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Five Canadians, with more than 500 years of stories

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The Canadian Press has spent the past month interviewing some of Canada’s more than 11,000 centenarians and their families. These are some of their stories.

‘THEY HAD TO FLY IN DOCTORS TO NAIROBI’

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Bill Hamill, 100, wears the air crew helmet he was issued while he was an air gunner with the Royal Air Force No. 115 Squadron in the Second World War, as he poses for a photograph at his home in Gibsons, B.C., on Wednesday, June 19, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

 



 

Bill Hamill has worn many hats in almost 101 years, including air gunner with the Royal Air Force in the Second World War, world traveller and dad.

The D-Day veteran said his last great adventure happened when he turned 100 last August. Having worked at CN Rail for “40 years and three months,” the company gifted him a trip across Canada.

“To go to Toronto from Vancouver was really exciting,” said the father of three.

Though wildfires in B.C.’s interior caused some hiccups, he said the adventure would be hard to top — he’s not as excited for his upcoming birthday as he was for his last.

It was his CN job that took him to Africa in the 1980s to work on a rail project in Tanzania. He said he went back a second time even though he caught malaria on his first visit.

“They had to fly in doctors to Nairobi,” he said. “I (was) kind of embarrassed … because by the time I got through to (Kenya), I was pretty well clear.”

Hamill was born into a large family in Long Branch, a neighbourhood in Toronto, in 1923. He was the seventh of 10 children, and is the last one living. “Most of them reached 90 and two were close to (that),” he said.

He moved to Gibsons, B.C., to live with his daughter after the deaths of his longtime partner, Thelma Weeks, and Larry, one of his sons, in Ontario.

Hamill said he lives a solitary life, but enjoys the small town where he lives. He tells stories of his life in his apartment, on the bottom floor of a duplex he shares with his daughter.

He said the biggest change in his lifetime is technology. He gestured to his smartphone, sitting on a table among books he said he could no longer read due to his deteriorating eyesight.

But he said his best friend FaceTime calls him every weekend from Toronto to catch up. He said his youngest brother, who died last year, used to do the same.

“There’s so many things in technology now,” he said. “Most things have changed.”


‘IF YOU SEE AN INJUSTICE, DON’T JUST TALK ABOUT IT’

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Vi Roden, who turned 101 on June 16, poses for a photograph at her home in West Vancouver, on Friday, June 14, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

 



 

Vi Roden, 101, is getting ready for the next phase of a long, full life.

She’s leaving her oceanview condo in West Vancouver, B.C., at the end of the month to move into a retirement home a few blocks away. She’s happy to be staying in the neighbourhood.

“Here in West Vancouver you can keep busy all day, every day, if you want,” she said.

She is a firm believer in keeping busy. That includes yoga, a book club and keeping up to date on current affairs. She’s also involved in the charitable group 100 Women Who Care.

“I just like to keep active and alert and know what’s going on in the world,” said Roden.

Roden, who was born in Vancouver, was the founder of the Act 2 Child and Family Service non-profit that has been helping victims of violence, sexual abuse and trauma since 1980. She has also helped incarcerated women through the Elizabeth Fry Society.

“I have always believed, if you see an injustice, don’t just talk about it, act on it, because that’s the only way change ever happens,” she said.

The most rewarding moment of her life, she said, was in the 1970s when B.C.’s then-attorney general Garde Gardom launched an investigation into a prison attack on a woman who was held down in a bath of boiling water; Roden said she personally called Gardom to alert him about the case.

Roden, whose husband of 62 years Maurice died in 2015, said it bothered her that she had lost some independence as she aged — “I don’t like to be a burden on my friends” — and she worried about falls. But she was constantly finding joy and beauty, whether it came from the smile of a stranger or a flower.

“I just think you have to enjoy each and every day, because you don’t know if you’re going to have another one.”


‘WE WISH THAT MOM WAS UP AND ABOUT’

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Margaret Friend celebrated her 101st birthday on April 27th, 2024 and continues to thrive at home at Macassa Lodge in Hamilton, Ont. on Thursday, June 20, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Peter Power

 



 

Margaret Friend has dementia but muscle memory took over as she effortlessly applied her lipstick for a photograph.

