TUESDAY December
24 2013 13
NEWS 3
Year in Review TASTE 25
Trends revisited SPORT 31
Show stoppers L o c a l N e w s . L o c a l M at t e r s
N S N E WS.C O M
$
SAV
INGS
up t o
20,0 00
On S elec ted M odel s
CLOSED Y BOXING DA
for e r a p e r P o T st Sale Our Bigge
In History
SALE
STARTSTH
DECEMBER
27
HOLIDAY HOURS: Dec 25 CLOSED Dec 26 CLOSED Dec 27 9am - 6pm Dec 28 9am - 6pm Dec 29 11am - 5pm Dec 30 9am - 9pm Dec 31 9am - 3pm Jan 1 CLOSED Jan 2 LAST DAY OF SALE 9am - 9pm
chevrolet • gmc • buick • cadillac
Northshore
Our Biggest Sale In History
BOXING WEEK SALE
W2 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - W3
CARTER GM NORTH SHORE’S
2013 CHEVY SONIC
PLUS 1,000
2014 CHEVY SILVERADO DOUBLE CAB
HOLIDAY
PLUS $1,500
OWNER BONUS** FOR ELIGIBLE OWNERS
ADDITIONAL HOLIDAY BONUS
*
1.99%
PLUS
2.99%
48 months finance
84 months finance
4.3 Litre V6 engine, power window, locks, tilt wheel, air condition and much more.
5 door, 1.8 Litre 4 Cyl Engine, 5 speed transmission, power locks, Bluetooth, rear spoiler, OnStar and much more.
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS TRUCK LOYALTY
$15,655 $3,157 $1,500
YOU PAY
10,998
$
2.99%
2.99%
R.S. appearance package, 18” aluminum wheels, rear spoiler, ground effects package, leather heated seat, power seat, Bluetooth, 1.4 Litre turbocharged engine, power sunroof and much more. Loaded vehicle.
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
$18,295 $2,797 $1,500
YOU PAY
2013 CHEVY TRAX
2.99%
1.4 Litre 4 Cyl turbocharged engine, air condition, power windows, power locks, tilt wheel, Bluetooth, Am Fm radio with USB and much more.
YOU PAY
2.99%
2.4 Litre 4 Cyl engine, power windows, power locks, tilt wheel, cruise control, Bluetooth and much more.
YOU PAY
YOU PAY
24,998
$
2.99%
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
$27,925 $5,427 $1,500
YOU PAY
0%
MSRP $41,645 CARTER DISCOUNT $1,647 HOLIDAY BONUS $500
YOU PAY
39,498
$
2.4 Litre 4 Cyl engine, power sunroof, rear camera, remote start, 18” wheels, Bluetooth and much more.
MSRP $27,815 CARTER DISCOUNT $817 HOLIDAY BONUS $500
This unit is equipped with all available options including navigation, heated leather seats, power sunroof, heated steering wheel, rear camera and much more
MSRP $77,395 CARTER DISCOUNT $7,595 HOLIDAY BONUS $500
YOU PAY
$
7 passenger, rear camera, power lift gate, Bluetooth, On Star and much more.
MSRP $46,595 CARTER DISCOUNT $1,195 HOLIDAY BONUS $500
$35,835 $1,435 $500
YOU PAY
2014 CHEVY TAHOE 4 WHEEL DRIVE
2014 CHEVY SUBURBAN 4 WHEEL DRIVE
LAST ONE
YOU PAY
63,900
$
chevrolet • Buick • GMc • cadillac
Northshore
2013 GMC SIERRA 4X4 EXTENDED CAB
LAST ONE
Power sunroof, 20” polished wheels,navigation, heated leather seats, assist steps and much more, loaded vehicle.
MSRP $71,195 CARTER DISCOUNT $6,795 HOLIDAY BONUS $500
YOU PAY
44,900
$
8 passenger, navigation, 20” wheel package, leather heated seats, power sunroof, rear DVD entertainment system and much more.
MSRP $74,875 CARTER DISCOUNT $6,975 HOLIDAY BONUS $500
2.99%
84 months finance
5.3 Litre V8, rear sliding windows, remote start, 17” aluminum wheels, running boards, locking diff, power seat, chrome package, Bluetooth and much more. MSRP $46,135 CARTER DISCOUNT $12,637 HOLIDAY DISCOUNT $1,500 TRUCK LOYALTY $1,000
YOU PAY
67,400
$
604-987-5231
*All payments and prices net of all rebates plus taxes and documentation fee of $598. Holiday Bonus, plus Truck Bonus are taxable. Vehicles not exactly as shown.
DL# 10743
YOU PAY
69,300
26,498
48 months finance
33,900
$
LAST ONE
only at this price
$
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
YOU PAY
1
48 months finance
8 passenger, power seat, trailer tow pkg, rear camera, Bluetooth, air condition and much more.
Heated leather seats, power sunroof, rear vision camera, loaded with all option.
$46,320 $8,822 $1,500
2014 GMC YUKON DENALI ALL WHEEL DRIVE
2014 BUICK VERANO
0%
0% 2.99%
35,998
$
2014 BUICK ENCLAVE ALL WHEEL DRIVE
36 months lease 84 months finance
Top of the line Regal equipped with all available options including power sunroof, 20’’ sport aluminum wheels, 2.0L high output turbo, navigation, leather heated seats and much more.
20,998
$
84 months finance
MSRP $30,535 CARTER DISCOUNT $4,037 HOLIDAY BONUS $1,500
$21,395 $2,095 $1,500
17,800
$
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
$25,155 $3,657 $1,500
2013 CHEVY EQUINOX ALL WHEEL DRIVE 2014 CHEVY TRAVERSE 1LT ALL WHEEL DRIVE
84 months finance
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
2.5 Litre 4 Cyl Engine, remote start, air condition, tilt wheel, cruise control, power windows, power locks, My link system, Bluetooth, 16” aluminum wheels and much more.
2014 BUICK ENCORE ALL WHEEL DRIVE
84 months finance
84 months finance
19,998
$
2013 BUICK REGAL G.S.
2.99%
84 months finance
13,998
$
2013 CHEVY MALIBU 1LT
2013 CHEVY CRUZE LT
84 months finance
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
YOU PAY
25,695
$
2013 CHEVY SPARK 1LT
Auto, air condition, power windows, power locks, tilt wheel, cruise control, My link 7" colour touch screen, USB port, Bluetooth and much more.
$31,695 $4,000 $1,000 $1,000
Northshore Auto Mall, 800 Automall Dr. North Van www.carternorthshore.com
YOU PAY
30,998
$
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
nsnews.com
PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN
$+%%' )*%(#!&"#
A2 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
The Be s Elfish Sales Event 2013 DODGE DART SE
MOST TECHNOLOGICALLY ADVANCED CAR IN ITS CLASS
59 MPG
WE WILL MAKE YOUR
FIRST 3 MONTHS PAYMENTS OR $ 1,500 CASH BACK! 2014 DODGE JOURNEY CVP
SALE PRICE:
19,998* OR FINANCE: $ 114 B/W*
$
SALE PRICE:
15,880
$
* $
2014 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CVP
OR FINANCE:
47/WEEK*
STK#13038
2014 RAM 1500
SALE PRICE:
19,998* OR FINANCE: $ 114 B/W*
$
STK#14154
2013 Total Quality Award
STK#14175
SALE PRICE:
19,700* OR FINANCE: $ 114 B/W*
$
STK#14088
*All prices and payments do not include tax. Payments for 2014 models are for 96 months at 4.29%, $0 down, OAC. (2013 Dart at 3.99%). See dealer for more details.
WE NEED YOUR 2006 TO 2012 VEHICLE
Do you have a two year old or older? Are you still making a payment but want a new car? We think we can get you into a new vehicle for the same or in some cases even a lower payment! Due to a province wide shortage of used cars, Chrysler Canada’s offering HUGE prices for used vehicles just like yours. During our ALL OUT CLEAROUT event we’re also offering MASSIVE Consumer Cash and DISCOUNTS of up to $10,000 on new vehicles, & HISTORIC LOW Interest RATES, hundreds of customers are trading up even two year old vehicles.
TRUCK OWNER? CHECK THIS OUT!
$1,500
DISCOUNT ON A 2014 RAM 1500 PURCHASE WHEN YOU CURRENTLY OWN A TRUCK OR ARE A TRADESMAN NO CHARGE CUMMINS DIESEL ON ANY 2013 RAM 2500 OR 3500 HEAVY DUTY MODELS!! $9,345 VALUE!
e Dealership Dodg p e e 5 Years rJ rysle or Over 2 h C d f o You hore r Neighbourho orth S N e h Servicing T
1-888-850-5047
1600 MARINE DR., NORTH VANCOUVER www.destinationchrysler.ca
destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca
destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca
destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca •
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A3
YEAR IN REVIEW
G\[$Q 0;+VP;N, %NVb\(&V$B ;($& VN&$("7$,( ',NV G;$,"( +(,$\&$& +(,Z(;O 7"$& aV$X ;($ &$"5\N$& ,"$&V5\ ,[ $X\ &$"5V, ;($& 9"VP5VNZ ;$ $X\ E,($X #;N7,"b\( 7;O+"& VN 2+(VP= *VZX$Q 2 P;(Z\ 9"PP5,@\( ;$ E\+$"N\ '\(OVN;P& +"&X\& 7,;P 9,"N5 [,( \_+,($ [(,O 0;N;5;= E\+$"N\ (\7\Vb\5 ;++(,b;P [(,O C,($ F\$(, #;N7,"b\( VN 6:8] $, 5,"9P\ V$& 7,;P>&XV++VNZ 7;+;7V$B= CKD'D) MIKE WAKEFIELD
The first of a two-part review
Top Stories of 2013 JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com
Big development toppled big outrage in 2013, with sizable projects approved across the ever-densifying North Shore. While buildings rose, the B.C. NDP’s fortunes plummeted, as their pollsterguaranteed election win dissolved into sweet victory for the B.C. Liberals. Pipelines remained a slippery topic before, after, and during the election. B.C.’s oil spill readiness was assailed while Kinder Morgan applied for a major expansion. Business boomed on North Vancouver’s port as Neptune Terminals doubled its coal handling while Richardson International won the right to grow bigger and wider — despite the misgivings of many neighbours. But while some corporations maximized profits, others struggled to break even. Capilano University,The Land Conservancy and B.C. Ferries all came under fire for the ways they tried to shore up debt.
JANUARY Road rage bat wielder avoids jail A minivan driver who beat a motorist with a metal baseball bat was handed a six-month conditional jail sentence to be served at home. Gerardo Arguello cut across two lanes of traffic, overtaking driver Ryan McCaffery and slamming on his brakes before getting out and hitting him four or five times with the bat, including once in the head. “You did it in front of your own children,” Judge Doug Moss said. Suspected armed robber arrested A Squamish man suspected of committing armed robberies at eight grocery stores was arrested at the Peace Arch border crossing on a 40-year-old warrant. Thomas Schwartz had been wanted in the United States since June 1972, when he allegedly deserted from the U.S. Air Force — later settling in Squamish under the name Tom Stone. He is suspected in four North Shore robberies.
WestVan stock promoter banned for life A West Vancouver stock promoter was banned from B.C. markets and fined $700,000 after lying to investors. Myron Sullivan II, also known as Fred Myron George Sullivan, pocketed $1.74 million after telling investors Global Response Group had robotic oil spill cleanup technology and was about to go public. None of the speculators who invested in Sullivan’s company saw their money again. The website for Global Response Group listed a West Vancouver UPS mailbox as the company’s address. Infections down Airplane crash survivor and West Vancouver resident Carolyn Cross oversaw her company’s infectionreducing technology used in a trial at Vancouver General Hospital. Ondine Biomedical uses a non-antibiotic therapy called photodisinfection. The method employs nonthermal light energy to kill bacteria in patients’ nasal
passages before surgery.The VGH trial saw a 39 per cent reduction in infections. The approach allowed for more surgeries and yielded nearly $2 million in savings. “I have a great technology that needed to get pulled out of the abyss and into a hospital system,” Cross said. Port approves coal expansion Neptune Terminals got the green light to double the steelmaking coal handled at its North Vancouver location following Port Metro Vancouver’s approval. Getting the OK means new equipment that will allow Neptune to move 18 million tonnes of metallurgical coal a year. PMV approved the project over the objections of global environmentalists and local residents concerned about carcinogenic coal dust. FEBRUARY Ferries deal reached on land values After being devalued to about the price of a large pizza — $20 — the Horseshoe Bay ferry
terminal was reassessed at $47 million. West Vancouver had been set to lose about $250,000 in annual tax revenue and was on the hook for taxes paid by B.C. Ferries to the district for the three years prior to the reassessment. The land was restored to its former value following an agreement between the B.C. Assessment Authority and the ferry corporation. North Vancouver man faces murder charge in Bacon death A North Vancouver man with alleged gang connections was charged in the murder of Red Scorpions gangster Jonathan Bacon, who was killed in a drive-by shooting in Kelowna in October 2011. Jason Thomas McBride, 37, has been charged — along with two other men — with the first-degree murder of Bacon and the attempted murder of three of his associates. MARCH Property taxes rise Residential and business taxpayers in the City of North Vancouver saw their
property taxes rise three per cent following a split council vote. Expecting the federal and provincial government to help pay the bills is “whistling through the cemetery,” according to Coun. Craig Keating, who said raising taxes was necessary. Council should have found that extra $400,000 by levying heavier taxes on developers or cutting out the “rather luscious council dinners, which happen every Monday night at taxpayers’ expense,” according to Coun. Rod Clark. Rescuee give back After being injured in a See more page 7
SCAN WITH %&\ $X\ G;B;( ;++ aV$X O,9VP\ 5\bV7\& $, &7;N $X\ +;Z\ ,N\ +X,$, $, ;77\&& O,(\ +X,$,&Q C;Z\ 8Q K;NN;X !VPPV;O&? $X\ )N,a C(VN7\&& ;$ GBNN #;PP\B 0\N$(\4& E,($X C,P\ 1=0=? aV&X\& \b\(B,N\ ; F\((B 0X(V&$O;&= C2L. 8 CKD'D CINDY GOODMAN
A4 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
The Infamous BOXING DAY SALE
70
ALL FALL ITEMS
ALL WINTER ITEMS, AND SELECT SHOES, BOOTS Excludes accessories and jewellery
%
OFF
50
%OFF
SALE CONTINUES ALL WEEK
• Sandwich • Horny Toad • Mexx • Not the Same • Urban Tribe • English Laundry • Desigual • Jbrand • Robert Graham • Kersh • Free People • Agave • Georg Roth LA • Jag John + Jenn • Metalicus • And More!
LIFESTYLE CLOTHING FROM HEAD TO TOE
1519 Bellevue Avenue, West Vancouver 604-913-1519
Doors open 9:30am December 26th
Sale to continue all week but come early for best selection.
BOXING DAY SALE Doors open 9:30am December 26th
70
OFF %
ALL FALL ITEMS
ALL WINTER ITEMS, AND SELECT SHOES, BOOTS
Excludes accessories and jewellery
50
% OFF
SALE CONTINUES ALL WEEK
...and MORE!
