Nov 11 Cloverdale Reporter

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Mall reno on agenda

By Jennifer Lang On Tuesday, the public gets another chance to hear from officials about redevelopment plans for Cloverdale West Village. The update on the former Cloverdale Mall site comes a month after a meeting at the Cloverdale Recreation Centre that was sparsely attended by the general public, but drew about a dozen local officials and business leaders. There, Surrey City Development Corp. officials were urged to better publicize the project, particularly news on how ongoing remediation related to a former dry cleaning operation is progressing. The meeting – Nov. 17 (6:30 to 8 p.m.) – is at the Cloverdale Legion.

The mall was torn down in 2011 in order to redevelop the property in phases as a blend of commercial and residential units. Ongoing remediation efforts to clean up soil contamination have delayed the project, but SCDC officials are optimistic progress is being made. CEO Aubrey Kelly said Townline Homes has agreed to develop the southwest corner with a four-storey residential and commercial development expected to break ground in early 2016. A second developer, Mosaic, is looking to build north of the legion after remediation is complete. A current project timeline has now been posted at scdc.ca, along with an extensive description of the ongoing remediation efforts.

Braving the stage

BOAZ JOSEPH PHOTO

Muskaan Toky, 7, dressed in a sari, peeks out towards the audience from the stage prior to a dance performance at the fifth-annual Fleetwood Diwali Festival at the Fleetwood Recreation Centre on on Nov. 7. Diwali, a festival of lights in Indian tradition, is on Nov. 11 this year.

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had graced the stage as Clara in The Nutcracker with the Royal City Youth Ballet, and starred as Elsa in the school’s production of Frozen. Her talent had taken her to Toronto to study, and she was set to attend Arts Umbrella this year, according to family friend Kelly Ewing, who has set up an online fundraising account for the girl. A health crisis struck out of nowhere the end of the past school year, when she became unexpectedly and gravely ill, developing kidney failure. Salisbury was diagnosed with lupus, and

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2 The Cloverdale Reporter Wednesday, November 11, 2015

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rehab possible in a system that is strapped,” writes Ewing. The teen is now undergoing outpatient rehab therapy using a state-ofthe-art technology called Myndtec. Treatments cost more than $4,000 and aren’t covered by the Medical Services Plan. The Emma Salisbury: Dance Again campaign on GoFundMe.com has so far raised more than $21,700 – more than half way to the goal. Clare Materi, a mom of a long-time dancer at Panorama School of Dance, Rowan, is holding a fundraiser at her fitness studio, Live2Play in Cloverdale

this Sunday (Nov. 15). Materi says Salisbury – who worked as a student teacher at her daughter’s dance school, helping younger students hone their skills – is showing a great deal of courage and determination in facing the biggest challenge of her life. Materi is running four, 30-minute jumping sessions (low-impact, choreographed routines done on personal sized trampolines to music). The first session starts at 11 a.m. and the last is at 12:30 p.m. Cost is $10. Live2Play is located at 200 5858 176 Street. Call 778-838-8349 to reserve a spot.

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Gibeau re-elected Chamber president By Jennifer Lang John Gibeau has been re-elected president of the Cloverdale Chamber of Commerce, where four new faces are joining the board of directors. Jim Heuving (Pacific Community Church), Marian Maletta (Westminster Savings), Gary Oliver (Urban Safari Rescue Society) and Tom Taylor (LegalShield and Surrey Little Theatre) were elected to the board at the Chamber’s Annual General Meeting, when six positions were up for election late last month.

