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<small>McColl Magazine is operating under the maxim Indigenous Canadian economic development is the pathway to progress for all Canadians</small> | <small>McColl Magazine is operating under the maxim Indigenous Canadian economic development is the pathway to progress for all Canadians</small> | ||
The parents of Lisa Marie Young last saw their daughter at 11 p.m. on the night of June 30, 2002, when she was preparing to leave the house. Her father asked, "Isn't it a little late?" He wondered because he was planning to help his daughter move to a new apartment the next day. Lisa Marie was going to start a new job the following week. She was a person who always found herself gainfully employed and was contemplating a return to school. | The parents of Lisa Marie Young last saw their daughter at 11 p.m. on the night of June 30, 2002, when she was preparing to leave the house. Her father asked, "Isn't it a little late?" He wondered because he was planning to help his daughter move to a new apartment the next day. Lisa Marie was going to start a [[RMH|new job]] the following week. She was a person who always found herself gainfully employed and was contemplating a return to school. | ||
The case of the Lisa Marie Young is as baffling as cases come, and nor will it stop haunting the city of Nanaimo, B.C., a city of 85,000 at the centre of Vancouver Island. A few years had gone by when (former) Nanaimo Mayor Gary Korpan was heard to say, "They still talk about it. A lot assume they know who did it." | The case of the Lisa Marie Young is as baffling as cases come, and nor will it stop haunting the city of Nanaimo, B.C., a city of 85,000 at the centre of Vancouver Island. A few years had gone by when (former) Nanaimo Mayor Gary Korpan was heard to say, "They still talk about it. A lot assume they know who did it." |