SIX SET UP SHOP AT CAPILANO MALL Travelling psychics come to THERE IS much reading going on at Capilano Mall this week, But what's being read goes far beyond the surface of the printed page. Six members of the Victoria- based Psychics’ Circle will be on hand locally to read hands, minds, physical gestures, numbers, stars, past lives and tarot cards. The travelling psychic fair has set up shop at the mall until Feb. 26. Clairvayant-psychic-couns ellor- healer-channeller-inventor- businessman Murray McKeown and palmist Sandra Fisher brought the first group of pyschics together for a collective approach to people reading in 1986. They’ve been “They want another perso By MICHAEL BECKER News Reporter and practising psychic counsellor Christobelic, and healer-trance medium-clairvoyant-rescue worker-ghost buster Peter Morris. The group believes everyone has far more inner potential than they recognize and attempts to show the way to answers to life’s big ques- tions. Said Fisher: ‘‘They want another person who doesn’t know them — n who doesn’t know them to See if they can shine a light that might help them understand what’s going 33 On. Ppalmist Sandra Fisher and Alberta. Said Fisher: ‘‘We wanted to work with a group of people that was really compatible with the bot- tom line that we want to help peo- ple understand themselves beiter using our own tools. We use our skills in a practical way.” The present configuration in- cludes McKeown, Fisher, psychic-healer-teacher-tarot card reader Donna, _tarot-astrology- numerology-f Ching specialist Lady Zee, astrology-tarot specialist touring ever since throughout B.C. to see if they can shine a light that might help them understand what's going on.*’ The mall readings are taped for future reference. McKeown says his own extraor- diaary abilities first surfaced in terms of an intuitive knowledge of the physical world around him. “It started a lot with machinery, parts, and knowing how things functioned without doing the research. By Grade !1 I was inelting my own aluminum with a furnace 1 had made without plans from scratch — casting, building 975 OIL LUBE & FILTER S4 g85 MARINE DRIVE NORTH VANCOUVER pieces of machinery, rebuilding engines. A knowledge of chemis- try, al! forms of science --- it was all just there. “Y couldn’t understand why it didn't make sense to everybody. I realized that if £ could sit dewn and want to know the answer to a material problem then 1 could also want to know what's the trouble with a person,’ McKeown said. Fisher first explored palmistry as a freelance writer researching the phenomenon years ago. “| just kept doing it. The way I learned everything ! know is from the people I read. For the first five years I just read people and asked them hundreds of questions. It hooked me. When ? citst actually decided to charge money for what I did, ] was very unsure of myself. The feedback and sesponse to my efforts were so phenomenal I ac- tually started making my fiving at it from the first time I sat down and charged money,"’ she said. Fisher works from a knowledge of physiognomy, skin ridges, fingerprint patterns and the insight gleaned from the countless hands she has read. Skeptics are warmly welcomed by the circle of psychics. Said McKeown: ‘‘The close-minded person is a fanatic. The skeptic is really a thinker. It’s not a bad way to be. You’re reacting to what you can see. You show them something real and they accept it.’’ 41 - Wednesday, February 22, 1989 - North Shore News Stop the chatter PAGE 42 NEWS photo Mike Wakefield HANDS, TAROT cards, stars and numbers will be read st 2 psychic fair taking place at Capilano Mall this week. Paimist Sandra Fisher and clairvoyant Murray McKeowa will be on hand along with others to read into the lives of North Shore residents through to February 26, Lonsdale Farm Market 988-1669 ORANGES /STRAWBERRIES LBS. FOR $700 $999 ‘GRAPEFRUIT