Her son, Jim Friend, said the moment was surreal, almost nostalgic.

“I haven’t seen lipstick on my mother in a long time,” he said. “At 101 years of age — I stood there and watched her apply lipstick to her own lips.”

His wife, Sue Friend, chimed in to add that Margaret Friend didn’t even need a mirror. “She always took great pride in making sure that her hair was done and she always dressed beautifully when she was going out,” she said, adding that her mother-in-law’s favourite colour was red.

Margaret Friend now lives in a long-term care home in Hamilton, Ont. Family members visit about twice a week, and she is close to her five grandchildren, said Sue Friend.

Margaret Friend had 13 siblings but has outlived them all. She has also been a widow for more than 40 years. Her husband, Ted, was 68 when he died in 1981. They had three children.

Jim and Sue Friend said Margaret Friend had a Grade 6 education and held several cooking and cleaning jobs. They said she loved to garden and enjoyed hosting and entertaining guests, travelling and singing in the church choir.

She also loved to dance, said Jim Friend. But in April 2022 — the night before her 99th birthday — she fell and broke her hip and now uses a wheelchair.

“We wish that mom was up and about, and dancing the way she loved to,” Jim Friend said. She still tries sometimes to dance despite her wheelchair, he said.

Jim Friend credits his mother’s long life to “good genes.”

“She’s still with us and we’re very thankful for that,” he said.


‘WE NEVER HAVE OUR MOMS LONG ENOUGH’

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Ellen Nielsen, 104, is seen with her daughter Anne Scott at the Dania Home residential care facility in Burnaby, B.C., May 20, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nono Shen

 



 

Ellen Nielsen sits up in her bed singing in the Dania Home, a residential care facility in Burnaby, B.C.

“Qué será, será, whatever will be, will be. The future’s not ours to see,” the 104-year-old sings with daughter Anne Scott.

The Doris Day classic is Nielsen’s favourite song.

Nielsen was diagnosed with dementia at 98, requiring her to move to the care home from her apartment.

Scott said her mother now sometimes has moments of not being able to understand why she is in the facility.

“She thinks she can just get up and go for a walk and then when she realizes that she can’t, it’s very sad,” said Scott, describing her mother as mostly bedridden.

As a child in Denmark, Nielsen used to put on gymnastics shows with her sister, charging spectators, and Scott attributes her mother’s long life to her childhood exercises.

In 1951, Nielsen, husband Erik and their young family moved to Canada. Scott was two at the time.

Scott’s fondest childhood memory is coming home from school in Vancouver to a kitchen filled with the smell of her mother’s baking.

“Mom was always in the kitchen making something, either bread or cakes or cookies, you know there was always something,” said Scott.

She said her mother, who has been widowed for about 45 years, always attributed her longevity to her stubbornness. To have had so much time with Nielsen was “a reward” said Scott.

“We never have our moms long enough. It doesn’t matter how long we have them. It’s never long enough,” said Scott.


‘I LIVE WITH HER IN MY HEART EVERY SINGLE DAY’

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Centenarian Joseph Novac in his room at the Whistle Bend Place Care Facility in Whitehorse, Yukon, on Monday June 24, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Mike Thomas

 



 

Joseph Novak grew up in Montreal and enlisted in the military when he was just 20 years old.

He said that this month had brought back “sad memories” — the 80th anniversary of D-Day and the first anniversary of the death of his wife, Mary. “But life must go on,” he said.

Novak, who turns 101 in September, was a lance corporal in the Canadian Army Service Corps and was made a knight of the French Legion of Honour in 2021 — that nation’s highest decoration.

For his 100th birthday last year, family, friends and Armed Forces members joined Novak at his care home in Whitehorse for a flag-raising ceremony.

Novak has given back to the Yukon, which he calls “Canada’s paradise.”

He donated a million dollars to the Yukon Hospital Foundation in 2021 to help purchase a new mammography unit and support mental health.

As the father of two journalists, he also gifted $150,000 to Yukon University to create a bursary for Indigenous students studying communications.

His son, who is also named Joe Novak, lives in Calgary. He said that while his father is best known publicly for his military work, he was also a skilled mason. He said his father worked in construction when he returned from the war but also built a home in Montreal and a cottage in Vermont.

