FREE
DEC. 27 2012 - JAN. 2, 2013 READ MORE ONLINE AT
WEVancouver.com
Also: New Year’s events 4 Swordfighting 6 Champagne picks 8 Mouth harp master 9 Fear of cannibals 10
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Dal Richards is ringing in his 78th new year as a musician (this year with Dawn Chubai, one of Dal’s Gals) 5 Rob Newell photo
Who
are
Publisher Anne Devereaux • 604-742-8684 publisher@wevancouver.com
the week ahead
Dec. 27 - Jan. 2
Managing Editor Martha Perkins • 604-742-8695 editor@wevancouver.com Editorial staff Kelsey Klassen • 604-742-8699 kelsey@wevancouver.com Contributors Gen Handley Christine Lyon Kurtis Kolt Deanna Cheng Curtis Woloschuk Thor Diakow Rob Brezsny
Mt. Seymour’s family-friendly NYE fireworks
Photography Editor Doug Shanks • 604-742-8691 photo@wevancouver.com Advertising Manager Gail Nugent • 604-742-8678 admanager@wevancouver.com Display Advertising sales@wevancouver.com
2012 Polar Bear Swin. Kevin Wu photo
Gagan Sandhu • 604-742-8683 gagan@wevancouver.com Lillian Wei • 604-742-8681 lillian@wevancouver.com Angela Meier • 604-742-8679 angela@wevancouver.com Shawna Kisell • 604-742-8680 shawna@wevancouver.com Classified Advertising 604-575-5555 classifieds@wevancouver.com Creative Services Supervisor Robbin Sheriland 604-742-8671 ads@wevancouver.com Creative Services Staff Tara Rafiq Circulation Miguel Black • 604.742.8676 circulation@wevancouver.com 280-1770 Burrard St., Vancouver, BC, V6J 3G7 Facebook.com/ WEVancouver @WEVancouver
Member of Black Press, B.C. Press Council, Canadian Community Newspapers Association. Published at Vancouver by the MetroValley Newspaper Group a Division of Black Press Group Ltd. Editorial submissions are welcome but unsolicited manuscripts will not be returned. Submissions may be edited for brevity and legality. Opinions in columns are not necessarily shared by the publisher. Copyright and/ or property rights subsist in all display advertising and other material appearing in WE. If, in the publisher’s judgment, an error is made that materially affects the value of the advertisement to the advertiser, a corrected advertisement will be inserted upon demand without further charge. “Make-good” insertions are not granted on minor errors which do not lessen the value of the advertisement. Notice of error required before second insertion.
Start New Year’s Day off with a dip By Deanna Cheng
T
he 93rd annual polar bear swim at English Bay, a traditional feat of fortitude and fun, is the perfect way to welcome the new year (and clear the cobwebs left by the celebrations of the previous eve). Join one of the largest and oldest Polar Bear Clubs in the world by registering for a free membership in front of the English Bay Bathhouse between 12:30 and 2:30pm on New Year’s Day. Donations and non-perishable food items will be accepted for the food bank. Event highlights are the costumes and the Peter Pantages Memorial 100-yard swim race. Swim coordinator Glenn Schultz says, “There are about two or three dozen people who do the race with roughly six to eight thousand [people] watching.” It starts at 2:30pm sharp. “People get antsy when you hold them back,” he said. From developing entry forms and new badges to cleaning the beaches to organizing police and traffic control, preparation for this event starts a couple months ahead. Last year, there were 2,200 registered swimmers. In 2011, a new record was set with 2,246 registered swimmers. Patrick Oleman, member of the Portland FC soccer team, gathered some friends to do it last year. Having done the swim a few times before at his reserve, this was his first time doing it in Vancouver. When asked what he took away from the expe-
WINTER SERVICE PACKAGE
LUBE AND OIL CHANGE includes 49 pt inspection *WITH THIS AD
only
5995
$
Swim tips from Glenn Schultz and the Vancouver Park Board:
• If you have a medical condition, please just watch. • Be with your children at all times. • Have someone looking after your belongings. • Please leave your dog at home. • Do not drink. Alcohol does not warm you up. It accelerates hypothermia. • Do not stay in the water longer than 15 minutes. Body heat is lost 25 times faster in water than in air. • Do not remove your clothing until swim time. The swim will be started by a flag and siren. • Entrants in the 100-yard race are to meet in front of the line on the north side (Stanley Park side) of the enclosure. • First three swimmers to touch the marker buoy by the lifeguard boat, give your name to the lifeguard. • After you swim, pick up your commemorative button at the large polar bear or at the registration table. • Warm up with coffee or hot chocolate.
Wright Mariner Supply
• Warranty Approved Scheduled Maintenance • Conventional & Computer Controlled Tune-Ups
OOTMAR AUTOMOTIVE YOUR NEIGHBOURHOOD AUTO CENTRE Best Cit y 14th ANNUAL
of the
Event tickets can be purchased on site starting at only 4:45pm. A tubing pass is $25 per person, with two tubing slots available: 5 - 7pm and 7 - 9pm. The tobogganing passes are $15. Both slopes —Delta and Charlie — will be open for guests. Remember to bring up your toboggans, wonder carpets, etc., or you can purchase one on site from the Enquist Lodge. For $10, spectator passes allow family members not keen on adrenalin activities to warm up by the fire, enjoy warm apple cider and eat some s’mores (food and beverage will also be available for purchase) while watching Tickles the Clown and an hourly fire spinning show, culminating with the 9pm fireworks finale. Go to MountSeymour.com/events for tickets and schedule of events.
Pick of the week
Your Vaporizer Specialists
AuTHENTIC 100% Wool Peacoats
Canadian Wool, made in Boston
Laundromat of Canada
Hand-Knit 100% Wool sweaters And Armor*Lux of france, Pollen of Lund, Canada’s Pure & Co. & Neon Buddha, Viberg of Victoria...
Dec 26-31
Smoke Shop
SALE!
Light it up
BOXING WEEK!!!
50% 778-786-0977 SAVE up to
109 W Cordova St Cordov aS t. Vancouver, BC Ignitesmokeshop.ca Vaporizers, Roor, Illadelph glass, & more.
VERIFIED CIRCULATION
65 East 3rd Avenue (3rd and Quebec) We invite you to call us with any questions regarding automotive service or repair. WE’RE HERE TO HELP!
604-681-1727 • www.ootmar.ca
2
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
Best Cit y
SALE on selected in-store items
of the
GOLD WINNER 13th ANNUAL 2010
CoAL HArBoUr mArINA (604) 682-3788 • www.wrightmariner.com
Ab bo t
tS t.
Readers’ Choice 2011
During the night, enjoy tubing and tobogganing with your family, or cozy up in front of two custom made Seymour fire pits. An event ticket must be purchased for Family First Night, as tickets purchased earlier in the day will not be valid. Season pass holders will also have to purchase an event ticket as Family First Night is a special park event.
FLOATING STORE at 485 Broughton St.
It’s tIme for your gIfts!
Open at 65 East 3rd Ave. • Family Owned and Operated • Serving Vancouver Since 1928 • AirCare Certified
rience, he replied, “I got a group of friends that are willing to, basically, do anything with me.” Another player loved the spontaneity. She said, “It was a really cool way to bring a bunch of strangers together and create a community in Vancouver out of a very different thing... Just bringing people together in that way is kind of unique.” As Oleman said, “Just have fun.”
Mount Seymour’s SnowPlay Park hosts a special family-friendly New Year’s Eve celebration from 6pm – 9pm on December 31 that includes tubing and tobogganing, live big band music, free s’mores and apple cider, and free party hats, sparklers and blowhorns for an early NYE countdown at 9pm. Family First Night is one of Vancouver’s only family friendly New Year’s Eve events. The Snowplay area opens for the event at 5pm and will run till 9pm when they’ll have the NYE countdown.
WEVancouver.com
Top 10 online stories of 2012 By Martha Perkins
Boy, do we love our restaurants! (Don’t forget to go to the contest page to vote for next year’s wine know you’re out ners.) there, WE Van2) Hey Ocean’s Ashleigh Ball couver readers. We as the voices of Applejack and know you’re pickRainbow Dash on My Little Pony. ing up a copy of this week’s ediThanks to this story, we now tion from one of the street boxes, know about the phenomenon or maybe from the stack in your called Bronies — men who like condo lobby. Perhaps you are sitMy Little Pony. There are more of ting at the coffee shop waiting for them than you think… a friend and you’ve started leafing 3) Tap and Barrel. After so through our pages. many doom and gloom stories It’s impossible for us to stand about Olympic Village, along over the shoulder of everyone came Daniel Frankel. He believed reading the ink-and-newsprint in the neighbourhood’s potential version of the paper (we love so much that he opened his first you) to find Tap and BarFREE out what storel here — and ries catch your judging from its eye. success, it will Thanks to indeed be the first Google analytof many. ALSO: Treating PTSD ics, however, 4) Devon in young vets 7 we know a lot Brooks speaks Dudepins 27 Ego Closet 29 more about out about sexual Kidd Pivot dances which stories assault. Wow. Shakespeare 31 our online This is one very readers (we brave, smart love you, too) and determined enjoy the young women. most. The co-founder of of the city Here’s a list the Blo hairstylof the Top 10 ing salons talks Pages 11 to 26 WE Vancouver openly about her online stories experiences as a for 2012. way of reaching out to others. A 1) Best of the City Dining Out powerful story! results. This is the go-to place 5) 10 Things to Do in Vancoufor people who want to know ver. We asked Vancouver Foodthe best places in the city to eat. ster Richard Wolak to share the
W
NOV. 8 - 14, 2012 READ MORE ONLINE AT
WEVancouver.com
The
Results
IT
ED
TI M
E
O
FF ER
Owner Robbie Kane serves up one of this city’s favourite breakfasts at Café Medina. Martha Perkins photo
FREE
VANCOUVER’S URBAN WEEKLY
JUNE 7 to 13, 2012
READ MORE ONLINE AT
WEVancouver.com
NE WS • E NT E R TA INM E NT • LIF E
LET’S TALK
Food as love: the Joy of Feeding 11 Hot Tickets celebrates festival season 17-21
When she was 18, Devon Brooks was raped. The founder of Blo has found healing in being able to talk openly about it 9 Martha Perkins photo SUPERB�WEST�END�LOCATION� AT�ROBSON�&�JERVIS
RENTERS, RAISE
10 dishes that people absolutely, YOUR STANDARDS! positively had to try before summer ended. No wonder he won best food blogger in our Best of the City (see #1.) 6) It Ain’t Over Yet. If there’s anyone who knows about the future, it’s an astrologer. Back in January, we asked our horoscope columnist, Free Will Astrology’s Rob Brezsny, to calm our fears about the end of the world. Just as he predicted, it didn’t happen on December 21. 7) Ryan Holmes’ Suite Success. What Lululemon did for yoga clothing, Hoot Suite has done for social media — put Vancouver on the world map. It all started when Holmes won a computer in grade school and had to turn it on using booster cables attached to the family car. For a kid who grew up off the grid, he certainly has risen to power quickly. 8) The opening of the Sardine Can. It’s not like Vancouver is FREE WIFI IN COMMON AREAS
ZIPCARS�IN�GARAGE
WHITE-OAK�FLOORING�AND� QUARTZ�COUNTERTOPS �MASSIVE�SOAKER�TUB�
LARGE�WORKOUT�AREA�AND� TRANQUIL�YOGA�SPACE
ST E P U P TO PAC I F I C PA L I S A D E S . T H E W E ST COA ST M O D E R N , W E ST E N D I CO N H A S U N D E RG O N E A M A S S I V E CO N V E R S I O N F RO M H OT E L TO 2 3 4 S PA R K L I N G N E W ST U D I O A N D O N E-B E D RO O M
R E N TA L S U I T E S . A PPLY N OW A N D C L A I M YOU R S P OT. W W W. PAC I F I C PA L I S A D E S .CA 60 4. 2 51.72 72
bereft of restaurants. But the opening of this tiny restaurant in Gastown was greeted with huge line-ups of people eager to try the Spanish-inspired dishes. 9) Sean Orr’s tour of Gastown. He calls most of Vancouver a modern-day Potemkin village — a shiny exterior that disguises a fake city. Gastown, however remains a very real, and very much loved, place for him. 10) Glowbal romance. Shannon Bosa-Yacoub and Emad Yacoub are the founders of the Glowbal Group, one of Vancouver’s hottest collection of restaurants. They are also very, very much in love. FREE
VANC OUV ER ’S UR BAN W EEK LY
MAR. 29 - APR. 4, 2012
READ MORE ONLINE AT
WEVancouver.com
N E W S • E N T E R TA I N M E N T • L I F E
Ryan Holmes’
Suite Success!
