o SATAN By DUSTIN QUEZADA _ ITTOOK. nearly 40 years but Raymond Laurier and three of his adult children made it back to Terrace. A French immigrant, Laurier came . ; to the area in 1952 — settling first in Kitimat and then Terrace — with his ' wife Jeannot, whom he had met in the - _ Eastern Townships of Quebec. Laurier built a cabin in Thornhill where his son Dominique was born in 1959. Daughter Angela was bom three years later and by the time there were _ four kids in the cabin, Jeanette told her’ J _ husband they had better find a larger - house. The cabin was ‘moved to ‘another " property and the family relocated to a home on River Dr. in Thornhill. “The house is still standing,” said : °Theo Cam, a neighbour who would remain friends with Raymond through ‘his time here and beyond. “It’s where the Moonlight Body Shop was.” ' Jeanette felt the need to be closer to | her family in Quebec, so in 1959 she ‘and the family’s seven children board- ed a train bound for Montreal. '- Raymond made two visits there in the following two years, which pro- - duced two more children. He had stayed the two extra years, working as a faller and well digger. By the time Raymond moved (o join ° the family i in 1969, he had been here 17 years. Those years proved to be séme of his best as evidenced by the lasting friendships he made. “His best friends are here,” said An- gela. “His last wish was to go back to France and to come back here.” . Raymond, though suffering the advanced effects of Alzheimer’s, did © indeed make it back, though the years really changed the landscape.- “My father took a lot of photos and you can see the changes i in them,” An-_ Former Terrace man ‘drowns after helicopter crashes in lake: leaves ‘behind a] THE BODY of a young - Terrace-Thornhill destination of family’ S cross-Canada trip” ners Office said autopsy re- THORNHILL Three: siblings Angela, centre, and Dominique Laurier, right, last-were in Terrace when Montreal hosted the world’s exhibition. On the . left is Manuel Pasdelou, Angela's boyfriend. ” gela said. “He couldn’t recognize anything — hardly his own house,” Cam said, add- ing his-longtime friend went through town still trying to point out the Mile _ onher father and his friends i ‘in the Ter- 17 sawmill, For Dominique and Angela, who were eight and five-years-old Tespec-- ‘tively when they left, their memories of the area are limited. ‘Dominique remembers being in Wolves and reunions with Scouts and the activities they did. He also recalls a “friend of his brother Vincent, the third sibling to make the trip, who would ride a horse to school. But Dominique remembers enough -tO witness great changes. “Iti is so beautiful, I wanted to cry — ‘it’s 'more modern, more nice,” he said. “I recognized the houses and it gave me a bit of a shock.” ‘From her father’s photographs, An- | gela said she recognized Cam’s face and above all else, the trees. “The mountains, Lakelse Lake and released, managed to. trudge the trees,” she said. “That’s what I re-. member most — the trees.” , The diminutive Angela, who brought her: boyfriend Manuel Pasdelou, was documenting the trip for a film based race area. “A contortionist by - trade, Angela ‘helped establish the now world famous Cirque du Soleil in 1984 and toured with them intemationally for several years. - The siblings were blown away throughout their cross-Canada drive and no more so than in the northwest. - The group visited Prince. Rupert, Kitimat, the Nass Valley, Stewart and. ‘the Salmon Glacier. “I find around this section here so beautiful,” Angela said. For Raymond, 76, it was ‘his last. trip. Dominique and Angela, however, aren’t So sure. © “Maybe like: salmon, we'll come ‘back here to die,” Dominique said. Lincoln DUSTIN QUEZADA PHOTO ; WE WILL BE OPEN UNTIL THE The Terrace Standard, Wednesday, August 23, 2006 - B3 ‘The Terrace Standard is ‘WWW. terracestandardl com Check out our site or call 638-7283 for advertising information Bulbs Are On The Way! “FARM & NURSERY~ MIDDLE OF SEPTEMBER! 