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SD44 recording ban challenged
Charter trumps policy, NorthVan resident says BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
A North Vancouver man says the North Vancouver school district is violating the Charter of Rights and Freedoms by stopping residents from filming or broadcasting school board meetings. Shane Nelson, who previously ran for the school board, has been told twice in two months to turn off his camera or be kicked out of the meeting.The first time in October, he was told it was because recording meetings was a violation of the school board’s policy that deals with surveillance cameras.The second time, unspecified “privacy legislation” was the justification. Nelson said he wants the board’s debates to be recorded and available for public scrutiny on principle, and video recording in public is a form of expression guaranteed by Section 2 of the charter, he said. Ultimately, the district should be filming and live broadcasting its meetings and posting them online after, just as the municipalities do, Nelson said. But recording and broadcasting meetings isn’t currently addressed in the policy that governs the board procedures, said Franci Stratton, board chairwoman, in an interview Thursday.
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H[0U_ d_W5;U 50c5 4[_ d;64[ E0U,;32_6 5,[;;W *Z546Z,4 *;_5U#4 [02_ 4[_ 6Z\[4 4; 54;9 ,Z4Za_U5 ]6;V 6_,;6*ZU\ Z45 V__4ZU\5% #I%I$ C%CMN%73+D +' %35C NI$J >5:5' L+' 5 PI2M+ +L (J5CM <ME%+C 5$ 5 'M3MC$ DMM$ICK NJM'M JM N5% 5%GM2 $+ $"'C +LL JI% 'M3+'2ICK7 `jbGb MIKE WAKEFIELD “This hasn’t come up as an issue with anyone in the community in the six years I’ve been on the board. We’ve always had a process that we record meeting minutes and they’re part of the public record,” she noted. Stratton said meetings tend to draw in children whose parents may not consent to filming and she did receive emailed complaints about Nelson See School page 9
Hundreds of tires slashed overnight BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
North Vancouver RCMP are looking for suspects after someone went on a vandalism spree resulting in more than 200 tires slashed overnight and counting. The suspects appear to have focused their destructive energy on
vehicles parked between Capilano University and Park & Tilford Centre in the early morning Thursday, according Cpl. Richard De Jong, North Vancouver RCMP spokesman. “We started getting calls round 3:30 a.m. or 4 a.m. in regards to tires being slashed. Some cars had four tires slashed,
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some had one or two, and we’re still receiving calls,” De Jong said “We still don’t have a final tally. We’re well over 140 vehicles. That translates to well over 200 tires.” In scope and monetary damage, it’s the biggest case of criminal mischief De Jong said he has seen on the North Shore. “There’s nothing of
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A2 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A3
Wider walkways planned for causeway Stanley Park safety plan popular with cyclists BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
North Shore cyclists and pedestrians will have a little more elbow room and a lot more safety when traversing the Stanley Park Causeway if the province and Vancouver Park Board follow through on recently released plans. The ministry of transportation and infrastructure on Tuesday debuted its designs to separate northbound and southbound cyclists onto opposite sides of the road, along with wider sidewalks and a pedestrianonly route.
<_40ZW5 ;] 4[_ *_5Z\U 96;9;5_* ];6 9_*_546Z0U 0U* ,c,WZU\ 50]_4c ZV96;2_V_U45 4; 4[_ H40UW_c `06X =035_10c% kI?`ji= HF``fi:< B.C. TRANSPORTATION MINISTRY Under the plans, the east sidewalk will be widened by 1.9 metres and be designated for two-way pedestrian traffic and northbound cyclists. The west sidewalk will be widened by a more modest 0.4 metres and be reserved for southbound cyclists only. Both sides will be separated from the
road by a 1.4-metre high safety fence. Widening the sidewalks would mean removing 14 of Stanley Park’s hallowed trees. The plan is being warmly received by North Shore members of the cycling advocacy group HUB. Members of the group had been lobbying for
safety improvements since May 2013 when a North Vancouver woman was killed after she fell from her bike into the path of a West Vancouver transit bus. “It’s a pretty creative way of getting almost everything we asked for,” said Heather Drugge, HUB spokeswoman. “It’s pretty interesting, isn’t it, because
of the asymmetrical nature of the design. I think overall we’re very pleased.” It will take some time for cyclists and pedestrians to acclimate to the new rules but engineers did a good job of making the design match the needs of both cyclists and pedestrians, Drugge said. The southbound, west sidewalk tends to have more conflicts as cyclists pick up a lot of speed on the downhill from the Lions Gate Bridge, she said. And the east side is more suited to a shared path, Drugge added. “Not only is the east side very wide, the cyclists are not moving very quickly because it’s uphill. If everybody behaves, this system should work,” she said. “Whenever you enter into social engineering… there’s always going to be some non-compliance. But the non-compliers are probably going to be oneoffs.”
CNV mayor’s address
Police seek surveillance video of crime spree
Mussatto sets priorities for next four years
From page 1
BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
Housing, a revived public waterfront and greener transportation — newly re-elected City of North Vancouver Mayor Darrell Mussatto set out his legislative agenda for the next four years in his inaugural address to council Monday night. Mussatto started by indicating council will implement the Roger Brooks plan to revive the Shipyards district and Foot of Lonsdale to make it an “animated, lively, family friendly, people place and a destination that attracts and excites people year-round.” “We have a vision and plans that show us the path to accomplish this,” he said. Lower Lonsdale business owners can also expect they’ll be getting See Transit page 5
The province’s engineers also came forward with a concept that will create the least amount of grief for environmentalists, many of whom are also cyclists, Drugge said. “Other options that came up would have removed so many trees on the other west side that the whole thing never would have gone through,” she said. The Vancouver Park Board must still vote on whether to allow the province to go ahead with the work, but based on the conversation Drugge had with park board members on Tuesday, she is optimistic that will happen this spring. “They seem to think this was an excellent compromise position,” she said. The ministry of transportation and infrastructure and the park board are both asking for public feedback on the plan at gov.bc.ca/ stanleyparkcauseway.
SWEARING IN ? *Z546Z,4 N6_ 5_62Z,_5 [;U;36 \306* 540U*5 04 044_U4Z;U 05 <Z546Z,4 ;] d;64[ E0U,;32_6 e0c;6 IZ,[06* D0W4;U 0U* ,;3U,ZWW;65 96;,__* 4; 4[_ ZU03\360W V__4ZU\ ;] ,;3U,ZW e;U*0c% h3*\_ DZWWZ0V h% I;*\_65 96_5Z*_* ;2_6 4[_ 51_06ZU\ ZU ,_6_V;Uc% `jbGb MIKE WAKEFIELD
other detachments who have experience in something similar of late,” he said. “We did get some blood on one of the tires so we’ve got forensics on that for a possible match.” In the meantime, police say to leave your car parked if its tires have been slashed. Anyone who saw anything suspicious near the vandalized cars overnight is asked to call North Vancouver RCMP at 604-985-1311 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-2228477.
Mulgrave denied donor funds for expansion STEFANIA SECCIA sseccia@nsnews.com
B.C.’s Attorney General took the Mulgrave School Foundation to court — and won — over its intention to use donated funds for capital costs when they were meant for scholarships. In 2011, Mulgrave started a $23-million project to expand its
campus on Cypress Bowl Lane to include a senior school building. From 2008 and 2010, the independent school received approximately $1.1 million in donations for its scholarship program from four donors. Although the foundation received the donors’ consent to repurpose the funds for offsetting construction
costs, B.C. Supreme Court Justice David Masuhara denied the action because of bureaucratic red tape. Mulgrave School was founded in 1994. Its foundation was incorporated in 2007, achieved charitable status in 2008, and became a public entity in 2009. Since 2001, the 100,000-square-foot school building has housed
classrooms, science labs, gymnasiums, a library and a theatre. Then in 2010, it expanded with its Early Learning Centre facility. When the foundation set its eyes on the multimillion-dollar senior school project — meant to give grades 10 to 12 students university guidance and a counselling centre — it had to take out a loan. The school would
rely on donations to help pay off the loan. While the project is scheduled to be completed by 2015, the school wouldn’t be able to pay off the large loan until 2017. So when the foundation attempted to redirect the funds from the scholarship program, the B.C. Attorney General’s office See Charitable page 5
A4 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A5
Transit a top priority From page 3 a Business Improvement Area, which will add an additional levy on their tax bills to be spent on projects meant to foster more commerce in the area. Not forgotten was the languishing Harry Jerome Recreation Centre, which Mussatto pledged council would be dealing with early in the new year. Residents can also look forward to a completed Spirit Trail spanning the city’s entire east-west border as well expansions of the Green Necklace, both part of the mayor’s goal to coax people out of their vehicles. On the matter, Mussatto said the city will be actively pursuing more transit as a referendum on
=Z4c ;] d;64[ E0U,;32_6 e0c;6 <066_WW e355044;% TransLink expansion and funding looms. “Effective immediately, council’s top priority is to improve bus and SeaBus services on the North Shore. We will work with TransLink to ensure a
third SeaBus is a reality and focus on improving the SeaBus area,” he said. Mussatto also stated his policy preferences for the perennial affordable housing problem on the North Shore, which include protecting existing rental housing and ensuring a range of housing options. “This council wants to make it easier for families to stay in North Vancouver and we will continue to work hard to make home ownership and rent more affordable. During the next four years we will assist residents by streamlining the process for coach houses, secondary suites and the city will actively seek purpose-built rental housing.” Those were issues
of contention in the now stalled Official Community Plan, which Mussatto also addressed. “We are committed to adopting a new OCP as soon as possible,” he said. On the matter of North Vancouver school district lands, Mussatto said he supports the preservation of open space at Lucas Centre and Cloverley. “While fields there may need improvement, which we will support, I will not support any revision to the zoning of these lands unless absolutely necessary in this term of council,” he said. Mussatto is joined at the council table by firsttime Coun. Holly Back and returning incumbents Don Bell, Craig Keating, Linda Buchanan, Pam Bookham and Rod Clark.
Setting it straight A story in the Wednesday, Dec. 3 paper incorrectly stated that Jonathan Wilkinson is running as the Liberal Party of Canada’s candidate for Burnaby North-Seymour in the next federal election.
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Sunday December 7, 2014
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In fact,Wilkinson is the federal Liberal candidate for North Vancouver. Terry Beech is the federal Liberal candidate for the new riding of Burnaby North-Seymour in the 2015 election.
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A6 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 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.
Camera shy N
orth Vancouver school board is finishing its term with an F in transparency. In the last two meetings, residents have come hoping to record the board’s debate. Not seeing a policy to rigidly tell them what to do, the board told the residents to turn their cameras off or be kicked out. This was the wrong decision. The board and its administrator seem to be forgetting another policy called the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which is the supreme law of the land. The Supreme Court of Canada has deliberately interpreted our fundamental right to expression in a very broad, far-reaching way, including for the use of cameras in public places. Of course there are justifiable limits when safety or personal information is concerned, but elected officials have
zero expectation of privacy while they’re engaged in official debate. As a society, we actively encourage citizens to be engaged with their governments, to scrutinize their debates and question their decisions. Whether the school board intended it or not, this has the effect of reducing transparency and possibly running afoul of the charter. All of this, however, is losing sight of the forest for the trees. Of course anyone should be able to record board meetings but it should be something actively done by the school district. The technology required to record and livestream a meeting exists in most anyone’s pocket. Most municipalities have been doing this for years. It’s the single biggest step our school districts could take to reach out to citizens who have a right to know.
There’s a new kid on the development block If you loved theWeegies, as I tenderly call the WestVancouver Citizens for Good Government, you may adore theWest Vancouver Housing Association. The WVHA is a new kid on the development block. Literally. It has a storefront in Dundarave.Two wellplaced, mystified West Van town hall personages agreed with the undersigned that, as of last week, they’d never seen it open. Nor did it have a website. Or any Googleable reference. Agent Tj3s8 — a development sceptic, so take the opinion with a large grain of NaCl — says the WVHA consists of “the worst” real estate heavies, the most powerful developers and salespeople. Meaning the best, biggest, most successful, by positive interpretation. And why is the WVHA
Pretty much like the selfinterest of all of us when our dollar is at stake. •••
Trevor Lautens
This Just In
springing into life now? Because next month West Van council begins serious debate on an updated official community plan, which will take many months to pass. In that time gap, so goes the cynical view of Agent Tj3s8, the real estate business will put foot to the floor to rush town hall development approvals before a possibly more stringent OCP is passed.
CONTACTUS
Fittingly next up, gloomy retail news: Baracos + Brand is closing — a quality men’s store that would have attracted well-heeled residents of Grosvenor Ambleside, steps down Bellevue, had it held on for a few years. Christine Baracos and late West Van councillor John Clark co-owned the store under the smartly named The Mensroom. Its successor’s closure supports Mayor Michael Smith’s case that many Ambleside businesses are suffering near-death experiences, and Grosvenor is a major step toward rejuvenation. So Smith (and Grosvenor) must welcome the reborn Shell station across Marine Drive, long an
inglorious mudhole entrance to Ambleside that hardly enhances sales of condos — which, Agent p49scR, a new agent whose accuracy is untested and is only on the apprentice list, declares are projected to start at $1.6 million and, for the two penthouse-type terrace homes, will be north of $15 million each. Michael Ward, senior vice-president and general manager of Grosvenor Americas, responds: “Price lists are not something we distribute, but rather we provide those that are interested in purchasing specific residential units with the individual pricing for that unit.” Grosvenor Ambleside’s presentation centre will be completed in February,Ward adds. ••• As Constant Reader knows, my only journalistic
fault is an abiding kindness. So I’ve been musing about my words, last time at bat, about Coun. Craig Cameron’s pain that council duties were costing him — he has to take time off from what we might call real work. He’s right. Most present councillors are either retired or aren’t principal or sole breadwinners. Exceptions are Cameron, a government lawyer who has lost income due to council demands, and newcomer Christine Cassidy, a financial adviser, who may find herself in the same financial boat — a metaphorical leaky 12-foot rowboat. Councillors are paid about $30,000 a year for running a municipality where top staff get up to seven or eight times as much. So vote-topping Cameron isn’t whining. He’s just more open than others about the
sacrificial realities of council service in 2014. ••• I allow myself one sports comment per year.This is it: My deep distrust of contact sports — football and, yes, hockey, about which I have a puckish sense of humour — deepened last weekend. Hamilton, my home town (only 51 years away from it, seems like 52), crushed favoured Calgary with a touchdown in the last 35 seconds of the Grey Cup game … but for an interference call that wiped out Brandon Banks’ classic 90-yard run to the end zone. And left Calgary’s 20-16 lead intact. From my seat in Section 444, the referee instantly resembled the man who ain’t got rhythm, nobody’s with him, he’s the loneliest man in town (that’s Irving Berlin, kiddies). See Referees page 10
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A7
VIEWPOINT
Lost in all the oil rhetoric is realism
Despite the promises you hear chanted on Burnaby Mountain, there is no way the oil industry will be out of our lives in our lifetime. Oil is everywhere. It affects everything.The clothes you wear, the computer you use, the television you watch, the food you eat – all are touched by oil at some point, either at the creation stage or on their journey to the consumer. A recent book by journalist Rose George, entitled 90 Per Cent of Everything, documents that almost everything you use in life has travelled to your destination by container ships, fueled by diesel oil. She spent a year on those
Keith Baldrey
View from the Ledge ships, noting that pretty well everything we buy, we ship. The little-noticed world of shipping, and the irreplaceable role it plays in the world, is just one example of how deeply oil has seeped into our daily lives.
Preventing a pipeline, as those on Burnaby Mountain are hoping to do, may sound noble but it will have absolutely no impact on the oil industry. It is too massive, too deeply entrenched in our society for the halting of a pipeline’s construction in a tiny corner of the world to constitute more than a tiny blip in the overall scheme of things. The protest against the Kinder Morgan pipeline has been compared to the Clayoquot Sound “war of the woods” protest in the 1990s.The two are decidedly different.The forestry protest was about ending clear-cutting logging of old growth timber, a practice very few people had any personal experience
Mailbox
Cellphone’s return an early gift Dear Editor: Christmas comes early. A special thank you to the person who found and turned in my cellphone to
the SeaBus (the weekend of Nov. 22-23). You phoned a friend’s number, listed in my phone, who emailed me that my
phone had been found. Christmas goodwill! Season’s greetings! Paul Tolan North Vancouver
READY TO GO!
with. but the pipeline protest is about oil, which touches everyone, every single day. While it was easy to target the forest industry back then, it is more than a bit disingenuous for environmentalists to demonize the oil industry – including that which operates in the Alberta tar sands – while they, like everyone else, uses so much of that industry‘s product. There is a refusal by many of those on Burnaby Mountain to acknowledge
this unavoidable fact, and to pretend that there is no inconsistency in advocating for eliminating or weakening an industry while at the same time relying on that same industry for their livelihood. Of course, some do acknowledge this inconsistency and say just because they drive a car, that doesn’t mean they can’t work towards curbing carbon emissions. Fair enough, but lost in the chanting and rhetoric
that flows from the Kinder Morgan protesters (or Enbridge protesters) is any notion of realism. Instead, they project a romantic vision that is simply unattainable. Oil is here to stay, until there is no more of it left. Another example of the quiet little “inconsistency” that exists for so many of those who condemn the oil industry, especially the Alberta oil sands, is the See Pension page 11
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A8 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A9
School board to consider policy review From page 1
recording without permission in October. Still, Stratton said the board will be reviewing its own policy, which could lead to cameras in the board room, either from citizens or the school district staff. “We can’t circumvent the process which we go to in order to establish policy or to review policy. I think we’ve heard Mr. Nelson and others and said this is something we need to consider and we put it on the inaugural board meeting agenda,” she said. “We’ll ask
for them to expedite it so we can see where it’s going to go in the next couple months.” But Nelson stressed he shouldn’t need permission or a policy to be allowed to record the trustee debates and post them online any more than he would need permission to record and post what he sees in any other public space. “I spent a ridiculous amount of time last night reading over all of the policies of the board, all of the charter, case law, privacy policy both (the Personal Information Protection
Act and Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act) and my reading of it is there’s absolutely no justification of it or legal backing or school board policy that prevents recording of the meetings,” he said. The standard board meeting minutes fail to reflect the scale and nature of debate before decisions are made, he said. “How can anybody know what the dissenting opinion is if there’s nothing in the minutes about it and there’s no video record and there’s no media present?” he asked.