BJ’s West Van
2463 Marine Drive, West Vancouver 604-926-0712 4440 West 10th Avenue, Vancouver 604-222-1028
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A5
Lighting on 34th Street
Deep Cove designer lands Macy’s gig JULES KNOX newsroom@nsnews.com
This year’s window display in Macy’s department store has roots in North Vancouver. The lighting for Manhattan’s most wellknown winter wonderland, made famous by the classic Miracle on 34th Street, was designed by Mike Inwood, a lighting expert born and raised in North Vancouver. The display, which is seen by as many as 75,000 people a day, chronicles a boy’s dream where he encounters fairies, a waterfall and animals made of “ice.” “It’s a very vibrant scene with all these magical creatures,” said Inwood. “It’s quite peaceful.” Inwood said the snow from his youth, which he remembers as very serene, helped inspire the mood of the lighting in the window. “It was something pure and hopeful, and truly magical for me,” he said. “That was what I tried to
FJH. JE!DD/ a,(R& ,N ; 0X(V&$O;& aVN5,a 5V&+P;B [,( F;7B4& 5\+;($O\N$ &$,(\ VN E\a `,(R= CKD'D )%1FJ''./ capture in the lighting of the story from window to window.” Inwood got into acting on Deep Cove’s stage, but when he was at UBC, he switched to the technical side of production. Since pursuing a master’s degree at NewYork University, he’s had tremendous success, including winning an Emmy as part of NBC’s team covering the Olympics in
Vancouver. The display was built in a Brooklyn warehouse before being moved to the department store’s windows. It took Inwood about two weeks to install the lighting, working mostly nights, he said, although the warehouse setup took months.The team that worked on the million-dollar display included sculptors, animatronic specialists and
video designers. Inwood’s biggest challenge was figuring out how to navigate the small spaces in the window. “We were basically doing a series of dances to get through with the equipment,” he said. “It was lighting yoga.” Weeks later, he’s still finding artificial snow clinging to his clothes. Working on a window display is very different from his previous stage work, Inwood said. “In the window, everything is exposed, so it’s a real challenge to make sure everything is lit up properly without negatively impacting the overall design by putting lights somewhere visible,” he said. This year’s lighting display used LED lights almost exclusively, and Inwood estimates that this probably cut the display’s power consumption by at least half. Despite success in New York, Inwood tries to work in Vancouver whenever he can. “I can never stay away from home long,” he said. In May, he will return to the Lower Mainland to design the lighting for the premiere of Amber Funk Barton’s dance piece, The Art of Stealing.
HASHTAG YOUR CHRISTMAS PHOTOS for a chance to win a weekly prize of a $50 gift certificate to the Teahouse in Stanley Park or Seasons in the Park!
INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT?
Why not have 35 years of experience on your side?
TIM MALEDY Personal Injury Law
Harbourside Corporate Centre 407-850 Harbourside Dr, NorthVancouver | 778.588.7051 www.lawyerswest.ca
VERSACE DIOR ALEXANDER MCQUEEN PRADA SAINT LAURENT VALENTINO MIU MIU GIORGIO ARMANI BRUNELLO CUCINELLI ERMANNO SCERVINO EMANUEL UNGARO MAXIME SIMOENS ROBERTO CAVALLI VERSACE DIOR ALEXANDER MCQUEEN PRADA SAINT LAURENT VALENTINO MIU MIU GIORGIO ARMANI LANVIN GIANVITO ROSSI PORTS 1961 ARMANI COLLEZIONI MOSCHINO CHEAP AND CHIC REED KRAKOFF BRUNELLO CUCINELLI ERMANNO SCERVINO EMANUEL MAXIME SIMOENS ROBERTO CAVALLI M MISSONI MCQ PIERRE BALMAIN BREBISUNGARO NOIR J BRAND L’AGENCE DUVETICA SHOE SALON
LANVIN GIANVITO ROSSI PORTS 1961 ARMANI COLLEZIONI MOSCHINO CHEAP AND CHIC REED KRAKOFF M MISSONI MCQ PIERRE BALMAIN BREBIS NOIR J BRAND L’AGENCE DUVETICA SHOE SALON
JUST CAVALLI RED VALENTINO Y-3 BY YOHJI YAMAMOTO REBECCA TAYLOR RYU VINCE RACHEL ZOE ROBERT RODRIGUEZ G-STAR JOHN VARVATOS USA DIESEL AG JEANS ROCK REVIVAL JUST CAVALLI RED VALENTINO Y-3 BY YOHJI YAMAMOTO REBECCA TAYLOR RYU VINCE ADD MAGASCHONI DENHAM OPENING CEREMONY TRIARCHY TRUTH & PRIDE LINE RACHEL ZOE ROBERT RODRIGUEZ G-STAR JOHN VARVATOS USA DISEL AG JEANS ROCK REVIVAL ADD MAGASCHONI DENHAM OPENING CEREMONY TRIARCHY TRUTH & PRIDE LINE
7 57 West Hastings Street (Sinclair Centre) 604.683.1133 Leone.ca | L2leone.ca
757 West Hastings Street (Sinclair Centre) 604.683.1133 Leone.ca | L2leone.ca
A6 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
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.
A time to give T
his time of year is traditionally the season of giving. We’re used to the familiar sounds of the Salvation Army Christmas kettles. Many groups take part in campaigns to help the food bank or buy an extra toy for their local Christmas bureau. Meanwhile, almost all major charities make online donations easy. Charities depend on that outpouring of Christmas spirit to sustain their operations year round. It was sobering, then, to read a recent report that the percentage of Canadians who give to charities is down over the past decade and that the amount they give has also declined. It’s not hard to figure out why. These are tough economic times. Unfortunately, the same conditions that have resulted in less giving have also resulted in greater need.
Government programs that help people who are struggling are also feeling the pinch. The number of people relying on help from charities is growing. Across the country, B.C. ranks seventh in the percentage of those who donate to charities — behind Nova Scotia and PEI. Better news is that we rank third in the percentage of income donated and second only to Alberta in the average dollar amount we give: $1,889. That’s not bad, but we can do better. This year Ottawa has actually made that easier for first-time donors by offering a bigger tax credit for those who haven’t donated before. The hope is that a first-time donation will turn into lifelong habit of generosity. That’s what we call a gift that truly keeps on giving.
Black and white memories are happy “City sidewalks; busy sidewalks/Dressed in holiday style/In the air, there’s a feeling of Christmas/Children laughing, people passing/ Meeting smile after smile/And on every street corner you’ll hear/Silver bells, silver bells/It’s Christmas time in the city. . . .” Evans and Livingston, In Canada’s multicultural society, why do pollsters run annual surveys to ask us whether we think it is OK to wish someone Merry Christmas? But run them they do. Can you imagine the uproar if polls asked whether it was still kosher for our Jewish friends to celebrate Hanukkah, or for Muslims to respect the prayers and charity of Ramadan? Does anyone question the relevance of Chinese New Year or the Sikhs’Vaisakhi Khalsa Day?
Elizabeth James
Just Asking
Bah! Humbug! to you, Angus, Ekos and Ipsos. Be off! Leave us in peace to cuddle down next to ourYule logs to create new family traditions and rekindle memories of childhood Nativity scenes and of movies like It’s a Wonderful Life, Miracle on 34th Street and Damon Runyon’s riotous story, The Lemon Drop Kid. There’s a reason why
CONTACTUS
sentimental black and white films still appeal to young and almost old alike. It’s because they remind each successive generation of all that is good in people’s hearts in our crazy world. Religion-based or not, if Christmas does the same just once every year, what can be wrong with that? None of that explains, though, why comedic gangsters, silver bells and miracles on the streets of NewYork City are so firmly entrenched in the heart of a London-born Canadian as a part of her Christmases past. Could it be because all three films were released in the heady five years following the end of the Second World War? Despite all the blackened, bombed-out buildings, Londoners had taken a huge, cleansing
breath and burst into freedom. For a girl barely into her teenage years, the simplest new experience became an adventure. Gone was the sense of danger and doom. Foodrationing was coming to an end. Imported bananas were an exciting new taste, and movies, made in faraway America no less, became the stuff of girlhood magic. Judging from recordings being replayed today and from the performances of school choirs in our malls, millions of others have been similarly captivated over the ensuing six decades. Ray Evans and Jay Livingston composed Silver Bells for the Bob HopeMarilyn Maxwell comedy, The Lemon Drop Kid which arrived in cinemas in 1951. Rumour has it that although Evans and Livingstone
were reluctant to risk their musical careers by writing what they considered a fluff piece, their careers were in the doldrums and they needed the money. No one could have predicted we’d still be singing “Silver Bells” in 2013. First released in springtime, it is remarkable the song became a Christmas classic so quickly. Until I heard it again a week ago, I could not have explained why the song was so attached to Christmas in my mind. Only when I delved into the histories of these movies and others I’d watched along the way did I begin to understand the memories I’d bought for sixpence at the Splendid Cinema a mere 10-minute skip from home. Unrecognized at the time, they had become subconscious markers for
some of the milestones in my life: the end of the war shortly after Bing Crosby first recorded “I’m Dreaming of a White Christmas”; the beginning of my teens; the last year of school in the 1951 of The Lemon Drop Kid; the new job I landed “in the City” in 1954 the year Bing crooned his way into Rosemary Clooney’s heart in the 1954 release of the movie White Christmas. As the memories swirled around in my attempts to make sense of them for this story, they blended with those of a very different kind of Christmas — and with a recent Lower Mainland news item — an idea was born. In the early 1980s, I left Vancouver one November for what ended up as a See Save page 11
nsnews.com
NORTH SHORE NEWS 100-126 EAST 15th STREET NORTH VANCOUVER B.C. V7L 2P9
ADMINISTRATION/RECEPTION
Doug Foot
Vicki Magnison
Terry Peters
Martin Millerchip
Michelle Starr
Trixi Agrios
Rick Anderson
PUBLISHER
DIRECTOR, SALES AND MARKETING
MANAGING EDITOR
EDITOR
DISTRIBUTION MANAGER
DIRECTOR OF CLASSIFIED
REAL ESTATE MANAGER
Direct 604-998-3550 dfoot@nsnews.com
Direct 604-998-3520 vmagnison@nsnews.com
Direct 604-998-3530 tpeters@nsnews.com
Direct 604-998-3543 mmillerchip@nsnews.com
Direct 604-986-1337 mastarr@nsnews.com
Direct 604-998-1201 tagrios@van.net
Direct 604-998-3580 randerson@nsnews.com
Tel 604-985-2131 Fax 604-985-3227 DISPLAY ADVERTISING Tel 604-985-2131 E-mail display@nsnews.com Fax 604-985-1435 REAL ESTATE ADVERTISING Tel 604-985-6982 E-mail realestate@nsnews.com Fax 604-998-3585 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Tel 604-630-3300 E-mail classifieds@van.net Fax 604-985-3227 DISTRIBUTION INQUIRIES Tel 604-986-1337 E-mail distribution@nsnews.com Fax 604-985-3227 NEWSROOM Tel 604-985-2131 E-mail editor@nsnews.com Fax 604-985-2104 PHOTOGRAPHY Tel 604-985-2131 E-mail photo@nsnews.com Fax 604-985-2104 PRODUCTION Tel 604-985-2131 E-mail production@nsnews.com Fax 604-985-3227
AFTER HOURS NEWS TIPS? CALL 604-985-2131 North Shore News, founded in 1969 as an independent suburban newspaper and qualified under Schedule 111, Paragraph 111 of the Excise Tax Act, is published each Wednesday, Friday and Sunday by North Shore News a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership and distributed to every door on the North Shore. Canada Post Canadian Publications Mail Sales Product Agreement No. 40010186. Mailing rates available on request. Entire contents © 2013 North Shore News a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership. All rights reserved. Average circulation for Wednesday, Friday and Sunday is 61,759. The North Shore News, a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership respects your privacy. We collect, use and disclose your personal information in accordance with our Privacy Statement which is available at www.nsnews.com.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A7
YEAR IN REVIEW From page 3 tumble down a Hollyburn Mountain gully, snowshoer Terry Park gave $5,000 to North Shore Rescue to thank the volunteers who brought him to safety. Park also provided the rescuers with 40 boxes of apples from his farm. Sultan replaces Yap Ralph Sultan, MLA for West VancouverCapilano, took over as minister responsible for multiculturalism following the resignation of JohnYap. Yap took the political bullet following the release of a controversial memo — leaked by the NDP — detailing a plan to use government resources to score “quick wins” in B.C.’s ethnic communities. “It was judged this particular document was not OK,” Sultan said. Onni highrise gets splitvote approval City of North Vancouver council granted the Onni Group the right to build a three-tower, 344-unit condo development on the Safeway site at Lonsdale Avenue and 13th Street. Council gave Onni the
OK to erect the 24-, 18-, and eight-storey towers following a split vote that provided the climax to three years of will-theyor-won’t-they melodrama that included Onni representatives promising to pull the deal off the table as well as conflict of interest accusations. The amenities — which include 6,100 square feet of childcare space and 12 units of affordable or assistedliving housing — were too good to pass up, according to Coun. Craig Keating. Power line shocks residents Moodyville denizens were jolted after finding out BC Hydro and Port Metro Vancouver planned to use their neighbourhood as a corridor for high-voltage transmission lines. Port Metro Vancouver neglected to mention the power lines when outlining the Low Level Road expansion. “We were buying a pig in a poke and this is exactly the kind of poke that we’re getting. Poke, poke, poke,” said City of North Vancouver Coun. Rod Clark. Asked if the port had
fulfilled its promise to work with the community when developing Low Level Road, PMV representative Justin Pedley was contrite. “The port has to apologize a little on this one,” he said. TransLink lacks accountability: report TransLink’s operations are “unique, and not in a good way,” according to a consultants’ report released by the TransLink Mayors’ Council. TransLink’s unelected board receives funding from property taxes but offers little accountability, according to the report. District of West Vancouver Mayor Michael Smith trashed TransLink, calling it “completely dysfunctional.” “They have a TransLink commissioner who costs $500,000 a year and nobody knows what he does,” Smith said. Local wood to heat swimming pool Karen Magnussen Rec Centre swapped out its old natural gas boilers for a wood-fired pool heating system fed entirely by green clippings from around the
District of North Vancouver. The new system should cut the approximately 500 tonnes of carbon dioxide belched into the atmosphere annually by 60 to 70 per cent. Burning wood is considered carbon neutral because the carbon sequestered in trees is released naturally as a tree dies and rots. APRIL NSR gets a new home North Shore Rescue opened the doors of its new headquarters, dubbed “the Embassy,” at 61 Bewicke, Ave., in North Vancouver. The building will be used for training and logistics but could also function as a command centre in the event of a disaster. City OKs secondary suites City of North Vancouver duplex owners were given the right to build secondary suites, turning every duplex into a potential four-plex. At least 100 secondary suites already exist in the city but would escape the safety code if the lodgings were banned. “People are living there See more page 9
449 Hamilton Street, Vancouver Tel: (604)681.6391 100th Anniversary Retirement
CLOSING OUT SALE 90% OFF UP TO
LIST PRICE
OVER 1.2 MILLION DOLLARS OF INVENTORY MUST BE LIQUIDATED!
DON’T MISS THE ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE:-
✱ SABLE ✱ LYNX ✱ CHINCHILLA ✱ MINK ✱ BEAVER ✱ FOX ✱ REX ✱ ITALIAN LEATHERS, FUR TRIMMED MICROS, CASHMERE & DOWN.
EXAMPLES
List Price
Liquidation
Sheared Blackglama Mink Coat ............. $23,340 Female Pearl Mink Coat.......................... $20,000 Canadian Sable Jackets ........................... $10,800 Lynx Cat Jackets....................................... $13,200 Dark Mink Jackets ................................... $13,920 Reversible Black Mink Vests with Hood ... $6,220 Sheared Beaver Jackets............................. $8,000 Natural Rex Chinchilla Jackets.................. $5,990 Large Knitted Sable Stoles........................ $4,510 Men’s Micro Jacket, Mink Collar, Lapin Fur Liner .......................................... $4,000 Woven Black Mink Vests ........................... $2,630 Knitted Mink Stoles................................... $1,600 Rex Chinchilla or Mink Handbags ............ $1,288 Knitted Mink Hats ........................................ $250 Knitted Rex Collars....................................... $350
www.pappasfurs.com
6,988 5,988 3,988 $ 2,488 $ 2,488 $ 1,788 $ 1,598 $ 1,498 $ 1,688
$
$
$
$
All taxes included.
BUY NOW WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! THIS IS THE BIGGEST SALE IN PAPPAS FURS HISTORY!
