the changing concepts of masculinity. Certainly, Michael Sam - the all- American defensive end who last week told the rest of the world what his University of Missouri coaches and teammates already knew, that he was gay - is already helping break down stereotypes about gay men. But there were many examples before Sam, including NFL players such as Jerry Smith and David Kopay, who came out after they retired. " When it comes to gay men, the script is being rewritten," said Sarah Kate Ellis, president of GLAAD, a leading lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender advocacy organization. " It's a wonderful thing happening as the definition of manhood evolves, and it becomes more inclusive of more types of men." - The Associated Press By David Crary The measure of a man Changing concepts of masculinity confusing for some INCIDENT 369 When: Nov. 28, 2013 Where: 730 St. Anne's Rd. Two shoplifters stole several bottles of liquor from a Liquor Mart by concealing them in bags they were carrying. The women split up to distract staff while one of the suspects made off with both bags. INCIDENT 370 When: July 22, 2013 Where: 1500 block of Regent Avenue A man entered a bank and said he wanted to convert some Canadian money to U. S. cash. During the transaction he became upset, demanded his money back and grabbed his own cash as well as some of the bank's money before storming out. 1 THINGS TO DO Whiskey in the winter On Friday, whiskey lovers will gather at the Fairmont Winnipeg hotel at 2 Lombard Pl., for the 2014 Winnipeg Whiskey Festival. Yes, it's a whole festival dedicated to Scotch, Irish, Bourbon, Tennessee and Canadian whiskies. The event is open to whiskey know- it- alls and those who want to know a little bit more. The night will include whiskey tastings and a gourmet buffet. As a bonus, money made during the festival will support the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame. Visit winnipegwhiskeyfestival. com for more information. SHANE KEYSER / MCT FILES Michael Sam is set to become the first openly gay player in a major North American professional sports league. JORDAN POWER 204- 697- 7063 204- 697- 7000 204- 697- 7122 A_ 02_ Feb- 16- 14_ FP_ 01. indd A2 2/ 15/ 14 9: 38: 28 PM ;