Canucks Prepare To Face San Jose In Consecutive Games Tuesday and Thursday Night

VancouverCanucksCANUCKS BANTER     By Andrew Chernoff    MARCH 28, 2016

The Vancouver Canucks are preparing to face the San Jose Sharks in consecutive games on Tuesday and Thursday night, in home and away contests.

Coach Willie Desjardins addressed the media this morning, and is hoping a couple of injured players could return tomorrow night.

Vancouver’s goals are to end their 8-game losing streak and put a few goals past the Sharks goaltenders, as the players play for jobs on the team for next season in the remaining games of the season.

Dan Hamhuis met with the media following practice at Rogers Arena to discuss being named as the Canucks Masterton Trophy nominee.

Videos from the official Canucks YouTube channel here : http://www.youtube.com/Canucks

Rhinos Are Being Airlifted to Australia to Avoid Poachers

A black rhino takes to the air in the first stage of its venture during the 2013 World Wildlife Fund’s Black Rhino Expansion Project. (Martin Harvey/Corbis)

A new project is flying rhinos from South Africa to Australia to create a “biological insurance policy” against increased poaching.

By Jason Daley   smithsonian.com

Conservationist have done just about everything possible to save rhinos—they’ve fenced them in, sent out squadrons of anti-poaching rangers, and even cut off rhino horns to make them less appealing. The horns are primarily valued for traditional medicines in China and Vietnam, but with the price of a single rhino horn clocking in at $500,000, poachers just keep coming. That’s why one Australian real estate agent is putting a radical plan into effect—he’s transporting rhinos to the land down under.

“There is no safe place in Africa for rhinos today,” Ray Dearlove, a South African transplant and founder of the Australian Rhino Project tells the Australian Broadcast Corporation. “They’ve become extinct pretty much from the top down to South Africa where probably 85 to 90 percent of the white and black southern rhinos that are left in the world.”

His plan is to transport 80 rhinos, 20 per year for the next four years, to Australia. In May, the first six white rhinos go into quarantine in Johannesburg, South Africa. Then, in August, they will fly to Oz and spend another two months in quarantine at the Taronga Western Plains Zoo before reaching their final destination, the Monarto Zoo safari park outside Adelaide.

While airlifting the two-ton creatures might seem like an over-reaction, recent poaching numbers show that urgent action is needed. According to the Sydney Morning Herald, the kill rate of rhinos has exceeded the birth rate for the first time. In 2007, 13 rhinos were killed in southern Africa. In 2013 that number rose to 1,004, 1,200 in 2014 and in 2015 high horn prices pushed the number of poached rhinos to around 1,500 animals.

At that rate, southern white rhinos face extinction within ten years. That’s why Dearlove decided to begin airlifting the rhinos at around $75,000 per animal to create a “biological insurance policy” against extinction in the Outback.

“The numbers are deteriorating fast,” he tells the ABC. “I thought Australia is one of the safest places on the planet to start this breeding herd, with the eventual intention that they would be repatriated to Africa when those [poaching] issues are sorted out.”

This isn’t the first rhino airlift attempted. Last year the project Rhinos Without Borders began flying out the beasts from South Africa to the safer lands of Botswana, with a goal of moving 100 animals. And in 2013 the Wold Wildlife Fund moved rhinos in their Black Rhino Range Expansion Project. But the latest effort is even more ambitious, with the plan of shipping them out of the country altogether.

After three years of dealing fulltime with red tape and naysayers, the 67-year-old Dearlove now has the support of the South African and Australian governments and the project has gained the support of corporate donors and environmentalists like Jane Goodall.

“If you or I don’t do anything about it, who’s going to do something about it?” Dearlove tells the ABC. “And when they’re gone, who will they blame?”

Source: Rhinos Are Being Airlifted to Australia to Avoid Poachers | Smart News | Smithsonian

Brother Obama › Cuba › Granma – Official voice of the PCC

The kings of Spain brought us the conquistadores and masters, whose footprints remained in the circular land grants assigned to those searching for gold in the sands of rivers, an abusive and shameful form of exploitation, traces of which can be noted from the air in many places around the country.