Blankie found Everyone has their favourite blankie, says a Cloverdale resident who found a baby blanket that fell out of a passing vehicle on her street Friday morning. She’s hoping to reunite the owner with the blanket, which she fears might be greatly missed by the child it belongs to. It was found in the 18500-block of 58 Ave. in Cloverdale. It has soft, light blue fleece on one side, and black polar fleece with happy-looking blue, white, yellow and polka-dot whales on the other. Call 604575-2400 if you have information.

the province collected donations on behalf of the Red Cross, according to a press release from the Ministry of Small Business and Red Tape Reduction, which is responsible for the B.C. Liquor Distribution Branch. The donations have helped the Red Cross provide food, water, household items and health services to Syrians impacted by violence and political unrest in their homeland and in neighbouring countries affected by the conflict and the influx of refugees. The federal government has

BC Liquor Stores have collected more than $70,000 for Syrian relief. From Sept. 16 to Oct. 17, the 196 stores across

pledged to match donations (up to $100 million) from individual Canadians to registered charities to Dec. 31, 2015. The provincial government has said it will allocate $1 million to help Syrian refugees settle in B.C. Customers and employees of BC Liquor stores have already collected more than $300,000 in 2015 for Nepal earthquake victims and to assist B.C. wildfire relief efforts.

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tors allowing half of the board to be elected annually. In the future, the Chamber will be electing six board members for two year termss each year at the annual general meeting. The changes to the Chamber’s constitution and bylaws are intended to help ensure the organization’s goals and objectives are maintained from year to year. The Cloverdale Chamber of Commerce represents more than 400 member businesses in Surrey’s historic business district.

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executive for the coming term. Gibeau remains in the position of president, Taylor will serve as vice president, Richards as secretary, and Oliver as treasurer. Gibeau thanked outgoing board members Jas Chhina, Sherrold Haddad and former vice-president Judy Higginbotham, who narrowly missed winning the seat in South Surrey-White Rock for the federal Liberals on Oct. 19, for their dedication and guidance. Last month, members approved a change in the term of office for its board of direc-

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4 The Cloverdale Reporter Wednesday, November 11, 2015

What’s Up! at the Surrey

Museum

17710-56A Ave., Surrey, B.C. Info: 604-5926956 www.surrey.ca/heritage, follow us at @ASurreyMuseum. Hours: Tuesdays-Fridays, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Saturdays: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. New! Open Sundays from noon to 5 p.m. Admission sponsored by the Friends of the Museum Society. EXHIBITIONS KIDS GALLERY AT THE SURREY MUSEUM Explore the world of sustainable energy from a kid’s point of view in this new interactive gallery. Get your hands on big ideas and green activities as you climb into the tree fort, ride the energy bike, experiment with electricity, and more! PROGRAMS SURREY REMEMBERS Bring the family for the Remembrance Day ceremony at the Cloverdale Cenotaph, then come in from the cold for refreshments, films and crafts. At 11:30am join former Royal Canadian Navy Wren Gwen Settle as she shares Cold War secrets. Wednesday, November 11 9:30am-1:30pm, all ages, by donation November 14, 1:00pm-4:00pm MUSEUM AFTER DARK Combine local wine and tapas with the secrets of the Museum vault for a unique night out. Get a behind-the-scenes look at the “dark things” in our collections then sip and socialize. Must pre-register at 604-592-6956. 1 session $15 (19yrs+), Thursday, November 19, 6:30pm-9:00pm FELTED CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS Kids watch the magic happen when they combine colourful wool, soap, water and friction to make their own felted Christmas ornaments. Pre-register at 604-592-6956. 3 sessions $45 (8-12yrs), Thursday, November 19, 4:00pm-6:00pm LET’S TRAVEL: JAPAN Preschoolers create their own Kokeshi doll, take a “walk” through a Japanese garden and enjoy a sushi-inspired snack. Must pre-register at 604-592-6956. 1 session $11 (3-5yrs) Friday, November 20, 10:30am-12noon DISCOVERY SATURDAY: ROARING TWENTIES This family event is the bee’s knees! Jazz babies of all ages will enjoy swing dance performances and 1920s music, and make a feathered head piece or snappy bowtie. Saturday, November 21, 1:00pm-4:00pm, All ages, by donation VERY VINTAGE: HAIR AFFAIR Learn how to pull off fashionable finger waves, buoyant beehives and Rockabilly rolled bangs from an expert stylist, then capture your new look in our vintage photo booth. Must pre-register at 604-592-6956. 1 session $18 (12-15yrs), Thursday, November 26, 6:00pm-9:00pm CURIOUS TYKES: GOLD RUSH ADVENTURE Eureka, what a time your child will have in our tent learning about the Gold Rush! Bring your little nugget to pan for gold, trade for supplies and make a shiny craft. Must pre-register at 604-592-6956. 1 session $11 (3-5yrs), Friday, November 27 10:30am-12noon

Opinions & Letters

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Autumn springs MARLENE DELCOURT PHOTO

It’s not every October that the sweet scent of fresh lilacs fill the garden, but that’s just what happened to Cloverdale resident Marlene Delcourt, who sent in this shot taken in her yard.

