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Remembering coach Brian Upson and 1982’s epic basketball battle. See story page 4. LOCAL NEWS LOCAL MATTERS SINCE 1969
Rockridge film students Meryl Stevens and Tavish Kelpin have produced a documentary about legendary high school basketball coach Brian Upson. PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
Above left: West Vancouver seniors boys basketball head coach Brian Upson congratulates Highlander player Paul Kitchener after the team won the 1982 provincial championship game. Above right: Coach Upson stands beside assistant coach Tom Rippon, team captain Erik Lockhart, Paul Kitchener, and other members of the team as trophies are presented. PHOTOS SUPPLIED
Remembering coach Brian Upson and an epic basketball battle
“Seven seconds, six, five! Marter: controlling, moving in, shoots! No! The Highlanders have won the provincial championship! The West Vancouver Highlanders are the champs!” ROSALIND DUANE rduane@nsnews.com
It’s March 20, 1982, and a game many still remember as one of the most exciting high school sports events in recent history.
For the first time, the senior boys provincial basketball championship tournament is featuring two North Shore teams in the final. Played before a packed crowd of 5,000 at Vancouver’s PNE Agrodome, the battle is fierce and the outcome uncertain until the very end. After a nail-biting nip and tuck game – one point here, one point there, back and forth – a steal by the Pipers with a little more than three minutes left marks the beginning of a roller-coaster ride to the finish. Down by five points, the steal is followed by a series of shots, turnovers, and fouls
The final game
that results in Argyle closing the gap to just one point. The score is 44-45 for the Highlanders. The original cable broadcast of the game was recently digitized by Rockridge secondary film students and posted to YouTube, but despite the improvement in video and audio quality, it’s still sometimes hard to hear the voice of the game announcers clearly over the roar of the crowd. “Anything can happen and probably will,” one of them accurately predicts in the final moments of the game. At the three-minute mark, the tension is palpable, and a passing observation by one of the announcers holds more meaning than he intended or probably even knew: Both coaches are on their feet at the Highlanders bench. What isn’t mentioned is the fact that Highlander head coach Brian Upson can barely stand. As the camera cuts from the court to the sidelines in the final minutes of the game, somehow Upson still looks professional in a sport coat that drapes his emaciated body like its two
sizes too big. Having coached basketball at West Vancouver secondary for more than 20 years, the popular teacher was battling a form of stomach cancer and was bedridden at the time, but somehow found the strength to attend this, his final game. He died exactly two weeks later. Highlanders team captain Erik Lockhart remembers what his coach, who he still calls “Mr. Upson,” told the team before the final game. Coach Upson couldn’t climb the stairs to the team locker room so they met in a cow stable behind the basketball court. “He said ‘Guys this is probably a once-in-a-lifetime,’” recalls Lockhart, who was a 17-year-old Grade 12 student at the time. “He said ‘Go out there and have fun and enjoy it.’” He also told them to be like ducks on a pond: “Be graceful on the surface but paddle like hell underneath.” And paddle they did. Going into the finals, Argyle was the favourite to win, having beaten West Van three times in regular-season
play and at the North Shore finals tournament. But the Highlanders took a backdoor into the provincials by beating another team and came face to face with their longtime rivals once again.
!!!
With just under two minutes left in the game, the score is 45-44 for West Van when an offensive foul gives Argyle possession of the ball. They miss a shot but gain another foul to earn two free throws. Lucky No. 13, Steve Pawlett, six-foot-two and 160 pounds, steps to the line for Argyle. With a minute and 34 seconds to go, Pawlett puts the Pipers ahead. The score is now 46-45 for Argyle and the clock is counting down from 1:25. At this point, Highlanders player Paul Kitchener makes what his teammate Lockhart calls a “miracle shot.” After a round of passing that can’t break through the Argyle defence, Kitchener sinks a desperation basket from outside the key with just three seconds left on the shot clock. “He had to take it and he
turned around from way, way out,” explains Lockhart. The result is two points for West Van and a new game leader with 43 seconds left. Argyle then takes possession and the Highlanders try to hang on to their one-point lead, but it quickly slips through their grip. The topsy-turvy ending is still up in the air with less than a minute of play to go. Argyle’s six-foot-four centre Mark Marter is fouled under the West Van net and drains two free throws to put Argyle ahead again by one point. “The big guy hits it when it comes down to it!” the announcer yells. “This is no place for a weak heart,” notes the other, the excitement clear in his voice. The camera cuts to the sidelines and coach Upson is still on his feet, as are most of the people in the stands. With less than 40 seconds to go, the score is now 48-47 for Argyle. West Van forges in deep, can’t break the Argyle defence, but still manages to get off a few shots that don’t drop. Then Argyle catches a
rebound, sealing West Van’s fate. Or do they? Fate is fickle and Argyle almost immediately loses possession of the ball. And then it happens: another foul. With less than a minute left to play, “miracle shot” Kitchener heads to the line and dumps two free throws to put West Van ahead. Again. By one point. Again. Anyone not already biting their nails at this point probably started just then. The Pipers charge down the court on a last-gasp effort with just seconds left in the game and the announcer starts the countdown: “Seven seconds, six, five. . . .” Argyle feeds the ball to their 6-4 centre deep in the lane. Marter sets up and shoots. “I put my hands up and prayed,” recalls Lockhart. “And Mark missed the shot.” Mark rarely missed shots, Lockhart reflects. The ball hits the backboard and doesn’t fall. The game is over. The Highlanders win. Up in the stands,
See Two page 5
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
NEWS | A5
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NEWS HWY 1 TO GET NEW BRIDGES OVER LYNN CREEK 7 MAILBOX REAL COST OF DISTRACTED DRIVING 9 ONLINE COMMENT SLOW DOWN TO 30 KM/H 11 PR E S C H O O L O PE N H O U S E
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Coach Brian Upson’s oldest son Greg looks at team photos with his mom Paula. Members of the family are featured in an upcoming Rockridge secondary student film. PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN
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Two tough teams battle to the bittersweet end
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From page 4
17-year-old Greg Upson looks at his dad and understands the real emotion he sees through the full smile. “He barely had the strength to get out of bed at that point,” notes Greg. “It was the pinnacle of his coaching career and, of course, it was the final game as well.” Greg says he hadn’t watched the game for years because his VHS version was in such bad shape, but has watched it since it’s been online thanks to Rockridge film students posting a digital version of it to YouTube. “All the emotions come back,” says Greg, who attended the 1982 game with his two younger brothers, Gary and Brent, and their mom Paula. (The Upson brothers attended Hillside secondary, their catchment school.) The family all knew by then that Brian’s cancer was terminal. But they didn’t know how soon he would die. Says Greg of the game: “It was one of the most exciting sports events I have ever seen, obviously with the extra emotion there it was incredible. It was unbelievable. The crowd was just on their feet going crazy.” The game announcer would concur: “It would be appropriate to say that all hell has broken loose here at the Agrodome,” he reports after the final play of the game as
Team captain Erik Lockhart’s grad photo. PHOTO SUPPLIED fans fill the court. It was a bittersweet moment for the Upson family and for both teams. “To their credit, those guys were real gentlemen,” Lockhart says of the Argyle players. “I could tell that they weren’t bitter. They were extremely disappointed and, yes, they were trying to win. It was their final game too.” But at the same time, they knew coach Upson’s cancer was terminal. “I got the feeling that they sensed the bigger picture,” says Lockhart. They were all seniors, this was their last game, and they all wanted to win. But although they wanted to win for their beloved coach, Lockhart admits they were teens in their final year of high school and they also wanted to win for themselves, their school, and their teammates. Lockhart doesn’t remember the final game as a sombre event. There was much celebration and
coach Upson even attended the team party the next day. Team members continued to visit their coach throughout his final two weeks, and Brian’s wife Paula says it wasn’t unusual for students to stop by the house as her husband had become much more than a teacher and a coach: he was a mentor and a role model. “He just loved basketball so much,” she says. “The team just loved Brian as a coach. He was a terrific person, he was very easy-going and involved in lots of sports and things, and was always interesting. He was a very easy person to like and that’s how the students felt about him.” Three years before the big game, Brian had been diagnosed with an ulcer. A year later, that diagnosis changed to stomach cancer. He was told he had just one year to live, but he hung on for two. Paula remembers the night she and her husband shared an important realization: “We were having dinner at the Park Royal Hotel, which isn’t there anymore, and that’s when we realized there was only so much time left.” She is firmly convinced Brian was hanging on for the basketball. Her son agrees. “I think basically what happened was he was kind of hanging on for the final game.
See Student page 31
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NEWS | A7
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Express lanes coming to the Cut
Lower Lynn corridor project to ease eastwest congestion JANE SEYD AND BRENT RICHTER jseyd@nsnews.com brichter@nsnews.com
Plans to alleviate traffic on the Cut and Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing got a big boost Friday with the announcement of two new two-lane bridges over Lynn Creek shouldering the existing orange Highway 1 bridge.
The $60-million project announced Friday expands on the already-in-progress Mountain Highway interchange redesign. Costs of the project will be shared equally by federal, provincial and District of North Vancouver taxpayers. When the project is complete, which is targeted for 2021, the Cut will be divided into express and collector lanes, similar to what’s used at the Port Mann Bridge now, with local east- and westbound traffic crossing the new bridges. The design is meant to physically separate east-west traffic trying to get across the North Shore from traffic bound for the Ironworkers. It
will also mean less weaving and merging of vehicles at multiple entry points on the highway, which creates inefficiencies. The total cost of the project is now nearly $200 million. North Vancouver Seymour MLA Jane Thornthwaite described the project Friday as “one of the most complicated infrastructure projects in the province today” and one that’s critical to the North Shore. “Since 2009, this has been the number one issue I’ve been working on,” she said. “We’ve been stuck in this forever and we’re finally going to fix it.” Thornthwaite said the lower Lynn corridor is currently a choke point for the entire region – both for people driving from Horseshoe Bay to Burnaby and those going from shopping to soccer practice within North Vancouver. “I live here and I know how busy Highway 1 can get,” she said “I’ve been stuck in traffic for hours.” North Vancouver MP Jonathan Wilkinson described the project announcement as “very good news for all of us.” He added he’d raised the issue of the significant bottleneck in the area and
Municipal, provincial and federal politicians gather at Lynn Creek bridge Friday to announce joint funding of $60 million for a fourth phase of work along the Highway 1 Lower Lynn corridor, to be completed in spring 2021. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD
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Bandage for the Cut
W
ith Friday’s announcement, almost $200 million is now being spent to widen Highway 1 and revamp our local interchanges in a bid to ease traffic congestion. For drivers on the North Shore, this is a good thing. Traffic problems have escalated to the point of being untenable. The new corridor improvements have every possibility of making getting around North Vancouver – those picking up their kids from daycare, going to sports practice or grocery shopping – much less frustrating. For the 80 per cent of traffic that’s heading over the Ironworkers, however, the fix is less clear. Politicians love road and bridge projects – big tangible stretches of asphalt, steel and concrete. But regionally, they’re also evidence of a mid-century way of thinking – that the solution to congestion is more road capacity.
Provincial statistics show the North Shore’s population has largely flatlined. A 2015 traffic study put the blame for our worsening traffic woes on a big increase in people driving here for work. If we continue the trend of exiling our working class to the suburban valley, it’s only a matter of time before our fancy new infrastructure will be at capacity again. While we welcome Friday’s announcement, it won’t solve larger traffic problems over the long term. The best way to do that is to have people live closer to where they work – which means more affordable housing options. Improving our transit system and some form of road pricing will also be key. As the revered city planner Lewis Mumford acutely noted in 1955, adding highway lanes to deal with traffic congestion is like loosening your belt to cure obesity.