PRE BOOK ONLINE FOR YOUR HOLIDAY EVENT NORTHSHORETAXI.COM
604.987.7171
Best Sale of the Year One Day Only Dec. 26th, 11-5 All Fall • Shoes • Boots • Clothing & Accessories
50 off %
BRAND NAMES • Fly London • Softinos • Frye • Michael Kors • Tribal • Kenneth Cole & more
AT BARACOS + BRAND
THE CIVILIZED WAY
SAVE 30 - 60% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE DECEMBER 27
- 31
Excludes Blunstone, Glerups and New Arrivals. No returns or exchanges.
1411 Bellevue Ave, West Vancouver
3065 EDGEMONT BLVD
604.986.4893
1,288 $ 789 $ 358 $ 258 $ 158 $ 88
www.baracosandbrand.com • 604-925-1812 Vince • Joe’s Jeans • Brax • Sand • Dl 1961 34 Heritage • Bugatchi • Pure • Coppley • Hiltl Bruun and Stengade • Haupt • Happy Socks • Bjorn Borg
A8 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
31st Annual
BOXING DAY BLOWOUT Sale starts Thursday 8:00 AM SHARP
40 -70
%OFF *
EVERYTHING! Not Valid on any Past Purchases. * No Refunds or exchanges December 26 & 27.
Kitsilano: 3301 W. Broadway..................................731-2700 North Vancouver: Capilano Mall.............................986-5203 Port Coquitlam: 2755 Lougheed Hwy ....................464-7170
Kerrisdale: 2126 W. 41st Avenue............................263-7300 White Rock: 620 Peninsula Village.........................541-2783
www.edslinens.com
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A9
YEAR IN REVIEW From page 7 and if the city wants to go down the road of saying, ‘Let’s start evicting people,’ I think we’re going to have revolution on our hands — and well so,” said Coun. Craig Keating. Richardson expands Port Metro Vancouver gave its blessing to Richardson International’s $120-million grain terminal expansion in Moodyville. Richardson was awarded the right to build a bank of 54-metre silos stretching 172 metres from the east
side of the existing ones — big enough to hold an additional 80,000 tonnes of grain and oilseeds. Beleaguered Moodyville residents greeted the news with dismay but not surprise. “It just appeared from the last eight months of behaviour of both Port Metro Vancouver and Richardson International that the neighbourhood is acceptable collateral damage,” said First Street resident Michael Binkley. When the silos are complete — likely in 2015 — full-time staff at
Richardson will increase by 40 to 50 positions. CapU cuts courses Capilano University dropped the axe on a slate of courses and programs including computing science, textile art, medical assistance and geology to help shore up a $1.3-million deficit in the university’s budget. A phalanx of 38 former faculty members called for the termination of university president Kris Bulcroft, accusing her of abandoning community consultation.
Bulcroft found a defender in West VancouverCapilano MLA Ralph Sultan, who said the president should be celebrated for guiding the school from a community college to a great university. MAY North Shore Winter Club locks out 16 employees After going nearly a year without a deal, employees at the North Shore Winter Club were locked out after rejecting a contract. Shift length was one of the original issues but,
according to CUPE, the club now wants to reduce the number of unionized staff. Employees were still locked out at press time. Council discussion dissolves after racial epithet Debate over Port Metro Vancouver was derailed at a City of North Vancouver council meeting when one councillor let loose with a racial slur. “We’re getting shafted by Port Metro Vancouver on their paying of taxes because
they don’t like the assessed value and they’ve gone to court and they’re fighting us tooth and nail and we’re getting jewed down completely on the taxes that are owed,” said Coun. Rod Clark. Clark defended his comment as being commonly used and carrying no religious overtones. Mayor Darrell Mussatto rebuked Clark twice, saying his language was unacceptable. See more page 10
BOXING WEEK EVENT HASHTAG YOUR CHRISTMAS PHOTOS for a chance to win a weekly prize of a pair of passes to the Vancouver Christmas Market!
Anglican Church of Canada
ST. AGNES
530 East 12th St 604 987-0432 www.stagnes.ca
Sunday, December 22: 8 & 10:15am Holy Eucharist Tuesday, December 24: 8pm Christmas Eve Service
(Featuring carols, candles & communion)
Sunday, December 29: 8 &10:15am Holy Communion
ST. CATHERINE’S 1058 Ridgewood Dr 604 985-0666 www.saint-catherines.org
Sunday December 22 10am Lessons and Carols Tuesday December 24: 3pm Children’s Nativity Service (especially for preschool ages)
5pm – Family Eucharist with Bell choir 10:30 – Christmas Carols 11pm – Midnight Mass by Candlelight Wednesday December 25:10am Regional Christmas Day Eucharist
ST. CLEMENT’S
PAY NO TAX
See your sales associate for details
Leather Queen Bed $798
ST. JOHN’S
13th & Chesterfield 604 986-1151 www.stjohnnv.ca
Sunday December 22: 10am Holy Eucharist Tuesday December 24: 5pm Family Christmas Eve Service 11pm Christmas Midnight Mass Sunday December 29 10am Holy Eucharist
ST. MARTIN’S
195 East Windsor Rd 604 985-5919 www.saintmartins.ca
Sunday December 22: 10am only Holy Eucharist Tuesday December 24: 4pm Children’s Story time & Carols 7pm – Family Christmas Eucharist 11pm - Christmas Eve Candlelight Choral Eucharist Wednesday December 25: 10am Holy Eucharist at St. Martin’s Sunday December 29: 10am only Holy Eucharist
Sectional $1298
Closed DECEMBER 24th&25th Open BOXINGDAY 11am-5pm
Sectional $1298
3400 Institute Rd 604 988-4418 www.stclementschurch.ca
Sunday December 22: 9:45am Christmas Pageant Tuesday December 24: 4pm - Children’s Interactive Storytime and Carols 7pm – Christmas Eve Eucharist 10:30pm – 30 minutes of Carols 11pm - Christmas Eve Eucharist Sunday, December 29: 9.45am Holy Eucharist
Dining Table $698 Dining Chair $168
Leather Chair in Cognac $998 Fabric Chair in Sand $598
scandesigns.com CELEBRATING
37
YEARS
COQUITLAM 1400 United Blvd 604.524.3444 RICHMOND 12551 Bridgeport Rd 604.273.2971 LANGLEY 20429 Langley By-Pass 604.530.8248
VICTORIA 661 McCallum Rd 250.475.2233 NANAIMO 1711 Bowen Rd 250.753.6361 KELOWNA 1850 Springfield Rd 250.860.7603
A10 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
BOXING WEEK SALE
BUY ONE PAIR GET SECOND PAIR AT 50% OFF REGULAR PRICE* December 24 - January 1
PARK ROYAL NORTH (By the Bay) 604-925-9756 METROPOLIS AT METROTOWN (Near Target) 604-437-5600 WOODGROVE CENTRE (Nanaimo, BC) 250-390-2821 Haney Place Mall (Maple Ridge) 604-466-6405
www.astepaheadfootwear.com *Certain exceptions for BOGO promotion apply including SAS, Mephisto, Blundstone, Ecco, Hunter, UGGAustralia, Robeez, and accessories. Half price discount applies to the equal or lower price pair of shoes. Limited quantities available. Sorry no rain checks. Promotion does not apply at the Maple Ridge Location.
YEAR IN REVIEW From page 9 “Sure, dad,” Clark responded sarcastically. Clark showed contrition the following day. “I offer a heartfelt and profound apology to any and all who were offended by my words,” he wrote in an email. Liberals triumphant Despite the best efforts of the NDP and the expectations of some woefully misguided pollsters, the B.C. Liberals formed a majority government, sweeping the North Shore in the process. With an ease that surprised some of her own supporters, Naomi Yamamoto notched a win in North Vancouver-Lonsdale — projected as a closelycontested swing riding. West Vancouver-Capilano MLA Ralph Sultan eased into office for the fourth straight time. Pemberton Mayor Jordan Sturdy became the West VancouverSea to Sky MLA and Jane Thornthwaite returned to her seat in North VancouverSeymour. NDP leader Adrian Dix’s opposition to Kinder Morgan’s pipeline expansion
may have factored in his election day drubbing. “It will scare away future investment,”Thornthwaite said of Dix’s stance. The Liberals spent approximately $319,000 in the four North Shore ridings during the monthlong election campaign, compared to $184,000 spent by the NDP. While the election outcome shocked almost all pundits, the results were accurately predicted by North Shore News columnist Trevor Lautens. Lighthouse Park killer sentenced The man responsible for the 2009 stabbing death of a woman in West Vancouver’s Lighthouse Park was given a 10-and-a-half year sentence. Alexander Lawrence LaGlace pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the killing of Tammy Lynn Cordone after stabbing her in a tent the homeless couple was sharing. LaGlace spent the better part of the 10 years prior to the crime living in a forensic psychiatric hospital in Port Coquitlam. He was released six months before killing Cordone.
Criminal charges for tree cutters Two North Vancouver homeowners and an arborist are facing criminal charges after allegedly cutting down a swath of trees in Capilano River Regional Park. The trio either cut down or damaged 35 trees to increase the westward view from their homes, according to the RCMP. If convicted, the wouldbe lumberjacks could face 10 years in prison. Bringing the trees down, some of which were upwards of 145 years old, put the slope above Capilano River at risk of a landslide and wildfire. DNV green lights treatment centre Despite opposition from neighbours, District of North Vancouver council unanimously approved the municipality’s first womenonly alcohol recovery centre. The nine-bed North Shore recovery house offers abstinence-based treatment with an emphasis on employment and education. A former Vancouver Police Department beat cop in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, Coun. Doug MacKay-Dunn championed
the project. “We spend too much money on enforcement and not enough money on treatment, and not enough money on recovery, and not a 10th of what we should be spending on prevention,” he said. Future of Lower Lynn District of North Vancouver council unveiled a 20-year plan to bring 120,000 square feet of new retail space and 50,000 square feet of office space to Lower Lynn town centre, sparking “tremendous excitement” in the development community. The neighbourhood is centred around the strip of Mountain Highway between Crown and Hunter streets. NVSD cuts Outdoor School staff After losing nearly $1 million in two years, the North Vancouver school district elected to lay off eight union support staff and fire 13 casual staff at the North Vancouver Outdoor School near Squamish. The school district has owned and operated the 420-acre site for 40 years. Read the second part of this review in our Dec. 27 issue.
Make the New MONSTER Year Bright Xmas SALE Ring in 2014 with a sumptuous meal at the Peak of Vancouver. 4- and 6-course options available. Call Chalet Reception (604) 998-5045 to reserve your table.
Doing it right. Right on time. Shop open from 10am ’til 6pm throughout December.
ONLY HERE ONE DESTINATION, ENDLESS EXPERIENCES
94 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver 604 985 2213 www.obsessionbikes.com
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A11
Save the old movies but save the movie houses too From page 6
four-month stay in Hawaii. While there, we explored the day-to-day activities of Hawaiians who live in the neighbourhoods outside the oft-maligned touristy areas of Waikiki. One of our discoveries was the Movie Museum in Honolulu. Close by Ala Moana Beach Park, it is a tiny cinema that seats about two dozen people and shows classic movies; Casablanca was one I remember, but many others were enjoyed during that stay.There was a full house each time we visited and early lineups were already forming for the next showing as we blinked
Come see our great holiday gift ideas!
art in eyewear
our way out into the soft Hawaiian sunshine. Could we not treasure and save heritage buildings like Vancouver’s Hollywood Theatre? Or respect the decades of work contributed by local theatrical icon Red Robinson? Could we stage the plays and films of yesteryear in honour of those who had the affection and wisdom to build the theatres? Then, perhaps, we could recapture our memories in the smiles and merry wishes bestowed on us each December by family, friends and strangers alike. Merry Christmas to all my readers. May all your memories be happy ones! rimco@shaw.ca
GREAT SEMI ANNUAL SALE UP TO
60%
OFF
all frames & sunglasses (with purchase of prescription lenses.)
(Some exceptions apply.)
SALE ON DECEMBER 1ST - DECEMBER 31ST, 2013 1685 marine dr., west van 6 0 4 - 9 2 5 - 2 1 1 0 w w w.optixeyewear.ca
EDGEMONT VILLAGE
3065 EDGEMONT BLVD, NORTH VANCOUVER 604.986.4893
eyewear and contact lenses
REPUTATION. SERVICE. VALUE. “...we would not hesitate to recommend Y.Franks, and would like you to pass on our thanks for the professionalism and courtesy shown to us by all the staff we dealt with.” Sandy Earle, New Westminster
“What more can I say but: GREAT! Well done.”
OUR LEGENDARY
BOXING WEEK SALES EVENT (INCLUDING SUB-ZERO & WOLF DISPLAY APPLIANCE CLEARANCE)
Kathy & Don Stutt, Richmond
“... and Y.Franks continues to set the bar ever-higher for service and professionalism in the appliance industry.” Tara Murphy, General Manager Studio Snaidero, Vancouver
“Love the new showroom. Staff are great. Little snacks and coffee - a great touch.”
CLEARANCE - WOLF DISPLAY APPLIANCES
MONOGRAM
JENN-AIR
KITCHENAID
MIELE
Derek McLauchlan, Bowen Island
“... and will recommend Y.Franks to anyone. They will be happy with the exceptional service, the range of products, and great pricing.” Cynthia, Vancouver
“We had to exchange our item and our salesperson was so helpful.” Bob Frederick, Burnaby
“Y.Franks’ commitment to consumer needs, and their customer service, is extraordinary” Paul Casey, President, Gateway (Viking) Distributors, Seattle
CLEARANCE -- SUB-ZERO DISPLAY APPLIANCES
EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS!
BOXING WEEK SALE BEGINS FRIDAY. (OUR STORE WILL BE CLOSED ON BOXING DAY SO OUR STAFF CAN ENJOY THE HOLIDAY WITH FAMILY AND FRIENDS.)
MORE THAN 90% OF Y.FRANKS CLIENTS ARE REPEAT CUSTOMERS,OR DIRECT REFERRALS
WEEKDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 TIL 5:30 CLOSED SUNDAYS 503 - 15TH STREET WEST VANCOUVER 604.926.0124 WWW.YFRANKS.CA
A12 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
BRIGHT LIGHTS
by Paul McGrath
NV chamber’s Christmas reception
Klaus Kaufmann ;N5 Gabryelle van der Molen
E,($X #;N7,"b\( 0X;O9\( ,[ 0,OO\(7\ +(\&V5\N$ Louise Ranger ;N5 FG2 Jane Thornthwaite The North Vancouver Chamber of Commerce’s annual Christmas reception took place atop Grouse Mountain in the Timber Room the evening of Dec. 4. Guests were encouraged to bring non-perishable food donations for the Harvest Project or toys for Hollyburn Family Services’Youth Safe House.The winners of the chamber’s Christmas by the Sea Parade of Trees decorating competition at Shipbuilder’s Square were also announced at the event.The decorated trees will remain on display until Jan. 5, 2014.
John Friswell ;N5 Andrew Orr
Danielle Thomson ;N5 Kris English
Paige Larson ;N5 Mark Lauder
John ;N5 Sylvia Cromack
Norm Binion ;N5 Nancy Tran
Francine Legault ;N5 Tamara Roberts
E,($X )X,(\ E\a&4 Kelly Pownall ;N5 Robbie Ohlhauser
Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos go to: nsnews.com/galleries.
ry Meisr tmas
Chr
&
ppy a H a ear Y New ll our
to a ers. Custom e r o h S ro m Nor th ishes f Best W Insurance. ity Bay C
PRIVATE AUTO WITH FAMILY INSURANCE HOME - CONDO - TENANTS - BUSINESS - MARRIAGE LICENCE
Unlimited Contents $280,000 $320,000 $400,000 $600,000 $800,000
Liability $1,000,000 $1,000,000 $1,000,000 $1,000,000 $1,000,000
Opposite Save-On-Foods #121-1199 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver
604-986-1155
SAVE ON INSURANCE Replacement Value $350,000 $400,000 $500,000 $750,000 $1,000,000
LYNN VALLEY CENTRE
Mon-Fri 9am-9pm, Sat 9am-6pm, Sun 10am-5pm Family $328.00 $369.00 $453.00 $680.00 $915.00
*Current rates based on available discounts
BAY CITY INSURANCE SERVICES LTD.