All three returned home

To the editor; but these are the families stories, as Re: photo of three soldiers, WWI I have been told. on Page 21,“Museum, archives open Robyn Wells for Remembrance Day,” Nov. 4 Surrey This photo is incorrectly named. It Ed note is my great grandfather and his two sons. J. Heppell is in the middle with his Re: “Twelve feet from death,” Nov. 4 two sons on each side of him: ClarI was a 19-year old signalman ence Heppell, John Heppell, Cecil on HMCS Iroquois that day. I live Heppell. in Blacks Harbour, New Brunswick Uncle Cec had his 16th birthday and would like to hear from any of on the Front Line. I believe Uncle my old shipmates, especially those Clarence was injured and in the hoswho were on the first trip of HMCS pital for six months. Iroquois to Korea in 1952. All three returned to Cloverdale. SURREY ARCHIVES IMAGE 10:11 I can be found on facebook ‘Bill They were living on 180 Street, According to his great granddaughter, John Heppell is in the centre, Moff att’. PM me. named Heppell Road at that time. with his sons Clarence, left, and Cecil, in 1916. All three returned to My younger brother, Tom MofCouncillor Pratt changed the name Cloverdale after the First World War. fatt, was a stoker on Iroquois as of the road My Mum has another lovely picture of the well. after himself while the three of them soldiers with their two younger brothers in Bill Moffatt were serving their King and country to their Boy Scout outfits. Blacks Harbour, NB ‘Pratt Road’! I can verify this information with mother

Looking for shipmates

NIMBYs at work

underestimating costs. Like Frank Bucholtz stated, the true costs will be in the neighbourhood of $5 billion. The main reason for moving the train is for property values. Reasons such as safety and others such as noise and pollution are pretty shallow. If it is a true emergency response reason for Crescent Beach, then an underpass would be better and cheaper. Further, Erik Seiz states in his letter, “Moving the train would

Re: “Moving tracks inland does little for Surrey,” Nov. 7 Mayor Linda Hepner, White Rock Mayor, Wayne Baldwin and MP Dianne Watts are way off base when they state the total cost would be in the area of $350 to $450 million to move the train. Not to mention the $700,000 they want to spend on a technical study. Politicians are notorious for

unlock this national treasure, so families would not have to pack up their family bicycles and picnics, and then drive to Stanley Park?” He states it would benefit the whole province. I do not see how anyone in Williams Lake or anywhere else in the province would benefit. This, coming from residents who want residential parking only and put up no parking signs, logs and stones to restrict parking in front of their homes,

but which is public property. It is just a case of NIMBY with the rest of the province paying for it. If the people of White Rock and Crescent Beach are so adamant about relocating the train, for whatever reason, then maybe they should be assessed the costs and then let’s see how eager they are then. J. Edwards Cloverdale

The Cloverdale

AT SURREY ARCHIVES 17671 – 56 Avenue, Info 604-502-6459 www.surrey.ca/heritage WAR VETERANS’ STORIES Local World War I and II experiences are reignited as we sift through our veterans’ papers, photos, and audio clips. Must pre-register at 604-502-6459. 1 session $10 (all ages) Saturday, November 14, 11:00am-12noon

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The Cloverdale Reporter, est. 1996, is a community newspaper published weekly and delivered to homes and businesses in Cloverdale and Clayton. Submissions are welcome. Send letters and news tips to editor@cloverdalereporter.com.

