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Henpecked
After successfully lobbying council, West Van teen Kaylee Whittaker can walk softly and carry a big chick See story page 7
LOCAL NEWS LOCAL MATTERS SINCE 1969
Kaylee Whittaker is the proud owner of six young chickens. PHOTO KEVIN HILL
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
| A3
north shore news nsnews.com
PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETING Pacific Gate Investments has proposed to construct a mixed-use project at the north west corner of Marine Drive and Capilano Road. (2010 Marine Dr/1633 Capilano Rd) The proposed plan is in keeping with zoning and the Lions Gate Village Centre Implementation Plan.
Wednesday,September 21, 2016 7:00pm – Doors Open / Open House 7:30pm – Presentation Grouse Inn Meeting Room 1633 Capilano Rd, North Vancouver The proposed project consists of 263 residential units located in a 23 storey and 19 storey building; Commercial space including restaurant, mixed retail, and space that is large enough for a small supermarket or grocer; Public parking for visitors and customers; Road improvements; A public plaza; and land set aside for a future pocket park on Curling Road.
Notice of Partial Road Closures andCLICK Disposition TO EDIT Harbour Ave., Columbia St. Dominion St. MASTER and TITLE What: Public input opportunity regarding the closure of
approximately 8,802 square metres of municipal road allowance consisting of portions of Harbour Ave., Dominion St. and Columbia St.
When: 7 pm, Monday, September 12, 2016 Where: Council Chambers, District of North Vancouver Municipal Hall, 355 West Queens Road, North Vancouver, BC
An information package has been distributed to owners and occupants within the Lions Gate Town Centre. If you would like to receive a copy or if you would like more information, contact Wayne Pai of Pacific Gate Investments at wayne@pacificgate.ca / 604-319-0000 or Tamsin Guppy of the District of North Vancouver Planning Department at 604-990-2391, or bring your questions and comments to the meeting. *This is not a Public Hearing. DNV Council will receive a report from staff on issues raised at the meeting and will formally consider the proposal at a later date.
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What changes?
Bylaw 8190 proposes to close portions of dedicated municipal road allowance. If Bylaw 8190 is adopted, the District intends to dispose of the land to Maplewood North (Darwin/TWN) GP Ltd. for consolidation with their adjacent lots. In exchange the District will receive the appraised market value of $8,100,000.00 and additionally all associated costs for a new road easement alignment for the ongoing public access to Harbourview Park and all necessary public utility infrastructure replacement.
When can I speak?
If you are affected by this proposed closure, please join us for the Regular Council Meeting to be held on Monday, September 12, 2016 at 7 pm at the North Vancouver District Hall.
Need more info?
The bylaw and staff reports are available for review online at www.dnv.org/road_closures or at the Municipal Clerks Office. Office hours are Monday to Friday 8:00 am to 4:30 pm.
Who can I speak to?
Ryan P. Malcolm, Manager, Real Estate and Properties at 604-990-2264 or malcolmr@dnv.org
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A4 | NEWS
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sundayfocus
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
At left: Young women gather at sunset on Mount Marsabit, Kenya. PHOTO SUPPLIED WADE DAVIS At right: Wade Davis, UBC anthropologist and National Geographic Society explorer-in-residence. Davis has done ethnographic research in more than 80 countries and is giving a lecture in West Vancouver next week. PHOTO SUPPLIED RYAN HILL
How anthropology can save the world
Culture warrior BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
If you want to ask a scientist how to save the world, maybe start by asking how so many cultures have survived this long.
Wade Davis, UBC anthropologist, author and National Geographic Society explorer-inresidence, is bringing that message to West Vancouver in a public lecture at Mulgrave School, Sept. 15. “The thrust of my work as an anthropologist is really trying to make the world safe for human differences and for diversity. My mission at the (National) Geographic for 15 years was to really kind of change the way the world views and values culture,” he said. “We have a strong conviction storytellers can change the world.” And so Davis will be telling some of the stories he’s collected living and doing ethnographic research among the indigenous people of more than 80 nations. Among the stories most frequently recalled in his lectures: studying survival in the high Arctic; learning the origins of Voodoo in West Africa; sailing with the descendants of the Polynesian navigators who, without any navigational aids, colonized the most remote islands of the Pacific 1,000 years BCE; visiting an 800-year-old salt mine in the middle of the Sahara Desert to better understand Islam; and seeing how spiritual beliefs of the Amazon tribe known as the People of the Anaconda contribute directly to the way they manage their land and thrive. The takeaway from these stories is an abiding respect and understanding of the “dazzling” ways indigenous people have formed their beliefs and adapted to the world around them. “The other peoples of the world aren’t failed attempts at being modern or failed attempts at being new. Every culture is a unique answer to a fundamental question – what does it mean to be human and alive?” Davis said. The subject of the Mulgrave talk dovetails nicely with the International Baccalaureate
Young men of the Huli tribe in Papua New Guinea prepare for an initiation rite after spending years in isolation. PHOTO SUPPLIED WADE DAVIS school’s Theory of Knowledge class, which challenges students to reflect on the nature of knowledge, and on “how we know what we claim to know.” Those students will be getting a private lecture from Davis earlier in the day. “The great revelation of anthropology was that the world that you’re born into is just one model of reality, the consequence of one set of choices your cultural lineage made, however successfully,” Davis said. “The other peoples of the world remind us there are other ways of thinking, other ways of being, other ways of orienting yourself in social, physical, even spiritual space.”
But those ways of thinking, speaking and being, and the tremendous intrinsic value they hold are under critical threat, arguably more so than any particular ecosystem or branch of flora or fauna. To illustrate, Davis points to the “haunting statistic” that of the 7,000 languages spoken on Earth today, half aren’t being taught to children. Less than a third of one per cent of the population is still actively speaking these dying languages. “As these languages disappear we are literally losing half of all humanity’s intellectual, spiritual, social, ecological knowledge, and this doesn’t have to happen,” he said. “We hear so
much about the threat to endangered species but no biologist would dare suggest that half the species of the world were on the brink of extinction. And yet that most apocalyptic scenario in the realm of biological diversity scarcely approaches what we know to be the most optimistic scenario in the realm of cultural diversity.” Some like to retort that a world where everyone speaks a common tongue would be a better place, but Davis isn’t having it. “What a fine idea,” he said, sardonically. “But let’s make that language Haida. Let’s make it Inuktitut. Let’s make it Lakota… You suddenly begin to feel as a native speaker of English what it would be like to be enveloped in silence with no means to pass on the wisdom of your ancestry or anticipate the promise of your descendants.” But as Davis points out, the disappearance of language and culture isn’t a naturally occurring phenomenon. It’s man-made. The eradication of indigenous cultures was fed, in part, by the wrong-headed thinking of 19th century anthropologists who tended to view other cultures on a hierarchy, always with their own culture at the top and varying degrees of savagery below. Davis points to Europeans clashing with Australia’s aborigines as one of the worst examples. Because they looked strange, had simple technology and – most offensive to the Victorian British – showed little interest in acquiring material goods, the British concluded they must be something less than human. “As recently as the 1950s, ranchers had quotas on how many ‘Abbos’ they could shoot who trespassed upon their land,” Davis said. What the colonists failed to understand was that the entire ethos of the people they so dehumanized was dedicated to continuing the rituals deemed necessary to keep the world exactly as it was at the time of creation.
See Indigenous page 5
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
NEWS | A5
north shore news nsnews.com
MAILBOX RAFE MAIR LETTER TO THE PM 8 MAILBOX HEDGE CRITTER A CREATURE COMFORT 9 NEWS FULLBRIGHT SCHOLAR RICK COLBOURNE 10
NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING FOR 6695 NELSON AVENUE known as the Sewell’s Landing Development A public hearing will be held regarding the proposed bylaw amendments listed below, to allow for the redevelopment of 6695 Nelson Avenue with: six buildings of three to 12 storeys; 159 residential units; commercial space; underground parking; and public spaces and sidewalks. A public meeting will be held concurrently regarding proposed Development Permit No. 15-037.
WHEN: Monday, September 19, 2016, 6 p.m. public hearing WHERE: Council Chamber, 750 17th Street, West Vancouver PROPOSED SITE PLAN
MAP 89 66 ON
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Men and women cross Tibet’s Yarlung Tsangpo, the highest major river on Earth, in a simple wooden frame wrapped in yak hides. PHOTO SUPPLIED WADE DAVIS
637. 639.
From page 4 In other cases, it’s forced assimilation by a dominant political or religious force, much like Canada instigated with Indian residential schools. Here on the North Shore, the Squamish language has only seven fluent speakers left, a legacy of St. Paul’s Indian Residential School, which stood where St. Thomas Aquinas secondary now welcomes students. Lastly, industrialization and resource extraction on traditional indigenous lands has forced people to abandon their traditional ways of living to scrape by in a cash economy, typically with a lower quality of life, Davis said. “Too often, indigenous peoples are given a false choice of either poverty or industrial activity that compromises the thing they love most – their homelands,” Davis said. But the good news is things are turning around, albeit slowly. Canada has mostly parted ways with the old pedagogy, learning to celebrate and encourage First Nations people fostering their own culture, Davis said. Recognizing Aboriginal land title and granting self-governance, as has been done in the case of Nunavut, have also been steps in the right direction. And there is a movement afoot to revive Squamish language, including an immersion academy set up by local
activist Khelsilem. It would be naïve to assume the Squamish people will give up speaking English and readopt their mother tongue as their main form of communication, Davis said, but there is great value in keeping the language alive. “There’s an incredible moral and political and psychological power in even the efforts to maintain the language,” he said. “It’s not about isolating the Squamish people with their language and no access to modernity. It’s about how can they as a group of individuals embrace this realm of modernity, but critically.” Much as other cultures change and adapt, so too must ours, and sooner rather than later if climate change has anything to do with it, Davis said. In many ways, we have the wind at our backs when it comes to progress. “When I was a kid, just getting people to stop throwing garbage out of their car was a victory. Words like biodiversity and biosphere hadn’t been invented yet, and now they’re part of the vocabulary of schoolchildren,” he said. “In my lifetime, women have gone from the kitchen to the boardroom. People of colour from the slave ship to the White House, gay people from the closet to the altar. The information age has put the knowledge of the world literally at the fingertips of everybody with a device. We’re moving absolutely into a post-carbon energy economy.”
The two most important scientific achievements of humanity, in Davis’s mind, are the first images of the Earth taken from the Apollo spacecraft and the decoding of the human genome. Taken together, they underscore the message that we are one people sharing one habitat. Despite the bleak misfortune being foisted on indigenous people in so many places, Davis still beams with optimism. Perhaps a bit like Scrooge waking up on Christmas Day to realize he still has time to mend his ways, we too have an opportunity. And the anthropologist’s best advice: listen to the voices of the thousands of other cultures while they’re still here and speaking. “None of this is to be pessimistic or apocalyptic. On the contrary,” Davis said. “Every culture has something to say and each deserves to be heard.” Wade Davis will speak on Sept. 15, 7-9 p.m. at Mulgrave’s Linda Hamer Theatre, 2330 Cypress Bowl Lane. Admission is free but attendees are asked to RSVP at info.mulgrave. com/wade-davis. Davis is also publishing two books this fall including Wade Davis Photography, a collection of his favourite photos from the last 15 years, and Cowboys of the Americas, a reflection on the relationship between humans and horses in traditional farming.
