A8 - Sunday, March 6, 1983 - North Shore News inquiring reporter by Ellsworth Dickson Do you remember a song from the sixties that went: “We'd live the lives we choose, Wed fight and never lose, For we were young and sure to have our way. Yes, “Those were the Days”. For today’s question I visited Lynmour Community School to ask children: ‘What would you like to be when you grow up?”’ Robbie North Vancouver I] want to be a professional hockey player in the NHL. Presently, I play on a hockey team called the North Van Atom “A’s. My favounte player is Ivan Hhinka of the Canucks. Tim North Vancouver I want to be an Olympic skier. I practice on Grouse Mountain. I like the “Peak” the best Aly North Vancouver | want to be a karate master 1 have been studying karate for a few Months now and | really hhke it Denelda North Vancouver I want to compute ths Lyamour computers grade sin in a work with Here at we stuched last year in fm osure there good computers future oan Nic ate North V am ouver 1 veterinanan l would The te be oa oll amiemads cxgmes cally che opes lieve Bak FROM PAGE A1 Shore municipalities, has long recognized the need for a joint approach to disposal. She says she has been concerned by the lack of alternative siles at a time when mayor tandftis are at the point of closing and the unwillingness for any one municipality to be the location for a new dump. She points out that even if the Lower Mainland was to find the capital expense involved with large-scale incineration at least 30 per cent of the region's garbage would still have to be dumped in landfills. “We would welcome provincial involvement,” she says. Recalling the obstacles that have arisen while the question of siting a landfill has been shuffled from one municipality to another, Baker comments: “We need some . cooperation, not confrontation.” In his letter, the minister expresses his uncertainties over whether the municipalities are going to get anywhere with the problem unless he steps in. To the residents living near Eagle Harbour and Glenmore elementaries, the closure means even more than having their children By CHRIS LLOYD DEEP COVE resident Betty Edge assumed the crash which startled her while she was in bed at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday was the sound of something falling over in her home But when she could find nothing oul of place the incident became a puzzic Unul the following day. when she was outside the house at 1934 Deep Cove Road and saw there was a hole in the roof Her husband, Rob Edge, recognized — the signs when he later in spected the naime-inch square hole The heavy scouring on one of the rafters beside the hole Kenneth Parkinson Situation in hand, I Airborn icicle pierces roof WEDDING PHOTOS Complete Wedding C overage KO8 Colour proots flo CNoose trom from $340. Mirror lmage Photography bused to other schools. It means the end of local community centres, a social impact, which will eliminate recreational facilities and local meeting places. “I have been following with some concern recent events concerning = solid waste m the Lower Mainland,” his letter opens, “and while it is not my in- tention to become involved in a regional matter when the elected officials have the am wondering whether this is the case on this issue at this time.” Baker has every reason to be anxious for a solution to parbage dispesal, being uncomfortably aware of the fact that Premier Street will be filled three years in the er welcomes new plan Rogers will likely be acting within a matter of weeks as there is an urgent need to _ come up with waste disposal decisions. On an immediate basis, these decisions will involve Tandfilling, he says, as “the development of incineration cannot happen overnight.” (=3 | CRASH PAD 7 aN =) NEWS 6 March 1983 VoL H permitted dumping area. As for the chances of Distnct being allowed to expand, in light of the uproar from. neighbors eoncerning the existing > operation, she doesn't even want to think about it at this tume. She won't even speculate over whether Distnct would stick its neck out by putting in for expansion in the first place. Head of the municipal secuion of the provincial Waste Management Branch. Erme Lawson, says he feels told him an object had plunged through the roof from a great height. “I lived in’ London during the blitz,” he said. “This is like shrapnel in the Secdind World War.” On the attic floor, among the splinters of the cedar shakes, was a pool of water and when Edge called an airport: official he was told the hole had obviously been made by an icicle falling off a plane wing “The Minastry ol Transport guy told me he would even tell me which plane at came off.” said dee, who thinks the whole thing is beyond au yoke. “Someone's going to get killed by one of these things, one day * 986-5155 DR. ALISON RUSSELL 1s pleased to announc @ that DR KATHRYN HOLMES (AA Mf} will be pointing her in (he practice of FAMILY ME DICINE Ste 306-125 E effective March 7/83 13th St North Van 987 7742 ‘st You will recall when | ran out of space last week it was due to the burden of explanation placed upon me by a Capilano College marketing wizard. The news was gently broken to me that our weekly ad failed all tests and broke all rules of what an ad is supposed to look like. This prompted a hastily call- ed summit meeting of The Crash Pad Marketing Dept., normally held in the Lynnwood or some other fitting round table. Consensus was that I ought to make this look more like an editorial column, and maybe more people will be hoodwinked into reading Its a Silver Wind That Blows No Good, Dept. True enough. Especially if you were one of the hundred. odd cars parked around a local construction site recently. The vehicles fell victim to a phenomena known as overspray Overspray sounds gentle and harmless, it reminds one of walking along the sea wall... in reality it means cars getting showered with silvery space-age tough paint meant to protect whole buildings, and if you think its easy getting that stuff off a car, well, let me tell you Continuing Ed, Dept. Which is another way of saying that Ed ts continuing to take courses at a startling rate, leaving me to run Crash Pad by my own wit His latest academia was the IICAR (Inter Industry Conference of Automotive Repair), a ses ston that brought us body people, ICBC and manufac turers together on the problems faced in curtng the 1983, 1984, even 1985 models This Sunday will be a cram ses sion in Richmond on the same subject. | just hope that Ld doesn’t take too much education down tn one swallow Hie risks suffering the same fate as the fellow | met once in a hospital emergency waiting nom The man tn sisted on seeing a doctor since for the past few days he'd been noticing that everything he said was smarta: than the last thing he'd said He deduced from thts that his brain was enlarging at a dangerous rate, and would shortly be bursting tts confines 1 feel, that as Ed’s employer, It is my responsibility to point out these pitfalls Thanks, But No Thanks Dept. Finally, a message to the party or parties who seem bound to send business our way via twisted acts of sabotage on innocent vehicles In the past week we had cars where 1) someone had stolen the bumper leence plate and all 2) someone had stolen half the front grill §) someone had stolen beth tail lights Phe thefts didnt occur af Crash Pad, but tin’ the customers own canports Is thts some new cult? Detrott dew worshippers’ Perhaps they are apprentice car thieves working up to the day they can abscond with a whole car Senoush whoever itis please find a new Prob on are upset ig Our CUS LOrmenrs WVS8 Conan Dre am 380-4581. a Ss o OPEN SATURDAYS! 1315 Cotton Drive (73% ark & Tilford)