North Shore News May 9 2014

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FRIDAY May

9 2014

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New William Griffin taking shape

Council pushes project forward as site demolition ramps up this week JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

The new pool won’t be Olympic-sized and the racquetball players won’t get a wall of their own, but despite those qualms the William Griffin Recreation

Centre moved a step closer to redevelopment Monday. District of North Vancouver council voted unanimously to push the project forward with the hopes the new centre will open its doors in the fall

of 2016, replacing both Delbrook and the old William Griffin centre. At approximately 40 feet tall and 96,369 square feet, the facility will house a gym, weight room, leisure pool and lap pool, as well as space for seniors and a preschool. The centre gives a wide berth to Mosquito and Misson creeks. However, 48 trees to the southeast of the

facility will likely be felled because of poor health, a wildfire risk, or to make way for the new facility. Despite his earlier comments that the facility would be better suited for the Delbrook site, Coun. Mike Little congratulated staff on making the best use of “a very tricky site.” A group of racquetball players petitioned the North Vancouver Recreation

Commission earlier this year after discovering the new facility would dump their sport in favour of squash. “Not only (is the Griffin recreational centre) trying to kill the sport in North Shore, but they are also killing our group, because it’s a very social group and we support each other,” said racquetball player David Aroeste. The complaint was carefully considered, but

a staff report concluded the facility needs to be as welcoming to as many users as possible. In 2012, the City and District of North Vancouver elected not to combine forces and build one 50metre pool. Instead, each municipality will likely build their own 25-metre pool, much to the chagrin

See Facility page 5

Safe ‘not worth’ stealing stolen BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

A NorthVancouver resident is hoping someone will find or return some sentimental heirlooms and personal documents after her safe was stolen last week. The woman left her basement suite on Hoskins Road just after 10 a.m. on April 29.When she returned an hour later, the home had been broken into and the safe was missing. When the thief eventually gets the safe open, he or she will soon realize they should have heeded the note posted to the front before lugging the steel box off. “I’m not worth stealing. I don’t contain any valuables. I only keep personal and company documents safe from fire,” the note read. The only things in the safe were audiotapes of See Safe page 11

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A3

Rental housing a go for Phibbs Judge lowers Six-storey development to span four lots near transit hub

boom on fired WV teacher

JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com

District of North Vancouver council approved a six-storey development near Phibbs Exchange Monday, but despite being billed as affordable housing, the project’s cost was too high >T /53Y43#4 5aT)a5YT] :_ 3[a !!n&2TY3 5aT3/V -2YV)YT] /885:1a) _:5 !Q""&-V:+W d._:5) H3% mI>blk< HFbbhk9; GBL ARCHITECTS for one councillor. The 112-unit Oxford Street development showcases the need for sprawl development,” she said. Council needs to replenish the district’s Many young people don’t want to own a car, outdated rental stock, according to Little. amalgamation between the City and District of “I think the worst is yet to come, unfortunately, according to Mayor Richard Walton. North Vancouver, according to Coun. Lisa Muri. “We’re trying to create a community which in terms of replacing the aging rental supply. “There’s tons of rental in the City of North gives people the option of not spending a lot of Because we’ve only built two buildings in the last Vancouver and if we were one municipality we time in their cars,” he said. 19 years there’s a whole bunch of buildings out wouldn’t even be having this conversation,” she The development exemplifies the challenge of there that are aging,” he said. said. being a social engineer, according to Coun. Alan Muri questioned the need for new rental The project is a rezoning of four single-family Nixon. housing, mentioning the new building above lots between 1561 and 1583 Oxford St. “I happen to be in the business of renting BlueShore Financial on Lonsdale Avenue in the Muri was nonplussed by the building’s size, its out apartments downtown,” he said. “This City of North Vancouver. “It’s half-empty and it’s design, a lack of green space, and its location on a still represents a really good deal from a rental been open for six months,” she said. “New stuff is busy thoroughfare. perspective compared to what students face in the not affordable, old stuff is affordable.” “The access onto the Second Narrows Bridge downtown core.” The building’s studios will likely rent for has been suggested to come out right in front of Ultimately, the development will be a service $1,000 per month. One-bedroom units will rent this building,” she said. to the community, according to Nixon. Other councillors cited the project’s location as for $1,200 and three-bedroom units will rent for “I don’t think we can turn our back on the fact $1,750 per month, according to district staff. a prime attribute. The project is light on parking, with 86 spaces, that there is a need,” he said. “If ever there was a location in our community The development will likely include a small but heavy on bike racks and bike lockers. where it was appropriate to . . . potentially have commercial element, such as a coffee shop. “I think the parking will sort itself out,” said a bit of a different model available for a building, Council did not grant Darwin Properties’ Coun. Robin Hicks, calling the project ideal for this is it,” said Coun. Mike Little, noting its request to waive approximately $575,773 in car sharing. proximity to transit. development cost charges. Speaking on behalf of Modo Car Co-op, Phil Despite supporting the project, Little was When the project receives final approval, Baudin praised the development as a high-density sympathetic to Muri’s concerns about density. Darwin will be on the hook for a community area optimal for car sharing at a March 25 public “I’m not interested in endlessly densifying our amenity contribution of $50,000, which is hearing. community.You take the density you need to take earmarked for public art. The development will add more congestion to get what you want,” he said. Coun. Doug MacKay-Dunn did not attend to an area already smothered in traffic, according The units are between 416 and 963 square the meeting and Coun. Roger Bassam was absent to Muri. “One day, I guess the car will go away. feet. for the vote. I don’t think that will be in my lifetime or my The floor space ratio, which measures the The project needs one more vote before final daughter’s lifetime. I think the car is here to stay, development’s total floor space against the size of certainly on the North Shore, which was built as a adoption. its lot, is 3.32.

Policy change impacts Argyle rebuild JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com

The North Shore school district is awaiting word from the province about whether a new policy on capital building projects could upset an anticipated $50 million rebuild of Argyle secondary. Last fall, the North Vancouver Board of Education voted to pursue a rebuild of the school, rather than a seismic upgrade.The decision means the school district will have to borrow — and pay back — the $15 million difference in cost between the two options, and have that approved by the Ministry of Education. But recently, the province announced a new policy

requiring school districts to contribute up to 50 per cent of the cost of new capital projects — including seismic upgrades — if they have cash available. The letter sent by the province to school superintendents last month said in some cases school districts may have to shift money from existing operating or capital priorities to help pay for major capital projects. Up until now, major school capital projects like new schools and seismic upgrades have all been funded by the province. Three high schools in North Vancouver — Argyle, Handsworth and Windsor — are all on the list as needing seismic upgrades.

Of those, a $5.4 million seismic upgrade of Windsor is furthest along in the approval process. “It’s a challenging situation to address with the ministry,” said Superintendent John Lewis, who added the change in policy was a surprise to school districts. Lewis added so far it’s not clear what the province considers “available cash.” “The ministry may regard cash position in a different way to the school district or the general public,” he said. The school district, for instance, has set aside about $6 million to fund future employee benefits, said Lewis. “That may appear as cash,” he said, but added that money is

earmarked for a specific purpose. The school district also expects to finish the year with a surplus, which it plans to use toward operating costs next year. “That could be regarded as cash,” as well, he said, adding the money is needed to balance the books over the next two years. The province also has final approval on what the school board can do with half the money it gets from the sale of surplus properties. Currently the school district is still paying down about $6.2 million in debt it acquired during rebuild projects of Sutherland secondary in 2007 and Westview elementary in 2009.The province has

indicated it wants that debt paid off before new debts are taken on. Just over $5 million from the school district’s sale of Ridgeway Annex is slated to go towards that debt. The ministry has indicated funding for capital project requests will be discussed with school districts on a case-by-case basis. While significant funding issues are still being ironed out, the school district is also examining the potential capacity of an Argyle replacement. Lewis said the school district would like to see a replacement built with an official capacity of 1,300 students and potential to expand that to 1,500 students if needed.

A former West Vancouver teacher who has spent the past three decades trying to fight his dismissal has been told by an Ontario judge he isn’t welcome in court. Roger Callow was recently told not to bother trying for another day in court by Justice Colin McKinnon of the Ontario Superior Court after Callow launched another legal suit against the West Vancouver School District, described by McKinnon as the same case Callow has been “attempting to advance in various courts across the country for the past 29 years.” Callow launched the case in Ontario after being rejected repeatedly — and eventually banned — by courts in B.C. “His behaviour suggests that he views the Canadian court system as something akin to a perpetual all-day all-you-can-eat buffet,” wrote McKinnon. Callow worked as a teacher in West Vancouver from 1968 to 1985, when he was laid off and never recalled. For the next 29 years, Callow has fought that decision, according to McKinnon’s ruling, through various court challenges, attempts to appeal lower court decisions and attempts to sue two B.C. judges in federal court. “He has been unsuccessful in all these proceedings,” wrote McKinnon. Ten years ago, the B.C. Supreme Court decided it had had enough and banned Callow from launching further legal actions on the topic without the prior permission of the court. But that didn’t stop him entirely. “Mr. Callow has also been remarkably imaginative in engaging in offensive conduct outside the courtroom, denigrating Canada’s judiciary and legal system. He has displayed insulting placards in public places and posted offensive materials on his See Plaintiff page 5


A4 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A5

Facility to house 25-metre pool From page 1

of Coun. Alan Nixon, who called the move “verging on the nonsensical.” Nixon praised the design of the centre at Monday’s meeting. “I think the architects, from what I can see . . . have done an exceptional job in creating a building that I think we’ll all ultimately be very, very proud of. I just wish it was housing a 50-metre pool,” Nixon said. The City of North Vancouver will likely

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redevelop the Harry Jerome Rec Centre when William Griffin opens, according to district staff. “I suspect that if that pool is closed, we’ll end up with a huge influx of North Van city, Lonsdale rec folks coming in here at the same time we open,” said Mayor Richard Walton. Walton urged staff to think about contingency parking in anticipation of a parking jam when William Griffin opens.Vehicle access for the centre will be at Del Rio Drive.

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Plaintiff treated courts like ‘buffet’ From page 3

website,” wrote McKinnon, including comments about every judge “who has had the misfortune of ruling against him.”

Callow now lives in Ontario, where courts don’t have the jurisdiction to deal with his appeals. In refusing to allow Callow to launch any more lawsuits about his firing

without prior approval of a judge, McKinnon wrote that controls must be put in place to prevent Callow from “voraciously consuming valuable and scarce judicial resources.”

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A6 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

VIEWPOINT PUBLISHED BY NORTH SHORE NEWS A DIVISION OF LMP PUBLICATION LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, 100-126 EAST 15TH STREET, NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. V7L 2P9. DOUG FOOT, PUBLISHER. CANADIAN PUBLICATIONS MAIL SALES PRODUCT AGREEMENT NO. 40010186.

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s the City of North Vancouver moves closer to adopting its longawaited official community plan revision, several council members appear to have been struck with a case of cold feet. Some, it seems, would even be content to have the OCP changes languish into the next municipal term. Official community plans by their nature are controversial. They attempt to marry best practices in urban planning with the needs and desires of residents today — often a match made in hell. Since the process to update the OCP began three years ago, citizens have been extensively consulted. About 4,500 pieces of feedback — more than double the original goal — and that is thanks to the members who pushed for more meetings. But you’d think by now everyone

would be done talking. In a case of classic foot-dragging, this week, council voted to hold more meetings and delay the public hearing until September, essentially ensuring the OCP becomes an election issue. That’s too bad. This is the council that has presided over the OCP process, sat through interminable meetings, questioned staff and heard from the public. They are in the best position to make an informed decision on the OCP. What should be an informed decision made by level heads is now going to be made in the heat of an election fray. A lot of work could be for naught. Not everyone will be pleased with the OCP no matter what it contains. But the longer it drags out, the uglier and more divisive the debate stands to be, especially as November elections loom.

TWV’s behind-the-scenes story a puzzler You often hear something described as ‘‘unbelievable.’’ It rarely is. But this I rate high on my personal unbelievability scale. Ever heard of a group declining to enter a competition — because it fears it might win? Sounds like a brilliant theme for a witty comedy. Which is appropriate. This head-shaking fear of success afflicts Theatre West Van. Whereby hangs a tale. The narrative begins with a puzzlement. In the list of plays in the annual Theatre BC North Shore Zone Festival of Plays — which began Monday at Presentation House in North Vancouver and concludes Saturday night, adjudicated by fine actor and director David Mackay — an entry by TWV was noticeable by its

Trevor Lautens

This Just In

absence. The festival draws plays from Deep Cove to Pemberton. But no TWV, a six-time festival best-play winner since 1997. Stranger yet, on various dates before, during and after the festival, TWV is staging its own play: Fawlty Towers, directed by Damian Inwood, based on the madly funny television series (and with Simon Drake successfully, and

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gamely, playing the role that John Cleese will forever be identified with). It opened May 2 and closes May 17; check dates at theatrewestvan.com. This scheduling clash between TWV and the festival looks as insane as a John Cleese skit. It isn’t unprecedented. Nor is it one scheming to upstage the other. I asked Anne Marsh what’s going on. Marsh embodies the indispensable, longtime Ms. Everywoman of North Shore theatre, the kind needed by little theatres everywhere: Example, wearing hats both as festival administrator and publicist for just about every North Shore play, and program producer and sound engineer for Fawlty Towers — simultaneously. Marsh was commendably frank. It’s all

about money. “A couple of years in the recent past, Theatre West Van has entered and won the Zone Festival and was required to go to Maple Ridge and Kamloops for the finals. This puts a heavy financial burden on the club, which is definitely the poor man amongst groups on the North Shore,” Marsh explained. “The club was therefore afraid that it might win again and be faced with, say, $10,000 to transport the cast and crew to Kamloops (the resident site of the provincial finals these days).” And the timing of Fawlty Towers wasn’t TWV’s choice. It was scooped by other bookings: On a First Name Basis, by Canadian playwright Norm Foster, a favourite of mine, and Booktopia. Great business

for the Kay Meek. There’s more. “Theatre West Van has to pay over $7,500 to rent the Studio Theatre at the Kay Meek Centre, as well as abiding by all the union rules and times of operation from the technicians — an onerous situation,” Anne Marsh said. “The other groups on the North Shore (Deep Cove Stage Society and North Vancouver Community Players) can come and go as they please in their theatres, and have a much longer lead time to start setting up their productions. Theatre West Van is restricted to the Sunday before opening.” So the sets have to be struck when space is rented to other users, and then rebuilt on the Wednesdays. Alison Jopson, TWV vice-president and liaison with the Kay Meek Centre