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PROPOSED COMPREHENSIVE DEVELOPMENT
PROPOSED OFFICIAL COMMUNITY PLAN BYLAW 4360, 2004, AMENDMENT BYLAW 4897, 2016 would enable the rezoning of the subject lands for the proposed residential and commercial buildings and place the lands within the Sewell’s Landing Development Permit Area. PROPOSED ZONING BYLAW 4662, 2010, AMENDMENT BYLAW 4898, 2016 would rezone the subject lands to CD54: Sewell’s Landing, which will regulate the use of the land based on the proposed development. PROPOSED PHASED DEVELOPMENT AGREEMENT AUTHORIZATION BYLAW 4899, 2016 would secure the associated community benefit; the agreement would set out the framework between the District and the applicant in terms of receipt of the voluntary community amenity contribution payment. PROPOSED DEVELOPMENT PERMIT would control the form and character of the development of the subject lands including the public spaces surrounding and within the site and sustainability initiatives. PROPOSED DEVELOPMENT PACKAGE covenants are proposed to secure the master development, public access and works and services for the project. COUNCIL WELCOMES YOUR INPUT: All persons who believe their interest in property is affected by the proposed bylaw amendments and development permit will be given an opportunity to be heard at the public hearing. Prior to the hearing written submissions may be: emailed to mayorandcouncil@westvancouver.ca; mailed to Council at Municipal Hall, 750 17th Street, West Vancouver BC V7V 3T3; or delivered to Legislative Services at Municipal Hall; and must be received no later than 3 p.m. on September 19, 2016 to ensure their availability to Council for the hearing. Persons relying on electronic submissions do so at their own risk of technical issues affecting receipt. Written submissions will be included in the public hearing information package for Council’s consideration. After the public hearing has closed no further submissions can be considered by Council. MORE INFORMATION: The proposed bylaw amendments, development permit and other documents Council may consider in deciding whether to adopt the proposed bylaw amendments may be inspected at westvancouver.ca and at Municipal Hall, from September 1 to 19, 2016, Monday to Friday (except statutory holidays), 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Copies may also be inspected at the Memorial Library and at the public hearing and concurrent public meeting. QUESTIONS? Lisa Berg, Senior Community Planner sewells@westvancouver.ca | 604-925-7237
A6 |
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NEWS | A7
north shore news nsnews.com
Chickens back in West Van backyards Teen lobbied district council, parents, now gets fresh eggs JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com
The chickens – but not the roosters – have come home to roost in West Vancouver.
West Vancouver teen Kaylee Whittaker feeds six hungry chickens. After nearly two years of fowl play, Whittaker was instrumental in reversing the district’s restrictions on backyard hens. PHOTO KEVIN HILL
Nearly two years after Kaylee Whittaker first called for district council to perform a coop d’etat on their chicken bylaws, the teenager brought home six feathered friends to her very own coop. “It feels really good,” Whittaker said last week just before fetching her brood. District council officially changed their regulations in April, allowing for a chicken on every plot. Because the chickens must be at least four months old, Kaylee had her chicks raised
on Bowen Island beginning in May. She says she made weekly trips to visit Blondie, Cheeky, Raven, Dovey, Ruby, and Sweatpea. Last week, the chickens crossed the strait. They’re “amazing creatures,” Whittaker reported. “They like to stay on your lap for 10 or 15 minutes.” The chickens were held nearly every day to make them friendly around people, noted Celeste, Kaylee’s mother. Caring for the hens has helped Kaylee develop a strong sense of responsibility, she added.
“It’s a way of keeping her grounded going into her teen years,” Celeste said. Besides lobbying West Vancouver council, Kaylee also needed to persuade her parents before she could bring chickens to her backyard. After numerous requests for her own chickens, Kaylee’s father told her: “Get the bylaw changed and I’ll build you a coop,” Celeste recalled. “He thought that was the end of it,” she said with a laugh. But their strong-willed
See Teen page 11
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A8 | NEWS
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NORTH SHORE NEWS 116-980 WEST 1ST STREET NORTH VANCOUVER B.C . V7P 3N4 N SNEWS.COM PUBLISHED BY NORTH SHORE NEWS A DIVISION OF LMP PUBLICATION LTD. PARTNERSHIP, 116-980 WEST 1ST ST., NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. V7P 3N4. PETER KVARNSTROM, PUBLISHER. CANADIAN PUBLICATIONS MAIL SALES PRODUCT AGREEMENT NO. 40010186.
Movin’ out
A
lbert Einstein once likened life to riding a bicycle. His point was that the best way to balance is to keep moving. In our effort to find balance, the North Shore News is moving from Central Lonsdale to new offices at 980 West First Street near Harbourside. We’ll be about equidistant from Walmart and MacKay Creek, which feels somehow fitting for a North Shore business. But before we cap the last pen and pen the last headline, we want to offer our sincere thanks to our former neighbours. A city as beautiful as North Vancouver can slide by on its looks, but from our headquarters on Lonsdale and 15th we were privy to an amazing assortment of personalities. We’ve
chatted with parents, panhandlers, priests, paranoiacs – and a few who had reason to be paranoid. We will miss you all, and we thank you for helping make this newspaper what it is. There is no community newspaper without the community. On Monday morning we begin unpacking and we hope you’ll come down and see us. Whether you’re a council watchdog or you noticed something interesting while watching dogs, we want to hear from you. The North Shore News has survived the Internet, upheaval throughout the news industry, and a fire. Part of the credit is due to a talented and dedicated staff, but on balance, it’s not us, it’s you. This is your newspaper, and as we move, we hope you’ll move with us. It’s the only way we can stay balanced.
MAILBOX
MPs making decisions about voting reform doesn’t sit well
Dear Editor: Re: Pressing Trudeau on his Electoral Reform Pledge, Aug. 28 Other Voices guest column. I stand 100 per cent in favour of changing our voting system and prefer either proportional representation or, failing that, mixed member proportional, which combines PR with first past the post. My point here, though, is that it doesn’t matter a damn what I prefer, the question is how will this be decided? I totally reject the notion that MPs should make that decision for a number of reasons, which are contained in the letter that I sent to the prime minister and three Opposition leaders. Considering the way my MP speaks for me on matters such as Woodfibre LNG, I don’t want her deciding anything
CONTACTUS
on my behalf when the decision ought to be mine not what’s in the best interest of the Liberal party – or any other party for that matter. It amazes me that we, the rabble, are too stupid to understand the proposed voting systems yet smart enough to know which MP to vote for. I suggest that you make your own submission to Mr. Trudeau and the party leaders rather than depend upon hearings set up by Liberal MPs which, to me at any rate, have all the credibility of meetings Liberal MPs traditionally hold. Rafe Mair Lions Bay
Editor’s note: Rafe Mair’s letter to the prime minister is on our website, attached to his letter to the editor at nsnews.com/ opinion/letters.
Lions Bay resident Rafe Mair suggests readers voice their opinions about electoral reform. PHOTO SUPPLIED
First Langdale then Lions Gate Bridge? Dear Editor:
Re: Residents Should Board First: Petition, Sept. 4 news story. I can sympathize with Ryan Medd and his fellow Langdalers that have to use B.C. Ferries out of necessity, but I can’t agree that they should get priority loading. If you take his argument to its logical extent you would have to give priority to the entire highway network to those who are travelling to or from home. So how are you going to do that with the Port Mann Bridge? Or Highway 1? Or the Lions Gate Bridge? Or any street, road or bridge anywhere?
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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 © 2016 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. North Shore News is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent organization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please email editor@nsnews.com or call the newsroom at 604-985-2131. If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the web site at mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844-877-1163 for additional information.
Also, Langdalers know when they choose to live there that B.C. Ferries is their link to the mainland, and as a result they save about a million dollars (literally, average house price in Vancouver is $1.5 million; average house price in Sechelt, $558,000) when they bought their home on the beautiful Sunshine Coast peninsula. The million dollars they save on their house purchase can buy a lot of water taxis or seaplane flights, for the occasions that B.C. Ferries is not quick enough to meet their demands.
ADMINISTRATION/RECEPTION 604-985-2131 ADVERTISING 604-998-3510 display@nsnews.com REAL ESTATE ADVERTISING 604-998-3580 realestate@nsnews.com CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 604-630-3300 classifieds@van.net DISTRIBUTION INQUIRIES 604-986-1337 distribution@nsnews.com NEWSROOM 604-985-2131 editor@nsnews.com PHOTOGRAPHY 604-998-3532 photo@nsnews.com
NEWS | A9
north shore news nsnews.com
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
MAILBOX Goodbye Hedgy: a poem
Boulevard critter teases smiles from commuters
Seems like an odd thing For progress to conquer. Hardly a pest. At best, A welcome to Lynn Valley That’s all worn out. Goodbye Hedgy. (How do we save the “CaterPillar” of our community)? (We’d like to know)
Dear editor:
Re: Bike Lanes In, Hedge Creature Out (For Now), Aug. 31 news story. Traffic jams, construction and the relentless pursuit of density have become the everyday on the North Shore, yet there is a little creature residing on Lynn Valley Road who provides a momentary respite from the frenzy. On my worst day, the sight of that whimsical hedge critter teases a smile from my lips. The North Shore News report that the creature and the median would be demolished to make way for a bike lane brought tears to my eyes. While vying for space for our buses, buggies, bikes, skateboards, feet and cars, the road rage between all parties involved increases. That little critter needs to remain to provide a brief but essential timeout to the urban cacophony.
Mike Jessop and family North Vancouver
QUOTES OF THE WEEK: They flash like a sea of pearls.” — Former Bowen Island Mayor Bob Turner marvels at the shining schools of anchovy in Howe Sound (from a Sept. 4 news story).
It was actually pretty amazing how the community came together so quickly.” — North Vancouver school district spokeswoman Deneka Michaud praises Handsworth students and parents for repairing the football field after an SUV cut doughnuts into the turf (from a Sept. 7 news story).
Sometimes you get a totally different story than you’ve got in English.”
Jane Fairbairn North Vancouver
Sarah and Wesley Jessop, ages 6 and 9, have one final visit with Lynn Valley’s beloved hedge creature before its removal for major road work that includes new bike lanes. PHOTO SUPPLIED
— North Vancouver RCMP Const. Myung Hwan Choi discusses the advantages of multilingual police offers (from a Sept. 7 news story).
We are now a member of the Amica family! Edgemont Village Senior Living is now called Amica at Edgemont Village. We will continue to provide first-class, all-inclusive living with premium amenities, services and staff. Plus, you’ll have 24/7 access to care and support. Choose from one of our three neighbourhoods with dedicated dining, activities and staff: • Independent Living • Assisted Living • Memory Care
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A10 | NEWS
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
Can’t Lose Weight? Cap prof named Fulbright scholar Get results with VGB The Virtual Gastric Band! Amazing hypnosis procedure for weight loss!
Award funds research in aboriginal entrepreneurship MATTHEW GILMOUR reporter@nsnews.com
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Capilano University business instructor Rick Colbourne has been awarded the Fulbright Canada Scholarship to conduct research in indigenous entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial ecosystems at the University of Arizona.