4903 Graham Ave.,: Terrace 635-1907 | Wednesday Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 6: 00 p.m. man originally from Terrace has been recovered from an unnamed lake in northern” ~ Saskatchewan. Philip Lincoln, 29, who had been living in Smith- ers died on Aug. 13 when a helicopter carrying him and two others went down in ap- proximately three metres of water south of Fond-du-Lac, a fly-in community near the Saskatchewan-Northwest Territories border. — “Philip had an injury to his spine, so he couldn’t feel his legs and he drowned,” Julie, Lincoln’ s wife told. Black Press on Aug. 14. On Aug. 15, an RCMP ‘underwater recovery team found Lincoln’s body, which was taken to Saskatoon for autopsy. ” The Saskatchewan Coro- . Correction notice THE AUG. 9 issue of The Terrace Standard contained incorrect information about one float winner from the Riverboat Days parade. Sunshine -_ placed third in the vehicle category, not the Totem Sad- dle Club. Limousine sults would not be available for three to six months. — Sgt. Brad Kaeding, an RCMP. spokesman, said foul play was not suspected and, as such, police have tured the investigation into the cause of the accident over to Transport Canada. The two other men, whose names have not been PETLAND TERRACE PROUD TO SPONSOR a ApoptTeA® PET a’ more than eight kilometres through dense brush to get help.. “Knowing Philip he prob- ably told the other guys to let go of him or they would all drown,” Julie said. The three men were con- ducting geological surveys for Smithers-based Ranex Exploration. K Helpll We are over-run with cats and kittens, as are other shelters at this time of year. The sad reality is that the majority don't find ‘forever homes’ and they are euthanized. We are trying to put-an end to this. by including the spay/ neuter when you adopt from the Thornhill Animal Shelter. The adoption fee is $84.80 and you get |% a fixed, dewormed, and flea free cat! C’mon.} down fo the Thornhill Animal Shelter. : * VIEW ANIMALS AT: www.petfinder.com Come see these animals at the Thorahill Animal Shelter his wife Julie and their five children —.Hope, Leif, Lily, Jateil and Shummi. A memorial service will be held in Terrace Wednes- day, Aug. 23. The family is expecting a large turnout of. — people who want to pay their last respects. ~Thom Barker, Smithers Interior News eaPetiandl NOW AVAILABLE Vice President & Corporate Secretary Cynthia M. Lukaitis NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETINGS | | B.C. Ferry Authority & British Columbia Ferry Services Inc. The Annual General Meeting of B.C. Ferry Authority and the . Annual Public Meeting of British Columbia Ferry Services Inc. will be held on: September 21, 2006 at the Victoria Conference Centre, 720 Douglas Street, Victoria, B.C. commencing at 4 P. m. The public i is invited to attend and an opportunity will be provided to ask questions and express views. 1 -AveCFerries “UNBC UNIVERSITY OF | NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA Register now for Fall Courses offered | In Terrace and Prince Rupert. . ANTH 101 Peoples and Cultures mS o ANTH 404 Comparative Study of Indigenetis Peoples of the World ENGL 283 Introduction to Romantic Literature 5 - ENGL 320 First Nations Literature, ENGL 331 Genres in Canadian Literature - *Course offerings subject to change and sufficient enrollment _ _ENGL 410 Contemporary Women’s Literature ENVS 203 Environmental Policy . ENVS 414 Environmental and Professional Ethics HIST 190 The West and the World to 1660 HIST 300 Historiography . , POLS 316 Community Government and Politics POLS 403 Social and Health Policy and Administration SOCW 422 Child Welfare Practice SOCW 426 Current Issues in Child Welfare Practice SOCW 457 Individual & Community Wellness Please enquire about course offerings in Kitimat, Smithers, ‘ Hazelton & other communities in northwestern BC. For more information contact: UNBC's Northwest Regional €ampus 4741 Park Ave. Terrace, BC Tel: 250-615-5578 Toll Free: 1-800-697-7388 nw-inlo@unbe.ca. | PHONE 635-9060 FOR MORE INFORMATION Me} © Race on 3/8 mile poved, banked, oval track www. TERRACESPEEDWAY. cA. SATURDAY, | SEPTEMBER 9TH ~ TIME TRIALS: 7:30 P.M. . _ RACING: 8: 30 P.M. “Night ‘Racing KIDS FREE 7 & Under - T TICKETS ADULT $7 STUDENT $4. SENIOR (60+). $4 FAMILY. $17 Cash Only — "Sponsored by FORD FASTLANE: aul 2r Thuader and Pro:Stock Racing . RACING TIMES SATURDAY NIGHT Time Trials: 5:30pm Racing at 7pm SUNPAY Time Trials: 12:30pm _Standatd : © Pro Stock & WESCAR, Thunder, Hitto-Poss and Bomber classes FACILITIES: Bleacher seating for 1,500: Washtooms Food Vendors, Wheechair Accessible Racing at 2pm “a CO i