CAPILANO MALL
Next to Walmart #30-935 Marine Drive, North Vancouver
604-904-9700
Mon-Wed 9am-6pm, Thurs-Fri 9am-9pm Sat 9am-6pm, Sun 11am-6pm
Our office in West Vancouver has amalgamated with our new location in Capilano Mall next to Walmart, the Liquor Store and Kins Market.
HOME
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A13
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE
to HOME & GARDEN
Pretty paper wrappings Barry Link
Practical Geek
Tech that made life (a bit) better
Barb Lunter
Home Ideas
Pretty packages make nice first impressions. This year, impress your recipient with a beautifully wrapped gift. When these are placed under the tree they double as lovely holiday decorations. Eucalyptus Leaves
DIG DEEP Garden columnist Todd Major makes some Christmas wishes page 14
Duplicate the look of a fresh eucalyptus wreath with this miniature version of eucalyptus leaves in a garland design.You can also make the shape into a wreath on a square or rectangular package. Materials: 2 shades of green craft paper (available at Michaels) Craft glue, scissors, Scotch tape Miniature glitter dots (available at Michaels) Green wrapping paper Cut your two shades of green paper into 10centimetre wide strips. Fold the strips in half and make a crease down the centre. Using your scissors cut half-petal shapes along the fold line. When the fold is open you are left with a full shaped petal. Continue to cut halfpetals along the whole folded side of the paper.
%&\ 7(;[$ +;+\(? ZPV$$\(? &$V7R\(& ;N5 9\;5& $, 5(\&& "+ 0X(V&$O;& +(\&\N$&= C(\$$B +;7R;Z\& N,$ ,NPB VO+(\&& ZV[$ (\7V+V\N$&? $X\B ;P&, 5,"9P\ ;& X,PV5;B 5\7,(;$V,N= CKD'D MIKE WAKEFIELD
Repeat this with the other coloured green craft paper. Wrap your gift in the green wrapping paper and set aside. Using your craft glue apply petal on top of petal in a wreath or garland shape on the topside of your gift. Let dry. Add your glitter dots in a random fashion along the garland. WinterWreath This is a pretty winterwhite themed gift idea. Using a small snowflake hole punch and some silver dots you can create this gift in minutes. Look for snowflake hole punches at your local craft store. For larger gifts choose a snowflake punch in a large size.
Materials: White glossy wrapping paper (available at Michaels) Scotch tape Silver beading thread Silver miniature dot stickers White and powder blue shades of craft paper Silver beads (optional) Snowflake hole punch Wrap your gift in the white, glossy paper and set aside. Punch out enough snowflakes to create a wreath the desired size for your package. If you plan to alternate the snowflakes in powder blue and white then cut out in equal amounts. Lay out the pattern
that you wish to create first with the snowflakes. Do not glue them to the package until you are satisfied with the look. Once you have glued them, alternate the silver miniature dot stickers in the centres of the snowflakes and add the silver beads. To finish off the wreath, tie a small bow with the silver beading thread and glue to the bottom of the wreath. Let dry. Barb Lunter is a freelance writer with a passion for home decor, entertaining and floral design. Contact Barb by email at barb@lunter.ca or follow her on her blog at lunter.ca.
KE A M L L A p o t S e n O R U O Y COLLISION REPAIR & AUTO SERVICE CENTRE w w w. t a y l o r m o t i v e . c o m All Collision Insurance Company’s Lifetime Guaranteed Repairs ■ New Car Warranty arranty Approved pproved Services
■
GOVERNMENT LICENSED INSPECTION STATION S-2584
50222
Tech won’t change your life. But it might make it a little bit better. Here are three pieces of tech I acquired this year that made my life just that much more comfortable, interesting or tolerable.
Bose Quietcomfort 15 headphones International air regulations now require that every commercial plane must have at least one crying baby on board for the duration of the flight. (I think it was the Swedes who pushed this through.) That’s why when I flew to Europe this past summer I was armed for the expedition with a set of Bose Quietcomfort 15 headphones that block out sound.These put a deep dent in my budget, but they were worth it. Bose doesn’t have the best reputation for sound quality among audiophiles, but its implementation of active noise cancellation is stellar and the Quietcomfort 15 fit my ears like a pair See Roku page 16
Winner of the 2012 AutocheX Premier Achiever Award for Extraordinary Customer Satisfaction
UBE L R E P U S R E T IN W SPECIAL $99.00 s & Filter most vehicle • Lubricate Change Oil Report tion pec Ins ety Saf icle • Comprehensive Veh aust, Tires Exh , kes on, Steering, Bra • Checking Suspensi Protection eze Fre d cor Re , tem g Sys • Pressure Test Coolin er Operation Wip ts, ligh all ses, Checking • Checking Belts & Ho on diti with Print Out System & Battery con • Test Starter, Charging nt Out Pri h gnment Check wit • Computer Wheel Ali
ad Test
• Rotate Tires & Ro
SINCE 1959
174-176 Pemberton Ave.
604.985.7455
mental fees Plus Taxes and environ
Pricing **Special Winter Tire
THE HOME OF QUALITY WORKMANSHIP & TRUSTWORTHY SERVICE
all Brands
A14 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
HOME
An Xmas plea to be kind to Mother Earth Here’s what I would ask him to give me for Christmas. Dear Santa, I know you’re busy and have many gifts to deliver this year, but this is what I want for Christmas. Firstly, would you please tell everyone that pesticides are poisonous and they kill life and that hurts Mother Earth and pesticides are very dangerous for young children like me.Why am I asking you for this gift? Mainly because my mom
Todd Major
Dig Deep
What if Santa Claus were a gardener like us?
and dad and their generation were brainwashed when they were young by sophisticated and seductive marketing that led them to think that without pesticides the world would be overrun by insects. Those same insects it turns out are needed for people to survive and to keep Mother Earth healthy. I also think that if someone like you, who everyone loves and respects, would tell parents how dangerous pesticides are, they might listen. Secondly, I want you to
Capilano Mall 925 Marine Drive, North Vancouver, BC TEL: 604.990.0229
Park Royal South Centercourt South Mall West Vancouver, BC TEL: 604.921.1120
Great Holiday
Savings on your Favorite Stress Relief Formulas from AOR! Or Ortho • SleepTM A Natural Solution to Promote Restful Sleep
• Prevents Insomnia • Restores restful sleep patterns • Promotes relaxation and reduces anxiety
Advanced B ComplexTM The Best Mix of B Vitamins
• Contains the most effective forms of B vitamins • Provides balanced, research-supported doses • Maintains cellular energy production • Supports the function of the brain and nervous system
LL-TyrosineTM A An Amino Acid for Stress Management
• Required for the synthesis of essential hormones and neurotransmitters • EEnhances cognitive function • IImproves alertness •H Helps with multitasking
Ortho • AdaptTM Helps to Cope with Stress
• Mobilizes internal energy stores • Reduces the impact of stressful conditions • Activates whole-body defences • Prevents the body from overreacting to a stressor
Yes, we are moving! the Centre Court Park Roy uth Mall. Find us nearfor our grand opening for exatrl aSo s Join us
avings!
Find us on PARK ROYAL NUTRITION HOUSE
drop some mulch in every garden, even for the people who don’t understand that mulch is good for the soil and all the plants that live there. If you could put some mulch in everyone’s garden, then people would not have to spend their busy days weeding and they would not have to use poisonous herbicides to kill beautiful dandelions and other pretty weeds.Those weeds don’t know they are not supposed to grow in everyone’s garden, so it’s not their fault, really. And it turns out that many of those pretty weeds give food to all of the good bugs. Thirdly, if you would please drop a letter in everyone’s mailbox, because I don’t know if you have email, and tell everyone that all trees should be loved and cared for. It seems that my dad and many other dads are always going into the garden to cut down trees and I don’t understand why. My mom tells me that some trees don’t behave the way people want them to, so Dad goes out and cuts off some branches or cuts down the whole tree. My friend Jonny’s dad does
the same thing in his garden and so does Jenny’s dad. I asked my mommy, “Why don’t people just plant a nice tree that behaves the way they want it to?” Mommy said, “People are not always willing to listen or to respect things they should.” Fourthly, if you would please give everyone a new package of vegetable plant seeds in their Christmas stocking so they can grow some food in their garden. I don’t know how, but Daddy tells me that the way people grow food on farms and in greenhouses has become unsafe and he’s worried about feeding me fruits and vegetables from those places. Daddy says that if we grow food in our own garden we can be sure of what is used to grow the food and what’s in our soil, so we can eat healthy and not have to worry. It’s kinda funny because now I see that lots of my friends have vegetable gardens instead of lawns in their yards. I guess if the people who run the world won’t listen to what everyone wants, then the smart people will do things for themselves.
Daddy also says that we buy organic food because it’s better to eat than food grown with poisonous pesticides. I also asked Mommy if organically grown food has more good things in it than the other food. Mommy said, “Organically grown food sometimes has a similar nutritional value to conventionally grown food but we choose it because no dangerous pesticides are used to grow organic food and that’s healthier for our bodies.” I know if you could give those gifts this year, Santa, then Jonny, Jenny and me could go play in the shade of those lovely big trees, maybe snip a veggie or two from Jonny’s garden and not have to worry about getting poisonous pesticides on our little shoes or on our delicate and fragile little hands. Love from Toddy Major. P.S. Santa, I hope your garden is growing good things for you and the reindeer to eat. Toddy Major is just a kid who wants to make the world better place. stmajor@shaw.ca
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A15
HOME Green Guide UNCOVER YOUR CREEKS on Monday, Jan. 6, 3:15-4:30 p.m. at the entrance to Mahon Park, West 18th and Jones Ave., North Vancouver. Learn about local ecology, engage in data collection, observe local environmental change and monitor water quality in Wagg Creek. info.evergreen.ca COMPOST COACHING Free personalized, at-home support for using the Green Can or backyard composter. Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned pro, you’re guaranteed to learn something new. Offered by the North Shore Recycling Program on behalf of all three North Shore municipalities. Book appointments at 604-984-9730 coaching. northshorerecycling.ca EDIBLE GARDEN PROJECT VOLUNTEER ORIENTATION NIGHT takes place the second Monday of every month at 6 p.m. Learn about the projects the Edible Garden
MASSIVE
BOXING DAY CLEARANCE
50- OFF 70%
DON’T MISS THIS!
ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING
ONE DAY ONLY
OPEN 10AM
THURSDAY DEC. 26
PATCH OF PURPLE D(N;O\N$;P 7"(PB R;P\ ;55& 7,P,"( $, $X\ aVN$\( Z;(5\N= CKD'D MIKE WAKEFIELD Project is running and how to get involved. Location will be provided upon registration. volunteer@ ediblegardenproject.com ediblegardenproject.com Compiled by Debbie Caldwell
Email information for your non-profit, by donation or nominal fee event to listings@nsnews.com.To post your own event online, go to nsnews.com, scroll to Community Events and click on AddYour Event.
$39 3 WAY CARDIGAN
LEATHER
50% OFF
1441 Bellevue Ave.
604.926.2113
50% OFF
HUDSON JEANS
$19 LEATHER GLOVES
preludefashion.ca West Vancouver Newest Boutique
Happy Holidays
Rita, Joanne & Judy Seasons Greetings from the Couch Potato gals!
The store that friends tell friends about. 1405 Pemberton Avenue, North Vancouver
604.988.8271 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 • Sunday & HolidayS 12-5 16 YEARS ON THE NORTH SHORE!
Thank you for your continued support for the last 29 years BRAND NAMES YOU CAN TRUST
A SHADE BETTER Est. 1984 SERVING THE NORTH SHORE SINCE 1984
604.984.4101 #110-949 W. 3rd St., North Van(behind Capilano Mall)
• • • • • •
Blinds Drapery Automation Repairs Parts Cleaning
We will be closed on December 25th and will re-open on January 6th
A16 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
HOME
Roku 3 cheap, small and easy to use From page 13 of slippers. I put them on shortly after takeoff, hooked up my tablet to listen to music and watch videos, and had my best flight in years. Bring it on, unhappy loud babies, I didn’t hear you at all. I’ve since used them while vacuuming, watching TV late at night and to shut out annoying conversations of branding consultants meeting at Starbucks. UnoTelly Regular readers know
my frustration at banging my head against VPNs and various device setups to get U.S. Netflix and Hulu on my home TV.VPNs are great for security and circumventing geoblocks, but they don’t work on devices like my Xbox 360 and PlayStation3, two key ways I access content as a cordcutter. This year I tried out a DNS redirect service. Essentially it reroutes your Internet traffic to a computer that’s configured with access to specific media sites, such as U.S. Netflix or the BBC,
that are otherwise blocked to users outside of their home countries. It involves changing a few settings on your computer or router, but is otherwise easy to set up. Some people use free DNS redirect services available on the web. Because I don’t trust anything on the Internet that’s free, I opted for UnoTelly, a commercial service that provides a large library of international media sites to watch.The big advantage for me is that the service can be configured
independently on my gaming consoles. After enabling UnoTelly on my PlayStation 3, I can now get every flavour of Netflix (from U.S. to Nordic), Hulu Plus and BBC’s online video. Roku streaming box Those two gaming consoles under my TV are giant boxes, their size and noise all the more annoying because the future of home theatre is small.The Apple TV showed that small was possible and desirable, and it was quickly followed by the
Roku streaming box. I bought a Roku this year as an experiment, and it quickly became a preferred, easy and inexpensive way to get Netflix on my TV. Starting at $70 and the size of a hockey puck, the Roku is light enough to hang on the back of your TV and completely silent. Since it’s always on, with minimal power use, you don’t need to wait for it to boot up. It has a clean, simple interface. The Roku 3 version also features a remote control with a plug-in jack for stereo headphones, a great feature for watching late at night without waking up the
neighbours. Many of its channels, such as Internet-based broadcasts of dozens of cooking shows, goofy geeks and American church services, you’ll never watch. But it also features excellent apps like Slacker and TuneIn Radio and I’ve used its PBS and CBS News channels for full episodes of programs like Frontline and 60 Minutes.That’s all without needing to hook it up to a VPN or DNS, which is good since sadly Roku settings don’t allow for such things. blink@vancourier.com Twitter.com/trueblinkit
PRE-OWNED VEHICLE
Merry Christmas
HASHTAG YOUR CHRISTMAS PHOTOS for a chance to win a weekly prize of a $50 gift certificate to the Teahouse in Stanley Park or Seasons in the Park!
NORTH SHORE
3FO9228B
11 MAZDA 2
P9770
13 FOCUS TITANIUM
4 cyl, 5spd, air, 3FO9228B $
Auto, nav system, heated seats, rev camera, P9770 $
11,900
22,750
P9821
09 SMART CAR
Auto, air, only 29,000 klms, P9821 $
9,500
06 FUSION SE
4 cyl, auto, only 54,000 klms, P9829 $
10,500
P9789
27,500
49,500
Nav, rev camera, P9800 $
P9815
4 cyl, 5 spd, only 70,000 klms, P9782A $
13,900
7,500
13 FUSION SE
2.0 echo bost, leather, nav, P9835 $
27,500
13 FIESTA H/BACK
4 cyl, auto, sport pkg, winter pkg, P9843 P9843 $
17,900
P9801
P9805
12 MKX AWD
12 E350 CLUB WAGON
43,500
27,500
Loaded, 14,000 klms, P9801 $
P9817
15 passenger XLT, P9805 $
P9822
P9825
13 EXPEDITION MAX LIMITED 13 ESCAPE SEL AWD 03 E350 MOTORHOME 13 FLEX LIMITED AWD Nav system, leather, P9817 $
Loaded, P9815 $
47,500
P9739A
09 NISSAN 350Z ROADSTER Auto, only 20,000 klms, P9739A $
28,800
Winter special, a must see, P9822 $
32,500
13 FLEX SEL
19,500
P9831
6 cyl, auto, My Ford Touch, P9831 $
29,900
Pro Gas North Shore, your local Heating, Gas Fitting & Air Conditioning Company. Serving the North Shore for over 20 years.