“Personally, it’s quite an honour,” said Colbourne, a resident of Edgemont Village. He was speaking via telephone from his new office in Tucson. “The University of Arizona is a leader in looking at indigenous issues, globally. There are a lot of experts here, so it’s a really great place to be.” The award is handed out each year by the Foundation
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for Educational Exchange between Canada and the United States of America. According to Colbourne, the idea of the program is to bring “thought leaders” from different areas together to share knowledge. He is one of 16 Canadian scholars that will now travel to host universities across the U.S.A. In exchange, Canadian Universities will receive 26 visiting American scholars. “The point of the Fulbright is that you come back to your home community and you share that knowledge,” he said. “The research I’m doing here keys into the research I’m doing in Canada, and also keys in with international research that I’m doing with international partners. The goal of Colbourne’s research is to determine what factors are preventing indigenous communities from providing the same opportunities for entrepreneurship that exist in non-indigenous communities. “When we look at entrepreneurial ecosystems in non-indigenous situations, they are fairly well organized; it’s easier to get funding, you’ve got access to education, venture capitalist networks, etc.” he explained. “When you look at indigenous communities, you don’t have any of that. My research looks at what do the communities have, and what are the kind of mechanisms here in the U.S. that tribes and communities use to support entrepreneurship from an indigenous perspective.” This is a field that has not received very much
Fulbright scholar Rick Colbourne attention, according to Colbourne; however, he feels that attitudes are beginning to shift. World leaders are beginning to acknowledge that there is work to be done to create the conditions for indigenous communities to live sustainable and healthy lives. “This has been a turning point year (in Canada) with (Prime Minister) Trudeau coming in,” said Colbourne. “He has said we need to have a new relationship with aboriginal people in Canada. The question is, how we make sure that these communities stay connected to tradition and culture, while still making sure that they have opportunities within their communities.” Colbourne’s Fulbright residency officially begins later this month when school recommences. During his time in Arizona, he has been commissioned to design an indigenous entrepreneurship course for the school. “This is what I want to be doing,” he said. “For Fulbright to be giving me that opportunity, I feel very privileged, I don’t take it for granted.”
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
NEWS | A11
north shore news nsnews.com
Teen reaps rewards of WV coop-eration From page 7 daughter “just wasn’t letting this go,” Celeste recalled. “I just knew I wanted chickens,” Kaylee explained. Asked about the toughest parts of her experience, Kaylee offered a two-part answer. “Getting the bylaw changed,” she said. “And then, cleaning up the poop.” The coop is designed to be predator-proof, resistant to even the most ingenious raccoon, according to Celeste. Kaylee said she’s looking forward to watching her chickens grow. “You get eggs every morning,” she explains. “Cats and dogs don’t give you anything.” West Vancouver forbid fowl in 2008 over concerns the chickens might bring bears into backyards but later found those fears were unfounded. Approximately 60 per cent of West Vancouver residents polled in a small survey favoured allowing chicken coops in their neighbourhood, with many citing the benefits of food security and environmental sustainability. A $50 registration fee is required for chicken-keepers. Roosters are not permitted. Residents with a yen for hens can learn more about West Vancouver’s chicken bylaws at westvancouver.ca/ chickens, or they can pick up West Vancouver’s chicken bylaw pamphlet, featuring cover art by Kaylee.
FAMILIES DEALING WITH
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No roosters are permitted in Kaylee’s henhouse. West Vancouver council changed their backyard bylaw earlier this year to allow a maximum of six hens. PHOTO KEVIN HILL
DON’T WALK, FLY! EDGEMONT VILLAGE 604.986.4893
and many years’ experience dealing with been diagnosed.
Hosted by North Shore Schizophrenia Society in partnership with NSDRC Funding provided by: Vancouver Foundation
CYPRESS VILLAGE Public Forum #3: Plan Alternatives The Cypress Village Planning Team is hosting a public forum to present 3 plan concepts for the future Cypress Village. We are continuing to build on the last 4 months of community engagement with West Vancouverites to further evolve and improve the vision for Cypress Village.
LAKES, WHYTE LLP Is pleased to announce the addition of Saeid Haghighi to our legal team. After a successful year articling with Lakes, Whyte LLP, Saeid Haghighi is now available to discuss your legal issues. Contact Saeid regarding wills and estates, ICBC/personal injury, driving related offences, criminal matters and tenancy disputes. Saeid is fluent in Farsi.
We hope you are available to join us!
Details When: Thursday, September 15th, 2016 Venue: Mulgrave School, 2330 Cypress Bowl Lane Agenda: 6:00pm – 6:30pm – Presentation of Cypress Village Plan Alternatives 6:30pm – 7:30pm – Group Discussions of Plan Alternatives 7:30pm – 9:00pm – Community BBQ
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A12 | COMMUNITY
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
BRIGHTLIGHTS! by Lisa King Polish Festival The North Shore Polish Association Belweder invited community members to the fourth annual Polish Festival at Lynn Valley Village Sept. 4. Local residents of all ages gathered for a taste of the exciting flavours of Polish culture. Polish traditional cuisine and beverages were on offer as well as a host of themed performances and face painting, games, art and a variety of other activities.
Barb and Julia Broda sell handmade Polish pottery.
Polonez Polish Canadian Dance Society’s Sebastian Petelski, Patrik Slazkiewicz and Bartosz Suchorowski
King Matt Theatre’s Kenneth Lai, Samantha Hussey, Cheyenne Mabberley, Maddisen Silva and Julia Siedlanowska
Iga Rudzinska, Janina Joniec, Iza Sobieski, Karolina Francis and Teresa Rakowska
Noah Jones and Janelle Kosik
Volunteers Sandra Jedrzejczyk, Karolina Filipowska and Olivia Tatianna
Polonez Polish Canadian Dance Society dancers Katarzyna Przystupa, Olivia Johns and Emilia Krupa
Joshua Murdoch and Michelle Weisbom of King Matt Theatre
Anna Slazkiewicz, Iwona Swiatczak, Urszula Sulinska, Andrew Dobrowolski and Slavek Swiatczak
Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos, go to: nsnews.com/community/bright-lights
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| A13
north shore news nsnews.com
neighbourhoods
Capilano/Edgemont
Grinder goes to new heights for the cause
Pemberton Heights resident supports Grind for Kids program ERIN MCPHEE emcphee@nsnews.com
Once she saw it with her own eyes, Sarah-Jane Tomlinson’s commitment to the cause was firmly cemented.
Having signed up as a participant in the annual Grind For Kids program, which sees community members make ascents up the popular North Shore trail as a means of raising funds in support of B.C. Children’s Hospital Foundation, she had been invited to tour the Vancouver hospital. “You come away from that and you say, well how can I not do fundraising,” says the 49-year-old Pemberton Heights resident. “You just want to help,” she adds. This year marks Tomlinson’s fourth season on the Grind and her third as part of the Grind for Kids Program. As of Thursday, the hiking enthusiast had logged 1,573 Grinds overall, earning her the record for the woman with the most Grinds ever, as listed on Grouse Mountain’s website. This season alone, she
has logged 481 ascents, also earning her the female course record for most Grinds this season. “I’m hoping to get 600,” she says referring to her goal for 2016. As well, she’s hoping to raise $10,000 for B.C. Children’s Hospital. So far, she’s raised just over $5,000. If she reaches her goal, that will bring her three-year program participation total to $20,000. “The fundraising is my biggest drive. That’s kept me going and doing big numbers,” she says. This year, Tomlinson decided to add an additional focus to her fundraising, both in support of the cause as well as the environment. “I saw plastic bottles and I started picking those up,” she says. At first Tomlinson thought she’d pick up one bottle per Grind, however that plan was quickly expanded as she continued to notice additional discarded bottles as well as general litter that she decided to pick up too. “I started just doing Garbage Grinds as well,”
See Hikers page 16
So far this season Sarah-Jane Tomlinson has logged 481 of her planned 600 ascents of the Grouse Grind in support of B.C. Children’s Hospital. She has also started completing Garbage Grinds, picking up discarded bottles and other litter along the way to further support her efforts. PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH
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A14 | NEIGHBOURHOODS
nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
Cap Bridge awards annual scholarships at soiree Capilano Suspension Bridge Park’s Summer Season Soiree, an annual end-of-summer team member event, took place at Stanley Park Pavilion on the evening of Aug. 30.
For the first year, the Capilano Group’s three Vancouver teams celebrated together (Capilano Suspension Bridge Park, Stanley Park Pavilion and Prospect Point), according to a written statement from the organization. Staff enjoyed mingling, dining under the stars and playing Giant Jenga on the outdoor deck overlooking Stanley Park. The formalities included a big thank you to everyone from CEO Nancy Stibbard, and the presentation of 11 Cap Groupie Awards, seven $1,000 academic scholarships and the singular Capilanitude Award. Capilano Scholarships were awarded to Capilano’s Derek Maroney, Clarice Scop, Jessica Ellis, Michael Beck,
Tania Talebzadeh, Linden Maultsaid-Blair and Stanley Park Pavilion’s Tiago Cruz. All recipients demonstrated that their commitment to academics was no less than to their community and to the Capilano Group.
Capilano Suspension Bridge Park alone employs 260 team members during peak season. The three Vancouver Capilano Group teams consist of more than 355 team members. capbridge.com
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Scholarship recipients Michael Beck, Tiago Cruz, Tania Talebzadeh, Derek Maroney, Clarice Scop and Linden Maultsaid-Blair pose for a photo with CEO Nancy Stibbard at Capilano Suspension Bridge Park’s Summer Season Soiree. See more photos from the event at nsnews.com/community/neighbourhoods. PHOTO SUPPLIED
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| A15
north shore news nsnews.com
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A16 | HEALTH & WELLNESS
nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
Hikers quick to support Garbage Grind initiative
From page 13
seen it all, from a man hiking the trail with an artificial leg to a four-year-old “cranking up there with his mom and dad.” “Every day is different. Different things will inspire you. ... It’s just one of those unique places for me,” she says. To share some of her inspiration, Tomlinson recently launched a Grouse Grindthemed blog at grousegrinder.com. “People will ask me what do I eat and all that kind of thing, but I didn’t want it all to be about me. So I asked other Grinders if they would let me do a bio on them and (share) their Grind experiences and why they do the Grind, so that’s how it started,” she says.
she says. So far Tomlinson has collected more than 500 bottles. She plans to put the funds earned from returning them towards her Grind for Kids fundraising total. When asked what a typical week is like, Tomlinson, who works part time, says Monday to Thursday, she’ll complete two Grinds, go to work, and then head back to Grouse Mountain to do an additional ascent or two. Friday to Sunday, she’ll complete six back-to-back Grinds daily. “My other life is pre-April, or pre the season opening, and then after the Grind closes. It’s just solid Grinding in the summer,” she says. Spending so much time on the trail, Tomlinson says she’s
Recent posts include those highlighting her Grind for Kids participation and Garbage Grinds, which has helped rally a community of supporters. “There are a few Grinders who will pick up bottles and then I’ll get to the top and they’ll hand me three or four bottles and I’ll have three or four bottles as well,” she says. Going forward Tomlinson plans to take her fundraising for B.C. Children’s Hospital to the next level. “I feel like I need to do something bigger,” she says. What exactly that will look like, only time will tell, but likely no mountain will be too high for her to tackle. To support Tomlinson’s efforts, visit the Grind for Kids program website, bcchf. ca/events/event-calendar/ grind-for-kids, and make a pledge in her name: SarahJane Tomlinson.