(another multi-tasker: She played murder victim Mrs. Boyle in Agatha Christie’s classic The Mousetrap last year), clarifies this point: “Although the set has to be dismantled and then reconstructed some weeks (not all), this is done by the Meek at their expense and this is something we appreciate . . . as it saves us paying for dark nights.” (My interjection: Yes, and the high union wages doubtless are folded into the rent.) Jopson stresses that TWV has a good relationship with Kay Meek operations director Galen Olstead. Is there a solution to this hand-to-mouth existence for a theatre company in this ultrarich town? Back to the founding deal, perhaps: The theatre shares its See Agreement page 10

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A7

VIEWPOINT

Greatest threat to B.C. environment in our lifetime DAVID BLACK Guest columnist

This is the second of two columns addressing what I see as the greatest threat to the B.C. environment in our lifetime. The Alberta oil industry’s Northern Gateway plan is to export bitumen to Asia via tankers from the B.C. coast. TransMountain Pipeline recently started to ship bitumen from Vancouver and wants to ship a great deal more in future. Under no circumstances should we allow that to happen. A bitumen spill at sea could destroy our coastline, together with the fish and wildlife that depend on it, for hundreds of years. My first column discussed the light oil spill by the Exxon Valdez and the terrible toll it took on the Alaskan habitat and fishery. It also gave proof that a bitumen spill would

be far worse. A bitumen spill would be almost completely unrecoverable because it would sink and stay on the bottom of our seabed. The solution that is best for Canada is to build refineries. I am promoting and backing this solution. Refineries convert bitumen to very light fuels that would float and evaporate if ever spilled. There are other enormous benefits: There will be a major reduction in greenhouse gases if we use new cutting-edge Canadian technology in the refineries. They will be so clean that in combination with oilsands extraction there will be less CO2 than in the huge conventional oilfields and refineries of Iraq and Nigeria. In other words these clean refineries would neutralize the extra greenhouse gases generated in Canada’s oilsands. The refineries will be built in Asia if not in Kitimat, and if so they

MOTHER’S DAY

will emit double the CO2. This is the reason that Andrew Weaver of the BC Green Party is in favour of Canadian refineries. Asian refineries will also generate 200 train cars a day of very dirty coke (much fouler than BC coal) which will be subsequently burnt in the atmosphere to create power. The Canadian refineries will not result in the production of any coke. As we all live on one planet, it is far better for the global environment to build these refineries in Canada. Construction of the refineries will create 12,000 jobs in B.C. for five years. Operations at the refineries will result in more permanent jobs than any project has ever created in B.C. with approximately 6,000 direct jobs. These will be highly paid permanent jobs. These jobs will be available for the life of the refineries which should be in excess

of 50 years. In addition there will be thousands of other jobs created in spinoff local petrochemical companies and in indirect employment throughout the province. The Canadian and Provincial governments, local regional districts and municipalities, and many First Nations, will share in billions of new tax dollars each year. Unfortunately our Canadian oil companies are not interested in building new major refineries. They are focused on extraction which is more profitable than refining. One of them challenged me to spearhead a refinery myself, so I am doing that. We have a solid business plan and as a consequence Chinese banks and other institutions are prepared to lend us most of the funds required to build the greenest and most efficient refinery in the world. We are currently moving

ahead with engineering design and environmental work. We will also build a safe northern pipeline from Alberta to the refinery in Kitimat, with the active participation of First Nations. Modern pipelines can be built and operated safely. Leak data is available for everyone to see on Canadian and U.S. government websites and it proves recently constructed pipelines are not leaking. Furthermore some of the best pipelining companies in the world are based in Canada.

inHabit

design and project management

In addition we will build a fleet of new tankers, powered by LNG rather than Bunker C oil, to transport the refined products to Asia. This way we know the tankers will be state-of-the-art and as safe as possible. The fleet will be owned by a company based in B.C. so it cannot shirk its legal liability if there ever is a spill at sea. Let me be up front about my biases. I am for creating thousands of good permanent jobs in B.C. See Decision page 10

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A8 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A9

Mouth of McDonald Creek to open to salmon Federal funds, private donations to kickstart summertime shoreline work BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnew.com

> 1:V2T3aa5 435a/UWaa8a5 [aV84 i/35YT/ =52TWa' N' 5aVa/4a / 4U:V3 YT3: g+;:T/V) <5aaW% bldGd PAUL MCGRATH

WestVancouver’s McDonald Creek is taking a step towards becoming the salmon-bearing stream it once was before the area was an enclave of condo towers and houses. West Vancouver Streamkeepers are forging ahead with a plan to open up the creek estuary that had become almost impassable for spawning salmon. Shoreline work meant to preserve the waterfront and protect it from pounding storm surges has had the adverse effect, making the estuary inhospitable for smelt, said John Barker, Streamkeepers president. The water is generally too shallow for spawning salmon to make it upstream except during the highest tides — which only last two to three hours during a few days a month, according to Barker.The situation is a bit like only opening the door to a hospital maternity ward for a couple hours a day while women in labour wait outside. “In between

that, you’ve got mid-range tides and the fish can’t get in.They’re milling around at the mouth.The seals get them.The otters chase them,” Barker said. “The ocean’s got to come and meet the creek mouth in order for fish to get in.” To remedy the situation, contractors will strategically place boulders in the estuary to create an S-curve channel that will be deep enough. The project is meant to recreate the success of a similar one on Lawson Creek just 300 metres away. “The fish loved it. It was like a magnet,” Barker said. When returning salmon runs make it past the mouth of McDonald Creek, they’ll be greeted by a salmon rearing pond designed by the streamkeepers last year, which also is having “phenomenal” success, Barker said. Beyond that, the group is eyeing one last barrier to fish at Fulton Avenue, which is next on the project list. “If we can get fish passing Fulton Avenue, there’s great habitat upstream from that for several blocks and that will

be more spawning habitat and more rearing habitat,” Barker said. About half of the funding for the $125,000 project is coming from the federal Recreational Fisheries Conservation Partnerships program, which West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country MP John Weston came to the creek to announce last week.The rest comes from

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A10 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

INQUIRING REPORTER

Daniel Boulier North Vancouver “No, why keep wild animals locked up in a pen? They should be out in the ocean.”

Lynne Krag-Hansen North Vancouver “No, because they belong in the ocean free.”

Ted Stokowski North Vancouver “No, they’re made to be in the open.”

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The Wiens Family

Family owned an operated since 1997

From page 6 handsome space with abutting West Vancouver secondary under an innovative joint-use agreement between the West Van school board and the West Vancouver Arts Centre Trust. Mutually beneficial? Yes. But worth revisiting? Definitely. ••• Alcohol and drug addicts are treated sympathetically by the public and their proxy media reporters and commentators in these enlightened days, not like the bad old times when such addiction — often covered up by empty vows to reform, stealthy evasion, enabling by family

NOW OPEN! Denman Place Mall Vancouver

and friends, and outright lying — was considered a character failure and not an illness requiring counselling and medical treatment. Unless you happen to be a politically conservative mayor of Toronto. Then there is no limit to the relentless ambush, the invasion of privacy, the heartlessness and the cruelty explained and justified as the public’s right to know and other noble pronunciamentos of the media. How clever some of the witty wisecracks. How insatiable the public’s appetite. How seedy, selective and hypocritical our societal and personal ethics. rtlautens@gmail.com

Decision day draws closer I am for creating billions of new tax dollars for government coffers. I am for reducing the planet’s greenhouse gas emissions. I am for building an oil pipeline that will never leak. I am for building a modern tanker fleet that carries only refined fuels that float and evaporate if spilled. I am against shipping bitumen in tankers.

www.cvoh.ca www.cvoh.ca

William Clark North Vancouver “No. I wouldn’t want to be caged up like that.”

Agreement worth revisiting

From page 7

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Stanley Dzuba North Vancouver “I think so. It’s an educational tool for kids.”

WANTED

Despite whales having relatively little to do with bike lanes, Mayor Gregor Robertson spoke out on behalf of the incarcerated cetaceans anyway. The Vancouver Aquarium should give up their bread and blubber attractions, according to Robertson, who joined a growing chorus calling for the release of whales and dolphins. The aquarium responded, noting the animals are adopted and that their research could be crucial in the whales’ survival. Does the aquarium serve a greater good, or should they let their mammals go? Weigh in at nsnews.com. — Jeremy Shepherd

Should aquariums keep whales and dolphins?

If you agree that we should not put bitumen in tankers, please contact your local MP and say so. The Canadian government makes a decision on Northern Gateway in the next few weeks. David Black is a B.C. businessman who has proposed building a refinery near Kitimat as an alternative to shipping bitumen.

North Shore News Carriers Adult & Children

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Wednesdays, Fridays & Sundays Visit www.nsnews.com to apply


Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A11

New Harry Jerome on the horizon Council approves new timeline for aging rec centre’s replacement BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

Expect constructions workers and heavy equipment going to work on a replacement for North Vancouver’s Harry Jerome Recreation Centre by the end of 2016. Exactly what the rec centre will consist of and how the project — last estimated to cost $70 million — will be paid for, however, still hasn’t been decided. Under a timeline approved by council April 28, city staff will do a facility assessment and site planning between now and

December to come up with conceptual design options. Discussions on financing and public consultation will start in early 2015 with council approval by fall. Council also voted to put up $250,000 to develop more design options and program planning. “I have to congratulate staff,” said Coun. Rod Clark “I put a notice of motion forward to have a shovelready project ready when William Griffin opens and that is not too distant in the future. I challenged staff to do that.They came back in spades and have brought forward such a time frame.” Beyond trying to time its construction with the

rebuilds of other North Shore rec centres, the city would do well to start construction for financial reasons, Coun. Don Bell added. “The building itself is suffering physical problems — breakdowns and those are only going to increase as time goes on, so it’s going to get more costly so the sooner we can move it ahead, the better,” he said. The city is no longer sticking to council’s “preferred option” for a layout as selected by council in the fall of 2012. Council has not yet decided whether it will borrow money, spend reserves or find other ways to finance its construction. Filling the extra space on the site with townhouses and condos, however, was not a palatable thought

Safe contained photo negatives From page 1

the victim’s parents and old photo negatives, said Cpl. Doug Trousdell, North Vancouver RCMP spokesman. Either the thief ignored the note or was further

enticed by it, believing it to be a ruse,Trousdell speculated. In any case, police are hoping contents will turn up or the thief will return them. “I don’t think they’re of any value to the thief,” he said.

In 2012, thieves made off with an Alderlynn Drive man’s safe containing only home movies.The breakand-enter remains under investigation. Anyone with any information is asked to call the North Vancouver RCMP at 604-985-1311.

even for council members who are typically in favour of density bonusing for community amenities. “I’m not interested in much, if any, density at that site,” said Coun. Linda Buchanan. But, Harry Jerome is just one very big-ticket spending item without a clear funding plan on the city’s horizon, Coun. Pam Bookham

warned. Beyond the new rec centre, waterfront redevelopment and North Shore Neighbourhood House, the taxpayers will also be on the hook for a yet-unknown portion of a $700-million replacement for Lions Gate Wastewater Treatment plant. Metro Vancouver has been lobbying the province and federal government to chip

in one-third each, as has been the standard practice for major infrastructure projects. So far, there’s no indication what percentage Metro will pay and, of that, how much will appear on North Shore homeowners’ utility bills. The federal government has mandated a tight deadline of having the facility up and running by 2020.

CANADIAN UNION OF PUBLIC EMPLOYEES LOCAL 389 (North Vancouver) would like to congratulate the following recipients of our ten annual $1,000 Scholarships:

Nicole Anderson Mark Anderson

Devin Hewett Matthew Herunter

SEYCOVE SECONDARY

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BURNABY CENTRAL SECONDARY SUTHERLAND SECONDARY

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A12 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

BRIGHT LIGHTS

by Kevin Hill

Starry Nights Black and White Gala

Kim Hansen' Gurminder Janjua' Brayden Rysstad /T) Zachary Anderson

Richard Wahl' Fraser Engel /T) Scott Stirling Representatives of the Sutherland family of schools presented the fourth annual fundraising Starry Nights Black and White Gala: Motown Edition, April 12 at Sutherland secondary. Guests wore their ďŹ nest black and white garb, enjoyed appetizers by the North Shore Culinary School and danced the night away to The Dynamics. Other activities included silent and live auctions, a photo booth and games of chance.

Kathy Owens' Karen Savage' Heather Johnston /T) Kris Stead

Rachel MacAulay' Julie Anderson' Astrid Westervelt /T) Debra Dennehy

Pam Drake /T) Sue Woolley

Dana Irving /T) Dean Stark

Jennifer Bermudez' Wendy Matsubuchi' Vince White' Hartej Gill /T) Erin Garcia

Susan Rysstad' Natalie Pensato' Madison Wilkins /T) Jacqueline Malamalatabua

Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos go to: nsnews.com/galleries.


PULSE

Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A13

YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE

to ARTS & CULTURE

THIS WEEK: — Sarah McLachlan has released her eighth studio album, Shine On, on theVerve label. She recorded the tracks in Montreal and Vancouver with longtime collaborator/producer Pierre Marchand. General tickets for her Oct. 20 Orpheum show go on sale this morning at 10 a.m. See story at ns.news.com/ entertainment. — Sound of Dragon Music Festival, Vancouver’s first-ever festival devoted to “Chinese music” takes place this weekend at Roundhouse Community Arts and Recreation Centre. See page 38. For more information visit soundofdragon.com. More online at nsnews.com/ entertainment twitter.com/NSNPulse

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Arts Club tackles Monty Python’s Spamalot

Courting chaos

■ Monty Python’s Spamalot, May 8 to June 29 at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage, 2750 Granville St., Vancouver.Tickets from $29 at 604-687-1644 or artsclub.com. CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com

Things have been getting awfully silly inside the Arts ClubTheatre rehearsal hall. In the weeks leading up to the company’s production of Monty Python’s Spamalot, director Dean Paul Gibson was surrounded daily by a motley crew of cross-dressers, evil bunny rabbits, Laker Girls, tap dancers, actors speaking in exaggerated French accents and knights who say “Ni!” “It is tight quarters, let

AWESOME TAPES FROM AFRICA b>m9 !L

me tell you,” Gibson says of the small — and very crowded — hall. But work is never dull. “It’s the best kind of chaos — entertaining chaos.” Spamalot opened May 8 and runs until June 29 at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage in Vancouver.The promotional poster describes the musical as “lovingly ripped off” from the 1975 film Monty Python and the Holy Grail, which parodies the legend of King Arthur. Conceived by Eric Idle, a founding member of the British comedy troupe, the original Spamalot production opened in 2005 and earned three Tony Awards, including Best Musical. When it comes to the Arts Club production, Gibson maintains an ifit-ain’t-broke-don’t-fix-it philosophy.

“It’s successful, so let it be. Just do it well.” He has steered clear of doing anything that might mess with the Python brand. After all, it’s the troupe’s enduring style of surreal humour that allowed Spamalot to succeed three whole decades after the release of the movie on which it’s based. “It’s a silly, silly brand. I just think that it’s downright stupidly fun,” Gibson says, noting the unique way the Pythons manage to veer from slapstick comedy to “what the hell’s going on?” moments to socio-political digressions. The sketch comedy TV show, Monty Python’s Flying Circus, ran from 1969 to 1974. In addition to Holy Grail, the group’s other film credits include And Now for Something Completely

MOTHER TONGUE b>m9 n!