P9835
P9800
12 NAVIGATOR
P9782A
07 TOYOTA YARIS
4 cyl, auto, sync, P9772 $
P9829
13 EDGE SEL
6 cyl, auto, Sync, rev camera, P9789 $
P9772
12 FOCUS SE
Nav system, leather, P9825 $
39,900
P9832
37,500
Please do not confuse Pro Gas North Shore with telemarketers from Pro Gas & Heating (PG Home Services) in Surrey. They are a different company and NOT accredited with the Better Business Bureau - BBB.
We install and service furnaces and fireplaces. Call us today.
604.925.1341 • progas.ca
Kitchen Cabinet Savings from People who know Scan this ad with & visit our photo gallery
P9833
13 EDGE LIMITED AWD 13 EXPLORER LIMITED AWD Loaded, P9832 $
Kam Filsoofi - OWNER
Loaded, P9833 $
43,500
604-980-2411
833 Automall Dr., North Vancouver www.camclarkfordlincoln.com
KITCHEN CABINETS, FREE BATHROOM VANITIES ESTIMATES &COUNTERTOPS Visit our showroom (behind Sleep Country) 1044 Marine Dr, North Vancouver
604.770.1986
WWW.COWRYKITCHEN.COM
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A17
NEIGHBOURHOODS
BOXING WEEK BLOWOUT! New Balance 860v3 M & W Reg. $139.99
Asics GT-2000 v1 M & W Reg. $159.99
NOW $89.99
NOW $89.99 All 2013 Footwear On Sale
$20 - $60 OFF
Selected 2013 Apparel UP TO
50% OFF
Shop early for best selection!
TIME TRAVELLER 'XV& V& ; +X,$, ,[ !\&$ #;N7,"b\(4& K,PPB9"(N &RV 7;O+ &,O\$VO\ ;[$\( V$ a;& 9"VP$ ;(,"N5 8S6Y= JN$\(\&$VNZPB? $X\ +X,$, a;& $;R\N ;$ NVZX$? ;N5 V$ a;& "&\5 $, O;R\ ; 0X(V&$O;& 7;(5= 'X\ !\&$ #;N7,"b\( KV&$,(V7;P ),7V\$B &\N5& 0X(V&$O;& Z(\\$VNZ& ;N5 9\&$ aV&X\& [,( $X\ E\a `\;( $, ;PP= VN[,3abX&=7; CKD'D 0D%*'.)` D- 'K. !.)'
980 Marine Drive, North Vancouver
(next to Everything Wine and across from Indigo Books)
604.982.0878 • www.forerunners.ca @Forerunners_NV
Season’s Greetings!
OFF
50% Thank you
All SHADE-O-MATIC Products Hurry! Time Limited Offer Valid for orders placed Dec 1 thru Dec 31
for making us #1 for 6 consecutive years!
604-929-2546
northshore@budgetblinds.com www.budgetblinds.com
Lynn Valley Road & Mountain Hwy • www.shoplynnvalley.com
HASHTAG YOUR CHRISTMAS PHOTOS for a chance to win a weekly prize of a pair of passes to the Vancouver Christmas Market!
LYNN VALLEY CENTRE
#2E0D%#.* 2*0KJ#.)<)%1FJ''./ 1` 'K. !.)' #2E0D%#.* KJ)'D*J02G )D0J.'`
Shopping locally is your gift to our community. Thank you!
SEASON’S GREETINGS From Lynn Valley Centre
December 24: December 25: December 26: December 27: December 28:
10 am - 5 pm Closed Noon - 5 pm 10 am - 9 pm 10 am - 6 pm
December 29: December 30: December 31: January 1: January 2:
Noon - 5 pm 10 am - 6 pm 10 am - 5 pm Closed 10 am - 9 pm
winners • shoppers drug mart • save-on-Foods • black bear pub • plus over 40 stores
A18 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
JUST ! UNCED O N N A
AY D I L O H BONUS
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A19
BOXING WEEK SAVINGS ARE HERE
*
2014 CR-V 2013 FIT STARTING FROM
16,075
$
**
INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
1,000
HOLIDAY BONUS
Model shown G3H87DE
Hurry!
27,685
$
JUST ANNOUNCED
$
These special savings will end January 2nd.
STARTING FROM
**
JUST ANNOUNCED
$
INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
*
1,000
HOLIDAY BONUS
Model shown RM3EES
*
2014 CR-V LX
SPECIAL EDITION Lease for
153
$
¥
PILOT STARTING FROM
200
146
$
¥
4.99 $ 0 down
$
STARTING FROM
16,935
$
bi-weekly for 60 months. MSRP** $25,685 includes freight & PDI.
**
PLUS
500
HOLIDAY BONUS *
INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI Model shown FB6E5DKV
Model shown YF4H9DKN The first minivan to earn a 2013 Top Safety Pick+ rating‡
THE LIMITED EDITION CR-V SE GIVES YOU OVER $1,600 IN EXTRAS.
PLUS
1 500
for Accessories, Service or Gas Card
3.99 $ 0 down
%APR£
STARTING FROM $36,630**
Including roofrails, running boards, cargo tray, all season floor mats and SE badge.
GIFT CARD
¥
%APR£
bi-weekly for 60 months. MSRP** $31,685 includes freight & PDI.
CASH PURCHASE INCENTIVE ON EVERY 2013 MODEL
CASH PURCHASE INCENTIVE#
2013 CIVIC LX
Lease for
For another
88
EST O U R B OF S OFFER AR E THE Y
Every USED VEHICLE Sale Priced
2013 CIVIC DX $
Ω
1.99 $ 0 down
%APR£
bi-weekly for 60 months. MSRP** $16,935 includes freight & PDI.
PLUS
500 OLIDAY
$
H BONUS
*
Model shown FB6E5DKV INCLUDES: • 1.8 LITRES, 16-VALVE, SOHC, i-VTEC® 4-CYLINDER • ECON MODE BUTTON & ECO ASSISTTM SYSTEM • ACE BODY STRUCTURE • 4-WHEEL ABS • VEHICLE STABILITY ASSIST (VSA®) WITH TRACTION CONTROL • AM/FM/CD AUDIO SYSTEM WITH MP3/AUX JACK AND 4 SPEAKERS
Or 0.99% lease or finance
$
Lease for
$
**
bi-weekly for 60 months. MSRP** $28,684 includes freight & PDI.
Our Best Offers Of the Year plus receive a
Lease for
2013 CIVIC
INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
2.99 %APR£ $ 0 down
$ ,
2014 ACCORD LX
183
5,000
$
2014 ODYSSEY LX
5,000
CASH PURCHASE INCENTIVE# ON EVERY 2013 RIDGELINE MODEL
bi-weekly,*# get:
PLUS
500 OLIDAY
$
H BONUS
MSRP** $19,740 includes freight & PDI.
*
Model shown FB2E4DEX • HEATED FRONT SEATS • HANDSFREELINKTM BILINGUAL BLUETOOTH® • INTELLIGENT MULTI-INFORMATION DISPLAY (i-MID) • BLUETOOTH® WITH STREAMING AUDIO • REMOTE KEYLESS ENTRY • BODY COLOURED DOOR HANDLES & HEATED SIDE MIRRORS
2013 RIDGELINE
$
15
$
2013 CIVIC EX For another
11
$
bi-weekly,*# get:
$
PLUS
500
HOLIDAY BONUS
Based on a step-up from Civic LX. MSRP** $21,740 includes freight & PDI.
*
Model shown FB2E5DJX • 16” ALUMINUM ALLOY WHEELS • AM/FM/CD AUDIO SYSTEM WITH MP3/AUX JACKAND 6 SPEAKERS • REARVIEW CAMERA • LEATHER-WRAPPED STEERING WHEEL • POWER MOONROOF WITH TILT FEATURE
STARTING FROM $36,630** INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
1 500
$ ,
CASH PURCHASE INCENTIVE# ON SELECT 2013 CIVIC MODELS
OR
0.99% LEASE OR FINANCE Ω¥
SHOP EARLY AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR BEST SELECTION OF MODELS AND COLOURS. IT WON’T GET BETTER THAN THIS!
bchonda.com
Take the Honda test drive. It costs nothing. It proves everything.
www.pacifichonda.ca
816 Automall Drive, North Vancouver 604-984-0331
†$1,000 holiday bonus is available on every 2014 CR-V model. Holiday bonus will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. ΩLimited time lease offer based on a new 2014 Odyssey LX 5AT model RL5H2EE. €3.99% lease APR for 60 months O.A.C. Bi-weekly payment, including freight and PDI, is $183.22. Down payment of $0.00, first bi-weekly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $23,818.60. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. 120,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometer. ¥Limited time lease offer based on a new 2014 CR-V LX (SE) 2WD model RM3H3EES. £2.99% lease APR for 60 months O.A.C. Bi-weekly payment, including freight and PDI, is $152.76. Downpayment of $0.00, first bi-weekly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $19,858.80. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. 120,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometer. *Limited time lease offer based on a new 2014 Accord LX 5MT model CR2E3EE. #4.49% lease APR for 60 months O.A.C. Bi-weekly payment, including freight and PDI, is $146.36. Downpayment of $0.00, first bi-weekly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $19,026.80. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. 120,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometer. **MSRP is $31,685 / $28,684 / $25,685 including freight and PDI of $1,695 based on a new a 2014 Odyssey LX 5AT model RL5H2EE / 2014 CR-V LX(SE) 2WD model RM3H3EES / new 2014 Accord LX 5MT model CR2E3EE. PPSA, license, insurance, taxes, and other dealer charges are extra and may be required at the time of purchase. ¥/£/€/Ω/#/* Prices and/or payments shown do not include a PPSA lien registration fee of $30.31 and lien registering agent’s fee of $5.25, which are both due at time of delivery. ‡For more information, visit http://www.iihs.org/iihs/ratings/vehicle/v/honda/odyssey. #$1,500/$1,500/$5,000 Honda cash purchase incentive is available select 2013 Civic models/select Fit models/every Pilot model. Honda cash purchase incentive will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes and cannot be combined with special lease or finance offers. *$500 Holiday bonus is available on every new 2013 Civic/Fit model. Holiday bonus will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. ΩLimited time 0.99% finance offer based on new 2013 Honda models and a 24 month finance term available only through Honda Canada Finance Inc. O.A.C. Finance example based on a new 2013 Fit DX 5MT model GE8G2DEX and a 24 month finance term available only through Honda Canada Finance Inc. O.A.C.: $16,075 at 0.99% per annum equals $312.26 bi-weekly for 24 months. Freight and PDI of $1,495 included. Cost of borrowing is $162.52, for a total obligation of $16,237.52. Down payment of $0.00, first bi-weekly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at finance inception. Taxes are extra. Finance on approved credit for qualified customers only. ¥Limited time lease offer based on new 2013 Honda models and a 24 month lease term available only through Honda Canada Finance Inc. O.A.C. Lease example based on a new 2013 Fit DX 5MT model GE8G2DEX and a 24 month lease term available only through Honda Canada Finance Inc. O.A.C.: 0.99% lease APR for 24 months O.A.C. Monthly payment, including freight and PDI, is $303.38. Down payment of $0.00, first monthly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $7,584.50. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. Prices and/or payments shown do not include a PPSA lien registration fee of $13.51 and lien registering agent’s fee of $5.25, which are both due at time of delivery. 48,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometres. **MSRP is $16,935 / $16,075 / $36,630 based on a new 2013 Civic DX FB2E2DEX / Fit DX GE8G2DEX / Pilot LX 2WD YF3H2DE including $1,495/$1,495/$1,640 freight and PDI. £$500 Holiday bonus is available on every new 2013 Civic model. Holiday bonus will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. ΩLimited time lease offer based on a new 2013 Civic DX 5MT model FB2E2DEX. €1.99% lease APR for 60 months O.A.C. Bi-weekly payment, including freight and PDI, is $88.25. Downpayment of $0.00, first bi-weekly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $11,472.50. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. 120,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometer. *Limited time lease offer based on a new 2013 Civic LX model FB2E4DEX. #1.99% lease APR for 60 months O.A.C. Bi-weekly payment, including freight and PDI, is $103.42. Downpayment of $0.00, first bi-weekly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $13,444.60. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. 120,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometer. ¥Additional $11 bi-weekly is a step-up from the Civic LX model bi-weekly payment. Limited time lease offer based on a new 2013 Civic EX model FB2E5DJX. †1.99% lease APR for 60 months O.A.C. Bi-weekly payment, including freight and PDI, is $114.91. Downpayment of $0.00, first bi-weekly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $14,938.30. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. 120,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometer. **MSRP is $16,935 / $19,740 / $21,740 including freight and PDI of $1,495 based on a new 2013 Civic DX 5MT model FB2E2DEX / Civic LX model FB2E4DEX/ Civic EX model FB2E5DJX. PPSA, license, insurance, taxes, and other dealer charges are extra and may be required at the time of purchase. ¥/†/€ /Ω/#/* Prices and/or payments shown do not include a PPSA lien registration fee of $30.31 and lien registering agent’s fee of $5.25, which are both due at time of delivery. #/*/Ω/€/¥/£/**/†/‡ Offers valid from December 13th, 2013 through January 2nd, 2014 at participating Honda retailers. Dealer may sell for less. Dealer trade may be necessary on certain vehicles. 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 Honda retailer for full details.
A20 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
PARENTING
Techniques enrich our experience A number of years ago a child development expert strongly suggested that it was people like me who were causing problems for parents. This message was
delivered at a professional development event in front of my peers and again on a television interview program. The point was that if parents were attached to their children, they would
On Now at The Brick! For more details go instore or online @thebrick.com.
not need hints and tips on what to do when their children are misbehaving. They would instinctively know. In other words, if your child throws a tantrum at the mall and you do not instinctively know how to respond, it says you are not properly connected to your child. In her recent book, The Conscious Parent, Shefali Tsabary suggests that we see parenting our children as a way to raise our own consciousness. She believes that the information needed to raise a child is found within the parentchild relationship. “For this reason,” she says, “parenting is learned not through reading books that offer quick fixes or taking classes that specialize in techniques.The conscious approach embodies values that emanate from the relationship.” There is certainly important value in understanding the importance of being attached to and connected to your child.There is certainly important value in being consciously aware of what we are feeling and learning as we raise our children. But I cannot simply hang up my shingle and go away. I do not believe these concepts need to be separated and can’t understand why these professionals believe it is an either/or situation. If I believe that good nutrition is essential to
Kathy Lynn
Parenting Today health and I have a history of eating that doesn’t mean that I can simply walk into a store, buy some food and know what to do with it. I will read books, take courses and learn how to prepare a nutritious meal. I find it frustrating and demeaning that professionals taking a different look at child-raising do not include or consider the traditional books and courses that have been helping and supporting parents for the past decades. Parenting speakers respect the concepts of attachment and consciousness.We may use slightly different language but we know that parents need to understand the importance of attachment, of the connection between themselves and their children. And we certainly understand that nothing teaches us more about ourselves than raising our children. So where is the line? How do we work together to
support, educate and inform parents? I believe it is a question of respect.Those of us who are running courses, delivering keynotes and workshops and writing books, newsletters and blogs about child-raising are offering an excellent service to parents and more particularly to children who need quality parenting. In The Conscious Parent the author suggests that “traditionally the relationship between parent and child has been hierarchical and linear: the parent issues rules and orders like a military general, and children either obey or find themselves punished.” She suggests that the relationship between parent and child is paramount, not specific techniques. I would suggest first that certainly in any material I have written about discipline I have discussed the difference between discipline and punishment and that punishment is not an effective way to raise children. I would also suggest that knowing some respectful techniques for healthy childraising actually frees parents to focus on the relationship and to be conscious about what is motivating both them and their kids. I would finally suggest, and it is obvious from the title of my first book, Who’s in Charge Anyway?, that I would not want to suggest that parents who take charge
UP TO 67% OFF!