MAILBOX
Support our First Nations on Kinder Morgan stance Dear Editor: Re: More Pipeline Suits Launched by First Nations, Jan. 18 front-page story. As a former senior industrial hygienist at WorkSafeBC, I had direct experience with drafting parameters and criteria for the creation of industrial health and safety regulations in B.C. With regard to the suit launched by North Shore First Nations aimed at stopping the construction of Kinder Morgan’s expanded pipeline, Tsleil-Waututh Nation Chief Maureen Thomas outlines various flaws in the federal government’s consultation process. Among these flaws, she states that “the oil spill risks and health impacts were significantly understated.”
I strongly and unequivocally support this statement made by Chief Thomas. In the event of an oil spill, quantitative and qualitative assessments of the impacts on human and environmental health have been understated to the point of being generally avoided or ignored. How many of us have read a media report of any substantive statement on the risks and impacts of a potential oil spill in our waters? Or have heard a government politician respond directly to that issue? I believe the risks and impacts of an oil spill were “understated” to avoid dealing with the elephant in the room – which is the fact that diluted bitumen would have very detrimental, permanent
CONTACTUS
impacts on the health of our environment, and that adequate technology is not even available to clean up that kind of ocean oil spill. How can such a situation, on a greatly expanded scale, be in any way acceptable? Based on my experience in the field of industrial health and safety, it certainly isn’t. It is even less so in a large urban coastal area which is greatly dependent upon its environment for its economy. Simply put, the issue is “understated” because it has been essentially whitewashed at our great peril and expense by political power brokers who have, wittingly or not, placed the corporate agenda ahead of the well-being of our communities. It is, in my estimation, an appalling situation
which defies rudimentary common sense. I also believe that many of us, as ordinary citizens, are feeling this at a gut level – which is the reason this proposed pipeline expansion has become so viscerally upsetting and frustrating for a very large number of Metro Vancouver residents. Our mayors, councils and
other politicians, our newspaper editorial boards, our community and professional organizations and each of us – as ordinary citizens – must support our First Nations and follow their lead in sending a powerful message to the federal government and the world at large that we strongly oppose the construction of Kinder Morgan’s
Trans Mountain pipeline. It is critical that we marshal our resources in putting a stop to this project as we are not only protecting the physical, social and economic wellbeing of our communities, but our fundamental way of life on the West Coast of Canada. John Sbragia Bowen Island
Replace foreign oil with domestic Dear Editor: Canada imports about 650,000 barrels per day of oil from some of the most despotic and culturally intolerant countries in the world. The money we spend on this oil supports slavery, homophobia, suppresses
women and much more. At the same time we leave our oil and jobs in the ground. We export by rail and at a 25 per cent discount. These pipelines and others to follow are not increasing carbon emissions. They are replacing
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foreign oil with domestic. Countries like Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, and Nigeria can leave their oil in the ground as a result. We will create good jobs and social services. Mike Butterfield West Vancouver
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must include your name, full address and telephone number. Send your letters via e-mail to: editor@nsnews. com. The North Shore News reserves the right to edit any and/or all letters based on length, clarity, legality and content. The News also reserves the right to publish any and/or all letters electronically.
Real cost of distracted driving measured in lives Dear Editor: Are you the person who was driving north on Chesterfield Avenue in North Vancouver, and turning east onto 16th Street on Thursday, Jan. 19 at 1 p.m.? You were alone. You were intent on what you were doing. But you were not intent on the business of properly controlling your vehicle. You failed to notice the elderly lady with a cane at the southwest crosswalk who was clearly waiting for the traffic to stop so that she could safely cross the road. No, you were too busy
talking on your cellphone. It was in your left hand, to your ear, as you wheeled through the crosswalk, and turned right onto 16th Street. No attention being paid to anyone but yourself. Was your phone conversation more important than the safety of that lady? Are your needs more important than everyone else’s security? Fortunately, the lady was able to cross the road safely after you drove away. But I was left shaking my head at what I had witnessed. If a member of the RCMP had been around, you would have
received two tickets – one for failing to stop at the crosswalk when a pedestrian was trying to cross ($167), and a second for distracted driving (using an electronic device while driving – $368). And you would have received seven points on your driver’s licence – points that add up and increase the cost of your car insurance. All of us need to be aware of what we are doing on the roads, as drivers, pedestrians or cyclists. Please help to make 2017 a safer year on all the North Shore roads. Alison Watt North Vancouver
ONLINECOMMENT NSN STORY: Campaign On For 30 km/h on Residential Streets (Jan. 22) TreadingLight (at nsnews.com): Yes! 50 to 30 would make a world of difference for pedestrians, kids playing, bikers and reduce sound levels significantly. As an avid biker, I don’t think drivers understand how scary and defeating it is to have a half ton machine rip by you on a quiet residential street. Han-Lin Yong (at nsnews.com): The article mentioned residential streets. Since most of the commuting distance for drivers is on major roads, travel times shouldn’t increase too much. It saves money on speed limit signs too. Peter Teevan (on Facebook): Interesting that he (Dr. Mark Lysyshyn, medical health officer) doesn’t mention that it’s also never acceptable to step into a crosswalk without looking, to walk in the street amid traffic while wearing earphones, to still walk even though the pedestrian lights say “stop,” to pass a right-turning vehicle on the right on a bike, etc., etc. Does the medical officer think that vehicle speed is the only contributing factor to accidents? Or perhaps does he/she just think it’s a politically correct opportunity to fight the automobile. NV (at nsnews.com): I’d rather have stricter eyesight tests for drivers. It’s not speeders that are the problem, it’s people who literally can’t see someone crossing the street. I have to turn on my phone flashlight to get people to stop at the crosswalk sometimes, even in good conditions. Vivien Virginia Garlick (on Facebook): This speed limit of 30 km/h is the norm in many cities in the U.K. And in Europe. In my own city, Bristol, it’s enforced and it makes for a nicer, safer neighbourhood. I also know someone who was hit by a car recently whilst on their bike and as the car was doing the 30km/h limit was injured but not killed. Everyone of course resisted it to begin with, but now it’s accepted and people have adhered to and embraced it. Guy Trotter (on Facebook): I’m in favour of this proposal. I assume the proposal is referring to the speed on side streets, rather than on main thoroughfares (i.e. Mountain Highway and others). Consider this: on a “typical” side street in North Vancouver (or, at least in Lynn Valley, where I live), most houses have rental suites, which means more cars parked on the road. Also consider that most roads don’t have sidewalks, which necessitates pedestrians to share the roadway with cars. So, you have narrow streets, lots of vehicles, and pedestrians walking on the road. Naturally, this necessitates lower speed limits. . . . A 30km/h limit will have an almost negligible impact on anyone’s time to get around on the North Shore. The side streets are the shortest segment of anyone’s commute (I’d hazard), so a reduced speed for this hazardous area seems completely reasonable.
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If he were here today, he would be unbelievably proud of this honour.” — Curtis Jones speaking about his father, late North Shore Rescue team leader Tim Jones, at an announcement for the official naming of Tim Jones Peak (from a Jan. 15 news story).
She was a working person with kids and things just worked out terribly.” — Malcolm McLaren remembers Lisa Dawn MacPherson whose burned body was found in November on the Bridgman Park Trail (from a Jan. 27 news story).
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A10 |
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
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NEWS | A11
north shore news nsnews.com
Drivers will have to learn new patterns From page 7
promised a Liberal government would fix it during the 2015 federal election. North Vancouver Lonsdale MLA Naomi Yamamoto said the full project will create 600 jobs over a four-year period. The new express/collector distribution system will be an adjustment at first, with a few people likely getting caught in the express lanes and missing their desired exit, said Gavin Joyce, the District of North Vancouver’s general manager of engineering. “You have to make that decision early,” he said. “You’ll get used to it pretty quickly if you live on the North Shore.” According to traffic studies, about 20 per cent of the drivers on the Cut during the evening rush hour are exiting before the bridge. Part of the $20 million going towards the project from District of North Vancouver taxes will go towards the purchase or expropriation of private land on the north side of the existing bridge, and more trees will have to be removed from Bridgman Park to accommodate the new bridges. There had been talk of replacing the orange 1960 Highway 1 bridge over Lynn Creek, but the structure has at least another 15 years of life left in it. Compared to previous iterations, the concept unveiled Friday adds the ability for Mountain Highway drivers to get on Highway 1 eastbound, though it does not offer a
way for drivers exiting the Cut at the new interchange to turn north onto Mountain Highway. Eventually, the province will also look to totally revamp the Main Street/ Dollarton Highway interchange as well, although what that might look like hasn’t even been put on paper yet. According to a provincial traffic study, the Ironworkers Bridge itself is almost at capacity now. In theory, the bridge can handle 1,800 vehicles per lane, per hour heading eastbound. But the bridge already accommodates more than 5,000 vehicles per hour in its three eastbound lanes during peak periods. Seymour North Burnaby MP Terry Beech acknowledged Friday’s announcement won’t eliminate traffic congestion on the North Shore. “It’s not the only solution to solving our traffic problems,” he said, adding housing affordability and transit also play key roles. “All of these issues affect traffic and they affect each other,” he said. District of North Vancouver Mayor Richard Walton said while “the future isn’t just in building roads and highways … you have to invest in your infrastructure.” Walton said the project will make a difference to traffic congestion on the North Shore. “You’re always going to have to spend some money on roads,” he said. “There’s a huge amount of lost productivity with people sitting in traffic.”
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A worker clears trees at the site of the Mountain Highway interchange, part of the ongoing fix for the Lynn corridor bottleneck in North Vancouver. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD
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A12 | COMMUNITY
nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
BRIGHTLIGHTS! by Mike Wakefield North Shore Health Care Awards
The 10th annual North Shore Health Care Awards for outstanding achievement were held Jan. 19 at Lions Gate Hospital and hosted by Dr. Allan Burgmann. This year there were were 42 staff member and physician nominations for outstanding achievement in the categories of leadership, clinical practice, and workplace inspiration, with awards won by Lions Gate Hospital registered nurse Nelson Tung, pediatrician Dr. David Critchley, and unit clerk Corinne Beck, respectively. The Spirit of Philanthropy Award was given to Leanne Appleton, a dedicated Lions Gate Hospital Foundation volunteer and project lead for the LGH site redesign. About 200 people from health care sites across the North Shore attended the event and were treated to lunch, refreshments and cake.
MC Dr. Allan Burgmann Lions Gate Hospital Foundation president Judy Savage with foundation chair Pierre Lebel
Reynald Ancheta, Candall Lind, Mehrasa Ramin-Yekta, Gaynell Brown John and Lina Gaya
Kim Stuart and Kerrie Watt
LGH Foundation mascot Seymour with Rebecca Hall
Karon Carleton, Gabriel Blasbalg and Cheryl West
Karin Olson and Lori Baker
Cindy Hartley, Roy Laube, Tanis Evans and Joanne McLellan
Please direct requests for event coverage to: cgoodman@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos, go to: nsnews.com/community/bright-lights
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NEIGHBOURHOODS | A13
north shore news nsnews.com
neighbourhoods
Deep Cove
Longtime Cove mechanic looks back
Central Motor Service started in the 1930s MARIA SPITALE-LEISK mspitale-leisk@nsnews.com
Jeremy Thorp manually lowers the service bay garage door at the end of another day in Deep Cove.