TERRY FOX RUNS North Vancouver Terry Fox Run co-ordinator Norman Thomson and Rotary Club of North Vancouver president Kevin Evans raise awareness of next weekend’s 36th annual Terry Fox Run. The North Shore is gearing up to host two runs on Sunday, Sept. 18. The North Vancouver event will be held at Inter River Park at 10 a.m., with registration kicking off at 9 a.m. Course options include one- and 10-km routes. The West Vancouver event will be held at Dundarave Beach, next to the Beachhouse Restaurant, at 10 a.m. Registration begins at 9 a.m. Course options include one-, five- and 10-km routes. A complimentary pancake breakfast will be provided to all participants. PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH
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COHO RUN A 14-kilometre journey from Kitsilano Beach over to Ambleside Park Sunday, Sept. 11 at 8 a.m. Registration required. cohosociety.com COHO SWIM Choose from 1.5- or three-kilometre options starting and finishing close to the welcoming pole at Ambleside beach Sunday, Sept. 11 at 9 a.m. Swimmers must wear wetsuits. Registration required. cohosociety.com HIKE4HUNTINGTON An annual nature hike with family activities, awards and refreshments Sunday, Sept. 11, 8:30 a.m. at Rice Lake Loop Trail,
Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve, North Vancouver. Choose from three- or fivekilometre routes. All proceeds go directly to support families impacted by Huntington disease. $25 for adults, $12.50 for children six-12 and free for five and under. hscevents.ca/bchike NAR-ANON A 12-step support group for family and friends affected by those addicted to drugs meets Sundays, 7-8:30 p.m. in Seminar Room A at Lions Gate Hospital, 231 East 15th St. and Tuesdays, 7:30-9 p.m. at the Alano Club, 176 East Second St., North Vancouver. 604-986-3854
nar-anonbcregion.org CAREGIVER NETWORK GROUPS Are you providing emotional or practical support to a family member or friend? Join the Caregiver Network for ideas, stress relief and encouragement Wednesday, Sept. 14, 10:30 a.m. in Room 203, Capilano Mall, North Vancouver. 604-982-3320 MEDITATION: THE PATH TO WELL-BEING Classes using a mantra and the Tibetan ohm with instructor Thomas Kefferputz will start Wednesday, Sept. 14 at the Ferry Building Gallery, 1414 Argyle Ave., West
Attend a Lynnterm Tour and see the waterfront at work!
Vancouver. Information and times: 604-925-7290, ferrybuildinggallery.com or info@thepath2wellbeing.com. JIU JITSU ON THE PIER All are welcome Sunday, Sept. 18 from noon to 3 p.m. at the pier at the bottom of Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. The first hour will be a kids class followed by a one-hour adult seminar and one-hour of roll time. Suggested donation of $30. The Right to Play charity will be supported. Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email upcoming event info to listings@nsnews.com.
MINGLE OF THE JINGLES
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On the Waterfront... Proud to be on the North Shore Visit Lynnterm and learn about the important work that takes place and the role the waterfront plays in our economy.
Tour Date / Time:
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Saturday, Sept. 17th
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(9:30 a.m.)
(9:30 a.m.)
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All proceeds to North Shore ConneXions Society
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
LIVING | A17
north shore news nsnews.com
WV employees’ association awards scholarships Three North Shore high school graduates are heading to their respective post-secondary institutions this fall with some extra financial security thanks to the West Vancouver Municipal Employees’ Association.
The association just announced the 2016 winners of its three scholarships – academic, trades, and visual arts – each worth $1,000. The academic scholarship was awarded to 18-year-old Rockridge secondary grad Makaela Smithers, who is attending the University of Victoria
tell your
community about your upcoming events
email editor@nsnews.com
DARYL
PHARMACIST
As we move closer to liberalizing marijuana, we can’t lose sight of the fact that marijuana is still a psychoactive drug and it can affect different people different ways. For example, work is being done to see how its effects differ between women and men. Much research is being done on this subject and nothing is definite yet. However, to be safe, women wanting to become pregnant should abstain from marijuana during preconception, pregnancy and lactation.
Information on marijuana is increasing daily. Any questions? Ask us.
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and plans to complete a degree in engineering. The Roy Hunter Memorial Scholarship for
the Visual Arts went to fellow Rockridge secondary grad Eliza King, 18, who is studying art history and
psychology at the University of Victoria. Conner Fricke, 18, a Sutherland secondary grad,
is the recipient of this year’s trades scholarship. He will be starting at BCIT in October where he has been
accepted into the Carpentry Framing and Forming Foundation Program. – Christine Lyon
FIT&HEALTHY A18 |
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
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This month, in addition to EOMA’s regular Ladies Only fitness and selfdefence classes, and in response to disturbing stories of women being threatened or assaulted on urban trails and near universities, EOMA has introduced its new KRAV MAGA women’s selfdefence program.
In addition to the KRAV MAGA and other fitness programs for women, Yoo and his highly-trained teachers continue to offer professional instruction for children ages five and up, youth and adults. Programs include Judo and Taekwondo – the gentle arts – as well as Boxing and Wrestling.
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First developed by the Israeli army around 70 years ago, KRAV MAGA teaches women self-defence, survival techniques they can use to defend themselves in the event they find themselves threatened in their urban environment. “It builds on a person’s own instinctive reactions to a physical assault,” said Yoo. As with all the techniques taught at EOMA, Yoo says that although a KRAV MAGA move may look aggressive, in reality it is a controlled, skilled
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LIVING | A19
north shore news nsnews.com
Be wary of doom-and-gloom market headlines
In this day and age, it’s relatively easy to find what you’re looking for by doing a quick search on Google, whether it’s to buy something, find a date or get the latest update on Kim Kardashian and Justin Bieber.
As an investor, when you’re looking for information on markets or stocks, you likely already have your preferred news sources saved in your favourites tab. Your information might come from major media outlets, financial bloggers or maybe your neighbour. It’s important to remember that not all sources are equally reliable – not that I’m trying to discredit your neighbour. Every now and then, some news headline on markets
Making Cents Lori Pinkowski will surface; someone who is apparently “in the know” will claim that a stock market crash is coming. These outrageous headlines will unfortunately grab your attention the most. Everyone can have an opinion on the state of
the markets or the global economy, however not all opinions are accurate and credible. The new reality of today is that there is no shortage of information, but an overload. We come across many doomsday authors and bloggers who make a living out of scaring investors into believing that markets and the economy will collapse. The reality is that, like any sales person, they want to sell you a product. In most cases, it’s either the latest version of their book, newsletter, gold coins or all of the above. They present you with ill-conceived facts to sell you on fear so they can profit from it. Apparently gold coins are what will save you in a doomsday scenario … not food, water, shelter or
electricity. Let’s consider the facts for a moment on markets and use the S&P 500 index as an example. A 10 per cent correction is normal and has happened about twice a year, on average, since the 1920s (this is the era they started tracking the index). A more substantial correction of 20 per cent has happened more frequently than you think, every two years on average. The really scary market corrections of 50 per cent or more have happened so infrequently that before the recent financial crisis, the last one occurred in the late 1930s (from 1937 to 1938). But despite the fact that numerous market corrections have materialized over the years, the S&P 500 has continued to
climb to new highs. As of last week, the S&P 500 had again reached new highs. What’s important to realize is that market volatility is normal while severe market crashes, like the financial crisis, are not. Keeping your money on the sidelines in a savings account or even GICs because you fear markets will collapse is not really the best investment solution. Inflation is almost two per cent in Canada and when you account for the taxes you pay on the interest, you are losing money annually. This is not a great long-term investment strategy. With all three market indices in the U.S. hitting all-time highs, this is actually a bullish (good) sign. After experiencing a year of consolidation
in the stock market, on the backdrop of a great second quarter for corporate earnings, in my opinion it is time to get invested and overweighed in equities if you are still on the sidelines. The green light is on! Lori Pinkowski is a senior portfolio manager and senior vice-president, Private Client Group, at Raymond James Ltd. This is for informational purposes only and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of Raymond James. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future performance. Lori can answer any questions at 604-915-LORI or lori.pinkowski@raymondjames.ca. Listen to her every Monday morning on CKNW at 8:40 a.m.
COMMUNITYBULLETINBOARD Email information for your North Shore event to listings@nsnews.com.
COHO FESTIVAL The annual celebration of the return of the coho salmon to the North Shore will be Sunday, Sept. 11, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. at Ambleside Park, West Vancouver. Festival activities include a salmon barbecue, live music and more. cohosociety.com ELECTORAL REFORM TOWN HALL Join MP Jonathan Wilkinson for a discussion on how to improve democratic accessibility and representation for all Canadians Monday, Sept. 12, 7-9 p.m. at Memorial Community Centre, 125 East 23rd St., North Vancouver. RSVP. democraticreformnorthvan. eventbrite.ca
LET’S GET GRILLIN’ West Vancouver Historical Society members Dave Barker, Barbara Hunter, Rod Day, Wendy Topham and Roddy MacKenzie invite residents to the society’s annual barbecue Wednesday, Sept. 14, 5-7 p.m. at the West Vancouver Lawn Bowling Club, 650 20th St. No admission fee, but donations will be accepted. PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH
DARE TO BE HEARD - A LITERARY SALON Come read your story, poem or memoir Monday, Sept. 12, 6:30-8:45 p.m. at North Vancouver City Library, 120 West 14th St. This free dropin session, hosted by the North Shore Writers Association, celebrates local writing without critiquing. nswriters.org SCOTTISH SOCIAL DANCING Enjoy the physical, mental and social benefits of Scottish country dancing with Gleneagles Dance Club. A free introductory class for beginners will take place Monday, Sept. 12, 7:30 p.m. at Hollyburn elementary, 1329 Duchess Ave., West Vancouver.
Classes for experienced dancers begin Sept. 14. 604987-3792. BOATING 2 Seymour Power Squadron will host a boating course on Beyond the PCOC (Pleasure Craft Operator Card) Wednesdays, Sept. 14-Oct. 19, 6:30-8:30 p.m. at Windsor secondary, 931 Broadview Dr., North Vancouver. $140. 604551-7073 or boatingcourses.ca/ provinces/british-columbia. SENSATIONALVANCOUVER Local author Eve Lazarus will present an illustrated evening based on her book Wednesday, Sept. 14, 7-8 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library,
1950 Marine Dr. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca BECOME A DOCENT If you enjoy working with children, want to share your enthusiasm for history, or are looking to broaden your own experience, consider becoming a docent for the North Vancouver Museum & Archives. Find out what being a school program docent is all about at an information session Thursday, Sept. 15, 10:30–11:30 a.m. at North Vancouver Museum at Presentation House, 209 West Fourth Ave., North Vancouver. nvma.ca
See more page 22
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A20 | SENIORS
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
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Memory Lane Laura Anderson A visit to Hollyburn Lodge will be a highlight for Hollyburners at the annual Pioneer Skiers Reunion on Wednesday, Sept. 21.
The lodge restoration is close to completion and oh, if those walls could talk. Fortunately, they don’t have to. Newly minted centenarian June Gillrie – born Lorna-June Patricia Leslie on June 23, 1916, in one of Vancouver’s oldest houses, the Leslie house (no relation) at 1380 Hornby St., will be there with her fellow Pioneer Skiers to tell us how it was during the lodge’s heyday in the ’30s and ’40s and again in the ’60s and ’70s. I remember leafing through June’s albums
Thelma Hutchinson and June Gillrie rest on the roof of the Swish Inn cabin at Hollyburn Mountain in the 1940s. This photo is just one of the many in Gillrie’s vast photo collection. See more at nsnews.com/living/seniors. PHOTO SUPPLIED at previous reunions. Photograph after black and white photograph of people recreating, winter and summer, on the mountains stacked up in Vancouver’s backyard. Every one mesmerizing, and every one described in detail by June, blessed with an impeccable memory and the skills of a
natural storyteller. June’s albums put faces on the familiar names: Sue and Clare Morrison, George and Janet Hale, Thelma and Jack Hutchinson, Brian Creer, and Chuck Gillrie. Don Grant, Hollyburn Heritage Society archivist, notes, “The days when June was on Hollyburn, that was
the golden age, the dawn of skiing, both recreational and competitive, in Vancouver.” It’s true. June has the memories, and the medals, that confirm it. Catching up with June to talk about Hollyburn took some doing. Her square
See Annual page 21
Let’s talk about our natural assets: the Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve Metro Vancouver manages the Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve to maintain its recreation, education and environmental values in conjunction with its capacity as a water reserve.