Get in the RewardLoop 6 Trevor Linden opening new Club 16 14 Main Street trending 17 ZIPCARS�IN�GARAGE SUPERB�WEST�END�LOCATION� AT�ROBSON�&�JERVIS
RENTERS, RAISE
STANDARDS! What will be the YOUR top stories of 2013? That’s the exciting part of working at a newspaper — finding the stories that people want to read. Meanwhile, we wish all of our readers a 2013 filled with good news. WEST COAST MODERN AESTHETIC
SECURED�BICYCLE�STORAGE� AND�WORKSHOP
WIDE��PROTECTED�BALCONIES FREE�WIFI�IN�COMMON�AREAS
STEP UP TO PACIFIC PALISADES. THE WEST COAST MODERN, WEST END ICON HAS UNDERGONE
A MASSIVE CONVERSION FROM HOTEL TO 2 3 4 SPARKLING NEW STUDIO AND ONE-
BEDROOM RENTAL SUITES. APPLY NOW AND CLAIM YOUR SPOT. WWW.PACIFICPALISADES.CA
Get a great deal on Windows Phone 8 devices
ROBSON STREET 601 Robson Street (604) 682-4333 1795 Robson Street (604) 605-8290 1093 Robson Street 604) 628-1388 CITY SQUARE 555 West 12 th Ave (604) 876-0888 METROPOLIS AT METROTOWN 4700 Kingsway, Burnaby Skytrain Station Entrance (604) 433-8000 Near SilverCity (604) 430-3903 Across from T&T (604) 432-9303 CRYSTAL MALL 4500 Kingsway, Burnaby (604) 718-2112 CENTRAL CITY MALL 10153 King George Blvd Surrey (604) 583-7000 ABERDEEN CENTRE 4151 Hazelbridge Way, Richmond (604) 303-8811
SAVE
LI M
50
1
with select 3-yr. FLEXtabTM agreements
ON THE HOTTEST WINDOWS PHONE 8 DEVICES
Rogers LTE network available in select cities. See rogers.com/LTE. m/LT L E. LT
SAMSUNG MSUNG AT A ATIV IV S | WINDOWS PHONE 8X BY HTC – 16 G | NOKIA LUMI LUMIA 920 coming soon
. UP BONUS: TO 12 MONTHS FREE UNLIMITED VIDEO STREAMING
**
Stay Connected... Connected... Stay www.mydigitalcom.ca www.mydigitalcom.ca
EXPERIENCE THE FASTEST WIRELESS NETWORK TECHNOLOGY ON THE PLANET
www.digitalcommunications.ca www.digitalcommunications.ca
* Offers available for a limited time and subject to change without notice. 1 Superphone $50 discount with new activation before Jan. 7/13 on any 3-yr. talk and internet plan having min. $45 monthly service fee. Device Saving Recovery Fee and/or Service Deactivation Fee (as applicable) apply in accordance with your service agreement. FLEXtab balance corresponds to the sum of the Device Savings Recovery Fee and the Additional Device Savings Recovery Fee. ** Up to 12 months unlimited video streaming on your smartphone (not shareable among devices) available to new wireless internet customers who activate an eligible 3-yr. term talk and internet plan (3 months with $55 single line/$110 family plan; 6 months with $65 single line/$130 family plan; and 12 months with $75 or $95 single line/$150 or $190 family plan respectively). Usage subject to Rogers Terms of Service and Acceptable Use Policy. Visit rogers.com/terms. Subject to change without notice. Device Saving Recovery Fees and/or Service Deactivation Fee (as applicable) apply in accordance with your service agreement. ©2012 Rogers Communications.
WEVancouver.com
R
aise your hand if your New Year’s resolution is to make amends for all the chocolate you just ate. Raise your other hand if your smartphone has become an extension of how your brain works. For those who have both hands in the air comes the new YYoga app. Developed by Vancouver’s Pound & Grain, the idea came from YYoga’s founding partner Terry McBride. “We all know that motivation is the thing that holds most of us back when it comes to fitness,” he says in a press release. ”This appworks [allows] people to create a profile and connect with friends so they can see who’s doing what. The idea? If you see that your friends are going to a class tonight, you’ll be more likely to go.” The app also offers a variety of yoga and fitness challenges and a dictionary of various poses.
Exclusive Offer Available at:
AND GIVE THE GIFT OF LLT LTE TE SPEE SPEED ED
$
YYoga app
Follow us on Twitter: @DigitalComBC
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
3
New Year’s EVE EVENT LISTINGS BUDDHARAVE PARTY FOR A CAUSE: Vancouver’s largest, substancefree New Year’s Eve celebration. Electro fusion music by DJ A Slam, dance, performances by Will Blunderfield and Air Ananda, a Buddha-bar serving vegetarian food with designer nonalcoholic beverages and a countdown meditation into 2013, for a capacity of 600+ participants. 100 per cent of the proceeds from the event will support youth-based projects in the Vancouver area and Care For Children, a program designed to provides education to under served communities. Yaletown Roundhouse Galleria (181 Roundhouse Mews). $65 at Buddharave.com.
CIRQUE GALA: Featuring six of
city’s best house and progressive DJs, Cirque performance artists, two floors of music + a VIP Mezzanine level, and a countdown you won’t forget. Toast to the great times to come in 2013 with a free glass of champagne at midnight. 9pm. $40-$50 at Ticketzone.com, Beat Street or East Side Urbanwear.
ELEVATION: Rise above it at a first-ofits-kind event in Vancouver. Two rooms of music and delight with 360° views of Downtown Vancouver, the North Shore, East Van and Burnaby from a 555ft vantage point. 9pm at Vancouver Lookout at Harbour Centre (555 West Hastings). $95-$120 at Clubzone.com.
FASHION TV PRESENTS NYE: Ring in the New Year in high style and glamour at Press Play’s NYE 2013 at Terminal City Club. Hosted by FashionTV and Press Play Entertainment. Have your own Hollywood moment on the ultraglam black-tie red carpet entrance; or if you’re feeling lucky, try your hand at live casinos. 9pm at Terminal City Club (837 West Hastings). $150 at PressPlayEstablishment.com.
FAMILY FIRST NIGHT: Mount
Seymour’s Snowplay area opens at 5pm and will run till the NYE countdown at
a kid-friendly 9pm. During the night, enjoy tubing and tobogganing with your family, or cozy up in front of 2 fire pits. Hot apple cider and S’mores, music and much more. 5pm at Snowplay Park, Enquist Lodge (Mount Seymour). Prices vary, MountSeymour.com.
GROUSE MOUNTAIN GALA: Spend
your New Year’s Eve 3,700 feet above the twinkling lights of Vancouver. A multicourse dinner, live DJ and dance floor, party favours and complimentary glass of bubbly. 5:30pm (The Observatory) and 5:45 (Timber Room). $70-$100 at 604-998-5045.
HOTEL GEORGIA NEW YEAR’S BALL: Rosewood Hotel Georgia will
look to raise the bar for future parties by bringing to Vancouver one of the hottest celebrations to usher in 2013. 9pm at the Rosewood Hotel Georgia (801 West Georgia). $100-$120 at Clubzone.com or RosewoodHotels.com.
NEW YEAR AT ROBSONS SQUARE:
Lace up your skates for a family-friendly New Year’s celebration at the Robson Square ice rink. Live music, stilt walkers, sorcerers, witches and a magic show. Be there for the countdown to an early New Year at 8pm. (800 Robson).
STEEL PANTHER: The legends of
Los Angeles’ Sunset Strip return to Vancouver to help “Rawk” in The New Year. 7pm at the Commodore Ballroom (868 Granville). $75 at Ticketmaster.ca.
POWDER BLUES BAND AND MIKE VAN EYES TRIO: Juno award-winning
Powder Blues, fronted by Tom Lavin on guitar, is joined by Mike Van Eyes, Vancouver’s boogie woogie rock ‘n’ roll piano player who has contributed his extraordinary talent to the legendary R&B troupe The Epics and the all-star rocker band The Trespassers. 7pm at Vancouver Fanclub (1050 Granville). $40$45 at VancouverFanclub.ca.
NEW YEARS IN NARNIA 2: Last
Quebec). $90-$115 at Clubzone.com.
year you stepped into the Winter wonderland of Narnia within The Keefer Bar. This New Year they transform the Keefer in the theme of Prince Caspian and a nautical adventure. Sweet Soul Burlesque troupe will perform three sets of magical Narnia-themed burlesque to ring in the New Year. 8pm at the Keefer Bar (135 Keefer). $25 at Clubzone.com.
PRIDE OF VANCOUVER NEW YEAR’S EVE BOAT CRUISE: Ring in
2013 in grand style aboard the Luxurious Pride of Vancouver. Your cruise includes a gourmet buffet, entertainment and dancing all in the true cruise ship tradition. With the romance of the sea, Vancouver’s spectacular skyline and the city lights at night. 7:30pm. $147.78 at Clubzone.com.
NEW YEAR’S EVE AT THE WALDORF: A massive New Year’s
ROCK THEATRE CO.’S NEW YEAR’S EVE VARIETY SHOW: A hip, Rat Pack
Masquerade and Carnival with top entertainment, the best party DJs, Super Disco Freq, Cherchez La Femme, Chapel Sound DJs, The Amigos, Mr. Pablo, as well as roving performers. All tickets include a raw seafood bar, carving station and chocolate fountain. 9pm at the Waldorf Hotel (1489 East Hastings). $60 at EventBrite.com, Beatstreet, Highlife, Red Cat and Zulu Records.
era-themed holiday musical, hosted by the always boisterous Madame Va-Va Voom (Anne-Marie de la Giroday). Enjoy a glass of champagne and a party favour for you and your friends and bring in 2013 with the momentum it deserves. 10pm at the Revue Stage (1601 Johnston). $30-$35 at VancouverTix.com or 604-629-8849.
NEW YEAR’S EVE 2013 JAZZ GALA:
SIN CITY FETISH NEW YEAR’S: Get your freak on to a sultry smorgasbord of retro and 80s, rock, industrial, dirrrty electro and dance tunes galore (djs Pandemonium and R-Lex with surprise guests). Indulge the exhibitionist or voyeur in you in the sinfully delicious Sin City dungeon, watched over by the Vancouver Dungeon Team. 9pm-3am at the Red Room (398 Richards). $25 at WantTickets.com.
Experience the unique taste of jazz and festive atmosphere during this thrilling night. Come join us at the ballroom of one of Vancouver’s finest hotels. Every ticket includes buffet dinner, champagne toast and the great vibe of a fabulous full-size jazz band. 8pm at the Sandman Hotel (180 West Georgia). $140 at Clubzone.com.
NYE 2013 MIDNIGHT STARDUST:
Vancouver’s hottest annual red carpet New Year’s celebration in true Las Vegas fashion at the world-class Westin Bayshore Hotel Resort. Starring some of Canada’s best live performers, entertainers, celebrities, & DJs. 8pm at the Westin Bayshore (1601 Bayshore). $75-$150 at Clubzone.com.
landmarks in Vancouver is playing host to a NYE 2013 party for all those partygoers who want to be part of a classy New Year’s Eve celebration in town. 9pm at the Telus World of Science (1455
NEW YEAR’S EVE BALL: Experience all of the best aspects of New Year’s Eve — the live count down, the champagne, the amazing vibe, at the Fairmount Hotel. 9pm at the Fairmont Waterfront (900 Canada Place). $100-$120 at Clubzone.com or Fairmont.com. OPUS Bar’s NYE 2013: Sponsored
by Veuve Clicquot champagnes, two floors of fun from 10pm to midnight and a champagne bar and DJ until 2pm at Vancouver’s premiere boutique hotel (322 Davie). $100. Vancouver.OpusHotel. com
New Year’s Eve with Dal Richards and his Orchestra:
As champagne corks fly in the Whistler Ballroom at the River Rock Casino Resort (8811 River Road, Richmond), 94-year-old Dal Richards and his orchestra will break into Auld Lang Syne. Tickets include buffet, dance floor, party favours and champagne toast at midnight. 7pm; $99.50 single, $159 couple at RiverRock. com
THE JEWEL BALLROOM NYE GRAND GALA: From the creators of
Bright Nights at Stanley Park:
WISE HALL NEW YEAR’S EVE GALA: The Wise Hall New Year’s Eve
Glitz & Glamour: A sell out every
the last three sold out Shangri-La NYE galas. Experience NYE in the heart of the city and overlooking the magnificent waterfront, surrounded by panoramic vistas of the harbour, mountains, False Creek and the city sky line. 8pm at the Jewel Ballroom (1495 West 8, 4th floor). $100 at Clubzone.com.