Different (1971), Monty Python’s Life of Brian (1979) and Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life (1983). The five surviving members of the veteran troupe are set to reunite for 10 live performances in London this July.Tickets to the first show sold out in 43 seconds — an indication of the Pythons’ continued popularity, Gibson says. He believes that Spamalot has enjoyed such success over the last 10 years not just because of its absurd Pythonesque humour, but also because it is a very welldone musical. “(The creators) understand what the whole genre is, the framework of a good musical,” he explains, adding that the show also manages to poke fun at Broadway theatrical conventions. “They’re not

NEIGHBORS b>m9 nO

being particularly earnest about it all; the irreverence is fantastic.” The songs are extremely catchy, Gibson adds, expecting that guests will leave the theatre whistling. Some numbers, such as “The Song that Goes Like This” and “I’m Not Dead Yet,” were written specifically for the musical; others are from the Holy Grail movie; and the fan favourite, “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life,” was originally featured at the end of Life of Brian. This year marks the 50th anniversary of the Arts Club Theatre and, coincidentally, Gibson’s 50th birthday. When Arts Club artistic managing director Bill Millerd approached Gibson last year to direct a show for See Gibson page 18

LEMOINE FITZGERALD b>m9 SQ


A14 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

CALENDAR Galleries

ARTEMIS GALLERY 104C-4390 Gallant Ave., NorthVancouver.TuesdaySunday, noon to 5 p.m. 778233-9805 artemisgallery.ca BELLEVUE GALLERY 2475 Bellevue Ave.,West Vancouver. GalleryTuesdayFriday, 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Saturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. and by appointment. bellevuegallery.ca CAFÉ FOR CONTEMPORARY ART 138-140 East Esplanade, NorthVancouver. MondayFriday, 7 a.m.-7 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, 8 a.m.-7 p.m. 778-340-3379 cafeforcontemporaryart@gmail. com CAROUN ART GALLERY 1403 Bewicke Ave., North Vancouver.Tuesday to Sunday, noon to 8 p.m.778372-0765 caroun.net North American Classic Paintings Since 1889: Works by various artists will be on display until May 14. CITY ATRIUM GALLERY

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A15

CALENDAR From page 14 141West 14th St., North Vancouver. Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.604-9886844 nvartscouncil.ca. Butterfly Factory: A 30-foot installation piece by Rosemary Burden will be on display until July 7.Artist talk:Tuesday, May 13, 12:15-12:45 p.m. CITYSCAPE COMMUNITY ART SPACE 335 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. MondaySaturday, noon to 5 p.m. 604-988-6844 nvartscouncil. ca The Reclaimers: An exhibition of 17 artists that focuses on art made be recycling material will run until May 10. To Have andTo Hold: Objects of identity and things we leave behind with large scale paintings, photographs and installed pieces by Cori Creed, TraceyTarling and Kevin Vallely will be on display from May 16 to June 21. Opening: Thursday, May 15, 7-9 p.m. Artist talk:Thursday, May 22, 6-7 p.m. Art Rental Salon: An ongoing art rental programme with a variety of original artwork available ranging from $10 to $40 per month. COASTAL PATTERNS GALLERY 582 Artisan Lane, Bowen Island.WednesdaySunday, noon-5 p.m. or by appointment. 604-7624623, 778-997-9408 or coastalpatternsgallery.com DISTRICT FOYER GALLERY 355West Queens Rd., North Vancouver. Monday-Friday,

8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 604988-6844 nvartscouncil.ca NorthVancouver Community Arts Council will present an exhibition of acrylic paintings of boats and bike trails by Danyne Johnston and ceramic works by Claire Madill until June 17. DISTRICT LIBRARY GALLERY 1277 LynnValley Rd., North Vancouver. nvartscouncil.ca NorthVancouver Community Arts Council will present an exhibition titled “Landscape Complexions” with works by Margaret Heywood until May 20. NorthVancouver Community Arts Council will present an exhibition of works by Eric Goldstein from May 21 to July 15. Opening reception: Saturday, May 21, 2-4 p.m. FERRY BUILDING GALLERY 1414 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver.Tuesday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., closed Mondays.604-925-7290 ferrybuildinggallery.com Textile Arts 2014 Grad Show: Capilano University student’s work will be on display until May 25. Meet the artists: Saturday, May 10, 2-3 p.m. THE GALLERY AT ARTISAN SQUARE 587 Artisan Lane, Bowen Island. Friday-Sunday, noon4 p.m. 604-947-2454 biac.ca GALLERYYOYO 312 East Esplanade, North Vancouver.Wednesday to Saturday, 1-5:30 p.m. or by appointment. 604-983-2896 GORDON SMITH

GALLERY OF CANADIAN ART 2121 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver.WednesdayFriday, noon to 5 p.m. and Saturday, 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Adult admission by donation/ children free. 604-998-8563 info@smithfoundation.ca A Journey Exposed: Gu Xiong, a transcultural artist with a strong sense of global interconnectivity will examine the effects of globalization with an exhibition until Aug. 23. Opening reception: Friday, May 9, 7-9 p.m. International artist symposium Saturday, May 10, 2-4 p.m. GalleryTours: Thursdays at 12:30 p.m. and Saturdays at 1:30 p.m. Registration required. KAY MEEK CENTRE 1700 Mathers Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-981-6335 kaymeekcentre.com On OurWalls — In Our Midst: Twelve large canvases by painter Rose-Marie Goodwin will be on display until June 5. NAVA ART CENTER 1355 Main St., North Vancouver. Monday-Friday, 5-9 p.m., Saturday and Sunday, 2-8 p.m. 604-9856282 A Cup of Love: A photography exhibition with works by Masoud Harati will run until May 10. NORTHVANCOUVER MUSEUM 209West Fourth St., NorthVancouver. Open by appointment only. 604-9903700 x8016 NorthVancouver Experience, an ongoing See more page 16

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A16 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

CALENDAR From page 15 exhibit defining life in North Vancouver.

INNER CITY BLUES >TT E5YaT)#4 Ta0 /V-2U' 2/* %&- 4-/.C- #> %&- 9-B> D#A-' 3aVV4 3:2][ 3/Va4 :_ YTTa5 +Y3e VY_a /]/YT43 / -/+W)5:8 :_ 5a35: 4:2V -a/34 /T) [/5U:TYa4% H[a V/2T+[a4 3[a 5aVa/4a 0Y3[ / 4[:0 /3 3[a I/YV0/e <V2- :T g/e !R :T / ):2-Va -YVV 0Y3[ j/4UYTa fa34aT/% ;::54 O 8%U%' 4[:0 OKS" 8%U% GY+Wa34 A!" /3 3[a )::5% bldGd HFbbhk9;

PRESENTATION HOUSE GALLERY 333 Chesterfield Ave., NorthVancouver. Wednesday-Sunday, noon5 p.m. 604-986-1351 presentationhousegallery.org Stan Douglas — Synthetic Pictures: An exhibition of new photographs will be on display until May 25. RON ANDREWS COMMUNITY SPACE 931 Lytton St., North Vancouver. 604-987-8873 or

604-347-8922 Sustenance and theWorld Through Glass Beads: Glass beads needlework pictures by Svitlana Gerasymchuk-Mulyk and figurative paintings in oil and acrylic on canvas by MegTroy will be on display until June 8. SEYMOUR ART GALLERY 4360 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily. 604-924-1378 Ordinary Beauty: A historical exhibition with a selection of prints from the Burnaby Art Gallery by the Group of Seven artist L. LeMoine FitzGerald will run until June 7. Lecture by curator IanThom: Sunday, June 1, 2-4 p.m. Curator’sTalk: Every Thursday at noon there will be a 20-minute curator’s talk with background on the current show in the gallery. SILENT POETRY ART STUDIO 1079B Roosevelt Cres., NorthVancouver. MondayFriday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. or by appointment. 604312-1184, 604-781-4606 silentpoetryartstudio.wordpress. com Original art, mentoring and classes with Sharka Leigh and Sandrine Pelissier. SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver.Tuesday to Sunday, noon-4 p.m. 604925-7292 silkpurse.ca West Coast Magic: A collection of landscape paintings by local artist Leilani Finch will be on display until May 11. Music for Art: An exhibit of artwork by professional

musicians who are also visual artists will run from May 13 to June 1. Opening reception: Tuesday, May 13, 6-8 p.m. WESTVANCOUVER MEMORIAL LIBRARY 1950 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca In the Gallery: Youth artwork created byWest Vancouver secondary students will be on display until May 31 in conjunction with the Booktopia children’s literature festival. WESTVANCOUVER MUNICIPAL HALL 750 17th St.,WestVancouver. Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m.4:30 p.m. 604-925-7290 Art in the Hall: Acrylic on canvas paintings by JeffWilson will be on display from May 7 to June 13. WESTVANCOUVER MUSEUM 680 17th St.,WestVancouver. Tuesday-Saturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 604-925-7295 westvancouvermuseum.ca SD45 One: An exhibition of WestVancouver students past and present will run until May 31. YEATS STUDIO & GALLERY 2402 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver.WednesdaySunday, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. 778279-8777 craigyeats.com

Concerts

CENTENNIAL THEATRE 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. 604-984-4484 centennialtheatre.com See more page 17

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A17

LYNNVALLEY LIBRARY 1277 LynnValley Rd., North Vancouver. 604-984-0286 x8144 nvdpl.ca Music at the Library — Safer Sax: Saxalamode will perform a combination of tangos and jazz standards Friday, May 16, 7-8:30 p.m. Registration required. Music at the Library: John Lyon and Friends will play tunes from the 1960s and more to help celebrate the library’s 50th birthdayThursday, May 22, 3:30-4:30 p.m.

Celebrate Spring: A benefit concert featuring the King of Swing, Dal Richards and his 10 piece orchestra in support of the Paul Sugar Palliative Support Foundation Saturday, May 17 at 2 p.m.Tickets: $35. Inspiration from the Professionals Project: VancouverYouth Symphony Orchestra with guests Borealis String Quartet will perform Sunday, May 18 at 2:30 p.m. Admission by donation at the door. DEEP COVE COFFEE HOUSE Mount Seymour United Church, 1200 Parkgate Ave., NorthVancouver. 604-3635370 jane@nsrj.ca Deep Cove Folk: Earl Peach and Illiteratty will perform Friday, May 9 at 9 p.m. Doors open at 7 p.m. and warmup acts start at 7:30 p.m. Admission: $10 which includes coffee and goodies. HIGHLANDS UNITED CHURCH 3255 Edgemont Blvd., NorthVancouver. The Antar Suite: The Ambleside Orchestra will perform Friday, May 23 at 7:30 p.m.Admission by a suggested donation of $20.Tickets: friends@ amblesideorchcestra.ca or at the door. KAY MEEK CENTRE 1700 Mathers Ave.,West Vancouver.Tickets: 604-9816335 kaymeekcentre.com Spring Concert:The VancouverYouth Symphony Orchestra — Senior Orchestra will perform Sunday, May 11 at 7:30 p.m.Admission by a

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suggested minimum donation of $10. How Can I Keep From Singing: Cayla Brooke,Tom Pickett and a four-piece band will perform a tribute to the life and music of Eva Cassidy May 22-24 at 8 p.m.Tickets: $40/35. The Lions GateYouth Orchestra will perform a broad variety of musical periods and styles with conductor Clyde Mitchell Friday, May 23 at 7:30 p.m.Tickets: $20/$15/$10.

LYNNVALLEY UNITED CHURCH 3201 Mountain Hwy., North Vancouver. 604-987-2114 lynnvalleychurch.com Friday Night Live: A weekly series with improv actors AddLibretto playing hosts to musical guests Fridays at 7:30 p.m.Admission by suggested donation of $10.

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SHAUGHNESSY HEIGHTS UNITED CHURCH 1550West 33rd Ave., Vancouver. Poetry in Bridges: Jubilate Vocal Ensemble, a mixed voice adult choir, will perform a concert that explores the collapse of the Ironworkers’ Memorial Bridge Saturday, May 10 at 8 p.m.Admission: $20/$15/$10.

3183 Edgemont North Vancouver 604.924.0122 tartooful.com

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SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7292 silkpurse.ca Music for Art: Soprano Karen Santos will perform a concert invoking the themes of her abstract paintingsThursday, May 15 at 10:30 a.m. Santos See more page 18

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A18 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

CALENDAR From page 17 will be accompanied by pianist Miguel Brito.Tickets: $20/$15. Music for Art: Flutist MarkTakeshi McGregor and pianist Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa

1525TaylorWay,West Vancouver. Mother’s Day in Song: Three North Shore choirs directed by NicoleThomas Zyczynski will perform Saturday, May 10 at 2 p.m.

will present music inspired by McGregor’s painitngsThursday, May 22 at 10:30 a.m.Tickets: $20/$15. ST. DAVID’S UNITED CHURCH

The concert will feature a song with photos running in the background.Admission by donation with proceeds going to purchase feminine hygiene products for women living in the Downtown Eastside.

ST. STEPHEN’S ANGLICAN CHURCH 885 22nd St.,West Vancouver. 604-926-4381 Mother’s Day Sunday Bright Service: Jumpin’ Jehosephats Jazz Band will TELUS STORES

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perform Sunday, May 11 at 10 a.m. Guests are encouraged to wear a colourful outfit. Mood Music: WestVancouver School District Honour Choirs spring concert with guest pianist Hey-Jung Choi May 22 and 23 at 7 p.m.Admission: $10. Tickets: 604-981-1360. WESTVANCOUVER MEMORIAL LIBRARY 1950 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca Friday Night Concert — Latin Chamber Music: Latin influenced music performed by some of Vancouver’s finest musicians Friday, May 23, 7:30-8:45 p.m. WESTVANCOUVER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 2893 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-926-1812

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Gibson born in Scotland From page 13 the 50th season, he jumped at Spamalot. “I just immediately knew right away that I wanted to be involved with Spamalot because I grew up with the Python people, the Flying Circus, and that was all part of my youth.” Born in Scotland, Gibson left the British Isles with his family when he was five years old and settled in White Rock. But he didn’t leave behind his appreciation for British comedy. In fact, he recalls re-enacting John Cleese’s famous “Dead Parrot” sketch in school. “I grew up understanding that sense of humour.” But he stresses that Spamalot is not just for people like himself who were raised on Monty Python skits and movies.The show will also appeal to musical theatre lovers and, for those unfamiliar with the Pythons, Gibson is hopeful this production will create some new fans. “I certainly hope that they’re entertained as much as I have been in the rehearsal hall,” Gibson says.


Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A19

MUSIC J o in t h e Fa m ily Fu n

Lonsdale Spring Celebration Celebrate your Neighbourhood

FREE Activ itie s

AWESOME AFRICA >0a4:Ua G/8a4 _5:U >_5Y+/ _:2T)a5 =5Y/T H[YUW:1Y3c -5YT]4 [Y4 ;j /+3 3: 3[a 7:. </-/5a3 :T 75Y)/e' g/e !P 3: 8V/e 4:Ua :_ [Y4 1/43 +:VVa+3Y:T :_ 5/5a >_5Y+/T ]5::1a4 ?5aVa/4a) U/YTVe :T +/44a33a( _a/325YT] [Y][VY_a' _2XY' -aT]/' 34:T]/ )Y4+:' 4:2W:24' [Y8&[:8' 5[2U-/ /T) a3[Y:&4:2V 32Ta4 /T) +:2T3Va44 :3[a5 5a]Y:T/V ]aT5a4% G[a >55Y1/V >]aT+e 85:)2+3Y:T 0YVV /V4: _a/325a ;j ;%;aa ?haY425a $ b/+YM+ I[e3[U( /T) j:4[ g/]Ta3Y+IYT]% 7:5 U:5a YT_:5U/3Y:T 1Y4Y3 _/+a-::W%+:U$/0a4:Ua3/8a4_5:U/_5Y+/ :5 /55Y1/V/]aT+e%+:U% H=B> #AB(- F#%& %&<B1B* B.. %/ I#-F B 8/#C-* !//A ./;=B'% /+ H&#AG/I#%0 F/*G#>( %&- '/">; '1'%-A #> B 5@ '-%3 bldGdH HFbbhk9;

21st St Street et & Lo Lonsdale d le Ave.

La Grande Cantatrice MalienneVol. 3 (Malian singer’s 1982 release the first appearing on AwesomeTapes from Africa label in 2011) — Hallo Dawe –Volume 3 (Oromo music from Ethiopia) — Boureima Disco et le Super Bonkaney (First

ALL TS TICKE $20

Friday, May 23rd, 7:30pm at WEST VANCOUVER UNITED CHURCH 2062 Esquimalt Avenue, West Vancouver Hosted by West Vancouver United Church

$25 $22

www.axistheatre.com

Where to Buy Tickets: By Phone 604-878-1190 or Buy Online (no fees) at vwmc.ca with credit card or Buy in advance at West Vancouver United Church

ADULT

Li ve m ent E nter ta in

21st St E

22nd St E St Georges Ave

— FadimoutouWallet Inamoud. “Isswat” traditional music of the Adrar D’Ifoghas in Northern Mali. — Fanta Damba du Mali:Vol. 2 (The side of the cassette readsVol. 1 but either way this is classic stuff fromWassoulou diva) — Nâ Hawa Doumbia:

FREE

Eastern Ave

I/5a 5a+:5)YT]4 _5:U fB l/0/ ;:2U-Y/ /T) >43a5 >0aWa /5a 30: :_ 3[a ]aU4 _:2T) :T >0a4:Ua G/8a4 _5:U >_5Y+/%

cassette from dance band big on Niger’s wedding scene) — Bintou Sidibe (more fine Wassoulou rhythms) — Aster Aweke (Ethiopian diva’s first recordings) — Oum Koulsoum: Rak El Habib (last piece Egyptian icon did with composer Mohammed AlQasabghi) — Hailu Mergia Hailu Mergia and His Classical Instrument (Ethiopian 1985 cassette rereleased on Awesome Tapes from Africa label) — Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey & His International Brothers: A Christmas Special by the King of Juju. For more music go to awesometapes.com. — John Goodman

Lonsdale Ave

Awesome Tapes from Africa Top 10 As a student doing research in Ghana on a Fulbright scholarship, Brian Shimkovitz encountered street vendors in West Africa selling music cassettes unavailable anywhere else. He started a blog in 2006 named Awesome Tapes from Africa to share information on the gems he found — everything from ancient highlife recordings to contemporary electronic pop tunes. Awesome Tapes from Africa is now also the name of a record label, and Shimkovitz DJs all over the world playing mostly straight from tape. He’s unearthed a ridiculous amount of rare, sublime music that would probably otherwise have been lost. Here’s a list of 10 off the top:

Saturday, May 10, 11.00am – 2.00pm

S ch e du le On li ne

Live Entertainment on the Main Stage • Featuring DJ Dale Cheyne • Mike Hobbs & the Swingin’ Dixie, Pat Post Band • Kara Lockwood, acoustic guitarist

• Sweet Scarlet • Healthy Community Hero Award • Lawn Bowling Challenge Awards • Zumba demo

Free Activities 11:00am Opening City and District Mayors’ Lawn Bowling Challenge 11:00am-2:00pm Community and Business Displays Craft Fair at Silver Harbour Yoga in the Park – Kids 12:30-1:15pm, Adults 1:15-2:00pm Story Time by City Library - 11:00am and 1:00pm Children’s Art and Play Zone The Funmobile City Fire Department and fire hoses Bike Rodeo for kids 5-9. (Bring your bike and helmet) 12:30-2:00pm S il ve r Try Lawn Bowling at NV Lawn Bowling Club Harbour 1:30-3:00pm C afe 6 Lu nch $3-$ Free Public Swim at Harry Jerome Pool

$10

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Buy from any Welsh Men’s Choir member Free Tickets for Children under 12 with adult

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A20 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

Name: BC HYDRO; Width: 30p5.999; Depth: 14 in; Color: Process color; Ad Number: 2263266

CALENDAR From page 18

Book review

Millie: Notre Dame Regional school will perform this musical Friday, May 9 at 7:30 p.m. Admission: $20.Tickets: 604255-5454 or jisherwood@ndrs. org.

Photographs capture summer in its prime

DEEP COVE SHAW THEATRE 4360 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver. 604-929-9456 firstimpressionsththeare.com Looking: A comedy of high romanceWednesdays-Saturdays until May 24 at 8 p.m.Tickets: $18/$16.

CUT DOWN YOUR POWER BILL

KAY MEEK CENTRE 1700 Mathers Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-981-6335 kaymeekcentre.com FawltyTowers:Three epsisodes of this television comedy series will be brought to stage May 9, 10, 14-17 at 8 p.m. with matinees May 10 and 17 at 2 p.m.Tickets: $22/$20/$15. On a First Name Basis: A love story, a social commentary and a mystery performed by Norm Foster May 9 at 8 p.m. Tickets: $50/$42/$25/$15. PRESENTATION HOUSETHEATRE 333 Chesterfield Ave., North Vancouver. 604-990-3474 phtheatre.org

■ Summertime. Edited by Joanne Dugan. Chronicle Books, 144 pages, $34.95. Warm breezes, children’s laughter, waves lapping the shoreline, these are just some of the things that come to mind when you think of summer.We all have our personal connections to the warmest time of year. It could be a place, an activity, a smell or sound, but there are associations that offer a chance to be emotionally transported. Joanne Dugan sought out help of a broad selection of international photographers to contribute to this collection.The images offer a broad cross-section of memories and while they may hold specific connections for the

Festival of Plays:The Theatre BC North Shore Zone Festival of Plays will run until May 10 with a different

photographers, they all share in a more universal appeal and follow the summertime theme beautifully. These photographs capture great summer moments. A diver suspended over the water, a child seated high up on a swing, or the dappled sunlight upon water, each image speaks volumes to the joy of that wonderful time of year. — Terry Peters

play each evening at 8 p.m. Tickets: $20/$18.There will be See more page 28

PUBLIC HEARING Bylaw Amendment to Prohibit Medical Marijuana Production

ENERGY STAR appliances will save you money on your electricity bill and between May 1 – 31, 2014 you can get up to a $100 rebate on select ENERGY STAR refrigerators and clothes washers. Find out which models qualify at powersmart.ca/appliances. ®

R001769564 3.00x14 P

What:

A proposal to prohibit medical marijuana production and distribution within the District.

When:

7 pm, Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Where:

Council Chambers, North Vancouver District Hall, 355 W. Queens Road

What changes?

This proposal requires an amendment to the Zoning Bylaw.

When can I speak?

We welcome your input Tuesday, May 13, 2014 at 7 pm. You can speak in person by signing up at the Hearing or you can provide a written submission to the Municipal Clerk at input@dnv.org or by mail before the conclusion of the Hearing.

Need more info?

Relevant background material and copies of the bylaw are available for review at the Municipal Clerk’s Office or online at dnv.org/public_hearing. Office hours are Monday to Friday 8 am to 4:30 pm.

Questions?

Erik Wilhelm, Community Planner, at 604-990-2360 or wilhelme@dnv.org

dnv.org facebook.com/NVanDistrict

@NVanDistrict


Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A21

PERFORMANCE

Poetry feeds an exploration of borders

Wild Excursions presents world premiere of Mother Tongue ■ Mother Tongue by Conrad Alexandrowicz. Texts adapted from published work by poets Lorna Crozier and Erin Mouré. Scotiabank Dance Centre, 677 Davie Street, May 14-18. JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

Conrad Alexandrowicz has an unusual job: he puts poetry into motion. The director and choreographer is currently translating the poetry of Lorna Crozier and Erin Mouré into a performance that weds their words to physical movement. Exactly how you might describe that wedding is anyone’s guess. “I had another interviewer ask me what she would see on stage and I said, ‘Well, that’s pretty impossible to answer.’ You have to be there,” Alexandrowicz explains.

There is no theatre without being there, but the world premiere of Mother Tongue is so difficult to imagine you may need to be there just to confirm it exists. In brief: two actors and six dancers will move and act and translate a series of poetic works to the stage. “I had this idea that it would be really great to work with poetry as a resource for creating physical theatre,” Alexandrowicz says during a break from rehearsals. As an assistant theatre professor at the University of Victoria, Alexandrowicz is a colleague of Crozier, a writing professor at the school. Alexandrowicz approached the poet at a faculty retreat and found she was enthusiastic about the idea of using her poetry to form a coherent story See Poets page 22

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A22 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

PERFORMANCE

Two poets are very distinct From page 21 told through invented language and movement. Alexandrowicz elected to apply for a grant to further the work. “Amazingly, I got the money,” he says. The choreographer had already been working with Mouré’s poetry and decided the two wordsmiths’ echoed back and forth from one to the other. “In some ways because they’re very different from each other,” he says. The poets are distinct, but both have written work that deals with death. The Poet’s Dream, penned by Crozier, centres around a poet who is sucked inside her psyche. There are angels, memories, and mortality, specifically the death of parents. Mouré’s The Unmemntioable touches on some similar themes, albeit

in a much different work. “I was really gripped by the story of her mother’s family, the whole multiethnic strife in western Ukraine, which has a whole different resonance now, of course,” Alexandrowicz says. Both works deal with a primal sense of loss, according to Alexandrowicz. “Both my parents are gone, but my mom died in 2002. I guess it’s because it’s the kind of thing; you never get over it, you just get used to it.” Like two misfits who decide to be independent together, poetry and theatre belong together, according to Alexandrowicz. “Poetry has become a fringe art form the same way that dance and physical theatre are fringe art forms,” Alexandrowicz says. Alexandrowicz specializes in what he calls

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non-natural theatre. “It’s not much different from staging a play except that the text is much more

plastic,” he explains. While iconic plays like Death of a Salesman have certain defining elements,

Mother Tongue is still gathering elements to be defined. The first rehearsals

are the most difficult, according to See Mouré page 39

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A24 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A25

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A27

FILM

Neighbors been done before ■ Neighbors. Directed by Nicholas Stoller. Starring Seth Rogen, Rose Byrne and Zac Efron. Rating: 4 (out of 10) JULIE CRAWFORD Contributing writer

Neighbors is trying to be five other movies at once, and failing miserably at each. The premise sounds reasonable: new parents sink all their savings into their dream house only to discover that the house next door has been bought by a fraternity. The result is a less-funny frat movie than Old School, a less gross-out version of a Farrelly film, and a movie that’s not nearly as partyready as Project X. Mac and Kelly (Seth Rogen and Rose Byrne) are eager to lay down some ground rules while not coming across as old farts. So they decide to ask frat president Teddy (Zac Efron) to keep the noise down while offering him weed as a peace offering.The generation gap is apparent right away, when the guys argue about who is the best Batman ever:Teddy says Christian Bale; Mac says Michael Keaton. But the peace doesn’t last long: Delta Psi Beta is the fraternity that brought you beer pong. It’s Teddy’s year to be on the wall of legends, which means the most epic party ever. After Mac calls the police, the frat (including Dave Franco and Superbad’s McLovin) makes the family’s life a living hell and Mac and

C/+ 9_5:T' Ha3[ I:]aT /T) I:4a =e5Ta 43/5 YT fY+[:V/4 H3:VVa5#4 +:Ua)e 7-#(&?/*'% H=B> #AB(- F#%& %&<B1B* B.. %/ I#-F %*B#C-*3 bldGd HFbbhk9; Kelly make it their mission to get the boys kicked out. Maybe if there was a straight man or woman here, the silliness would ring true. However, Mac and Kelly are equally culpable in the revenge plot, equally potty-mouthed (guess what baby’s first word will be?) and both long to recapture their 20s by gulping down as much weed and shots as

possible. “We can’t both be Kevin James,” acknowledges Mac. But no one –least of all the screenwriters — acknowledges the fact that the parents left their baby at home alone all night, a fact that could’ve been exploited for a chuckle or two. No one is likeable.There should be pathos mixed in with all the profanity, and there are plenty of

opportunities — Kelly’s dissatisfaction with being a stay-at-home mom,Teddy’s fear of post-college future, Mac’s loss of self — but these are only glimpsed and then discarded, like the used condom on Mac’s lawn. “You guys don’t want to go back to your boringass lives as parents,” is the only sage line uttered by moronic family friend

Jimmy (Ike Barinholtz). The actors look miserable. Often you see a film that has been made solely so that the cast can hang out and have a good time.This isn’t one of those. Zac Efron, in particularly, is clearly disappointed that if he ever stops doing ab crunches he will never get See Filmmakers page 28

Showtimes LANDMARK CINEMAS 6 ESPLANADE 200West Esplanade, NorthVancouver Captain America:The Winter Soldier (PG) — Fri, Mon-Thur 6:45; Sat-Sun 1:15, 6:45 p.m. Captain America:The Winter Soldier 3D (PG) — Fri-Thur 3:30, 9:55 p.m. Rio 2 (G) — Fri-Thur 4, 9:30 Rio 2 3D (G) — Fri, MonThur 7:10; Sat-Sun 10:15 a.m., 12:45, 7:10 p.m. Heaven is for Real (G) — Fri, Mon-Thur 3:40, 6:35, 9:25; Sat-Sun 10:05 a.m., 12:50, 3:40, 6:35, 9:25 p.m. The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (PG) — Fri, Mon-Thur 3:45, 7, 10:15; Sat-Sun 10:10 a.m., 12:30, 3:45, 7, 10:15 p.m. The Amazing Spider-Man 2 3D (PG) — Fri, Mon-Wed 3:15, 5, 6:30, 8:30, 9:45; SatSun 10 a.m., noon, 1:30, 3:15, 5, 6:30, 8:30, 9:45;Thur 3:15, 5, 8:30 p.m. Godzilla 3D (PG) — Thur 7, 9:50 p.m. PARK & TILFORD 333 Brooksbank Ave., NorthVancouver Mr. Peabody & Sherman (G) — Sat-Sun 4:45 p.m. Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D (G) — Fri, Mon-Tue 7:30, 9:50; Sat-Sun 7:30, 10:05;Wed 9:50 p.m. The Grand Budapest Hotel (14A) — Fri,Tue-Wed 7:05, 9:30; Sat 4:30, 7:15 9:45; Sun 2, 4:30, 7:15 9:45; Mon 9:30; Thur 10 p.m. The OtherWoman (PG) — Fri, Mon-Thur 7:10, 9:45, Sat 10:50 a.m., 1:30, 4:10, 6:55, 9:40; Sun 1:30, 4:10, See more page 34

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A28 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

CALENDAR From page 20

THEATRE AT HENDRY HALL 815 East 11th St., North Vancouver. 604-983-2633 northvanplayers.ca Last Dance: An ageing poet, in the prime of life, decides to give up her much younger lover May 22 (preview $8), 23, 24, 28-31 and June 4-7 at 8 p.m. Tickets: $18/$16.

a presentation of awards and closing night party May 10. The Gondoliers: North Shore Light Opera Society will perform this musical comedy with romance May 15 (preview), 16, 17, 22-24, 28-31 at 8 p.m. with matinees May 18 and 25 at 2 p.m.The May 22 and 28 shows will have singalongsTickets: $10-$30.