CONTACT US: NEWS: 604-575-2400 | ADVERTISING: 604-575-2423 CLASSIFIED: 604-575-5555 | CIRCULATION: 604-575-5312 PUBLISHER: 604-575-5347 CLOVERDALEREPORTER.COM The Cloverdale Reporter is published every Wednesday. Advertising deadlines are Thursdays at 5 p.m. OFFICE ADDRESS: 17586 56A Avenue, Surrey, B.C. V3S 1G3.

The Cloverdale Reporter is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a selfregulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to the B.C. Press Council, P.O. Box 1356 Ladysmith, B.C. V9G 1A9. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to bcpresscouncil.org.


Wednesday, November 11, 2015 The Cloverdale Reporter 5

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By Jennifer Lang Has it been 55 years already? Members of Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary’s class of 1960 – and three of their teachers – got together for lunch last month for a 55-year reunion. The class was the first to graduate as students in the “new”

school building, which opened in 1957, according to long-time Cloverdale resident and alumnus Alan Clegg. There were 51 students in the graduating class, and 15 were able to make it to this year’s gathering, a buffet luncheon held last month at Newlands Golf Course

in Langely. They last got together five years ago, in 2010, for their 50th reunion. Clegg said John Parolin, who taught English, Bill Derpak who taught Grade 12 math and was the school’s vice principal, and See HANDFUL / Page 7

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Wednesday, November 11, 2015 The Cloverdale Reporter 7

Was the class a bit of a handful? From page 6

Phys Ed teacher Neil Inglis were all able to join their former students at the event. From the sounds of it, the class of 1960 was a bit of a handful, judging by a tale Clegg relates involving a Grade 12 experiment gone awry. The assignment was to make chlorine gas – slowly, by carefully adding volatile elements together. But some students poured in the ingredients too quickly (“Some of the lads leaned to mischief,” Clegg winks), resulting in an excessive amount of poison gas that rapidly accumulated into a thick, roiling layer that poured into the classroom and into the hallways. The entire school had to be evacuated. Fortunately, nobody was hurt. “We stood on 180 Street and watched the gas roll out of the windows,” he says. Their high school graduation dance was held in the school gym. Elvis Presley was popular, he says. Students were joined by their parents at the event, along with school board dignitary, the Superintendent of Schools. “I proposed the toast to the parents,” recalls Clegg. “I was frozen in fear. I never enjoyed my dinner.” Clegg’s wife Lorna didn’t attend Lord Tweedsmuir. Today, the Cleggs are proud parents of three children who attended the school. Cloverdale Public School, a five-room schoolhouse, opened in 1912. One room

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contained a class for first-year high school. The first student graduated in 1917, the year the school was renamed Cloverdale Superior School. The new Surrey High School opened east of the elementary school in 1922 – located in what is currently known as Cloverdale Traditional School. For years, it was Surrey’s only high school. But in 1940, Semiahmoo and Queen Elizabeth high schools opened, ushering in a name change. Surrey High was renamed in honour of the late John Buchan, Lord Tweedsmuir, the popular Governor General of Canada. Lord Tweedsmuir High School moved to a new school building on 180 Street that opened in 1957, serving grades 9 and up. In September 1993, Cloverdale Junior Secondary and Lord Tweedsmuir Senior Secondary joined together to form Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary, and moved into the new building constructed on the 180 Street site.

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8 8 The The Cloverdale Cloverdale Reporter Reporter Wednesday, Wednesday, November November 11, 11, 2015 2015

Mobile falls clinics for seniors to expand

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By Jeff Nagel Mobile clinics pioneered by Fraser Health to help seniors avoid dangerous falls and stay active longer will be rolled out across the province. The mobile labs bring imaging instruments like X-ray body scans and fall-risk assessment tools to individual communities. Seniors can meet with nurses, pharmacists, kinesiologists and physiotherapists to get various tests involving strength, balance, vision, blood pressure, a medication review and a diet evaluation focused on calcium and vitamin D. They leave with a personalized activity program. “There are four key ways to prevent falls as a senior: get your eyes checked, make your home safer, get regular exercise – including strength and balance training – and ask your doctor or pharmacist to re-