NYE AT THE TELUS WORLD OF SCIENCE: One of the most recognizable
Tattooed Fireball, Melody Mangler. Press your finest threads, get your dance shoes on, and come on down to the finest live music gala in Vancouver. 8:30 at the WISE Hall (1882 Adanac). $25 (advance) and $30 (at door) at BrownPaperTickets. com, Red Cat, Highlife and the Wise Lounge. Info: WiseHall.ca.
Gala featuring Cousin Harley, Rich Hope and His Evil Doers and Burlesque’s
One of the best Vancouver holiday attractions for young kids, Bright Nights transforms Stanley Park’s Miniature Train park into a winter wonderland of over two million lights and a live-action tableaux. Riding the train is $10 adults, $7 (youth 3-17 and seniors). BurnFund. org
year, ring in the new year with DJs Flipout, Alibaba, Kizum, Zak Santiago, Daddy Mikey, Elmo Super Sound, Earl da Pearl, Latin DJ Jorge and El Nino. Four ballrooms, two dinner bands. Doors at 6pm, Hilton Vancouver Metrotown (6083 McKay Ave., Burnaby). MeloProductions.net
t c orral o o b K O BOXING DAY SALE CONTINUES!
ENTIRE INVENTORY
ON SALE Shop early for best selection!
up to
50
OFF
25
OFF
HOURS: 10-6 Sun-Thurs 10-8 Fri-Sat 205 Carrall St. at Water St. Gastown 604.684.2668 www.OKBootCorral.com
Say goodbye to the old and welcome the new at this alcohol-free evening of family entertainment and celebration in Whistler Village. Tickets give access to a range of venues with entertainment for all ages including music, arts, crafts, food, dancing and ice skating at Whistler Olympic Plaza. Dec. 31, 6pm. Info: Whistler.com.
all belts
& clothing
%
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
OFF
% western boots
Mens & Ladies Motorcycle Boots
4
25
%
WHISTLER PRESENTS – NYE CELEBRATIONS:
Christmas tree chipping • UBC’s Botanical Garden is hosting a tree-chipping service. Not only will the chips be used for mulch on garden trails, but proceeds will be donated to Thunderbird Elementary School’s food garden.The suggested donation is $5. Drop off your (undecorated) tree at 6804 SW Marine Drive, 9:30am to 4:30pm, from now until January 9. BotanicalGarden.UBC.ca • If your tradition is to wait until the Feast of the Epiphany (the 12th day of Christmas) to take down your tree, on Jan. 6 bring it over to Kingsgate Mall (370 E. Broadway), by donation, from 5:30 to 7pm. Proceeds will be donated to the Mount Pleasant Elementary School to help send their students on field trips. MainStreetBIA.com
WEVancouver.com
As soon as he goes on stage, the connection with the audience is right there,” says Muriel Richards of her husband Dal, who has no plans for retirement. Rob Newell photo
Dal Richards is Mr. New Year’s He’s leading his orchestra for his 78th consecutive New Year’s Eve bash. Next month help him celebrate his 95th birthday at a party at the Orpheum By Martha Perkins
D
al Richards is sitting on a leather couch in his three-storey loft in Gastown. While his wife Muriel slips downstairs to answer an email about one of his upcoming gigs and the photographer sets up his equipment, Richards is talking to Dawn Chubai about what it’s like to perform together on stage. “You make me feel so young,” the bandleader says to Chubai, the Breakfast TV host who moonlights as one of Dal’s Gals. Chubai smiles, channels her inner Frank Sinatra and sings, “You make me feel so young… you make me feel there are songs to be sung.” The notes trail off but the smile stays. “We should do that song,” she says to Richards. That’s when the transformation takes place. I swear that when you look in Richards’ eyes you can see that his brain is working out an arrangement for the song — which instrument will play what, what bar the singers will come in on. He can hear the song, he can feel it, and chances are that his fans will one day hear it exactly the way it’s playing out in his head right now. There, in that moment, is the answer to the question that he’s lived long enough to be asked more than any other: How do you stay so youthful? What’s the secret to being about to turn 95 and knowing that the Orpheum will be packed with people wanting to help you celebrate? It’s the music, yes, but not just the music. It’s the communion
WEVancouver.com
that takes place between him on the stage and the audience on the dance floor. One can’t live without the other: a performer needs a listener and a listener needs to be entertained. Every time he picks up his baton, or his saxophone, he lets the audience know that in appreciation for their presence, he’s going to do his best to make sure they have a good time. At home, Muriel says, Dal is quite a quiet, private person. “But as soon as he goes on stage, the connection with the audience is right there. He’s never tired after a gig because he’s so happy.” Chubai loves to watch the people in the audience respond to Richards and the music. People of all ages come to his performances but it’s the ones who heard the Dal Richards Orchestra in their youth, and perhaps danced while he played at the Panaroma Roof at the Hotel Vancouver, that catch her eye. “You can almost see them revert to their youth, because that’s what Dal’s doing. He seems to be ageless.” Richards will give you a scientific reason why he truly is a “super senior.” It has something to do with telomeres that prevent his DNA from fraying as quickly as it does in most people. It doesn’t hurt that by living in Gastown, he and Muriel can walk almost everywhere. And when the photographer asks if it’s too much to ask Richards to go down one of the swirling staircases for the photo shoot — it’s an automatic reflex to treat a 94-year-old with gentle deference — Richards points out that going up and down those stairs helps keep him fit, too.
Richards is the last person to make age an excuse for not doing something. He’s booked for his 78th consecutive New Year’s Eve dance party, playing at the River Rock Casino on December 31 till one in the morning. “He’s booked for an event next October,” Muriel adds. Forget about the joke about being so old he doesn’t want to buy unripe bananas. “When I said to Dal, ‘Do you want to commit?’, he says ‘Sure, what the hell.’” It won’t be surprising if he’s already starting to think of where he’ll celebrate his 100th birthday.
Early days
The Marpole where Dallas Richards was born in 1918 seems worlds away from today’s modern Vancouver. The family had a radio but it picked up local stations only. Young Dal had an adventurous spirit so he created his own “crystal set” so he could listen to stations from as far away as Cincinnati to Mexico City. In his autobiography, One More Time, he writes that it was magic to dangle “a long wire out the window as an antenna, poking a cat’s whisker wire into a chunk of galena crystal and moving it around until faint sounds came through the static in his earphones.” iPods as revolutionary devices? This was 1927. Were it not for a slingshot accident that caused the removal of his left eye that same year, young Dal might not have dreamed about being one of the musicians he listened to on his crystal set. The future seemed bleak during the long hours he had to stay in bed. Looking for something to take his mind off the loss of his eye,
his doctor noted that since Dal’s mother was a good piano player, could Dal have the makings of a good musician, too? “That was my salvation,” Richards says. “It took me out of my depression.” His first big “break” was a trip to Chicago in 1933 with the Kitsilano Boys Band, which also managed to make enough money for a transAtlantic crossing to London. Dal and his teenaged friends followed the “don’t ask, don’t tell” approach to getting into nightclubs where they’d sip soft drinks and listen to the bands. If he wasn’t hooked before, there was no way he’d give up the dream of being a professional musician now. It would be wrong to look at big band music through a nostalgic prism. You’ve got to remember that in Richards’ days, this was the popular music. The music had energy and verve, the bands were hot commodities. Richards’ autobiography is filled with stories about lively, and sometimes raucous, club nights when the who’s who of jazz and big band music came to Vancouver to play. In the 1950s, big band music’s popularity was weakened by the arrival of the Elvis Presleys, but the two styles of music had enough of a fan base to co-exist. It was the Beatles who sounded big bands’ death knell by creating the music that now filled the concert halls. Bookings dried up and so, for the first time, Richards, had to go looking outside of music for work. He enrolled in BCIT’s hospitality program and started a successful hotel career filling the rooms of Vancouver hotels. Of course, he
never stopped playing — when he was 90 he had 125 gigs — and if he could fill some of those rooms with musicians and the fans who wanted to hear them play, double bonus. Over the years, he’s been given every accolade possible, from the Order of Canada and the Order of BC to keys to the city of Vancouver. Despite the applause, the number of people who ask to shake his hand or have their picture taken with him, he’s still the excited teenager eager to please with his music. “He just doesn’t have ego in his DNA,” his wife Muriel says. He was thrilled and deeply honoured to be ask to carry the Olympic torch in 2010. He writes, researches and hosts a weekly radio show on AM 650, plays every summer at the PNE (where there’s a bench with his name on it) and draws in the crowds every New Year’s Eve at the River Rock. On January 13, you’re invited to help him celebrate his 95th birthday with a music-filled bash with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra at the Orpheum. (Tickets are $30 and are available at VancouverSymphony.ca) “I don’t think about my age,” he says. “I don’t think, ‘Oh, God, I’m 94.’ I’m just grateful.” At the end of One More Time, Richards writes, “Quit? No, I couldn’t handle that. Retirement is not an option. Besides, it would fly in the face of medical advice. ‘Don’t stop blowing your horn, Dal,’ my doctor says. ‘You may drop dead.’” Please, Mr. Richards, follow your doctor’s advice!
DalRichards.com
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
5
En garde! Sword play is a ‘thinking person’s art,’ says founder of Academie Duello By Gen Handley
S
o how’d I do today?” I asked. “I thought you did well,” he said, his eyes looking down at the wood floor. “Yeah? Is there any chance I could beat you in a duel?” His eyes moved up, looking at me directly in the eyes this time. “No, definitely not,” he said somewhat apologetically. This was the conversation I had with my instructor Clint Fernandes following my very humbling first lesson in rapier duelling at the Academie Duello, the conspicuous building on West Hastings. (Curious, you’ve probably peered in through the big windows, but maybe never have ventured in.) Part museum, part training space, the school immediately impresses once you walk in through its doors. In a large open, well-lit room, the school is contained by bare brick walls that are adorned by almost every medieval boyhood fantasy imaginable — Arthurian long swords, shiny suits of armor, ancient-looking scrolls, regal crests and broad-headed axes. The idea for Academie Duello was born in the underground parking lot of a Surrey apartment building where founder Devon Boorman and other teen sword enthusiasts would gather at night to practise and teach the art of European sword fighting. But as the numbers of aspiring swordsmen grew to about 30, the building management
Writer Gen Handley’s first rapier duelling lesson at Academie Duello was more of a workout than he expected. Rob Newell photo became concerned (and probably confused) and eventually kicked the group out. “It was very Highlander,” said Boorman with a laugh. “The interesting thing was that the parking lot had a really hard time with burglaries and the only night of the week that they didn’t have burglaries were the nights we were there. And as soon as we were gone, they started to get burglaries again. Really, what they should have done was to try to get us to come out on more nights.” But from that rag tag group of urban swordsmen came a growing buzz about the Boorman’s unique lessons and soon after, connections began to build, leading to much more official Academie Duello in 2004. With a roster of close to 200 students, the Academie’s curriculum focuses on the weapons and martial arts of Northern Italy during the Middle Ages and Renaissance between 1400 and 1600. In addition to
the muskateerish rapier, the school provides instruction on a wide range weapons including the two-handed long sword (think Conan the Barbarian), the shield-compatible side sword (think Gladiator), the bow and arrow as well as the Vancouver-friendly umbrella, which utilizes the Victoria-era martial art of bartitsu for self-defense (think Sherlock Holmes or a drunk Merry Poppins). My lesson in rapier fencing focused on proper posture and footwork, different lunges to hit my opponent as well as defensive moves against the same lunges directed at me. I was surprised, afterwards, how tired my arms, legs and mind were after the onehour lesson — the feeling was comparable to the mild fatigue after a light yoga lesson. The more intense periods of the instruction required me to be alert on a number of levels, while engaging specific muscles not often used. It’s not as easy as that Zorro makes it out to be.
“Sword play is definitely a thinking person’s art,” Boorman said. “So you have to be somebody who wants to be mentally stimulated while you get a workout. And that’s who we get — we get people who don’t want to go to the gym because they think it’s boring, they want to do something that’s both physical and mental.” Speaking to the animated Boorman, who has been practising Western and Eastern martial arts for more than 20 years, it’s clear in his eyes that the man has found his passion. He has extensive experience not only teaching martial arts and swordplay, but also a lot of years studying and researching the area, becoming a well-known authority in the area. “I’m a pretty diverse martial artist, but I’ve found that working with the rapier has made me a better martial artist in everything I do because of how intricate that weapon is,” he said. “Now, when something falls off my counter at home, I catch it. I’ve had students tell me that when they’ve tripped, they just do a roll. Or a lot of people tell me that when they stand on the bus, they don’t hold onto anything anymore — they’re a rock because your core gets really strong and your balance is really powerful. The real-world benefits are learning what you’re capable of, of balancing your body and getting more fit and developing grace and dexterity — those are the things you want to get out of it.” So based on this deep knowledge of sword combat, could you take on an orc? Boorman laughed — although quite confidently. “Well, certainly, as they’re depicted in movies, I think that orcs tend to be pretty unsophisticated in their sword fighting,” he said. “So yeah, I think so — I could take an orc.”