He’s got one last piece of business to attend to before calling it quits. For Deep Cove’s longtime community mechanic, this transaction is personal. Thorp has found a suitable owner for his teenage daughter’s first car. The black Golf had been driven by Reilly for a couple of years, before she headed off to university in Calgary last fall. Thorp imparts some advice to the young man, who himself is navigating early adulthood, and tells him to hold onto the Golf since it’s a good car. Inside Thorp’s humble office, framed pictures of various community sports teams he sponsors hang on the weathered walls. He has treats in a jar for customers’ furry companions in this dogfriendly community. Central Motor Service has been a fixture at the intersection of Deep Cove Road and Mount Seymour Parkway since the 1930s. As a young apprentice, Thorp discovered the unassuming mechanic shop in 1988, not knowing that one day he would inherit an enduring piece of Deep Cove history. In the early days, when Deep Cove was a summer cottage community, Central Motor Service was only a onebay garage with gas pumps. “It definitely would have been a slower pace back then,” says Thorp, sitting behind the desk in the original office built almost 90 years ago. Thorp tells the story of a recent afternoon when two generations of Covers collided. He and his mechanic trio had finished lunch together – the boss will often order the penne chicken from nearby Arms Reach Bistro – when an older gentleman showed up at the shop. They learned the man was one of the first mechanics at Central Motor Service in the 1930s. He had a little place in the Cove and would unwind on the weekend at dances
in Lynn Valley. He said they would fix one or two cars a week in those days. On the day Thorp met him, the retired mechanic had brought his grandkids out to show them the special shop that still stands from a bygone era. The island that once supported gas pumps still remains, many years after the pumps were removed. Thorp once found a big box of handwritten receipts from the 1940s, when gas was two cents a gallon. That was four decades before Thorp arrived at Central Motor Service. Thorp enjoyed tinkering around with cars from a young age. Growing up in Lions Bay, he and his friends would cruise up the Sea to Sky Highway for some skiing in Whistler. The Hillside secondary grad went to BCIT after high school, with that innate interest in car mechanics in hand. When it came time to do an apprenticeship, Thorp drove to Deep Cove to see Tony Yamashita, the third owner of Central Motor Service. Yamashita took Thorp under his wing and, along with mechanic training, taught him a most valuable life lesson. “(Tony) was as honest as the day is long,” recalls Thorp. “He always preached, you’ve got to be honest.” When Yamashita retired he passed the torque wrench to Thorp about five years ago. All told, Thorp has been fixing cars in the Cove for 30 years. “We fix everything, all years, makes and models,” he says. “We get lots of cars from the ‘60s, we’ve had some cars from the ‘50s, and a Pantera (sports car). “There’s a guy in the neighbourhood who had a car from the ‘30s, a Daimler.” Thorp’s personal preference is mid to late ‘60s General Motors cars, “just because they look good,” he says. The ‘60s was when the second bay was put in at Central Motor Service. Underneath the shop, where there used to be an old hardware store, has since been repurposed with more service bays for a total of eight. A wave of nostalgia washes over longtime Seymour resident and District of North
Jeremy Thorp stands in the doorway of Central Motor Service, where he first arrived as a young apprentice in 1988. PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN
Vancouver Coun. Lisa Muri when asked about Central Motor Service’s history. Her grandfather built the business and owned it along with the hardware store and the lumber yard until about 1970. “He found Deep Cove reminded him of the fjords of Norway,” says Muri. She remembers Cove residents knocking on the door of the family home, saying their hot water tank had burst, and her dad heading up to open the hardware store to get their part for them. Thorp also answers the call on his days off, proving that fixing cars is a passion for him, and customers are more than just invoice numbers. Ninety per cent of Thorp’s patrons live in the Seymour area and many remain loyal even after they move away. “I’ve got a guy coming in from Ladner tomorrow who
used to live in the Cove,” says Thorp. After he closes up shop for the weekend, Thorp spends time with his wife and two children in Lynn Valley. They hike the Headwaters with the family dog, Jasper. Though these days it’s just Jeremy and his wife Angela at home. Twenty-year-old Dylan plays college baseball for Bellevue University in Nebraska – he was named pitcher of the week in the California Community College Baseball Coaches Association last spring – while his sister Reilly, 18, studies sciences in Calgary. Thorp knows Central Motor Service may only have a few more years left in its original location. “I always start to think about that and there’s so much going on that you don’t think about it,” says Thorp. In December, Darwin
Properties submitted a development application to North Vancouver District for the Central Motor Service site and other properties on that block of Deep Cove Road down to the Raven Pub. The district has sent out a notice to residents within a 100-metre radius of the site asking for initial input on the preliminary application. The deadline for submitting input on 1012-1110 Deep Cove Road is Jan. 31. If the application moves forward, a public info session is required at the next stage, the detailed application phase. The proposal is to redevelop the properties and create a new restaurant (The Raven) and 27 total townhomes and rowhomes in two phases to a maximum height of three storeys. Thorp says he’s working with Darwin Properties and is hoping they will find Central
Motor Service a new home in the Dollarton area. “Even if we do move to a newer, better building, I will still feel kind of sad. I’ve been here most of my life,” says Thorp. In the meantime, Thorp concentrates on what he can control – helping keep customers safe on the road. Thorp stands in Central Motor Service’s doorway, the threshold into manhood he crossed all those years ago. He hands the Golf keys to the young man and asks if he has any questions before sending him on his way. The kid says no. Thorp tell him the most important thing to do is keep up with the oil changes and to keep the tires inflated. The kid nods. Thorp turns and walks back inside his office. He genuinely cared about that car.
A14 | NEIGHBOURHOODS
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
Michelangelo inspired art in Maplewood MARIA SPITALE-LEISK mspitale-leisk@nsnews.com
Stone sculptor Michael Binkley had an epiphany in Italy.
He was 20 years old and floundering through life when he decided to study in the epicentre for early Italian Renaissance art. It was in the hallowed halls of the Accademia di Belle Arti that Binkley had his premonition. He stared at Michelangelo’s four unfinished slave sculptures. “I had this epiphany that I could see inside rock,” says Binkley. And my epiphany was I realized I could see those half finished sculptures the way that everyone else could see (Michelangelo’s) David finished.” Binkley came home inspired from that experience and spent the summer of 1980 in a friend’s studio learning how to carve stone. He was a quick study and has since earned a reputation as one of Canada’s most successful self-represented artists. The Lynn Valley resident’s work can be found in private collections on every continent. “You will even find a Michael Binkley on Antarctica,” he says. Binkley maintains his studio in Moodyville, where he works in a wide variety of stone and idiom. His collection contains figurative, abstract and wildlife works, however Binkley’s favourite subject to sculpt is the human nude. “I can’t explain it but it’s just my favourite art form and that probably goes back to Michelangelo,” he says. “I think that the human body is one of the most beautiful things in nature.” Over the years Binkley has begun offering stone carving workshops, including one coming up in the Seymour area in
NOTES FROM THE NEIGHBOURHOOD BEERS AND BITES NIGHT Deep Cove Stage Society will host a fundraiser with games, prizes, food, dancing and more Saturday, Feb. 11, 7 p.m.
at Narrows Public House, 1970 Spicer Rd., North Vancouver. Proceeds go towards the replacement of theatre seats. $25, which includes one drink,
early February. Undoubtedly, the most unique environment Binkley has taught in was out at sea. He plied his craft in the Mediterranean, in Alaska and across the Atlantic, teaching stone sculpting aboard cruise ships, including the stately Queen Mary 2. Binkley was selected to represent Canada in the $5-million onboard permanent art collection for that ship. He completed that commission at the end of 2003, when the ship was ready for unveiling and christened by Queen Elizabeth II. Binkley strives to create sculptures which will seduce the viewer’s eye, stir the soul, and entice the viewer to touch. With his upcoming course at Maplewood House, Binkley is hoping to spark some imagination. “To this day most workshops … they will all follow a pattern,” he says. “I would prefer to encourage creativity.” Instead of going in with a concept, Binkley will study the rock and envision what form it should take, that’s his method. “I would like to see students engage with a piece of stone,” he says. In past workshops students have created everything from a lighthouse to a self-portrait of a left hand out of stone. The Maplewood course will run three Tuesday nights and at the end of it students can go home with a piece of soapstone art. “Because it’s so soft, participants will be able to work quickly and hopefully realize a piece from start to finish,” says Binkley. He will teach students how to create a masterpiece from soapstone using files, rifflers and sandpaper, Tuesdays, Feb. 7-21, 7-9 p.m. at Maplewood House, 399 Seymour River Place. The course cost is $130 and includes materials. Register by Jan. 31 by calling 604-988-6844 or emailing programmes@nvartscouncil.ca. appies and door prize entry. 604-929-3200 deepcovestage. com HISTORY OF MOUNT SEYMOUR AND OLD BUCK TRAIL Join Deep Cove Heritage Society at its annual general meeting and listen to
guest speaker Alex Douglas of the Mount Seymour History Project Thursday, Feb. 2 from 10 a.m. to noon at Deep Cove Cultural Centre, 4360 Gallant Ave. deepcoveheritage.com RON ANDREWS COMMUNITY SPACE
Michael Binkley in his Moodyville studio. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD 931 Lytton St., North Vancouver. 604-987-8873 or 604-347-8922 Realms of the Imagination: Painter Antonio Dizon presents his newest abstract compositions on canvas and Kate Whitehead and Connie Cunningham show their pottery and whimsical creations in clay until Feb. 19. My West Coast: Painter Elizabeth Austin shows her acrylic on canvas landscapes of the West Coast and potter Jochen Schliessler shows large vases, jugs, bowls and planters Feb. 19-April 9. DEEP COVE SHAW THEATRE 4360 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver.
The Marvelous Wonderettes: A musical featuring over 30 classic ’50s and ’60s hits Wednesdays-Saturdays, Feb. 23-March 4 at 8 p.m. with a matinee Saturday, March 11 at 2 p.m. Tickets: 604-929-9456 or firstimpressionstheatre.com. SEYCOVE AUCTION DINNER AND DANCE Take part in the 35th annual Seycove Auction Saturday, March 4, 6 p.m.-1 a.m. at Seycove secondary. Funds raised create scholarships and bursaries for Seycove graduates and provide funds for surrounding feeder elementary schools. $50. More information is at seycoveauction.org.
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NEW location 1226 Marine Dr. Pemberton Plaza is NOW OPEN! 604.990.0440
The Pro Nova Ensemble will play the music of Heitor Villa-Lobos, Mozart & Brahms Sunday, Jan 29, 7:30 pm Mt. Seymour United Church 1200 Parkgate, North Vancouver Wednesday, Feb 1, 7:30 pm Kay Meek Studio Theatre, 1700 Mathers, West Vancouver Admission by donation | www.pronova.ca | 604-921-9444
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
| A15
north shore news nsnews.com NOTES FROM THE NEIGHBOURHOOD
REGISTER NOW FOR PRE-SCHOOL CLASSES, FALL REGISTRATION OPENING SOON
T-SHIRT DESIGN A workshop for ages 11 and up Saturday, Feb. 4, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at Maplewood House, 399 Seymour River Place. Design a T-shirt and learn how to screen print the design onto clothing. Bring at least one clothing item to print on. $75, most materials included. Registration required: 604-9886844 or nvartscouncil.ca. WATERCOLOUR ICICLES A painting workshop led by Frank Townsley, Saturday, Feb. 18, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. at Maplewood House, 399 Seymour River Place. $75, materials included. Registration: 604-988-6844 or programmes@nvartscouncil.ca.
Dance classes for preschool to adult. Hip Hop, Tap, Jazz, Ballet, Modern, Break Dancing, Acro 808 Lytton Road, North Vancouver
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604-929-6060
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TO MARCUS WITH LOVE Show producer Dominique Hogan, performer Will Sanders, and Minister Nancy Talbot get ready for the upcoming show To Marcus With Love, a benefit concert for Marcus Mosely. The event takes place at Mount Seymour United Church, 1200 Parkgate Ave., North Vancouver, on Friday, Feb. 10, at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $15, available online at brownpapertickets.com, or by calling 604-770-1088. The event will include a variety of performances, including the Marcus Mosely Chorale and Burstin’With Broadway, as well as a raffle and wine bar. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD
Join us for our Grace & Poise Trunk Show, Thursday Feb 2, 6-9pm This is an incredible new line for us that is locally designed & produced! Wine, refreshments, light bites & amazing company will be served! 111-2120 Dollarton Hwy, NVan 604-770-1667 littlepinkdoor.com
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THE SNOW IS GONE! COME ON DOWN!
MAPLEWOOD FARM The local community favourite! Where storybook characters come to life
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The Maplewood Farm is a fun - and educational - place to visit for the whole family. Developed historically from its early days as a thriving dairy, today the Farm has been preserved offering a truly rural experience, among the expanding city limits, with a wonderful collection of over 200 domestic and friendly farm animals and birds.