Can you really cuddle a monitor lizard? Teens can find out at the next session of Urban Safari Rescue Society’s Junior Zoo-Keeping course, starting Saturday, Nov. 15 (1-3 p.m.). The eight-week course covers how to care for, handle and train animals – snakes, lizards, mammals, frogs, tarantulas and more. Visit urbansafari.ca for more info or call 604-531-1100 to register.

view your medications,” said Fabio Feldman, manager of Fraser Health’s falls and injury prevention program. “Following this simple advice could save you, or someone you love, the pain and suffering of a dangerous fall.” The mobile clinics first launched in Fraser Health but increased provincial funding will allow them to go province-wide by 2018, in partnership with the Centre for Hip Health and Mobility at Vancouver General Hospital. Each year, one-third of B.C. seniors fall, and 4,000 seniors who fall sustain a hip fracture. Falls are the top cause of injury-related deaths in seniors in B.C., and 20 per cent of older people who fall and fracture a hip do not survive.

– For more information online, see FallsClinic.ca or FindingBalanceBC.ca.

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10 10 The The Cloverdale Cloverdale Reporter Reporter Wednesday, Wednesday, November November 11, 11, 2015 2015

‘The least we can do is remember them’ By Boaz Joseph They were just teenagers when they made their way onto no man’s land. Climbing out of the trench in what was once farmland at Beaumont-Hamel, France, it took

about three minutes for the tightly packed group to make their way to the halfway point between Canadian and German trench lines. Carson Jones, 17, was among the small group that paused at the “danger tree” – a landmark

LE S

Delview Secondary. which had stopped many “(My great-grandfaothers. It was shell-fragmentther), along with thousands of others, were ed stump known to be in full view of German teenagers just like me,” she wrote before going to the artillery spotters and battlefield. “It is unimagmachine-gunners. inable for me to think It wasn’t long about losing my entire before it hit her. The North Delta graduating class to war.” Jones was one of 16 student realized it Carson Jones was on that ground, winners of the Vimy Foundation’s Beaverbrook 99 years earlier, on the first day of the Battle of Vimy Prize, a two-week educathe Somme during the First tional program that took her to historical sites from both World World War, that almost the entire Royal Newfoundland Wars throughout France, Belgium and England. Regiment was wiped out in just 20 minutes. Jones was joined by 14 CanadiOnly 68 men answered roll an students (among 200,000 applicants) and one each from Britain call the next day. Nearly 800 and France. had set out. “We learned a lot on the trip Jones, who this past August visited Canadian and Allied that they would never talk about in high school,” says Jones. “I don’t battlefields from both world think many people can actually wars in Europe, compares picture how many soldiers there the event on July 1, 1916 to a decimation of her peers at were (in Europe), but we went to

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cemeteries and we could see that.” There were cemeteries, memorials, beaches, museums and historical landmarks that included the remnants of a Mulberry harbour on Sword Beach (a temporary harbour used to offload cargo), Winston Churchill’s War Rooms (complete with the prime minister’s maps), and location of the 1914 Christmas truce – the first and last of its kind (an unofficial ceasefire) during the First World War. She visited John McRae’s dressing station in Essex Farm, Ypres, where the Canadian doctor was inspired to write the iconic poem “In Flanders Fields” in 1915. In one isolated archaeological dig at Maison Blanche Souterraine just west of Vimy Ridge, Jones saw 100-year-old graffiti that would have made any soldier’s mother blush. “The guys in our group found them hilarious,” she chuckles.