Thank you B.C. for digging safely in 2012
This year, more calls to BC One Call for natural gas pipeline information and safe digging practices resulted in fewer pipeline hits.
Make the right call BC One Call: 1-800-474-6886 the FortisBC Energy name and logo under license from Fortis Inc. (12-336.1 6FortisBC uses December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
12/2012)
AcademieDuello.com
WEVancouver.com
Grand Opening
MARCH 2013
OPENING MARCH 1ST
Blackbird Theatre puts a fresh spin on Molière’s tale of the world’s most notorious seducer By Christine Lyon
D
on Juan’s reputation as a depraved philanderer often precedes the legend of his unrepentant path to hell. Though many versions of the Spanish folk story have been told, perhaps one of the best known is the 1665 comedy by French playwright Molière. It’s this satiric version that Vancouver’s Blackbird Theatre company will stage Dec. 26 to Jan. 26 at The Cultch. Starring Peter Jorgensen as the master swordsman and seducer who tricks women into sham marriages, and Simon Webb as his servant Sganarelle, Blackbird’s take on Don Juan promises to be an unconventional one. When it comes to the sets, music and costumes, director John Wright says he has drawn inspiration from eras long before and after Molière’s time. “What that means is that, although it was written in the 17th century, you may see the odd mask that comes from earlier,” he explains, adding the checkered stage floor is reminiscent of Renaissance Italy, and one costume was designed with a nod to the 1960s. Meanwhile, the soundtrack features a rock mass in Latin with electric guitar by composer Peter Berring and arias from Mozart’s Don Giovanni, the 18th century opera based on the legend of Don Juan. Blackbird has presented a number of modern classics, such as Waiting for Godot (2011/12) and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (2009/10), based in time periods Wright was content to reproduce. “But as you go further back, I think that there
16th Annual
READER’S CHOICE
2013
needs to be a bridge between the audience of our time and the play of whatever century,” he says. For Wright, the former head of theatre and film at UBC and co-founder of Blackbird Theatre, Molière is one of the greatest comedy writers in European tradition. “He’s a great master and, if you’re going to call yourself a classic theatre company, eventually you have to do Molière.” Blackbird’s promotional tagline for the play promises “three songs, two duels and a trip to hell.” Professional fight choreographer David Bloom was called in to help the cast, including 24-year-old Pippa Mackie, properly wield their daggers, spears and swords. “Even though they’re dulled down, you still have to be very careful,” says Mackie, a National Theatre School graduate who plays multiple roles in Don Juan. “It’s highly choreographed, like a dance would be … you have to know the steps.” Swordplay aside, Mackie says she has the most fun when she trades her weapons for a corset and plays Charlotte, a peasant girl seduced by the irresistible titular character. It’s a chance for her to really dig into Molière’s prose. “[The language] is very clean and clear, not like in modern text where you can kind of just zip through it. You really have to give the words their proper weight,” she says. While Wright describes the production as “pretty uproariously funny at times,” he hopes the audience gets more than just laughs out of it. “It’s a play in which the central character rebels against everything, including God. So really, he’s an anti-hero, and that’s one of the things that makes the play very modern,” he says. “It’s fairly audacious and I don’t think you would see another production like it.” Don Juan runs Dec. 26 to Jan. 26 at The Cultch. Tickets from $17 at TheCultch.com.
Enter to win an iPad We want your opinion. Vote for your favourite local people and places. Go to www.WEVancouver.com and click on CONTESTS.
WEVancouver.com
604.599.9057 | www.BearCreekVilla.com 82 Ave
144 Street
8233 - 140th Street Surrey, BC V3W 5K9
84 Ave
140 Street
Don Juan spans the centuries
SENIORS SUPPORTIVE INDEPENDENT LIVING & RESORT LIVING
King George Hwy
Women’s defences must be up when Don Juan is nearby — Peter Jorgensen and Barbara Kozicki in the Blackbird Theatre production. Emily Cooper photo
Register now to choose your view month Rental rates starting at $1700 per all inclusive
Retirement living on the park
Happy New Year
Francesco and staff wish all our cherished clients, neighbours and visitors a happy, safe and prosperous 2013.
Join us on New Year's Eve for dinner. Enjoy 20% off
all food at the early seating (5:30pm-7:30pm)
Don Francesco Ristorante
860 Burrard Street (between Robson and Smithe) Reservations recommended • 604.685.7770 December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
7
End the year with a champagne pop! There’s nothing like Champagne to get a new year started
CityCellar By Kurtis Kolt
A
s we dash towards the end of 2012, I’m going to end this year’s worth of columns with a bang! Well, a ‘pop’ actually, because we’re talking Champagne. In fact, it’s going to be more of an indulgence since you’ll have to reach a little deeper into your pockets for this week’s recommended wines. If there’s ever an excuse to drink proper Champagne, the stuff coming from the French region sharing the
name, New Year’s Eve fits the bill perfectly. I recently had the good fortune to sit through a fantastic tasting of Champagnes with Trialto Wine Agency’s David Scholefield, a respected local wine guru who has spent the majority of his career importing wines from around the world. Trialto’s specialty is “Wines of People, Place and Time,” and these Champagnes offer all of those things — very special wines to cherish. Don’t be afraid to break the bank this week — my next column will be on killer wines for under 15 bucks. Deal? Perfect.
Gosset Grande Reserve Champagne NV | France | $74.99 | BC Liquor Stores From the oldest wine house in Champagne — the first New Year they rang in was 1585 — comes this complex, fruity and floral widelyavailable sparkler overflowing with
BOXING WEEK SALE
$AVE SAVE 20% ONUP SALE ON ALL ITEMS TOPRICE 40-70% OFF URBAN HOME specializes in every type of Custom-Made upholstered furniture such as sofas, love seats, chairs, wing chairs, accent chairs and hide-a-beds.
$1398
$ 1119
$299
Pierre Gimonnet Extra Brut “Oenophile” 2005 | France | $85ish | Private Wine Stores Referred to as an “emerging superstar” in the Champagne world, the first sip proves why. Made from 100 per cent Chardonnay and expressing lovely minerality. After noting that there was plenty of fruit-driven concentration, I couldn’t help but enjoy the distinct aroma of kettle-cooked potato chips. In fact, go ahead and enjoy a handful while pouring yourself a second glass!
Trialto’s David Scholefield uncorks Gosset Grand Reserve. Kurtis Kolt photo
Varnier-Fanniere Brut Grand Cru NV | France | $78-ish | Private Wine Stores You want to talk hand-crafted, small production? How about this tiny four-hectare estate producing 2,500 cases a year, the equivalent of some of our smallest Okanagan wineries! This one is also 100 per cent Chardonnay, grown on chalk that translates well to the palate, mingling with fresh lemon curd and marmalade slathered on a fresh-baked baguette. Smoked salmon, goat cheese and seared scallops in brown butter would all be a treat!
Jean Milan Brut Grand Cru Blanc de Blancs Spécial NV 375ml | $45ish | Private Wine Stores Intimate New Year’s for two? This half-bottle will certainly do the trick! Another small producer crafting a perfect balance of fruit, minerals and acidity! The citrus is a touch more exotic here, with pomelo, mandarin and a few zests of key lime. It’s so delicious that I like to think of these bottles as “personal-size,” if you
drink straight from the bottle, no one has to know! While the last three Champagnes here are available in a few private wine stores, their supply is quite limited. Kitsilano Wine Cellar had the best stock of all of these, as of this printing. To follow up on any of them, visit Trialto.com. Best wishes for a happy, healthy and peaceful New Year!
Vancouver’s favourite breakfast destination for over 10 years.
$269
Starting from
$98
$798
$ 598
13,000sqf Furniture Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Furniture. SAVE $$$ on:
$1998
$ 1698
• Coffee Tables • Beds • Lamps • Mattresses • & Home Accessories
STYLISH FURNITURE AT AFFORDABLE PRICES
URBANHOME O U T L E T 445 Terminal Ave., Vancouver, BC V6A 2L7
Phone (604) 647-3996 FREE PARKING
Start the New Year Fresh!
604 801 6669 | 1050 Hamilton Street | YaletownDentistry.com
8
lemon fizz and fresh lime zest. Extra points go to this one because the bottle is absolutely gorgeous. A perfect complement to salty snacks and cheeses.
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
...that’s where the city’s finest omelettes are to be found. – Jurgen Gothe, Vancouver Flavours on The Peak 100.5 FM
Best Cit y of the
SILVER WINNER 13th ANNUAL 2010
Breakfast & Lunch | Open Daily 7am – 3 pm 2211 Granville St. @ 6th Ave. 604-737-2857
16th Annual
READER’S CHOICE
2013
Enter to win an iPad We want your opinion.
Go to www.WEVancouver.com and click on contests.
... and a little bubbly for charity
F
rom the 49th parallel of the Champagne region in France to the 49th parallel in Vancouver, comes a non-vintage, identified as Cuvee No. 735, from the Jacquesson cellars. A recent tasting, at the Marquis wine cellars on Davie, showed a beaming, self-possessed, readyto-drink wine with yellow fruits, and white flower suggestions, complemented by a rather long vanilla cream finish. It’s a blend of 47 per cent Chardonnay, 33 per cent Pinot Noir and 20 per cent Meunier assembled from the 2007 crop. Marquis Wines will donate $1 from the sale of each bottle of Jacquesson Champagne ($64.95) to Karma Exchange to fund girls eduction through the Create Change Foundation. — Jean-Edouard de Marenches
WEVancouver.com
One man’s trash, another woman’s obsession
Jew’s harp expert Deirdre Morgan demonstrates how to play the ubiquitous world instrument. Inset: A handful of harps from countries such as Siberia, India and Nepal make up her large collection. Kelsey Klassen photos
By Kelsey Klassen
T
he next time you see something shiny on the ground, perhaps you should bend over and pick it up. To hear Deirdre Morgan tell it, that simple impulse has led the Vancouver musician deep into communities in remote cultures of the world, on a fervent quest to catalogue one of the planet’s most prolific instruments. But the surprise isn’t that Morgan, a classically trained pianist, has spent almost her entire 20s immersed in one very unique facet of world folk music — it’s how it all came about. “This rusty one,” she starts, affectionately picking up a twisted, phallic piece of metal from among dozens on her coffee table, “I found it lying on the floor of a friend’s house seven years ago. Something about the shape caught my eye.” Mistaking it for a bike key, she eventually determined it’s the instrument that makes that high-pitched, sproingy sound in the background of American jug band music. But she didn’t know what it was called. Curiousity piqued, the young UBC ethnomusicology student brought the mystery home with her, starting where we all would — with a Google search for “twangy mouth instrument.” Seated on a cream-coloured couch in her whimsical SoMa apartment, nestled in the sky-lit upper floor of an art-filled sharehouse dubbed The Main Artery, Morgan is at ease, joyous even, as she recalls all the twists her life took after seeing the millions of search results that popped up on her screen. While she rearranges the piles of musical equipment in front of her, her long-haired cat Chili makes the rounds, investigating the interview before plopping down on a choice bit of armrest. Morgan’s piano squats, gently-used, in the corner next to her bed while just above her, and decidedly hard to miss upon arrival, is the galactic star of her tumbleweed collection — which she found (for free) on Craigslist at the peak of an eight-year enthusiasm for the desert drifters. “I have a bit of an obsessive mind about certain things,” she concedes, somewhat bashfully, as she methodically disinfects her entire 75-plus piece Jew’s harp collection. The Jew’s harp or jaw harp or mouth harp, (or any one of a plethora of other names for it), was the strange metallic instrument she found that day. And she is cleaning her collection all these years later because, having become Vancouver’s foremost expert and player of the instrument, she often demonstrates them at music festivals, and she naively told the public at a recent event that they could try hers... only to watch in horror as every person who passed by put one in their mouth. The collection is as expansive as it is nuanced. Lined up on the table, the harps range in millimetres by length and curve, with the largest spanning a person’s palm, and the smallest no more substantial in size than a flash drive. Subtle differences, from ethnic engravings, to rich metallic tones and the shape of the frames, allow Morgan to list off each country of origin effortlessly. She calls her assortment modest, citing a 3,000-piece museum in Siberia (where children are taught to play the harps in school and carry them on strings around their necks) and the inimitable collection of an aficionado in Japan. But for a 28-year-old girl’s bedroom in Vancouver, it’s a delight. The fact that she even discovered this exotic instrument on our rather culturally isolated shores is a strange twist of luck befitting the mysterious history of the harp. Theories abound as to how it spread so widely throughout the world, but it is largely accepted that it originated in Siberia and travelled down the Silk Road trade route, into India, Afghanistan, Europe, and, with the colonial era of conquest, South America and South Africa.