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604-770-0188
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VOLUNTEER DRIVERS NEEDED! For more information call 604-515-5400 or visit volunteercancerdrivers.ca
April through October Hours: 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM
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604-929-5610
405 Seymour River Place North Vancouver, B.C. Canada V7H 1S6
www.maplewoodfarm.bc.ca
A16 |
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
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| A17
north shore news nsnews.com
A big part of what makes the North Shore one of the best places in the world to live is the diverse selection of small businesses throughout North and West Vancouver.
In the following pages, you will find 26 ways to support small businesses located in your community.
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Y S A TO W Z
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A18 |
C
nsnews.com north shore news
A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
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Ellison Travel & Tours opened in 1980 and now employs more than 80 full and part time travel professionals in 6 locations: Exeter, Goderich, Toronto, Ottawa, London, ON and North Vancouver, BC. Today, the family-run company covers a broad swath of the travel market including vacation and corporate travel, and specializes in customized tours for adult and student groups. Marcie Ellison-Outerbridge manages her team in the North Vancouver location offering vacation travel, tours for women and corporate travel in addition to their group travel services. Ellison Travel also offers online bookings. Visit their website at www.ettravel.com for all your travel needs.
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Forerunners is a store built on community and passion. We pride ourselves not only on our service, but also on our dedication to educating, motivating and inspiring fellow runners. We are runners ourselves, and we take great joy in building and fostering the running community on the North Shore. Our goal is to provide runners, walkers, and fitness enthusiasts of all levels with the specialized support they need to fulfil their
fitness goals. From first-time 5K runners to world-class athletes, we can get you set up to hit the ground running. Looking for a new pair of kicks to get you out on the trails or up the Grouse Grind? Come in and meet owners Ken Greenaway and Jerry Ziak and the rest of the knowledgeable staff at Forerunners in North Vancouver.
980 Marine Drive, North Vancouver (next to Everything Wine and across from Indigo Books) ***)(''&%#(!)$"+
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A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE
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Hear at Home Mobile Hearing Clinic LTD is dedicated to providing high quality service and hearing products by qualified Registered Hearing Instrument Practitioners. Our service is unique in bringing professional hearing help services right to your door.
Griffins Boxing Club...
Innovating the world of Boxing Filled with Kids, Youth, New Moms, Women fighting Breast Cancer, Amateur Boxing Athletes… you will never see such a diverse group of people all coming together for one reason: to sweat and have fun doing it! Non contact.
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Jennifer Abbott BC Licensed Hearing Aid Practitioner
We are North Shore’s mobile hearing clinic since 2009. We come to you!
Training you for Life ® 326 E. Esplanade Avenue 604.980.1900 | griffinsboxing.com @griffinsboxing
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MOBILE HEARING CLINIC
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M Most people hate their mortgage, so putting mortgage and love in the same sentence isn’t popular. But Michael James at Mortgage Evolution from Dominion Lending Centres is a different kind of mortgage broker. Most of the “Big 6 Banks” offer mortgages that have high penalties if you want to get out of them. Dominion Lending Centres - Mortgage Evolution does not offer just one or two types of products like traditional banks – Michael is free to shop around with over 30 different lenders. This allows you the borrower to revolutionize your mortgage. You can get better rates and lower penalties – that’s why people love our mortgage solutions! Refinance your home and use your equity to get the home of your dreams today. The process can be as simple as a half hour phone call.
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
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he Living Lab is not just a furniture store - its a design resource center! With a newly expanded showroom, an even wider array of design resources, bedding, wallpapers, toss cushions, and a fabric gallery clients come to The Living Lab to see and test products that complement their style (everything from modern west coast to traditional comfort). We offer primarily Canadian made pieces that are built for a lifetime, with a wide range of prices and styles. Come collaborate with our design consultants to find “your look”.
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Contact Michael James today at 604.770.4900 or mjames@mortgageevolution.ca Stay on top of things and sign up for my e-news at: mjamesmortgages.com
The good news is the knowledgeable team at Novo Solar are here to help. Call today to set up a no charge consultation to figure out the most cost effective way to stabilize your heat bill with Solar energy. (oh, and there are some spring promotions on (starting tomorrow) that you’ll want to hear about!)
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A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE
Quality Eyewear at prices you will love.
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The North Shore News can help you reach, engage and convert customers with our team of digital experts. Our services include:
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At renovateme! design & construction, we are a North Shore based, family owned and operated company where style and practicality meets courteous and knowledgeable service and quality and durable materials to create time sensitive, budget friendly and fuss free home improvement experiences of the finest order.
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he Dye Lot has you covered whether you’re looking for a flattering haircut or great colour. The 2016 winner of the North Shore News Readers Choice Award for best salon features talented stylists who offer hair care services for men and women in a friendly atmosphere. The Dye Lot now offers a full wig, hairpiece and extensions service for clients seeking hairpieces for both fashion and hair loss. To book an appointment please call 778.340.3332
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pper Level Plumbing is a North Vancouver based company and we’ve been proudly servicing the North Shore and Lower Mainland for five years. We offer complete plumbing services including drain cleaning, camera scoping, new construction, renovations, gas work and light commercial.
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3 LOCATIONS: 1637 Lonsdale Avenue North Vancouver 604.985.1185 857 Hornby Street Vancouver 604.428.8824 562 West Broadway Vancouver www.victoriashealth.com 20 YEARS
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
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A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE
We are your solution for all your Drainage and Oil Tank Removal needs
West Coast Tank Recovery provides Residential and Commercial Oil Tank Removal and Contaminated Soil Remediation from Residential and Commercial properties. West Coast Drainage provides water line repair and replacement, video drain inspections, sewar repairs and more.
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BRIGHT LIGHTS
Gala by the
12
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Capilano element ary hosts spring fundraiser at Pinnacle Hotel LIVING 25
Gerry’s Garde
TASTE 23
NORTHSHO
RENEWS
LOCAL NEWS .
LOCAL MATTER
LOWER LONSD ALE
Maru Korea n Bistro
Lower Lonsdal e restaurant features popular favourites
S . SINCE 1969
Early morning blaze leaves eight people homeless
INTERACT WITH
THE NEWS
AT
NSNEW S.COM
JEREMY SHEPHER jshepherd@nsnews.coD m
Firefighters saved North Vancouve eight r residents after a blaze swept through a Lower duplex shortly Lonsdale a.m. Sunday before 2 morning
. “In two minutes, your life has changed,” said duplex’s residents, one of the sional photograp profesher Peter Langer. Langer was fast asleep when he heard a neighbour yelling: “Fire! Fire! Get The fire continued out!” to spread as the artist grabbed his cellphone, laptop and camera gear. In a series of 9-1-1 calls, neighbours reported and smoke billowing flames from the second storey East Third Street of an duplex, according to District of North Vancouver assistant fire chief
See Duplex
page 7
SAILOR’S
sailor is takingDELIGHT West Vancouve part in the thrilling r’s Nikola Girke is gearing up new Nacra 17 for her class, her third different eventfourth trip to the Olympic Games this summer since her Olympic LONSDALE debut. See story in Rio. page 29. PHOTO The experienced
DEVELOPMEN T: LOWER
Museum su
JEREMY SHEPHER jshepherd@nsnews. D com
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After 30 years of looking past, North Vancouver’s for a new place to hang have found Museum and the a compelling new home – but they’ll Archives may business have to make Council is considerin case before they can move in. a g a 12-storey, tower perched 117-unit
on residential and Carrie Cates a commercial podium at West Esplanade Court. The which could site includes be given to the city, potentiall16,155 square feet Council sent y for the museum. despite several the project to public hearing councillors Monday expressing reservations over the iv
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#237
Dexter Texter
MIKE WAKEFIELD
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City considers OCP exemption Polygon’s 12-sto for rey tower propo sal
lack of a business plan. There should be no further requests for costs to the funds, city or any The city providedaccording to Coun. Craig Keating. $100,000 for several studies, the museum including a to undertake plan was not business plan. complete in That business time much to the chagrin of Coun. for Monday’s council meeting, “The taxpayer Rod Clark. should have the right to know that they’re
Bad Driver Award #237: Fatal Distrac tion
8
not giving away millions to away,” Clark a developer said. who’s going to walk Council voted against putting Shop earlier the museum this year, which in the Pipe able location. Clark called “(Site 8) won’t a much more much more suitdifficult to find. be nearly as attractive , it’ll be numbers, that And I have to see those business case, business A few rows before I can of the council support it.” museum supporter chamber were occupied by s clad in blue advocate for T-shirts who a new were there Serving as city home for the museum. to council’s represent ative to the museum
See Site page
4
Bad drivers like you. So watch Dexter bring us good drivers like yourself)! And out for texters (and don’t be when you do remember BC’s need collision one repair, favourite, Craftsman Collision. ®™ Trademark of AIR MILES International Trading B.V.
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PROUDLY FOUNDED AND HEADQUARTERED ON THE NORTH SHORE
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Not Your Typical Yoga Studio
Oxygen Yoga & Fitness is a fun, fresh twist on exercise.
Our mix of 23 different yoga and fitness classes means that you’ll never get tired of the same dull exercise routine. Classes like Hot Power Core, Restorative Fascia Release with RAD Roller and Fast & Furious classes – workouts you won’t see at any other fitness studio. Improve your technique, burn off that extra 5 pounds, stretch out your body with a group of supportive fitness experts and members who all want to have a great time and stay fit.
1524 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver 604.306.9642 (YOGA) | oxygentraining.ca
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ocated on the shores of Stave Lake in Mission, BC, Zajac Ranch for Children provides summer camps for children and young adults with chronic, life-threatening or debilitating conditions. These experiences give participants the opportunity to explore the great outdoors while developing greater social and environmental awareness, increased self-confidence and positive growth in attitudes towards physical activity. Each summer, Zajac Ranch welcomes hundreds of children aged 7-17 with a wide variety of medical conditions.
“Kellen made a friend this year at camp that is now coming to Kellen’s birthday party. For Kellen, this is a huge deal – making friends is what he struggles with most. Zajac Ranch gave him the opportunity to bond with another little boy who is a lot like him; at Zajac Kellen doesn’t feel different.” -Samantha, mother of Zajac Ranch Camper
300–2006 West 10th Avenue Vancouver 604.739.0444 info@zajac.com | zajacranch.com
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Calf muscles can be important to tone Often times when we go to the gym we forget to exercise an important set of muscles: our calves.
The dilemma with training calves is that they are difficult muscles to develop. Every person has a slightly different structure and form, and some people have larger muscles than others. The calf is the region between your knee and ankle, at the back of your lower leg. Just a few extra inches in muscle mass can make a big difference to the way they look. Often those with higher calves have a harder time developing muscle, but it is still important to get a great calf workout for increased power and stabilization. The following are some benefits of training your calves. ! Protect from calf pulls: Calf pulls are among the most common injuries for runners and athletes. If you don’t train your calf muscles you are at a greater risk of developing an injury. The calf is made of a larger gastrocnemius and a smaller soleus muscle. A pull occurs when one of these muscles separates from the Achilles tendon by stretching too far. The recovery time can last from a few weeks to months depending on the severity of the injury. ! Stabilization: Calves help to stabilize ankles and feet by preventing pronation and supination (or ankle rolls). Runners, walkers and other athletes can lower their
Personal Best Shaun Karp chance of injury by strengthening their calf muscles. ! Power: Our calf muscles lift the heel when we are running, walking and jumping. The gastrocnemius muscle generates power. In fact, athletes who want to increase their vertical jump target this muscle. Calf workouts When training your calves, it is important to do two to three minutes of stretching before your workout, in between reps and after your workout. An example of a simple stretch is the Wall Calf Stretch: ! Stand a little less than arm’s distance from the wall and place your hands flush against the wall for support. ! Step your left leg forward and your right leg back, keeping your feet parallel. ! Bend your left knee and press through your right heel keeping your right leg straight. ! Hold for 20 to 30 seconds and switch legs. After stretching you can begin your workout. Below are
three great calf exercises. Be sure to start off slowly, especially if you have neglected this muscle group as your muscles can become very sore if you do too much the first few times. Calves usually respond well to higher repetitions, so pick one exercise and perform twice each week with at least one day in between, then switch exercises the next week for variation. ! Standing calf raises: Stand on a stair or the edge of an aerobic step and raise your body up and down while keeping your legs straight, ensure you are holding something sturdy for support. Go all the way up and down and work towards performing three sets of 15 to 25 reps. Once this becomes easy you can progress to performing it with one leg at a time. ! Seated calf raises: This is a classic calf movement and most gyms have this machine. This exercise is great for shaping calves. By targeting the inner and outer parts of the muscles it gives calves a wider look. Complete three sets of 15 to 20 reps with a comfortable weight. ! Calf raises on leg press: this is a great overall calf exercise. Complete 20-25 reps. Use a comfortable weight and ensure full range of motion. Shaun Karp is a certified personal trainer in North Vancouver. For more information call 604-420-7800 or visit karpfitness.com.