Dance

CENTENNIAL THEATRE 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. 604-984-4484 centennialtheatre.com Coppelia: Coastal City Ballet will perform this classical ballet Friday, May 16 at 7:30 p.m.

ST. MARTIN’S HALL 195 EastWindsor Rd., North Vancouver. 604-767-0665 Ghostchasers: A comic thriller farce May 9 and 10 at 7:30 p.m. with a matinee May 10 at 2 p.m.Tickets: $12/$7.

PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETING

Tickets: $30/$22.

Clubs and pubs

BEAN AROUNDTHE WORLD COFFEES/ BEANS ON LONSDALE 1802 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. Live music every Thursday, 8 p.m. 604-985-2326 CASA NOVA CAFÉ 116 East 14th St., North Vancouver. 604-983-2223 info@casanovacafe.ca CHESHIRE CHEESE RESTAURANT AND BAR Lonsdale Quay 123 Carrie Cates Court,

Filmmakers fill with filler

NorthVancouver. lonsdalequay.com CAULFEILD COVE HALL 4773 South Piccadilly Rd.,West Vancouver. 604-812-7411 caulfeildcovehall.ca DUNDARAVE FISH MARKET 2423 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-922-1155 dundaravefishmarket.com ELECTRIC OWL 928 Main St.,Vancouver. 604-558-0928 See more page 34

From page 27

another film role. Speaking of abs, we see more of Seth Rogen’s than we’d like. Seeing doughy people have sex is kind of humourous, right? But then we see him hosing the lawn shirtless.We see him shirtless at a party, and shirtless at Abercrombie and Fitch. It’s only one device that points to the fact that filmmakers realized they had time to fill, and so spun out scenes past their funny date. There isn’t a gag we haven’t seen done. Mastitis

comedy? Done. Poop all over the place? Done. Stolen air bags randomly detonating? OK, not done before, but you can see that stunt in the trailer. Mac and Kelly’s list of old people stuff is moderately funny — the smell of fresh coffee, weekend shopping at The Container Store — but it’s nothing that you and your friends couldn’t come up with over a beer or two. And when you realize that you could’ve written the whole movie, with funnier results, Neighbors isn’t worth the effort.

Living cities

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A30 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A31

YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to FASHION & STYLE

Spirality skincare comes to life

NorthVancouver resident creates organic cosmetics CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com

FASHION FILE Our weekly roundup of fashion and beauty events and activities. page 33

Rosa Perez comes from a family of scientists, so experimenting with ingredients and developing formulas comes naturally to her. Two years ago, the Lynn Valley resident created and launched Spirality of Life, a line of natural skincare products, and fulfilled a dream she’s had most of her life. Growing up in Mexico, Perez admired her chemist grandfather who had a laboratory in the family home. It was at the end of the hallway on the top floor of the house, she recalls. “I used to go upstairs when I was little and I saw all the tubes all together.” There, she would watch him concoct many of their household products — from cleaning solutions to shampoo. “I learned a lot from him,” Perez says. Meanwhile, her mother had a PhD in science and focused her research on plants. Perez says she always had an interest in cosmetics. She studied cosmetology at postsecondary school in Mexico and continued her education in Barcelona, Spain, where she graduated as a cosmetic chemist. She deviated from the cosmetics industry for a while, taking a job in broadcast radio, but returned to her passion years later when she, together with her mother and her sister (a

plastic surgeon), started a cosmetic and nutraceutical company and developed a natural skincare line. In 1997, Perez left the business in the hands of her family when she and her husband moved to Canada. The couple have lived in North Vancouver for 16 years and have two children, aged 12 and 10, and two dogs. When she arrived in Canada, Perez made it a priority to improve her English and then earned her esthetician certification from the Cosmetologist Association of B.C. She worked in the beauty industry, but what she really yearned to do was invent creams and cleansers of her very own. Two years ago, while sitting in West Vancouver Memorial Library, she decided the time was right. Her children no longer demanded as much of her attention and she was itching to start a business. That very day she came up with the name Spirality of Life, inspired by her childhood habit of doodling spirals in the margins of notebooks. The result of her efforts is a vegan cosmetic line with organic and nontoxic ingredients with no petrochemicals or parebens. Perez decided on the formulas herself and manufactures the products in a laboratory in Richmond, which she rents from a chemist. See Products page 33

heTT E/VVae 5a4Y)aT3 I:4/ ba5ac 4[:04 :__ 3[a VYTa :_ T/325/V 4WYT+/5a 85:)2+34 4[a _:5U2V/3a)% la5 H8Y5/VY3e :_ hY_a +:VVa+3Y:T 24a4 :5]/TY+' T:T&3:.Y+ YT]5a)YaT34 _5aa :_ 8a35:+[aUY+/V4 /T) 8/5/-aT4% bldGd MIKE WAKEFIELD

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A32 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

≥ 2013 YVR ANNUAL AND SUSTAINABILITY REPORT HIGHLIGHTS

CONNECTIONS THAT WORK

Vancouver Airport Authority is a community-based, not-for-profit organization that manages Vancouver International Airport (YVR). Our entire mandate is to connect the people, products and businesses of British Columbia to the world, creating jobs, generating economic impact and building an airport that makes its community proud.

≥ OUR PEOPLE Almost 24,000 people call YVR their workplace. And at the core of this community is the Airport Authority team itself, a group of 408 employees that goes beyond, every day to keep YVR operating 24-7.

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≥ OUR CUSTOMERS

YVR welcomed a record 17.97 million passengers in 2013, thanks to strong domestic travel and a tremendous boost in traffic to Asia-Pacific.

A record number of passengers chose to travel to and through YVR in 2013. In the same year, our shared passion for customer care broke another record: 91% customer satisfaction rating.

As essential as airport safety, sustainable airport operations remain a key focus for us. Environmental initiatives in 2013 included cycling infrastructure upgrades and a successful construction waste recycling program.

≥ OUR COMMUNITY

17.97 MILLION

≥ OUR LEADERSHIP

PASSENGERS TRAVELLED THROUGH YVR IN 2013

Financial and Operating Highlights

2013

REVENUE (millions)

433.3

OPERATING EXPENSES (millions)

292.3

GROUND LEASE (millions)

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EXCESS OF REVENUE OVER EXPENSES (millions)

97.1

NET ASSETS (millions)

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CAPITAL EXPENDITURES FOR THE YEAR (millions)

186.0

PASSENGERS (millions)

18.0

AIRCRAFT RUNWAY TAKE-OFFS AND LANDINGS (thousands)

263

CARGO HANDLED (tonnes)

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The Airport Authority is governed by a board of 14 directors, each with close ties to the local community. Day-to-day airport operations are overseen by our eight-member executive team, led by President & CEO Craig Richmond, who assumed the role on July 1, 2013.

We are proud of our role as a community contributor and in 2013 invested more than $760,000 in local not-for-profit organizations, charities and sponsorships.

40

SCHOOL TOURS COMMUNITY FESTIVALS

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IN COMMUNITY INVESTMENT

We strive to be open and accountable to you, our customers, neighbours and business partners. For the complete 2013 annual and sustainability report, please visit www.yvr.ca We welcome your comments and questions. Please email us at:community_relations@yvr.ca


Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A33

LOOK Fashion File A FASHIONABLE CAUSE A Mayan cultural fashion show and dance featuring Ballet Folklorico Nahualli Friday, May 9, 6-9 p.m. at St. Agnes Anglican Church, 530 East 12th St., North Vancouver. $45, which includes wine and a Mexican dinner. 604-8197982 mayacorn@telus.net mayacornconnection.ca

YOUR NEW SUMMER HANGOUT by Adrienne Matei

We’re happy a sweet little spot like Exile Bistro has opened near English Bay. We have a feeling it’s going to be the perfect place to roll into after summer beach days leave us craving a bite and a solid cocktail.

FASHION SHOW LeslieJane clothing store at 1480 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver, is holding a fashion show on Saturday, May 10 at 2 p.m. Featuring live music by Ron Stelting and Jenny Megan. 10 per cent of sales will benefit Dress for Success. lesliejane.com JEWELRY MARKET The West Vancouver Community Centre is holding its Spring Jewelry Market May 10 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the atrium. westvancouver. ca/jewellerymarket Compiled by Christine Lyon Fashion File is a weekly column. Send your info to clyon@nsnews.com.

DINING & NIGHTLIFE

HALF CORKED CONTEST by Kate LeGresley

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Her line includes a Grapefruit Facial Cleanser, Grapefruit Balancing Toner, Booster Berries Moisturizer, Anti-aging Serum and Illuminating Serum. What sets her products apart from other organic skincare lines on the market, Perez says, is the

Does food, wine, fresh air and a chance to explore boundlessly beautiful B.C. send shivers (the good kind) up your spine? Same here. That’s why we’re giving away two tickets to the absolutely phenomenal (and completely sold-out) Half Corked Marathon in Oliver Osoyoos Wine Country on May 24th! Enter now on www.vitamindaily.com

use of liquid crystals with the molecular structure (H2O)37. Perez says this liquid helps eliminate toxic molecules and free radicals and also aids product absorption. “This water is a very good carrier of the ingredients and also, inside the skin, it will help to

promote the collagen and the elastic fibres.” She is slowly but steadily managing to get her products sold in stores. Currently, Spirality of Life is sold at select North Shore spas, Pure Integrative Pharmacy and Shoppers Drug Mart locations. It is also available at spiralityoflife.com.

STYLE SPRINGS ETERNAL by Adrienne Matei

This spring we’re vibing Betty Draper wandering out of a phantasmagoric Garden of Eden dreamscape and into the office. Trust us, OK? Following, the hottest style trends for the (second) warmest season. Find 4 spring looks to try now on www.vitamindaily.com FASHION & SHOPPING

CELEBRATE

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TOP 5 SPRING LIPSTICKS by Janis Galloway

Our tried-and-tested pucker picks for spring include practically every shade of the rainbow (save green).

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Products use liquid crystals From page 31

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A34 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

CALENDAR From page 28 FINCH AND BARLEY 250 East First St., North Vancouver. finchandbarley. com Dino DiNicolo will perform solo showsThursday, May 15 and June 19 from 8:45 to midnight. HUGO’S RESTAURANT 5775 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-281-2111 Open Mic: EveryThursday from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Live Music: Every Saturday evening with jazz on the second and last Saturday of each month. JACK LONSDALE’S PUB 1433 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. Live music every Friday and Saturday at 9 p.m. 604-986-7333 LYNNVALLEY LEGION 1630 LynnValley Rd., North Vancouver. Stage 4 — Blues Night: The SaveYour Skin Foundation will hold its annual fundraiser featuring Hot Lucy Saturday, May 10, 6 p.m.-1 a.m. Proceeds will help raise critical funds and awareness needed to help See more page 38

Trend #1: The Essential Anorak

Trend #2:

The Micro Bag

Trend 3:

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Showtimes From page 27 6:55, 9:40 p.m.Thur 1 p.m. Bears (G) — Sat 12:30. 2:40; Sun 2:40 p.m. Neighbors (18A) — Fri, Mon-Thur 7:40, 10; Sat 12:15, 2:45, 5:15, 7:45, 10:15; Sun 2:45, 5:15, 7:45, 10:15 p.m. The Lunchbox (G) Hindi with English subtitles — Fri, Mon-Thur 7:20, 9:50; Sat 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 7, 9:50;

Sun 1:45, 4:15, 7, 9:50 p.m. Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return (G) — Sat 11:45 a.m., Sun 2:10 p.m.Thurs 1 p.m. Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return 3D (G) — Fri, MonThur 7, 9:20; Sat 2:10, 4:35, 7, 9:20; Sun 4:35, 7, 9:20 p.m. Metropolitan Opera: La Cenerentola — Sat 9:55 a.m. Now: In theWings on a World Stage (PG) — Thur 7:30 p.m.