He said his father also worked as a cleaner, bridging into consulting and managing work for cleaning companies. “He and my mom invested very wisely in the stock market,” he added.

He said his father always embraced the philosophy that “you treat people the same way you want to be treated.”

“My dad decided that they thought this money should go to the hospital (and) back to the community that had been really good to them,” he said.

Joseph Novak credits his long and happy life to his wife, who died of cancer in 2019 within three months of their eldest son, Peter, who also lived in Whitehorse.

“She was an exceptional lady,” Novak said of his wife. “I live with her in my heart every single day that goes by.”

— By Brieanna Charlebois and Nono Shen

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 25, 2024.

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Tampa Bay Lightning select Victor Hedman as captain, succeeding Steven Stamkos

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TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — The Tampa Bay Lightning selected Victor Hedman as the team captain on Wednesday as training camp opened, making the big defenseman the successor to Steven Stamkos.

Hedman, who is going into his 16th season with Tampa Bay, was considered the obvious choice to get the “C” after the Lightning did not re-sign Stamkos and their longtime captain left to join Nashville.

“Victor is a cornerstone player that is extremely well respected by his teammates, coaches and peers across the NHL,” general manager Julien BriseBois said. “Over the past 15 seasons, he has been a world-class representative for our organization both on and off the ice. Victor embodies what it means to be a member of the Tampa Bay Lightning and is more than ready for this exciting opportunity. We are looking forward to watching him flourish in his new role as we continue to work towards our goal of winning the Stanley Cup.”

The 33-year-old from Sweden was a key contributor in the Lightning hoisting the Cup back to back in 2020 and ’21, including playoff MVP honors on the first of those championship runs. Hedman also took home the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s top defenseman in 2018 and finished in the top three in voting five other seasons.

Ryan McDonagh, who was reacquired early in the offseason in a trade with the Predators, and MVP finalist Nikita Kucherov will serve as alternate captains with the Lightning moving on to the post-Stamkos era.

___

AP NHL:

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Toronto FC Jason Hernandez looks to clean up salary cap and open up the future

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TORONTO – While Toronto FC is looking to improve its position on the pitch, general manager Jason Hernandez is trying to do the same off it.

That has been easier said than done this season.

Sending winger Jahkeele Marshall-Rutty to CF Montreal for up to $1.3 million (all dollar figures in U.S. funds) in general allocation money before the secondary transfer window closed in early August helped set the stage for future moves.

But there have been plenty of obstacles, which Hernandez has been working to clear.

“We feel a lot more confident going into this upcoming off-season that we did the one prior,” said Hernandez. “There’s a level of what I would say booby-traps that were uncovered when I first got the (GM) role at the end of last summer.”

The club is paying off departed forwards Adam Diomande and Ayo Akinola as well as a $500,000 payment due in 2024 to Belgium’s Anderlecht for Jamaican international defender Kemar Lawrence. That payment was part of the transfer fee for Lawrence, who joined TFC from Anderlecht in May 2021 and was traded to Minnesota United in March 2022.

Diomande was waived while Akinola’s contract was terminated by mutual agreement.

“That comes to an end in ’25, which is nice,” said Hernandez. “We had to suffer from a salary cap perspective this season. But those things coming off, the Jahkeele Marshall-Rutty money coming in, we’re going to be in a position to make some good additions, which is positive.”

While MLS clubs are allowed one contract buyout per year, Toronto had already used its on former captain Michel Bradley, who retired after last season. Bradley had previously restructured his contract, deferring money.

TFC’s only other move during the summer transfer window was the signing of free-agent defender Henry Wingo. Hernandez said the club knew going into the window that it was likely limited to the one acquisition “unless other business happened”

“We knew we had this bucket of money and we knew we were going to go get Henry,” said Hernandez.

While the sale of the highly touted Marshall-Rutty opened up other possibilities, it came on the eve of the transfer window closing. And the team did not like what it saw in the free-agent market.

“A lot of the opportunities we were presented in the free agency space felt more like a short-term, Band-Aid decision versus what actually the club probably needs.”