Tourism today, in large part, consists of viewing the delights of our landscapes and tasting exquisite delicacies from our seas, and is always shared with the private capital of large foreign corporations, whose earnings, if they don’t reach billions of dollars, are not worthy of any attention whatsoever.

Since I find myself obliged to mention the issue, I must add – principally for the youth – that few people are aware of the importance of such a condition, in this singular moment of human history. I would not say that time has been lost, but I do not hesitate to affirm that we are not adequately informed, not you, nor us, of the knowledge and conscience that we must have to confront the realities which challenge us. The first to be taken into consideration is that our lives are but a fraction of a historical second, which must also be devoted in part to the vital necessities of every human being. One of the characteristics of this condition is the tendency to overvalue its role, in contrast, on the other hand, with the extraordinary number of persons who embody the loftiest dreams.

Nevertheless, no one is good or bad entirely on their own. None of us is designed for the role we must assume in a revolutionary society, although Cubans had the privilege of José Martí’s example. I even ask myself if he needed to die or not in Dos Ríos, when he said, “For me, it’s time,” and charged the Spanish forces entrenched in a solid line of firepower. He did not want to return to the United States, and there was no one who could make him. Someone ripped some pages from his diary. Who bears this treacherous responsibility, undoubtedly the work of an unscrupulous conspirator? Differences between the leaders were well known, but never indiscipline. “Whoever attempts to appropriate Cuba will reap only the dust of its soil drenched in blood, if he does not perish in the struggle,” stated the glorious Black leader Antonio Maceo. Máximo Gómez is likewise recognized as the most disciplined and discreet military chief in our history.

Looking at it from another angle, how can we not admire the indignation of Bonifacio Byrne when, from a distant boat returning him to Cuba, he saw another flag alongside that of the single star and declared, “My flag is that which has never been mercenary…” immediately adding one of the most beautiful phrases I have ever heard, “If it is torn to shreds, it will be my flag one day… our dead raising their arms will still be able to defend it!” Nor will I forget the blistering words of Camilo Cienfuegos that night, when, just some tens of meters away, bazookas and machine guns of U.S. origin in the hands of counterrevolutionaries were pointed toward that terrace on which we stood.

Obama was born in August of 1961, as he himself explained. More than half a century has transpired since that time.

Let us see, however, how our illustrious guest thinks today:

“I have come here to bury the last remnant of the Cold War in the Americas. I have come here to extend the hand of friendship to the Cuban people,” followed by a deluge of concepts entirely novel for the majority of us:

“We both live in a new world, colonized by Europeans,” the U.S. President continued, “Cuba, like the United States, was built in part by slaves brought here from Africa. Like the United States, the Cuban people can trace their heritage to both slaves and slave-owners.”

The native populations don’t exist at all in Obama’s mind. Nor does he say that the Revolution swept away racial discrimination, or that pensions and salaries for all Cubans were decreed by it before Mr. Barrack Obama was 10 years old. The hateful, racist bourgeois custom of hiring strongmen to expel Black citizens from recreational centers was swept away by the Cuban Revolution – that which would go down in history for the battle against apartheid that liberated Angola, putting an end to the presence of nuclear weapons on a continent of more than a billion inhabitants. This was not the objective of our solidarity, but rather to help the peoples of Angola, Mozambique, Guinea Bissau and others under the fascist colonial domination of Portugal.

In 1961, just one year and three months after the triumph of the Revolution, a mercenary force with armored artillery and infantry, backed by aircraft, trained and accompanied by U.S. warships and aircraft carriers, attacked our country by surprise. Nothing can justify that perfidious attack which cost our country hundreds of losses, including deaths and injuries

As for the pro-yankee assault brigade, no evidence exists anywhere that it was possible to evacuate a single mercenary. Yankee combat planes were presented before the United Nations as the equipment of a Cuban uprising.