IMPROVE YOUR HEALTH
Physical. Physiological. Social. Well Being.
QUIET TIME Will Blunderfield leads a meditation and yoga class at John Braithwaite Community Centre last week. His classes are on Thursday evenings, 7-8 p.m. and 8-9 p.m. Check out the website at nvrc.ca for more information. PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH
HEALTH NOTES JANUARY IS HEALTH AND WELLNESS MONTH North Vancouver Recreation and Culture and North Vancouver District Public Library have teamed up with the City and District of North Vancouver, Vancouver Coastal Health and the Canadian Mental Health Association to celebrate health and wellness until Jan. 29. A series of free workshops and programs will be offered. See a complete schedule at nvdpl.ca or nvrc.ca. No registration required. FOOD AND MOOD A workshop for those or a loved one who is suffering with a serious life-
limiting illness Monday, Jan. 30 , 10 a.m.-noon at the HOpe Centre, 1337 St. Andrews Ave., North Vancouver. Learn the basics about nutrition, the importance of routines, mood foods and how to apply this knowledge. Free. Registration: liina. mcneil@vch.ca or 604-984-3743. FAMILY TO FAMILY COURSE ON MENTAL ILLNESS Families are welcome to enrol in a free, 12-week intensive course taught by trained individuals who have experience navigating the system Feb. 8-April 26, 7-9:30 p.m. Information and registration: 604-926-0856 or email kathryn@northshoreschizophrenia.org.
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NORTH SHORE & COAST INTRAINING CLINICS Bowen Island Municipality Saturday 8:30AM - 604.947.2216
Karen Magnussen Recreation Centre Sunday 9:00AM - 604.983.6551
Brennan Park Recreation Centre Saturday 9:00AM - 604.898.3604
Parkgate Community Centre Wednesday 6:30PM - 604.983.6350
Delbrook Community Centre Monday 7:00PM - 604.983.6301
West Vancouver Community Centre Sunday 9:00AM - 604.925.7270
Gibsons and Area Community Centre Sunday 9:15AM - 604.885.6868
FIT&HEALTHY Running after baby! A26 |
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017 Advertisement
WE CAN HELP AT ANY STAGE
Have you had a child (or perhaps two or three) and feel like you are living in a different body?
Are you struggling with getting back to your favourite activities or just chasing after your children because you don’t have the strength or you’re in too much pain? Do you have trouble controlling your bladder when you run, jump, cough or sneeze? Are you frustrated that you can’t get rid of the baby belly even after working on your abs for months? Pregnancy and childbirth change your body in significant ways. While you are pregnant, the abdominal muscles slowly get stretched and sometimes separate in the middle in order to accommodate for the baby (diastasis). The hormone relaxin is
released to allow your ligaments to stretch and the bones in your pelvis to move so there is more space for the baby.
Your posture changes because of the change in your body’s shape. The pressure of the baby up on your diaphragm can alter your breathing and the way the diaphragm contracts. When you give birth, there is stretching and possibly tearing of the pelvic floor muscles and connective tissue and sometimes damage to the joint at the front or back of the pelvis. If you have a C-Section, the layers of abdominal muscles are cut. All these things significantly impact your body’s stabilizing systems. Your “inner core”muscles form a canister that, when working optimally, will stabilize your spine and pelvis, giving
BAD PREGNANCY POSTURE
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your limbs a strong foundation on which to move and providing a good support to your pelvic organs.
These muscles don’t automatically regain normal function after delivery, so if you try to go back to your prebaby activities, it can feel like it is a lot more effort and that you don’t have the strength or control that you used to. If you push on without restoring your optimal alignment, control and strength in your core, you will likely use non-optimal movement patterns that put you at risk for repeated injuries to your back, pelvis, hips, neck as well as possible prolapse of your bladder or uterus. You can feel good again though! With a thorough assessment of your posture, breathing, and muscle function experienced therapists (and mums ourselves!) at Trimetrics can tailor a treatment program to get you up and running enjoying both your baby and your body again. We will do a detailed biomechanics assessment of your posture, alig alignment and motor control including using a real time ultrasound machine to assess your abdominal and pelvic floor function. We will also assess for a diastasis. We offer r rehabilitative pilates, an extremely eff effective way to improve your postur rebuild your stability, posture, mobilit and strength and prepare mobility y body to run (or hike, ski, dance, your spin) with ease and pleasure again af baby. after Shawna Murray, BscPT, FCAMT, CGIMS, Cert Med Acupuncture 604-982-0366 trimetricsphysio.com
Call or email us for an appointment 604.982.0366 • www.trimetricsphysio.com 307–850 Harbourside Drive, North Vancouver
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| A27
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Welcome to IQ Dental DR. TERRY MCKAY IS PLEASED TO WELCOME
Dr. Tyler Sheasby TO OUR IQ DENTAL FAMILY PRACTICE.
Dr. Sheasby is proud to continue Dr. McKay’s tradition of offering patients minimally invasive long lasting dentistry. Dr. Sheasby is accepting new patients and is currently available on Monday and Thursdays. In addition to family and cosmetic dentistry, Dr. Sheasby offers many other services including children’s dentistry, extractions root canals, crowns and bridges, veneers, tooth whitening and more. MEET TYLER TODAY AND YOU’LL BE ON YOUR WAY TO THE SMILE YOU’VE ALWAYS DREAMED OF.
CALL 604-988-7010 DR. TERRY MCKAY DMD DR. TYLER SHEASBY DMD SUITE 202 132 EAST 14TH STREET NORTH VANCOUVER
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A28 | SENIORS
nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
Housing not just for the young
Call Caroline Vincent today for your FREE consultation. 778.899.0141 shelfgenie.com
VOLUNTEER DRIVERS
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For more information call 604-515-5400 or visit volunteercancerdrivers.ca
Seniors also at risk for losing homes Homeless seniors on the North Shore? Never, it’s unthinkable, right?
At a recent presentation at the Services to Seniors Coalition participants heard some alarming statistics about the issue. We were told that Hollyburn Family Services Society served 215 clients last year who were homeless or in danger of losing their housing. The average age of these clients was 65 with an almost equal split between men and women, and 99 seniors were about to be evicted from their homes. Seniors at Housing Risk was a participatory research project finalized in 2013, in a partnership with Lionsview Seniors’ Planning Society and Hollyburn Family Services Society. A number of recommendations came out of that report and Hollyburn took these on with some success under the leadership of Leya Eguchi, a co-author of the report and presenter at the coalition meeting. Included in the list was a recommendation to increase senior-specific outreach
Older and Wiser Margaret Coates support, and Hollyburn has done that by adding four outreach support staff to their team. They have put into place a rent bank that subsidizes an average of 12 seniors a month. Hollyburn has also opened a Safe House for seniors in partnership with the District of North Vancouver. The Safe House has been at nearly full capacity since it opened in 2015. More than half of the clients were referred by a medical professional and many had significant health issues such as cancer, post heart attack complications and diabetes. The Safe House gave them a chance to stabilize their health crisis. At the presentation we learned that homelessness, or being at risk for homelessness, can be attributed to
unexpected circumstances such as illness, loss of a job, death, system glitches, availability and affordability of housing, cost of food and other living expenses, lack of social support, and barriers to housing. Some would argue that housing affordability is the number one factor. In a Jan. 24 Vancouver Sun article by Sam Cook, it is reported that a 2017 Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey shows Vancouver is considered to have one of the third most expensive housing costs in the world behind Hong Kong and Sydney, Australia.
“There are serious consequences for residents,” the survey said. “The higher house prices reduce discretionary incomes, which reduces potential standards of living and raises relative poverty rates.” On the North Shore, studies done by the City of North Vancouver and Districts of North and West Vancouver have shown it is increasingly more difficult to attain affordable housing for seniors who are at risk of homelessness or seniors who simply want to downsize but stay in their community. The City of North Vancouver Housing report
See Shared page 29
A recent presentation showed 215 North Shore seniors accessed services last year because they were homeless or in danger of losing their housing. PHOTO MARIA SPITALE-LEISK
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
SENIORS | A29
north shore news nsnews.com
Shared living an appealing option From page 28
says that “Seniors are expected to experience the largest proportional growth amongst all age groups in the City of North Vancouver in coming decades. The aging population is already evident in the number of non-market housing units dedicated to independent and frail seniors and the growing wait list for seniors-oriented housing.” People have been coming up with their own innovative solutions to cope with rising housing costs. According to a Jan. 23 Toronto Star, article one solution is called Shared Housing. Think Golden Girls, the TV show in which four older women lived together and shared housing costs and expenses thus contributing to their overall well-being. In Paris, in an arrangement called homeshare, two people, a student and a senior,
share the senior’s home, one for assistance in daily living and one to be able to afford the rent. They were matched by an organization called Ensemble2Generations. A BBC news report said: “The concept is simple, yet it attempts to bridge an intergenerational divide that exists in many parts of the world.” If we want to keep seniors safely housed then we will need groups like Hollyburn, groups who provide below-market rental housing such as Kiwanis, government-sponsored affordable housing strategies, and innovative solutions. Margaret Coates is the co-ordinator of Lionsview Seniors’ Planning Society. She has lived on the North Shore for 47 years and has worked for and with seniors for 20 of those years. Ideas for future columns are welcome by sending an email to lions_view@telus.net.
SENIORS CALENDAR EXERCISE FOR MOBILE SENIORS The Keep Well Society offers free classes at seven venues across the North Shore. The programs include one-hour of fitness followed by blood pressure checks, health coaching, massage, speakers and social times. 604-988-7115 X27 keepwellsociety.ca SINGALONG MONDAY Drop in and singalong with pianist Donna Crook Mondays, 10-11 a.m. at Parkgate Community Centre, 3625 Banff Court, North Vancouver. Songbooks will be provided. Free. ACCESSING SERVICES A workshop for family caregivers currently supporting a person with dementia who is living at home Saturday, Feb. 11, 1-3 p.m. The session will review strategies for accessing support from a variety of sources in the community. Info and reservations: 604-984-8347 or info.northshore@ alzheimerbc.org. SENIORS GATHERING — GLUTEN FREE A free drop-in program for an informal get together and chat from 10 to 11:30 a.m. on the second Tuesday of every month at the North Vancouver City Library, 120 West 14th St. During the Feb. 14 talk, Mountain Top Bakery’s Bruce Jones discusses gluten free and other specialty baking techniques and challenges. 604-998-3460 nvcl.ca SENIORS GATHERING — A PERFECT CUP OF TEA A free drop-in program for an informal gettogether and chat, 10-11:30 a.m., on the second Tuesday of every month at the North Vancouver City Library, 120 West 14th St. At the March 14 drop-in, Kyla Wilson from Murchie’s Tea and Coffee will discuss the history of tea and how to brew that perfect cup. Bring your sense of humour. 604-998-3460 nvcl.ca
DENTURE WEARERS! COME IN AND RECEIVE A COMPLIMENTARY CONSULTATION AND DENTURE CARE PACKAGE FREE!