Hernandez was not willing to take in players who came with a “club-friendly” salary cap charge in 2024 and a much bigger number in 2025.

Instead, Toronto promoted forward Charlie Sharp and wingback Nate Edwards to the first team from TFC 2 ahead of last Friday’s roster freeze.

MLS teams are operating on a salary budget of $5.47 million this season, which covers up to 20 players on the senior roster (clubs can elect to spread that number across 18 players). But the league has several mechanisms that allow those funds to go further, including using allocation money (both general and targeted) to buy down salaries.

Designated players only count $683,750 — the maximum salary charge — against the cap no matter their actual pay. Toronto’s Lorenzo Insigne is actually earning $15.4 million with fellow Italian Federico Bernardeschi collecting $6.295 million and Canadian Richie Laryea $1.208 million.

Hernandez says Laryea’s contract can — and “very likely” will — be restructured so as to remove the designated player status.

There are benefits in going with just two designated players rather than three.

Teams that elect to go with two DPs can sign up to four players as part of the league’s “U22 Initiative.” The pluses of that structure include a reduced salary cap charge for the young players and up to an extra $2 million in general allocation money.

Hernandez says the club is currently pondering whether that is the way to go.

Captain Jonathan Osorio who is earning $836,370 this season, restructured his deal to allow the team to sign Laryea as a DP. In doing so, Osorio had his option year guaranteed so his contact runs through 2026.

Hernandez and coach John Herdman will have decisions to make come the end of the year.

The contracts of goalkeeper Greg Ranjitsingh ($94,200), defenders Kevin Long ($277,500), Shane O’Neill ($413,000) and Kobe Franklin ($100,520), midfielder Alonso Coello ($94,050) and Brandon Servania ($602,710), and forward Prince Owusu ($807,500) — all on the club’s senior roster — expire at the end of 2024 with club options to follow.

While there is more work to do, Hernandez believes TFC is on the right road.

Toronto, which finished last in the league at 4-20-10 in 2023, went into Wednesday’s game against visiting Columbus in a playoff position at eighth in the East at 11-15-3.

“By every metric, we are miles ahead of where we were at this point last year,” said Hernandez.

“That’s a low bar, so that’s not saying much,” he added.

But he believes TFC is “quite competitive” when it has all its players at its disposal.

“To get results in this final stretch, we’re going to need our prominent players to really show up and have big performances, and be supported by the rest of the cast.”

After Columbus, TFC plays at Colorado and Chicago and hosts the New York Red Bulls and Inter Miami. The club also travels to Vancouver for the Canadian Championship final.

Follow @NeilMDavidson on X platform, formerly known as Twitter

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 18, 2024



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Canada’s Hughes may be what International team has been missing at Presidents Cup

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Mackenzie Hughes might just be what the International team needs as this year’s Presidents Cup.

Hughes, from Dundas, Ont., is one of three Canadians on the squad competing in the match-play event at Royal Montreal Golf Club next week.

His putting skills, cool demeanour under pressure, pre-existing connections with teammates and clubhouse leadership could help the team — made up of non-American players outside Europe — end a nine-tournament losing skid to the United States at the biennial event.

“I’ve had this one circled on the calendar for a few years now,” said Hughes on joining fellow Canadians Taylor Pendrith and Corey Conners as captain’s picks on the 12-player International team. “I pretty much knew that when it was announced the tournament would be in Canada and that Mike Weir was going to be the captain, you pretty much knew where that was going to go.

“To get that call from (Weir) is really special because he’s the guy that I looked up to, we all looked up to, as Canadian golfers.”

Pendrith and Conners are returning to the team after a disappointing 17 1/2 to 12 1/2 loss to the United States at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, N.C. in 2022.

Hughes was ranked 14th on the International team standings in 2022 and could have easily been included on that squad after Australia’s Cameron Smith and Chile’s Joaquin Niemann were ruled ineligible after jumping ship to the rival LIV Golf circuit.

However, captain Trevor Immelman of South Africa instead chose the lower ranked Christiaan Bezuidenhout (16th) of South Africa, Pendrith (18th), South Korea’s Kim Si-woo (20th) and Australia’s Cameron Davis (25th).