The military experience and power of this country is very well known. In Africa, they likewise believed that revolutionary Cuba would be easily taken out of the fight. The invasion via southern Angola by racist South African motorized brigades got close to Luanda, the capital in the eastern part of the country. There a struggle began which went on for no less than 15 years. I wouldn’t even talk about this, if I didn’t have the elemental duty to respond to Obama’s speech in Havana’s Alicia Alonso Grand Theater.

Nor will I attempt to give details, only emphasize that an honorable chapter in the struggle for human liberation was written there. In a certain way, I hoped Obama’s behavior would be correct. His humble origin and natural intelligence were evident. Mandela was imprisoned for life and had become a giant in the struggle for human dignity. One day, a copy of a book narrating part of Mandela’s life reached my hands, and – surprise! – the prologue was by Barack Obama. I rapidly skimmed the pages. The miniscule size of Mandela’s handwriting noting facts was incredible. Knowing men such as him was worthwhile.

Regarding the episode in South Africa I must point out another experience. I was really interested in learning more about how the South Africans had acquired nuclear weapons. I only had very precise information that there were no more than 10 or 12 bombs. A reliable source was the professor and researcher Piero Gleijeses, who had written the text Conflicting Missions: Havana, Washington, and Africa, 1959-1976, an excellent piece. I knew he was the most reliable source on what had happened and I told him so; he responded that he had not spoken more about the matter as in the text he had responded to questions from compañero Jorge Risquet, who had been Cuban ambassador and collaborator in Angola, a very good friend of his. I located Risquet; already undertaking other important tasks he was finishing a course which would last several weeks longer. That task coincided with a fairly recent visit by Piero to our country; I had warned him that Risquet was getting on and his health was not great. A few days later what I had feared occurred. Risquet deteriorated and died. When Piero arrived there was nothing to do except make promises, but I had already received information related to the weapons and the assistance that racist South Africa had received from Reagan and Israel.

I do not know what Obama would have to say about this story now. I am unaware as to what he did or did not know, although it is very unlikely that he knew absolutely nothing. My modest suggestion is that he gives it thought and does not attempt now to elaborate theories on Cuban policy.

There is an important issue:

Obama made a speech in which he uses the most sweetened words to express: “It is time, now, to forget the past, leave the past behind, let us look to the future together, a future of hope. And it won’t be easy, there will be challenges and we must give it time; but my stay here gives me more hope in what we can do together as friends, as family, as neighbors, together.”

I suppose all of us were at risk of a heart attack upon hearing these words from the President of the United States. After a ruthless blockade that has lasted almost 60 years, and what about those who have died in the mercenary attacks on Cuban ships and ports, an airliner full of passengers blown up in midair, mercenary invasions, multiple acts of violence and coercion?

Nobody should be under the illusion that the people of this dignified and selfless country will renounce the glory, the rights, or the spiritual wealth they have gained with the development of education, science and culture.

I also warn that we are capable of producing the food and material riches we need with the efforts and intelligence of our people. We do not need the empire to give us anything. Our efforts will be legal and peaceful, as this is our commitment to peace and fraternity among all human beings who live on this planet.

Fidel Castro Ruz

March 27, 2016

10:25 p.m.

 

Source: Brother Obama › Cuba › Granma – Official voice of the PCC

NHL MORNING SKATE – MARCH 28, 2016

NHL MORNING SKATE – MARCH 28, 2016

Welcome to the “NHL Morning Skate,” a daily collection of the latest news and notes from around the League.

TODAY’S CLINCHING SCENARIOS

* The Capitals will clinch the Presidents’ Trophy and the No. 1 seed in the playoffs if they get at least one point against the Blue Jackets.
* The Sharks will clinch a playoff berth if they defeat the Kings in any fashion OR if they get one point against the Kings AND the Coyotes lose to the Flames in any fashion OR if the Coyotes lose to the Flames in regulation.
* The Predators will clinch a playoff berth if they defeat the Avalanche in regulation.