Cedar Springs PARC Independent retirement living on nature’s doorstep. Open your window each morning and breathe in the mix of sea and mountain air. Share a nutritious breakfast with friends, then take a gentle yoga class before our bus service takes you out for a group excursion. Or use our car service to take you out for that special appointment. An active, healthy lifestyle is waiting here for you. With one-bedroom suites starting at $3,755 a month, including chef-prepared meals and our Independent Living+ program for holistic wellness, it’s within reach.
Book your free tour and lunch with Cindi at 604.986.3633
Why Go Far?
Support your local Denturist on the North Shore Brent Der R.D.
NORTH VANCOUVER DENTURE CLINIC 604-986-8515 231 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver
Home and Institutional Care Available
parcliving.ca/cedarsprings 3633 Mt. Seymour Parkway, North Vancouver, BC
2015
VOLUNTEER DRIVERS
NEEDED!
For more information call 604-515-5400 or visit volunteercancerdrivers.ca Volunteer Cancer Drivers Society provides safe, dependable free-of-charge transportation to people receiving treatment and follow up care for cancer.
A30 | LIVING
nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
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The following is a selection of volunteer opportunities from various community organizations, made available through Volunteer North Shore, a service of North Shore Community Resources Society. QUEEN MARY FAMILY LEARNING PROGRAM This intergenerational program in the Lower Lonsdale area delivers learner-centred literacy programming to the parents, grandparents and caregivers of Queen Mary elementary students. Its goal is to provide opportunities for participants to be more involved in their community, to support their children’s learning and to improve their ability to access services. BOARD MEMBER Capilano Community Services Society seeks volunteers interested in being involved with a non-profit society, available for board meetings held the third Thursday of each month (except July and August); able to serve a minimum of two years, four-eight hours per month. Experience in accounting or fund development welcome. FRONT DESK VOLUNTEER Chinese Community Policing Centre is looking for a front desk volunteer to assist clients reporting non-emergency crimes over the phone or through the Internet. The volunteer will also provide English, Cantonese and/or Mandarin interpretation and translation, assist in completing victim impact statements and make referrals to
NOMINATE TODAY!
The North Shore Sport Awards is a celebration of sport achievement at all levels; community, high school, provincial, and international. Nominate someone you know, or yourself, for recognition in these categories: SPORT OFFICIAL
FAIR PLAY
Those who in the process of officiating educate and encourage athletes and coaches to play fair.
An athlete, coach or manager who has demonstrated true spirit of sport
COMMUNITY SPORT VOLUNTEER
COACH
An organizer, trainer or manager
Coach who is NCCP certified
YOUTH FEMALE
TEAM
Amateur team competing in an organized league
Athlete 18 & under
PARA-ATHLETE
Athlete 18 & under
YOUTH MALE
Any athlete with a physical disability.
OPEN FEMALE
Athlete 19 to 39 years of age
OPEN MALE
Athlete 19 to 39 years of age
MASTER FEMALE
Athlete 40 years of age or older
MASTER MALE
Athlete 40 years of age or older
JIM MARTIN YOUTH LEADERSHIP High School student that excels in athletics, academics, and community service.
Nominate online at nvrc.ca/nssportawards Deadline for nominations is February 1, 2017. The North Shore Sport Awards ceremony will take place on Tuesday, March 28, 7:00pm at the West Vancouver Community Centre Atrium. FOUNDING SPONSOR
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other victim services agencies. MEALTIME ASSISTANT A volunteer is needed at the Lynn Valley Care Centre from Monday to Sunday, 6-6:30 p.m., to assist a blind woman with meals. DROP-IN HOST VOLUNTEER 411 Seniors Centre seeks volunteers to greet members and clients attending its diverse programs and activities, and create a welcoming environment on weekdays during regular hours of operation from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. If you are interested in these or other possible volunteer opportunities call 604-985-7138.
WHITE CANE WEEK Amy Amantea and Rosamund van Leeuwen, with guide dog Rory, will be participating in the White Cane Week presentation upstairs at Park Royal’s south mall on Feb. 7, 10 a.m.-2:30 p.m. The event will feature information about resources, including assistive technology, service animals, adaptive sports, and accessible library materials, for people with sight loss. Sighted guides from the Park Royal north and south bus stops are available by calling Amy Amantea in advance at 604-763-2695. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD
PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETING A 3 unit development is being proposed for 3030 Sunnyhurst Road to construct a residential townhouse project. You are invited to a meeting to discuss the project. Date: Wednesday, February 8, 2017 Time: 6:45 p.m. Meeting Location: Karen Magnussen Community Centre, Eagle Room 2300 Kirkstone Road, North Vancouver The applicant proposes to rezone the site from single-family zoning to a comprehensive development zone to permit a three unit ground oriented townhouse development, consistent with District of North Vancouver’s Official Community Plan. The proposal includes two buildings (one single unit and a duplex). Units range in size from 1500sq.ft. to 2400sq.ft. All three units will have a two car garage and storage. The meeting is being held by Brody Development (S & B) Ltd. in compliance with District of North Vancouver Council Policy. The applicant will present details of the proposal and discuss any concerns residents may have. Information packages are being distributed to residents within a 100 metre radius of the site. If you would like to receive a copy or if you would like more information, please contact: Brianne Brody of Brody Development (S & B) Ltd. at 604-980-2954; Emel Nordin of the Community Planning Department at 604-990-2347; or Duane Siegrist of Integra Architecture Inc. at 604-688-4220; or bring your questions or comments to the meeting. *This is not a Public Hearing. Council will receive a report from staff on issues raised at the meeting and will formally consider the proposal at a later date.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
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north shore news nsnews.com
Student film documents team’s final tourney From page 5
And then once the game was done and they’d won that championship I think he just felt he could go,” says Greg. Brian died exactly two weeks after the championship win. It was a blow to the family, but they carried on. “You do the best you can. My mom was unbelievable. My mom was a trooper. She was incredibly strong,” explains Greg. When asked how she faced losing her husband and raising three teens on her own, Paula admits: “That’s what I was wondering at first.” But she is quick to add: “You know something? I had three great kids, so, well, it wasn’t easy, but they made it easier for me. They were great.” Paula, who was at the final game with her three sons, remembers when the final buzzer went. She watched her husband stand for the entire trophy ceremony despite the fact that he had arrived to the venue in a wheelchair. Assistant coach Tom Rippon was by his side, ready to hold him steady, but Paula thinks her husband wanted to stand on his own. And he did. “I believe he willed himself to live those final days,” she reflects on the emotional time. Memories of coach Upson are particularly poignant for Lockhart right now as his own father battles cancer. He says the struggle has brought back strong memories of that final game in 1982, and the time he spent with his team
Rockridge secondary film students Tavish Kelpin and Meryl Stevens directed and produced the student documentary Longshot: The Brian Upson Story, about the coach of the 1982 West Vancouver secondary senior boys basketball team. PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN and his coach. “He always taught us about poise,” notes Lockhart. “Be calm and remain focused on exactly what you need to do.” His approach to coaching was very strategic. Having been a player himself, including captain of the UBC Thunderbirds, coach Upson was very good with reacting and strategizing at half-time and during time outs, adjusting to what was working and what the other team was doing, explains Lockhart. Now living in Ontario with two young daughters, one of
whom he is already coaching in a junior basketball league, Lockhart regularly visits his parents, who still live in West Vancouver, and recalls the lessons he learned from Brian Upson. “One of the other things he pushed, along with poise, was to maintain confidence in our abilities,” says Lockhart. “He always taught me about what he called the ‘must-take shot.’ In other words, if you find yourself in an open spot in a high-pressure situation: go ahead and take the shot.” Lockhart says he carried that message through
university and into a business career. “You set yourself up and prepare for success and rely on your abilities and don’t pass up that opportunity.” Although the basketball game is over, the memories live on. “I think of it as a really rewarding time in terms of all the work paying off. I think of it as bigger than basketball. And there were some life lessons that have stuck with me a long time around playing fair, being a good sport, and being a gentleman on the court and off the court. And
I think much of that was the way he carried himself as a coach and sort of a mentor,” says Lockhart. All three Upson boys are now grown and have families of their own. All still live on the North Shore, as does Paula, who has six grandkids ranging in age from five months to 22 years old, including Greg’s son Matt, a 17-year-old senior on the basketball team at Rockridge secondary. When he watches his son play, Greg says he can imagine how his dad would have coached Matt, as he did
Greg and his two brothers in their driveway. But although Matt and his brother Ryan know about their grandfather, younger generations of students may not know why there is a studentathlete scholarship at West Vancouver secondary in honour of coach Brian Upson. They soon will. Students in Rockridge secondary’s film class have recently completed a documentary called Longshot: The Brian Upson Story, which follows the saga of the West Van coach as he leads his team to the 1982 provincial championships while living with cancer. The film includes interviews with family members, former players, and local reporters who reflect on the effect Brian Upson still has on the community today. The film will have a screening at Kay Meek Theatre on Feb. 24, and Paula hopes it will be a full house. “I think he’d be so happy,” she says of what might have been Brian’s reaction to the film and to renewed interest in the story. “He’d be so happy for his team. Not for him, but for his team. That people still remember it.” Because of his love of teaching, she adds: “I think it was wonderful that students wanted to do this. That they came up with the project and they wanted to do it. I think he would be so pleased with that.” Tickets to the show are available online at kaymeekcentre.com. Both the trailer for the film and the original cable version of the 1982 game are available on YouTube.
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nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
WHAT’SGOINGON
BANDING TOGETHER Kulvir Mann, Julia Staub French, Caroline Schut and Joanna Zelichowska link up to show their support for the North Vancouver-based Jessie’s Legacy Eating Disorders Prevention and Awareness Program. The program, run by Family Services of the North Shore, is the provincial leader for the annual Provincial Eating Disorders Awareness Week traditionally launched the first week in February. Events this year include a PEDAW promotion night during a Vancouver Canucks game Feb. 4 as well as a purple day on Feb. 3. The public is encouraged to wear purple and don a purple wristband on that day and post photos taken in front of purple-lit landmarks around B.C., including several locations around the North Shore. For more information visit jessieslegacy.com. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD
PETS FOR ADOPTION Jasper
Happy go lucky, bouncy, young boy. He is about 2 years old and ready to have some adventure. Jasper is very social and loves everyone.
WEST VAN SPCA
Preacher
Preacher is a well-behaved little cuddle monster who loves to play fetch, to be held like a baby and to purr sleeping on your chest. He is a great family cat & is to be adopted with his brother PINSTRIPE or as a buddy cat.
VOKRA
Carter
Carter is a 4 year old Italian greyhound/shiba/chi cross. He weights 18 lbs. He loves people and is super affectionate. He has lots of energy to go for walks, runs and hikes.
THE ONE DOG RESCUE • A VOICE4PAWS CANINE RESCUE SOCIETY gr8k9s62@shaw.ca
Tuffy
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Brynna
WEST VAN SPCA
VOKRA
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Maggie Moo
Deez
CROSS OUR PAWS
CROSS OUR PAWS
1.5 year old Chow Chow/Shepherd. He loves people and A young black kitty, loves ear scratches and dinner A sweet, cuddly young cat loves to be on your lap or in your dogs. Tuffy is looking for a home that can help him with time. He loves chasing toys and playing with his best arms getting her chin scratched. She is curious and playful his separation anxiety and fear of cars. and would like a home that has a dog or cat for company. friend GROUCHO so they must be adopted together.
Looking for an athletic dog? Interested in getting into agility Deez is still looking for his match. He loves women and or flyball? Maggie Moo will be your star and would absolutely needs to live with another, well mannered canine. Deez THRIVE in either sport. Maggie is 2 years old and weighs 42 lbs. weighs 100 lbs and is a Mastiff/Dane mix about 4 years old. She needs an active owner with no young kids.
Landon
604-990-3711 • DOgWOOD SPORTINg DOg RESCUE lichen-t@shaw.ca • 604-926-1842
• CROSS OUR PAWS RESCUE www.crossourpawsrescue.com • DACHSHUND & SMALL DOg RESCUE 604-944-6907
Email information about your upcoming minimal-charge or free North Shore events to listings@nsnews.com.