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A35

VISUAL ARTS

Seymour gallery adds personal touch

Memorabilia provides insights into work of L. LeMoine FitzGerald ■ Ordinary Beauty: Prints by L. LeMoine FitzGerald, from the Burnaby Art Gallery collection, on until June 7 at the Seymour Art Gallery. Free lecture by Ian Thom, senior curator at the Vancouver Art Gallery, June 1, 2 p.m. Free 20-minute curator’s talks Thursdays at noon. seymourartgallery.com. ERIN MCPHEE emcphee@nsnews.com

It was serendipitous. Talking to one of the Seymour Art Gallery’s longest-serving volunteers, Ina Law, interim curator Hilary Letwin excitedly told her about her next project, a retrospective of Group of Seven artist Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald (1890–1956). Law said, “‘Oh FitzGerald? FitzGerald from Winnipeg?You know, my daughter is married to a man whose mother knew

him because he used to come and sketch on their farm in Snowflake, Man,’” recalls Letwin. Law went on to say, “‘In fact, I think she’s got some shoeboxes of letters and all sorts of other things that they’ve saved as a result of this connection.’” Law put Letwin in touch with her daughter Karen’s mother-in-law, Ferne Green, 81, a current Portage la Prairie resident, who was happy to offer stories and mementos related to her family’s relationship with the celebrated artist, some of which is currently featured in the resulting exhibition, Ordinary Beauty, on now until June 7 at the Deep Cove gallery. The show features a selection of FitzGerald’s prints from throughout his life, on loan from the Burnaby Art Gallery, known for its extensive collection of works on paper, says Letwin, who serves as the show’s

HaeU:25 >53 m/VVa5e#4 lYV/5e ha30YT V::W4 :1a5 3[a 7Y3cma5/V) 4[:0% bldGd MIKE WAKEFIELD curator. “It’s wonderful to have this opportunity to show all of these works together that measure the breadth of his career,” says Letwin. “But also to infuse the works with

a personal element through the contributions of Ferne because it’s all well and good to put art up on a wall, but to be able to show the art with a combination of letters and photographs and

other personal memorabilia and memories of this person I think really brings the artist to life in a way that is not always possible by just looking at their art.” The Group of Seven

artist, a member for a year before it disbanded in 1933, spent a few summers on the West Coast in the early 1940s as his daughter, Patricia, lived on Bowen Island. However, FitzGerald spent much of his life working at the Winnipeg School of Art. From 1924 to 1947 he served as first teacher, then principal. A number of the prints on display at the Seymour Gallery served as Christmas cards that FitzGerald would send out to friends, family and professional contacts during those years, typically landscapes, or architectural views, many of which were from windows of different buildings around the school. “You can almost see him positioning himself in front of a window and capturing a different view,” says Letwin. “The interesting thing about these architectural views is that he’s very drawn, it would seem, to Italian architectural features. If you look quickly at these prints it’s almost as if it’s a view in Florence or in another See Artist page 36

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A36 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

CALENDAR

Artist visited family’s farm From page 35

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Italian city. But if you know your Winnipeg landscape, then you will recognize that in fact it’s the Winnipeg juvenile detention centre or one of the public works buildings.” Green was pleased with the opportunity to offer insight into the life of the artist, whom she knew from a young age. FitzGerald, on his own, often with his wife and at times with his children, would stay on Green’s parent’s farm to sketch. “He wasn’t famous then, he was a painter trying to make his way and he was the principal of the school of art for quite a while we knew him, but he certainly didn’t put on any airs. He was just Mr. FitzGerald to us,” laughs Green. “He had such a deep hearty laugh that I just loved to hear,” she adds. Green suspects FitzGerald came to know

her father as the artist’s grandparents had had a farm two miles away from theirs in Snowflake. The same age, yet very different men, the two got along famously. “(FitzGerald) liked the farm and (being) very close to nature, so in that way they were alike, but he wasn’t used to the kind of work my dad was used to for sure,” says Green. “He sometimes helped my dad a bit, but mostly he sort of just wandered around on his own,” she adds. FitzGerald and his wife, so as not to displace any of the members of Green’s family would sleep in the hayloft. “We always went out to the hayloft after they left thinking that sounded like a wonderful thing, but . . . . because we’d hear a mouse or a bird or something . . . . by the time the night was See Manitoba page 38


Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A37


A38 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

Name: NORTH SHORE NEWS HOUSE ADS; Width: 19p11.999; Depth: 1.917 in;

#nsnmoments

CALENDAR

PUBLIC

INFORMATION

MEETING

A redevelopment is proposed for 3600 Mahon Avenue (a portion of Braemar School site) to construct 7 strata single family homes. You are invited to a meeting to discuss the project. Date: Wednesday, May 14, 2014, 7:00pm- 8:45pm Place: 3600 Mahon Ave (Braemar Elementary School Activity Room) The applicant proposes to rezone a portion of the Braemar school site from Public Assembly zoning to a Comprehensive Development Zone to permit 7 strata single family houses. Information packages are being distributed to residents within a 75 meter radius of the site. If you would like to receive a copy or more information, contact James Fox of Wedgewood Ventures Ltd at 604-649-5658 or Kathleen Larsen of the Community Planning Department at 604-990-2387.

This is not a Public Hearing. DNV Council will receive a report from staff on issues raised at the meeting and will formally consider the proposal at a later date.

DRAGON SOUNDS fY+:Va hY /T) <:5ae l/UU 8a5_:5U /4 / 8Y/T: /T) a5[2 )2: /3 3[a H:2T) :_ ;5/]:T 7a43Y1/V ^ E/T+:21a5#4 M543 _a43Y1/V )a1:3a) 3: \<[YTa4a U24Y+Z' 4[:0+/4YT] / 0Y)a 5/T]a :_ U24Y+/V 43eVa4 ^ :T H2T)/e' g/e !!' /3 T::T /3 3[a I:2T)[:24a#4 ba5_:5U/T+a <aT35a% 7:5 U:5a YT_:5U/3Y:T 1Y4Y3 '/">;/+;*B(/>3=/A% bldGd HFbbhk9; From page 34 fight melanoma, one of the most common, deadly and preventable forms of cancer. $25. eventbrite.ca/e/hot-lucystage-4-blues-night-tickets10872254205. MIST ULTRA BAR 105-100 Park Royal,West Vancouver. 604-926-2326 DJs spin classic dance music from the ’80s, ’90s and today. QUEENS CROSS PUB

2989 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. queenscross.com AdamWoodall performs acoustic music every Sunday, 7:30-11:30 p.m. THE RAVEN PUB 1052 Deep Cove Rd., North Vancouver. theravenpub.com AdamWoodall performs acoustic music everyThursday, 7:30-11:30 p.m. RED LION BAR & GRILL 2427 Marine Drive,West

Vancouver. 604-926-8838 Open Mic Night: A variety of talent fromWestVancouver and beyondTuesdays at 8 p.m. Participation welcome. Info: ethosproductions@shaw.ca. Jazz Pianist Randy Doherty will perform everyThursday, Friday and Saturday from 8 to 11 p.m. RUSTY GULL 175 East First St., North Vancouver. Live music Wednesday, Friday and Saturday; Mostly Marley

performs every Sunday, 7 p.m. SAILOR HAGAR’S BREW PUB 235West First St., North Vancouver. Live music every Friday and Saturday, 9 p.m.1 a.m. 604-984-3087 THEVILLAGE TAPHOUSE TheVillage at Park Royal, WestVancouver. 604-922See more page 39

Manitoba life reflected in exhibition From page 36

THE LUNCHBOX The Lunchbox paints a nuanced portrait of life in contemporary Mumbai, weaving themes of gender values, social class and generational differences story.

Wednesday

May 14 @7PM

Park and Tilford Cineplex 333 Brooksbank Ave, North Vancouver

Advanced Tickets Online: nvartscouncil.ca By Phone: 604.988.6844 In person: 335 Lonsdale Ave, NV AT THE DOOR - CASH ONLY

over we were all back in the house,” says Green. Green recalls an early embarrassment, jumping to FitzGerald’s defense at age eight. “Mr. FitzGerald was pretty well bald but he had artist hair I guess, sort of longer, curly up the back around.The people that were there, they were actually buying a picture. They sort of teased him a little bit about his hair being bald on top or something. I said, ‘well, when winter comes it will all grow out’ because being a farm girl of course I thought the horses. . . all grew thick hair in the wintertime and I thought he would too. And they laughed

hY:TaV hag:YTa 7Y3cma5/V) ?!NL" ` !LQP( 0/4 3[a :TVe UaU-a5 :_ 3[a m5:28 :_ Ha1aT 3: -a -/4a) YT 0a43a5T </T/)/% at that. I remember being really embarrassed. I can

still remember how awful I felt because I knew I’d said something silly,” she says. It was a reciprocal relationship as Green and her family would stay with the FitzGeralds in Winnipeg as needed, for visits to the doctor or dentist, for business or simply a vacation. Green recalls sleeping in a room where FitzGerald’s paintings were hung and laughs at her younger self, turning her nose up at his nudes, of someone’s back, much preferring his nature pictures. The two families stayed in contact through the years, Green inviting the couple over for dinner after she was married and Green’s mother caring for Mrs. FitzGerald

when she got older. “They were very special people and we really had a good friendship,” says Green. Green and her son and daughter-in-law are travelling to the North Shore this weekend to see the exhibition.While Green has seen a number of FitzGerald’s shows over the years, it’s always something she looks forward to. She recognizes the landscapes in his paintings, depictions of the old Snowflake family farm, or of her father. One painting “Potato Patch,” shows him hard at work hoeing potatoes. “Every time I go I see something that I didn’t see before,” she says.


Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A39

CALENDAR From page 38

Movies at the Library: Goldfinger will be screened Thursday, May 22, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Registration required.

8882. WAVES COFFEE HOUSE 3050 Mountain Hwy., North Vancouver.

CENTENNIAL THEATRE 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. 604-984-4484 centennialtheatre.com Take No Prisoners: Comedian Ron James will give a performance of brand new material Friday, May 9 at 7:30 p.m.Tickets: $55.

Other events

CAPILANO LIBRARY 3045 Highland Blvd., North Vancouver. 604-987-4471 x8175 nvdpl.ca AuthorTalks at the Library: Husband and wife team of writers Ann Eriksson and Gary Geddes will talk about their latest works Tuesday, May 20, 7-8:30 p.m. Registration required.

LYNNVALLEY LIBRARY 1277 LynnValley Rd., North Vancouver. 604-984-0286 x8144 nvdpl.ca AuthorTalks at the

Library: Journalist Len Corben will host a talk titled “One for the Book”Wednesday, May 21, 7-8:30 p.m. Be prepared to hear some strange stories from the North Shore’s past. Registration required. PARK &TILFORD CINEPLEX ODEON THEATRE 200-333 Brooksbank Ave., NorthVancouver. The North Shore International Film Series: The NorthVancouver Community Arts Council will screen Canadian, independent and foreign films throughout the fall, winter and spring.The Lunchbox will play May 14

at 7 p.m. Hindi with English subtitles.Admission: $11. Info: 604-988-6844 nvartscouncil. ca/events/north-shoreinternational-film-series. SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7292 silkpurse.ca Songs and Stories: Composer Michael Conway Baker will share show biz, film and concert music stories past and present the thirdWednesday of every month, 10:30-11:30 a.m.Admission by donation. — compiled by Debbie Caldwell. Email information to listings@nsnews.com.

Mouré tougher to translate From page 22 Alexandrowicz. “There’s always this really awkward period where the actors have to move and they have to hold scripts in their hand,” he says. “It just felt like nothing was working.” Mouré’s work ended up being more difficult to adapt, according to Alexandrowicz. “Erin’s work is really written more to be read. She uses the page much more,” he explains,

discussing the punctuation, fonts and deliberate misspellings that make up her poetry. When the show is complete and each word and punctuation mark is embodied by movement, Alexandrowicz hopes the audience sees something powerful and redemptive about being mortal. “I hope that they have some kind of confrontation with the mysteries about human life that can be conveyed in these art forms when they’re fused.”

NORTH SHORE’S

restaurant guide $ Bargain Fare ($5-8) $ $ Inexpensive ($9-12) $ $ $ Moderate ($13-15) $ $ $ $ Fine Dining ($15-25) LIVE MUSIC

AUSTRIAN Jagerhof Restaurant

Best Little Schnitzel House in Town

OPEN MIC/KARAOKE

BRITISH $ $ $ The Cheshire Cheese Restaurant & Bar

71 Lonsdale Ave, N. Van. 604-980-4316

BISTRO Hugos,Artisanal Pizzas and Global Tapas $ $$ Spring has sprung so why not join us on our deck as the weather gets warmer? Enjoy our daily lunch specials,or join us in listening to great local musical talent two evenings a week.We serve both deep dish and thin crust pizzas,fresh original salads, a great burger,smoked ribs and chicken, South East Asian specialties and a tempting array of sweet fondues and crepes.The menu is eclectic and there is most certainly something for everyone.

5775 Marine Drive, West Vancouver 604-281-2111 hugos@eagleharbour.ca

DJ

BIG SCREEN SPORTS

The Salmon House

$$

Excellent seafood and British dishes on the Waterfront. Friday and Saturday, Prime Rib Dinner. Sunday,Turkey Dinner.Weekends and Holidays, our acclaimed Eggs Benny. Open for lunch or dinner, 7 days a week.

2nd Floor Lonsdale Quay Market, N. Van. 604-987-3322

Serving spectacular views and fine, indigenous west coast cuisine for over 30 years. Lunch, dinner and Sunday brunch. Live entertainment in Coho Lounge on weekend evenings.

2229 Folkestone Way, W. Van. Reservations: www.salmonhouse.com or call 604-926-3212

$ $ 1373 Marine Dr. (2nd flr) W. Van. 604-926-4913

$$$

Critically acclaimed worldwide for its delectable beef noodle, Chef Hung has won numerous Championships in Taiwan and now crowned the Kypriaki Taverna $$ Best Noodle House in Vancouver! For the BEST quality and the BEST Come see what all the excitement prices, come visit or call for delivery is about. today. Open everyday @ Noon for lunch.Voted one of the top 1560 Marine Dr., W. Van. 778-279-8822 5 Greek restaurants in the Lower Mainland.With our outstanding UBC Wesbrook Village: 6190 Marine Drive, West Vancouver food, reasonable prices, friendly 102 - 3313 Shrum Lane, Vancouver 778-279-8874 service and candle-lit charm you will 604-228-8765 Truffle House & Café $$ see why so many people call it their The Truffle House & Café is truly a warm Aberdeen Centre: favourite restaurant. Call for delivery/ 2800 - 4151 Hazelbridge Way, Richmond place to eat European cuisine with take out tonight or come in for a friendly service and reasonable price. 604-295-9357 relaxing Mediterranean experience. Philippe & Fabienne Chaber www.chefhungnoodle.com

For 2 or 200! Enjoy sweeping views through the 6th fairway,to the ocean at Gleneagles Clubhouse.Larson Station West Coast Bistro,a fabulous little restaurant and banquet facility, tucked away on the Gleneagles Golf Course.LIVE MUSIC Fridays & Saturdays BRUNCH on weekends. Family friendly & casual,with flavours of the West Coast.

have created a cozy and comfortable atmosphere and offer a delicious combination of French, Italian and West Coast specialties that your taste buds will love.Already well known for their brunch & lunch, the Truffle House is pleased to offer you DINNER! Join us Friday & Saturday evenings from 5-10 pm for delicious seasonal menus.

2452 Marine Drive, W. Van. 604-922-4222 www.trufflehousecafe.com

GREEK

1356 Marine Dr, N. Van. 604-985-7955

FINE DINING The Observatory

$$$$

An epicurean experience 3700’ above the twinkling lights of Vancouver.

Grouse Mtn, 6400 Nancy Greene Way, N. Van. 604-998-4403

INDIAN Handi Cuisine of India

Village Tap House $$

Reader’s Choice 2006 Winner offering Authentic Indian Cuisine. Open for lunch and dinner,7 days a week.Weekend buffet,ocean view, free delivery.