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• Understand Metro Vancouver’s role in providing clean, safe drinking water and ensuring the sustainable use of water resources. For more information: Call: Information Centre at 604.432.6200 Email: icentre@metrovancouver.org (Please add “LSCR Annual Event” in the subject line) Visit: metrovancouver.org and search for “LSCR Annual Event”
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
SENIORS | A21
north shore news nsnews.com
Annual pioneer skiers reunion set for Sept. 21 at Cypress From page 20 dance club, Ocean Waves, was hosting their annual Corn Roast and Dance in Courtenay and June was on hand for the full program, including pacing off a step or two. “I shouldn’t have danced,” she said, having broken her pelvis last year and a femur this year, both events purely by accident, “but I did. Me, I do things anyhow.” Yes, June is a woman who dances to her own tune, always has. She is also gracious and considerate, making time to reminisce before the big event of the weekend, the potluck dinner and dance. June’s contribution, mixed vegetables, was already prepared. June was 10 years old and specializing in roller and ice skating when Hollyburn Lodge opened in 1927. A few years later, as a teenager, June would leave her home near South Granville, board the streetcar and then the ferry to cross Burrard Inlet and finally, putting one foot in front of the other, hike all the way up the mountain to the ski camp at First Lake. “For $20 a season, you rented a bunk – put down your sleeping bag. You could rent skis too but I bought
mine from Hamish Davidson. I was always moving up – trading up – on skis.” June met Chuck Gillrie on the mountain and they married in 1942. Chuck was from East Vancouver, a welder working in the Vancouver shipyards turning out freighters for the war effort. He and Brian Muir had already built one cabin, Stonehaven, the only cabin on Hollyburn with a stone foundation. The newlyweds built a second cabin, June working alongside Chuck. “In that picture of me with the axe,” she says, “I used it for peeling logs.” They named the cabin Swish Inn for the sound of a pair of skis swishing over the snow. “We were always up the mountain. Summers it was swimming at First Lake, hiking, working on the cabin. I’m a golfer and a sailor, too, charter member of the Kitsilano Yacht Club.” (June says “Kitsilanah” – few Vancouverites are left who pronounce the word in that way). “Winters we skied, of course, and I was a skater, having started out roller skating. We ski club members bowled and skated together. I skated at First Lake and at
Lost Lagoon in Stanley Park. In those days it iced over solid. From the time I was born, I was always active and I still am. “Oh, these memories,” says June, “my mind is full of so much.”
June Gillrie and her fellow Hollyburners will be recreating and sharing memories at the 24th annual Pioneer Skiers Reunion. Hosted by Hollyburn Heritage Society and Mount Seymour History Project, this year’s reunion
will be Wednesday, Sept. 21, from noon to 4 p.m. at Cypress Creek Lodge and all are welcome. For more information, visit
hollyburnheritage.ca. Laura Anderson works with and for seniors on the North Shore. 778-279-2275
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June Gillrie goes through some of her medals, photo albums and other memorabilia. PHOTO SUPPLIED JANE HENDERSON
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A22 | LIVING
nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
Preparing My Final Wishes: Much Better to Be Ready
Wednesday September 14, 7:00-8:30 pm Lynn Valley Branch, North Vancouver Public Library 1277 Lynn Valley Road, FREE! Registration required.
North Vancouver
Most families have little idea of the decisions, work and costs for making final arrangements at the time of need. Funeral advisors will share information you can use to prepare your family so as to reduce the burden, the pressure and the costs of arranging a funeral, cremation or burial. Presented by Frederick Margel, Funeral and Cemetery Advisor. Space is limited. To register for this workshop, please call 604-807-4041 or email: frederick.margel@sci-us.com
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Electoral Reform. Learn. Share. Participate. The federal government has promised to change the way we elect our representatives in Ottawa. Join us for an interactive dialogue on the options for change.
Saturday, September 17 9:30am - 12:30pm North Vancouver City Library 120 West 14th Street (refreshments) Thursday, September 22 11:30am - 1:00pm Capilano University Library Room 321 (refreshments) Pre-register by phone 604.985.7138 or email nscr@nscr.bc.ca or visit www.nscr.bc.ca/nscr/democracy_cafe.html for a seat. Join the online conversation! #NSDemocracyCafe
Because our election system is too important to leave just to the politicians E V E N T PA R T N E R S :
BARGAIN BOOKS Rotary Club of Lions Gate members Elizabeth Chong, Virginia Lange, Stan van Woerkens and Roger Thomey invite readers to the club’s first Charity Book Sale Sept. 12-18 at Capilano Mall (between the lottery booth and the escalator) during mall hours. More than 10,000 books will be available for $2 each and all proceeds will support community projects. PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD From page 19 TECH TALK — 3D PRINTING Join 3D printing specialist John Beihler to learn more about applications and future developments in the world of 3D printing Thursday, Sept. 15, 6-7:30 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. Register at westvanlibrary.ca.
PERSIAN BOOK CLUB Read and discuss classical and contemporary Persian literary prose Thursday, Sept. 15, 2-4 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. 604-9257400 westvanlibrary.ca THE ART OF SELF A workshop series for women that is part discussion group
and part exploring creativity through art every second Friday, Sept. 16-Dec. 2 (break for Nov. 11), 7-10 p.m. at The Music Box, 1564 Argyle Ave., West Vancouver. Discuss inspiring topics and play around a bit with hands-on art projects. $28/evening or $150 for all six evenings. theartofselfemail@ gmail.com theartofselfgroup. weebly.com – compiled by Debbie Caldwell
Heritage Homes Available Relocate to Your Property! Qualex-Landmark™ is offering two heritage homes listed on the City of North Vancouver 2013 Heritage Register for relocation within the City of North Vancouver. The homes, 733 East 3rd St and 749 East 3rd St, were constructed in 1941 as temporary living quarters, but have survived as permanent family housing and are registered as category ‘A’ heritage. 733 East 3rd St, also known as Rushede Residence, is an example of Wartime Housing Ltd. ‘H-1’ single-family dwelling that is approx. 1,000sqft. 749 East 3rd St is an example of Wartime Housing Ltd. ‘H-12’ single-family dwelling that is approx. 1,500sqft. These heritage homes could function as a laneway or coach home on an existing residential property in the City of North Vancouver. Eligible recipient sites include double-fronting or corner lots where road width is sufficient to accommodate the movement of a 24’ wide home. Qualex-Landmark™ is offering to bear relocation costs to eligible sites in the City of North Vancouver. The City of North Vancouver’s Official Community Plan provides incentives for the purposes of heritage conservation such as additional density in return for the legal protection of heritage buildings. The approval process will vary depending on the recipient site. Owner(s) of recipient sites are fully responsible for determining eligibility and obtaining applicable approvals from the City of North Vancouver. Owner must undertake site preparation in advance of receiving a home including all rehabilitation costs to meet City of North Vancouver building standards. Homes will be delivered as-is, except for any modifications necessary to allow relocation. Relocation to recipient site must be completed prior to November 31, 2016. For more information: Tyler Thorne, Qualex-Landmark™ t. 604.683.5152 | e. tthorne@qualex.ca
For heritage and permit inquiries: Chris Wilkinson, City of North Vancouver t. 604.990.4206 | e. cwilkinson@cnv.org
™ denotes one or more trademarks of Qualex-Landmark Management Inc. used under license by Qualex-Landmark Northern Limited Partnership.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
PETS | A23
north shore news nsnews.com
Teaching a dog to come is challenging but essential Without a doubt, the most important command a dog will learn is its recall, otherwise known as coming when called.
But ironically, it is also one of the most difficult commands for a dog to learn. Well, let me rephrase that. A dog can learn to come when called just as easily and as quickly as it can learn to sit or lie down, but dogs tend to respond to their recall with far less consistency than other obedience commands. One reason for this is because commands such as “sit” or “down” are static, which means a dog is required to be stationary in order to execute the command and is able to stay focused much more easily. Unlike “sit” or “down,” the recall is a dynamic command. This means that motion is involved to execute it correctly and as soon as you add movement, you also add distraction. A moving dog is distracted far more easily than a stationary dog. The second reason, which really should be the first reason because it’s the only reason in the big scheme of things, is that the dog simply does not want to come when called. And the reason it
Canine Connection Joan Klucha doesn’t want to is because of human error. And what is this error, you ask? It’s not just one, so hold on and pay attention. Let’s take an off-leash hike as an example. When an owner calls their off-leash dog, often they will do nothing when the dog does not respond. The error here is that they just taught their dog to ignore them. Training tip No. 1: when your dog does not respond when you call it, go and get it! Do not make human error No. 2, which is to repeatedly call the dog, shouting its name louder and louder. Training tip No. 2: when you do this, you are again teaching your dog to ignore you until you start to sound like a raving madman. Only
then does the dog lift its nose from the base of the tree to see what the heck you are screaming at, which leads to human error No. 3: praising the dog, even offering a treat when it does this. Training tip No. 3: the dog did not respond to the recall, it heard obnoxious sounds coming from the direction of its owner, and that perked its interest. It did not come when called, yet the owner thinks the dog heard the recall, rewards the dog, and will very likely do the exact same thing the next time therefore reinforcing the dog ignoring the recall. Silly human, smart dog. Humans make a lot of mistakes before they change their ways. They are funny like that. They often repeat the same wrong behaviour many times expecting a different outcome instead of learning from their mistake the first time. When you realize your dog’s recall is scoring an “F” and the only way you can get your dog’s attention on a walk is if you are wearing a Lady Gaga meat suit (Google it), it’s time to go back to the basics of training and take it slow! A reliable recall takes time and the understanding
DON’T WALK, FLY!
that it is really, really hard for a dog to turn away from a scurrying squirrel or a group of dogs or (insert distraction of choice here). You have to work very hard and slowly increase the level of distractions over time as well as improve your leadership so that your dog looks to you as a leader worthy of coming to when summoned. No one likes to hear that their dog does not think they are worthy of coming to. But it’s the truth. If all you do with your dog is go for the occasional walk and feed it, you are the taxi service and the vending machine. There is no leadership-based relationship here. When I work with a dog with a poor recall, I invariably spend the very first week teaching leadership skills to the owner and a simple back-to-basics training exercise for the recall, which is where this is leading. My next column will focus on leadership 101 and teaching a reliable recall. Joan Klucha has been working with dogs for more than 15 years in obedience, tracking and behavioural rehabilitation. Contact her at k9kinship@gmail.com.
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A24 |
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
Your North Shore Guide to the games people play SPORTS NEWS? Contact sports editor Andy Prest at 604-998-3538 or email aprest@nsnews.com
West Vancouver’s Jack Rieder pulls off a high-flying stunt at the Kite Clash Championships held Aug. 26-28 in Squamish. The 16-year-old, who began kiteboarding just two years ago, won the Canadian junior freestyle and international junior open competitions while also picking up a pair of silver medals in senior men’s events. PHOTOS SUPPLIED BRIAN AIKENS
West Van kiter flies onto podium
Teen cleans up at kiteboard nationals MATTHEW GILMOUR reporter@nsnews.com
West Vancouver’s Jack Rieder dazzled hundreds of spectators at the Kite Clash Championships held in Squamish, Aug. 26-28.
Just 16 years old, Rieder took the competition by storm, winning gold medals in both the Canadian junior freestyle and international junior open competitions. He kept on hitting the podium when he moved up to the senior ranks, adding silver in the Canadian men’s freestyle and men’s kite slalom. “What placed him ahead of the pack was his consistency,” Kite Clash judge Geoffrey Waterson stated in a press release. “He did well because he didn’t crash and he landed a lot of technical, high level tricks.”