WEVancouver.com
She stops mid-explanation, her striking Welsh beauty splitting into a grin, to add that she thinks there is simply something so universal about the instrument, primordial even, that people just figured it out independently of each other. And then she picks one up and starts to play. Held with the lips against the teeth, she strikes up an Indian rhythm — high and plucky, The ORIGINAL a quick little percussive melody. “I’m not doing anything to the instrument itself and that’s whats Thai Cuisine really cool about it. On its own, this instrument doesn’t really make a Flavoured with Chef Grace’s own sound; it needs to have a resonator and with the human body, the size and shape is totally variable.” . Rich tones, from human voices to the thunder of galloping horses, are created by simply by flicking the flexible metal tongue in the middle, and changing the shape of the mouth, throat, or stomach. She turns to one of her more artisan Siberian pieces and elicits a drone eerily reminiscent of an old man chanting, with words and winJoin us for a great dining experience tery imagery floating throughout. “The vibrations go through your skull,” she squints when she’s finSEASON’S GREETINGS ished. “I’ve been doing it for so long that I like it, it can be very medi1211 Hamilton St. • 604.642.0123 tative, but,” she adds with a laugh, “it totally freaks some people out.” simplythairestaurant.com And then a horrified look crosses her face. “For the longest time, my mom thought it was called a ‘juice harp’, because you drool when you play....” The Jew’s harp, is it stands, is only called so in English circles, and academically has never actually been linked to Israel or the Jewish community at all. The evocative name, which may have originated from the French jouer (to play) is a harmless misnomer that persists in North America even today. Morgan, in fact, presides over the Jew’s Harp Guild as the Monday, December 31 executive director, organizing the North American Jew’s Harp Festival in Bay City, at The Dockside Restaurant Oregon, each year, and is on the board in the Granville Island Hotel of the International Jew’s Harp Society — Featured Entertainment: both volunteer positions that stem from The Steve Kozak Blues Band – Restaurant her community involvement, not only as a musician, but as an academic (she did her Girl On Wax DJ Crystal A’dare – Lounge masters thesis on the subject) and amateur Purchase Event Tickets priced from $24.95 – $129.95 filmmaker (she’s making a documentary). • Three or four-course Dinner Packages with guaranteed “It’s super geeky. I just travel around and seating for the evening go to all these crazy festivals.” • For only $25 "Join the Party" tickets allow guests to drop Once the marketing coordinator for in after dinner to enjoy two rooms of entertainment and Vancouver vocal ensemble Musica Intima, midnight bubbles. Morgan has had to put that job (the one ALSO AVAILABLE: Room and dinner packages including the that has helped her pay for her explorasuperb boutique accommodations of the Granville Island Hotel tions), to bed while she embarks on her are also available. next adventure — a Ph.D dissertation on the Jew’s harp at the School of Oriental and African studies in London. Some might say it was luck that put the harp at Morgan’s feet that day, but when horoscopes and self-help gurus start bandying guidance about how to make the For more information or to reserve your table, please call Dockside at 604-685-7070, most of your new year, perhaps the best email info@docksidevancouver.com, or visit www.docksidevancouver.com. advice is to just look around you, and In the Granville Island Hotel, 1253 Johnston St, Granville Island. allow yourself to get a little obsessed.
AUTHENTIC
CREATIVITY
SIMPLY THAI
Celebrate New Year’s Eve at Dockside Restaurant
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
9
At home on the edge of the world Vancouver performer Emelia Symington Fedy fondly remembers the Christmas she was not eaten by cannibals
off the grid as possible. Much of the local tribe had never seen a white person before, though some of the elders recalled the Western missionaries who built palm-frond churches and taught them hymns. At The Flame: Holiday Season Edition storytelling event held last month at The Cultch, Symington Fedy, a Vancouver-based performer and artistic director at The Chop Theatre, explained why some of those early missionaries never left the subtropical archipelago. “Vanuatu was full of cannibalism, like all of Melanesia was at the time,”
By Christine Lyon
L
iving at the northernmost tip of the Vanuatu islands in the South Pacific, Emelia Symington Fedy and her former boyfriend succeeded in getting as far
BeNTO BOx LUNCH SpeCIAL
9
$ 00 VISIT US AT BOTH OUR LOCATIONS:
869 Hornby Street (at Smithe) • 604-688-7788 3349 Cambie Street • 604-872-3434 Mon-Thur 11am-10pm • Fri-Sat 11am-11pm • Sun/Hols 11:30am-9:30pm tokyojohnsushi.com • Serving Vancouver for 15 years
specials for dec. 27, 2012 to jan. 3, 2013
new year special!
steak & lobster combo only $12.98 includes 1 bacon wrapped tenderloin and 1 lobster tail
Gourmet
aaa baseball cut sirloin steaks
865 Denman St.
bacon wrapped tenderloin steaks
meats
$6.48 each
604.681.2121 now available for new year: fresh duck, goose, pheasant and roasting hams. pre order today!
she said, noting the practice was once an important cultural ritual. By the time she arrived, cannibalism had long been outlawed and she was assured no one would eat her. Plus, “white meat is very, very salty,” she was told. In time, Symington Fedy and her boyfriend became entrenched in the community. When Dec. 24 arrived, the locals showered the pair with food and gifts, though they wondered why this Western couple would want to spend their most important holiday with people who don’t celebrate Christmas. That night, lying on their grass mat, Symington Fedy and her boyfriend heard something in the jungle. “We can tell it’s a large group of people, we can tell they don’t want to be heard,” she said. “I see the shadow of a man in a loin cloth holding a torch, creeping up to my hut.” She and her boyfriend looked at each other, terrified, and both thought the same thing — cannibals. “They’ve been lying to us,” she thought. “They were feeding us food because they were fattening us up. This is their Christmas feast!” And, come to think of it, isn’t salty meat the tastiest kind? Envisioning her slow and painful demise, Symington Fedy
4 for $12.98
From Tourism Vancouver…
V
ancouver continues to build its reputation as an international gateway with two new flight services announced for 2013. On May 13, Lufthansa will launch a daily, non-stop route from Munich to Vancouver. The
traditional tourtiere pies
LOUNGE
CAFE
TAPAS
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
additional flights will complement existing service between Vancouver and Frankfurt, and are expected to increase the number of inbound visitors by approximately 15,000. Delta Airlines’ daily, non-stop service from Vancouver to New York also starts in May, adding to flights already offered by Air Canada and Cathay
Pacific between Vancouver International Airport and John F. Kennedy Airport. The route will assist with capacity requirements for an expected boost in cruise ship passengers next year, with the Port of Vancouver expecting a 20 percent increase in the number of sailings out of Vancouver.
Outstanding collection of Persian: Oriental Carpets LARGE WOOL AND SILKS
CASUAL
Pink Elephant Thai marries old world Thai culture and tradition with all that is fun, sexy and hot—hot pink, that is. Book your Christmas dinner party with us! Enjoy authentic Thai cuisine with our signature cocktails and martinis. DJ every Friday. 1152 Alberni Street 604.646.8899 www.pinkelephantthai.com
10
The Flame: Holiday Season Edition is presented with Metro Vancouver as part of its Create Memories, Not Garbage campaign. Watch local performers tell their memorable Christmas stories at MetroVancouver.org.
A large wholesaler of fine Persian & Oriental carpets is now insolvent. Their assets are ordered to be sold by auction. All items are guaranteed as hand woven, or hand made with natural fibers. Consignments for liquidation from various cancelled exhibitions have been added to this auction.
we offer online home delivery, for more info visit www.tangosgourmetmeats.com
BISTRO
to learn about their culture,” Symington Fedy said. “They wanted to give us the gift back and share with us a bit of our culture.” She listened, full of appreciation, as her neighbours recited the familiar, albeit slightly mispronounced, carols. “I remember standing in my own filth, on the edge of the world, and I have never felt more at home.”
PUBLIC AUCTION
large $9.98 small $5.48
FINE DINING
proceeded to void her bowels. The “fierce fear explosion” shot her backwards and, only at that moment, did her boyfriend decide to check outside. When he opened the door, they were at once serenaded with a phonetic rendition of “O Holy Night.” “The entire community had snuck up on us because they didn’t want to scare us,” Symington Fedy realized. “They had surrounded our hut, and they were holding candles, not torches.” The villagers had secretly been practising three Christmas carols in preparation for the ambush performance. “They were so thankful that we came to spend Christmas with them and that we wanted
Get outta town — more direct flights out of YVR
holiday dining CASUAL
Emelia Symington Fedy once worried she was going to be Christmas dinner during a trip to Vanuatu.
AUCTION: TUESDAY, JANUARY 1, 2 PM VIEW FROM 1 PM
TRADITIONAL AS WELL AS CONTEMPORARY :TURKOMAN, SILK TABRIZ, KASHAN, SHIRAZ GASHGAI, SIRJAN,SAROUG,FINE GABEH, CHOBI, NAIN, TRIABAL BALOUCH, ONE OF A KIND VILLAGE RUGS, MASTER WORK BY RENOWED ARTISANS, RUNNERS, SCATER RUGS, OVERSIZED AND MANY LARGE DINING LIVING ROOM SIZES.
WEST VANCOUVER MASONIC HALL 1763 BELLEVUE AVE., WEST VANCOUVER
Terms: Cash, Visa, MC, Amex, and certified cheques. 15% Buyers premium plus HST in effect. Some items in advertisement are subject to prior sales/error/omissions. All sales are final. For more info call 1.604.808.6808. Licensed auctioneers.