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Continued page 11 DINNER WITH FRIENDS Dinner with Friends, currently playing at the Langley Playhouse, is being held over for three performances: Thursday, Nov. 26, Friday, Nov. 27 and Saturday, Nov. 28. Presented Thursdays to Saturdays to Nov. 21 plus the additional shows. The 2000 Pulitzer Prize-winning story by Donald Margulies about what happens to two couples when one marriage falls apart. Directed by Mary Renvall and produced by Raymond Hatton. At the Langley Playhouse, 4307 200 Street, Langley. Showtimes are 8 p.m. Tickets are $15 for all performances. Reservations: langleyplayers.com, reservations@langleyplayers. com, or call 604-534-7469. CALENDAR GIRLS Held over: Surrey Little Theatre presents Calendar Girls by Tim Firth, to Nov. 21. Thurs. to Sat. at 8 p.m., at 7027 184 St. with shows added: Sunday, November 15 and Wednesday, November 18 (At 8 p.m.) Based on the movie, a women’s institute chapter pose nude for a calendar to fundraise for a local hospital. It becomes a media sensation and strains friendships. Ages 13+. See www.surrreylittletheatre. com for more info. Tickets at brownpapertickets.com or by calling reservations@ surreylittletheatre.com or 604 576 8451. BACKDOOR CHRISTMAS BAZAAR AND CRAFT SALE The Ladies Auxiliary to Branch 6 Cloverdale Legion is holding their annual Christmas Bazaar & Craft Sale, Saturday, Nov. 21, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Silent auction, home baked goods and vendors with a variety of handmade crafts and other items for sale. Raffle tickets for sale with proceeds to Surrey Memorial Children’s Hospital.


Wednesday, Wednesday, November November 11, 11, 2015 2015 The The Cloverdale Cloverdale Reporter Reporter 11 11

Students toured battlefields of Western Europe From previous page

More serious was a visit to a garden where the late owner, a Frenchwoman, found the bodies of 27 Canadians massacred by German soldiers during the Second World War. While many of the stops – sometimes five a day – became a blur, Vimy Ridge was a big one Jones remembers well. “It was just crazy going up this giant hill and trying to understand why (Canadians) wanted it so badly. (But) when you go around the front side of the monument, you can see everything in the area.” The battle of Vimy Ridge, which took place in April 1917, is said to have forged Canadian identity – it gave the country an unprecedented sense of pride after its four divisions took the heights that their allies didn’t in the

previous two years of battlefield attrition. The monument itself is beautiful,” Jones says. “There are so many intricate little details carved into it, including a list of names.” One name not on it, nor on any Canadian memorial, is artilleryman William “Poppy” Janes (sic), Jones’ great-grandfather, who survived the war and lived until 2002, when Jones was four years old. “He very, very rarely talked about the war,” says Jones’ mother Kim. “He was a Newfoundlander, so when he had a beer or two, his stories would come out, and he would often end up crying.” Poppy once told his family how a German soldier, dying on a battlefield, showed him a picture of a woman – Poppy assumed it was his wife, as he didn’t understand what the German was saying.

After some battles in the First World War, the Canadians scavenged the fields, Kim says. “They used to take the bullets and whatever they could. My grandfather said that if the Americans hadn’t come, they would’ve lost the war. They were running out of shoes, they were running out of bullets, they were running out of everything.” “(Poppy) did say once that we never should have been there, we were just children,” adds Kim. But mostly, he kept

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Carson Jones, 17, came home with three jars filled with sand from Juno and Omaha beaches in Normandy (above), sites of Second World War battles.

quiet about the war. “The same thing happened when we talked to veterans at Dieppe,” recalls Jones. “We would try to ask them questions and they wouldn’t (answer) – they’d talk about it for a second and then they’d change the subject.” Jones came home with photos, trinkets and a heap of knowledge of history she plans to share with high school students – even while going to SFU this fall. (She hopes to become a teacher.) “(The soldiers) gave up their lives,” she says.