THE JOURNEY HOME DOG RESCUE
• DISTRICT ANIMAL SHELTER
www.animaladvocates.com bylawofficer@shaw.ca • 604-328-5499
CROSS OUR PAWS
Landon is a friendly 9-year-old black lab who desperately needs a foster or adoptive home as he is extremely depressed in the kennel.
• ANIMAL ADVOCATES SOCIETY • BOWEN ISLAND SHELTER
Scarlet
This beautiful senior is a pleasure to be with. Scarlet is a 7 to 8 yr old German Shepherd that would love a home with little to no stairs. She is good with other dogs and cats.
• DORIS ORR D.O.N.A.T.E. 604-987-9015 • FRIENDS OF THE ANIMALS info@fota.ca • 604-541-3627
• FUR & FEATHERS RESCUE 604-719-7848
Tell us what you think
WHAT DOES COMMUNITY LOOK LIKE ON CANVAS? High school students throughout North Vancouver were recently asked this question by the RCMP Youth Intervention Unit and asked to interpret the question with paintings. The works are on display in the North Vancouver RCMP detachment lobby at 147 East 14th St. The public is invited to view the artwork and anonymously vote on their favourite piece. Voting is open until Feb. 3 when the top finalists will be determined. LIBRARY SMALL GRANTS PROGRAM is a program offered by North Vancouver City Library targeted at promoting connection among newcomers and longtime residents of the city. The program provides up to $500 to support creative ideas for projects, events and initiatives that use the library’s space and resources to promote learning, understanding and friendship among the city’s diverse residents. Details, eligibility criteria and how to apply: nvcl.ca/usingthe-library/library-small-grants. Deadline for applications: Feb. 15. WRITING CONTEST The North Shore Writers’ Association is currently running its annual contest for fiction, non-fiction and poetry. Fee: $20/$15. Deadline for entries: Tuesday, Feb. 28. nswriters.org CLIMATE CHANGE Learn about municipal leadership on climate change on the North Shore Monday, Jan. 30, 6:30-8:30 p.m. at John Braithwaite Community Centre, 145 West First St., North Vancouver. Representatives from the District of West Vancouver and City and District of North Vancouver will discuss the measures they are taking to significantly lower community and corporate greenhouse gas emissions through their strategic plans and targeted actions. $10. nsclimateaction.eventbrite.ca INFORMATION MEETING Learn about West Vancouver’s proposed 2017 budget Jan. 30, 6-8 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr.; Feb. 1, 2-4 p.m. at the Seniors’ Activity Centre, 695 21st St.; and Feb. 2, 6:30-8:30 p.m. at Gleneagles Community Centre, 6262 Marine Dr. westvancouver. ca/budget LET’S TALK Develop English language skills by discussing current events at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. Beginners: Monday, Jan. 30, 10:15-11:15 a.m. or 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Intermediate: Tuesday, Jan. 31, 7-8:30 p.m. westvanlibrary.ca TIPS FOR SMALL AND HOME-BASED BUSINESSES The West Vancouver Chamber of Commerce and West Vancouver Memorial Library invite the public to a business breakfast with speaker Cyri Jones who will discuss marketing and branding for small business Tuesday, Jan. 31, 7:30-9 a.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. Free, but registration is required: 604-926-6614 or info@westvanchamber.com. URBAN HOMESTEADING SERIES — HOMEMADE LOOMS AND BASIC WEAVING Learn how to build a homemade loom using recycled materials, and how to create a string-art piece Wednesday, Feb. 1, 7-8:30 p.m. at North Vancouver City Library, 120 West 14th St. Registration: nvcl.ca. THE GALA ON 12TH STREET — 1001 NIGHTS St. Agnes Anglican Church will host a fundraiser to benefit REST, a group that sponsors refugees coming to Canada Saturday, Feb. 4, 6-10 p.m. at 530 East 12th St., North Vancouver. Cost: $60 per person, which includes a three-course dinner, Original Blend performance, live and silent auctions and more. 604-250-6658 PUB QUIZ NIGHT Make up a team or join one for a quiz night Saturday, Feb. 4, 7-10:30 p.m. at Caulfeild Cove Hall, 4773 South Piccadilly Rd., West Vancouver. Proceeds will go to Family Services of the North Shore. Cost: $25, which includes a pub dinner. 604-812-7411 caulfeildcovehall.ca. VEX ROBOTICS TOURNAMENT Watch high school students from around the Lower Mainland competing in a robotics tournament featuring approximately 70 teams Saturday, Feb. 4, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at West Vancouver secondary, 1750 Mathers St. robotevents.com WRITING WITH WRITERS The North Vancouver City Library, 120 West 14th street, hosts an informative evening with novelist Diana Stevan Wednesday, Feb. 8, 7-8:30 p.m. Learn what is involved with creating and completing a work of fiction. Admission is free however registration is required. nvcl.ca
• gREYHAVEN EXOTIC BIRD SANCTUARY www.^reyhaven.bc.ca • 604-878-7212 • THE JOURNEY HOME DOg RESCUE thejourneyhomedo^rescue.ca • 778-371-5174 • THE ONE DOg RESCUE theonedo^rescue@shaw.ca • 778-918-0395 • PACIFIC ANIMAL FOUNDATION www.pacificanimal.or^ • 604-986-8124 • RABBIT ADVOCACY gROUP OF BC www.rabbitadvocacy.com • 604-862-1843
• SNAPPS snappsociety@^mail.com • 778-384-3226 • VANCOUVER kITTEN RESCUE www.vo]ra.ca • 604-731.2913 • VANCOUVER SHAR PEI RESCUE vspr@shaw.ca / vancouversharpeirescue.com • WEST VAN SPCA www.spca.bc.ca/westvancouver • 604-922-4622 • WESTCOAST REPTILE SOCIETY www.wspcr.com • 604-980-1929
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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
Royals rise in Howe Sound hoops
Handsworth knocks off Sentinel to stake early claim to top spot ANDY PREST aprest@nsnews.com
The Handsworth Royals senior boys basketball team finished off a hot month with a tough win over Sentinel Thursday, shooting themselves into top spot in the Howe Sound AAAA league as the playoffs approach.
The Royals actually trailed the Spartans by three heading into the fourth quarter Thursday at Handsworth, but their offence woke up in time to score 24 points in the final 10 minutes to secure a tough 64-55 win. “That was a crazy game for sure,” Handsworth head coach Cam Mowat said after the contest. “Sentinel is a tough team, they’re pretty good. … It was a defensive battle, which you’ll see against good, tough teams.” The Royals were led by the dynamic Grade 11 duo of point guard Blake McLean and forward Ben Grant. Centres Baptiste Grandjean and Amir Hajisafar also helped provide the interior muscle that pushed the Royals past the Spartans. The win moved Handsworth, 16-5 for the season, to 3-0 in Howe Sound play and gave them their ninth straight win overall. In January the Royals posted a 9-1 record, a run that included a gold medal win at the Cavs classic tournament hosted by Collingwood School last weekend. Handsworth claimed that title with a 74-52 win over fellow North Vancouver school Carson Graham in the final on Saturday. The Royals continued their North Shore reign three days later with another win over Carson, this time by a score of 86-52 in Howe Sound league play. “We expect them to be a bit tougher the next time around,” Mowat said of the Eagles, who had several players fighting the flu bug during Tuesday’s game. “They’re a talented group. If you let them get their shots, they’re capable of winning on any given night.” Rounding out the Howe Sound AAAA contenders is Argyle, a team that has just two Grade 12 players on its roster. “They’re a young team, but they’re aggressive, which can give us problems from time to time,” said Mowat. “Just like any team on the North Shore, anyone can win on any given night. No game is a given. They’re quite a capable team when they’re firing.” One more wrinkle will be thrown in the mix when the perennial dog fight known as the Howe Sound playoffs begin. The West Vancouver Highlanders have not been playing league games, just exhibition contests, but they’ll be thrown in the mix again once the playoffs start and a trip to the AAAA provincial championships is on the line. “We don’t really care who we face, we just want to play our game,” said Mowat about his team’s potential playoff opponents. “We want to prepare, and win any game we can, whether it’s against West Van or Carson or Sentinel or Argyle, we’ll come out and play Handsworth basketball.” No matter how it all shakes out, Mowat knows his Royals will have to be at their best to keep their spot on top of the Howe Sound heap. “I don’t think it’s safe to make predictions, just because on any given night, anyone can win,” he said. “Sentinel gave us our biggest test – that was a very exciting game. But that said, Argyle, Carson – they can surprise you.” As for the Royals, all they want to do now is keep preparing
See Playoffs page 34
Sentinel’s Andrew Davis and Handsworth’s Baptiste Grandjean battle during a AAAA Howe Sound senior boys game Thursday at Handsworth. The host squad won 64-55. For more photos visit nsnews.com. PHOTOS PAUL MCGRATH
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nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
Snowboarders find some fresh powder in an unlikely place during the fifth annual Uncapped Rail Jam held at Capilano University Thursday. PHOTOS MIKE WAKEFIELD
Off the rails at CapU
It was a snow day this week at Capilano University as the students’ union put on the fifth annual Uncapped Rail Jam Thursday, bringing some of the North Shore’s famous mountain life into the middle of campus.
Tourism student Carmina Tioseco was the lead organizer in charge of setting up a short ski and snowboard course in one of the school’s central courtyards. The tricky part, of course, is getting finding snow on a campus that is normally soaked in rain during the winter months. The team trucked in a bunch of the white stuff the night before, loading up a 26-foot truck on Mount Seymour. “We just shovelled it into a U-Haul. It took a long time,” she said with a laugh, adding
that the snow move took nearly 10 hours to complete. “I had a really good team that helped me out. They stayed late to shovel.” It was all worth it to see the campus come together to enjoy food, music and fun while watching 25 local riders show off their best tricks. “It was great community,” said Tioseco. “All the hard work that me and my team put in all paid off in the end. It was nice to see everybody having a good time.” The event was used to raise funds and awareness for the Chill Foundation, a Vancouver-based organization that provides opportunities for underserved youth to build self-esteem and life skills through snowboarding and other board sports. – Andy Prest
BC Hydro vegetation maintenance Ground-level transformers Protecting our equipment, workers and the public When: January 26, 2017 to March 31, 2017 Time:
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily
We are removing vegetation growth around BC Hydro ground-level transformers. We require these areas to be clear to ensure the safety of our employees while operating and inspecting this equipment. Overgrowth on this equipment can be very dangerous, which is why over the next few months, we’ll be pruning and removing vegetation growth in the West Vancouver area, from Cypress Creek west to Gleneagles Golf Course. BC Hydro technicians need to be able to quickly and easily access these ground-level transformers when there’s an outage or emergency. The required clearance area is 2.5 meters from all doors and 1 meter from all other sides. For more information about our vegetation management practices, please visit bchydro.com/trees.
5234
Sentinel’s Dylon Matthews looks for an opening during a Howe Sound senior boys AAAA matchup against Handsworth Thursday. PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH
Playoffs quickly approaching From page 33 themselves for the fight they know is coming soon. “You can never be comfortable, it’s never good enough,” said Mowat. “But we’re improving, we’re getting to the point where we want to be, but we’re not there yet.”
!!! Action continues this week in the AAAA ranks with Argyle hosting West Van Monday night and Sentinel hosting Carson Graham Tuesday. Both games begin at 7:30 p.m. Handsworth will be back in action Thursday when they’ll host Argyle in a 7:30 p.m. tipoff.