Rieder’s career in Kiteboarding began just two years ago, when at 14 years of age, while sailing in Squamish, he noticed a group of kiteboarders darting in and out of the waves near the beach. “They were going a whole lot faster and jumping,” Rieder said. “It just looked way more exciting.” Rieder had to beg his parents for a few months to finally let him take lessons, he said. Two years later, he is one of the top kiters in the country. Competition at the Kite Clash takes three forms. There is the big air competition, where kiters are judged on the height and style of their jumps. In this category, the wind often carries kiters up to heights of 10-plus metres. The slalom also made its debut this year. Rieder specializes in the freestyle competition, where kiters
remove their safety harnesses so they can pass the bar behind their backs while completing tricks. According to Rieder, because they are not attached to their kites, freestylers stay a lot closer to the water when they jump. It turns out “closer to the water” means something very different to Rieder than it would to most people: the pros frequently reach heights of five to six metres while pulling off their tricks. In freestyle, your score is based on the difficulty of the trick you attempt, the speed at which you enter the jump, your technical execution of the jump and, of course, how wild the crowd goes when you stick the landing. “It’s kind of a fun part of it,” said Rieder. “If you’re making the crowd all excited, they’ll boost up your score for that.”
Rieder was shown the ropes by some of Canada’s most experienced kiters. In training, he would try to mimic their styles and prove to them that despite his age, he could still keep up with their level of difficulty, he said. “When I was learning up in
Squamish,” he recalled, “a lot of the guys up there like to do kite loop handle passes, which is a more extreme version of what other juniors were doing (at the competition).”
See Squamish page 26
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
| A25
north shore news nsnews.com
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*XT5-48 month term with $4,000 downpayment 10,000km per year, plus taxes. Escalade - 48 month term with $19,000 down payment, 16,000km per year. ATS - 0.9% for 48 month term with $2,350 down payment. All payments plus tax.
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nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
Squamish a perfect setting From page 24
It is that move that Rieder believes won him the gold medal in both junior competitions. He explained that when you enter the jump if you bring the kite through the centre of the wind it gives a lot more power to the jump. “The kite goes around in a circle and that brings you up a lot higher,” he said. “Then you do the handle pass.” He said that by doing this kind of loop before passing the bar behind his back, he was able to reach a height of
about four metres during the competition in Squamish. The site of the competition was familiar to Rieder. During the winter season many local kiters don thick wetsuits with hoods and gloves and go to work in the frigid surf off the shore in Tsawwassen. But as soon as the weather turns to summer, it’s back up to Squamish, where Rieder said you find some of the best kiteboarding conditions in the country. “That spot’s nice and steady,” he said. “It’s the spot everybody waits for in the summer.”
Now with two national championship appearances under his belt, and some hardware to show for it, Rieder will have to make a decision about how far he wants to go with the sport. “Kiteboarding doesn’t have a lot of money in it right now,” said Rieder. “But it’s growing pretty quickly.” The sport will never garner the kind of payday that professional hockey and soccer players receive, said Rieder, but he is viewing it as an opportunity to see the world and make a little money in the process.
TERRY FOX RUN FOR CANCER RESEARCH
HIGH ROLLER West Vancouver’s Steven Santana lines up a shot during round robin play at the Canadian Singles Championships Tuesday at the West Vancouver Lawn Bowling Club. The championships wrap up this weekend with playoff finals Saturday. Visit nsnews.com to see more photos. PHOTO KEVIN HILL DEVELOPER’S INFORMATION SESSION
SUNDAY SEPT 18, 2016 “The answer is to try and help others” – TERRY FOX
Bewicke and 15th Limited Partnership is holding an information session where interested members of the public are invited to learn about our application for a 5 storey, mixed use building located at 705-717 West 15th Street.
Meeting Location: 705 West 15th Street (upper floor) th
Date: September 15 , 2016 Time: 6:00-8:00pm
Kevin Hussey Bewicke and 15th Limited Partnership 604.734.8443 Kevinh@pennyfarthing.net
TERRYFOX.ORG / 1.888.836.9786
No eNtry fee • No miNimum PLeDGe • No miNimum DoNatioN NORTH VANCOUVER
Inter River Park Registration: 9am|Run Start: 10am For more information contact Norman Thomson at 604-926-4503 WEST VANCOUVER
Dundarave Park
Enter at Marine Dr & 25th St Registration: 9am|Run Start: 10am For more information email info@terryfoxrun.org
TERRYFOX.ORG | 1-888-836-9786
Community Development Contact: David Johnson, 604.990.4219, Djohnson@cnv.org This meeting has been required by the city of North Vancouver as part of the rezoning process.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
| A27
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REMEMBRANCES in memoriam
FORREST, Peggy February 19, 1920 − September 12, 2015 Our wonderful Mom Miss your smile and hugs daily Memories cherished Penny, Ted and Jamie
memorial donations
Your gift in memory of a loved one will support palliative care programs and patients on the North Shore. To donate on-line go to www.northshorehospice.ca Or mail cheques to: PO Box 54019 1562 Lonsdale Avenue North Vancouver, V7M 3L5
BC Cancer Foundation 150 – 686 W. Broadway Vancouver, BC V5Z 1G1 604.877.6040 bccancerfoundation.com Supporting the BC Cancer Agency Supporting the BC Cancer Agency
ADVERTISING POLICIES
All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and willingly sold to buyers at the advertised prices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertising that does not conform to these standards or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any reader encounters non-compliance with these standards we ask that you inform the Publisher of this newspaper and The Advertising Standards Council of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: The publishers do not guarantee the insertion of a particular advertisement on a specified date, or at all, although every effort will be made to meet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishers do not accept liability for any loss of damage caused by an error or inaccuracy in the printing of an advertisement beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by the portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred. Any corrections of changes will be made in the next available issue. The North Shore News will be responsible for only one incorrect insertion with liability limited to that portion of the advertisement affected by the error. Request for adjustments or corrections on charges must be made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration. For best results please check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Refunds made only after 7 business days notice!
obituaries
ROBERTS, Dave June 2, 1939 − September 5, 2016
ADDISON, Patricia (nee Hope) 1929 - 2016 Patricia Addison passed away suddenly on August 29, 2016, at the age of 87. She was deeply loved by her husband of 60 years, Hugh Addison, who predeceased her by a year, and by her sons, Charles (Cynthia Sully) and James. She was a loving and devoted grandmother to Catherine, Heather, Kate, and Erin. She is survived by her sister, Helen Hart (David Hart) in Eastbourne, England, and her nieces Clare Hart, Ruth Hart and her nephew, Anthony Hart. She is also remembered by her many good friends and her extended family. In addition to her beloved husband, Hugh, she was predeceased by her parents, Jack and Alexandrina Hope. Patricia was born in Edmonton, Alberta, in 1929. She grew up loving art and playing the piano. She spent many happy days with her family at their cottage at Ma-Me-O Beach at Pigeon Lake, Alberta, along with her many relatives and friends. After high school she went to work for Rule, Wynn, and Rule, a leading Alberta architectural firm. She ultimately became office manager in the Edmonton office. Patricia always spoke fondly of a trip she made with Helen and other friends to Europe by ocean liner from New York in the early 1950’s at a time when you could walk around Seville, Spain, before there were any tourists and when you packed your best clothes to visit the casino in Monte Carlo. In 1955 she met the love of her life, Hugh Addison. Patricia and Hugh were married in Edmonton in 1956 and started to build a life together. After her two sons came along, the family moved to North Vancouver in 1964 for Hugh’s new job and then to West Vancouver, which was where Hugh was from. Patricia always cared deeply for her family and worked hard to support them by believing in them and looking after the family home. Over the years, Patricia made many friends in a variety of activities from her bridge group where so many young families came to know each other, to her quilting group when the kids had all left home. Patricia volunteered regularly in her community through a variety of organizations over the years. She and Hugh travelled extensively to many locations around the world. Patricia was always there with a comforting shoulder if things weren’t going quite right. In retirement, she spent many happy years with Hugh at their vacation home on Saltspring Island tending to their garden and playing golf with many friends including, Bill and Mary Hogg. In her later years, she continued to be active in the community and with friends. She loved all her granddaughters deeply and was fiercely proud of them. After Hugh’s passing last year, it took her some time to recover, but in recent months she had found peace and comfort in the warmth of her home. She continued to watch the ships sail past while sitting on the deck of her home feeling the warm rays of the sun on her face. Patricia lived a full life. She was and is loved and will be deeply missed. Patricia’s family would like to thank Janice, Heather, and Socki for enabling her to remain in her home over the past year. There will be a gathering to remember Patricia at 1 pm on Sunday, October 2. For more information regarding the gathering contact Hollyburn Funeral Home. In lieu of flowers, a donation to BC Children’s Hospital Foundation would be appreciated. For those wishing to share a memory of Patricia, please go to www.Hollyburnfunerals.com.
It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Dave Roberts in West Vancouver. Born in London, UK, Dave is survived by loving wife, Valerie Way, children Joy and Glen, sister Carol Rose, family and friends. Passions included music, photography, sailing, travel and nature. Donations to the David Suzuki Foundation appreciated. Special thanks to the staff of the Capilano Care Centre for their loving care of Dave. A Celebration of Life will be at 3PM, October 29, 2016 at the North Shore Unitarian Church.
GILLETT, Kevin J. February 21, 1949 − September 1, 2016
It is with heavy hearts that Kevin’s family announces his unexpected passing. Survived by wife, Genevieve, daughters Sarah and Elodie, three grandchildren Eloise, Felix and Johnny, and siblings Nigel and Joanna. Will be remembered as a loving husband, Dad and Papi who prioritized family, friends and travel. Celebration of Life scheduled for September 16th, 4PM at 580 Robin Hood Road, West Vancouver. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to heartandstroke.com.
ARCHER nee Reeds, Margaret Ruth May 12, 1922 − September 4, 2016
With great sadness, we announce the sudden death of our mother, grandmother and great− grandmother, Ruth Archer, at the age of 94. Predeceased by her husband, Rev. Major William Archer, in 1996, Ruth leaves behind her daughters Elizabeth Ellis (Henry) and Margaret Garnett (Don), her son Reed (Luise), grandchildren David (Hilary), Christine, Adrian (Kimberly), Jay and Leslie and great−grandchildren Quinn, Quinn and Fern. Ruth enjoyed her busy life as a military chaplain’s wife, posted in many different bases across Canada. She was active in the United Church from an early age, playing the organ at services, teaching Sunday school, leading Bible studies, hosting church functions and baking thousands of cookies for events and Christmas craft sales. She was happiest being with her family or sitting by a campfire. The family welcomes you to join them at a memorial service on Friday, September 9, at 2PM at North Lonsdale United Church, 3380 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver. Reception to follow.
SLATER, Queenie May June 3, 1932 – August 30, 2016 With heartache we announce the gentle passing of our adored “Q” after a brief illness. Born Queenie May Gunderson in Alert Bay, B.C., Queenie married William (Bill) Slater in 1957. They settled in North Vancouver in 1964 to raise their three daughters: Stephanie, Melinda and Scenery. Bill and “the girls” are joined in grief by grandsons Dylan and Ryder McRae; sons-in-law, George McRae, Roy Reichgeld and Brian Casilio; sisters Joyce O’Conner, Jessie Roland and Vera Gunnarsen; sister-in-law Linda Gunderson; and many nieces, nephews and friends. Many family members and friends were able to visit her in hospice, ensuring that her death - like her life - was filled with laughter and love. “Our family is comforted by the thought of Queenie being reunited with her adored brother “Johnnyboy” and nephews Kevin and Mark O’Connor.” “You sure had “a good run” Q. Love and miss you always.” A memorial service will be held at the West Vancouver Seniors’ Activity Centre, 695 21st Street, Sunday, Sept. 25 at 1:00 p.m. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the Paul Sugar Palliative Support Foundation, the BC SPCA, or the charity of your choice.
