14 - Wednesday, July 20, 1988 - North Shore News Pa KATHLEEN HANSEN — Miss Time Out Sports ¢ Like many of her fellow contestants, 17-year-old Hansen entered the pageant dq as an adventure. Living on the North Shore all her life, Hansen was named the a junior female sportsperson at Seycove Secondary, where she was active on the. student council. In the fall, she plans to attend Capilano College before going on to Simon Fraser University for a Bachelor of Education. . Hansen believes that the most important issue for today's young people to address is drinking and driving 2s it is ‘‘a problem all over.” |”. lbs Actors Mel Gibson and Clark Gable top her list of favorite movie stars, and musically her likes include groups Icehouse and The Talking Heads. ALTHOUGH ONLY one wiil walk away with the honor- able title of Miss North Shore 1988, 11 North Shore women are having the time of their young lives in the action-packed weeks leading up to the glittering pageant show and emo- tionally-charged crowning ceremony. The event is slated for 7 p.m., Friday Aug. 5 at the Centennial Theatre in North Vancouver. tee, as raw contenders. Following an intensive, month- — —= ANITA HRBAR ~— Miss North Shore Optimist MISS North Shore organizer Gerti Todd... polishing pageant hope- fuls. The contestants are inducted to the well-organized pageant regime, mapped out by Miss North Shore organizer Gerti Todd and commit- long round of fashion shows, eti- quette, choreography, and modell- ing instruction sessions, the con- testants emerge well-poised and polished. This year’s contestants vying for the particular privilege of bearing the Miss North Shore 1988 crown are Shelley Donovan, Miss Dollar Mall; Kathleen Hansen, Miss Time Out Sports; Anita Hrbar, Miss North Shore Optimist; Nina Jakobsen, Miss Lynn Valley Lions; Kelly Marshall, Miss Lynn Valley Centre; Lee-Anne McDonough, Miss Tomahawk Barbeque; Joanne Meyer, Miss Mount Seymour; Michelle Morgan, Miss Nick’s Supplies; Tara Paat, Miss Park Royal Hotel; Allyson Phelan, Miss Capilano Mall; Arttamus Schulze, Miss Army and Navy, Air Force Vets Unit 45. © Building self-confidence and baving fun are the reasons Hrbar, 18, got |: involved with the psgeant. Busy working with the Bert Duke community soft- ball league, the Alberta native also pariicipated in last year’s B.C. Summer Games. me A Carson Graham graduate, Hrbar is a hostess in a focal restaurant and is interested in commercial design, hoping to one day become a graphic designer. “We are all equal, and to accomplish anything we must work together,”’ she |? said when asked about the most important issue facing young people in today’s world. “The teenagers of today are the future of tomorrow.” NINA JAKOBSEN — Miss Lynn Valley Lions © A North Shore resident all her life, Jakobsen, 17, is an active athlete who has attended two B.C. Summer Games, made the B.C, field hockey team for her age group and worked as a Grouse Mountain ski technician for three seasons. A Handsworth Secondary graduate who lists Peter Pan as her hero, Jakobsen feels that saying no to drugs is the most important issue facing youth today. A fietd hockey coach, she holds a first aid certificate, and future plans are travelling to Asia and Europe ard working at Australia’s Mount Buller. Cary Grant and Kelly McGillis are her favorite movie stars, and ou the musical side she likes The Cult, The Sex Pistols, The Doors and David Bowie. i: eal Be eH f KELLY MARSHALL — Miss Lynn Valicy Centre : © Nineteen-year-old Marshall became involved with the pageant as a way to meet new people, gain modelling experience and build her self-confidence. A pecr counsellor in high school, 2 day captain at Lions Gate Hospital and a volunteer for various charities, she lists wheelchair athlete Rick Hansen as her hero. . Future plans for the life-long North Shore resident include continuing her study of sign language at college then work with the hearing-impaired. Hobbies include writing poetry and weightlifting; James Dean is a favorite actor. f Drug/alcohol abuse awareness is to her the most important youth issue to- day. SHELLEY DONOVAN — Miss Dollar Mall * Nineteen-year-uld Donovan entered the pageant for a chance to meet new people and have fun. A North Shore resident for 19 years, the Capilano Col- lege student is active as a counsellor at the North Vancouver Outde sr School and as one of the organizers of the college’s Retail Manageme:i Program fashion show, . “I feel that young people should be more concerned about .:Jucation,”’ she explains. ‘‘If we can realize how important it is to learn ata young age, maybe then we can benefit with better jobs in the future.” Donovan lists her heroes as “all firemen,'’ and future plans include finishing college and travelling to Europe to explore the fashion industry there. : LEE-ANNE McDONOUGH — Miss Tomahawk Barbeque © A high school cheerleader and honors graduate, McDonough, 18, became ore of the contestants for the Miss North Shore title as “I’ve always wanted to enter 3 pageant.’’ Interested in modelling, make-up artistry, hairstyling and fashion designing, McDonough plans to attend fashion college after working or a year. Among her heroes are Gandhi, B.C. artist Emily Carr and author Charles Dickens; she believes that striving for world peace is the most important issue facing today’s youth and that relations between the countries need to improve. A Narth Shore resident for three years, Vancouver-born McDonough lists 50s vamp Marilyn Monroe as favorite actress and Kevin Costner as favorite actor. NEWS photos Cindy Bellamy