64% OFF!
Canadiana ceramic fry pans with enviro-friendly ceramic coating, PFOA and PTFE Free. Safe for induction stovetops. 24cm/9.5” Canadiana fry pan. List: $139.00. Now $44.99! 28cm/11” Canadiana fry pan. List: $149.00. Now $49.99!
47% OFF! Ring in the
75% OFF! Our 11pc SteelChef cookware set features a brushed/
polished stainless steel exterior finish that makes this cookware a favourite in contemporary kitchens. Stainless steel handles and lids. Encapsulated base, induction compatible, dishwasher safe. Contents: 1.5L, 2L, 3L & 4L saucepans, 5L Dutch oven, 24cm/9.5” fry pan, 5 s/s covers. Bonus - 4pc measuring cup set. List: $649.99.
$15999
20pc Greenwich flatware set. List: $69.99.
$2499
73% OFF! EcoPro fry pan - 2 pack. Featuring a durable
New Year! Set of 2 mini cocktail shakers - red & blue. List: $16.99.
ceramic interior that performs like a non-stick surface yet is completely PFOA and PTFE free. Induction compatible. List: $229.99.
$899 83% OFF!
$5999
1L Fusion5 sauté pan with cover and lifetime warranty. $149.99.
$2499
Set includes: 20cm/8” & 24cm/9.5”
SPECIAL!
8pc steak knife set with stainless steel blades. $23.99.
$1699 DECEMBER 26TH TO 31ST ONLY AT:
NORTH VANCOUVER
MING Wo Cookware Capilano Mall 35 – 935 Marine Dr. Pearsons Home Hardware 1329 Lonsdale Ave.
WEST VANCOUVER
Herzog Crystal Park Royal 741 Park Royal Mall North
Information & dealers: 1-800-A NEW-POT or www.paderno.com. Not all locations open Sunday. Quantities limited, please be early. Sale items may not be exactly as shown.
of their responsibility to raise their children are acting like military generals. But they do understand that as the adult in the relationship, they have the task of raising the children. I appreciate that all parenting authors would agree that it is never appropriate to just let kids figure it out on their own or do whatever they wish or want. I am simply suggesting that adding tips, techniques and concepts into the mix is a positive and enriching move. Kathy Lynn is a professional speaker and author ofWho’s In Charge Anyway?, But Nobody Told Me I’d Ever Have to Leave Home and Vive la Différence. If you want to read more, sign up for her informational newsletter at parentingtoday.ca.
Kids Stuff RED RIDING HOOD Deep Cove Stage Society presents a pantomime with all the usual jokes, pranks and bellylaughs for the whole family (suitable for children ages six and up) Dec. 27, 28, 30, Jan. 2 and 3, 7:30 p.m.; Dec. 26, 28, 29, Jan. 4, 3:30 p.m. at 4360 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver. $14. 604-9293200 deepcovestage.com. PETER PAN A pantomime performance Jan. 16-18 and 23-25 at 7:30 p.m. with matinees Jan. 18 and 25 at 2 p.m. at St. Martin’s Hall, 195 East Windsor Rd., North Vancouver. $17/$13/$10. 604-767-0665 GLENEAGLES STORYTIME A free drop-in program for families with children ranging in age from newborn to six Wednesdays, 10-10:30 a.m. at Gleneagles Community Centre, 6262 Marine Dr., West Vancouver. 604-9257408 westvanlibrary.ca YOUNG MOTHERS PROGRAM For mothers 24 years old and younger, Wednesdays, 12:30-2:30 p.m. at John Braithwaite Community Centre, 145 West First St., North Van. Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email information for your non-profit, by donation or nominal fee event to listings@ nsnews.com.To post online, go to nsnews.com/Events.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A21
(604) 985-8738
colonywarehouse.com
SERVICE, SELECTION, VALUE - SINCE 1969
BOXING WEEK SPECIALS DYSON AM01 HOT/COOL FANS
KITCHENAID DISHWASHERS
WHIRLPOOL DISHWASHERS
$199.99 - LIMITED STOCK
PRICED FROM $599.99+
PRICED FROM $349.99
WHIRLPOOL SMOOTH TOP RANGES
SAMSUNG WASHER/DRYER SETS
LG WASHER/DRYER SETS
PRICED FROM $499.99+
PRICED FROM $1299.99+
PRICED FROM $1199.99+
DOOR CRASHER DEAL
RECEIVE 75% OFF SELECT SINGLE MATTRESSES!
CLEARANCE ITEMS
MORE DEALS IN STORE
ADDITIONAL 10% OFF! SEE CURRENT LIST ONLINE
SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION
SERVICE, SELECTION, VALUE - SINCE 1969
(604) 985-8738
colonywarehouse.com 1075 Roosevelt Crescent, North Vancouver
Mon-Sat: 9am-5:30 * Sun: noon-4pm
Winner of the Best North Shore Appliance Store Award - Three years in a row
A22 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
PEAKE & RICHMOND LTD. Insurance Specialists Serving the North Shore for Over 50 Years
Our mission is to provide our clients with the best coverage available. We cover your home and personal property, commercial, auto and travel.
Wishing you a Merry Christmas, from Our Family To Yours! Dundarave
2435 Marine Drive, West Vancouver
604-922-0181
www.pr-insurance.ca
SEASON’S GREETINGS YOUR
BLUE BUS Merry Christmas!
Samra Brothers Roong Team wishes you a
warm & happy Christmas season from our family to yours.
West Vancouver Transit
604-985-7777
westvancouver.ca
604-946-4333 • www.samrabrosroong.com
Merry Christmas
Wishing you a safe and Merry Christmas from our family to yours
Davies Pharmacy | Home Healthcare 1401 St. Georges Ave., North Vancouver 604-985-1481 • www.daviesrx.com HOURS:MONDAY-FRIDAY:9AM-6PM | SATURDAY:9AM-5PM | SUNDAY&HOLIDAYS:CLOSED
Your friendly neighbours on Fell
Drive with care and keep the rubber on the road 604.985.8265 212 Fell Ave, North Van
from your
District of North Vancouver Fire & Rescue Services 1110 Lynn Valley Road North Vancouver CITY OF NORTH VANCOUVER FIRE DEPARTMENT
Celebrate Safely ...keep your tires on the road! Merry Christmas from our family to yours.
Your City Firefighter Team reminds you to celebrate safely!
880 15th St W. North Vancouver 604-985-9131 fountaintire.com
604-980-5021
Children laughing, people passing, meeting smile after smile.
Merry Christmas and a happy New Year from our family to yours. BRITISH PAC I FIC PROPERTI ES WEST VANCOUVER SI NC E 1931
www.britishproperties.com
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A23
SEASON’S GREETINGS Wishing you holiday happiness wishing you joy and good cheer wishing you days of prosperity throughout the coming year. MERRY CHRISTMAS
Now Delivers Wishing our Patrons and Community a Warm and Safe Holiday Season! Mythos Greek Taverna
1979
110 Fell Avenue NORTH VANCOUVER
604-988-2239 www.derosaauto.ca
24.95
Oil and Filter Christmas Special With Free Safety Inspection!
For most vehicles (plus tax & fees).
1811 Lonsdale Ave North Vancouver • 604 984-7411
since
FAMILY RUN BUSINESS SINCE 1978
$
from John, Ryan & Iain
Expires Dec 31, 2013
CELEBRATE SAFELY THIS SEASON
Ride‘em toys… for under the tree! And, now in – the new PlasmaBike! Unique design encourages balance and coordination for 18 months & up.
$
7995
© 2011 Charm Co
BOOMERS & ECHOES
NEW AND QUALITY CONSIGNMENT
Kids & Maternity Ltd.
1985 Lonsdale Ave., North Van. 604.984.6163
We perform carseat checks (corner of 20th & Lonsdale ) FREE PARKING for you. Call for appointment. Serving families for over 25 years • www.boomersandechos.com
Wishing you a Safe and
Wishing all a very Merry Christmas
Happy Holiday Season with Family and Friends
~ Jordan Sturdy, MLA
604.876.4604
http://www.krguttersystems.ca
Celebrate Safely and have a wonderful Holiday Season
JORDAN STURDY, MLA WEST VANCOUVER-SEA TO SKY 6392 Bay Street West Vancouver, BC V7W 2G9
Hollyburn Funeral Home 1807 Marine Drive, West Van
Ph. 604-922-1153
604-922-1221
%"!!) (!'$*&#$+ NORTH SHORE BC NEW DEMOCRATS
TERRY PLATT PRESIDENT
West Vancouver - Capilano
MICHAEL CHARROIS PRESIDENT
North Vancouver - Lonsdale
JIM HANSON PRESIDENT
North Vancouver - Seymour
Season’s Greetings and Happy New Year from your North Shore BC New Democrats
INSURANCE BROKERS - EST. 1906
Also offering Event Liability Insurance
Enjoy your holiday season & celebrate safely. Providing Home, Auto & Business Insurance to the North Shore for over 100 years
604-988-1148
1900 Lonsdale Ave., North Van www.ibib.ca
A24 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
BOXING DAY BLOWOUT!
ENTIRE STORE ON SALE! 75%
OFF
UP TO
NO RAINCHECKS • BOXING DAY-DOORS OPEN AT 8AM • WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
Darcy Sofa
Lori Sofa
Reversible Sofa Ottoman with 2 pillows, Dark Grey Linen Also available in Black Bonded Leather
$
449
50
REG. $899
1/2 PRICE
Rockstar
Queen Size Bed Frame
$
299
REG. $799
SAVE $500
Eurotop Mattress
$
Sofa available in 5 different colours
119
$
Each piece
ANY SIZE SAVE UP TO 75%
REG. $799
Sofa with Armrest
188
3 Piece Bonded Leather Sofa, Loveseat & Chair
$
699
REG. $1,699
OVER 60% OFF SAVE $1000
Royal Bedroom Set
Click Clack Sofa Bed
$
299
Bedford
Bedroom Set includes Dresser, Mirror, Headboard, Footboard, Rails and 1 Night Table. Chest also available.
REG. $752
75% OFF
COMPARE AT $752
VANCOUVER
$
799
REG. $1,999
SAVE $1200 RICHMOND
Bunk Bed
Can be converted into Twin Beds
$
248
REG. $549
LOWEST PRICE OF THE YEAR home life SURREY
“Discover the Difference” 2967 Grandview Hwy. 11930 Bridgeport Rd. 13251 72nd Ave.
www.jrfurniture.biz
13486 76 Ave.
604-433-4426 604-244-8384 604-590-1541 604-591-8813
No rainchecks, selection may vary by location. In stock merchandise available while supplies last. No price adjustments on previous purchases. Errors may occur in print. We reserve the right to correct such errors. Sale ends January 1, 2014.
TASTE
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A25
NOTABLE POTABLES Columnist Tim Pawsey suggests wine pairings for a turkey dinner online at nsnews.com.
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE
to EXCEPTIONAL CUISINE
Trends of the past year revisited
Chris Dagenais
The Dish
A shift is underway in Vancouver dining, one that has been developing for years. Those who were watching the scene closely in 2013 might have noticed that in the midst of this shift, the North Shore emerged as an instructive microcosm, shedding light on what is happening at ground level to affect the change. You see, the type of experience that Vancouverites seek from a restaurant is changing. To gourmands, Vancouver may intuitively seem like the ideal city for fine dining. It is spectacularly nestled between ocean and mountains, providing prized locations for restaurateurs. Its raw goods, from some of the best seafood on the planet to glorious seasonal produce, are a chef’s dream. To boot, it has a thriving wine industry with new, award-winning labels emerging yearly. And yet, despite this enviable mix, the list of fine dining restaurant closures in our city over the last several years is a hefty tome that includes the efforts of many highly accomplished players in the culinary world.With a few notable exceptions, fine dining establishments in Vancouver have found the market exceedingly tough. Some attribute the shift away from fine dining to
2N5(\a 0;O\(,N ,[ DPVb\& ,N ';+ ^&\\N VN $X\ +X,$, ,N $,+A &\PP& ,VP& $X;$ 7;N 9\ $(;7\5 9;7R $, aV$XVN X,"(& ,[ $X\V( 7("&X= I;&,N CP\BO ,[ Two Rivers Specialty Meats (photos above) sells ethically sourced meats. -JG. CKD'D) CINDY GOODMAN, LISA KING the economy. Indeed, in a challenging financial climate it is hard to support a $150 per head dining proposition. However, the economy (and attendant factors like disposable consumer income) ebbs and flows, while the retreat from fine dining has remained steady. I believe that other factors are at work here, non-
❤to Cook? Posh Pantry has what you’re looking for, even if it’s just…inspiration!
Come to Shop. Come to Gather. Come to Cook
monetary influences that account for our changing behaviours. Among these factors are the phenomena of savvy diners and hyperspecialization.The North Shore is a thriving haven for both of these trends and is, in my opinion, reflective of the culture of dining in our city today. Take Olives on Tap,
for instance, the olive oil specialist on West 16th Street that I have come to frequent since my first visit back in July. Owner Andrew Cameron provides consumers and chefs with exceptional quality oils that can be traced back to within four hours of their crush, a remarkable feat in a marketplace rife with
Boxing Day BLOWOUT!! Open Every day! Little shop with big discounts:
Mon-Sat 10am-6pm: Sunday 11am-4pm
All-Clad, Le Creuset, Maxwell & Williams, KitchenAid and much more! Gift Cards Available Start your New Year looking forward to new recipes, enroll in aClasses cooking class with your friends! Cooking offered weekly
CHECK US OUT ON FACEBOOK Just over the bridge!
4548 Hastings St., Burnaby (Just east of Willingdon) 604.428.3700 www.poshpantry.ca
fraudulent products.The Olives on Tap tasting room is groundbreaking in its capacity to supply both a unique consumer sampling experience as well as an educational overview of how best to use olive oil in culinary applications. I’ll often start a meal plan See Cuisine page 27
A26 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
X O B
Y A D G IN
E L A S
CANADIAN
LOBSTER TAILS
raw frozen 112 g Limit 8 per customer
2
REG
6.99ea
FOR
MEADOWVALE
6
BUTTER
salted 1 lb Limit 3 per customer
98 OCEAN WISE
REG
4.99ea
free
If we are selling it today, it’s ground fresh in-store today. Limit 4 per customer
FRESH IN-STORE MADE
min 155 g Limit 8 per customer
each
buy one get one
FRESH EXTRA LEAN GROUND BEEF
ANGUS BEEF OR LOCAL CHICKEN KABOBS
2
99
REG
4.99ea
4
FOR
10
LOCAL WILD HALIBUT FILLETS
previously frozen Limit 5 lbs per customer
FRESH ST EXCLUSIVE
SPINACH & ARTICHOKE DIP
WEST VANCOUVER
REG
5.49ea
SCHNEIDER’S
SLICED SIDE BACON assorted 375 g - 500 g
00
15930 FRASER HWY
FLEETWOOD, SURREY
2
89 /100 g
3 99 2
99 each
300 g Limit 2 per customer
GREAT DEALS + DEMOS 1650 MARINE DR.