WEVancouver.com
Free Will Astrology By Rob Brezsny • Week of December 27 ARIES (March 21-April 19): In The Matrix, the heroes are able to instantaneously acquire certain complex skills via software that’s downloaded directly into their brains. In this way, the female hacker named Trinity masters the art of piloting a military M-109 helicopter in just a few minutes. If you could choose a few downloads like that, Aries, what would they be? In 2013, I expect that your educational capacity will be exceptional. While you may not be able to add new skills as easily as Trinity, you’ll be pretty fast and efficient. So what do you want to learn? Choose wisely. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Are you familiar with the fable of the golden goose? The farmer who owned it became impatient because it laid only one gold egg per day. So he killed it, thinking he would thereby get the big chunk of gold that must be inside its body. Alas, his theory was mistaken. There was no chunk. From then on, of course, he no longer got his modest daily treasure. I nominate this fable to be one of your top teaching stories of 2013. As long as you’re content with a slow, steady rate of enrichment, you’ll be successful. Pushing extra hard to expedite the flow might lead to problems. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Here are some of the experiences I hope to help you harvest in 2013: growing pains that are interesting and invigorating rather than stressful; future shock that feels like a fun joyride rather than a bumpy rumble; two totally new and original ways to get excited; a good reason to have faith in a dream that has previously been improbable; a fresh supply of Innocent Crazy-Wise Love Truth; and access to all the borogoves, mome raths, and slithy toves you could ever want. CANCER (June 21-July 22): In “Actuality, Reminiscence, and Fabrication,” artist Deborah Sullivan includes a piece called “Penance 1962.” It consists of a series of handwritten statements that repeats a central theme: “I must not look at boys during prayer.” You probably have an analogous rule lodged somewhere in the depths of your unconscious mind — an outmoded prohibition or taboo that may still be subtly corroding your life energy. The coming year will be an excellent time to banish that ancient nonsense for good. If you were Deborah Sullivan, I’d advise you to fill a whole notebook page with the corrected assertion: “It’s OK to look a boys during prayer.” LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): For years, the gravestone of Oscar Wilde was covered with kiss-shaped lipstick marks that were left by his admirers. Unfortunately, Wilde’s descendants decided to scour away all those blessings and erect a glass wall around the tomb to prevent further displays of affection. In my astrological opinion, Leo, you should favour the former style of behavior over the latter in 2013. In other words, don’t focus on keeping things neat and clean and well-ordered. On the contrary: Be extravagant and uninhibited in expressing your love for the influences that inspire you — even at the risk of being a bit unruly or messy. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): In 2013, I hope to conspire with you to raise your levels of righteous success. If you’re a struggling songwriter, I’ll be pushing for you to get your music out to more people — without sacrificing your artistic integrity. If you’re a kindergarten teacher, I’ll prompt you to fine-tune and deepen the benevolent influence you have on your students. If you’re a business owner, I’ll urge you to ensure that the product or service you offer is a well-honed gift to those who use it. As I trust you can see, Virgo, I’m implying that impeccable ethics will be crucial to your ascent in the coming year. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): After Libran poet Wallace Stevens won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1955, Harvard Uni-
WEVancouver.com
versity offered him a job as a full professor. But he turned it down. He couldn’t bear leaving his day job as the vice-president of an insurance company. I suspect that in the first half of 2013, you will come to a fork in the road that may feel something like Stevens’ quandary. Should you stick with what you know or else head off in the direction of more intense and unpredictable stimulation? I’m not here to tell you which is the better choice; I simply want to make sure you clearly identify the nature of the decision. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In 2013, I will try to help you retool, reinvent, and reinvigorate yourself in every way that’s important to you. I will encourage you to reawaken one of your sleeping aptitudes, recapture a lost treasure, and reanimate a dream you’ve neglected. If you’re smart, Scorpio, you will reallocate resources that got misdirected or wasted. And I hope you will reapply for a privilege or position you were previously denied, because I bet you’ll win it this time around. Here are your words of power for the year ahead: resurrection and redemption. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Based on experiments at the Large Hadron Collider, a team of physicists in France and Switzerland announced that they had tentatively discovered the Higgs Boson, which is colloquially known as the “God particle.” What’s all the fuss? In the San Francisco Chronicle, Leah Garchik quoted an expert who sought to explain: “The Higgs boson is the WD40 and duct tape of the universe, all rolled into one.” Is there a metaphorical equivalent of such a glorious and fundamental thing in your life, Sagittarius? If not, I predict you will find it in 2013. If there already is, I expect you will locate and start using its 2.0 version. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In 2013, I pledge to help you bring only the highest-quality influences and self-responsible people into your life. Together we will work to dispel any unconscious attraction you might have to demoralizing chaos or pathological melodrama. We will furthermore strive to ensure that as you deepen and fine-tune your self-discipline, it will not be motivated by self-denial or obsessive controlfreak tendencies. Rather, it will be an act of love that you engage in so as to intensify your ability to express yourself freely and beautifully. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “Genius is the ability to renew one’s emotions in daily experience,” said French painter Paul Cezanne. Many of us replay the same old emotions over and over again — even in response to experiences that are nothing like the past events when we felt those exact feelings. So a genius might be someone who generates a fresh emotion for each new adventure. Here’s another possible interpretation of Cezanne’s remark: It can be hard to get excited about continually repeating the basic tasks of our regular routines day after day. But a genius might be someone who is good at doing just that. By both of these definitions, 2013 could be a genius year for you Aquarians. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Home is not just the building where you live. It’s more than the community that gives you support and the patch of earth that comforts you with its familiarity. Home is any place where you’re free to be your authentic self; it’s any power spot where you can think your own thoughts and see with your own eyes. I hope and trust that in 2013 you will put yourself in position to experience this state of mind as often as possible. Do you have any ideas about how to do that? Brainstorm about it on a regular basis for the next six months. Homework: Check out Part One of my three-part audio forecasts of your destiny in 2013, go to http://bit.ly/ BigPicture2012. .
Give the gift that comes with a gift! Receive a bonus $10 White Spot Gift Certificate valid for the New Year* when you purchase $50 worth of White Spot Gift Cards. Visit any of our restaurants or online for more details.
whitespot.ca *While quantities last. Bonus $10 White Spot Gift Certificate valid from January 2nd to March 31st, 2013.
GRANVILLE & DRAKE 718 Drake Street 604-605-0045
GEORGIA & CARDERO 1616 West Georgia Street 604-681-8034
CAMBIE & 13TH 2850 Cambie Street 604-873-1252
BROADWAY & LARCH 2518 West Broadway 604-731-2434
OAKRIDGE CENTRE 41st & Cambie 604-621-2820
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
11
Movie Reviews
Discover the freedom that balance can bring!
Parental Guidance is a laughable mess Parental Guidance
Rolfing is Manual Therapy which strengthens the body’s structural integrity and functional resources. In addition to addressing the symptoms of injury, Rolfing works on the adaptive and compensatory changes that can predispose— or be the result of—an injury. Rolfing can help you move again.
STEPHEN G. INABA
Directed by Andy Flickman Starring Billy Crystal, Bette Midler It took decades for showbiz veterans Billy Crystal and Bette Midler to star in a film together; unfortunately their first big-screen outing is a forgettable mess. When helicopter parents Alice (Marisa Tomei) and Phil (Tom Everett Scott) leave town for a work commitment, they enlist the help of grandparents Artie (Crystal) and Diane (Midler) to take care of their three kids. Things soon go awry once old school parenting techniques clash with 21st century child behaviour. Hilarity is apparently supposed to ensue but it never even comes close, in fact most of the film’s gags result in awkward moments, potty humour and recurring jokes that overstay their welcome; case in point, one of the
Cruise over reaches in the hero department
Advanced Certified Rolfer Registered Massage Practitioner
#730-1285 W. Broadway • tel: 604.738.1012
JACK REACHER
Starring Tom Cruise, Rosamund Pike Directed by Christopher McQuarrie www.stepheninaba.com Antihero Jack Reacher may not play by the rules but the film bearing his name is strictly by-the-numbers. And while not everything on screen adds up, writer-director Christopher McQuarthere is more online rie cracks the equation for some serviceable entertainment. Just www.WEVancouver.com don’t expect Tom Cruise’s latest action figure to return for a second tour of duty. Movies don’t come much more disposable than this. When a sniper takes out five GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD NOMINATIONS Pittsburg civilians, a disturbed Iraq vet (Joseph Sikora) is arrested in what seems to be an open-and-shut case. However, rather than signing a BEST ACTOR BEST SCREENPLAY BEST ACTRESS BRADLEY COOPER DAVID O. RUSSELL JENNIFER LAWRENCE confession, the suspect demands the summoning of Reacher (Cruise), a military cop turned vigilante. Team-
4
®
MUSICAL/COMEDY
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR
“THE BEST ROMANTIC COMEDY OF THE YEAR!” CRITICS’ CHOICE AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING
BEST PICTURE
BEST DIRECTOR • BEST ACTOR • BEST ACTRESS • BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR BRADLEY
JENNIFER
ROBERT
COOPER LAWRENCE DE NIRO JACKI
WEAVER
CHRIS AND TUCKER
WRITTEN FOR THE SCREEN AND DIRECTED BY
DAVID O. RUSSELL
WINNER 2012 PEOPLE’S CHOICE AWARD
SilverLiningsPlaybookMovie.com ARTWORK©2012 THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
COARSE LANGUAGE
now playing
festival cinemas 1:15, 4:20, 7:10, 9:45 fifth avenue www.festivalcinemas.CA
2110 burrard street • 604-734-7469
FACEBOOK.COM/ALLIANCEFILMS
YOUTUBE.COM/ALLIANCEFILMS
VANCOUVER: SLIVER LININGS PLAYBOOK
kids is obsessed with calling Artie “Fartie”. Crystal and Midler have decent chemistry and even exhibit some genuine whimsy in a touching scene where they perform an a cappella duet of The Book of Love. Sadly though, the rest of the movie is chock-full of clichéd bits, classic overacting courtesy of the overbearing Tomei and terribly weak writing. One of the film’s failed attempts at comedy includes Crystal being hit in the crotch with a baseball bat before proceeding to vomit on a young child; a painfully Thor Diakow jarring example of the lowbrow comedy the actors are forced to endure throughout the film. Crystal and Midler may provide some laughs and there is a decent comedy buried somewhere in this schlocky muck but Parental Guidance closes out 2012 on a rather silly and unnecessary note.
ing with a defence attorney (Rosamund Pike), Reacher digs for the truth and burrows his way to an underground figure (Werner Herzog) who’s so hardcore that he once chewed off his own fingers to combat frostbite. While much has been made of Cruise failing to measure up to the 6’5” frame attributed to Reacher in Lee Child’s novels, it’s actually his bearing that proves more problematic. Radiating confidence and competence, Cruise deprives us of the enjoyment derived from discovering what a character is capable of. Instead, we’re left to get our kicks from Reacher’s old-school methods which see him shunning cell phones and refusing to resort to Google searches when cracking skulls can elicit the same results. It’s fitting then that the highlight here is a time-honoured car chase. And as Reacher’s vintage American muscle car rumbles along, repeatedly picking up speed only to crash into an obstacle and emerge a little wonkier, it’s apparent that this sequence is also the perfect encapsulation of the film as a whole. — Curtis Woloschuk
Send this movie to the guillotine LES MISÉRABLES
Starring Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, Anne Hathaway Directed by Tom Hooper Abandoning the hallowed halls of Buckingham Palace for the squalid slums of 19th Century France, Tom Hooper (The King’s Speech) also forsakes his workmanlike brand of filmmaking in favour of a bombastic shooting style befitting a “musical phenomenon.” The camera swirls, swoops, and tilts incessantly, while fisheye lenses stretch and distort the barrage of images. Given all this visual mayhem, one would hope that the familiar songbook might serve to anchor the proceedings. However, Hooper’s decision to have his cast sing live on set (rather than lip sync) only furthers the discord. Consequently, this adaptation’s strongest moment arrives when the camera settles on Fantine (Anne Hathaway) for several minutes as the tuberculous-ridden prostitute bellows the impassioned I
Dreamed a Dream. Not long for this world, Fantine grants custody of her young daughter Cosette (who grows up to become the warbling Amanda Seyfried) to Jean Valjean (Hugh Jackman), a reformed prisoner in search of redemption. Locked in a relentless-if-glacial pursuit of Valjean is Javert (Russell Crowe), a policeman seemingly oblivious to the fact he’s devoted two decades to bringing a bread thief to justice. Given that Hooper doesn’t much care if his actors are singing in key, it’s unsurprising that he exhibits similar disregard to ensuring that his film maintains a consistent tone. In his clumsy hands, the supposed comic relief supplied by Helena Bonham Carter and Sacha Baron Cohen treads closer to corporal punishment. If nothing else, we share some of the suffering endured by the French revolutionaries in the film’s final hour. However, there’s to be no reward for our sacrifice. — Curtis Woloschuk
FILE NAME:
! N I W O T S Y A D L FINA
DATE: WED DEC 19 ARTIST: RA
PHONE: 416 862 8181 SIZE: 4.33" X 5" EXT. 255
Choose from 3 stunning homes or take the Cash!
ONE_4.33X5AF_SLP
Jan.15 Millionaire! DEADLINE midnight Start your New Year as a Multi-
LIVE in Vancouver with $2.5 Million Cash Prize!
Easy Order: MillionaireLottery.com
or 604-602-5848 Winner will choose 1 prize option; other prize options will not be awarded. Rules of Play: MillionaireLottery.com Chances are 1 in 117,000 (total tickets for sale) to win a grand prize. Chances are 1 in 482,600 (total tickets for sale) to win a 50/50 prize. Problem Gambling Help Line 1-888-795-6111 www.bcresponsiblegambling.ca
12
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
Know your limit, play within it.
IONAIRE MILL DESIGNER HOME
LOTTERY VG
N H & IO D AT U BC H O S P I TA L F O U N
Make this your best NewYear ever!
BC Gaming Event Licence #47690 50/50 BC Gaming Event Licence #47691
19+ to play! WEVancouver.com
out after dark OUT AFTER DARK is a weekly feature highlighting social and cultural events around Vancouver. Got an upcoming event? E-mail us at outafterdark@WEVancouver.com. On Twitter: #OADVan
1
with
MAY GLOBUS
2
Win a Redbox movie package It’s New Year’s Day. You and your kids stayed up way past your normal bedtime and now you’re not feeling very energetic. Why not spend the day snuggled under a blanket on the couch, eating popcorn and watching movies? That is what awaits the winner of a prize pack from Redbox. It includes everything you need for a lazy day at home — a blanket, popcorn bowl, popcorn, free movie rental coupons and three DVDs perfect for watching with the family: Brave, We Bought a Zoo and Kung Fu Panda Holiday. Go to WEVancouver.com/contests for your chance to win. Meanwhile, don’t forget to support your favourite businesses by voting for them in our Best of the City survey on the contest page. You could win an iPad!