The B.C. Civil Liberties Association, meanwhile, says some limits on what is recorded would be justifiable, like if sensitive personal information is being discussed. But it would be “backwards” to start with a blanket ban on recording. “Outside of a carefully drafted, appropriately tailored policy that governs the justifiable exceptions, we can’t think of a reason why you couldn’t — the same as you take notes — record a public meeting,” said Micheal Vonn, BCCLA policy director. “It’s on the
government to justify why they are not giving more open access to their public meetings — not for the citizen to justify why they need it.” Nelson has agreed to Stratton’s request that he not record the Dec. 9 meeting because the children of the board members will be present for the swearing in, but he does plan to keep “putting
Jim Hanson
Founding Partner of Hanson Wirsig Matheos LLB (UBC) - BCL (Oxon) - Lawyer since 1985
Charitable gift was for scholarships From page 3 was opposed because the gifts were given for a discrete purpose — scholarships and bursaries — and not for the school’s capital campaign for the construction of new buildings. Masuhara agreed. In his ruling, the judge stated that although the donors agreed to repurpose the funds, when the money was given to
the charity under the Society Act the purpose was for the advancement of education through scholarships. Masuhara also noted that the foundation did not provide enough evidence to prove there is an “impossibility or impracticability” for the money not to be used for the scholarship program. Mulgrave’s new senior school is expected to open to classes in January 2015.
pressure” on the board. The West Vancouver school district allows cameras in the board room as long as the board chairperson has been made aware in advance.The Vancouver School Board allows recording in its board room, as long as camera set-ups are not blocking the view of other attendees or positioned behind the board table.
confidential personal email: jameshanson@shaw.ca Practice Restricted to
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Saturday, December 6th, 5–8pm @ Shipbuilders’ Square 5-8PM
Family ACtivities • Ornament making • Lantern making with NVMA • Gingerbread decorating • Skating rink (bring your skates)
6PM
tree lighting by Mayor MUSSATTO • The City tree will be located under the crane • All the lights in the Shipyard will be turned on • Vote for your favourite corporate tree
6:30-8pm other events
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• Santa arrives • Christmas sing-a-long with Silver Harbour Choir (6:30-7pm) • Photos with Santa in the Winter Wonderland (7-8pm) • Christmas Market in Pipe Shop (12noon-8pm) • Food trucks • Free hot chocolate provided by Pier Gelato • Free coffee provided by Bean Around the World
OUR at 7:30pm ~ HARB E H ~ CAR T N I OL SHIPS donations welcome
Proceeds to North Shore rescue
A10 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
INQUIRING REPORTER Although snow swept through the Lower Mainland Friday night followed by frigid wind chills and frosty temperatures, Environment Canada is expecting the next three months to either be average or warmer than usual thanks to El Nino, with the North Shore settling back into the old routine of showers, rain and more showers. But there might be hope for clear and cold fans — the Weather Network’s long-term forecast predicts colder temperatures, but not as bad as last year. Which would you prefer? Have your say at nsnews.com. — (!&$'%"' (&##"'
Kerry Phillips North Vancouver “I don’t mind the weather at all when the sun’s going.”
How do you prefer your winter weather?
William Phillips North Vancouver “I don’t mind the cold, but it ruins my sports because all the fields are frozen.”
Sarah Russell Vancouver “I hate the weather we had on Saturday. I had to work outdoors and I was so cold. Rain’s the best.”
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Jonas Fung Kelowna “I like it when it’s snow and dry, or cold and dry.”
Kurt Menzi Vancouver “I like the snow on the mountain.”
Referees have power to determine a win or loss From page 6 Vancouver Sun sports writers mocked the illegal block call. Iain MacIntyre doubted that Taylor Reed’s infraction influenced Banks’ spectacular run: “By CFL standards, deciding the Grey Cup on largely innocuous contact was absolutely predictable.” Cam Cole: “That’s not to say there wasn’t a foul on the play.The problem is that there’s a foul, or two, or five, on pretty much every play in football.” (Canada’s real gridiron drama was Saturday, when my school, Hamilton’s
McMaster, bowed 20-19 to University of Montreal Carabins on a dying-seconds blocked field goal. Two hometown losses in a weekend!) Back to the point: In hockey, as in football, the line between fair and foul is often so subjective, so arbitrary — penalties commonly aren’t called in overtime, f’r instance — that refs have huge power to determine winners and losers. Which is why baseball is my game.The umpires — suitably black-clad — are clearly God clones. Never wrong. Sort of like old newspaper columnists.
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A11
Pension funds invested in oil From page 7 pension fund they pay into. The B.C. public sector pension fund is administered by the B.C. Investment Management Corp., which has more than $100 billion in investments that fund the pensions for more than 500,000 people — teachers, professors, MLAs, municipal workers, etc. Public sector unions such as CUPE and the B.C.Teachers’ Federation have been at the forefront when it comes to attacking
the oil sands industry.Yet their members stand to financially benefit from that very industry, because of the inescapable role oil plays in pretty well everything, including their pensions. The BCIMC’s investment holdings include $603 million invested in Suncor, one of the largest oil sands companies. another $409 million is with Enbridge, while $372 million is with Canadian Natural Resources and $284 million is parked with Exxon Mobil.
All told, the BCIMC has almost $3.6 billion invested in the oil sands alone (including, ironically, a small stake in Kinder Morgan). Plus another halfbillion dollars in companies associated with pipelines. Plus hundreds of millions of dollars in Alberta real estate — including a property in Fort McMurray, which is Ground Zero for the tar sands — and the Alberta government itself, all of which benefit hugely from that province’s oil sands development.
Want to fight climate change? Drive less, fly less and buy less. But don’t for a moment think that shutting down a pipeline is going to have any impact whatsoever, other than easing some guilty consciences of people who will continue to use the oil industry just as much as they did before the protests on Burnaby Mountain. Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global BC. Email: Keith.Baldrey@globalnews
Nov 28 – Dec 31
Open Nightly : Over 100,000 Lights on Display!
Family Friday Nights
VISIT SANTA (bring your own camera) Hot Chocolate & Cookies Live Entertainment & More!
Download the new free mobile app for up-to-date, instant access to recycling, green can and garbage collection service information specific to your collection zone. Simply type in your address to access your own personalized collection schedule, set-out information and more.
Sync the collection calendar with your iCal, Outlook or Google calendar View, download or print your collection calendar Sign up for reminders by email, phone, text message or Twitter For more infomation, visit
northshorerecycling.ca Note: North Shore residents using the “My Waste” App should delete it from their smartphone as it will no longer be updated.
Local 296 Charitable Societies
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Dec 5, 12, 19 & 26 : 6 –9pm
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All proceeds go to The North Vancouver Firefighters Charitable Societies
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Download the North Shore Collection App today
A12 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
BRIGHT LIGHTS
by Paul McGrath
FANS Tribute to the Arts
,1@) 7+9(3 +O 3L(Q5$+(& HQH7Q(& Carole Badgley< Mark Sager< Julie Kemble< TL5Q;*(Q&L3QG$< 9G3 Roger Nelson
486P ,1@) .L&$LGN"L&MQ3 1($L&$& Brent Comber 9G3 Shari Ulrich The annual FANS (Fund for the Arts on the North Shore Society) Tribute to the Arts took place on the night of Nov. 14 at the Gordon Smith Gallery for Canadian Art in North Vancouver. The event honours local artists who have created a nationally recognized body of work and it also sees the awarding of the Don S. Williams grants to financially assist emerging and established artists who are interested in furthering their artistic endeavours. This year’s event was hosted by actor Jay Brazeau, a past recipient of the FANS Distinguished Artist Award, with this year’s winners named as musician Shari Ulrich and designer/sculptor Brent Comber, who were in attendance.
,1@) 7+9(3 +O 3L(Q5$+(& HQH7Q(& Christine O’Byrne< Lori Phillips< *(Q&L3QG$< 9G3 Nicky Morgan
Frankie Watt-Elphinstone< Christie Grace< Branwen Kemp 9G3 Estelle Liebenberg< .+G ): !LIIL9H& N(9G$& (Q5L*LQG$&
Don S. Williams 9G3 SLOQ Audrey Williams
Diane Zylka< Michael Gordon 9G3 Anne Gudrun
.+G ): !LIIL9H& N(9G$ (Q5L*LQG$ Suzanne Ristic SL$M M"&79G3 9G3 QTQG$ B/ Jay Brazeau
@+($M #9G5+"TQ( /+HH"GL$= 1($& /+"G5LI2& QRQ5"$LTQ 3L(Q5$+( Linda Feil 9G3 7+9(3 5M9L(S+H9G Louise McLay
Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos go to: nsnews.com/galleries.
We’ll announce your
Wedding, Anniversary or Special Occasion on Wednesday.
SEND us your picture for our Celebrations page, a feature of the North Shore News. Enclose a good-quality photo and a description of your special occasion along with a contact name and phone number and we’ll try to include it in our feature. The Celebrations page is a free service and there is no guarantee as to when submissions will be published. Text may be edited for length and editorial style. Photos will be available for pickup at our front desk three days after the publication date, at 100-126 East 15th St., North Vancouver. Photos not picked up after one month will be discarded.
PULSE
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A13
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE
to ARTS & CULTURE
— The Kwakwaka’wakw and their Film —
In the Land of the Head Hunters
“The Kwakwaka’wakw first began to accommodate Edward S. Curtis and his photographic apparatus at Fort Rupert, British Columbia, sometime around 1910. By that time, they already had a substantial history with anthropologists, colonial agents, and early tourists coming to take their pictures. Rather than documenting Native life in 1914, Head Hunters documents a moment of cultural encounter between Curtis and the Kwakwaka’wakw actors and consultants who were performing Curtis’s scripted version of their own past for the camera . . . . Even more noteworthy than Curtis’s embellishments, though, is the film’s portrayal of actual Kwakwaka’wakw rituals that were prohibited in Canada at the time of filming under the federal Potlatch Prohibition (1884-1951), intended to hasten the assimilation of First Nations. Despite this legislation, the dances and visual art forms — hereditary property of specific families — were maintained through this period and transmitted to subsequent generations, including the performers
See Kwakwaka’wakw page 44
More online at nsnews.com/entertainment twitter.com/NSNPulse
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Edward S. Curtis film restored to its former glory
Ritual magic
■ In the Land of the Head Hunters at Pacific Cinémathèque, Friday, Dec. 5 at 6:30 p.m and Saturday, Dec. 6 at 8:30 p.m. Special Centennial screening atVancityTheatre on Sunday, Dec. 7 at 7 p.m. Special guests in attendance: Bill Cranmer, hereditary chief, N‘amgis First Nation, and K‘ómoks and Kwakwaka‘wakw artist Andy Everson. Owen Underhill from theTurning Point ensemble will also be on hand to talk about his involvement with recording the film’s score. Evening hosted by filmmaker Colin Browne. STEFANIA SECCIA sseccia@nsnews.com
When American photographer Edward S. Curtis witnessed the rich culture of the aboriginal community in Fort Rupert and Alert Bay 100 years ago, he decided to make a melodrama set against the backdrop of precolonialism in North America. He collaborated with the Kwakwaka’wakw people to tell a tale of love, war and adventure before contact with European settlers. On Dec. 7, 1914, his silent film In the Land of the Head Hunters screened in Seattle. It was
B3 KINGS `?k: TO
●
not only the first feature-length film produced in British Columbia, and oldest extant feature in Canada, but also the first to only star aboriginals. But the film was a financial disaster that was not preserved properly. That is, until a recent restoration project between academics and descendants of the film’s cast worked to re-release it on its 100year anniversary, which will be screened at Vancity Theatre and Pacific Cinémathèque this weekend. Hereditary Chief Bill Cranmer, of the N’amgis First Nation, was part of the restoration project between academics and the U’mista Cultural Centre in Alert Bay. But Cranmer also has personal ties to the film, as his great-grandfather, George Hunt advised Curtis during shooting. He’s also related to the film’s leading stars. “It’s pretty special for us as descendants of the actors in the film,” he says. “My great aunt Maggie Frank was the star, and my great uncle Stanley Hunt was the male star.” The film mixes documentary and dramatic elements, with authentic traditions and rituals, including the potlatch ceremony, which at the
A FEW OF MY FAVOURITE THINGS `?k: TM
●
time was prohibited by the federal government. “It’s really something special,” Cranmer notes. “I knew my great aunt, my great uncle when they were fairly old and to see them as they were way back then is something special.” The film shows his ancestors as the healthy, industrious people Captain Vancouver discovered in 1792, Cranmer added. “Our old people were pretty good actors,” he says. “A lot of the things we do in our ceremonies involved a certain amount of acting.” The film is a significant link between the community and its ancestors, Cranmer said. “His work was very valuable to us,” he says. “We got to see, first off, our ancestors as they were. We got to see some of the dances… lots of information that probably would’ve disappeared if it hadn’t been for Curtis’s work.” Colin Browne, a film scholar and Simon Fraser University professor who was involved with the restoration project, says from 1915 to the early 1970s the film dropped from the public’s purview, which is why it isn’t as recognized as much as other iconic movies from that bygone era.
AVENUE Q `?k: S"
See Collector page 44
●
CORNER GAS `?k: ST
A14 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
CALENDAR Galleries
ARTEMIS GALLERY 104C-4390 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver. Tuesday-Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. 778-233-9805 artemisgallery.ca ARTS IN VIEW ON LONSDALE BlueShore Financial, 1250 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. Propellor Design: A “range” light sculpture inspired by the North Shore mountains and five meridian pendant lights are currently on display. BUCKLAND SOUTHERST GALLERY 2460 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-922-1915 bucklandsoutherst.com CAROUN ART GALLERY 1403 Bewicke Ave., North Vancouver. Tuesday to Saturday, noon to 8 p.m.778-372-0765 caroun. net
CHRISTMAS WITH BACH f03*04_ HZU\_65' ]_0436ZU\ 0U !O&9Z_,_ .06;73_ ;6,[_5460 9W0cZU\ ;U 9_6Z;* ZU5463V_U45' 9_6];6V .J'I%$D5% NI$J /53J 04 d;64[ E0U,;32_6#5 H4% ?U*6_1#5 FUZ4_* =[36,[ ;U H3U*0c' <_,% P 04 T 9%V% GZ,X_45 ATR 0*3W4 $ AT" 5_UZ;6 $ A!R 543*_U4 $ ]6__ 3U*_6 !l% 8;6 V;6_ ZU];6V04Z;U 2Z5Z4 E5"25$M%ICKM'%73+D% `jbGb HF``fi:<
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See more page 15
Neil Simon’s comic masterpiece
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robert moloney and andrew mcnee from the original 2014 arts club production. photo by david cooper
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A15
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Glerups Indoor Shoe Days December 5 - 12, 2014
From page 14
CITY ATRIUM GALLERY 141 West 14th St., North Vancouver. Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.604-9886844 nvartscouncil.ca NorthVancouver Community Arts Council will present an art display of creatures from the deep by artist Larissa Blokhuis until Jan. 19. Info: cnv.org/ deepseaart.
9 a.m.-5 p.m., Saturday, noon-5 p.m. 604-988-6844 nvartscouncil.ca Anonymous Art Show: Hundreds of works by hundreds of artists will be for sale at this fundraising event and group exhibition until Dec. 20. All artwork will be priced at $100 and the artist will remain anonymous until after the purchase. The Gift Box: Buy local from two display cases dedicated to local artisans who specialize in high quality, hand-crafted and unique gift items. Art Rental Salon: An ongoing art rental programme with a variety of original artwork available ranging from $10 to $40 per month.
CITYSCAPE COMMUNITY ART SPACE 335 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. Monday-Friday,
COASTAL PATTERNS GALLERY 582 Artisan Lane, Bowen Island.Wednesday-Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. or by
Vancouver. Student Art Show: Twenty students will be showcasing watercolour paintings Sunday, Dec. 7, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Originals, prints and cards will be available for purchase.
appointment. 604-7624623, 778-997-9408 or coastalpatternsgallery.com DISTRICT FOYER GALLERY 355 West Queens Rd., North Vancouver. MondayFriday, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 604-988-6844 nvartscouncil. ca
Try on a pair, for a chance to win a pair! Simply try on any pair of Glerups, ‘The indoor shoe’ for a chance to win a pair. Ask us for details.
glerups.ca
EDGEMONT VILLAGE 3065 EDGEMONT BLVD., NORTH VANCOUVER
DISTRICT LIBRARY GALLERY 1277 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. nvartscouncil.ca NorthVancouver Community Arts Council will present artwork by Squamish Nation Band member Gigaemi from Dec. 10 to Feb. 10. Opening reception: Saturday, Dec. 13, 2-4 p.m. FERRY BUILDING
604.986.4893
PUT A MANDARIN IN HER STOCKING!
