Al4 - Sunday, May 30, 1982 - North Shore News EEE community round up Ra Big parade kicks off WV Community Day AT il A.M. next Saturday, June 5, Asher Smith will be entertaiming as “Who Hoo the Clown”. Dave Simmons will be balancing high on his unicycle. The West Vancouver Bands will be tooting and the Kings Avenue Clown Troupe wilh be clowning. West Vancouver's Girl Guides and members of the Otters Swim Club will be marching. All of these people and many, many more will be a part of the West Vancouver Community Day Parade. This year the Community Day Parade begins at Ambleside Park at Il a.m. and proceeds along Marine Drive, ending at 12 noon at the Recreation Centre complex. There are always numerous colourful floats in the parade and this year will be no exception. A new float from the Junior League is expected. School groups which enter floats in the parade will be eligible to compete for prizes offered by the West Van- couver Rotary Club. The Club is providing $500 for the best school float, a $250 second prize, and a $125 third pnze. In between floats there will be bands galore to keep everyone's toes tapping. Along with the three units of the West Van Band, there Help with jobs A JOINT PROMOTION has been launched by North Vancouver Chamber of Commerce and North Van School District to urge local employers to consider North Van graduates when hinng. The promoton is running utider the slogan “Look First in North Vancouver” and John lLudgate, career education consultant with the school district, promises employers won't have to look far. “We can help local em- ployers find applicants who have the abilities, work habits and attitudes necessary for successful employment,” Ludgate says. Every year, he _ notes, North Van schools graduate many capable students, some of whom pursue further educational op- portunities. Many others, however, seek employment that has the possibility of leading to 8’ x 12’ size from less than $2,500 For more intormation please contact (PACIFIC EDEN») i For IN HOME Estimate call 3168 Lake City Way Burnaby, B.C. V5A 3A4 420-1324 apprenticeships or other types of on-the-job training. “This year it will be ex- ceptionally difficult for these graduates to find this type of employment,” Ludgate says. “With this in mind we are’ appealing to local employers to take a first look, when hiring, at the products of the community’s own schools.” Such contact Van 8141. FREE JOB ADS the North employers Ludgate at School Board, can North 987- Meanwhile, Shore News and Sunday News are offering § free classified ads to bona fide school, college and university students seeking summer employment These free ads must be typed or clearly written and must be mailed or delivered by hand to the News office, 1139 Lonsdale Avenue They cannot be accepted over the phone will be the Shriners’ and the Vancouver Department Band. Watching a parade 1s always fun, but it is even more fun to be in it. If Band Fire children would like to participate, they are en- couraged to dress up in a costume, decorate their bikes or wagons, and ride inthe parade. After the parade is over the Community Day events begin at the Recreation Centre complex. Plan to spend Saturday, June 5, watching the parade and enjoying the festivities at the Recreation Centre with your friends and neighbours. Credit due for old NV pictures NUMEROUS photogra- phs of old North Van- couver appeared in the special Lynn Valley Pioneer Days supplement published in last Wed- nesday's edition of the North Shore News, but credits for their origin were inadvertantly omitted. The photographs in question, taken between 1905 and 1909, were by pioneer North Van photographer G. G. Nye. They appear in “The Boom Years” written and compiled by Donald }. Bourdon of the North Shore Museum and Archives, published by Hancock House Publishers and on sale at local bookstores. We apologize to Mr. Bourdon and Hancock House for the unintentional om- mission. VALUABLE PRIZES are offered for the best school floats in West Van's Commanity Day parade next Saturday. Above: last year's entry from Gleneagles Elementary School. N.S. agendas HIGHLIGHTS of this week’s council and school board meetings (no meetings by West Van council or North Van School Board): NORTH VAN DISTRICT COUNCIL (Monday, 7:30 p.m.) Transportation, Wood- lands and Sunshine Falls. Grant application procedures. Proposed assessment/tax- ation inquiry. Support for Surrey council re 1982 provincial grants. Maplewood official com- munity plan. Proposed helicopter pad (Burrard Y arrows letter). Capilano Trading Post siting area amendment. Lions Club request for use of fields. Traffic and = Safety Committee meeting, May HH Debris at corner of Fromme. 27th and Lynn Valley Rd North Shore Playcare Society Transit operating centre al Klahanie Park the best dressed house in tow invest in year-round comfort. wn: 7 The Greenhouse for people, not just for plants The Eden Garden Room Conservatory ts easily the most versatile greenhouse ever invented NORTH VAN CITY COUNCIL (Monday, 7:30 p.m.) New Museum and Ar- chives budding. Resident-only parking, 100 block East Ist. North Shore Playcare Society. N. Shore Union Board of Health, Vector Project. Outdoor dining, 224 West Esplanade (Land use con- tract amendment). Industrial assessments. Local improvement bylaw introductions. WEST VAN BOARD (Monday, 7 p.m. — at Hollyburn Elementary School, Teachers Centre, 13th and Duchess) SCHOOL Special reports on “Human ennchment challenge *Secondary school organi zation “Long range planning “Work study expenence and and work Put YouR BACKS INTO it -Pa CAP’N TROLLER Cap'n Troller is delivering real ale to the Troller Pub at Horseshoe Bay'