SNEAK PEEK AT MONDAY’S ACTION

All Times Eastern
Winnipeg @ Philadelphia, 7:00 p.m., TSN3, CSN-PH
Columbus @ Washington, 7:00 p.m., FS-O, CSN-DC
Buffalo @ Detroit, 7:30 p.m., NBCSN, SNE, SNO, SNP, FS-D
Toronto @ Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m., TVAS, SNO, SUN
Colorado @ Nashville, 8:00 p.m., ALT, FS-TN
Anaheim @ Edmonton, 9:00 p.m., FS-W, SNW
Calgary @ Arizona, 10:00 p.m., SNF, FS-A
Los Angeles @ San Jose, 10:00 p.m., NBCSN, SNE, SNP

SHARKS, PREDATORS ATTEMPT TO PUNCH PLAYOFF TICKETS

Both the Sharks and Predators will try to clinch playoff berths while facing division rivals:

* The Sharks (41-28-6, 88 points), who saw their 10-year playoff streak end in 2014-15, will attempt to return to the postseason when they welcome the Pacific Division-leading Kings (45-25-5, 95 points) to SAP Center. This marks the fifth and final meeting of 2015-16 between these California rivals, who have split their opening four matchups – with the road team winning each contest (SJS: 2-1-1, LAK: 2-2-0). That includes a 3-2 overtime victory by Los Angeles in their most recent head-to-head game on Jan. 24 in San Jose.
* The Predators (39-23-13, 91 points) will try to lock up their fifth postseason berth in the past seven years when they face the Avalanche (38-33-4, 80 points), the first team on the outside of the Western Conference playoff picture, at Bridgestone Arena. This marks the fourth of five meetings in 2015-16 between these Central Division rivals, who will close their season series on April 5 – also in Nashville. Colorado has won two of their opening three matchups (COL: 2-1-0, NSH: 1-2-0).

SUNDAY’S RESULTS

Home Team in Caps
CAROLINA 3, New Jersey 2
Pittsburgh 3, NY RANGERS 2 (OT)
Chicago 3, VANCOUVER 2

LADD, BLACKHAWKS CLINCH EIGHTH STRAIGHT PLAYOFF BERTH

Andrew Ladd scored the tiebreaking goal with 2:27 remaining in regulation to power the Blackhawks to their eighth consecutive playoff berth.

* At 44-25-7 (95 points), the Blackhawks moved four points ahead of the idle Predators (39-23-13, 91 points) for third place in the Central Division. They also climbed within four points of the idle division leaders – the Stars and Blues (both 45-22-9, 99 points).
* Ladd, who posted 2-1—3 in Saturday’s win at CGY, has 6-3—9 in 13 games since rejoining the Blackhawks. His six goals pace the team in the span, while his nine points are tied for second on the club – behind only Patrick Kane (4-6—10 in 13 GP).

CROSBY, PENGUINS INCH AHEAD IN METROPOLITAN DIVISION RACE

Sidney Crosby scored with 29.5 seconds remaining in overtime to lead the Penguins past the Rangers and to their eighth victory in their last nine games, including five straight on the road.

* The Penguins, who moved within three points of second place in the Metropolitan Division, closed their season series with a 3-1-0 record against the Rangers (NYR: 1-2-1).
* Crosby picked up his eighth career overtime goal and first of 2015-16. He ranks third in the NHL with 32-46—78 this season, including at least one point in 14 of his past 15 contests (7-15—22).

LOOSE PUCKS
Forward Victor Rask (2-0—2) registered his second multi-goal game of the season to lift the Hurricanes within four points of the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. Rask, who scored for the third straight game (4-0—4), reached the 20-goal milestone for the first time in his career (20-25—45) . . . Forward Eric Staal (2-0—2) posted his 50th career multi-goal game – and first with the Rangers (14 GP) . . . Penguins goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury (25 SV) improved to 7-1-0 in his last eight appearances (1.98 GAA, .915 SV%).

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