14k yellow gold mandarin garnet ring, set with white and fancy yellow diamonds. -Designed by Tamara Moerike
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3102 edgemontboulevard, boulevard,north northvancouver vancouver •• 604 3102 edgemont 604 985 9851500 1500••evj@telus.net evj@telus.net
Register now for Winter art classes! We offer programming for students K-12 to adults. New class offerings on www.gordonsmithgallery.com Please register online, or call our office for more information. Artists for Kids phone 604.903.3798 email afkinfo@sd44.ca
A16 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
CALENDAR From page 15
and about their experiences creating new lives and memories will run until March 28.
GALLERY 1414 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver. TuesdaySunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., closed Mondays.604-9257290 ferrybuildinggallery.com Great Stuff Art Sale: Giftable art by 37 local artisans, jewellers, potters and craft artists will be for sale Tuesdays-Sundays, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. until Dec. 14. Late night shopping Fridays until 8 p.m.
NORTH VANCOUVER MUSEUM 209 West Fourth St., North Vancouver. Open by appointment only. 604-9903700 x8016 NorthVancouver Experience, an ongoing exhibit defining life in North Vancouver.
THE GALLERY AT ARTISAN SQUARE 587 Artisan Lane, Bowen Island. Friday-Sunday, noon to 4 p.m. or by appointment. 604-9472454 biac.ca
PARK & TILFORD GARDENS 333 Brooksbank Ave., North Vancouver. PRESENTATION HOUSE GALLERY 333 Chesterfield Ave., North Vancouver. Wednesday-Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. 604-986-1351 presentationhousegallery.org Lee Friedlander’s photographs and books will be on display until Feb. 8.
GALLERY YOYO 312 East Esplanade, North Vancouver.Wednesday to Saturday, 1-5:30 p.m. or by appointment. 604-9832896 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@
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Gallery Tours: Thursdays
PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETING
A redevelopment is being proposed for 1203, 1207 Harold Road to construct a residential townhouse project. You are invited to a meeting to discuss the project. Date: Time: Location of the Meeting:
Thursday, December 11, 2014 7:00 p.m. Mollie Nye House 940 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver
The applicant proposes to rezone the site from single-family zoning to a comprehensive development zone to permit an 8-unit ground oriented townhouse development. The proposal includes one building. 8 units will have two parking stalls per unit.
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The meeting is being held by Homefield Investments Ltd. and Integra Architecture Inc., in compliance with District of North Vancouver Council Policy. The applicant will present details of the proposal and discuss any concerns residents may have. Information packages are being distributed to residents within a 75 metre radius of the site. If you would like to receive a copy or if you would like more information, please contact: Mike Brody of Homefield Investments Ltd. at 604-980-2954; Casey Peters of the Community Planning Department at 604-990-2388; or Duane Siegrist of Integra Architecture Inc. at 604-688-4220 or bring your questions or comments to the meeting. *This is not a Public Hearing. Council will receive a report from staff on issues raised at the meeting and will formally consider the proposal at a later date.
at 12:30 p.m. and Saturdays at 1:30 p.m. Registration required. GRAFFITI CO. ART STUDIO 171 East First St., North Vancouver. Tuesday-Friday, 1:30-6:30 p.m. or by appointment. 604-9801699 or gcartstudio@shaw.ca HOLLAND/CROFT STUDIOS 106 West First St., North Vancouver. 604-250-5562 KAY MEEK CENTRE 1700 Mathers Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-981-6335 kaymeekcentre.com LIONS BAY ART GALLERY 350 Centre Rd., Lions Bay. Featuring established and upcoming artists. Monday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 604-921-7865 lionsbayartgallery.com LYNNMOUR ART STUDIO AND GALLERY 301-1467 Crown St., North Vancouver. Saturday and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. or by appointment. 604-9294001 nsartists.ca/garyeder Contemporary and Abstract Paintings by Gordon Oliver, Robert Botlak and GaryW. Eder. THE MUSIC BOX 1564 Argyle Ave.,West
Vancouver. MYSTIC MASK ART STUDIO 319 West 28th St., North Vancouver. NAVA ART CENTER 1355 Main St., North Vancouver. Monday-Friday, 5-9 p.m., Saturday and Sunday, 2-8 p.m. 604-9856282 NORTHSHORE AUTO MALL 104-788 Copping St., North Vancouver. Throw Mark Weave: Four artists (Vincent Massey Pottery, Cheryl Massey Baskets, Lisa Geddes Paintings and Erica Massey ChicaVerde Jewelry) will show their works of pottery, paintings, baskets and jewelry Dec. 12 from noon to 9 p.m., Dec. 13 and 14 from noon to 5 p.m. Opening reception: Thursday, Dec. 11,4-9 p.m. Info: vincentmasseypottery. com. NORTH VANCOUVER COMMUNITY HISTORY CENTRE 3203 Institute Rd., North Vancouver. TuesdaySaturday, noon to 5 p.m. 604-990-3700 x8016 nvma. ca Sharing Our Stories: A display that features reminiscences shared by some Canadian Iranian North Shore residents about why they chose to live here
PRESENTATION HOUSE SATELLITE GALLERY 560 Seymour St., Vancouver.WednesdaySaturday, noon to 6 p.m. satellitegallery.ca The Port/Matthew Buckingham: Obscure Moorings: An examination ofVancouver’s role as a port city and its relation with the maritime worker will run until Dec. 6. RON ANDREWS COMMUNITY SPACE 931 Lytton St., North Vancouver. 604-987-8873 or 604-347-8922 Art and Deco: Abstract compositions by Michael Jeffery and Christmas decorations by Parkgate Ceramic Studio members will be on display until Dec. 7. Blue Sky Meets Fired Earth: Landscape paintings by Cathy Roddie and ceramic forms by Liz De Beer will be on display from Dec. 7 to Jan. 11. SANDRINE PELISSIER STUDIO 125 Garden Ave., North Vancouver. Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Weekly non-instructional life drawing classes. SEYMOUR ART GALLERY 4360 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily. 604-924-1378 seymourartgallery.com Winter Gift Gallery: The gallery will be selling a selection of holiday gifts by local artists until Dec. 24, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Curator’s Talk: Every See more page 17
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A17
CALENDAR
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104-3151 Woodbine Drive, North Vancouver CREST teamclarke.com • 604 220 2020
ARTFUL PRESENTATION d;64[ H[;6_ ?64Z54 k3ZW* V_V._6 H[_6__ h;U_5 *Z59W0c5 5;V_ ;] [_6 W04_54 1;6X ZU [_6 543*Z;% G[_ \3ZW* Z5 [;W*ZU\ Z45 0UU30W 064 5[;1 0U* *_V;U54604Z;U 5_55Z;U 04 `06X\04_ =;VV3UZ4c =_U46_ ;U H3U*0c' <_,% P ]6;V !" 0%V% 4; R 9%V% b2_6 P"" 9Z_,_5 ]6;V V;6_ 4[0U !"" 064Z545 1ZWW ._ ]_0436_* ZU 4[_ 5[;1% ?*VZ55Z;U Z5 ]6__% `jbGb MIKE WAKEFIELD
From page 16 Thursday at noon there will be a 20-minute curator’s talk with background on the current show in the gallery. SHELTON ART/ STUDIOS GALLERY 3540 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. Studio visits by appointment. 604-9225356 sheltonart.com SHIPBUILDERS’ SQUARE 15 Wallace Mews, North Vancouver. THE SHORE PRESENTATION CENTRE 238 Fell Ave., North Vancouver. Daily, noon to 5 p.m. SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE
1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver. Tuesday to Sunday, noon to 4 p.m. 604-925-7292 silkpurse.ca Silent Auction: Capilano University IDEA students will hold an auction of paintings from the Reflections 2015 calendar series. Bidding will close Dec. 6 at 4 p.m. Gifted: An exhibit of works by the volunteers who work at the Silk Purse will run from Dec. 9 to 21. Opening reception:Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2-4 p.m. SPACE EMMARTS STUDIO 305 Mansfield Pl., North Vancouver.Wednesday and Friday, 2-5 p.m. or by appointment. 604-3750694 emmarts.ca STARFIRE STUDIO 6607 Royal Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-922-5510
starfireattheferries.com 195 STUDIOS — ARTISTS ON PEMBERTON 195 Pemberton Ave., North Vancouver. 195studios.ca TARTOOFUL 3183 Edgemont Blvd., North Vancouver. 604-9240122 tartooful.com VIPOND STUDIO AND GALLERY 195 Pemberton Ave., North Vancouver. By appointment only. 604-209-1197 Landscapes in oil on canvas by NormanVipond. WEST VANCOUVER MEMORIAL LIBRARY 1950 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca See more page 18
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A18 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
CALENDAR From page 17 In the Gallery — Things That Go: Images of boats, buses, trains and cars from the library’s historical photograph collection will be on display until Jan.12. WEST VANCOUVER MUNICIPAL HALL 750 17th St.,West Vancouver. Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 604925-7290 Art in the Hall: An exhibition of photographs by Francine Drouin will run until Jan. 30. WEST VANCOUVER
MUSEUM 680 17th St.,West Vancouver. TuesdaySaturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 604-925-7295 westvancouvermuseum.ca Harry and Jessie Webb: — Artists inVancouver’s Jazz Age: An exhibition that draws from the artists’ estate will run until Dec. 6. YEATS STUDIO & GALLERY 2402 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver.WednesdaySunday, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. 778-279-8777 craigyeats. com
Concerts
CAPILANO UNIVERSITY PERFORMING ARTS THEATRE 2055 Purcell Way, North Vancouver. 604-9907810 capilanou.ca/ blueshorefinancialcentre/ Winter Harp: An ensemble of harps, flutes, medieval instruments and percussion combine for a concert of carols, poetry and song Dec. 17 and 18 at 7:30 p.m.Tickets: $37/$34. CAULFEILD COVE HALL 4773 South Piccadilly Rd., West Vancouver. 604-8127411 caulfeildcovehall.ca
CENTENNIAL THEATRE 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. 604-984-4484 centennialtheatre.com Candlelight Carols: The VancouverWelsh Men’s Choir will perform a Christmas concert accompanied by choirs from Argyle secondary Friday, Dec. 12 at 7:30 p.m.Tickets: $30/$27/$12. A Traditional Christmas: TheVancouver Symphony Orchestra will perform holiday music Friday, Dec. 19 at 4 and 7:30 p.m. Admission: $42/$37.Tickets: 604-8763434 or vancouversymphony. ca.
Gloria! A Christmas Celebration: Lions Gate Sinfonia will perform traditional carols followed by a singalong Saturday, Dec. 20 at 7:30 p.m.Tickets: $39$35/$18/$12. DEEP COVE COFFEE HOUSE Mount Seymour United Church, 1200 Parkgate Ave., North Vancouver. 604-363-5370 jane@nsrj.ca Pearl: Kathy Francis and Andrea Smith will perform “cool” tunes, harmonies and multi-instruments Friday, Dec. 19 at 9 p.m. Doors open at 7 p.m. and warm-up acts start at 7:30 p.m. Admission: $10 which includes coffee and goodies. JOHN BRAITHWAITE KAY MEEK CENTRE 1700 Mathers Ave.,West Vancouver. Tickets: 604981-6335 kaymeekcentre. com Year End InVoice: Pandora’sVox and Espiritu will perform their annual
Holiday gift idea: Driving lessons.
Christmas concert Dec. 5 at 8 p.m. and Dec. 6 at 2 and 7:30 p.m.Tickets: $32/$28/$24/$20/$12. Rock ‘n’ Roll Christmas — Buddy and The Killer in Concert: Zachary Stevenson as Buddy Holly and Lance Lipinsky as Jerry Lee Lewis will perform a tribute concert Tuesday, Dec. 9 at 7 p.m.Tickets: $42. The B3 Kings will perform their annual Christmas concert Dec. 10 and 11 at 8 p.m.Tickets: $30/$15. Winter Express: Harmony House Music School and Harmony Training and Performance Society will present an evening of artistic expression of contemporary music Friday, Dec. 12 at 7 p.m.Tickets: $20/$15/$10. Celebrate the Love at Christmastime: Amanda Wood will perform her annual Christmas concert featuring guest artists and musicians Friday, Dec. 12 at 8 p.m. Tickets: $30/$20. Partial See more page 24
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A19
CALENDAR
Edgemont Village Spectacular Light Display Thank You Sponsors! 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30.
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SUPER MUSICAL G[_ ?645 =W3.#5 96;*3,4Z;U ;] =5': ;+))IC% @]_0436ZU\ 0,4;65 H,;44 D0W4_65 0U* H060&h_0UU_ j;5Z_) ;9_U5 4;UZ\[4 04 4[_ H40UW_c iU*3546Z0W ?WWZ0U,_ H40\_% G[_ V35Z,0W' .05_* ;U 4[_ 54;6Z_5 ;] `%f% G602_65 0U* 4[_ D0W4 <Z5U_c NWV' 63U5 4[6;3\[ 4[_ [;WZ*0c 5_05;U 3U4ZW h0U% S' l"!R% 8;6 V;6_ ZU];6V04Z;U 2Z5Z4 5'$%3E"473+D% `jbGb HF``fi:< DAVID COOPER
VANCOUVER WELSH MEN’S CHOIR
One pair. #585 Leather Lined in Rustic Brown also available in Rustic Black $189.95
CHRISTMAS CANDLELIGHT CAROLS Friday, December 12th, Centennial Theatre, 2300 Londsdale Ave., 7:30pm
WHERE TO BUY TICKETS:
Adult $27, Senior $24, Student $10. Online from vwmc.ca (no fees) or call 604.878.1190 Centennial Box Office, noon-5pm, Mon-Sat, 604.984.4484 From any choir member, or at the door
That’s all it takes. Just one pair of Blundstone boots will make you a fan for life. No laces. All season. Long wearing. Go anywhere. Spine and joint sparing. So comfortable that – surprise! You end up with two pairs.
blundstone.ca EDGEMONT VILLAGE
3065 EDGEMONT BLVD, NORTH VANCOUVER 604.986.4893
A20 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
A Few Of My Favourite Things
CALENDAR
Our Annual Holiday Spectacular!
Dec 11-14 & 18-21 Presentation House Theatre 333 Chesterfield Avenue, North Vancouver
Box Office: 604-990-3474 www.phtheatre.org
CULTURAL DIVERSITY ?c0 j060U*0 W_0*5 0 \6;39 4[6;3\[ 0 ._WWc *0U,_ 5_55Z;U ;U 4[_ W054 *0c ;] iU4_6U04Z;U0W :*3,04Z;U D__X 04 =09ZW0U; FUZ2_65Z4c d;2% !P&l!% =09F#5 iU4_6U04Z;U0W H43*_U45# =;WW_,4Z2_ [_W* *Z]]_6_U4 _2_U45 4[6;3\[;34 4[_ 1__X 4; ,_W_.604_ 4[_ U04Z;U0W _2_U4 5399;64ZU\ 543*cZU\ 0.6;0* 0U* 4[_ ,;U46Z.34Z;U 4[04 ZU4_6U04Z;U0W _*3,04Z;U V0X_5 4; =0U0*0% `jbGb MIKE WAKEFIELD
Public Meetings & Holiday Hours Reminder Following is a list of North Vancouver District public meetings for this month. Please note that this list is subject to change and new agenda items/meetings may be added during the month.
Council Meetings:
Monday, December 15, 7pm
Committee of the Whole: For more information:
Monday, December 8, 7pm
• visit dnv.org for agendas, minutes and schedules of upcoming meetings • call 604-990-2315 for a recorded listing of agenda items • visit dnv.org/agendanotice to have agendas delivered to your inbox • visit any District Library to view a copy of the agenda which is available the Friday before the regular Council Meeting
Holiday Hours District Hall and Operations Centre will be closed December 24 (at noon), 25, 26, and January 1. Our Customer Service Centre at District Hall will be open December 29, 30, 31 and January 2 responding to general telephone, email and walk-in enquiries. For more information on District services during the Holidays visit dnv.org.
facebook.com/NVanDistrict
dnv.org
@NVanDistrict
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A21
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MT. SEYMOUR Enjoy a moderately strenuous snowshoe tour. This is a fun and active way to learn about the role our mountains play in collecting and storing our drinking water. Learn about local plants and animals that call the Seymour Watershed home. Wrap-up your tour with a cup of hot cocoa. Ages 18+, $18 with own snowshoes; $25 includes snowshoes rental Registration required. Must be physically capable of hiking up and down steep sections with snowshoes. Register by phone at 604-432-6359 or online using the four-digit barcode.