The least we can do is remember them.” Jones also brought home three jars filled with sand from Juno and Omaha beaches and stones from the beach at Dieppe, sites of Second World War battles. Her great-grandfather, Poppy, “would’ve been so proud of Carson going,” says Kim. For more information about the Beaverbrook Vimy Prize or to apply for 2016, visit www.vimyfoundation. ca/Beaverbrook

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12 12 The The Cloverdale Cloverdale Reporter Reporter Wednesday, Wednesday, November November 11, 11, 2015 2015

Wednesday afternoon is B.C. Breeders Classic Day at Fraser Downs, hosting the biggest day of the year in harness racing. Two- and three-year-old horses from B.C. will race for over $400,000 in purses on Nov. 11. Such outstanding performers as IllwinifIcan, and Watch my Luck will be hoping to grab the lion’s share of the Robert Murphy and Mary Murphy stakes for three-year-olds. The Murphys always began their horses’ names with the moniker “Red Star” and were a dominant force in B.C.’s breeding industry for many years. For two-year-old honours, there

are even more contenders for the Millbank Stakes. One Big Cat, Bettor’s Mark, Mach and Roll Baby, and Hanalie Bay will all be the ones to beat for the $100,000 finals. Ontario-based, but B.C.-raised Billy Davis Jr. will be driving at Fraser Downs on Breeders Classic Day, for father Bill, and others. A graduate of Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary, he consistently places among the top 10 drivers in Canada. This year he has already won 241 races and earned over $1.4 million. Post time is 12:45 p.m. For more information, visit FraserDowns.com/ racing. – Cloverdale Reporter

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Wednesday, November 11, 11, 2015 2015 The Wednesday, November The Cloverdale Cloverdale Reporter Reporter 13 13

ENGINEERING

NOTICE OF INTENTION TO PROVIDE ASSISTANCE AND OF PROPOSED PROPERTY DISPOSITION TAKE NOTICE THAT pursuant to sections 24 and 26 of the Community Charter, S.B.C. 2003, c. 26 as amended, the City of Surrey (the “City”) hereby gives notice of its intention to provide assistance and of a proposed property disposition under a partnering agreement between the City and the Surrey City Development Corporation (the “Development Corporation”) dated April 30, 2007 as amended (the “Agreement”).

MILNEPHOTOGRAPHY

Tap dancers from Lisa’s School of Dance, Studio One Dance Centre, and Dance expressions are on the Junior (ages 12 to 15) and Senior (16 and over) teams representing Canada at the IDO World Dance Championships.

Dancers tap to Worlds By Jennifer Lang Twenty dancers from local studios are thrilled at the prospect of shouldering the nation’s hopes at the world tap dance championships next month. The junior and senior teams – comprised of Surrey, Langley and Aldergrove dancers – are competing at the IDO World Tap Dance Championships in Riesa, Germany Dec. 1-5. The International Dance Organization (IDO), is a world federation that includes more than 90 nations, representing 250,000 dancers on six continents.

A division of

Under the direction of their Team Canada choreographer, Lisa Dew of Lisa’s School of Dance, the dancers are hard at work, rehearsing and training through blisters, shin splints and tears in preparation for the event. They face another challenge as well: Each dancer is required to raise $3,600 to cover costs of costumes and other trip expenses, including food, says Judy Goldsmith, Team Canada Tap representative. They will be around town fundraising, and looking for sponsorships. Team Canada Tap presents a

showcase performance Friday, Nov. 20 at the Abby Arts Centre in Abbotsford (6-9 p.m.). Tickets are $25 and available at The Dance Box in Langley, Limbers Dancewear in Surrey, and at JazzMaTazz in Abbotsford. The showcase will feature the Team Canada dancers, along with other performance groups from across the province. A silent auction is also planned, along with flower sales, concession and other activities to support the dancers. – For more, teamcanadadance.com or find them on Facebook

AND THAT the Agreement as approved by Council is part of a strategy to maximize the financial returns through development and provide an annual revenue stream to the City from the City’s wholly owned Development Corporation. The form of assistance is the transfer of beneficial interest in land more particularly described below (the “Land”) from the City to the Development Corporation, valued at $6,487,975.00, in exchange for a promissory note representing the Land’s value. The Land is more particularly described as follows: Parcel Identifier 029-612-608 Lot 1 Section 15 Township 7 New Westminster District Plan EPP45397 AND THAT the Agreement and any relevant background documentation may be inspected at the City Hall, Office of the City Clerk, 13450 - 104 Avenue, Surrey, BC, Monday through Friday (except statutory holidays) between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Jane Sullivan City Clerk

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Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.