Showing posts with label October 21. Show all posts
Showing posts with label October 21. Show all posts

Sunday, October 21, 2018

24 Hours After Canada Legalised Indian Hemp, Stores Run Out Of Supplies

24 Hours After Canada Legalised Indian Hemp, Stores Run Out Of Supplies

Within 24 hours of its legalisation in Canada, stores selling Indian hemp have announced that they ran out of supplies.

Nearly a century of marijuana prohibition came to an end Wednesday as Canada became the first major Western nation to legalise and regulate its sale and recreational use.

Hundreds of customers braved the cold for hours outside Tweed, an Indian hemp boutique in St John’s, Newfoundland, that opened briefly at midnight, to buy their first grams of legal cannabis.

In total, Statistics Canada says 5.4 million Canadians will buy cannabis from legal dispensaries in 2018 — about 15 percent of the population. Around 4.9 million already smoke.

On day two of legal recreational cannabis in Canada on Thursday saw more long lineups outside pot stores and supply shortages in parts of the country.

Most consumers were exuberant about the end of prohibition, but a few expressed disappointment over not being able to buy cannabis on the first day.

Others balked at the relatively high prices — ranging from Can$5.25 (US$4.02) in Quebec to Can$18.99 in Saskatchewan per gram — compared to the black market that saw average prices plunge in the last year to Can$6.79 per gram.

After waiting seven hours in line at a store in downtown Montreal on Wednesday, Alexandre, 30, said he was turned away at closing at 9 p.m. (0100 GMT). Police stepped in to disperse the crowd, without incident.

“It was hell, it was cold,” Alexandre said. “But we had fun anyway, talking with people in the crowd and sharing joints.” He was back early Thursday morning to try again.

“Yesterday was the day that everyone was waiting for but I think that little by little the queue will decrease,” he said.

‘The bomb’
Genevieve Despres, 41, was one of the lucky ones to make it inside the store on Wednesday. She described the scene in line as “super friendly, we sang, we laughed, I made friends.”

“I do not usually smoke but since it was a historic day for Canada I thought I’d try,” she told AFP.

Despres smoked bought pot with a low level of THC, the psychoactive agent in cannabis.

“My God it’s the bomb!” she said — and returned with friends Thursday to buy more.

In Ontario, Canada’s most populated province, 38,000 orders for weed were processed in the first few hours Wednesday (total figures for the day were not yet available), while in neighboring Quebec 42,000 orders were processed in-store and online, smashing all expectations.

Supply shortages were reported in the provinces of Newfoundland and Saskatchewan, as well as in the Arctic territory of Nunavut.

Several online retailers including the Ontario government’s pot portal, meanwhile, warned customers to expect shipping delays of up to five days as they worked late into the night filling orders.

Canada Post workers are also poised to strike starting on Monday after more than a year of contract talks stalled, which could further delay deliveries of online orders.

“We expected, you know, certain strains might run out and there would be a bit of a run on supply,” Bill Blair, a former Toronto police chief who is the government’s pointman for legalization, told public broadcaster CBC.

“But, you know, they’ve got a pretty good infrastructure in place and I’m confident it will work,” he said.

(AFP)

Former NBA star Kobe Bryant Removed from Film Jury Over 2003 Rape Allegation

Former NBA star Kobe Bryant has been removed from the jury of an upcoming film festival at the behest of a Change.org petition that said the former basketballer should not be involved due to the 2003 rape allegation made against him, according to Variety. (At the time, Bryant had said any relations were consensual; he pleaded not guilty to felony charges, which were later dismissed; and he settled a related civil suit).

The 40 year old — who won an Academy Award earlier this year for his work on the animated short film Dear Basketball — was set to participate in the Animation Is Film Festival this weekend in Los Angeles.