“I certainly wanted to be on that team but also I understood the picks,” said Hughes, who lives in Charlotte and plays at Quail Hollow regularly. “I think that like a lot of guys that don’t get picked you more so look back on your own play and I wish I had made that selection easier for them.

“I didn’t do myself any favours in the six weeks leading up to it and that’s a hard pill to swallow.”

It may have been a costly oversight on Immelman’s part, as finishing holes was an issue for the International team in 2022 and Hughes is one of the best putters on the PGA Tour. This season he’s third in shots gained around the green and fifth in shots gained from putting.

“It doesn’t mean that just because I was there it would have turned the tide, but I’d like to think maybe I could have helped,” said Hughes. “That’s why you play the matches. You have to get out there and do it.”

This year Hughes made it easier for Weir, the Canadian golf legend from Brights Grove, Ont., to choose him. Hughes is 51st in the FedEx Cup Fall standings and has made the cut seven tournaments in a row, including a tie for fourth at last week’s Procore Championship.

“Mac played very solidly all year. Really like his short game, an all-around short game,” said Weir on Sept. 3 after announcing his captain’s picks. “He’s one of the elite and best short game guys on the PGA Tour

“I also love Mac’s grit. So that was the reason I picked him.”

Hughes’s intangible qualities go beyond grit.

He, Pendrith and Conners will arrive at Royal Montreal as a unit within the International squad, having become close friends while playing on Kent State University’s men’s golf team before turning pro. They’re also part of a group of Canadians, including Nick Taylor and Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford, B.C., that regularly practice together before PGA Tour events.

“To have those guys with me is really icing on the cake, it’s very special,” said Hughes. “Opportunities like this don’t come around very often: to play this kind of team competition, which is already hard to do, but to play with some of your best friends, it almost seems scripted.”

An 11-year professional, Hughes has also been a member of the PGA Tour’s player advisory council the past two years and has been an outspoken advocate for making professional golf more accessible to fans.

Although Weir relied heavily on analytics to make his captain’s selections, Hughes’s character came up again and again when asked why he was named to the team.

“I just have a gut feeling with Mac that he has what it takes in these big moments,” said Weir. “They’re big pressure moments, and I have a feeling he’s going to do great in those moments.”

DP WORLD TOUR — Aaron Cockerill of Stony Mountain, Man., continues his chase for a spot in the Europe-based DP World Tour’s playoffs. The top 50 players on the Race to Dubai standings make the DP World Tour Championship and Cockerill moved eight spots up to 39th in the rankings after tying for ninth at last week’s Irish Open. He’ll be back at it on Thursday at the BMW PGA Championship at the Wentworth Club in Surrey, England.

KORN FERRY TOUR — Myles Creighton of Digby, N.S., is ranked 38th on the second-tier Korn Ferry Tour’s points list. He leads the Canadian contingent into this week’s Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship. He’ll be joined at Ohio State University Golf Club — Scarlet Course in Columbus, Ohio by Edmonton’s Wil Bateman (53rd), Etienne Papineau (65th) of St-Jean-Sur-Richelieu, Que., and Sudarshan Yellamaraju (99th) of Mississauga, Ont.

CHAMPIONS TOUR — Calgary’s Stephen Ames is the lone Canadian at this week’s Pure Insurance Championship. He’s No. 2 on the senior circuit’s points list. The event will start Friday and be played at Pebble Beach Golf Links and Spyglass Hill Golf Course in Monterey, Calif.

LPGA TOUR — There are four Canadians in this week’s Kroger City Championship. Savannah Grewal (97th in the Race to CME Globe Rankings) of Mississauga, Ont., Hamilton’s Alena Sharp (115th), and Maude-Aimee Leblanc (142nd) of Sherbrooke, Que., will all tee it up at TPC River’s Bend in Maineville, Ohio.

EPSON TOUR — Vancouver’s Leah John is the low Canadian heading into the Murphy USA El Dorado Shootout. She’s 54th in the second-tier tour’s points list. She’ll be joined by Maddie Szeryk (118th) of London, Ont., and Brigitte Thibault (119th) of Rosemere, Que., at Mystic Creek Golf Club in El Dorado, Ark.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 18, 2024.



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