RICKARD, Chester Ludlow February 10, 1915 to September 1, 2016 A great man, he lived a long and full life, for 75 years married to his Winnie Girl, the love of his life. A long-time resident of West Vancouver, Ches was a man of many passions. He began his airline career with Trans-Canada Air Lines (which later became Air Canada) in 1937 as a radio operator and after obtaining his pilot’s licence flew as a distinguished pilot for the remainder of his 36 year career. In his spare time he built a number of boats including Winsome III, lV and X, and was a keen racer. Winsome III won the Swiftsure Lightship Race three years running. He was a long-time member of both RVYC and WVYC. Ches and Winn sailed offshore for 7 years, coming home to visit family in the summer months. They loved to travel and they shared their boating lifestyle with friends and family. For many years Ches joined a morning “check in” with old friends on the ham radio net. VE7CCH has signed off a final time. Ches is survived by his daughters, Dianna and Joanie, and by his sons-in-law Rod Maddison, Fred Carter and Jim Charlesworth. His wife Winn and daughter Lynnie passed away before him. He leaves 10 grandchildren, 17 great-grandchildren and 7 great-great-grandchildren. He was an admired and loved father and Grampa. Thank you to all the wonderful people who were part of Ches’s life in the last few years, especially his caregiver team lead by Barb and Merly. He was very loved and cared for. A private family celebration will be held later in October when Ches and Winn’s ashes will be interred at the Gabriola Island Cemetery. Many happy hours were spent on Gabriola and the surrounding waters during their lives.
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes at
legacy.com/obituaries/nsnews
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nsnews.com north shore news
REMEMBRANCES
LEGAL
Public Information Meeting
FUNERAL SERVICES
obituaries
Preparing My Final Wishes:
Date: Thursday, September 15, 2016, 6:30pm - 8:30pm Place: 3075 Fromme Road
Much Better to Be Ready Wednesday, September 14 • 7:00-8:30 pm North Vancouver Public Library, Lynn Valley Branch 1277 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver Space is limited. Free! Registration required.
WILLIAMS, Tula Liv November 15, 1921 − August 31, 2016
Tula passed away peacefully at the age of 94 with her loving family by her side. She arrived from Norway in 1923 and settled in North Vancouver, where she proudly remained for her entire life. As a young woman, Tula loved to Jitterbug and Highland Fling dance. She played the accordion, was an avid card player, and loved her home of 53 years, where she remained until the age of 91. She worked at the Burrard Shipyards during the Second World War, and after becoming a single mother, went on to support herself and her two children by working at such places as the Capilano Suspension Bridge, One Hour Martinizing in Edgemont Village, and Sears. She was one of six children born to Henrik and Jenny Caspersen, and was predeceased by all of her siblings: Alvhild Beck, Arne, twin brother Leif, Evelyn Gatter, and Alice Holm. She is survived by her beloved and devoted children Karen Hedges, Bradley Williams and daughter−in−law Christine, grandchildren Jamie Hedges (Gordana) and Kristie Fuchs (Sean), great granddaughters Zoe, Amy, Natalie and Emma, as well as many loving nieces and nephews. She spent her final years in Evergreen House under the care of the capable and outstanding staff of 3 South. The family wishes to thank Dr. P. Schwartz, Dr. R. Puddicombe, and Dr. P. Montemuro for all of their care and kindness as well as all of the nurses and care aides that made Tula’s final years warm and dignified. She will certainly be missed. Her family will remember the strength that she demonstrated, and strive to uphold the values that she instilled. No service by request, but the family will celebrate her life at a later date. In lieu of flowers, please have a cup of coffee with your family in her memory.
Call: 604-807-4041 or email: frederick.margel@sci-us.com
The applicant proposes to enter a Heritage Revitalization Agreement to restore a heritage house (the Gillett Residence), and to construct 2 additional houses fronting Fromme Road and 3 laneway houses.
COMMUNITY
coming events
found A bag of school supplies found in Westin area 604.988.8022
lost LOST 2 YR old grey male cat Upper Lynn Valley. Recently had a Lion’s cut. Answers to Lamar. 778-883-6075
MEC North Vancouver Century Ride Don’t miss this great 50K/ 100K supported road ride through the heart of the North Shore on Oct. 1! Sign up today for $45: events.mec.ca/node/ 135851/
LOST GREEN CHEEK Parrot with white, turquoise, light & dark grey, reddish brown, mauve band on left leg with #040050993461 REWARD $100 for her safe return. “DIAMOND” 3yrs old last seen Draycott Road Area April 17th. Judy 604-988-7275
Information packages are being distributed to residents within a 75 meter radius of the site. If you would like to receive a copy or if you would like more information, contact Kathleen Larsen of the DNV Community Planning Department at 604-990-2369 or Ben Sigari of Maroon Construction Ltd. at 604-719-8549.
This is not a Public Hearing. DNV Council will receive a report from staff on issues raised at the meeting and will formally consider the proposal at a later date. EMPLOYMENT
general employment
PARSONS, Kenneth R. August 27, 1927 − September 4, 2016
Kenneth Robinson Parsons passed away peacefully at the age of 89 on September 4, 2016 at the Inglewood Care Centre in West Vancouver. Ken was predeceased by his sister Phyllis. He leaves behind his loving wife of 64 years, Irene, daughters Lori Staehling (Rick) and Jennifer Parsons, grandsons Andrew and Marc, great− grandchildren Robert and Angelica. Ken graduated from UBC in 1950 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. In 1952 he and Irene married. In 1956 he began a long career with Sandwell Engineering and that same year the couple built their first home in North Vancouver where they raised their two daughters. Ken and family lived in Chile, Portugal and Brazil when he was transferred by his company to work on the electrical design of pulp and paper mills in those countries − a great experience for the whole family. In more recent years, Ken developed vascular dementia. In December 2014, needing more support, he moved to Inglewood Care Centre where Irene visited him daily. The family would like to thank the staff of the Upper Terrace and Upper Lodge at Inglewood for their compassionate and caring treatment of Ken. He was a loving husband, father and grandfather and is deeply missed by his family. A service has not been arranged at this time but may be announced at a later date. We ask that no flowers be sent, but memories of happy times shared instead.
VOLUNTEER TUTORS NEEDED
As a volunteer with the ONE TO ONE Literacy Society, you won’t just be helping a child to read — you’ll be improving their self-confidence and giving them hope for a brighter future. Dedicate just TWO to THREE HOURS a week during the school day and help a struggling young reader develop literacy skills for life. Register at www.one-to-one.ca or contact 604.255.5559 or volunteer@one-to-one.ca.
GARAGE SALES
Garage Sale Sunday, Sept. 11 9am-5pm 4655 Rutrand Rd. Caulfeild area
classifieds.nsnews.com
Permanent Full time TCP CerTifiCaTion
778-683-5967
Requirements:
EMPLOYMENT
• live on North Shore • be active & energetic • possess valid BC Driver’s License • positive background check Pay: $12-16/Hr. Apply Today at 604.987.4112
CARE AID required for female quad. Sun-Wed: 6pm-9:30pm, Thurs & Fri: 5pm-9:30pm, Sat: 8am6pm. $20/hr to start.
604-339-7542
FUNERAL SERVICES
Build Results INSURANCE OPPORTUNITIES New North Vancouver Branch, #117, 2120 Dollarton Hwy, North Vancouver
Burial, Cremation Serving all faiths
1807 Marine Drive, West Vancouver, BC 604-922-1221 www.hollyburnfunerals.com Service Corporation International (Canada) ULC
Do you enjoy a challenging, dynamic and fun environment? Are you looking to advance your career and take your insurance skills to the next level? If you answered yes, YOU are the person we are looking for! With 17 locations, VIIC is one of the largest privately held brokerages in B.C. We are expanding into the Lower Mainland and have exciting career opportunities for the right people specifically Auto insurance and Personal Insurance Specialists. If you think this opportunity is for you, please send your current resume including a cover letter by August 25, 2016 at 5:00 p.m. to Heather at hbatchelor@viic.ca VIIC thanks all applicants for their interest; however only those short-listed will be contacted.
Email resume to susan@camclarkmail.com
• Automotive Detailer • Lot Attendant • Parts Delivery Driver
Location: North/West Vancouver Hours: F/T, Mon-Fri Days
ALL SMALL BREED PUPS Local, Non-Shedding and Vet Checked. 604-590-3727 www.puppiesfishcritters.com
Full Time Permanent Accounting Clerk
previous experience an asset
Now Hiring House Cleaners
West Van
general employment
flaggErs needed
PETS
career opportunities
Hollyburn Funeral Home
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
general employment PARKING LOT MAINTENANCE CLEANER Outside parking lot cleaner needed for shopping mall, Pemberton & Marine area. 7 days/wk, 4 hrs/day Early Morning, $13/hr. To apply, call Shane at 778-385-0291, Mon to Sat between 9am and 4pm or fax your resume to: 604-598-8416
medical/ dental help
clean drivers abstract
• Full Time Service Lot Attendant These are full time permanent positions required immediately. Short term or part time need not apply.
• Part Time Service Shuttle Driver
Email Resume to: dan@camclarkmail.com
CARPENTERS or CARPENTERS HELPER NEEDED Min 2 yrs exp. preffered. Must have valid DL. Must be skilled & hard working Please email resume to:
deifler@telus.net
GENERAL EMPLOYMENT
Auto Repair Technician Needed Rapidly growing VW/Audi repair shop in North Vancouver is hiring! This full-time Monday to Friday position will suit a journeyman or a highly energetic, motivated apprentice looking for a long-term career opportunity. If you have excellent organizational skills, initiative and the ability to work with minimum supervision, please submit your resume by email to: vwauto@telus.net
I.Q. Dental PT CDA needed for job share 2−3 days per week. Flexible, positive environment. Send your resume and contact info for consideration. Do NOT contact the office directly: tntmckay@telus.net mynorthvancouverdentist.ca
food/beverage help DISHWASHER Ambleside French Bistro looking for FT & PT dishwashers. Flexible hours, good pay, valid open work permit holders also ok, must understand English or French. brigitte@cafecava.com
BUSINESS SERVICES personals
Lily’s Relaxation Centre Amazing Massage!
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
MARKETPLACE
furniture
HOME SERVICES
RENTALS
suites for rent
drywall
1BR/1BA $1,050 Ambleside own entry; side patio; 5 appl, own w/d; side patio; security; n/s; n/p; mature individual. 604−816−9758
Boarding & Taping, Good Rates! Reliable, Free Est. Reno’s & Small Jobs Welcome! Call Gurprit 604-710-7769
electrical
Office Furniture Must Go! Various desks & filing cabinets for sale. Lots of options. Contact for pricing: 604−970−5589
free ing condition. U-Pick up.