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A23
CALENDAR
ns of asoFurniture eFine SManufacturers
Greetings Since 1916
2010
COOKSUPHOLSTERY UPHOLSTERY, COOKS INC CUSTOM DRAPERIES CUSTOM DRAPERIES AND EXPERT RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL FURNITURE REFINISHING 980 W. 15th @ Oak Street, Vancouver Email: cooksupholstery@shaw.ca
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MANUFACTURERS OF FINE FURNITURE SINCE 1916
PACIFIC SPIRIT CHOIR present a
CHRISTMAS CAROLONG
FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY Sing-a-Long Carols, Other Christmas music Children’s Story Time, John Rutter’s Gloria with Special Guest Singers and Pacific Spirit Brass
WEST VANCOUVER UNITED CHURCH 2062 Esquimalt Avenue
7:30 pm SATURDAY, DEC. 6 2:00 pm SUNDAY, DEC. 7 GOSPEL CELEBRATION G[_ e06,35 e;5_Wc =[;60W_ @ZU,W3*ZU\ h0VZWZ0 b#>6Z_U' e06,35 e;5_Wc' :WZa0._4[ I_ZWWc' e06X e;6Z55_44_ 0U* I;/Z_ kZW_5) 96_5_U45 (JICM' 0 \;59_W ,_W_.604Z;U ;] =[6Z54V05 04 jZ\[W0U*5 FUZ4_* =[36,[ @TRll :*\_V;U4 >W2*%' d;64[ E0U,;32_6) ;U H3U*0c' <_,% l! 04 lKT" 9%V% GZ,X_45 AlR$Al" 020ZW0.W_ .c ,0WWZU\ Q"S&PP"&!PP"% `jbGb MIKE WAKEFIELD
AT THE MARKET
SDALE QUAY * ChristmasKET Tree Lot * Holiday Showcase * Tree Lighting Ceremony
CELEBRATE WITH US THIS HOLIDAY SEASON SEPTEMBER 5 TO 7
* Holiday Story Time * Live Holiday Music * Santa Photos *Kids Crafts
* Extended Holiday Shopping Hours
LONSDALEQUAY.COM 604.985.2191
Visit our website for event details, holiday hours & parking info.
if you see news happening call our news tips line 604 985 2131
th C is om Su in nd g ay !
CHRISTMAS -
Tickets: $25, $20 & $10 at the door and at www.pacificspiritchoir.com
LONSDALEQUAY.COM
A24 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
CALENDAR proceeds will support Cystic Fibrosis Canada. I Sing Along WithYou: Dastan Ensemble and Jamal Kurdistani will perform
Persian classical and Kurdish music Saturday, Dec. 13 at 8 p.m. Admission: $45.Tickets: 604-985-6282. A Traditional Christmas: TheVancouver Symphony Orchestra will perform holiday
music Saturday, Dec. 20 at 4 and 7:30 p.m. Admission: $42/$37.Tickets: 604-8763434 or vancouversymphony. ca. David James & Big River will perform a tribute
Sadie, Westerleigh Resident
Even our most finicky residents love it here. Residents of all kinds love it at Westerleigh PARC. That’s because our retirement residence welcomes fluffy, furry, small and mini. We understand your pet is part of the family, and that’s exactly how we’ll treat it. Plus, you’ll live in one of the Lower Mainland’s most exclusive neighbourhoods within strolling distance to boutiques, cafés and services. All of our suites are pet-friendly and include all this: > physical fitness, brain fitness
and recreational programs
> daily gourmet meals
> exceptional ocean or mountain views
Visit us today to book a tour. Call 604.922.9888 for details.
parcliving.ca/westerleigh
LONSDALE QUAY 1PRESENTATION HOUSE THEATRE 333 Chesterfield Ave., North Vancouver. Tickets: 604-990-3474 phtheatre.org Van Django Bells: Van Django string, swing, jazz quartet will perform a Christmas variety show Tuesday, Dec. 16 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $16-$20. SEYMOUR ART SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7292 silkpurse.ca Classical Concert Series: Sarah Jane Scouten and Jack Dwyer will play a stripped down set of seasonal folk tunes Thursday, Dec. 11 at 10:30 a.m.Tickets: $20/$15. ST. ANDREW’S UNITED CHURCH 1044 St. Georges St., North Vancouver. 604-9850408 st-andrews-united.ca Christmas With Bach: The Laudate Singers will perform with a baroque orchestra Sunday, Dec. 7, 3-5 p.m. Admission: $35/$30/$15. Tickets: 604-729-6814 or laudatesingers.com. ST. DAVID’S UNITED CHURCH 1525 Taylor Way,West Vancouver. A Christmas Story: Musica Intima will perform traditional holiday favourites and contemporary works Saturday, Dec. 20 at 2:30 p.m. Admission: $35/$30/$10. Tickets: 604-731-6618 or musicaintima.org. ST. FRANCIS-IN-THEWOOD See more page 41
> transportation
> full kitchen and in-suite laundry
725 – 22nd Street, West Vancouver, BC
to Johnny Cash Monday, Dec. 29 at 7:30 p.m.There will be a special guest appearance by Hilary Beckett as June Carter.Tickets: $36.
Volunteer on the North Shore
From page 18
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International Volunteer Day
Celebrating volunteers at home and around the world North Shore Community Resources wishes to recognize and thank the many citizens who volunteer in our communities. • 13.3 million people across Canada generously help organizations to deliver important programs and services. • Volunteers contribute to over 2.1 billion hours of service annually in our country. • You make a difference and it is appreciated.
On December 5th North Shore Community Resources joins the rest of the world in celebrating your volunteer commitment to our communities.
Thank you!
North Shore Community Resources
201 - 935 Marine Drive (Capilano Mall) For information on volunteering call 604-985-7138 or visit: www.nscr.bc.ca/volunteer/volunteer.html
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A25
e a L e C A
❄Literacy tip s❄ ❄ Seasonal reci pe❄ ❄ Holiday list ings❄
Y O U R
G U I D E
T O
T H E
H O L I D A Y
S E A S O N
O N
T H E
N O R T H
S H O R E
Christmas gift wish recalled CHRIS DAGENAIS Contributing writer
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The year was 1982. Saturday morning cartoons ran for six hours back then, beginning at the crack of dawn with a marathon of Loonie Toons classics and reaching an apex around 10 a.m. with shamelessly commercial TV shows based on bestselling toys of the day (Pole Position, Rubik the Amazing Cube, Ewoks, etc.) The animated odyssey tapered off around noon with more adolescent-oriented dramas about gaunt popstars with fingerless gloves and feathered hair vying for top spot on the music charts. Throughout the programming, advertisers hard-sold messages about the must-have awesomeness of one toy or another, encouraging boys and girls to ramp up the parental nagging before offering speedy disclaimers about required assembly and the exclusion of batteries. That year, in the lead-up to Christmas, there was one heavily promoted toy that infected my impressionable brain with a singular obsession of such magnitude that I was scarcely able to converse on any subject that could not be easily segued back to it. It was a small, scale model motorcycle that could be inserted into a square starting gate equipped with a rotating handle. When you cranked
Seymour Dance Presents
THE NUTCRACKER Sunday December 7
Shows are 1pm and 4pm.
A BRAND NEW
AESTHETICS
Get into the holiday spirit with this charming production of dancers aged 3-18. Over 100 students perform this classic after the hard work of over 80 hours of prep and practising.
STUDIO IN THE
The Nutcracker is one of the world’s favourite ballets, and with Seymour Dance’s version- you’re in for a treat! This fairytale bursts with bewitching dancing, magical sets and the prettiest costumes imaginable.
Bloom Aesthetics
Tickets are available from Centennial Theatre and the costs are Adults $23, Student/Senior $20 and Children (2-12 year) $18.
NEIGHBORHOOD 104-265 25th West Vancouver
604-281-0081
www.centennialtheatre.com
the handle, the motorcycle’s motor mechanism wound tightly. A red launch button sent the taut motorcycle screaming out of the gate, balanced on its two wheels, for an advertised distance of 30 feet. Wow! In the history of toys, had there ever been anything cooler and of greater value for $20? I thought not. In my family, which is of Latvian origin on my mother’s side, the principal Christmas celebration took place on the evening of Dec. 24. The tradition was to have an elaborate meal and then repair to the living room to open presents for untold hours. Christmas Eve 1982 was marked by an explosive anticipation of opening a certain large present that I was certain contained the best toy ever fashioned. The gift was placed near the back of the tree and I was under strict orders not to touch it until it was time to open it. Stripped of my appetite through sheer nauseous excitement, the time finally came for me to open the glorious gift. With trembling
hands I tried to lift the box from the ground. Alas, I fumbled, the box proving much heavier than I expected. Odd, I thought, that the motorcycle should be so heavy. Perhaps its weight is what allowed it to stand on two wheels. Lugging the absurdly heavy package to a spot on the floor, I felt my cheeks flush with unbridled glee. I tore the paper from the package, revealing a generic cardboard box underneath. I opened the box and fished inside, expecting glossy toy packaging to emerge. Instead, I encountered layers and layers of tissue paper and felt my hand graze something rough and cold. Perplexed, I extracted two red bricks from the bottom of the box, placing them at my feet. Bricks? What? Were they to build a jump for my motorcycle? I was urged to keep digging. After much grasping and sorting, I came upon a tiny black box bearing d|| ZWK Wq ULz| pA
All I Want For Christmas... • Fresh cut Christmas trees • Holiday wreaths, garlands, and swags • Festive winter planters and greens • And many more great gifts and ideas
Open through December 24th Nor th Vancouver ad 1343 Lynn Valley Ro
604-985-1784
rden.ca www.mapleleafga
A26 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
E . D M N L A P R A A N S B . W R E G . D S B C O N K I N E I . L C A C R . R K O P G C O T advantage of the savings now and N O O S PRI CK. BR Take W I T L R O N ME F S L I L O A . N S O I O . get your floor installed before Christmas! G Y T RIN L LWA S N S A F E Y N C E A I D M O W R A A N L A P O . R A A L N S B . F CES R . LOW CK. E D B C N I N I . A R R K QUALITY AREA RUGS DURABLE HARDWOOD LUXURIOUS CARPET I O PR CK. BR LOW P STOC ORING IN ST E FLOO STO ORING. WAYS INME FLO LWAYS D NAM RICES. A N L A P O . R A A L N S B . F W R E . D S B C O E K OR I N E . L C M A C R . K I O A R P G C T FLO N W PR K. B LOW N O S I T R N S I O O STOC ING. E N S I O . Y M L S S A A F E Y IN O O R WA N A M E ALW AND N PRIC *
CO M E A N D V I S I T N O RT H VA N CO UV E R ’ S
BIGGEST SHOWROOM
Brand Name Flooring. Low Prices. Always in Stock.
ENDOFTHEROLL.COM
North Vancouver | 1570 Main St | 604.985.4200 No payment, no interest plans available OAC - *See store for details
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A27
SEASONAL RECIPES:POMEGRANATE DRESSING KZ] \BVVB9YT[ >]6Y@]= 9]>] @>B:Y5]5 7` ^_b HBT5]>\;V2
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Help us ‘extend a hand up’ to families in need
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Royal City Youth Ballet Company Society proudly presents, for the 26th season, the full length ballet, the Nutcracker.
The longest running Nutcracker ballet performance in Canada!
• Serving families and individuals across the North Shore • Providing counsel + coaching, food + clothing that saves lives
Don’t miss your opportunity to see this unique show that delights audiences of all ages.
• Offering one-to-one care. Restoring people to healthier, productive lives • Grassroots support from households, business, churches, community groups
“Extending a hand up, not a hand out” makes a healthy inclusive community
Artistic Director, Camilla Fishwick-Kellogg Executive Producer, Trisha Sinosich-Arciaga
Centennial Theatre, North Vancouver Sunday, December 21 at 1 & 4 pm Box Office: 604-984-4484 www.centennialtheatre.com
PLEASE DONATE TODAY: ONLINE: harvestproject.org BY MAIL or IN-PERSON: 1073 ROOSEVELT CRESCENT, NORTH VANCOUVER, BC
For more information, and a full list of performances, please visit our website:
www.royalcityyouthballet.org
A28 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
Family literacy tips
W
ith kids off school and parents home from work, the winter holidays are perfect for creating family time to play and learn together. In a recent press release, ABC Life Literacy Canada offered the following holiday family literacy tips.
LYNN VALLEY VILLAGE COMMUNITY EVENTS
rI`caj HQQb NSLeeag_ Gather the family together with a favourite holiday or winter book. Get cosy blankets and comfy chairs, then snuggle in and take turns reading aloud to one another. lIbg jQLO QJS GIOhN ISh ecfM MIeN_ Even young children can make marks, write, or draw on a card to send to friends and family or on a gift tag for someone special. UIbcSe_ Get the whole family involved in baking. Following a recipe is a great way to practise reading and comprehension skills. Measuring ingredients and following baking times are practical (and delicious!) applications of math skills. iLM ISh IHQLM_ Take in a holiday show or visit a museum. Family outings offer fun learning opportunities. And make sure to read the theatre program and the exhibit descriptions together. lIbg I acNM ISh GdgGb cM MJcGg_ Grocery shopping can be a fun family literacy activity. Your child can write the holiday
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shopping list, read signs and labels as you make your way through the aisles, and count items as they go into the shopping cart. qcKg Mdg ecfM Qf acMgOIGj_ Encourage literacy by giving books, games, drawing materials, magazine subscriptions and bookstore gift cards. When you include fun learning activities in your family’s holiday time, everyone stays sharp and ready for the new year. Find more family literacy tips and activities at familyliteracyday.ca.
UPCOMING EVENTS IN THE VILLAGE CHRISTMAS TREE WALK COME AND ENJOY! The Village Plaza will be filled with dozens of beautifully decorated trees and music will be playing around the clock. Each tree uniquely decorated in the holiday spirit. Come vote for your favourite!
www.lynnvalleyvillage.com
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A29
Holiday happenings
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Lynn Valley Road & Mountain Hwy • www.shoplynnvalley.com
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2014 Holiday Performances Sunday
7 A Tout Choeur French Choir 1–2pm
14
Jonathan Wiltse Pianist 2:30–4:30pm
21 Jonathan Wiltse Pianist 1–3pm
Monday
8
Tuesday
9
Jonathan Amicus Music Duo Wiltse Pianist 3:30–5:30pm 3–5pm
15
16
22
23
Amicus Jonathan Music Duo Wiltse Pianist 3:30–5:30pm 3–5pm
Amicus Music Duo 3:30–5:30pm
Wednesday
10 Amicus Music Duo 3:30–5:30pm
Thursday
11
Friday
12
Thunderbirds Jonathan Barbershop Wiltse Pianist 7:15–8:45pm 3–5pm
17
18
24
25
Amicus Thunderbirds Music Duo Barbershop 3:30–5:30pm 7:15–8:45pm
19
Jonathan Wiltse Pianist 3–5pm
Saturday
13 Amicus Music Duo 3:30–5:30pm
20
Amicus Music Duo 3:30–5:30pm
Jonathan Jonathan Wiltse Pianist Wiltse Pianist 3–5pm 11am–1pm CHRISTMAS
WINNERS • SHOPPERS DRUG MART • SAVE-ON-FOODS • BLACK BEAR PUB • PLUS OVER 40 STORES
A30 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
Box contains two unexpected red bricks TRWr ULz| n
Ticket Prices (includes TAX) $11 Adult (18-64) Senior (65+) $8 $8 Child/Youth (3-17) Free Children 2 and under Matinee train (all ages) $6
NOV 27 - DEC 18 MON - THURS 3pm-10pm FRI - SUN 10am-11pm
DEC 19 - DEC 26 EVERYDAY 10am-11pm *Closed Christmas Day
Advance tickets at Ticketleader.ca 604-252-3700
DEC 27 - JAN 4 EVERYDAY 10am-10pm
the stamp of the Swiss flag. Upon opening the diminutive package, I stared in utter bewilderment at the tiniest pen knife I had ever seen. Equipped with a short, surgically sharp knife on one side and a rough nail file on the other, the tool was a junior version of the Swiss Army Knife popular with grandfathers, scout leaders and precisely no seven-yearolds. I managed to choke out a thank you to the giver of the peculiar gift, who explained to me that the bricks were simply a way of throwing me off the scent of the pen knife; if I had snuck a shake of the gift while no one was looking I would not have guessed that it contained a one and three-quarter-inch blade. Truer words were never spoken; that’s right, I would never have guessed. I received many thoughtful and fun presents that year, but the mega-cool, alwayswanted-it-and-couldn’tpossibly-live-without-it motorcycle was not one of them. For weeks I regarded
that pen knife with scarcely contained disdain. But in the spring, the knife found its way into my pocket every now and then, and eventually I did not leave home without it. Its precise, sharp blade fashioned countless wooden arrows and cut through the twine of ingenious traps I set for bad guys in the backyard. It came in handy on camping trips and helped me to mark park benches and tree stumps with a set of timeless initials commemorating my time there. That knife remains an enduring memory of my childhood, of a time when the everyday adventures of my imagination eclipsed the machinations of advertising. Maybe my own kids will find some version of bricks under the tree this year.
Chris Dagenais is a North Shore resident and a regular contributing writer to the North Shore News. His weekly restaurant review column runs in the Wednesday issue of the paper and online at nsnews.com. Contact: hungryontheshore@gmail. com.