In a statement to Variety, Eric Beckman — the CEO of GKIDS, the producer of the event — said, “After discussions with the various stakeholders of Animation Is Film, the decision has been made to remove Kobe Bryant from the 2018 jury. We are a young organization and it is important to keep our collective energies focused on the films, the participating filmmakers, and our festival attendees.”

While responding to the festival’s decision to remove him from the jury, Bryant tells PEOPLE in a statement, “I was honored to have been originally invited by Animation is Film to serve on the 2018 Jury, and am disappointed to no longer serve in that capacity.”

“This decision further motivates me and my commitment to building a studio that focuses on diversity and inclusion in storytelling for the animation industry. I remain focused on changing the world in positive ways through diverse stories, characters, and leadership, in order to inspire the next generation.”

 

 

Top Nollywood Actor, ‘Ajimajasan’ Dies

Download Shake Am Mp3 by Teni

How sports participation can help build strong bones

According to a new study, young adults who played in organized sports as children and teens have stronger bones than peers who were less active as kids.

According to the results in the Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, Australian researchers said boys and girls who consistently participated in sports between the ages of 5 and 17 ended up with better bone density at age 20 than those who dropped out or never played.

“Our study provides a strong rationale for the early and persistent encouragement of sports participation amongst children and adolescents in order to support primary prevention strategies for the prevention of osteoporosis and age-related fracture,” said lead author Joanne McVeigh of the School of Occupational Therapy, Speech Therapy and Social Work at Curtin University in Perth.

How sports participation can help build strong bones

“Bones respond to the loads placed on them,” McVeigh explained in an email. “There is convincing evidence that the growing skeleton has a better ability to respond to mechanical stresses – loads – than the adult skeleton does. Therefore being part of organized sport during these critical developmental periods allows for optimal bone acquisition, leading to higher bone mass in young adulthood, and later life.”

 

“This is an important research study that demonstrates yet another important benefit of sports participation in children and adolescents,” Vigil said in an email. “We have known for decades about the benefits to bone health of exercise in adults. This study shows a benefit that is perhaps more important. The reason this study’s finding of benefit might be more important is the fact that people build the majority of their bone mass during adolescence – before age 20.”

 

“In other words, once we reach adulthood, we each have all the bone mass we will ever acquire,” Vigil said. “Therefore, whatever we can do before age 20 to strengthen our bones is of tremendous benefit. Along with adequate calcium and vitamin D, exercise is in that recipe, according to this study.”

 

So Sad! Ogun Corper Dies Of Kidney Ailment Just A Day Before Passing Out Parade

NYSC

The Ogun State Coordinator of the NYSC, Mrs. Josephine Bakare, has disclosed that a corps member died of kidney-related complications a day before the passing out parade.

Bakare disclosed this at the passing out parade of the about 3,799 corps members for the 2017 Batch ‘B’ Stream 1 in Ogun. The corps members had completed their service year on Thursday.

She charged them to keep themselves busy and utilise lessons learnt.

The corps members comprised 2,026 females and 1,773 males.

The coordinator advised the youths to use the opportunity to engage themselves in self-development endeavours, rather than wait on non-existent jobs.

She inspired them to be the best they could be, adding that it is only by investing in themselves that they could achieve greater heights.

“One opportunity opened to you is entrepreneurship, which has become the centre-piece of self-empowerment as preached by the NYSC scheme.

“It is my earnest hope that a large percentage of you will become job creators rather than job seekers.

“Don’t waste time to wait for jobs that are not forthcoming.

“It is this attitude that will take you to the pinnacle of whatever pursuit you embark upon, marking you for great exploits,’’ Bakare advised.

She urged the corps members not to involve themselves in illegal activities that could tarnish their image.

The corps members were also urged to imbibe the spirit of humility, service and dedication as they enter into the larger society.

The coordinator said that about 25 corps members ran afoul of the NYSC bye-laws and did not complete the programme.

She added that pending directives from the national body of the scheme, those affected will either get elongated service or be asked to repeat the programme as deemed fit.

(NAN)