604-987-7403
FREE: 10 one litre plastic bottles of BBQ starter fluid. Can deliver to Central or Lower Lonsdale. Please call 604.603.3463. FREE Merit Student’s Encyclopaedia, 20 Volumes, dictionary, junior Classics. Call 604.925.6111.
wanted CASH $ for TEAK / RETRO FURN & ANTIQUE Items FAIR & RELIABLE
Local...Thanks! Derek 604-442-2099 Old Books Wanted also: Photos Postcards, Letters, Paintings. no text books or encyclopedias. I pay cash. 604-737-0530
houses for sale
All Electrical, Lic #105654 res/comm, renos, panel chgs Low Cost 604-374-0062 ALP ELECTRIC #89724 Low price, big/small job, satisfaction guar. Free est 604-765-3329 2BR/3BA $3,600 West Vancouver Cypress Park Estates in West Vancouver. Great south facing location with an incredible view! Steps to Cypress Falls Park, awesome for dog walking. Details − 2 bdrm, 3 bath with master Jacuzzi, 3 outdoor decks, 2 fireplaces, 2 car garage, W/D, Kitchen Aid Stainless Steel appliances, Beam built−in vacuum. jcherrier1464@shaw.ca
furnished rentals LONSDALE 500 - Furn Accom, Bach, 1, 2, 3 BR. Start at $1300. 604-723-7820 or visit www.homawayinns.com QUALITY SHORT TERM 1 - 2 BR mtn/city view suites www.lionsgatesuites.com
AUTOMOTIVE
domestic cars 2004 Dodge 2500 Hemi 4x4. Gold. Fully loaded. $7800 or best offer. Call 778-387-3626
2016 KIA FORTE 4 dr sedan, white, 1000 km, 6 spd standard, $12,500 604-922-7367
First Open House Pemberton NV $1,688,000 3 bedroom (could be 4), 3 bath, completely nice renovated home! Steps to Capilano Elementary (IB) and Carson Graham High School (IB). First Open House Saturday, Sept 17th and Sunday, Sept 18th, 2PM−4PM. 778−828−6878 leoliusold@gmail.com
real estate wanted House or lot wanted, North & West Van, any condition. 604-790-0472
RENTALS
apartments/ condos for rent
scrap car removal
THE SCRAPPER
SCRAP CAR & TRUCK REMOVAL
CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES
604-790-3900 OUR SERVIC 2H
E
.
#1 Backhoes & Excavators Trenchless Waterlines Bobcats & Dump Truck & All Material Deliveries
Drainage, Video Inspection, Landscaping, Stump/Rock/Cement/Oil Tank & Demos, Paving, Pool/Dirt Removal, Paver Stones, Jackhammer, Water/Sewer, Line/Sumps, Slinger Avail, Concrete Cutting, Hand Excavating, Basements Made Dry Claudio’s Backhoe Service
604-341-4446
fencing NORTH SHORE FENCES Quality work by professionals Repairs and construction
604-230-3559
glass/mirrors
THUNDERBIRD GLASS
· Quality Custom Glass Canopies · Interior/Exterior Glass Rails · Frameless Showers & Skylights
cleaning
With everything life throws at you, who has time to clean?
Call Merry Maids.
It’s one less thing to worry about.
604-980-6100 www.merrymaids.ca
drywall 3BR/1BA $1,800 N Burnaby Close to schools fahsenvan@gmail.com vancouver.craigslist.ca/bnc/ apa/5753669447.html The Pier - 199 Victory Ship Way. New 2 Br 2 Bath, 9 foot ceiling, air-con, incl. hotel gym/pool $3300. Anson Realty Matthew 778-388-8370 Westwind Apts West Van, 2BR $2025. Cat ok. Ground floor. Reno’d 2025 Bellevue 604-913-0734
A & A Millwood Quality Drywall Service. Repairs, renos, new construction. Prompt service. Richard cell 604-6710084 or 604-986-9880 ACE DRYWALL. Avail immed Board, tape, spraytex, repairs 16 yr exp. No job too small. Mike 604-808-2432, 604-985-4321 QUALITY GUARANTEED Serving the N. Shore for 25 yrs Boarding, Taping, Spraytex, Small Jobs welcome! Call Dave 604-984-7476
ROOFING
REPAIRS • RE-ROOFING • CHIMNEYS • SKYLIGHTS
SPRING SERVICES Lawn Aeration, Moss, Power Raking, Trims, Pruning, Topping, Clean-Ups
Call Brian 604-985-9214
Free Estimates
Call Sukh
604.726.9152 604.984.1988
SERAFINA
TRUSTED ON THE NORTH SHORE FOR OVER 30 YEARS
Garden Services
renovations
• Summer Pruning and Planting • Weeding and Clean-ups • Design & advice • Professional & experienced
www.serafinagardens.ca 604-984-4433 contact Cari
A Garden Grooming & Clean-up Co. Res/comm, guaranteed lowest prices, Free est 604-808-0056
Award-Winning Renovations ■ Rendering to Reality ■ ccirenos.com
CALL NOW:
604-980-7511
www.thunderbirdglass.com
gutters GUTTER CLEANING ROOF CLEANING WINDOW CLEANING POWER WASHING 30 yrs experience For Prompt Service Call
handyperson CAPILANO HANDYMAN l Renovations l Cabinetry l Demolition l Electrical l Plumbing l Paving l Drywall l Carpentry l Painting l Kitchens & Bath l Flooring l Fences & Decks
Insured & WCB
Tel: 604-219-0666
hauling CHEAP LOADS Fast Reliable Service 604-922-5101
landscaping CONSTRUCTIVE LANDSCAPING
Italian Craftsmanship Cedar Fencing/Decks Stonework paving stones Danny 604-250-7824 constructivelandscaping.com
■
604.980.8384
ALL WEST GARDEN SERVICE
Lawn maint, aeration moss, power raking, trim, prune, top cleanups free est. 604-726-9152
CNN Landscaping .
Weeding, Tidy up, Garden Work, Lawn Repair, Mulch. Same Day Service. Free Est.
Nick • 778-840-6573
masonry Rain Forest Stone Masonry North Shore based Walls, F/P, Patio’s & Repairs Michael 604-802-7850
HOME SERVICES painting/ wallpaper
PAINTER
Interior/Exterior
Drywall repairs, 30 yrs exp. Free Est. Refs Available CLAUDE
renos & home improvement
RELIABLE MOVING LTD.
Household Offices Pianos Licensed Bonded Insured Friendly Professional Reliable 3/5 Ton Trucks Well Equipped Senior/New Customer Discount
778.986.2758
Liability Insurance, WCB, BBB, Free Estimates
604-946-4333
Bath, Kitchen, Basement & More Grade A+, Licensed & Insured RenoRite.com, 604-365-7271
MASTER CARPENTER •Finishing•Doors•Mouldings •Decks•Renos•Repairs
Emil: 778-773-1407
GLOBAL
Licenced Plumber & Gas Fitter
PAINTING
• Exterior/Interior Projects • Written Warranty • Years of Experience • Fully Insured • WCB Covered Residential Specialists
QUALITY WORK. DONE RIGHT.
778.881.6096
a Bros Painting Kov
Friendly Service by Professionals Lic’d, Insured.
• Insured • Same Day Service • Hot Water Tank • Drainage Spec. in Leak Detection. Free Est.
604.987.7473
Delbrook Plumbing & Drainage • Licensed & Insured • No Job Too Small • Hot Water Tanks • Specializing in Waterline
604-729-6695 ACTUAL PLUMBING LTD
BBB, Visa/Mcard/Amex
604-874-4808
LOCAL PLUMBER Licensed, insured, GAS FITTING, renos, repairs. VISA 604-830-6617
Athan, 778-317-3061 www.kovabros.com
RICKY DEWAN PAINTING Book Your Exterior Now
Serving the North Shore for 20 years
604-299-5831 – Cell 604-833-7529
FAIRWAY PAINTING Fully Insured INTERIOR & EXTERIOR SPECIALS 10% OFF
plumbing
rubbish removal
PLUMBING LTD.
AAA PRECISION
20 yrs. exp. • Free Est.
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CROSSWORD
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30. 31. 32. 33. 38. 41.
Where to put things Commercials Hard drinker Take in Copy Volume of published materials 43. Used to be called “skim” 45. Organizes 47. Parts of worms 49. __ Khan: hereditary title 50. A cravat with wide square ends 55. Central China mountain range
CLUES ACROSS 1. Kiln 5. American time 8. Female sibling 11. Fencing sword 13. Spoken in Laos 14. Swiss river 15. Fictional Middle-earth 16. “The Real World” (abbr.) 17. Replacement worker 18. Form after cuts 20. Frozen water 21. Irritates 22. Type of bread 25. Female peace officers
56. Longing 57. Elephant’s name 59. British children’s author Blyton 60. Something curved in shape 61. Home to important events 62. Nagorno Karabakh Republic (abbr.) 63. A very large body of water 64. Consists of two elements
Crossword puzzle answers use American spelling
Rearrange the letters to spell something pertaining to baby safety.
LTOT E U LAST SUNDAY’S ANSWER: AUTHOR
CRYPTO FUN
LAST SUNDAY'S CROSSWORD SOLUTION:
DETERMINE THE CODE TO REVEAL THE ANSWER Solve the code to discover words related to baby safety. Each number corresponds to a letter. (Hint: 4 = t)
It’s okay to ask for help!
CLUES DOWN 1. Former CIA 2. Ooohs and ___ 3. Invests in little enterprises 4. Spanish river 5. In the preceding month 6. Malignant tumor 7. Dried off 8. Via __: main street of Ancient Rome 9. Asian country (alt. sp.) 10. One point south of southeast 12. Confederate soldier 14. Popular Bollywood actress Thottumkal 19. Small scale embedded generation (abbr.) 23. Female sheep 24. Of unsound mind 25. Pacific Time 26. Iowa town 51044 27. Trim 28. Wrath 29. Used to serve wine 34. Make less bright 35. Skywalker mentor __-Wan Kenobi 36. Protestant, Ulster, Loyalist 37. Expression of disappointment 39. Tropical fruits 40. Furniture with open shelves 41. Metal can be extracted from it 42. Flat tableland with steep edges 44. Lingua __ 45. Chadic language 46. Peruse 47. Yemenese port city 48. Lean 51. Helps little firms 52. Blackjack players need this 53. Be obedient to 54. Source of the Nile River 58. Cool
WORD SCRAMBLE
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A. B. C. D.
7
16
19
17
4
26
21
11
19
16
11
4
14
10
24
7
17
8
5
10
4
17
Clue: Being cautious Clue: Baby
Clue: Residence Clue: Safeguard
22
4
LAST SUNDAY’S ANSWERS: A. article B. editor C. rewrite D. publish
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
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WE’VE MOVED WEDNESDAY AUGUST 17 2016 TURE 19 FEA TAND NEWSS
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g Simmerlin hits podium in track cycling ST ANDY PRE news.com aprest@ns
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West Vancouver’s Georgia Simmerling can add more achievement one to already mind-bogglingher biography: Olympic medallist.
Georgia On Saturday Simmerli couver’s ng West Van g can add one joined with Allison Simmerlinevement to her Jasmin Glaesser Beveridge, and Kirsti more achi d-boggling Lay to blast past New Zealand already minOlympic in the bronze medal y: race biograph women’s track cycling in t. team erling medallis Simm pursuit at the Rio Olympic , On Saturday n BeveridgeVelodrom Alliso e. Simmerling had Kirsti already joined with sser and made history just Jasmin Glae past New Zealand by showing up for the event, Lay to blast medal race inb ze h C d in the bron ng team track cycli pic women’s the Rio Olym had at uit g purs . Simmerlin Velodrome e history just already madup for the event, dian by showing Cana the difbecoming ete in three ever to comp in three different ts ferent spor es. Gam iously Olympic ar-old prev in The 27-ye skiing in alpine competed
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