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Bring Hope and Joy to a Family this Holiday Season You can help... 8 Register On–Line to Sponsor a Family
with children, a senior or a person with disabilities
8 Donate On-Line or Mail a cheque to
FAMILY SERVICES OF THE NORTH SHORE #101–255 West 1st Street, North Vancouver, BC V7M 3G8
8 Bring a New Unwrapped Gift or Toy to:
CHRISTMAS BUREAU OFFICE BY DEC. 11TH #113 – 255 West
1st Street, North Vancouver, Monday thru Friday 10:00 am–4:00 pm; or
Leave your donation with Park Royal Guest Services, or Capilano Mall near Santa’s House
Our greatest need this year is gifts for seniors and children 12 -16
Thank you for your support! Visit www.familyservices.bc.ca for more information or call 604-984-9627 FOUNDING SPONSOR
EMPTY STOCKING FUND In partnership with United Way of the Lower Mainland.
Counselling • Support • Education
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A31
r e v u o t c s n e a V W 1650 MARINE DR.
HAND-MADE IN-STORE
FRESH STUFFED WILD BC SOLE FILLETS
FRESH LEAN GROUND BEEF
11.00/kg
149 /100g
HO T
LOCALLY RAISED
FRESH BONELESS SKINLESS BC CHICKEN THIGHS
de up of Mushrooms are %mawa ter around 90
4
FRESH JUMBO WHITE BC MUSHROOMS
99
299
6.59/kg
/lb
/lb
Nothing but good!
If we are selling it today, it’s ground fresh in-store today 6.59/kg
limits in effect
HOT
MEATS
2
CALIFORNIA
99
FRESH
LIBERTÉ
GREEK YOGURT
/lb
500 g
GROCERYthies
CATCH
Groovy for smoo
3
79 each
FRESH LARGE VINTAGE SEEDLESS GRAPES 5.49/kg
249 /lb
FROM THE OVEN
EUROPE’S BEST
FROZEN FRUIT 500 g - 600 g
10
2$ FOR
LOCALLY RAISED
FRESH BC CHICKEN WINGS 7.69/kg
349 / lb
We only sell 100% milk-fed veal from Canadian Farmers
FRESH VEAL CUTLETS milk fed 17.61/kg FRESH ST. HAND-MADE
PORK SIRLOIN OR CHICKEN KABOBS all varieties 155 g
7
99 / lb
8
2$ FOR
UNCLE BEN’S OCEAN WISE
PACIFIC HALIBUT FILLETS frozen LARGE WILD CARIBBEAN TIGER PRAWNS previously frozen
3
99
4 99¢
OCEAN WISE
OCEAN WISE
CE PRODU...and more
5
FUDGE BROWNIES 500 g
2$ RAGÚ
FOR
/ 100 g
2
3
FOR
CHEESE
/ 100 g
NATURAL PASTURES CHEESE COMPANY
CALENDOS 39 LECAMEMBERT / 100 g
WE ARE LOCALLY GROWN. THAT’S WHY WE’RE UP FOR ALMOST ANYTHING THAT SUPPORTS OUR LOCAL PEOPLE, PLACES AND ENVIRONMENT. IT’S ALSO WHY WE’RE COMMITTED TO LOCAL, SUSTAINABLE AND RESPONSIBLE FARMING.
HONEY HAM
/100 g
/100g
MADE FRESH IN-STORE
PEROGY MEAL 300 g
499
each
125 g
169
SCHNEIDERS
499 469
ARTISAN CHEESE
each
SLICED TO GO
2$
630 mL - 640 mL
399 499 4 pk
BAKED FRESH IN-STORE
49 PASTA SAUCE
BASA FISH FILLETS previously frozen 100% of our Wild Coho Salmon is caught in BC Waters. Now that’s local. WILD COHO SALMON FILLETS frozen
CHOCOLATE CROISSANTS
BISTRO EXPRESS rice side dish 240 g - 250 g
/ 100 g
BAKED FRESH IN-STORE
each
Meet Kale... Your new friend with benefits
Why did the potato cross thed. road ? He saw a fork ahea
1.5
MEXICO
FRESH BLACKBERRIES 6 oz weather permitting
349 each
CALIFORNIA
FRESH KALE green or black
bag
129 each
DEMPSTER’S
MEXICO
FRESH HASS AVOCADOS
99¢
each
FRESH ORGANIC BC AMBROSIA APPLES 3.28/kg
1
49 /lb
CANADIAN THE LITTLE POTATO COMPANY
FRESH BABY POTATOES red, yellow or trio 680 g
HOURS: Mon - Sat 7am - 9pm • Sun 7am - 7pm | 604.913.7757
2
WHOLE GRAINS BREAD 600 g
99 each
DEL MONTE
100% JUICE 1.6 L
plus deposit & recycle fee
5 299
2$ FOR
each
P r ices Valid from December 5th to December 11th
FF
47 %
O
O FF
$79
O
% 52 2 People, Including Any 2 Combos or Create-Your-Own Pasta with Garlic Bread & 2 Drinks
$12
VANCOUVER, BC
Value $185.00
$79
and up and up up and
%
86
50 % Any 2 Chicken, Beef or Lamb Donair Wraps with 2 Fries and 2 Soft Drinks
VANCOUVER, BC
U P
O FF
VANCOUVER, BC
Value $25.00
Value $76.00
$39.99
90-Minute Spa Package, Includes Full Body Aromatherapy Massage, Customized Facial & Eye Treatment for 1 Person or 60-Minute Hot Retreat Package for 2 People with Massage and Champagne
TO
Authentic Italian Lunch or Dinner for
VANCOUVER, BC
57 UP T % O
and up
FF
NORTH VANCOUVER, BC
Round-trip Transportation between Vancouver and Whistler on Whistler Direct Shuttle
O FF
3 or 5 Day Juice Cleanse Including Fresh Pressed Juice, Herbal Teas & More
FF
Value $99.00
O
20 UP T % O
A32 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
Value $350.00
Value $24.00
$12
and up
Skin Tightening Treatment for Full Face or Full Face and Neck NORTH VANCOUVER, BC
Visit www.socialshopper.com for more local daily deals.
$55
and up and up up and
LOOK
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A33
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to FASHION & STYLE
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Photos by Cindy Goodman
Toques about town There are many names for those cosy knit hats that are so ubiquitous this time of year — the beanie, the stocking cap, the bobble hat, or the distinctively Canadian toque. Some are slouchy, others are snug. Some are wool, some are synthetic. They can be pulled down to the eyebrows or
perched on the crown of the head. But they all serve the same purpose: they keep our noggins toasty when it’s cold outside. More than just a practical winter wardrobe staple, toques can also serve as stylish accessories. Frills such as brims, bling, pom poms and textile appliques all add flare to the humble head warmer.
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A34 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A35
LOOK Personal Shopper
‘Joey Pouch’ provides needed support It is a product that is long overdue but finally there is a place for men to keep things where they belong. Local company 2UNDR has designed the ultimate pair of men’s underwear. The brochure description says it best, “Sewn inside each pair of 2UNDR is a soft and comfortable penthouse condo for your most valuable assets. We call it the Joey Pouch.” The goal for North Shore resident Jeff Williams was to produce a highperformance men’s athletic underwear. Working with top designer Rocky Harris, Williams created three distinct styles. Besides the unique Joey Pouch, the attention to detail is foremost in every style. Waistbands that don’t roll up, flatlocked stitching that is intelligently located to avoid potential rub zones and moisture wicking materials all provide a great fit that performs well. Comfort, fit, style and a sense of humour were all brought to play in creating the three product lines. Day Shift is a cotton-modal blend mid-length boxer brief. Swing Shift adds a beechwood fibre to the cotton-modal blend creating a soft fit that keeps you chafe-free. The Gear Shift is a more athletic cut with a compression-like feel that includes Garmatex’s patented ColdSkin material. This fabric incorporates crushed jade into the microfibre filaments that promotes extra cooling and enhanced ventilation.
Fashion File
LOCALLY MADE `Z_66_ k63\_4' H060[ G0cW;6 0U* ?W._64 f; 06_ 0V;U\ 4[;5_ 1[; 1ZWW ._ 5_WWZU\ 4[_Z6 106_5 04 4[_ j;WZ*0c ?64Z50U 8_54Z20W' H0436*0c' <_,% Q' !! 0%V% 4; S 9%V% 04 kW_U_0\W_5 =;VV3UZ4c =_U46_' QlQl e06ZU_ <6%' D_54 E0U,;32_6% `jbGb MIKE WAKEFIELD
OPEN HOUSES Crystal Connections Jewelry will hold Christmas open houses on Dec. 5, 6 and 7 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at 4561 Prime Pl., North Vancouver. Designer
Working with professional athletes like PGA champion David Toms, skateboarder Jordan Hoffart, and Motocrosser Ronnie Renner has helped Williams connect with a wide audience. A special edition model named after the XGames gold medallist is coming out soon. One dollar from the sale of every Ronnie Renner pair will be donated to Red Bull’s Wings for Life charity that supports spinal cord research. Currently there are two locations that carry the product on the North Shore: Obsession Bikes, 94 Lonsdale Ave. and Rona Building Centre, 915 West First St. — Terry Peters
Margot J. Leviton will be selling her healing stone jewelry. crystal-connections. myshopify.com SCARVES FOR WATER The West Vancouver-based Obakki Foundation has released three new limitededition modal-blend scarves
— Stalk, Ash and Noir. They are now on sale for $29 each, with 100 per cent of the net proceeds going to build wells in South Sudan villages. obakkifoundation.org Compiled by Christine Lyon Send North Shore fashion info to clyon@nsnews.com.
Pamper Someone You Love This Christmas give that special someone a healthy glow with one of our revitalizing facials Choice of Oxygen Facial or ZO Zein Obagi Facial Peel Christmas Gift Special ONLY $99 REGULAR $150 Turn Back The Aging Clock
Canyon Laser & Skin Care offers the highest standard of client care, state-of-the-art advanced technologies and a complete line of physician grade skin care products to help you look and feel your very best.
Call for your complimentary consultation
#301-1277 Lynn Valley Road North Vancouver 604-986-1232 • www.drvanas.com
A36 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014 EVERY SAT & SUN 10AM-6PM
ALL CHECKOUT
CELEBRATING
LANES
OPEN GUARANTEED†
FREE Spend $250 and receive
unless we are unable due to unforseen technical difficulties
†
Lindt Gift Box
!
964 g
20830945
up to $24.98 value
! Spend $250 or more before applicable taxes in a single transaction at any Real Canadian Superstore location and receive free Lindt Gift Box 964 g. Excludes purchase of tobacco, alcohol products, prescriptions, gift cards, phone cards, lottery tickets, all third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners, etc.) and any other products which are provincially regulated. The retail value of up to $24.98 will be deducted from the total amount of your purchase before sales taxes are applied. Limit one coupon per family and/or customer account. No cash value. No copies. Coupon must be presented to the cashier at time of purchase. Valid from Friday, December 5th until closing Thursday, December 11th, 2014. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. No substitutions, refunds or exchanges on free item. 20840932
4
10000 05444
4
Kellogg’s jumbo cereal
selected varieties, 700 g - 1.35 kg
6
20591235
Oka cheese 225 g 20029954
8
Danette refrigerated dessert
48
dinner tray buns
4
white or whole wheat, pkg of 12
ea
20788606
00
2/
3 lb BAG Mandarin Satsuma
3
product of USA 20330176001
OR
3.00 EACH
96
5
2/
selected varieties, 4 X 100 g 207997974006
ea
00 OR
2.98
11
20770964
98
ea
Dairyland sour cream 500 mL or cottage cheese 500 g selected varieties
20275966001
5
refrigerated, selected varieties, 8 X 215 mL 20659165
M&M’s bowl size chocolate
400 g
4
202992958001
98
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
5.99
2/
selected varieties, 6 X 330 mL 20757368
3
98
ea
LIMIT 2
AFTER LIMIT
5.47
OR
2.98 EACH
7
20325132005
98
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
8.98
2
Hunt’s tomato sauce
Mazola oil
27
4
selected varieties, 1.42 L 2622228
ea
27
10 20305396
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
14.98
98
4
selected varieties, 910 mL tetra 208111720002
ea
LIMIT 2
AFTER LIMIT
5.97
selected varieties, 96 washloads, 4.43 L
12 rolls
9
San Pellegrino sparkling beverage
Danone Activia or Silhouette yogurt tub
Royale Tiger towels
98
ea
00
Sunlight liquid laundry detergent
20708181
8.98
500
selected varieties, 650 g
Del Monte fruit cups
ea
LIMIT 6
AFTER LIMIT
EACH
Saputo natural cheese bar or shredded cheese
selected varieties, 1 kg
97
2/
00
Mott’s Clamato cocktail 20318955002
OR
AFTER LIMIT
16.97
Thanks to all our vendors for up to 35 years of support.
98
47
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
3.56
Dawn ultra liquid dish detergent
2,000
9
ea
3.68
EACH
selected varieties, 1.12 L
2
20659787
180 washloads, 4.43 L
LIMIT 4
47
AFTER LIMIT
Snuggle liquid fabric softener
ea
2 2
selected varieties, 1.89 L
20300006008
LIMIT 4
2.89
20216145
Ocean Spray cocktails
selected varieties, 1.89 L
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
11.98
98
ea
LIMIT 2
AFTER LIMIT
3.59
Prices are in effect until Thursday, December 11, 2014 or while stock lasts. Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 2014 Loblaws Inc. * we match prices! Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A37
CALENDAR
Town Hall Meeting
Rezoning Application 1549 St. George’s Avenue Porte Development Corporation has applied for a Development Application to amend the Zoning Bylaw to permit a one-storey addition to the existing three- storey apartment building to create a four-storey rental apartment with a total of 29 units. A density bonus is requested for the provision of rental units. A reduction of nine parking stalls is requested, with the current parking area maintained to provide six surface parking stalls, accessed from the rear lane. This Town Hall Meeting provides interested members of the public an opportunity to learn about and respond to the proposal prior to Council consideration. Date: Time: Place:
Wednesday December 10, 2014 6pm - 9pm; Presentation at 7pm John Braithwaite Comm. Centre Anchor Room 145 West 1st St North Vancouver, BC
150
Subject Site
Applicant Kerry Kukucha Porte Development Corp 604.732.7651 x.111 Kerry@porte.ca
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if you see news
happening
235
231 235
#nsnmoments
call our news tips line
604 985 2131
... at Presentation House Theatre! A Merry Celebration of Your Favourite Music and Songs!
Book your Christmas Party at Our Annual Holiday Spectacular Dec 11-14 & Dec 18-21 Tickets on sale now!
Presentation House Theatre Box Office: (604) 990-3474 www.phtheatre.org
241
219
225
213
E 15th St
City of North Vancouver Christopher Wilkinson, Planner City of North Vancouver 604.990.4206 cwilkinson@cnv.org
It’s Beginning To Look A Lot Like Christmas...
Your Host Jay Brazeau
236
1535
228
1536
E 16th St 215
1549
215
1565
1550
226
1550
230
214
1605
1650
1621
1600
1612
1616
1540
1629
206
161
1628
136
Eastern Ave
1640
St Georges’s Ave
E 17th St 161
143
N
NORGATE CENTRE 1451 Marine Drive, North Vancouver • 604-904-7811
A38 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
MUSIC
B3 Kings dig into Christmas groove Jazz quartet continue tradition with gigs at Kay Meek Centre ■ B3 Kings, Kay Meek Centre, Dec. 10 and 11 at 8 p.m. For more information visit kaymeekcentre.com. JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com
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SOS Children’s Gingerbread Village
Public Information Meeting
Crippen Regional Park
P:esented by Vancouver’s P:eeminent Spectacle of Holiday Magic • Aztec Maintenance • Bentall Kennedy • Diamond Delivery • Freedom 55 Financial • German Canadian Business Assn. • Heming, Wyborn & Grewal • Lynn Valley Lions Club • Mogo • North Van Host Lions Club • North Van Rotary Club • Stewart, Aulinger & Company
www.sosbc.org
The band isn’t prepared. The crowd is about to sweep inside to hear Christmas carols filtered through Bill Coon’s guitar improvisations, Cory Weeds’ saxophone solos, Denzal Sinclaire’s joyful crooning and all the innovation Chris Gestrin’s 10 fingers can summon out of his B3 organ. Only they’re not prepared. “We never get together and rehearse,” admits Weeds. That lack of preparation is particularly apparent at sound check. “It always sounds very bad,” the saxophonist says. And while Sinclaire sorts out his drum kit, Weeds thinks of all the people who paid good money to hear the quartet. “We’re really not prepared,” he says. “And then something happens when we hit the stage.” That something is the chemistry between four musicians who each listen with the attentiveness of a
great conversationalist. Sinclaire bops his head in approval to every blistering note Weeds plays on “We Three Kings” and Coon is clearly absorbed in each organ riff Gestrin offers up on “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.” The group formed a little more than 12 years ago at a benefit concert for Weeds’ now defunct Vancouver jazz club The Cellar. Sinclaire, who was beginning to garner comparisons to Nat King Cole at the time, agreed to perform at the gig. “At the time he was playing with a quintet — that’s the band that I wanted and that’s the band I assumed he was going to use,” Weeds recalls. While going over the stage setup, Sinclaire mentioned he’d be playing drums and Gestrin would be on organ. “When I heard that I was very disappointed. . . . I didn’t even know Denzal played drums.” Weeds elected not to argue with the singer, who was, after all, playing for free. Weeds joined the duo on stage for a 45-minute set that he says was more fun than almost anything he’d ever done.
