2023 AHP General Fund and Nevada Targeted Fund Grants Awarded to 38 Vital Projects in Partnership with Member Financial Institutions in Arizona, California, and Nevada FHLBank San Francisco is Largest Privately-Owned
Article content
I read with interest your article on the history and loss of the building which housed The Only and the Loggers Club.
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser, or Letters to The Sun, July 3, 2021: The Only Seafood Café was a precious part of Vancouver Back to video
The Only Seafood Cafe was a precious part of the Vancouver that I came to know when I first moved west in the early 1970s. Much of the city that existed in the first half of the 20th Century was still alive at that time. I probably ate at The Only once a month until I moved north in 1980 chowder, halibut cheeks and chips was my regular order, but if they had no cheeks, I favoured the fried skate. Even after I moved to Fort St. John (where pioneering history was only one generation ago), every time I came back to Vancouver, a visit to The Only was essential. When I moved back in 1997, I worked downtown and, once a week walked down for lunch, as well as introducin
Article content
My brother died on Monday, May 31. Luc was 50 years old. He had many health issues and the official finding by the coroner was that he died of natural causes. His body was overwhelmed, fighting on so many fronts, and his organs slowly failed.
But he was an Indigenous man. And he died just days after the revelation that 215 childrenâs bodies were found buried on the grounds of what had been a residential school in Kamloops. One of his health issues was that he suffered from acute anxiety. When he heard the news, our mother had to go to him and calm him. He had misunderstood: Luc thought a mass grave had been found. He thought that 215 children had all died at the same time and were thrown into a huge grave.