1 Chun Che, Lieutenant Governor Judith
3
Guichon, Jose Carreno and Tiler Peck of the New York City Ballet backstage on opening night of Goh Ballet’s Nutcracker Dec. 19. 2 Chan Hon Goh congratulates dancers Diego Siqueira and Yoshiko Kamikusa. 3 Glowbal Group’s Emad Yacoub and Shannon Bosa Yacoub donated food for 3,000 people at Union Gospel Mission Dec. 17. Chefs and staff donated their time, too. 4 Goldie Hoffman, of Mainly Main magazine, pets a winning Mount Pleasant BIA wreath at Vancouver Animal Wellness Hospital Dec. 17.
4
Get the lowest price on tires, Guaranteed. *
Robson MedicaL
Unbeatable prices on top name brands like Michelin, BF Goodrich, Firestone, Toyo and more.
dr. peter J. marr, Family physician & associates
200-1525 Robson street
604 669-5669 • www.robsonmedicalclinic.com
New Patients Welcome
Families, children, men, women, seniors & pre-natal.
appointment preFerred open Monday to Friday 9:00aM - 4:00pM
ABBOTSFORD THE HONDA WAY 604-857-1430 D8292 CHILLIWACK MurrAY HONDA 604-792-2724 D8441
PORT MOODY/ COQUITLAM WESTWOOD HONDA 604-461-0633 D5933 WHITE ROCK WHITE rOCK HONDA 604-536-2111 D6911
LANGLEY JONKEr HONDA 604-530-6281 D8825 MAPLE RIDGE/ PITT MEADOWS MArV JONES HONDA 604-465-5464 D5108
VANCOUVER CArTEr HONDA 604-736-2821 D7713 VANCOUVER KINGSWAY HONDA 604-873-3676 D8508
VANCOUVER VANCOuVEr HONDA 604-324-6666 D8185 SURREY SurrEY HONDA 604-583-7421 D10482
RICHMOND rICHMOND HONDA 604-207-1888 D5597A BURNABY SOUTH/ NEW WEST OPENrOAD HONDA 604-525-4667 D7825
BURNABY NORTH HAPPY HONDA 604-294-2111 D5692 NORTH & WEST VANCOUVER PACIFIC HONDA 604-984-0331 D5583
bchonda.com *Honda dealer will match any competitor’s price on an identical tire. The competitor’s lower tire price must be verifiable (advertised price, flyer, phone call, etc.). Whether a tire is “identical” will be determined by looking at: product features, brand/manufacturer, model/size/volume & warranty. Any questions whether a tire is “identical” will be resolved on a case-by-case basis by the Dealer or General Manager. The Lowest Price Guarantee program applies to competitor’s regular and sale price. For all offers license, insurance, applicable taxes and registration are extra. Dealer may sell for less. Dealer trade may be required. Offers subject to change or cancellation without notice. Terms and conditions apply. Visit www.bchonda.com or see your Honda retailer for full details.
WEVancouver.com BCHDService-October-Tires-7.33x7.14.indd
1
12-10-29 1:59 PM
December 27, 2012 – January 2, 2013
13
14 WEVancouver.com
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 7
OBITUARIES
Thursday, December 27, 2012 WE Vancouver
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 33
INFORMATION ADVERTISE in the LARGEST OUTDOOR PUBLICATION IN BC The 2013-2015 BC Freshwater Fishing Regulations Synopsis
The most effective way to reach an incredible number of BC Sportsmen & women. Two year edition- terrific presence for your business.
Please call Annemarie 1.800.661.6335 email: ďŹ sh@blackpress.ca
TRAVEL 74
TIMESHARE
CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO Risk Program STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call Us NOW. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248
TRAVEL 75
TRAVEL
Condominium Hotel. 1-2-3 BR Condominiums. 825 - 1850 sq. ft. Convenient Beach Access, Heated Pool/Hot Tub, In-room Washer /Dryer, Flat Screen TV’s, Free Wi-Fi Private Balconies, Daily Housekeeping, Handicapped Rooms Available. Weekly / Monthly Rates. Free Local Calls. Free Local Beach Transportation. Conveniently Located to Shops and Restaurants. www.crystalpalmsbeachresort.com 1-888-360-0037, 11605 Gulf Blvd. Treasure Island FL 33706 HAWAII ON THE MAINLAND, healthy low-cost living can be yours. Modern Arenal Maleku Condominiums, 24/7 secured Community, Costa Rica “friendliest country on earth�! 1-780-952-0709; www.CanTico.ca.
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
130
$294.00 DAILY MAILING POSTCARDS! Guaranteed Legit Work. Register Online! www.ThePostcardGuru.com ZNZ Referral Agents Needed! $20$95/Hr! www.FreeJobPosition.com Multiple $100 Payments To Your Bank! www.SuperCashDaily.com More Amazing Opportunities @ www.LegitCashJobs.com
Required for an Alberta Trucking Company. One Class 1 Driver. Must have a minimum of 5 years experience pulling low boys and driving off road. Candidate must be able to pass a drug test and be willing to relocate to Edson, Alberta. Scheduled Days Off. Call Lloyd 780-723-5051
Help Wanted!!! Make $1000 a week mailing brochures from home! FREE Supplies! Helping HomeWorkers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity! No experience required. Start Immediately! www.mailing-ca.com
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES TRAIN TO BE AN Apartment/ Condominium Manager at home! We have jobs across Canada. Thousands of graduates working. 32 years of success! Government certified. www.RMTI.ca or 1-800-665-8339, 604-681-5456.
WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com
124
FARM WORKERS
FARM labourer - fertilize, spray, cultivate, irrigate crops. Operate/maintain farm mach/equip starting Mar.1/13 @ $10.25/hr Gill & Sons Berryland 15155 40 Ave Surrey. Fax resume 604-574-1306.
125
FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE
HELP WANTED
Make it yours. Call 604-708-2628 caregiving@plea.bc.ca www.plea.bc.ca
130
HELP WANTED
An Alberta Construction Company is hiring Dozer and Excavator Operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experienced in oilfield road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Construction at 780-723-5051.
HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES
2 Food Service Supervisor reqd.Sal $12.00/hr, F/T,Pmt, 1+ yrs exp. Duties:Supervise and coordinate activities of staff.Establish work schedule.Estimate/order ingredients /supplies.Maintain records of stock/repairs/sale/wastage.Train staff in job duties,sanitation and safety procedures.Ensure that food and service meet quality control standards.Take customer’s orders.Lang: English.Contact Derrick from A&W Restaurant.Work at various locations in Vancouver,BC. Apply at fdc.foods@yahoo.ca 3 Food Counter Attendant reqd. Sal $10.50/hr, F/T, Pmt, No exp. reqd. Duties: Take customers’ orders. Prepare, heat and finish simple food items. Serve customers at counters. Use manual and electrical appliances to clean, peel, slice and trim foodstuffs. Portion and wrap or serve food. Package take-out food. Stock shelves and refrigerators. General cleaning of restaurant and work area. Lang: English. Contact Derrick from A&W Restaurant. Work at various locations in Vancouver, BC. Apply at fdc.foods@yahoo.ca
BC’s largest High School Cafeteria Company with over 50 locations is now interviewing. Team leaders, counter attendants / cashiers / food prep, 4-8 hour shift during the school year to start at a high school near you.
COOK ~ HOST / HOSTESS SERVER ~ BARTENDER Tabla Bistro Ltd. is Hiring F/T Cook ($12.00/hr) Host/Hostess ($10.50/hr) Server ($10.25/hr) & Bartender (14.00/hr). Mail: 1149 Granville Street, Vancouver BC V6Z 1M1 or Fax 604-681-6373. NIRVANA Restaurant at 2313 Main Street in Vancouver is Hiring F/T FOOD BEVERAGE & SERVERS. No experience required. Salary would be $10.50/hr and min work 40hrs/ week. Must be available for weekends and evenings. Knowledge of Hindi or Punjabi an asset. Please send your resume to: 604-876-2911 or email at: ddhani@yahoo.com or meet in person at restaurant.
PROFESSIONALS/ MANAGEMENT
WHLS grower of native plants seeking creative, experienced individual with passion for environment to increase market share and sales. Degree req’d. Part-time/ flexible hours. Submit resume by Jan 10th to: opportunity@natsnursery.com
TRADES, TECHNICAL
PERSONAL SERVICES
Advertise your job postings with ease and reliability. We can help you source candidates locally or province wide with our proven advertising methods in over 96 community publications. Contact us today for customized packages and pricing!
Email: lisa@blackpress.ca
Need CA$H Today?
287
HOOT & OWL CUSTOM TILE WORK or BATHROOMS CUSTOM CARPENTRY
Own A Vehicle? Borrow Up To $25,000
Reno’s Additions & Kitchens
Cash same day, local office.
www.PitStopLoans.com 604-777-5046
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
Additions, Home Improvements Restorations, Renovations, & New Construction. Specializing in Concrete, Forming, Framing & Siding. 604-218-3064
Drywall work/rubbish removal
Email: hoot&owl@telus.net
188
LEGAL SERVICES
Gary 604-339-5430
CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 260
320
MOVING & STORAGE
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555. 2guyswithatruck.ca Moving & Storage Visa OK. 604-628-7136
ELECTRICAL
AFFORDABLE MOVING Local & Long Distance
$45/Hr
C & C Electrical Mechanical • ELECTRICAL • FULL PLUMBING SERVICES • HVAC GAS FITTING *Free Est. *Licensed *Insured 24hr. Emergency Service
604-475-7077
281
From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos
604-537-4140 SPARTAN Moving Ltd. Fast & Reliable. Insured Competitive rates. Wknd Specials. Call Frank: (604) 435-8240
GARDENING
WEED FREE Mushroom Manure 13 yards - $180 or Well Rotted 10 yds - $200. 604-856-8877
115
EDUCATION
115
EDUCATION
BECOME AN OPTICIAN IN ONLY 6 MONTHS Optical Dispensing is a high-growth industry with good pay and job security. Train for a “Career With Vision�. START YOUR OWN BUSINESS!!
startsFeb. Feb.20th, 11th, 2013 $ starts 2012 $ $ Hurry
BC B.C.COLLEGE COLLEGEOF OFOPTICS OPTICS #208 - 10070 King George Blvd., Surrey, BC www.bccollegeofoptics.ca
604.581.0101 151
PYRAMID CORPORATION is now hiring! Instrument Technicians and Electricians for various sites across Alberta. Send resume to: hr@pyramidcorporation.com or fax 780-955-HIRE.
Reach Out To QualiďŹ ed Candidates Today!
FINANCIAL SERVICES
MONEYPROVIDER.COM. $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877-776-1660.
Fax resume to 604-503-0951.
160
LOOKING TO HIRE?
182
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
No Credit Checks!
134
Canuel Caterers
Some great kids aged 12 to 18 who need a stable, caring home for a few months. Are you looking for the opportunity to do meaningful, fulfilling work? PLEA Community Services is looking for qualified applicants who can provide care for youth in their home on a full-time basis or on weekends for respite. Training, support and remuneration are provided. Funding is available for modifications to better equip your home. A child at risk is waiting for an open door.
PERSONAL SERVICES
173E
HEALTH PRODUCTS
GET 50% OFF - Join Herbal Magic this week and get 50% Off. Lose weight quickly, safely and keep it off, proven results! Call Herbal Magic today! 1-800-854-5176.
182
FINANCIAL SERVICES
If you own a home or real estate, ALPINE CREDITS can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161.
WE Vancouver Thursday, December 27, 2012
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
WEVancouver.com 15
PETS 477
FIVE STAR ROOFING
www.paintspecial.com Running this ad for 8yrs
GL ROOFING. Cedar shakes, Asphalt Shingles, Flat roofs, WCB Clean Gutters. $80. 604-240-5362
PAINT SPECIAL 3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour
626
Mainland RooďŹ ng Ltd.
(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.
