Saanich News, March 06, 2013

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Tuning out Students quit technology cold-turkey for 24 hours. Page A3

NEWS: Church grapples with troublesome gift /A5 ARTS: The colours of Neon Steve /A16 SPORTS: Claremont are Island B-ball champs /A19

SAANICHNEWS Wednesday March 6, 2013

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Lottery ticket helps crack regional crime spree Arrest expected to cut spike in auto crimes in Saanich Edward Hill News staff

for study of biological markers for age-related diseases. Researchers also gather detailed lifestyle and socio-economic information through interviews, and will use provincial health records to track medical issues that arise. The centre can test five or six people per day, at about three hours per person. Carswell laughs as he recalls his visit in August took more than seven hours. CLSA staff had a few computer kinks to work out.

A stolen lottery ticket worth $42 has helped police unravel an region-wide theft from vehicle crime spree. Regional Crime Unit officers arrested a 46-year-old man on Feb. 21 around noon near his home in the 600-block of Grenville Ave. Police found at least 100 stolen items in his residence, mainly electronics like cellphones, iPods, cameras and GPS units. RCU investigators caught a break from a car break-in in the 1600-block of Ash Rd. near Mount Douglas Park, from Feb. 12. The thief had stolen a Lotto Max ticket that the owner had photocopied, as it was part of a group purchase. Armed with a serial number and due to the lucky fact the ticket was a $42 winner, the B.C. Lottery Corp. was able to pinpoint that it was cashed at a Chevron in Esquimalt, and from that, police started to zero in on a suspect through video footage. RCU Staff Sgt. Gary Schenk said the gas station video wasn’t good enough to identify a suspect right way. But around the same time, a fingerprint from a different theft from vehicle case in Saanich produced a hit from the national fingerprint database – a real life CSI moment. The RCU had a name.

PLEASE SEE: Study aims to probe links, Page A4

PLEASE SEE: Two month spike, Page A10

Edward Hill/News staff

Eric Carswell demonstrates the eye exam machine used at the Canadian Longitudinal Study of Aging data collection site in the Gorge Road Hospital. Carswell was the first Greater Victoria resident to donate his health and lifestyle information for a study that aims to track 50,000 Canadians over 20 years.

Unlocking the secrets to healthy aging I Edward Hill Reporting

f there are a few key secrets to aging well, a nationwide, twodecade long survey of Canadians just might reveal those truths. Two-time cancer survivor Eric Carswell, 76, has his own rules of thumb – don’t drink alcohol and don’t smoke. “I don’t smoke or drink, and I used to do both, and there are health effects from both,” he says. Carswell is Greater Victoria’s very first participant in what is called the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA), an unprecedented data gathering exercise that aims

to plumb the granular details of the health and lifestyles of 50,000 Canadians, between the ages of 45 and 85, over 20 years. The Victoria resident led the way for randomly selected Greater Victoria residents, 331 so far, who have visited the region’s CLSA data collection centre, housed within Gorge Road Hospital. The poking and prodding is comprehensive – technicians conduct bone density scans, and hearing, eye, cardiovascular, cognition, strength and balance tests. The centre takes blood and urine samples

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