Palki Best Indian Cuisine $ $

Classic French cuisine served in an elegant and graceful setting. Neighbourhood For over 34 years, Chez Michel has Noodles House $ treated guests to only the best. North Shore’s best variety & quality Traditional seafood and meat Chinese food.Serving Lunch & Dinner entrees, dressed in rich, tempting 7 days a week.Eat in,10% off takeout. sauces, are specially featured Free delivery min.$20.00 order within alongside a superb selection of 3 kms. wines and a decadent dessert list. Superior service with a waterfront 1352 Lonsdale Ave., N. Van. view helps complete your lunch or 604-988-9885 dinner experience.

Larson Station West Coast Bistro & Banquets $ $ $ Chef Hung Taiwanese Noodle

WHEELCHAIR ACCESSIBLE

1579 Bellevue Ave, W. Van. 604-925-5262 www.handi-restaurant.com

FRENCH Chez Michel

CHINESE

WIFI $$$$

Where one spicy sauce does not fit all.Readers’Choice award winning restaurant for 5 years! Open for Lunch & Dinner.Lunch Buffet $10.95.

116 East 15th St, N. Van. 604-986-7555 www.palkirestaurant.com

PUB

The Black Bear Neighbhourhood Pub

$$

VOTED BEST PUB BY YOU - The Bear is your warm, friendly, comfortable local that has free parking plus a taxi stand. Full take-out menu. Daily drink and food specials. Reserve your parties of 15-30 ppl except Friday’s.Trivia played every Monday night. Come in for a bite and a drink. We are 100% smoke & UFC free. Follow us on Facebook & Twitter

1177 Lynn Valley Road, N. Van www.blackbearpub.com 604.990.8880

The Rusty Gull

$$

A Lower Lonsdale legend for 23 years. Home to the best in live music Wed, Fri, Sat & Sun nights. Great food selection that surpasses the norm. The best weekend breakfasts ‘til 2pm. Great selection of import draft. All Canucks PPV games on the big screens.

175 East 1st St., N. Van. 604-988-5585

Sailor Hagar’s Neighbourhood Pub

$$

Offers an excellent menu, the best craft brewed ales & lagers in Vancouver, live music, satellite sports, pool table, dart boards & heated patio with a spectacular city view.

86 Semisch Ave., N. Van. 604-984-3087

$$

WEST COAST

Pier 7 restaurant + bar $$$

Damn good pub! We try to take everything that’s good about a pub, and leave out what’s not, then add lots more good… Start with a comfortable room around a giant fireplace, add 20 ice cold brews on tap, really damn good food, some awesome events, and pretty much the most personable group of folks you’ll ever meet… and welcome to the Village Tap House! Come in for dinner, to catch the game on our dozens of high-def flat screens, or check the events page to see what’s happening this week.

Enjoy dining on the waterfront with our inspired west coast boat-to-table choices that feature seasonal offerings. Our bar features an extensive wine and cocktail list and 5T.V.s so you’ll never miss a game.We are located in Lower Lonsdale at the Pier,on the water. No other restaurant in North Vancouver gets you this close to the water.We are open for Lunch & Dinner. Pier 7: Brunch is now served until 2:30. on weekends and statutory holidays

1C - 900 Main Street, Village at Park Royal, West Vancouver 604-922-8882 info@villagetaphouse.com

25 Wallace Mews North Vancouver,BC 604-929-7437 www.pierseven.ca

The Lobby Restaurant at the Pinnacle Hotel

SEAFOOD

$$$

Montgomery’s Fish & Chips $

Inspired by BC’s natural abundance of fabulous seafood and the freshest of ingredients, dishes are prepared to reflect west coast cuisine. Open 7-days a week for breakfast, lunch, dinner and late night lounge.We are located on the corner of Lonsdale & Esplanade. The Lobby Bar: We now have Live music every Friday night from 8-11pm!

International Food Court, Lonsdale Quay Market 604-929-8416

WATERFRONT DINING

C-Lovers Fish & Chips

$$

The best fish & chips on the North Shore!

Marine Dr. @ Pemberton, N. Van. 604-980-9993 & OUR NEW LOCATION: 6640 Royal Ave., Horseshoe Bay, W. Van. 604-913-0994 The fastest growing Fish & Chips on the North Shore.

The MarinaSide Grill

THAI Thai PudPong Restaurant

$$

West Vancouver’s original Thai Restaurant. Serving authentic Thai cuisine. Open Monday-Friday for lunch. 7 days a week for dinner.

1474 Marine Dr., W. Van. 604-921-1069 www.thaipudpong.com

138 Victory Ship Way, N. Van. 604-973-8000 www.pinnaclepierhotel.com

$$

Enjoy your Waterfront dining experience with our extensive menu. From eggs benny to juicy burgers during our popular brunches to our famous prime rib, hot scallop salad, clam chowder, king crab, steaks, seafood style cordon bleu. Rooms available for private parties and free parking. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner seven days a week.View full menu www.marinasidegrill.com.

1653 Columbia St, N. Van. (2 blks South of Main & Mtn Hwy under the bridge) 604-988-0038 www.marinagrill.com

Would you like to advertise your restaurant here? Call 604.998.3560






A44 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE

to THE ROAD

Brendan McAleer

Braking News

Phones might make driving safer, lol jaa8 [/4 5a1Y1a) 3[a <[a5:Waa T/Ua 0Y3[ /T /VV&Ta0 HFE 3[/3 [/4 / 2TY62a )a4Y]T /T) :__&5:/) +/8/-YVY3Ya4 3[/3 U/Wa Y3 43/T) :23 _5:U 3[a 5a43 :_ 3[a M1a&4a/3a5 +5:0)% k3 Y4 /1/YV/-Va /3 ;a43YT/3Y:T <[5e4Va5 YT f:53[ E/T+:21a5% bldGd MIKE WAKEFIELD

A biweekly roundup of automotive news, good, bad and just plain weird:

2014 Jeep Cherokee

Using the mobile phone to prevent accidents As we all know, thanks to a constant media barrage and messages from local law enforcement, cellphones and cars don’t mix. The carnage caused by so-called distracted driving is on the tip of everyone’s tongues these days, and has almost supplanted drinking and driving as one of the more heinous crimes you can pull off behind the wheel. However, researchers at the University of Michigan are working with funding from the U.S. Department of Transportation to come up with a way for smartphones to actually cut down on pedestrian and cyclist crashes.You might be blithely crossing

Return of the Cherokee Scan this page with the Layar app to see video of the new Jeep Cherokee in action.

Unfortunately for Chrysler, the Jeep Liberty never garnered a lot of sales. However, when they announced that they would be replacing it with the revived Cherokee name, many were excited. The first Cherokee was produced by American Motors back in 1984 and was the first modern SUV without a body-on-frame chassis. Its innovative design and appearance proved quite popular and spawned many imitators. So many, in fact, we now have an entire market segment of them, known as crossover

genuine off-road capability. The all-new 2014 Jeep Cherokee seeks to continue that fashion of tackling terrain that many of its competitors would not dare to even attempt.

David Chao

Behind the Wheel utility vehicles. The hallmark of the Cherokee that set it apart from its rivals was its rugged toughness and

Design While Chrysler wanted to retain the legendary Jeep capability, they opted to move away from the classic, square-jawed look. The new Cherokee is much more sleek and progressive with its styling. The front end features the familiar seven-slot Jeep grille; however there is a

distinct horizontal fold through the centre. Slim LED daytime running lights are set high and wide and are uniquely separated from the headlamps below. Fog lights sit low at the bottom of the bumper. The windshield is much more slanted than previous Cherokees and punctuates its fluid design. The new silhouette is much more aerodynamic, providing better fuel economy and a quieter ride. Full LED taillamps continue the contemporary

See Jeep page 45

SeeVW page 46

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Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A45

TODAY’S DRIVE

Jeep shines on rough roads From page 44

look at the rear. The overall look and feel is distinct, progressive, and, dare-I-say, funky. The Cherokee shares the same platform as the new Dodge Dart. This gives it an overall length of 4.62 metres, placing it between compact and midsize SUVs. The cabin is sophisticated, with easyto-use technology and available with more than 70 safety and security features including 10 standard airbags. A Trailhawk edition is available for off-road enthusiasts and adds an inch of ground clearance, skid plates, red front tow hooks, standard four-wheel drive and a locking rear differential. Performance On the road, the Cherokee’s ride quality is on par with the best in this market segment. It does feel a bit sportier than the mainstream crossovers from Honda or Ford, however, thanks to Dodge Dart’s Alpha Romeo origins that carry its European feel over to the Cherokee. The base engine in the Cherokee, the 2.4-litre Tigershark MultiAir I4, is also shared with the Dart. It is rated at 184 horsepower and 171 foot-pounds of torque and provides decent power delivery. Chrysler’s new 3.2litre Pentastar V-6 is also available. The Cherokee is the first product to get this

engine, which produces 271 h.p. and 239 foot-pounds of torque. Regardless of which engine you choose, it will be mated to a nine-speed automatic transmission. This is the first vehicle in the segment to come with such a gearbox. This unit provides smooth shifts and improves fuel economy across all driving ranges. The Cherokee performs well as a daily driver, but if you leave the pavement onto rough roads, it will outshine most rivals. There are three available 4WD systems — Jeep Active Drive I, Active Drive II or Active Drive Lock. Jeep’s Selec-Terrain traction control system comes standard and allows the driver to choose the optimal on- or offroad setting including customized settings for sport, snow, sand/mud and rock. The Cherokee is the first midsize SUV to feature rear-axle disconnect, a system which seamlessly switches between two- and four-wheel drive to reduce the energy loss when 4WD is not needed.

the largest in the segment. Both units use Chrysler’s Uconnect system which removes redundant buttons from the centre stack and is one of the easiest to use infotainment systems on the market.

The available seveninch full-colour LED TFT reconfigurable instrument cluster allows the driver to customize which information they see and where. The front seats are

Rear cargo volume is 24.6 cubic feet with the rear seats up and 54.9 cubic feet with them down. The Jeep Cargo Management system provides added versatility. The highlight of the interior is the available wireless charging pad, which can power your

ergonomic and offer good support — they come standard in cloth but Nappa leather is available. For added passenger comfort and cargo flexibility, the second row seat bottoms slide forward and backward. They are also split 60/40 so they can be folded for additional cargo capacity.

See Tough page 47

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Environment Inside, the Cherokee boasts an attractive and upscale cabin with adequate space to seat five. The trapezoidal centre stack is a nod to Jeep’s heritage. Base models come with a 5-inch touchscreen multimedia command centre, but the optional 8.4-inch touchscreen is

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WE ALWAYS BUY PRE-OWNED CARS


A46 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

TODAY’S DRIVE

VW might, like, bring the bus back, man

From page 44

the street without looking up from composing that latest tweet, “Crossng st so nice day #yvr #cherryblossoms,” but your phone could actually be looking out for you. #GuardianAngel. The key is in a GPSlocator chip that can be embedded in the phone to broadcast your location up to ten times a second. Using technology under development for car-to-car communication, something that’s developing fast, a next-generation automobile

can actually track the pedestrian that’s obscured by the car turning right, and also keep an electronic eye on the cyclist that’s coming up fast. Now, none of this will be able to handle the famed Vancouver Pedestrian’s ability to suddenly dart into the road like a panicked squirrel, but it will cut down on potentially lethal interactions if auto-braking cars can react even before you do. The only drawback is perhaps a greater reliance on electronic safety nets, and even more

good? Well, they just scraped the badges off a Dodge Caravan and called it a day — nobody was fooled, and the van didn’t sell all that well. However, this time VW might get it right. Reports indicate that the success of the Beetle over past years has convinced VW that perhaps a more retro approach might be needed. Now, we’ve had rumours of a re-birth of the Microbus umpteen times before, usually about once a year. Mostly, that’s been wishful thinking, but VW’s new MQB

complacency behind the wheel. Not to mention, donning our tinfoil hats, that THEY can monitor your position at any time, if you have the app enabled. You know who I mean. The Pentaverate (ooh, I hate the Colonel). VW mulling re-launch of the Bulli Remember the Routan? That’s the time VW thought it would be a good idea to appeal to aging hippies and burgeoning families by bringing back the iconic VW van. Sounds

*

0

%

+

FINANCING

HURRY! INVOICE PRICING ENDS MAY 31ST Dealer is reimbursed a holdback amount included in invoice price by the manufacturer for each vehicle sold.

*

HWY: 5.3L/100 KM CITY: 7.6L/100 KM!

2014

ELANTRA L DEALER INVOICE PRICE:

OWN IT FOR

16,397

$

$ ‡

PLUS

WITH

0

79

0

%†

BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT

Limited model shown" Selling Price: $23,799

AND

$

FINANCING FOR 96 MONTHS

DOWN

ELANTRA L MANUAL. DEALER INVOICE PRICE INCLUDES $1,197 IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTSΩ, FEES (UP TO $499), DELIVERY AND DESTINATION.

PLUS HST.

OR

2014

STEP UP TO THE WELL EQUIPPED ELANTRA GT FOR AN EXTRA

ELANTRA GT L HWY: 5.8L/100 KM CITY: 8.5L/100 KM!

17

$

ELANTRA GT L MANUAL. $96 BI-WEEKLY AT 0.9% FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN. †

BI-WEEKLY

DEALER INVOICE PRICE INCLUDES $862 IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTSΩ, FEES (UP TO $499), DELIVERY AND DESTINATION. FEATURES INCLUDE: AIR CONDITIONING ! AM/FM/ SIRIUS XM™/CD/MP3 6-SPEAKER AUDIO SYSTEM ! ABS W/ ELECTRONIC BRAKE FORCE DISTRIBUTION ! ELECTRONIC STABILITY CONTROL (ESC)

19,182

$

DEALER INVOICE PRICE:

SE w/ Tech model shown" Selling Price: $26,727

HWY: 7.3L/100 KM CITY: 10.2L/100 KM!

2014

PLUS

WITH

BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT

FINANCING FOR 96 MONTHS

136 0.9

$ Limited model shown" Selling Price: $38,448

PLUS GET

0%

FINANCING FOR

%†

96

PLUS HST.

DEALER INVOICE PRICE:

SANTA FE SPORT OWN IT FOR

AND

0

$

DOWN

27,278

$

PLUS HST.

SANTA FE SPORT 2.4L FWD. DEALER INVOICE PRICE INCLUDES $1,316 IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTSΩ, FEES (UP TO $499), DELIVERY AND DESTINATION.