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REMEMBRANCES
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
EMPLOYMENT
obituaries
trades help Small Engine Mechanic and Shop Helper
Full Time & Part time Please send resume to: elimtech@telus.net
EDUCATION
tutoring services LEWIS, Ivy May August 18, 1927 - January 25, 2017 After many years living with Alzheimer’s, Ivy Lewis died in Victoria on January 25, 2017. Predeceased by her husband Eddie, parents George and Violet Fleming and siblings Florence, George, Marjorie Millar and Harry, she is survived by her children Trevor, Ivor (Jakki), Mary-Anne (Frank Jamin) and Thomas (Mary Clare), 9 grandchildren, 15 great grandchildren, sisters-in-law Jennie and Carla Fleming and numerous nieces and nephews. Ivy Fleming was born in Fort William, Ontario. Her family moved to North Vancouver and there she met and married Eddie Lewis. They had four children and over the years lived in North Vancouver, Steveston, Tahsis, Victoria and Port Alberni. After Eddie died in 1967, Ivy returned to North Vancouver. She was commissioned as a Salvation Army officer in 1971 and served at the Fernie Corps and the Homestead in Vancouver. In retirement she lived with her daughter in Prince George and in 2009 entered into care at the Salvation Army Sunset Lodge in Victoria. Funeral services will be held at Sunset Lodge, 952 Arm Street, Victoria on February 4, 2017 at 1:30 p.m. In lieu of flowers, donations to the Salvation Army Sunset Lodge or the Alzheimer’s Society Canada are appreciated.
MITCHELL, Sadie Doreen It is with a great sense of love and loss that we acknowledge the passing on January 17, 2017 of a wonderful mum and nana, Sadie Doreen Mitchell (née Toghill). Born and raised in Exeter, England, Sadie later moved to Montreal with her husband, James Ronald Mitchell, where only daughter Cheryl was born. After a family move to Toronto, she liked working as a fashion consultant. Sadie enjoyed her family, especially during fun-filled vacations such as those in Wildwood Crest, New Jersey. She liked to relax via knitting and colouring, as well as having a chat and laugh with people. Sadie loved watching her favorite movies - The Sound of Music and An Affair to Remember - and listening to favorite songs such as Puccini’s La Bohème and her wedding song, Schubert’s Ave Maria. She was beyond thrilled to become a nana, devoting countless hours to nurturing her grandchildren. Being a nana gave her joy and an even deeper sense of being needed and valued. Sadie is survived by daughter Cheryl, son-in-law David, and grandchildren Mitchell, Dylan and Nicole.
MOSS, Gordon William February 17, 1946 - January 2, 2017
A Celebration of Life will be held on Thursday, February 2 at 1:30pm at the auditorium of Evergreen Hamlets at Fleetwood, 8382 156 Street, Surrey. Support for the Huntington Society of Canada and the Canadian Coalition for Genetic Fairness is greatly appreciated.
Rose was born in Calgary Alberta, the only child of Anna and Peter Kasper, who had emigrated to Canada from Russia during the communist revolution. She moved to Vancouver with her mother at age 16 after the death of her father. She met Gale MacRae, the love of her life, in 1958 through mutual friends. Rose and Gale were married in 1960. Rose loved her family and friends, especially close friends Susan and Keith Hillman. She enjoyed playing golf with Gale and with her girl friends, as well as spending many happy times with friends at Whistler, Las Vegas, Reno and Palm Desert; almost as much as her unbelievable regular winnings at the casino. She loved her house parties, dancing with Gale, cruising and travels around the world. We will miss her quiet spirituality, forever bright smile and her unwavering positive attitude. At her wishes cremation will be performed, with internment in the North Vancouver Municipal cemetery. A celebration of life will be held at a later date.
FUNERAL SERVICES
Gordon, who was born and raised in North Vancouver, passed away peacefully with close family at his side. Gordon is dearly missed by his devoted son Erik, spouse Kristina Vandervoort, extended family and friends. He was predeceased by his parents George and Emma Moss and sister Georgina Crompton. Gordon was a committed trade unionist and NDP supporter who worked in the shipbuilding industry. He was also an accomplished musician and singer known for his kindness and sense of humour. The family wishes to extend gratitude and appreciation to: Dr. Henry Wong, Surrey Memorial Hospital’s respiratory therapists and ICU doctors and staff, Susan Tolley and the Huntington (Disease) Society of Canada and Diane Cameron and staff at Evergreen Hamlets.
MACRAE, Rose Nona It is with sadness that we announce the passing of Rose MacRae on Sunday, January 15, 2017 in Lions Gate Hospital. Born March 26, 1930. She was surrounded by her loving husband of 56 years, Gale MacRae, her niece and nephew Marnie and Ken, grand nephews Kevin (Sophie), Daniel (Elizabeth) and grand niece Michelle (Otto).
taking care of each other
is what community is all about.
Hollyburn Funeral Home
RAMSDEN, Jaqueline Elizabeth (nee Duggan) Jaqueline passed away, peacefully, on January 8th, 2017 at the age of 91. She will be forever remembered by her sons Stephen, Michael (Marguerite), Patrick and Christopher (Linda) and niece Leigh. Jaqueline will also be remembered by her grandchildren David, Elizabeth, Peter, Nadine, John, Sophie, Ryan, Laura, Sean and Taylor and her other nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her husband, Richard as well as her son, Gregory. The family will celebrate Jaqueline’s life privately at a later date.
1807 Marine Drive, West Vancouver Thank you for continuing to place your trust in us now and always. Proudly serving the north Shore for over 80 years West Van: 604-922-1221 or North Van 604-985-3454 HollyburnFunerals.com
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COMMUNITY
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When experience Counts!
604-980-3211
A Celebration of Life will be held at West Vancouver Yacht Club, 5854 Marine Drive, West Vancouver on Monday, March 6, at 3pm. In lieu of flowers, please donate to Cancer research or St. John Ambulance Therapy Dog Program.
www.westcoastwigs.com
Survived by his loving wife Ruby of 67 years, his children; daughter Candace (Andrew), son Michael (Lynda), grandchildren; Nicholas, Matthew, Derek, Justine, Ethan and sister Lorraine. A loving and devoted husband and father. He is irreplaceable. He will forever be remembered for his dry wit and sense of humour. Never too busy to help and always ready to give support and guidance. We will all miss him dearly and are grateful he is now at peace. A private gathering will be held at a later date.
CASH $ for TEAK / RETRO FURN & ANTIQUE Items FAIR & RELIABLE
Local...Thanks! Derek 604-442-2099
for sale - misc
Bruno Magli Shoes $50 Italian luxury shoes, women’s size 6−1/2. LGH Thrift Shop; 128 W15, NV
free Free: computer desk from Bombay. 52” long, 30” high, polished walnut. Call 604.925.0581
wanted Old Books Wanted also: Photos Postcards, Letters, Paintings. no text books or encyclopedias. I pay cash. 604-737-0530
found KEYS WITH blue tag found near Bewicke Ave, North Van. Call 778-288-9520 to identify.
Lynda at West Coast Wigs will provide you with her expertise and her knowledge of wigs and hair pieces.
THOMAS, Robert Edward August 28, 1929 - January 15, 2017
art & collectibles
COMMUNITY
No One Knows What It’s Like to be a Woman With Hair Loss
With regret we announce the passing on January 25th 2017 of John Frederick Trigg, engineer, naval officer, husband, father, grandfather and greatgrandfather. John was a career officer in the Royal Navy serving from 1940 until 1959; subsequently he pursued a successful career in the Gas industry, in both the UK and Canada. Upon his retirement he and his beloved wife Billie (Bee) travelled extensively. After Bee’s death in 2006, John, and his dog Abby spent a great deal of time volunteering with the St John Ambulance Therapy Dog program, being awarded the Order of Saint John for his work there. John is survived by his four children, six grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
MARKETPLACE
Dignity Memorial is a division of Service Corporation International (Canada) ULC.
Wigs, Wigs, Wigs & more
TRIGG, John Frederick
Certified Math Teacher Math, calculus, IB, AP, SAT programs. 604.929.6262
MEMORIAL DONATIONS
lost LOST brown tabby cat named Max. Lost since December 13th in Lynn Valley, spotted at 27th & Williams on Jan 25th. New to area, do not chase. Offer food. Skinny, could be injured. If found, please call anytime: 778.866.2533 or 604.349.6662. THREE KEYS in a brown leather case lost between Walmart and Save-OnFoods in North Van. Call 604.922.2247 to identify.
memorial donations
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
A38 |
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Your Choice
TIMEOUT!
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
Solutions can be found in next Sunday's issue.
CROSSWORD 58. Pie _ __ mode 59. Hebraic 60. River in India CLUES DOWN 1. City in Washington 2. Entertained 3. Nakedness 4. Exclamation of surprise 5. Instinct 6. Making a mistake 7. “Borgias” actor Jeremy 8. Phrases 9. Millihenry 12. Long ago 13. Self-immolation by fire ritual 17. Disfigure 19. Horseshoe extension 20. Regions 21. Philippine Island 25. Appropriate for a particular time 29. Small constellation in the Milky Way
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31. Categorizes 32. Malaysian boat 33. Natives of Sri Lanka 35. Type of vessel 38. Prescribe 41. Ranking 23. Trap
40. Branches of a bone
1. Part of a can
24. Long, angry speeches
41. Very much
4. A form of discrimination
26. For instance
42. TV host Leeza
CLUES ACROSS
27. Sticky, waterlogged soil
48. A way to change integrity
11. Expression of joy
28. Fasten
12. Spanish “be”
30. Card game
50. Plants with dark green, glossy leaves
14. A mongrel
31. Seaport (abbr.)
15. Helen was from here
34. Dresses worn in S. Asia
52. Agency
16. With many branches 18. Fussy
36. Midway between south and southeast
54. Martial artists wear this
22. Male fertilzing organ of a flower
37. Of the mouth
55. Peanut butter
39. Capital of Yemen
56. Drinkers sit on these
10. Doctors’ group
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45. Mineral can be extracted from this 46. Tide 47. Lump in yarn 49. Food on a skewer 56. Letter in the Albanian alphabet 57. Midway between south and west Crossword puzzle answers use American spelling
Rearrange the letters to spell something pertaining to winter weather.
IDGIRF LAST SUNDAY’S ANSWER: SPOUSE
CRYPTO FUN DETERMINE THE CODE TO REVEAL THE ANSWER Solve the code to discover words related to cold weather. Each number corresponds to a letter. (Hint: 9 = c)
It’s okay to ask for help!
53. Wear this when eating ribs
44. Funeral
WORD SCRAMBLE
Call today for a FREE In-Home Needs Assessment.
604-985-6881
51. Seedless raisin
43. Knickknack
A.
10
9
26
B.
24 15
8
18
C.
18 10
15
11
D.
9
4
20
Clue: Frozen substance Clue: Precipitation
Clue: Movement of air
8
Clue: Outerwear
LAST SUNDAY’S ANSWERS: A. bride B. groom C. ceremony D. rings
LAST SUNDAY'S CROSSWORD SOLUTION:
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
| A39
north shore news nsnews.com
IT’S TIME TO UNFUNK JANUARY.
January is officially the funkiest month of the year. The holidays are over and it’s just a big fat month of the blahs. Which is why we’re doing our first-annual “UnfunkJanuary” event. To help get you up here to get The Goods, you can save up to $52 a day with a 5-day Edge Card (unrestricted) until Jan 30th. Take it from us. Because with over five metres of snow so far, we’re experts on unfunking. Oh yeah, here’s a hashtag: #UnfunkJanuary. Photo by Eric Berger of Jonathan Hadley.
EDGE CARD SALE ON NOW
SAVE UP TO
52
$
WITH A 5-DAY /DAY EDGE CARD.
whistlerblackcomb.com 1.866.218.9689
A40 |
nsnews.com north shore news
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
NO CHARGE
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695 Bi-weekly
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*2017 XT5 – 48 month lease, 1.5% APR, 16,000 kms per year, TP $27,976, residual $20,466. 2017 Escalade ESV – 48 month lease, 4.9% APR, 16,000 kms per year, $6,500 down, TP $78,760, residual $47,325. Plus taxes. Vehicles not exactly as shown.
DL# 10743
Be Bold • Be different • drive a CadillaC North Shore’s Exclusive Cadillac Store
604-987-5231
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Northshore Auto Mall, 800 Automall Dr. North Van www.carternorthshore.com