15| W aterloo C hronicle | T hursday,S eptem ber 20,2018 w aterloochronicle.ca Waterloo votes October 22, 2018 Confirm your information today. Are you on the voters list? waterloo.ca/elections #WRVOTES Now to Dec 23 St. Jacobs schoolhouse theatre A mysterious murder. A salon full of suspects. But whodunit? Witness the fun, put your detective skills to the test, and take a stab at solving the crime! "Shear hilarity! One of the most intriguing, funniest, omedies I have ever seen." - The Record acky Whodunit! "Shear hilarity! One of the mos and best-acted comedies I have e The Hilarious & Wacky Whodunit! The Hilarious & W 519-747-7788 or buy online 24/7 at draytonentertainment.comBy Paul PörtnerDirected by Bob LohrmannPhoto:Gord Gammie, Robbie Towns andGregory Pember in ShearMadness. Director: Bob Lohrmann,Set Designer:David Antscherl, Costume DesignerNicole Del Cul, Lighting Designer Jeff JohnstonCollins. VAC, WCB, WSIB, WorkSafeBC, ADP & ODSP accepted. Registered under the College of Speech and Hearing Health Professionals of BC. *Free hearing tests are only applicable for customers over 50 years of age. No purchase required. Some conditions may apply. †Based on national physician referrals over the tenure of the corporation's Canadian business operations compared to the disclosed referral count of leading competitors. ®CAA, CAA logo and CAA Rewards trademarks owned by, and use is authorized by, the Canadian Automobile Association. **Price reflective of one hearing aid at current entry level retail price at 0% financing for 24 months before discounts. Finding a hearing solution to fit your lifestyle is important. We hear you. • Connect Hearing has the latest, most discreet hearing aids on the market. • We're Canada's #1 physician referred† hearing healthcare provider. • We have affordable monthly payment plans starting at $56**/month. • With over 130 locations across Canada, there's always a Connect Hearing clinic nearby. Book a FREE* hearing test today. 888.408.7377 connecthearing.ca After Scott Fraser suf- fered a stroke in 2010, his wife, Anne Marie barred him from entering the pool. Fraser, 59 at the time, had just returned from his second senior Canada Games, where he collected five medals, when he suffered the stroke. He spent a week in hospital as a result. After five-plus years, de- spite being "terrified," Anne Marie reluctantly let her hus- band resume swimming, this time only in 50-metre races. Fraser returned to the Canada Games, which runs every two years in different corners of Canada, in 2016 in Brampton. The event is for athletes ages 55 and up. And in his second games back on August 21-24, despite still suffering "lingering ef- fects" from the stroke, the Wa- terloo resident added four more medals to his collection. He now has 16 medals in se- nior games play representing Ontario. Despite her concerns, Anne Marie is still Fraser's biggest fan. "She says she's my cheer- leader," Fraser said. "She al- ways threatens to come out on the deck with pom poms, she's been very supportive in all I've done." Scott and Anne Marie's combined families consist of nine children and 14 grand- kids. The 67-year-old earned a gold medal in breaststroke while winning silver in the re- lay, freestyle, and butterfly at the games, which were held in Saint John, N.B. "It's a national stage, it's kind of the payoff for early mornings, and you develop a camaraderie with the people not only from Ontario, but you get reacquainted with people from previous years from the Yukon and North- west Territories, they even come from there," said Fra- ser, who attended Grand Riv- er and Waterloo Collegiate before graduating from East- wood during his high school days. The Canada Games, which also include sports and activities such as track and field, board games, walking, and cribbage, are about spirit and representing your com- munity, Fraser said. "You go out there, and the do the best you can, and enjoy the results. "The person that comes last gets the biggest cheer, just for completing it." Fraser, a competitive swimmer in secondary school, returned to the pool in 2001. "When I turned 50, my wife said you've got to get out and get some exercise," he said. He did just that, taking to the pool every morning be- fore 6 a.m. and competing in his first senior games in 2008. WATERLOO SWIMMER CAPTURES FOUR MEDALS AT CANADA SENIOR GAMES YEARS AFTER STROKE SCOTT FRASER HAS 16 MEDALS IN NATIONAL SENIOR COMPETITION NAMISH MODI nmodi@waterloo chronicle.ca Fraser (on the left) captured four medals at the Canada Senior Games in August in New Brunswick. Anne Marie Fraser/photo COMMUNITY