CLOCKWISE FROM top right: Last weekend saw the relaunch- ing of the M.V. Charles H. Cates at Mosquito Creek Marina. The vessel was originally built in 1913 for Charles Henry Cates, who founded the towing company C.H. Cates and sons. Earl and Suzanne Cates-Dodson had the crafi restored. They relaunched it on Saturday then hosted a reception at North Vancouver's Burrard Yacht Club. Pictured with the boat is Fred Amor, the head shipwright on the restoration project. Ear! Dodson, Suzanne Cates-Dodson and Sy!via Cates-Heiliger, and artist Daniel izzard (with Dodson lower left) were on hand, as well as Helen Cates, with niece Cates-Dodson. Married pianists play Centennial CLOCKWISE FROM right: Classical pianist Claude Frank and his wife Lillian Kallir played the Centennial Theatre, presented by North Shore Community Concerts (NSCC). Frank has had a long, distinguished career since his debut with Leonard Bernstein and the Kew York Philharmonic in 1959. An internationally acclaimed interpreter of Beethoven's piane literature, Frank is a professor of niusic at Philadelphia’s Cutis institute of Music and Yale's Schoo! of Music. He is an artist in residence at Kansas University. ; Kallir, who also debuted with the New York Philharmonic when she was 17 and has since performed with world-class orches- tras from Vienna to Toronto to Jerusalem to Buenos Aires, first performed publiciy when she played her recorder on radio at age four. Recently the two appeared with their daughter Pamela Frank on CBS's Sunday Morning program. Taking in the concert were Patricia Hoebig and Richard Kitson, originally from the North Shore. Kitson is now a Baltimore music historian who is in town to adjudicate the Kiwanis Music Festival. : NSCC Association treasurer Cam Ferguson, concert chairman Norma Porter and Bud Porter were present to enjoy the show.