Daily 9am-10pm at:
The Bowen Agricultural Alliance Society (BAA) proposes to establish and operate a pollinator initiative and demonstration garden in the Killarney Meadows area of Crippen Regional Park as an interactive outdoor learning centre: • To teach about the roles of pollinators in building a healthy food system; • To contribute to the building of healthy food systems through demonstration, educational programming and research; • To celebrate local agricultural heritage; and • To inspire visitors to apply what they’ve learned. Tuesday, December 9, 2014 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm Bowen Island Community School 1041 Mt. Gardner Road Multi-Purpose Room Join us to learn more about the proposal from BAA directors and park staff. The public information meeting will include presentations, question and answer period, and informal discussion. For more information, please call Metro Vancouver Regional Parks, West Area Office at 604-224-5739, visit www.metrovancouver.org or www.bowenagalliance.ca
Sinclaire, an admirer of John Coltrane drummer Elvin Jones, put as much passion and precision into his drumming as he did into his singing. The trio reunited for a Christmas concert at The Cellar, partially at the behest of Gestrin, who’d “always been bugging me about doing holidaythemed shows,” Weeds says. After adding Coon on guitar the quartet was complete and a Vancouver Christmas tradition was born. “Every year we close out The Cellar — or, we used to close out The Cellar,” he corrects. The West Broadway mainstay hosted jazz acts for more than a dozen years before falling silent in February. “There’s a sense of fear, a sense of desperation that I feel and a sense of ‘Where the hell are we going to play our music?’” Weeds says. A few Vancouver clubs have hosted some of The Cellar’s former acts but for Weeds the absence of live jazz in the city seems acute. “Things ebb and flow and they go up and down,” he notes. “To me it seems a little scarier than other times.” The club’s closure left a hole in the city, not just for Weeds but for any musician who favours unusual time signatures and moments of musical spontaneity. However, if the club’s closure is testament to skyrocketing commercial rents, the B3 Kings concert at the Kay Meek is a mark of the group’s resilience. “We’re excited that the tradition is continuing. A lot of Cellar traditions were in jeopardy when I closed the club.” For some jazz players, playing Christmas music feels a bit like putting a chef on a fast food assembly line, however Weeds is quick to clarify what the group does. “I don’t really look at it as playing Christmas music,” he explains. “It really is a jazz gig. Sure, we play ‘Jingle Bells’ but when you’ve got Chris Gestrin, Bill Coon, and Denzal Sinclaire as your rhythm See B3 Kings page 42
BRITISH COLUMBIA
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A39
THEATRE
Actors capture the spirit of the season Jay Brazeau hosts show at Presentation House Theatre
■ A Few of My Favourite Things, Dec. 11-14 and 1821 at Presentation House Theatre, 333 Chesterfield Ave., North Vancouver. Tickets: $10-28, available at phtheatre.org or by calling the box office at 604-990-3474. CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com
A flubbed line here, a missed cue there, a slightly off-key instrument. It’s those little human errors that give theatre the real-life quality Jay Brazeau finds so endearing. “I always say that the best kind of theatre I’ve ever seen is when mistakes happen,” says the seasoned North Vancouver actor. So, he won’t be kicking himself if he stumbles over a word — or a microphone cord — while hosting this year’s familyfriendly Christmas show at Presentation House Theatre, A Few of My Favourite Things. Brazeau will be joined on stage by five recent graduates of Capilano University’s musical theatre program and together they will share stories, sing songs — both holiday favourites and Broadway hits — engage the audience in a sing-along and take crowd requests. The participatory nature of the show means the performers will need to think on their feet and work their improvisational skills.
0 ,MN +L =: ,5P+"'I$M &JICK% [;54 h0c >60a_03 @4[Z6* ]6;V W_]4 1Z4[ 9Z0UZ54 h;5_9[ H_5_6X; 0U* 4[_ _U5_V.W_ ,054) [;9_5 03*Z_U,_5 W_02_ `6_5_U404Z;U j;35_ G[_046_ ]__WZU\ 05 4[;3\[ 4[_c#2_ Y354 .__U 4; 0 6_0WWc \;;* =[6Z54V05 9064c% `jbGb CINDY GOODMAN “You have to see what kind of crowd you have and which way it’s going to go,” Brazeau says. “You never know what’s going to happen.” Presentation House Theatre mounted A Few of My Favourite Things once before, in 2012, with Brazeau as a special guest. He came up with the concept for the show after considering a few of his favourite things to do during the holiday season: get together with friends, enjoy a drink or two, share
stories, sing songs and have some laughs. He says he hopes patrons leave the theatre feeling as though they’ve just been to “a really good party.” Meanwhile, he’s also excited to be home for the holidays this year and participating in a show in his own backyard. “I do a lot of performing all over North America, but it’s nice to be able to come back to your neighbourhood and have a place to do theatre and share it with your
DEREK EDWARDS Baloney and Balo Wine National Tour
Give the “ “Everyone knows Derek Edwards Gift of Laughter! is the funniest man in Canada!”
- Rick Mercer
North Vancouver Centennial Theatre Sunday, April 19 - 7:30 pm Box Office: (604) 984-4484
shantero.com
centennialtheatre.com
derekedwards.ca
neighbours.” When deciding on this year’s holiday offering, Presentation House Theatre’s artistic director Kim Selody says he wanted to capture the spirit of the season in a positive way without getting bogged down by tradition. “One thing we wanted to do was something that was a little bit broader, more secular and more fun, and more inclusive within the community,” he explains. “We basically are opening up the theatre and
making it like a giant living room and inviting the audience to come in and join us and be entertained for about 90 minutes.” When it comes to the song lineup, Selody is fairly tight-lipped, not wanting to give away any surprises. “Obviously we’re going to do something from Mame because that’s a musical that takes place at Christmas,” he reveals. And it’s a good bet The Sound of Music number that inspired the variety
show’s title will also be heard. But it’s important to keep the evening open, Selody says, leaving room for spontaneity. “(The show) really changes each night depending on who’s in the audience, depending on what they’re interested in seeing and hearing.” With pianist Joseph Seserko accompanying on the baby grand, Selody is confident the cast will be able to handle any song See Karaoke page 42
A40 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
THEATRE
Your guide to HOLIDAY GIFTING, HOSTING & TOASTING!
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Avenue Q meant for grown-ups ■ Arts Club Theatre prodcution of Avenue Q at Granville Island Stage until Jan. 3, 2015. JO LEDINGHAM Vancouver Courier
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It feels like the first time — only better. This production of Avenue Q is even slicker and funnier than last season, and although it’s not Christmas-y, it’s bound to make you ho-ho-ho like Santa. However, that jolly old fellow, being a saint, might cover his eyes when there’s puppet sex going on and on and hilariously on. Don’t be put off by it; it’s very funny and pretty brief. If you really can’t bear to watch, just shut your eyes and think of England. Avenue Q is a Broadway musical for grownups, an adult takeoff on Sesame Street that uses puppets just like the kids’ show. Created by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx back in 2002, it went on to win three Tony Awards in 2003 and now tours internationally. The puppet handlers, in contrast to Sesame Street, are fully visible and some of the show’s tremendous appeal is watching how,
for example, Lucy T. Slut becomes an extension of performer Kayla Dunbar; when Lucy sashays, Dunbar does, too. And when Lucy flings her blond curly locks around, Dunbar’s hair is flying around, too. Seeing the show for the second time, I was much more aware of the skill of the puppeteers. It’s hard to say where the performer ends and the puppet begins. And it’s a workout; under Peter Jorgensen’s direction, seven actors sing, dance and handle nine puppets.There are 21 sing-able songs and you will definitely leave the theatre with an earworm that goes, “It’s sucks to be me/It really sucks to be me.” Princeton, manipulated by boyish, tremendously appealing Jeremy Crittenden, has just graduated with a BA in English. But he can’t find a job, can’t pay his bills and can’t find an affordable place to live except down on multicultural, downon-its-luck Avenue Q, rendered with wonky, cartoonish apartment buildings by set designer Marshall McMahen. There, Princeton meets plain-Jane kindergarten assistant Kate
Monster (Kayla Dunbar who also handles Lucy), Nicky and Trekkie Monster (Nick Fontaine), Mrs. Thistletwat (Jeny Cassady) and humans Brian (Andy Toth), Christmas Eve (Selina Wong, a little sparkplug with big pipes) and Gary Coleman (Evangelia Kambites). Coleman, by the way, was a child star that petered out in adulthood. Avenue Q is clever: it knocks the stuffing out of Broadway musicals with their often-smarmy lyrics. Songs like “Everyone’s a Little Bit Racist,” “The Internet is for Porn” (“Grab your dick/And double click”) and “I’m Not Wearing Any Underwear” will have you chortling. And yet it celebrates the genre at the same time. From the press release — because I couldn’t describe it any better — Avenue Q touches on “raucous sexual congress, failed childhood stardom, excessive drinking... cute creatures doing bad things... getting laid off, finding your purpose... homosexuality, racism, See Something page 41
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A41
CALENDAR From page 24 4773 South Piccadilly Rd., West Vancouver. The Magic of Christmas: An unplugged evening of Christmas music featuring Michelle, Monique and Michael Creber, Gabriel Brown, Andrea Libman, EdithWallace, the Cypress Singers and other special guests Sunday, Dec. 7, 7:30-10 p.m. Admission: $90/$45/$25. Info: magicofchristmas.com. WEST VANCOUVER MEMORIAL LIBRARY 1950 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca TheVancouver Bach Choir along with two guest soloists will perform excerpts from Handel’s Messiah as well as a selection of traditional carols Friday, Dec. 12, 7:30-8:45 p.m.There will also be a short audience singalong.
Theatre
DEEP COVE SHAW THEATRE 4360 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver. 604-929-3200 deepcovestage.com Rumpelstiltskin: A pantomime version of this classic fairy tale will run Dec. 17-19, 22, 23, 26, 27, 29, Jan. 1 and 2 at 7:30 p.m. with matinees Dec. 20, 21, 27, 28 and Jan. 3 at 3:30 p.m. Tickets: $15. KAY MEEK CENTRE 1700 Mathers Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-981-6335 kaymeekcentre.com Don Pasquale: An opera performed byVenture Opera of NewYork Friday, Dec. 19 at 7:30 p.m. Admission: $40/$30/$20. Following the opera there will be an after party featuring The Boom Booms from 10 to 11 p.m. Admission: $40/$30/$20. RICHMOND GATEWAY THEATRE 6500 Gilbert Rd., Richmond. 604-270-1812 gatewaytheatre.com Crazy forYou: North Shore native, dancer Afton Toler will perform in this Gershwins’ musical until 31.Tickets: $48. SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7292 silkpurse.ca Opera Shorts — Opera in the Afternoon: A Christmas showcase of carols, opera arias and duets will be performed Sunday, Dec. 7, 24 p.m. Admission: $20/$10. Christmas With Charles Dickens: Festive theatre and music Thursday, Dec. 18, 10:30 a.m. Admission:
CELEBRATING KEITHMAS H9;;U IZ2_6 @G02Z5 :0,[0U G6Z0U,_ 0U* I0,[_W j;6X_U[_ZV_6) 06_ ;U_ ;] UZU_ .0U*5 9_6];6VZU\ 04 g_Z4[V05K ? 8;;* >0UX 83U*60\_6 @[;U;36ZU\ g_Z4[ IZ,[06*5# .Z64[*0c 0U* =[6Z54V05) 04 4[_ :W_,46Z, b1W <_,% !M% `6;,__*5 ]6;V g_Z4[V05 A!" 4Z,X_45 1ZWW \; 4; 4[_ 8;;* >0UX% !M( ;UWc 0*VZ55Z;U% H9;;U IZ2_6#5 U_1 0W.3V' &JM <MN ("C 0JJJJJ A+$ME' ,0V_ ;34 ZU d;2_V._6 ;U G;UZ, I_,;6*5 @%)++C'IPM'45C273+D )% `jbGb HF``fi:< $20/$10.
Something for everyone in Avenue Q
THEATRE AT HENDRY HALL 815 East 11th St., North Vancouver. 604-983-2633 northvanplayers.ca Cinderella: A pantomime tradition Dec. 5-7 and 11-14, Thursday and Fridays at 7 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2 and 4 p.m. Tickets: $10/$5.
From page 40
Dance
CENTENNIAL THEATRE 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. 604-984-4484 centennialtheatre.com Hansel and Gretel: Pacific DanceArts along with Coastal City Ballet will bring this fairy tale to life Sunday, Dec. 14 at 2 and 5 p.m. Admission: $30/$22. Winter Concert of Dance: AnnaWyman School of Dance Arts will perform Saturday, Dec. 13 at 4 p.m. Admission: $25/$17/$13/$5. Tickets: 604-926-6535. Nutcracker: Royal City Youth Ballet will perform this holiday tradition Sunday, Dec. 21 at 1 and 4 p.m. Tickets: $35/$25.
Clubs and pubs
BEAN AROUND THE 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, North Vancouver.
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at 9 p.m. 604-986-7333
THE EAGLES CLUB 170 West 3rd Street, North Vancouver.
LEGION #118 123 West 15th St., North Vancouver. 604-985-1115 info@legion118.com
ELECTRIC OWL 928 Main St.,Vancouver. 604-558-0928 FINCH AND BARLEY 250 East First St., North Vancouver. finchandbarley. com HUGO’S RESTAURANT 5775 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-281-2111 Open Mic: Every Thursday 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
LYNN VALLEY LEGION 1630 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. NARROWS PUB 1979 Spicer Rd., North Vancouver. 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 Adam Woodall performs acoustic music every Sunday, 8-11 p.m. THE RAVEN PUB 1052 Deep Cove Rd.,
North Vancouver. theravenpub.com RED LION BAR & GRILL 2427 Marine Drive,West Vancouver. 604-926-8838 Open Mic Night: A variety of talent fromWestVancouver and beyond Tuesdays at 8 p.m. Participation welcome. Info: ethosproductions@shaw. ca. Jazz Pianist Randy Doherty will perform every Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 8 to 11 p.m. RUSTY GULL 175 East First St., North Vancouver. Live MusicWednesday, Friday and Saturday; Mostly Marley performs every Sunday, 7 p.m. SAILOR HAGAR’S BREW PUB See more page 42
pornography, masturbation, interracial marriage, interspecies relationships (monsters and humans)... coming out of the closet, coming out of your apartment... coming out of your shell, and recycling.” In other words, there’s something for everyone. The facts behind New Yorker Rick Lyon’s puppet design are interesting: some of the puppets are worth $10,000, built and rented out all over the world by Lyon. “Rehearsal puppets” are provided before the cast gets to handle the real deals. Theatre companies can build their own but there’s a lot involved: weight, facial expression, durability; renting only makes sense. Avenue Q lyrics are smart; the voices are note perfect; the three-piece band, under the musical direction of Sean Boynton, goes to beat the band. This show sold out last season; it will probably sell out again. It’s a little bit raunchy, a whole lot funny and even better than the first time. Do not take the kiddies; they might try some of that “raucous sexual congress” at home and get put on Santa’s naughty list. For more reviews, go to joledingham.ca. Avenue Q runs until Jan. 3 at the Arts Club Granville Island Stage. For tickets, call 604-687-1644 or go to artsclub.com.
A42 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
CALENDAR B3 Kings: Giant Steps to Jingle Bells
From page 24 235 West First St., North Vancouver. 604-984-3087 Live Music every Friday and Saturday, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.
From page 38
TWO LIONS PUBLIC HOUSE 2601 Westview Dr., North Vancouver. Adam Woodall performs acoustic music every Wednesday, 7:30-10:30 p.m.
section, and we’re doing a funky groove . . . I can play that forever. It doesn’t matter if it’s ‘Jingle Bells’ or ‘Peter Cottontail’ or ‘Giant Steps.’” The group’s audience may be as eager to get “Last Christmas” by Wham! out of their heads as they are to shed the snow from their boots. “We have people that hate Christmas carols that just can’t stand hearing Christmas carols starting Nov. 20 and the last thing they want to hear is Christmas carols,” Weeds says. “But they like Christmas and they want to be in the spirit.”
THE VILLAGE TAPHOUSE The Village at Park Royal, West Vancouver. 604-9228882. Adam Woodall performs acoustic music every Thursday, 8-11 p.m. WAVES COFFEE HOUSE 3050 Mountain Hwy., North Vancouver. The Celtic Medley Song and String Player’s Showcase comes toWaves the first Saturday of every month, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Free. Anyone interested in performing can phone Doug Medley at 604-985-5646.
Karaoke Christmas From page 39
Other events
CENTENNIAL THEATRE 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. 604-984-4484 centennialtheatre.com Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour: An exploration of remote landscapes and mountain cultures to adrenaline-fueled action sports Friday, Dec. 5, 7:30 p.m.Tickets: $20.