REG
4.49/100g
REG
6.99ea
N O Y A D E N O
each
LY
6 2 C E D am - pm 9 7
TH
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A27
TASTE
Cuisine influenced by culture From page 25
$11
99 +GST
Child $599 Toddler $299 4-10 yrs
3 & under
includes bottomless pop! CL-AYCE4x4NS
following a visit there. With Cameron’s elixirs in hand, I might next pick up a case of organic, dry-aged meats from Two Rivers Specialty Meats, now offering limited, direct-toconsumer sales.Two Rivers is a North Shore butcher and distributor of 100-percent ethically raised, limited production meats from B.C. farms that has earned a loyal following among chefs for the flavour of its products and the sustainable practices of its partner farms. With my shopping list nearing completion, I might consider a beverage to accompany my meal. I’d likely head to Old Dollarton Highway where I’d find two purveyors of small batch, seasonal craft beer: Bridge Brewing and Deep Cove Brewers. From the former I’d be inclined to pick up a bomber of North Shore Pale Ale, a hop-forward but nevertheless rich and toasty, food-friendly beer, while Deep Cove’s Quick Wit Wheat Ale, with its citrusy effervescence, is an ideal aperitif. Where I once had to rely on a fine dining restaurant to provide me with the very best foodstuffs available in our market (at two to three times the cost of buying it directly) I can now find for myself the very same
ingredients that are being used by Vancouver’s best chefs. More than this, I am also able to learn how to use these ingredients just like my favourite chefs do. Chefs are heavily influenced by culinary traditions from all over the world. In Vancouver, it is not unusual to find Southeast Asian, Italian, Indian, or South American cooking techniques and ingredients co-existing on a single menu. And frankly, there is no better way to familiarize oneself with the influences that sway our favourite chefs than to sample key ingredients transformed at the hands of those who have mastered their particular culinary tradition. With this in mind, a place like the small, familyowned Hanoi Bistro on East Second Street becomes a must-visit destination.With the use of simple herbs and spices, all widely available in local shops, co-owners and chefs Ken and Thuy Nguyen transform everyday ingredients into remarkably tasty, fragrant dishes in the Northern Vietnamese tradition. For me, each visit to Hanoi Bistro, and countless other specialty restaurants of the North Shore, yields new insights into the best uses of my favourite ingredients. Like many other people,
Y ANY TIME AVAILABLE ANY DA Horseshoe Bay
6640 Royal Avenue, West Vancouver
604.913.0994
North Vancouver
giardino
1660 Pemberton Avenue
604.980.9993
Pizzeria
The only authentic Italian pizzeria on the North Shore Season’s Greetings! CHRISTMAS GIFT
From: Giardino Pizzeria To: The North Shore Locals:
FREE PIZZETTA!
1(V5Z\ 1(\aVNZ 0,O+;NB ,aN\( I;&,N )$(;$$,N 5V&+P;B& &,O\ ,[ $X\ P,7;P 7,O+;NB4& +(,5"7$= -JG. CKD'D PAUL MCGRATH I am increasingly absorbing the rich culinary culture that is flourishing in our city by visiting hyper-specialized champions of select ingredients and traditions. A visit to a celebrated new high-end restaurant now mainly serves to inspire me to learn for myself about the
influences and ingredients that inform its menu. Chris Dagenais served as a manager for several restaurants downtown and on the North Shore. A self-described wine fanatic, he earned his sommelier diploma in 2001. Contact: hungryontheshore@gmail.com.
Try any one of our STONE OVEN AUTHENTIC Pizzettas on Christmas Day as our Christmas gift to you! WE ARE OPEN FROM 12 NOON TO 8 PM ON CHRISTMAS DAY. • VALID ONLY ON CHRISTMAS DAY • DINE IN ONLY • LIMIT ONE PER TABLE • WHILE QUANTITIES LAST Check out our menu at: www.giardinopizzeria.com 115 W 15 Street North Vancouver 604.770.4484 Email: info@giardinopizzeria.com
Books
Southern classics among short list
■TheWhite Spot Cookbook, by Kerry Gold, Figure 1 Publishing, 158 pages, $24.95 What began in 1928 has grown into Canada’s longest-running restaurant chain.While staying true to their roots, the chefs at White Spot have also evolved the menu to reflect current tastes.Their signature hamburger with its Triple-O sauce remains a key menu item but is joined with Prawn Risotto and Halibut with Black Bean Sauce. This book features classic dishes and specialty items that have shown up as seasonal promotions over the past decade as well as recipes from the White Spot menu. The one secret you won’t find, though, is how to make the unique Triple-O sauce. That one is reserved for only a handful of staff and
is actually made off-site and delivered to the restaurants. ■Treme, by Lolis Eric Elie, Chronicle Books, 240 pages, $34.95 This companion book to the HBO series offers much more than a look behind the scenes. Central to the book is the extensive collection of recipes presented from the perspective of the characters of Treme and special guest chefs. Covering a full range of New Orleans cuisine, the recipes are a celebration of
the rich tradition of food from the Crescent City. The recipes are presented by 13 chefs, both real and fictional, but there is nothing make-believe about the meals they offer. Detailed instructions on how to make authentic gumbo or bisque are mixed in alongside Cajun traditional meals and contemporary takes on heritage recipes. ■ 200 Skills Every Cook Must Have, by Clara Paul and EricTreuille, Firefly Books, 256 pages, $29.95
There is a lot more to food preparation than just cutting and measuring. Being able to effectively bring the most out of the ingredients often requires special techniques and they can make the difference between just OK and delicious. Clara Paul and Eric Treuille guide readers through 200 different skills that will change the way you cook. Each one is presented with descriptions of the tools and ingredients, the method and some expert tips. Many of the skills are shown with accompanying photographs. From the best way to crack open a crab and extract the meat to the best way to peel an avocado, they provide a wealth of valuable information that will make your time in the kitchen more efficient and more fun. Terry Peters tpeters@nsnews.com
Tired of feeling fit and healthy?
It’s time to check out PROGRAM5000 Men, why deny yourselves the simple pleasures of life –that lonely cream pie, that unwanted box of chocolate truffles? Program5000 is an intensive 7-day plan guaranteed to extend your waistline, raise your blood pressure and get you noticed. Simply consume 5000 calories a day for just one week –you won’t believe the difference! Why share a queen-size bed with her when you can have a king-size one to yourself. And who needs a Smart car anyway?
BEFORE
SATISFIED CUSTOMER
“I’MSOENVIOUSOF ROY’SNEWBREASTS.” Mrs.G.Jones, Ambleside
AFTER
Special Early Bird Offer!
Sign up this week and get two chins for the price of one.
PROGRAM5000 The Proof of the Pudding is in the Eating
A28 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Registration Guide
Diverse mix making music together ROSALIND DUANE rduane@nsnews.com
Sylvie Lanmark-Kaye has been playing the clarinet “forever.” Not surprisingly she is a fan of bandleader and clarinetist Benny Goodman and loves listening to jazz and classical music. She also loves playing it. “It’s really fun, it takes you away to another space. And it’s great for that right side of the brain,” she says. Playing music, any music, is “really soothing for the soul,” she adds. A musician for more than 30 years, Lanmark-Kaye is also a member of the North Vancouver Community Band, and she is the band president. “Our mandate is just to bring music to as many people who are interested in it and share with our love of music and enjoy putting back into the community like we do,” says LanmarkKaye of the band. Community members in Lynn Valley started the North Vancouver Community Band in 1992. It was originally an alladult band, but eventually dropped the word “adult” from its name and now accepts musicians of all ages.The group currently meets at Carson Graham secondary and has about 35 members who range in age from 13 to 78.The diversity of age is a fact that
distinguishes them from other bands. “It’s just the love, the passion of playing music and sharing the same interest with a group of people,” says Lanmark-Kaye of why such a variety of musicians are drawn to the band. “When you’re playing with a large group it’s almost like a team effort.You have to listen to each other and try to maintain the balance,” she explains. “It’s a neat challenge and it’s very satisfying to hear what all of us together can produce.” Some of the group members have played semi-professionally in their younger days or are currently playing in other bands. Some are retired and some are students. “We have 10 secondary school students and they just mix right in,” says Lanmark-Kaye. She talks about one family whose son joined the band and the parents soon followed even though they couldn’t really play an instrument. Members don’t have to have an instrument to join this band. “Three years later they are playing amazing,” says Lanmark-Kaye of the parents who picked up instruments the band had on hand and learned to play them. The band plays a wide range of music from intermediate to advanced, and Lanmark-Kaye explains they are not a beginner
group per se but they do welcome everyone from those who are just starting to those who have played for a long time. Each year, the band performs at a variety of community events. In the past the group has performed at the Vancouver Marathon, Lynn Valley Days, Bright Lights at Stanley Park, and many other community events.They also regularly play at seniors centres and community centres. “We’re really a group that wants to put back into the community,” explains says Lanmark-Kaye. Recently, the band was awarded a grant that will allow it to bring in some professionals to work with various sections of the band. “Everyone’s there for the love of the music,” says Lanmark-Kaye. “Together we’re growing and getting a better and better sound.” The North Vancouver Community Band is always looking for new members. Anyone who is interested can drop by to observe for free.The fee to join the band is $80 a year for students, and $200 a year for adults.There are also some subsidies available for those who cannot afford the membership fee.The band meets Thursdays at Carson Graham secondary from 7:30-9:15 p.m. For more information visit the website at northvancommunityband. com.
F\P !;55P\? )BPbV\ G;NO;(R>H;B\? 2&XP\B 1VZZ\(&$;[[ ;N5 LVN; L;bVN ;(\ +;($ ,[ $X\ E,($X #;N7,"b\( 0,OO"NV$B 1;N5? aX,&\ O\O9\(& (;NZ\ VN ;Z\ [(,O 8] $, WU= 'X\ 9;N5 ;77\+$& ;NB,N\ aX, a;N$& $, T,VN (\Z;(5P\&& ,[ ;Z\ ,( ;9VPV$B= CKD'D PAUL MCGRATH
NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION lose 25 - 30lbs in just 12 weeks!
Join our new TF+ weight loss program or 90 days to a new you challenge!
2121 Lonsdale Ave North Vancouver BC, V7M 2K6 afkinfo@sd44.ca gordonsmithgallery.ca
Register now for Winter art classes! We are excited to offer some new programs: Teen Portfolio Preparation (Grades 10-12) Masterful Mixed Media (Grades 3-5) as well as many others! Registration is open.
Please register online at gordonsmithgallery.ca and click Artists for Kids Programs
weight ONLY 2 spaces left!days Sign upchallenge! today and
GET 10 FREE bootcamps for Christmas!
The most flexible, affordable and reliable training studio in North Vancouver.
Feel better,, Look better,, Live better Exclusive Personal Training Studio
829 W. 15th Street, North Vancouver 604.990.3476 • www.teamfitness.ca
PRE BOOK ONLINE FOR YOUR HOLIDAY EVENT NORTH SHORE TAXI.COM
604.987.7171
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A29
Registration Guide
Kids come together for lights, cameras and action ROSALIND DUANE rduane@nsnews.com
Sarah-Jane Redmond is the instructor for a new North Shore acting program, but she doesn’t teach kids how to act. “I’m not teaching them how to act,” she explains. “I’m teaching them how to be truthful in front of the camera. How to just be themselves in a particular situation but not layer that with acting.” Redmond is a professional actor herself and says when adults act they can find ways to manipulate certain situations a little bit easier, but kids are so in the moment that it just has to come naturally. “I think it’s so lovely when you see an honest, truthful moment from a child rather than something that is predicted,” she says. In January, Redmond will start a new 12-week program called Let’s Make a Movie that is run out of the Music Box art facility in West Vancouver. The program is a partnership with the District of West Vancouver. A group for kids ages 9-12 will meet on Wednesday afternoons and a group for kids ages 13-17 will meet on Thursday afternoons.
Although it’s an acting program, participants will also do exercises like improv, script writing, storytelling, and character building in the first quarter of the program. “It’s a chance for them to express themselves and be creative, but it’s also a chance for me to get to know them as well because what I’m really trying to do with the program is find out what’s unique about each child and really nurture that and have the best of them come out,” says Redmond. After the first quarter, the kids will write the script for a short film they will make before the end of the program. The kids will help build the characters, workshop the script, rehearse the script, come up with the costumes, help with props, etc. They will then film their short movie. A screening for parents will take place at the end of the program when participants will also be able to take home a copy of the film they made. Redmond says the program is suited to kids who are interested in learning how to express themselves more and who want to build their confidence. She says the curriculum will try to embrace who each child is individually and
C\$\( G"X;N$, (\7,(5& $X\ ;7$V,N ;& VN&$("7$,( );(;X>I;N\ *\5O,N5 (\X\;(&\& ; &7\N\ aV$X F;55V\ F"PP\N ;N5 2NN; -"PO;N? ;N5 K\V5V !VP&,N X;N5P\& $X\ 7P;+9,;(5 VN $X\ G\$4& F;R\ ; F,bV\ +(,Z(;O= CKD'D PAUL MCGRATH take them out of their comfort zone a little bit but not too much. “We really want to make the program fun, that’s our main goal,” says Redmond.
WEST VANCOUVER
COMMUNITY CENTRES
FITNESS
OPTIONS GET THE RIGHT FIT
FOR YOU!
Whether you’re a busy mom, high school student, professional on the run or new retiree, we understand that your fitness options need to fit your unique lif tyle and busy schedule! lifestyle
westvancouverrec.ca
TO FIND THE BEST OPTION FOR YOU:
VISIT westvancouverrec.ca OPTIONS PICK UP A BROCHURE S ION OPT S N CALL 604-925-7270 O TI OP ASK OUR STAFF! WEST VANCOUVER COMMUNITY CENTRES
FITNESS SS TNE GET THE RIGHT FIT
VERS OU NCO NTRE T VAITY CE UN WES MM CO
FOR YOU! FI ! SSOR YOU E F TN IGHT U! FI R
R FOR ONLY $35 PER MONTH* VERES FIT HT OUNT RIG NC CE THE NTH* GET MO VAITY PER T N $35 ESMMU ONLY WO FOR FIT C
GE
TH
E
R FO
T
R FO
O
NLY
YO R
5 $3
PE
H*
NT
O
M
*Adult Wave Pass
westvancouverrec.ca
604-925-7270
c.ca erre 0 ccouv tvan -72ca7 wes -925 ec..c 0 604 uverr 27 co 5-7 n 2 va st -9 e 4 w
lt Wave *Adu
lt du *A
Pass
ve W Wa
ss Pa
60
WE’RE RENAMING THE WAVE! We’re looking for a new name for the Wave Pass, please help us choose by voting on your top pick:
1. Energy Card 2. Fit Pass leisureguide@west Send us your votes to: leisur leisureguide@westvancouver.ca, or drop them off with our front desk staff at the Gleneagles or West Vancouver Community Centres by January 20. Each entry will be entered to win a 10-visit drop-in card!
facebook.com/westvanrec twitter.com/westvanrec
For more information about the Let’s Make a Movie program, log on to webreg. westvancouver.ca, call 604-925-7270 or visit theyoungtalent.com.
A30 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
SNEAK - A - PEEK
SNEAK - A - PEEK
STARTS THURS. DEC. 26th Dec 24 all stores close at 6 pm!
SNEAK - A - PEEK
50”
46”
LG 50” PLASMA TV
PN4500, 720P 600HZ, TRUSLIM FRAME, USB INPUT FOR PICTURE/AUDIO PLAYBACK
ssave ave $1100 00
498*
$
801905
†Electronics disposal surcharge applies. Provinces of Alberta, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Manitoba & Ontario. See store for details.