MONTHS

5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty†† 5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty 5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty

HyundaiCanada.com

TM The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. †Finance offer available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2014 Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/ Elantra GT L 6-Speed Manual/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD with an annual finance rate of 0%/0.9%/0.9% for 96 months. Bi-weekly payments are $79/$96/$136. $0 down payment required. Cost of Borrowing is $0/$711/$1,009. Finance offer includes Delivery and Destination of $1,595/$1,595/$1,795, fees, levies, and all applicable charges (excluding HST). Finance offer excludes registration, insurance, PPSA and license fees. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E. and a full tank of gas. ‡Dealer Invoice Price of 2014 Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Elantra GT L 6-Speed Manual/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD are $16,397/$19,182/$27,278. Prices include price adjustments of $1,197/$862/$1,316 and includes Delivery and Destination of $1,595/$1,595/$1,795, fees, levies, and all applicable charges (excluding HST). Finance offer excludes registration, insurance, PPSA and license fees. The customer prices are those reflected on the dealer invoice from Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. The dealer invoice price includes a holdback amount for which the dealer is subsequently reimbursed by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. ΩPrice adjustments are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Price adjustments of up to $1,197/$862/$1,316 available on in stock 2014 Elantra L 6-Speed Manual/Elantra GT L 6-Speed Manual/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD. Price adjustments applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. "Price of models shown (with Price Adjustments): 2014 Elantra Limited/Elantra GT SE Tech 6-Speed Automatic/Santa Fe 2.0T Limited AWD are $23,799/$26,727/$38,448. Prices include Price Adjustments of $1,445/$1,667/$2,446, Delivery and Destination charges of $1,595/$1,595/$1,795 fees, levies, and all applicable charges (excluding HST). Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA and license fees. !Fuel consumption for new 2014 Elantra L Manual (HWY 5.3L/100KM; City 7.6.L/100KM); 2014 Elantra GT L Manual (HWY 5.8L/100KM; City 8.5L/100KM); 2014 Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD (HWY 7.3L/100KM; City10.2.L/100KM) are based on Manufacturer Testing. Actual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for comparison purposes only. †‡Ω"Offers available for a limited time. Dealer may sell for less. Dealer order may be required. Visit www.hyundaicanada.com or see dealer for complete details. The SiriusXMTM name is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc. All other trademarks and trade names are those of their respective owners. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.

Jim Pattison Hyundai Northshore 855 Automall Dr. PAPERTO INSERT DEALERTAG North Vancouver, 604-985-0055HERE D#6700

platform technology gives it flexibility in construction that keeps costs down. Essentially, the modular nature of the chassis means that money need not be spent in developing a one-off chassis for a vanity project — they just plug in a 1.8-litre turbo, a 2.0litre turbodiesel, slap on a couple of calico curtains, and Bob’s, like, your uncle, maaaaan. There are other rumours here, including that the Dune concept (think modern Baja Bug) might make it into production. With VW sales slipping in North America, it’d be a good way for the company to inject some excitement into their brand.

Honda tackles Pikes Peak race in seven categories For most people, Honda is a nice safe automaker who used to build wacky racecars, but now is all about EarthDreams and hybrid, and the fuel-sipping Civic. Turns out, they still have a passion for racing. The Pikes Peak International Hill Climb is one of the most wellknown such events in the world, involving a hairraising dash up a mountain in Colorado. It used to be partially gravel, but now the entire way is paved, making for a rapid pace and a really, really hard landing if you accidentally drive off the side of the mountain. As there aren’t any guardrails, this actually happens from time to time. While nothing’s quite as nutty as the 532 horsepower Odyssey Minivan they brought last year, Honda still has a strong field for 2014, including two motorcycles and five cars. They’ll have an NSX running in the open class, a Honda-powered Norma racing chassis, two Fit subcompacts (one an EV, the other a Spec-B racing car), and a Honda S2000 with a 3.7-litre V-6 shoehorned into it. That last one sounds pretty darn great. Hey Honda, why don’t you build one of those for the rest of us? Aston Martin finally launching new platform The underpinnings of the current range of Aston Martins (apart from the 177 hypercar) are currently old enough to get all sulky and start listening to Linkin Park, or whatever

the equivalent is these days. Released at the beginning of the millennium, the VH chassis is entering its terrible teens, and it’s time to throw it away and start over. FYI, you’re not allowed to do the same with your offspring, no matter how much you might want to. A-M reports that the new chassis is under development, this tying in with their new contract with AMG. MercedesBenz’s skunkworks will provide the engines for the next round of British Grand Tourers, in much the same way as they build motors for exotica like the Pagani Huayra. And yes, I still have to Google the spelling of Huayra. While a new chassis is great, there’s a bit of sadness here at the passing of the old Aston V-12, which made a glorious noise and gave you a boot up the backside like you were a football and it was David Beckham. I’ll miss it a bit, right up until the AMG-sourced engine does the same trick.

Another helpful mobile phone Well, not so much a phone as a phone-sized battery pack. Junopower is a company that makes auxiliary battery packs for smartphones, so you can charge up if your iPhone suddenly goes dead. Again. For like the 10th time. They claim that their JUMPR device, which is about the size of an iPhone5 and twice the weight, is powerful enough to bring a car battery back to life. Small enough to cram in your pocket or the glovebox, it’s an easily portable recharger that cranks out 12 volts at 300 amps. That’s probably not quite enough to actually jumpstart your car, but it’ll do to boost the battery back up to levels where you can crank the ignition again. If you’re taking a road trip, particularly on a motorcycle where every ounce counts, it’s tinier than carrying jumper cables, and you’d be entirely self sufficient. Neat. Watch this space for all the best and worst of automotive news, or submit your own auto oddities to brakingnews@gmail.com. Follow Brendan on Twitter at @brendan_mcaleer


Friday, May 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A47

TODAY’S DRIVE

Tough to stand out in crowded SUV market From page 45

mobile devices without the need to plug them in. Features Prices range from $23,495 for the Sport 4x2 up to $32,195 for the Limited 4x4. Standard equipment includes keyless entry, illuminated entry, tilt and telescoping steering column, Bluetooth electronic stability control, brake stability control with trailer sway control, and electronic roll mitigation. Additional features, available as options or on higher trims, include remote start, heated exterior mirrors, autodimming rearview mirror, heated front seats, and Homelink. Fuel efficiency numbers (litres/100 kilometres) are 9.6 city and 6.4 highway for four cylinder models. The V-6 models return 10.7 city and 7.9 highway. Thumbs up The Jeep Cherokee is a funky, unique SUV with a real off-road prowess which makes it stand out. Thumbs down The styling is a big step away from classic Jeep and it’s one of those “you love it or hate it” designs that may remain controversial. There are so many competitors offering similar performance it may be difficult to stand out.

SUV market. It is also a marquee vehicle for Toyota and this latest generation doesn’t appear to lose that title. Unwilling to rely too

heavily on its history,Toyota has just recently given the RAV4 a makeover. Prices start at $23,870 and there are three models

is that it is pretty good at everything while not excelling in any one area. The CR-V has a starting price of $25,990, making it a little more than the competition. editor@automotivepress.com

Like the RAV4, the CR-V has been around since the beginning. The Honda CR-V has long been a respected CUV and the newly updated model promises to meet expectations. Its strength

to choose from, each available in FWD or AWD trim. Honda CR-V

Carter GM Northshore’s

GIGANTIC TRUCK EVENT 48 /

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ELIGIBLE OWNERS RECEIVE A SPRING BONUS UP TO

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ON ALL 2014 MODELS

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2014 CHEVY SILVERADO CREW CAB

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STK#818990 $ MSrP 33,255 $ You Save 6,267 Pick uP loYaltY caSh PurchaSe $2,000

carter

23,800

$

NORTHSHORE PRICE

carter

24,988

$

NORTHSHORE PRICE

DEMO LOADED WITH OPTIONS

ALL NEW

The bottom line The 2014 Jeep Cherokee is the most versatile, uniquely shaped five passenger utility vehicle on the market. Competitors Ford Escape The Ford Escape has been the best seller in this segment for a few years now. Like most of the class, it received a major overhaul last year. The new package has great styling, good efficiency and nice technology. The Escape starts at $23,244, but the much talked about foot-activated, hands-free tailgate is only available on the $30,764 Titanium model.

2014 GMC SIERRA 4X4 DOUBLE CAB

2014 CHEVY SILVERADO LT 4X4 CREW CAB

4.3 LITRE V6 ENGINE, 6 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS, TILT WHEEL, AIR CONDITION, TRAILERING PACKAGE, LOCKING REAR DIFFERENTIAL, BLUETOOTH & MUCH MORE.

5.3 LITRE V6 ENGINE, HEATED LEATHER SEATS, AIR CONDITION, POWER DRIVER SEAT, REAR VISION CAMERA, H.D. TRAILERING PACKAGE, 18” ALUMINIUM WHEELS, MYLINK 8” AUDIO SYSTEM, REAR SLIDING WINDOW, LOCKING REAR DIFFERENTIAL, BLUETOOTH, 6.6 FOOT BOX & MUCH MORE.

STK#8G60350 $ MSrP 37,900 $ You Save 6,905 Pick uP loYaltY caSh PurchaSe $2,000

STK#873400 $ MSrP 49,110 You Save + deMo diScouNt $9,310 Pick uP loYaltY caSh PurchaSe $2,000

carter

NORTHSHORE PRICE

coMPlete care

2

28,995

$

YEARS/40,000 KM COMPLIMENTARY OIL CHANGES

5

carter

NORTHSHORE PRICE

5

YEARS/160,000 KM POWERTRAIN WARRANTY

37,800

$

YEARS/160,000 KM ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE

Toyota RAV4 The RAV4 was amongst the first in the compact James Carter

Sunil Desai

Chris Cummings

Darcy Strachan

*All payments & prices net of all rebates plus taxes & documentation fee of $598. Loyalty bonus of $1500 on discounted GM models. Loyalty bonus of $750 for current car owners. Pick up owners $2000 loyalty on cash purchase and $1000 loyalty on finance or lease. Vehicles not exactly as shown.

chevrolet • Buick • GMc • cadillac

Kerry Renaud

Denzil Owen

Louie Liu

John Proctor

Derrick Bergman

Nino Decottis

604-987-5231

Northshore Auto Mall, 800 Automall Dr. North Van www.carternorthshore.com

DL# 10743

Prakash Panchal


A48 - North Shore News - Friday, May 9, 2014

They can’t leap tall buildings in a single bound, but there are plenty of reasons the Fit, Civic and CR-V are best-sellers† in BC.

I-WEEKLY L O W E SS TT EBBNI -TWEEVEEKRL Y L OPWAEY MNETWE VHEORN DOAN A EN POANY M ONDA A NEW H

2014 FIT DX Lease for

67

$

£

0.99% APR €

0 down

$

freight and PDI included. Bi-weekly on a 60 month term with 130 payments. MSRP $16,130** includes freight and PDI Model shown: GE8G2EEX

# 2014 CIVIC DX Lease for

79

$

*

0.99% APR #

1

S E L L I N GB C CAR IN

0 down

$

freight and PDI included. Bi-weekly on a 60 month term with 130 payments. MSRP $17,185** includes freight and PDI

Model shown: FB2E2EEX

2014 CR-V LX Lease for

135

$

Ω

#

1.99% APR ¥

0 do down

$

freight and PDI included. luded.

1

S E L L I N PGA C T COM BC SUV IN †

Bi-weekly on a 60 month term with 130 payments. yments. MSRP $27,685** includes freight and PDI Model shown: RM3H3EES

816 Automall Drive, North Vancouver 604-984-0331

www.pacifichonda.ca

Take the Honda test drive. It costs nothing. It proves everything.

†The Fit, Civic and CR-V were the #1 selling retail subcompact car, car, and compact SUV respectively in BC in 2013 based on Polk 2013 Dec YTD report. ‡In order to achieve $0 down payment, dealer will cover the cost of tire/battery tax, air conditioning tax (where applicable), environmental fees and levies on the 2014 CR-V LX, Accord LX, Civic DX and FitDXonlyonbehalfofthecustomer.£Limitedtimebi-weeklyleaseofferbasedonanew2014FitDXmodelGE8G2EEX.€0.99%leaseAPRona60monthtermwith130bi-weeklypaymentsO.A.C.Bi-weeklypayment,includingfreightandPDI,is$66.59basedonapplying$1,250.00leasedollars(whichisdeductedfromthenegotiatedsellingpricebeforetaxes)and$1,000consumerincentivedollars(whichis deductedfromthenegotiatedsellingpriceaftertaxes).Downpaymentof$0.00,firstbi-weeklypaymentand$0securitydepositdueatleaseinception.Totalleaseobligationis$8,656.70.Taxes,license,insuranceandregistrationareextra.120,000kilometreallowance;chargeof$0.12/kmforexcesskilometers.*Limitedtimebi-weeklyleaseofferbasedonanew2014CivicDXmodelFB2E2EEX.#0.99%leaseAPR ona60monthtermwith130bi-weeklypaymentsO.A.C.Bi-weeklypayment,includingfreightandPDI,is$78.54basedonapplying$800.00leasedollars(whichisdeductedfromthenegotiatedsellingpricebeforetaxes).Downpaymentof$0.00,firstbi-weeklypaymentand$0securitydepositdueatleaseinception.Totalleaseobligationis$10,210.20.Taxes,license,insuranceandregistrationareextra.120,000 kilometreallowance;chargeof$0.12/kmforexcesskilometers.ΩLimitedtimebi-weeklyleaseofferbasedonanew2014CR-VLX2WDmodelRM3H3EES.¥1.99%leaseAPRona60monthtermwith130bi-weeklypaymentsO.A.C.Bi-weeklypayment,includingfreightandPDI,is$134.80basedonapplying$1,250.00leasedollars(whichisdeductedfromthenegotiatedsellingpricebeforetaxes).Downpaymentof $0.00,firstbi-weeklypaymentand$0securitydepositdueatleaseinception.Totalleaseobligationis$17,524.03.Taxes,license,insuranceandregistrationareextra.120,000kilometreallowance;chargeof$0.12/kmforexcesskilometers.**MSRPis$16,130/$17,185/$27,685includingfreightandPDIof$1,495/$1,495/$1,695basedonanew2014FitDXmodelGE8G2EEX/new2014CivicDXmodelFB2E2EEX /2014CR-VLX2WDmodelRM3H3EES.License,insurance,registrationandtaxesareextraandmayberequiredatthetimeofpurchase.¥/£/€/Ω/#/*Pricesand/orpaymentsshowndonotincludeaPPSAlienregistrationfeeof$30.31andlienregisteringagent'sfeeof$5.25,whicharebothdueattimeofdeliveryandcoveredbythedealeronbehalfofthecustomeronthe2014CR-VLX,AccordLX,CivicDXandFitDX only.‡/#/*/Ω/€/¥/£/**OffersvalidfromMay1stthroughJune2nd, 2014atparticipatingHondaretailers.Dealermaysell/leaseforless.Dealertrademaybenecessaryoncertainvehicles.OffersvalidonlyforBritishColumbiaresidentsatBCHondaDealerslocations.Offerssubjecttochangeorcancellationwithoutnotice.Termsandconditionsapply.Visitwww.bchonda.comorseeyourHondaretailerforfulldetails.


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