LONSDALE QUAY 123 Carrie Cates Court, North Vancouver. lonsdalequay.com LYNN VALLEY LIBRARY 1277 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. 604-9840286 x8144 nvdpl.ca Book Launch Soirée: Fifty!With a Fabulous Future will be launched in
SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7292 silkpurse.ca North Shore Cric Crac Storytelling Evenings: How music came to the world
$
10
HAIRCUT Women - Men - Kids
— compiled by Debbie Caldwell. Email information for your North Shore event to listings@nsnews.com.
not an uninhabited place and Seaman includes these polar animals and birds within this formidable landscape. Beautiful reproductions of her breathtaking photographs fill the pages and offer a
view into a place few get to see. By sharing her pictures and stories Seaman hopes to bring the plight of the atrisk polar regions to a wider audience. —Terry Peters
MARR AT THE COMMODORE f_\_U*06c F%g% V35Z,Z0U h;[UUc e066' ];6V_6 W_0* \3Z406Z54 1Z4[ G[_ HVZ4[5' 9_6];6V5 04 4[_ =;VV;*;6_ >0WW6;;V ;U H3U*0c' <_,% P% e066' 0 V0Y;6 ZUL3_U,_ ;U 0W4_6U04Z2_ 6;,X \3Z406Z545' 6_W_05_* [Z5 W04_54 0W.3V' ;E5:E5C2' ZU b,4;._6% 8;6 V;6_ ZU];6V04Z;U 2Z5Z4 H+JCC:8D5''73+D% `jbGb HF``fi:< celebration of the library’s 50th anniversary Saturday, Dec. 6 at 7:30 p.m.The event will include appetizers, wine, music and a copy of the book. Admission: $50.Tickets: booklaunchsoiree.eventbrite. ca. Fish Don’t Climb Trees — A Whole New Look at Dyslexia: Author Sue Blyth Hall will talk about her book on understanding and overcoming the challenges and enjoying the gift of dyslexia Wednesday, Dec. 10, 7-8 p.m. Registration required.
KAY MEEK CENTRE 1700 Mathers Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-981-6335 kaymeekcentre.com Movies at the Meek: The Overnighters will be screened Sunday, Dec. 14 at 2 p.m. Tickets: $12.
request thrown their way. “Joseph is one of those amazing brains who can pretty much play anything that’s requested just off the top. He’s got an amazing repertoire.” Fortunately, those in the audience don’t need to have as extensive a repertoire if they want to sing along. Unlike the 2012 edition of A Few of My Favourite Things, this year’s production will feature the lyrics on a large screen, complete with a karaoke-style bouncing ball, so everyone can join in.
Call Maryam 778-858-4643 to book today! Expires Dec. 19, 2014
ROYAL TREATMENT SPA 712 Queensbury Ave, North Van (just south of E. Keith Rd/Grand Blvd)
will be presented by the North Shore Storytellers Sunday, Dec. 7, 7-9 p.m. Admission: $9/$7. Info: 604-985-5168, northshorestory@gmail.com or vancouverstorytelling.org Songs and Stories: Composer Michael Conway Baker will share show biz, film and concert music stories past and present the third
Wednesday of every month, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Admission by donation. WEST VANCOUVER MEMORIAL LIBRARY 1950 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca SFU Philosopher’s Cafe: Everyone is welcome to join
a discussion with moderator Randall MacKinnon Friday, Dec. 19 at 10:30 a.m.Topic: What are the pros and cons of philanthropy? Info: 778-7828000 or philosopherscafe.net.
Book review
Images document a world on the edge ■ Melting Away by Camille Seaman, Princeton Architectural Press, 160 pages, $68. Floating in the dark, icy waters of polar oceans the ancient icebergs appear like sentinels for a frozen fortress. They are captured in the stunning photographs of Camille Seaman who has traveled to both the Arctic and Antarctic many times since her first trip in 1999. Her witness to the dramatic changes in those fragile regions is presented in the descriptions to her images
and in seven short essays that recount her journeys. As ship’s photographer on the M/V Fram, and other research vessels Seaman had first hand access to this rare environment and shared the experience with a wide range of scientists.The photographs she shares in this incredible collection tell a story of a world threatened by a changing climate. The unexpected range of colours that appear in the massive ice formations add to the organic presence of these moving mountains.This is
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A43
FILM
Corner Gas finds its niche onscreen
■ Corner Gas:The Movie. Directed by David Storey. Starring Brent Butt and Gabrielle Miller. Playing now at International Village. JULIE CRAWFORD ContributingWriter
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PARK & TILFORD 333 Brooksbank Ave., North Vancouver, 604-9853911
See more page 44
Harbourview Homes Corp proposes to rezone the site from RM-1 multi -family residential to a comprehensive development zone, to permit a 7 unit ground oriented townhome project. Each of the homes are between 2,400 sq ft and 3,200 sq ft in size and will include an underground parking structure allowing for two cars per home in a secure garage.
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Interstellar (PG) — Fri, Mon, Wed-Thur 8; Sat-Sun 12:45, 4:15, 8; Tue 4:15, 8 p.m. Dumb and Dumber To (PG) — Fri 7:20, 10:05; Sat-Sun 2:10, 4:50, 7:20, 10:05; Mon, Thur 7:20, 10; Tue 4:50, 7:20, 10; Wed 10 p.m. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 1 (PG) — Fri 7:10, 10:10; Sat-Sun 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:10; Mon, Wed-Thur 7:10, 10; Tue 4:10, 7:10, 10 p.m. Thur 1 p.m. Horrible Bosses 2 (14A) — Fri 7:40, 10:20; Sat-Sun
risqué as things get in Dog River – no nudity, and the only scene of peril might be the sight of Brent’s cranky dad Oscar (Eric Peterson) hanging upside down from a tree. It’s unabashedly Canadian, right down to the Anvil t-shirt worn by Hank, and it’s good fun. That’s precisely the way Gas fans like it.
A development is being proposed for 3730-3736 Edgemont Blvd, to construct a 7 unit townhome project with underground parking. Harbourview Homes are pleased to invite you to attend a meeting and discuss the details of the project. DATE: TUESDAY DECEMBER 9TH TIME: 6:30 PM (7:00 PM PRESENTATION) PLACE: CAPILANO PUBLIC LIBRARY, POTLATCH ROOM 3450 HIGHLAND BLVD
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LANDMARK CINEMAS 6 ESPLANADE 200 West Esplanade, North Vancouver 604-983-2762 Birdman or (The UnexpectedVirtue of Ignorance) (14A) — Fri, Mon-Thur 6:35, 9:20; SatSun 12:45, 3:45, 6:35, 9:20 p.m. Big Hero 6 (G)— Fri, Mon-Thur 7; Sat-Sun 1, 4, 7, 9:50 p.m. Big Hero 6 3D (G) — Fri, Mon-Wed 6:30, 9:30; SatSun 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 p.m. Gone Girl (14A) — FriMon 9:30; Tue-Thur 8, 9:30 p.m.
and wife Robertson live in Vancouver, as does Ewaniuk; Cardinal lives in Squamish; the North Shore’s Craig Northey did the theme song. Everyone looks like they’re loving every minute of the shoot in Rouleau, Saskatchewan. You won’t find any cursing in Corner Gas: The Movie — “bum” is as
PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETING
PL
Corner Gas:The Movie (G) — Fri 7, 9:45; Sat 1:30, 4:15, 7; Sun 1:15, 4:15, 7 p.m. Serena (14A) — Fri, MonThur 6:55, 9:35; Sat-Sun 12:55, 3:55, 6:55, 9:35 p.m. Past Tense — Fri, MonThur 6:45, 9:45; Sat-Sun 12:40, 3:50, 6:45, 9:45 p.m. Exodus: Gods and Kings 3D — Thur 8 p.m. Royal Opera House: I Due Foscari — Mon 6:25 p.m. The Royal Ballet — Manon — Sat 10 a.m.
Showtimes
grandmotherly pangs? Does anyone actually stop for gas? It’s good fun watching Wanda run the illegal Copa Havana, which is, sing along with me, “the hottest spot here to Kelowna”. And straight-man Brent Butt’s delivery is reliably funny. The reunited cast is largely local: Butt
E
doughnut plant. The ever-optimistic Lacey cottons on to the idea of entering the Quaintest Community In Canada contest, which promises enough prize money to fix the town’s water supply and get the electricity turned back on. “Let’s get quantin’!” someone enthuses. Will the town’s residents succumb to the lure of quick money or band together in order to save the town? Will Brent’s mom (Janet Wright) find relief from those
27 37
“Nothing exciting ever happens around here,” says Hank. Cue the werewolfversus-robot battle in the middle of the gas station. But the real crisis is the town’s finances. Dog River is falling apart and broke, in stark contrast to the starched-white perfection of the town of Wullerton (spit), their closest neighbour and rival. Smelling blood, a giant doughnut, soup and sandwich chain (remind you of anyone?) is planning to buy up the town and turn it into a regional
3735
The gang is standing at the Corner Gas counter — which is stocked with Canadian staples like Old Dutch chips and Hawkins cheezies — pretty much exactly where they were when the TV show ended five years ago. But the bright, sulphuryellow Saskatchewan prairie looks even better on the big screen, in a limited run of Corner Gas:The Movie, playing now and through the weekend in Vancouver. The sitcom ran for six seasons and became a hit thanks to its as-faras-you-can-get-fromHollywood premise and the unabashedly corny situations faced by Brent Leroy (Brent Butt) and his fellow Dog River residents. Everyone is back: Lacey Burrows (Gabrielle Miller) still runs the café next door and seems the perfect match for Brent. The perpetually unemployed Hank Yarbo (Fred Ewanuick) is still scheming on ways to make a million, while gas station employee Wanda (Nancy Robertson) puts some illegal schemes of her own into action, all under the nose of a very pregnant Const. Karen Pelly (Tara Spencer-Nairn) and the newly retired Sgt. Davis Quinton (Lorne Cardinal).
82 -36 62 36
Information packages are being distributed to residents within a 75 meter radius of the site. If you would like to receive a copy or if you would like more information, please contact Natasha Letchford of the community planning department at 604 990-2378 or bring your questions and comments to the meeting. 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.
A44 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
FILM
Collector salvaged copy from dumpster
From page 13
What saved it was a film collector who salvaged a single, incomplete print from a dumpster in 1947. Hugo Zeiter then donated it to Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History. “The film has been around since the early ’70s in a different version, which was called In the Land of the War Canoes,” he says. “That film was usually restricted to classrooms. “It had a soundtrack which was in the language of the Kwakwaka’wakw people in Fort Rupert and Alert Bay.” But time was unkind to the re-edited 1974 version by Bill Holm and George Quimby as the projectors damaged many of the reels. “It was mostly shown in universities in anthropology classes,” Browne explains. “People didn’t understand it very well. I’d often show it to my students and they often fell asleep because they didn’t quite get it.” The film was also the subject of criticism and used as an example of the negative impact colonialism had on aboriginal communities. “But the film was meant to take place before contact,” Browne notes. “All of the costumes and all of the ceremony – everything but the melodrama, really – was all designed by the Kwakwaka’wakw people and performed by them.They were imagining.” In truth, Browne adds, it was 1914 and the community was wearing overalls, dungarees, dresses, bonnets, using gas boats and attending church. Some damaged clips from the film were found at the University of California, Los Angeles Film and Television Archive.The original score was filed at the library of the Getty Research Institute, however, it lacked the title connecting it to the film. The resurrection project for the original film by Curtis was started by American academics Aaron Glass and Brad Evans, with Browne’s assistance. “Now there’s a brand-spanking new restored version and the reason for that is because of Aaron Glass, a colleague of mine who studied here, went to Emily Carr (University) and UBC . . . . and discovered at the Getty Institute in Los Angeles was the music for the original score of the film.” This score is the oldest one in existence for a film more than 60 minutes long in North America, according to Browne. The idea to restore the 1914 film several years ago sparked yet another collaborative effort between the community and academics to restore a historical piece of the Kwakwaka‘wakw culture. The new version also features John J. Branham’s original 1914 score performed by Vancouver’s Turning Point Ensemble. “It’s thrilling for those of us who like movies and for those of us who somehow think it always happens somewhere else to realize one of the great films of that period was made here,” he says. “This film that was actually quite influential were counted in terms of the history of cinema but people haven’t known this story.” There will be two screenings of the film at Pacific Cinematheque in Vancouver on Dec. 5 and 6.The exact centenary anniversary screening of the film on Dec. 7 will be at Vancity Theatre, and will feature Browne and Cranmer on hand, including others involved with the restoration project, to discuss the film followed by a food and wine reception.
Kwakwaka’wakw refused to play to the stereotypes From page 13 associated with this project.An extension of their previous engagement with international expositions, ethnographers, and museums, the film in part helped the Kwakwaka’wakw evade the potlatch ban, maintain their expressive culture, and emerge as actors on the world’s stage. By adapting their traditional ceremonies for Curtis’s film while refusing to play stereotypical “Indians,” the Kwakwaka’wakw played a vital role in the development of the most modern of commercial art forms — the motion picture.” — from curtisfilm.rutgers.edu
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A modern-day Madame Bovery ■ Gemma Bovery. Directed by Anne Fontaine. Starring Gemma Arterton and Fabrice Luchini. In French with english subtitles. Rating: 7 (out of 10) JOHN GOODMAN jgoodman@nsnews.com
Brit newcomer Gemma Arterton (Strawberry Fields in Quantum of Solace) is the perfect foil for veteran French actor Fabrice Luchini in Anne Fontaine’s thoroughly entertaining romantic comedy Gemma Bovery. Arterton makes up one half of a British couple (with Jason Flemyng as Charlie) k_VV0 ?64_64;U 54065 ZU 4[_ 4Z4W_ 6;W_ ;] ?UU_ 8;U40ZU_#5 86_U,[ 6;V0U4Z, ,;V_*c BMDD5 who move from London to /+PM':% G[_ NWV ;9_U5 4;*0c 04 =ZU_9W_/ b*_;U iU4_6U04Z;U0W EZWW0\_ =ZU_V05% `jbGb HF``fi:< Normandy in the French countryside “where the art of living is taken seriously.” After meeting them on the day they arrive their neighbour, baker Martin Joubert (Luchini), can’t believe his luck.The similarities between the English Boverys and Flaubert’s From page 43 Madame Bovary capture his imagination. At the dinner table Joubert asks his wife and teenage son incredulously, “Guess their name?” Son: “Sherlock Holmes? James Bond? 2:20, 5, 7:40, 10:20; Mon, Wed-Thur 7, 9:50; Tue 4:30, 7, McDonalds?” Father: “Bovery. His name is Charles. Hers is 9:50 p.m. Gemma. Isn’t that wild? Here in Normandy where Flaubert Penguins of Madagascar (G) — Sat-Sun 12:15 p.m. wrote his masterpiece.” Son: “The movie sucked.” Penguins of Madagascar 3D (G) — Fri, Mon, Wed-Thur Adapted for the screen by Fontaine with longtime 7:30, 9:55; Sat-Sun 2:50, 5:05, 7:30, 9:55; Tue 5:05, 7:30, Jacques Rivette collaborator Pascal Bonitzer Gemma 9:55 p.m. Bovery moves along with a Mozartian lightness playing The Theory of Everything (G) — Fri, Mon, Wed-Thur off English/French stereotypes throughout. The script 6:50, 9:45; Sat-Sun 1, 3:55, 6:50, 9:45; Tue 4, 6:50, 9:45 rarely goes for overt laughs, but Luchini like a modern-day p.m. Thur 1 p.m. Buster Keaton, is always pulling the story in that direction. National Theatre Live: John — Wed 7 p.m.
Showtimes
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A45
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A51
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE
to THE ROAD
?$MQ( QIQ5$(L5 59(& HLNM$ &$Q9I $MQ MQ93ILGQ&< 7"$ $MQ @L&&9G CQ9O L& $MQ +GQ $M9$2& H9JLGN $MQ &9IQ& FN"(Q&: 0"= L$< 3(LTQ L$< *I"N L$ LG A LO =+"( 39LI= 95$LTL$LQ& 3+G2$ $9JQ =+" +"$ +O (9GNQ< $MQ CQ9O L& 9 *Q(OQ5$I= +(3LG9(= 9G3 *(95$L59I 59( $M9$ SLII GQTQ( $+"5M 9 N9& *"H*: >E?'? )%>>CD-. NISSAN
2015 Nissan Leaf
Leaf is shockingly easy When it comes to electric motor vehicles, one company steals the headlines, and the other quietly goes about making the sales figures. Tesla might shine in the spotlight, but in terms of putting keys in the hands of ordinary consumers, the Nissan Leaf is doing for electric mobility what the Prius once did for hybrid technology.
Brendan McAleer
Grinding Gears
It’s pretty amazing when you think about it. Here, sold at a regular dealership alongside ordinary internal combustion engines, is a perfectly ordinary car with four doors and a hatch that just happens to plug into the wall. It’s not wildly futuristic, nor impractical, nor really avant-garde. It’s just a car. Mind you, there are all
sorts of details that make the Leaf an unusual choice of transportation. On the market for four years now, Nissan’s electric car is unique in many ways. The question is, does it work for you? Design With no need for a conventional radiator or the other trappings of a gasoline-powered
car, the surprise is how much the Leaf actually looks like its entry level cousin, the Note. It’s got an amphibious-looking face, LED headlights and taillights, a few bluemeans-efficient badges here and there, but to the average onlooker, it’s just a pleasant little hatchback. Standard wheel size is See Electric page 52
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A52 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
TODAY’S DRIVE
Electric setup doesn’t cramp cargo space From page 51
a 16-inch steel wheel, with S models coming with 16inch alloys, and SL models equipped with 17-inch alloys. All cars come with a rear spoiler, with the SL trim gaining a small solar panel embedded in it. Mudguards are standard. In fact, if there’s any criticism to be made, it’s that the Leaf isn’t more striking. Much like the Prius, its appearance is very unassuming, built to appeal to the masses rather than make a big statement. Option the Morningsky Blue if you want to draw attention to yourself, but beyond that, the Leaf doesn’t shout about its e-creds. Environment Inside, the Leaf is again mostly ordinary, with a few unusual touches. Because it saps power to warm up the cabin, there are heated seats front and rear, and a standard heated steering wheel. This latter is just the best. I don’t know how we all manage to live through the winter without
a heated steering wheel. The seats are nicely comfortable, with plenty of rear legroom, and the trunk is well-sized. Because it was designed from the ground up to be an electric car, the Leaf doesn’t suffer from the cargo loss you find in electrified versions of regular cars, such as the Ford Focus EV with its cramped rear hatch. Other than that, some futurism extends into the cabin, where the instrument display shows a series of dots displaying power use or regeneration. Mid-range and higher models get a range indicator as part of the satellite navigation that shows how far you can go on a charge, and the puckshaped gear-lever is like something you’d expect to find on a Star Trek shuttle.