*after savings
3 DVD’s
†
50” ssave ave $1180 80
SONY 46” LED TV R450A, FULL HD 1080P, MOTIONFLOW XR 120, SCREEN MIRRORING PS (MOVIES, MUSIC AND APPS E FROM YOUR SMARTPHONE CAN NOW BE VIEWED ON R YOUR TV) USB INPUT FOR MOVIES, MUSIC, PHOTO PLAYBACK 599840
*after savings
5 BLU-RAYS
$
$
†
BOXING DAY
ssave ave $2 00 200
SONY 50” LED TV S
548*
$
Dec 26
R450A, FULL HD 1080P, R MOTIONFLOW XR 120, S SCREEN MIRRORING ((MOVIES, MUSIC AND APPS PS F NE FROM YOUR SMARTPHONE C CAN NOW BE VIEWED ON Y R YOUR TV) USB INPUT FOR MOVIES, MUSIC, PHOTO PLAYBACK 242642 P
regular store opening hours, all stores close at 8 pm
598*
$
*after savings
See online for details
†
1 DAYONLY DEC. 26
TH
save$20
29
PSN PLUS 12 MONTH SUBSCRIPTION CARD
$
reg retail, $49.99 each, 720699
97 after savings
limit 1 per customer
CUISINART STAINLESS STEEL 11 PIECE RED COOKWARE SET each, 228571 6845910965
SK 16GB SANDISK USB STICK
ssave ave $2 50 250
SE PACKS ENERGIZER MAX DENSE
6
$
876597
16GB SD $8.88
7 AA20/AAA12, AFTER DEC 28TH $9.97
88
228571 6845910965
777
14997*
$
$
limit 4, after limit $15.99
while quantities last
*after savings
CHEER LIQUID ORIGINAL GAIN LIQUID 4.43L CHEER POWDER 4.8KG OR GAIN POWDER 3.8KG
BOUNTY PAPER TOWELS 12=19 ROLLSS
OR
1.39
4.43L,
343431 3700082095
EACH
3647 3700023017 213647
1248
CHARMIN ULTRA BATHROOM TISSUE SELECTED VARIETIES, 20=60 ROLLS 102874 37000086813
$
limit 4, after limit $19.97
limit 4, after limit $20.87
limit 4, after limit $15.47
SCOPE CLASSIC 1L MOUTHWASH
$
limit 4, after limit $4.46
50
%
OFF
1098
$
selected varieties and sizes 183506 5610000320
296
1498
$
BOOST
6 X 237 ML MEAL
REPLACEMENT
selected varieties 651535 36000036435
697
$
limit 4, after limit $10.97
HUGGIES OR PAMPERS SUPER BIG PACK DIAPERS
NICORETTE 2 MG GUM 100/105’S LOZENGES 88/96’S OR QUICK MIST
SIZE N-6 , 58-128’S 365893 36000036435
2197
$
limit 4, after limit $29.97
selected varieties and sizes 228316 6024536744 2283 316 602 6024536 4536744 74
$4 OFF COUPON IN-STORE Pharmacy stores only
SEASONAL CLEARANCE
Prices effective Thursday, December 26, 2013 to Thursday, January 2, 2014, unless otherwise stated, while stock lasts.
2697
$
limit 4, after limit $30.97
some exceptions apply
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. © 2013 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.
SPORT
Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - North Shore News - A31
2013 SPORT YEAR IN REVIEW: JULY TO DECEMBER Read the continuation of this series in Sunday’s edition of the North Shore News.
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE
to THE GAMES PEOPLE PLAY
F\O9\(& ,[ $X\ 2(ZBP\ CV+\(& &\NV,( ZV(P& &,77\( $\;O 7\P\9(;$\ $X\V( aVN ,N X,O\ &,VP ;[$\( 9\;$VNZ $X\ D;R 1;B 1(\;R\(& VN $X\ +(,bVN7V;P 222 7X;O+V,N&XV+ MN;P +P;B\5 I"N\ 8 ;$ E,($X #;N7,"b\(4& JN$\( *Vb\( C;(R= I\&&V\ 1P;N7X;(5 ^;(O& (;V&\5A &7,(\5 $X\ ,NPB Z,;P ,[ $X\ Z;O\= CKD'D PAUL MCGRATH
2013 SportYear in Review: January to June
ANDY PREST aprest@nsnews.com
Show stoppers
In part 1 of our look back at the year in sports we scan the headlines from January to June to see who was scoring on the Shore. Snowboarders were in peak form as they prepared themselves for the 2014 Sochi Olympics and North Shore high school kids were busy showing that they are the most talented bunch in the province. Merry Christmas from the North Shore News sports department.We hope you stuffed yourself with turkey and are ready to loosen the belt a couple of notches while you relive these great moments. Bon appetit! January The Vancouver North West Giants often have a chance to score the
first entry in these North Shore sports year in review articles with their annual participation in the Mac’s Midget AAA Tournament and 2013 was no different as the North Shore/ Burnaby-based squad won the whole shebang for the second time in team history on NewYear’s Day. The Giants claimed the tournament’s massive trophy with a thrilling double overtime 3-2 win over the Carolina Junior Hurricanes in the final played at Calgary’s Scotiabank Saddledome. Vancouver trailed 2-1 late in the game but a goal from New Westminster’s Brandon Del Grosso with just 13 seconds left in the third period sent it into overtime. Both goaltenders shut the door in the first overtime — West Vancouver’s Bo Didur stopped 32 of the 34 shots he faced in the game
— before West Vancouver’s Jackson Cressey ended it with the championshipwinning goal five minutes into the second overtime period. The annual event is known as the best midget hockey tournament in the world. In March the Giants continued their dominance of the B.C. Major Midget League by claiming their fifth straight championship with a 2-1 series win over the Okanagan Rockets at Burnaby Winter Club. The Giants, with 15 of their 20 players hailing from the North Shore, clinched the series with a thrilling 1-0 win in the deciding game. North Vancouver’s Anthony Conti tipped in a power play point shot in the second period for the game’s only goal and Didur shut the door in goal to clinch the championship with a shutout win.
••• North Vancouver’s Hannah Miller suited up for Team Canada as they scored a thrilling 2-1 victory over the United States in the gold medal game at the 2013 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 Women’s World Championship held Jan. 5 in Heinola, Finland. Quebec City’s Catherine Dubois scored with 12.7 seconds left to send the game into overtime and Karly Heffernan of Belleville, Ont. recorded the winner just 40 seconds into the extra frame. At the world championships Miller was the youngest player on the Canadian team and was used as an offensive specialist, racking up a goal and two assists in five games while earning a lot of power play time. The championship final was an epic battle with the United States
taking command early, outshooting the Canadians 20-1 in the first period while taking a 1-0 lead. As the game wore on the Canadians held the Americans off the score sheet long enough to turn things around and pull off their late-game heroics. At the end of it all came that unforgettable tradition of lining up on the blue line while the national anthem plays. “It was the most amazing experience of my life,” said Miller. “I don’t think I’ve ever sung it that loud before.” ••• West Vancouver native Maëlle Ricker won gold at the Snowboard FIS World Championships Jan. 26 in Stoneham, Que., claiming the one title that had so far eluded her in her illustrious career as a snowboard See Local page 32
A32 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
SPORT
Local residents perform well across the board From page 31
going into this season.”
cross racer. Ricker’s trophy case was already stocked with Crystal Globe season-championship awards, numerous World Cup medals and, of course, a shiny hunk of gold won on Cypress Mountain at the 2010 Olympics, but before this year she had never earned gold at the world championships. She placed fourth three times, going all the way back to her first worlds in 1997, and won bronze at the 2005 race in Whistler but never world gold. That changed when the 34-year-old put in a dominant performance in Quebec, finishing as the fastest qualifier before carrying that speed into the six-woman elimination races and coming out on top in the final. Dominique Maltais of Petite-RiviereSt. Francois, Que., finished second to join her teammate on the podium while Norway’s Helene Olafsen won the bronze. “It’s extremely satisfying,” Ricker said of finally winning a world championship. “It’s definitely something that was missing, just not performing on the right day. It was a little bit of a thorn in my side and a big goal
February The Capilano University men’s volleyball team topped off a dramatic turnaround season by winning the PacWest provincial championship tournament and finishing fifth at the CCAA national championships. The Blues earned the provincial title, the team’s first since 2005, by topping No. 1-ranked Douglas College in a five-set thriller in the semifinals before beating No. 2-ranked Vancouver Island University in the final. Rookie head coach Nathan Bennett was named the PacWest coach of the year while fourth-year power hitter Dan Caverly was named MVP of the provincial championships and earned a spot on the first all-star team at the national championships. March Helen Crofts burned up the track for Simon Fraser University at the NCAA Div. 2 indoor track and field national championships in March, winning gold in the women’s 800-metre race.The West Vancouver middle-distance runner left competitors chasing her footprints as she notched a time of 2:05.96 in the final
race at the Birmingham, Ala. track meet. Crofts ended her SFU running career in fine style two months later when she won the 800-m title at the NCAA Div. 2 Outdoor Track and Field Championships held in Pueblo, Colo. Crofts led wire-to-wire, coming home in 2:08.18 to take the win by more than a second. “I couldn’t be happier,” she said, summing up the triumphant finish to her SFU career. “I’m sad to see it go but I’m very happy I’m going to be able to continue training with the team for the foreseeable future. SFU proved to be a really great experience and I definitely wouldn’t have done things differently.” ••• Windsor secondary’s gymnastics team nailed it at the provincial championships held March 7-9 in Powell River, vaulting over the competition to win the boys, girls and combined team titles. At the provincial championships the team was led by a trio of boys who scored allaround podium finishes in their levels. Justin Tan finished first in the boys Level 1 (lowest) all-around competition, Braeden Massullo finished third in Level 2 all-around and Greg
A cONteSt rewArdiNg Our ShArp-eyed reAderS.
AND WIN A $100 DINING GIFT CERTIFICATE! OnC of ?@C aFvCB?>sCmCn?s >n ?@>s >ss=C of ?@C NoB?@ S@oBC NCHs >s no? H@a? >? sCCms. SDo? >? anF Eo= Go=lF bC ?an?al>z>nA Eo=B ?as?C b=Fs Go=B?CsE of =s.
Enter to win by identifying the page number and issue date in an email that should include your name and daytime number to contest@nsnews.com (subject line “Joker”) on or before January 19, 2014. One entry per email address.
Burns placed second in the Level 4 competition. ••• North Vancouver native Manuel OsborneParadis won the national downhill title at the Sport Chek Alpine Canadian Championships in Whistler March 23, capping off a season that showed that his racing career is back to full speed after a few slow years. Osborne-Paradis whipped through the brand new Raven/Ptarmigan downhill course in a time of one minute 1.97 seconds, besting second place finisher Jeffrey Frisch by more than half a second with veteran John Kucera placing third. Manny also showed well in Kvitfjell, Norway on March 2 where he finished fourth in a World Cup downhill, missing the podium by one-hundredth of a second.The results were welcome news for a racer who tore his ACL and broke his fibula in a crash during a World Cup race in January of 2011. This month, Manny again proved he is among the world’s best racers heading into the 2014 Olympics, finishing fourth again in a World Cup race held in Beaver Creek, Colo. April Any NHL debut is special, but circumstances aligned to make West Vancouver’s Max Reinhart’s first game in the big show almost perfect. The 21 year old suited up for the Calgary Flames April 6, playing a regular shift in Rogers Arena against his hometown Canucks with cameras from the famed Hockey Night In Canada catching all the action. “It was honestly everything I dreamed of,” Reinhart told the North Shore News. “I still can’t really put a lot of my emotions into words — I think the best way to describe it was it was pretty much a dream come true.” Friends and family — including his mother Theresa and father Paul, himself a former NHL star — were on hand to see him play. “Growing up the dream was always to play in that building,” Max said. “Obviously as a kid growing up I always wanted to play for Vancouver but I’m not going to complain that I was playing with Calgary.” Max went on to score
K\P\N 0(,[$& RV7R& V$ VN$, XVZX Z\;( VN $X\ 5V&$;N7\ O\5P\B (\P;B ;$ $X\ E022 /Vb= 6 VN5,,( $(;7R ;N5 M\P5 7X;O+V,N&XV+& VN F;(7X= 0(,[$& a,N (\P;B 9(,N@\ aV$X X\( )VO,N -(;&\( %NVb\(&V$B $\;OO;$\& ;N5 (;7\5 $, ;N VN5VbV5";P Z,P5 VN $X\ U::>O\$(\= CKD'D PADRAIC MAJOR three points in 11 games as he finished out the season in Calgary. ••• In April, Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame announced their class of 2013 and included on the list was North Shore mountain biking legend Alison Sydor. Sydor was inducted during a ceremony in October alongside other sports superstars such as Joe Sakic and Russ Howard. “It’s pretty special news, it’s a very special honour,” Sydor told the North Shore News after learning she’d be the first mountain biker to be inducted into the hall. “In my cycling career I probably ended up being the first of a lot of things . . . back when I started, mountain bikes weren’t even invented,” she said with a laugh. June The Argyle Pipers senior girls soccer team got to celebrate on home soil after beating the Oak Bay Breakers in the provincial AAA championship final played June 1 at North Vancouver’s Inter River Park. Jessie Blanchard scored the game’s only goal on a long blast late in the first half that sailed over the head of the Oak Bay keeper before dropping just under the crossbar in the top
left corner. “I’m speechless. I’m so excited. It’s crazy,” Blanchard told the North Shore News after the final whistle sounded. “I did not think (that shot) was going in. I was just like, smash it as hard as you can.” With shutouts in both the semifinal and final as well as only two goals allowed in five total games, goalkeeper Austin Studer was named the tournament MVP. ••• It was an all-West Van showdown in the provincial AA rugby championship final played June 1 with the Collingwood Cavaliers coming out on top against their neighbours and longtime rivals from Rockridge. In the final, played in Abbotsford’s Rotary Stadium, Collingwood jumped out to an early 10-0 lead but Rockridge roared back to tie it at 10 early in the second half. With time winding down, Collingwood captain Marshall Fuller scored his second try of the game to make it 15-10 and the Cavaliers took control the rest of the way, bashing out a 20-10 win. See Sunday’s North Shore News for the continuation of the 2013 SportYear in Review series: July to December.
A36 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
th
E L A S Y A D G N I X BO
6 2 . C E D
W4 - North Shore News - Tuesday, December 24, 2013
CARTER GM NORTH SHORE’S
$
SAV
INGS
up t
20,0 o 00
On S
0.9%
elec
ted M
48 MONTHS FINANCE
odel
s
COMPANY DEMO
2013 CADILLAC ATS 2.0 LITRE TURBO
Thunder grey with Ebony leather interior, power sunroof, 6 speed automatic, bluetooth for phone & much more
$ MSRP 41,370 CARTER COMPANY CAR DISCOUNT $4,470 $ 1,500 HOLIDAY BONUS
35,400
$
THE ALL NEW 2014 CADILLAC CTS
2013 CADILLAC ATS ALL WHEEL DRIVE 0.9%
2013 CADILLAC ESCALADE HYBRID 4WD
IN OUR SHOWROOM NOW
36 MONTHS LEASING
2.0 Litre turbo, power sunroof, 17’’ polished wheels, Cadillac cue system & much more.
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
45,190 $ 2,890 $ 1,500
YOU PAY
40,800
$
MR CARTERS DEMO
2.0 Litre turbo, luxury edition, power ultraview sunroof, navigation system, 18’’ aluminium wheel pkg & much more.
$
2014 CADILLAC ESCALADE ESV ALL WHEEL DRIVE PREMIUM COLLECTION READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Equipped with all available Cadillac options including navigation, rear DVD entertainment system, 22’’ chrome wheels, power sunroof, power step boards & much more.A must see.
Rare unit, loaded with all available options including navigation system, 22’’ aluminium wheels, rear DVD entertainment system, power sunroof & much more.
$ MSRP 101,545 CARTER DEMO DISCOUNT $20,245 $ HOLIDAY BONUS 1,500
60,285 $ 2,000 $ 500
$
YOU PAY
57,785
$
YOU PAY
YOU PAY
79,800
$
MSRP CARTER DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BONUS
$
102,325 $ 8,005 $ 500
YOU PAY
93,820
$
CASH PURCHASE PRICE
Wishing You A Very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! Thank You For All The Business Through The Years! - from The Management and Staff
James Carter
Sunil Desai
Chris Cummings
All prices net of all rebates. Plus taxes & fees and documentation of $598. Vehicles not exactly as shown.
Darcy Strachan
Kerry Renaud
Denzil Owen
chevrolet • gmc • buick • cadillac
chevrolet • Buick • GMc • cadillac
DL# 10743
Northshore
Louie Liu
John Proctor
Derrick Bergman
Nino Decottis
604-987-5231
Northshore Auto Mall, 800 Automall Dr. North Van www.carternorthshore.com
Prakash Panchal