25 yrs in rooďŹ ng industry
Northstar Painting Ltd.- The Residential Specialists. BIG jobs, Small jobs - We do it all! Interior and Exterior Projects. Master Painters at Students Rates. WCB Safe, Reliable, Efficient & Quality Paint. 778.245.9069
Family owned & operated. Fully ins. We do Cedar Shakes, conversions, concrete tiles, torchon, fibreglass shingles, restoration & repairs. 20 yr labour warr. 604-427-2626 or 723-2626
Bluenose Pitbull Pups genetics/ razoredge UKC reg, 6M/1F, 9wks $500-$1500. 778-237-2824.
www.mainlandroof.com
356
NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com
RUBBISH REMOVAL
RECYCLE-IT! PLUMBING
• Hvac Gas Fitting • Electrical *Free Est. *Licensed *Insured 24hr. Emergency Service
C & C Electrical Mechanical
604-475-7077
Recycled Earth Friendly
548
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673
Auto Financing 1.800.910.6402
The Scrapper
560
220.JUNK(5865)
Serving The Lower Mainland Since 1988
PETS PETS
CANE CORSO MASTIFF all blues 6F 2M, ultimate family guardian ready to go $1000 (604)308-5665 CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866 CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are Spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977
GREAT GIFT IDEA!! ChillSpot is The COOLEST Dog Bed-A new and innovative, thermodynamically cooled dog bed, that enhances the cool tile surfaces our pets rely on during the warm weather months. Use promo code COOLGIFT For 10 % off! www.chillspot.biz
German Shepherd/Lab pups, 4F/1M, 2 blk, 2 wht, 1 mix, Jan 1. (604)316-2757. No Sunday calls
13-003B 2000 FORD EXPEDITION V.I.N.: 1FMPU18LXYLA81652 Registered Owner: LEE, JIN HO Indebtedness: $4019.68 13-003C 2005 SUZUKI GRAND VITARA V.I.N.: JS3TX92V254110104 Registered Owner: WIWCHAR, DEAN MICHAEL Indebtedness: $1814.40
13-003F 2003 HONDA ACCORD V.I.N.: 1HGCM72653A801549 Registered Owner: GUO, YUAN Indebtedness: $4668.16
DreamTeam Auto Financing “0� Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals
627
13-003G 1994 JEEP YJ SPORT V.I.N.: 1J4FY19P4RP443047 Registered Owner: WEST, CHRISTOPHER ANTHONY Indebtedness: $4464.32
1-800-961-7022
HOMES WANTED
www.iDreamAuto.com DL# 7557 WE BUY HOUSES! Older House • Damaged House Moving • Estate Sale • Just Want Out • Behind on Payments Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-626-9647
WAREHOUSEMAN LIEN By virtue of WAREHOUSMAN’S LIEN for SIGNAL WAREHOUSING, we will dispose of the following units to recover the amount of indebtedness noted plus any additional cost of storage, seizure and sale.
RENTALS 706
APARTMENT/CONDO
Day of sale is Thursday January 3, 2013@ 12:00 NOON. Absolute Bailiffs Inc. 20119 113B Avenue, Maple Ridge, B.C., V2X 0Z1 Contact: Sheldon Stibbs (604) 522-2773.
13-004 MISCELLANEOUS TILE Registered Owner: BEACH BUM TILES and GERRY WALTERS Indebtedness: $5563.97
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?
Chihuahua pups- males, 6-8 lbs full grown. L/C. 10 wks. Vet checked 1st shots. $550/ea. (778)708-6771
13-003A 2006 CHEVROLET COBALT V.I.N.: 1G1AM15B067632885 Registered Owner: CHONG, JOSEPH BAK Indebtedness: $6863.36
13-003E 2005 JAGUAR S-TYPE V.I.N.: SAJXA01T05FN34996 Registered Owner: AYMONG, AMYOT MICHAEL Indebtedness: $3878.56
MISC. FOR SALE
BIG BUILDING SALE... “�THIS IS A CLEARANCE SALE. YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS!�� 20x20 $3,985. 25X24 $4,595. 30X36 $6,859. 35X48 $11,200. 40X52 $13,100. 47X76 $18,265. One End wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-6685422. www.pioneersteel.ca.
WAREHOUSEMAN LIEN By virtue of WAREHOUSMAN’S LIEN for DRAKE TOWING LTD., we will dispose of the following units to recover the amount of indebtedness noted plus any additional cost of storage, seizure and sale.
13-003D 2003 PONTIAC VIBE V.I.N.: 5Y2SL62883Z415346 Registered Owner: ARROWLOU, YUALCHEN ACHMAD and ROYAL BANK OF CANADA Indebtedness: $5420.80
FURNITURE
AT LAST! An iron filter that works. IronEater! Fully patented Canada/U.S.A. Removes iron, hardness, smell, manganese. Sine 1957. Visit our 29 innovative inventions; www.bigirondrilling.com. Phone 1-800-BIG-IRON
But Dead Bodies!!
Canuck Roofing All Roof Repairs Any job big or small. Free Est. *WCB *Insured *BBB 778-772-1969
845
*NEW QUEEN MATTRESS SET* Pillow Top in Plastic. Mfr. Warranty Must Sell $200 ~ 604-484-0379
www.recycleitcanada.ca
Haul Anything...
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
No qr code reader? Text info: 778.786.8271
• Twins • Fulls • Queens • Kings 100’s in stock! www.Direct Liquidation.ca (604)294-2331
bradsjunkremoval.com
10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005
LOOKING FOR A DEAL ON A NEW VEHICLE? Save up to 40% OFF your next new vehicle... No games or gimmicks, deal direct with local dealerships. www.newcarselloff.com
HOUSES FOR SALE
BEAUTIFUL 5 Bdrm, 2 1/2 Bath home built in ‘05 on a large corner lot that backs onto an elementary school. 2nd floor boasts a spacious open area with plenty of nat. light that could be an office or fam. rm. 2-car gar., rear patio, A/C, Stove, DW., 3 new APPLS; fridge., W&D. Formerly valued at 261K. Interested in sale, trade or credit of $149.9K towards a house, cottage or land in ONT. See ad #430956976 on Kijiji GTA, or search “Buckeye� under “Real Estate�, or call 905-439-7773. Avail. for viewings by appt. Dec. 26-Jan.5.
CARS - DOMESTIC
MATTRESSES starting at $99
604.587.5865
477
818
AUTO FINANCING
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
On Time, As Promised, Service Guaranteed!
604.
810
TRANSPORTATION
PUGS, 2 fawn female, ready now. $400. 2 male/2 females, ready Jan 2. $600. (604)796-2727/799-2911
JUNK REMOVAL • Estate Services • Electronics • Appliances • Old Furniture • Construction • Yard Waste • Concrete • Drywall • Junk • Rubbish • Mattresses & More!
FULL PLUMBING SERVICES
ACREAGE
603
TRANSPORTATION
20 Acres FREE! Buy 40-Get 60 acres. $0-Down, $168/mo. Money Back Guarantee, NO CREDIT CHECKS. Beautiful Views. Roads/Surveyed. Neaer El Paso, Texas. 1-800-843-7537 www.sunsetranches.com
All kinds of re-roofing & repairs. Free est. Reasonable rates. (604)961-7505, 278-0375
604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley
338
PETS
REAL ESTATE
Day of sale is Thursday January 3, 2013@ 12:00 NOON. Absolute Bailiffs Inc. 20119 113B Avenue, Maple Ridge, B.C., V2X 0Z1 Contact: Sheldon Stibbs (604) 522-2773.
STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca www.creditdrivers.ca
more valuable websites‌
Save time, save money.
FRONT & REAR BRAKE SPECIAL
50
VANCOUVER’S LARGEST INDIAN BUFFET NEW A LA CARTE DINNER MENU!
WE ARE OPEN NEW YEAR’S DAY!
% OFF PADS OR SHOES
20
%
LIST PRICE. PARTS ONLY. t 3FQMBDF GSPOU QBET PS SFBS TIPFT t $IFDL ESVNT PS SPUPST CFBSJOHT IPTFT TQSJOHT BOE QBSLJOH CSBLF DBCMF %PFT OPU BQQMZ UP 0&. 1BET BOE 4IPFT
KITSILANO LOCATION: 1390 W. 4th Ave. 604-738-5590 Open Sunday
$PVQPO WBMJE POMZ XIFO .JOJU 5VOF #SBLF QSPWJEFT QBSUT BOE MBCPVS $PVQPO FYQJSFT +BO 0GGFS NBZ OPU CF DPNCJOFE XJUI PUIFS DPVQPOT PS QSPNPUJPOT $PVQPO NVTU CF QSFTFOUFE GPS EJTDPVOU 4VSDIBSHF NBZ BQQMZ
YALETOWN LOCATION: 710 Pacific St. 604-688-9309
off
anytime with coupon *Buffet only. Offer excludes alcohol. Expires January 30, 2013.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Lunch Buffet: MON-FRI $12.95 / SAT & SUN $14.95 Incl. Chai, Coffee and Juice 11:30-4
805 W. Broadway
Dinner Buffet: MON-THURS t FRI-SUN $16.95, 4–10 PM
Expires Jan. 30, 2013
Draft Beer Pints $3.95 – Pitchers $12.95
604.874.5800
40 items to choose from! Room for Groups up to 70 people
WEEKLY SPECIALS 100% BC Owned and Operated Prices Effective December 27 to January 2, 2013. We reserve the right to limit quantities. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.
Grocery Department
Dempster's Bagels
assorted varieties
2/6.00
6 pack • product of Canada
Meat Department PRICING
Organic Biodynamic Gold Delicious Apples from JMJ Rothe Orchard in Oliver, B.C.
9.99lb/ 22.02kg
assorted varieties
WOW!
Produce Department
Canadian Prime Rib Roasts
Tyrrell’s Hand Cooked English Crisps
3/6.99
150g • product of UK
WOW!
PRICING
reg 3.79
Sockeye Salmon Fillets assorted varieties
2/7.00
9.99lb/ 22.02kg
assorted varieties
from 2/6.00
250-270g • product of USA
170-297g • product of USA
Earth's Choice Organic Fair Trade Coffee assorted varieties
regular or spicy
9.99
3.99
9.99 12.99
from
473ml product of USA
5.99
500g or 4 pack product of Canada
Twinings Tea
assorted varieties
2/7.00
WOW!
PRICING
20 bags • product of England
4.99
20% off regular retail price
reg 6.49
395-410g product of Germany
Genesis Today Acai 100
Bakery Department 3.79
4.99
Double Chocolate Chunk or Oatmeal Cranberry Cookies
600g product of Canada, Mexico, USA and Chili
Avalon Organic Sour Cream
Sable & Rosenfeld Olives & Stirrers
2/7.00
assorted varieties
4.99
500ml
product of Canada
250-500ml • product of Canada
5.99
2/7.00
680g • product of USA
7.49 12.99
355ml
4.99
184g • product of USA
525g
WOW!
PRICING
30.99
12 day program
reg 36.99
Lose weight and feel great with the Wild Rose 12 day cleanse. It’s effective, well tolerated and easy to use.
WOW!
Choices Markets’ Wellness Library
PRICING
Look for our
WOW!
Let Choices be your partner in wellness with our series of healthy living guides. Available at any Choices location for $11.95 plus applicable taxes.
PRICING
2011, 2012 Awards. Your Loyalty has helped Choices achieve these awards. Thank you!
www.choicesmarkets.com Kitsilano
Cambie
Kerrisdale
Yaletown
Rice Bakery
South Surrey
2627 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0009
3493 Cambie St. Vancouver 604.875.0099
1888 W. 57th Ave. Vancouver 604.263.4600
1202 Richards St. Vancouver 604.633.2392
2595 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0301
3248 King George Blvd. South Surrey 604.541.3902
709ml
Organic Shikakai has been used in India for millennia as a gentle conditioning cleanser for both skin and hair.
Multiseed Brown Rice Bread
assorted varieties
assorted varieties
Dr. Bronner’s Organic, Fair Trade Shikakai Hand & Body Soap
Wild Rose Herbal D-Tox
Rice Bakery
Mary's Organic Crackers
Organicville Organic Gluten Free Pasta Sauce
package of 12
946ml
Acai is known as the Beauty Berry as it supports healthy hair, skin and nails with essential fatty acids and protein.
500g
assorted varieties
9 or 12 pack product of Canada
41.99
Organic Wholewheat Bread
Bemner's Frozen Fruit
7.49
4.49
bags or bins
Health Care Department
reg 6.99
Cascades Bathroom Tissue
product of Canada
Red and Green Organic Lentils
Dr. Oetker Casa di Mama Frozen Pizzas assorted varieties
PRICING
9.98lb/ 22.00kg
Bulk Department
Gruyère & caramelized onion or alsatian bacon & onion
4.49
2/7.00
WOW!
large • reg 14.99
Tartine Flatbreads
assorted varieties
assorted varieties
Organic Italian Porcelain Garlic from Don Kepke in Creston, B.C.
small • reg 11.99
Coconut Bliss Frozen Coconut Desserts
Danone Oikos Greek Yogurt
3/3.99
PRICING
Perfect for your party! Baked Brie Cheese
227g product of USA
400g product of Canada
WOW!
Deli Department
Flamous Organic Falafel Chips
product of Canada
Fair Trade Organic Hass Avocados from Pragor Coop in Mexico
previously frozen, value pack
Popcorn Indiana Kettlecorn, Popcorn and Chips
Kraft Philedelphia Cream Cheese
1.28lb/ 2.82kg
Choices at the Crest 8683 10th Ave. Burnaby 604.522.0936
Kelowna 1937 Harvey Ave. Kelowna 250.862.4864