Performance Forget Rolls-Royce: this is probably the quietest car I’ve ever driven. Heavily insulated against road noise, the Leaf is whisper quiet, especially at city speeds, with the loudest
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availability of the torque means that it feels much
speed transmission. While the Leaf is nominally no more powerful than a Micra, the immediate
See Leaf page 54
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Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A53
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A54 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
TODAY’S DRIVE
Fiat Beast roars back to life after 100 years
Brendan McAleer
for the time), in a car that’s nearly as tall as a man. No wonder they called it the Beast — only one of the two prototypes is still in existence, and has painstakingly been restored over several years. Started on video for the first time, a whole documentary is coming soon. I’m excited to see it, and also slightly terrified.
we talking? 28.5 litres. That’s more than 14 Honda Civic’s worth of displacement to crank out 300 horsepower (not bad
Falling gas prices predicted The plummeting price of oil and OPEC’s decision to keep production rates constant are being hailed as
A biweekly roundup of automotive news, good, bad and just plain weird:
The beast of Turin roars again Corvette? Hellcat? An offshore racing boat? Never mind all those puny engines — if you want a big motor, Fiat’s got you covered. Witness the freshly restored Fiat S76, better known as the Beast of Turin. More than a century ago, it set a speed record of more than 225 kilometres per hour, thanks to its mighty engine. How big are
Braking News
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France declares war on diesel “In France, we have long favoured the diesel engine,” said French Prime Minister Manuel Valls in a speech last month. “This was a mistake, and we will progressively undo that, intelligently and pragmatically.” Zut, as they say, alors! But isn’t Europe all about the pint-sized car with a grumbly diesel engine of microscopic displacement? Seems like every European manufacturer provides a diesel option in nearly everything other than outand-out sportscars. BMW even makes a range of Mbranded diesels. However, while diesel cars are good on C02 emissions and overall efficiency, older models produce particulate matter, and it appears that France would prefer its drivers go mostly electric. Tax-based strategies will be set up to both punish diesel owners as well as entice them into trading in on an electric vehicle. Well that’s going to go well. Something like 80 per cent of French vehicles are diesel-powered, and further taxation is going to enrage them — you might as well try to ban berets and stripey T-shirts. Plans haven’t yet taken effect, but when they do, perhaps expect Monsieur Valls to be
guillotined within the first week.
Ford Performance readies for Detroit With the last of this year’s auto shows out of the way, manufacturers are looking to make a big noise in 2015. Judging from the rumours leaking out about Ford’s plans for Detroit in January, the Blue Oval is going to kick off the year in style. First, there’s the rumoured GT-350R, an even harder-core race version of the just-released Shelby GT-350. Not too much of a surprise, this’ll likely ape the same aerodynamic and other enhancements the old Boss 302 Laguna Seca edition had. Also on the way, and potentially a huge scoop, is a return of the Ford GT. With Nissan poised to join Toyota, Audi, and Porsche in high-level LeMans racing, Ford seems to be readying itself to field an entry in the GTE class, and there’ll be a road-going version as well. Lastly, we’ll also likely see the Focus RS debuting in Detroit. With Europe now getting the new Mustang, Ford’s going to bring over the hottest hatchback it sells, and the rumours are it’s going to be all-wheel drive. Headto-head against the Golf R? That’d make for quite the comparison test. I’d certainly volunteer. Watch this space for all the best and worst of automotive news, or submit your own auto oddities to mcaleer. nsnews@gmail.com. Follow Brendan on Twitter at @ brendan_mcaleer.
Limited model shown♦
2015
59 0 24,444
OWN IT FOR ONLY
‡
IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTSΩ
2014 Elantra “Highest Ranked Compact Car in Initial Quality in the U.S.∆”
Sport 2.0T model shown♦
THE ALL- NEW 2015 SONATA
many consumers, at least south of the border. Downward swings in pricing seem to spur demand any time fuel drops, but it’ll likely climb back up again, so Canadians, keep buying those Honda Civics you love so much.
HyundaiCanada.com
®The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. ‡Cash price of $12,959/$24,859 available on all remaining new in stock 2015 Elantra L 6-speed Manual/Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD models. Delivery and Destination charges of $1,595/$1,795. Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, license fees, applicable taxes and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E. and a full tank of gas. †Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2014 Accent 4 Door L 6-speed manual/2015 Sonata GL Auto with an annual finance rate of 0% for 96 months. Weekly payments are $33/$59. $0 down payment required. Cost of Borrowing is $0. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination of $1,595/$1,695. Finance offers exclude exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, license fees, applicable taxes and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. Financing example: 2014 Accent 4 Door L 6-speed manual for $13,744 at 0% per annum equals $33 weekly for 96 months for a total obligation of $13,744. $0 down payment required. Cash price is $13,744. Cost of Borrowing is $0. Example price includes Delivery and Destination of $1,595. Example price excludes registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, license fees, applicable taxes and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. ΩPrice adjustments are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Price adjustments of up to $4,635/$3,835/$7,000 available on in stock 2015 Elantra L 6-speed manual/2015 Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD/2015 Genesis Coupe 3.8L GT. 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. ♦Prices of models shown: 2015 Elantra Limited/2015 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Limited AWD/2014 Accent 4 Door GLS Auto/2015 Sonata Sport 2.0T are $27,244/$41,444/$20,394/$32,694. Delivery and Destination charges of $1,595/$1,795/$1,595/$1,695. Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, license fees, applicable taxes and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. ▼Fuel consumption for new 2015 Elantra 2.0 Limited (HWY 6.7L/100KM; City 9.7L/100KM); 2015 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Limited AWD (HWY 9.8L/100KM; City 12.9L/100KM); 2014 Accent 4-Door GLS Auto (HWY 5.3L/100KM; City 7.5L/100KM); 2015 Sonata 2.0T Ultimate (HWY 7.4L/100KM; City 10.4L/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. ∆The Hyundai Accent/Elantra received the lowest number of problems per 100 vehicles among small/compact cars in the proprietary J.D. Power 2014 Initial Quality StudySM (IQS). Study based on responses from 86,118 new-vehicle owners, measuring 239 models and measures opinions after 90 days of ownership. Propriety study results are based on experiences and perceptions of owners surveyed in February-May 2014. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. ▲Government 5-Star Safety Ratings are part of the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA’s) New Car Assessment Program (www.SaferCar.gov). ‡†♦ΩOffers available for a limited time and subject to change or cancellation without notice. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order may be required. Visit www.hyundaicanada.com or see dealer for complete details. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.
Leaf actually fun to drive around town From page 52 faster. That’s assuming you have it in the right mode, however. Put the Leaf in eco-mode, and the throttle response drops to a level that makes it feel like you’re driving through maple syrup. Range is improved, but the car feels
very slow. Flick it back into regular mode while driving (just a push of the thumb on the steering-wheelmounted button), and the Leaf surges forward with glee. It’s actually pretty fun to scoot around in regular mode at city speeds, with the Leaf ’s point-and-shoot torque meaning you can zip forward to merge with ease. Now, a few words about See No page 55
Friday, December 5, 2014 - North Shore News - A55
TODAY’S DRIVE
No incentives offered in B.C. to lower price
From page 54
the range. The 2015 Leaf is much quicker to charge than previous models, but with the batteries fully topped off, it still only provides a total theoretical range of 135 kilometres. That’s about a quarter of your average compact commuter, and if you run low on electric power, recharging is a somewhat more involved affair than just popping over to the gasoline pump. However, for most everyday driving tasks, the Leaf is more than up to the job. I drove it home, up the hill from downtown to the North Shore, didn’t bother plugging it in, then drove to and from Richmond in rush hour. Even though the weather was cold enough to be running the power-sapping heater nearly full blast, there was still enough juice left to run for groceries, or pick up kids from school, or perform all the other little end-of-day tasks you might have. You don’t even really need a quick charger
at home, as the Lower Mainland is dotted with chargers these days. Park out front at the Granville Island Public Market and you can charge up your car for free. It’s an interesting way to get around, with hardly any drawbacks.Yes, longdistance roadtrips are a bit tricky, but that’s why you buy a Hellcat Challenger as a second car. Or maybe that’s just me. Features As mentioned, midrange Leaf models come with satellite navigation, based on a seven-inch touchscreen display. A backup camera is standard, and the top-level cars come with Nissan’s clever Aroundview monitor which shows a view all around the car. Hence the name. Obviously. Keyless entry and pushbutton start are standard, as is the aforementioned heated steering wheel, which I may have allegedly tried to steal and install in my own personal car. Allegedly. There’s also a huge
suite of Bluetooth-related technologies, including streaming audio and a hands-free text-message assistant. Possibly the most interesting smartphonerelated feature is the Carwings app, which lets you monitor your Leaf ’s charging, battery levels, and even kick on the airconditioning remotely. Fuel economy is officially rated at the equivalent of 1.9 litres/100 kilometres, or about $3 to charge.You can also set the Leaf up to draw power during off-peak times, when electricity is cheaper, bringing costs down further. The base model Leaf starts at $31,798. Green light Very quiet ride; very responsive torque; smart available features; spacious cabin Stop sign Slow to heat up; power use saps range; no incentives in B.C. makes it costly The checkered flag A completely usable
'MQ /MQT= #+I$ M9& 9 H"5M &M+($Q( QIQ5$(L5 (9GNQ $M9G $MQ CQ9O< 7"$ LO $MQ #+I$ ("G& +"$ +O K"L5Q $MQ(Q L& 9G LG$Q(G9I 5+H7"&$L+G QGNLGQ (Q93= $+ $9JQ +TQ(: >E?'? )%>>CD-. electric car for every day. If the range fits your intended use, it just works. Competition Chevy Volt ($26,670) So what if you don’t want to worry about range at all? The Chevy Volt asks
the question, and provides a solution. With an electric-only range of 61 km, and an internal-combustion engine to back that up for longer trips, the Volt basically provides the best of both worlds. It’s also
pretty quick, with 273 footpounds of torque on tap. Drawbacks are a slightly dated appearance (there’s a refresh coming soon), and an electric-only range that’s shorter than the Leaf ’s. mcaleer.nsnews@gmail.com
Celebrate the newest Sprinter with a special offer. THE 2015 SPRINTER 2500 144" CARGO VAN. TOTAL PRICE* STARTS AT: $44,960. LEASE OR FINANCE AND RECEIVE 3 YEARS NO-CHARGE SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE.†
Lease APR
5.49
Lease Payment
60 Months
Includes
563 3,000
% $ 1
1
$5,0001 Down
$
2
Delivery Credit
**Fees and taxes extra.
PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDE: • Fuel efficient 4-cylinder BlueTEC diesel engine • 7G-TRONIC transmission • Standard Crosswind Assist3
Sprinter Sales and Service Centre | 3550 Lougheed Highway, Vancouver | D#6279
604-676-3778 | vancouversprinter.ca
© 2014 Mercedes-Benz Canada Inc. Lease offer based on 2015 2500 144” Cargo Van (Stock #S1558617). National MSRP $41,300 *Total price of $44,960 includes freight/PDI of $2,895, dealer admin fee of $595, air-conditioning levy of $100, PPSA up to $45.48 and a $25 fee covering EHF tires. Additional Options, fees and taxes are extra. 1Lease example based on $563 per month (excluding taxes) for 60 months. Lease APR of 5.49% applies on well approved credit. Down payment or equivalent trade of $5,000, plus first payment and applicable taxes are due at lease inception. Cost of borrowing is $7,150. Total obligation is $43,460. Lease offer only valid through Mercedes-Benz Financial Services. 2Please note the $3,000 discount has been applied/included in the calculation of the monthly lease payment, it is only valid on 2015 Sprinter Cargo Vans delivered before December 31, 2014. †Three years of scheduled maintenance covers the first 3 factory scheduled maintenance services or 3 years, whichever comes first; and is available only through finance and lease through Mercedes-Benz Financial Services. Scheduled maintenance interval for model year 2015 Mercedes-Benz Sprinter is the earlier of 1 year or 25,000 km. The specific maintenance services included are described in the applicable Owner’s/Operator’s Manual and Service/Maintenance Booklet. 3Caution: Crosswind Assist can only act within the laws of physics. If the driver exceeds the physical limits, even Crosswind Assist will not be able to prevent an accident. Offer is non-transferable, non-refundable and has no cash value. Certain limitations apply. Vehicle license, insurance, and registration are extra. Dealer may lease or finance for less. Offers may change without notice and cannot be combined with any other offers. See your authorized Mercedes-Benz Sprinter Boundary Dealer for details or call the Mercedes-Benz Sprinter Sales Centre at 604-676-3778. Offer valid until December 31, 2014.
A56 - North Shore News - Friday, December 5, 2014
RECEIVE A $25 GAS CARD WIT0 H ALL IN-STOCK 2014 MODELS
3 500
MASSIVE DEM O CLEAROUT ON 2014 ACCORD, CR-V and PILO T
$ , UP TO
# LECT IN HOLIDAY SAVINGS ONLSSE . DE REMAINING 2014 MO
2014 CR-V
3,000
UP $ TO
*
Cash purchase incentive on select 2014 models.
2014 ACCORD
+ $500 HOLIDAY BONUS‡‡
3,500
= UP TO $
2014 CIVIC
#
IN SAVINGS ON SELECT 2014 MODELS.
** Starting from MSRP $27,685 includes freight and PDI. Model shown: CR-V Touring RM4H9EKNS
Features available on select models: • Multi-angle rearview camera (standard) • Intelligent Multi-informational Display (i-Mid) (standard) • Real Time AWD with Intelligent
UP TO
0 00 ,00 3 30
$
* CASH PURCHASE
INCENTIVE ON SELECT 2014 MODELS.
** Starting from MSRP $25,685 includes freight and PDI. Model shown: Accord Touring CR3F9EKN
Features available on select models: • Rearview camera (standard) t ™ blind spot display atch • LaneWa and Forward eparture ep • Lane Dep
ion Warning Collision
2,000
UP $ TO
*
Cash purchase incentive on select 2014 models.
+ $500 HOLIDAY BONUS‡‡
2,500
= UP TO $
#
IN SAVINGS ON SELECT 2014 MODELS.
** Starting from MSRP $17,185 includes freight and PDI. Model shown: Civic Si FB6E5EKV
Features available on select models: • 7˝ Display Audio System • LaneWatch™ blind spot display c gle rearview camera angle • Multi-an
Control System
bchonda.com
2014
Take the Honda test drive. It costs nothing. It proves everything.
CELEBRATING
816 Automall Drive, North Vancouver 604-984-0331
www.pacifichonda.ca
40 YEARS IN B US IN E SS
#Up to $3,500/$2,500 in savings is comprised of a up to $3,000/$2,000 cash purchase incentive on select 2014 CR-V models / select 2014 Civic models and a $500 “Holiday Bonus”. *Up to $3,000/$2,000/up to $3,000 Honda cash purchase incentive is available on select 2014 Civic models (2D LX, 2D EX, 2D EX-L NAVI, 2D Si, 4D DX, 4D LX, 4D EX, 4D Touring and 4D Si), select CR-V models (LX, EX, EX-L, Touring) and select 2014 Accord models (2D EX, 2D EX-L Navi, 4D LX, 4D Sport, 4D EX-L and 4D Touring). Honda cash purchase incentive will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes and cannot be combined with special lease or finance offers. ‡‡$500 Consumer Incentive Dollars “Holiday Bonus” (“Holiday Bonus”) available on any new 2014/2015 Civic and new 2014/2015 CR-V models, purchased or leased and delivered by January 2, 2015 and can be combined with advertised lease and finance rates. “Holiday Bonus” includes GST and PST, as applicable. Visit a participating Honda dealer for eligible products & services applicable to “Holiday Bonus” redemption. Offer ends January 2, 2015 and is subject to change or cancellation without notice.**MSRP is $17,185 / $27,685 / $25,685 based on a new 2014 Civic 4D DX 5MT FB2E4EEX / CR-V LX 2WD DX RM3H3EES / Accord 4D L4 LX 6MT CR2E3EE including $1,495 / $1,695 / $1,695 freight and PDI. */** Prices and/or payments shown do not include PPSA lien registration and lien registering agent's fees, which are due at time of delivery. Dealer may sell for less. Dealer trade may be required. For all offers levies (air conditioning tax of $100 and tire/battery tax of $25), license, insurance, applicable taxes and registration are extra. Offers valid from November 1st through December 31st, 2014 at participating Honda retailers. Offers valid only for British Columbia residents at BC Honda Dealers locations. Offers subject to change or cancellation without notice. Terms and conditions apply. Visit www.bchonda.com or see your BC Honda retailer for full details.