Cape Breton Post

People person

Dave Muise remembered for humour and lifelong dedication to his community

- BY DAVID JALA

Dave Muise once wrote that he was born in Sydney so that he could be close to his parents.

It was that kind of wit, along with his lifelong dedication to serving his community, that the former lawyer, politician and author is being remembered.

Muise passed away early Thursday morning after a long battle with cancer. He was 68.

Ray Paruch, a longtime Cape Breton Regional Municipali­ty councillor, grew up with Muise in Sydney’s Ashby area and the two went to school together at Constantin­e Elementary, Park Junior High and Sydney Academy before eventually ending up on municipal council at the same time.

Fruity beer drinks are great Halloween treats for Homer Simpson but not so much for kids.

But that’s what 12-year-old Morgan MacMullin from Florence, found in her bag the day after trick-or-treating. It wasn’t the full alcohol kind but a deal coholized lager beer with lemonade known as Radler, which contains .5 per cent alcohol.

“I looked at it the night before and asked, who gave you beer? And she was like, ‘Mom. It’s lemonade,’” said Marlyce MacMullin, who was out trick-ortreating with her daughter.

“I didn’t think anything of it. Then she came down the next day and said, ‘Oh my God, Mom. Olivia got the same one and it’s non-alcoholic beer.”

The girls were trick-or-treating in the Meadowbroo­k subdivisio­n in Sydney Mines, a place they go every year.

“I wasn’t overly concerned … it’s mostly people we know from growing up and the kids would know their kids … and it’s safe,” MacMullin said.

“I just laughed it off. I said, well you’re not drinking that. She was like, ‘Well, can I smell it’… She smelt it and said ‘That’s gross.’”

Morgan wasn’t the only child to get a can of de-alcoholize­d Radler, which can be bought at grocery stores.

Tanya Gracie’s 12-year-old daughter Olivia was trick-ortreating with Morgan and got one too.

“Liv comes upstairs yesterday and she’s like, ‘Mom, I think you need to smell this ... I think it’s one of those beers (her dad drinks),” Gracie

said.

“It was funny. Just her face when she came upstairs, she was just, like, in disbelief.”

Gracie also thinks it wasn’t intentiona­l.

“I really honestly think it was a mistake. Somebody obviously thought it was lemonade,” she said.

It seems this is a mistake a few people have made. One comment on the Facebook post Gracie made about the beer in the treat bag said his mother-inlaw had sent his kids to school with cans of this lemon Radler a couple of weeks ago.

“I wonder how many other people got them,” MacMullin said.

Another theory Gracie has is

that someone ran out of treats and “just said screw it.”

“Maybe there’s a bottle of wine in there. I better check.”

 ?? CAPE BRETON POST PHOTO ?? Cape Breton Regional Municipali­ty Mayor David Muise poses for a photo in his office on the fourth floor of the Civic Centre on Sydney’s waterfront back in September 2000. The photo was taken shortly after Muise had announced his intention to seek...
CAPE BRETON POST PHOTO Cape Breton Regional Municipali­ty Mayor David Muise poses for a photo in his office on the fourth floor of the Civic Centre on Sydney’s waterfront back in September 2000. The photo was taken shortly after Muise had announced his intention to seek...
 ??  ?? Paruch
Paruch
 ??  ?? MacDonald
MacDonald
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO/TANYA GRACIE ?? From left, Olivia Gracie and Morgan MacMullin, both 12, were surprised to find cans of de-alcoholize­d beer with lemonade in their Halloween treat bags. The girls turned the cans over to their moms, who believe the treats were an innocent mistake.
SUBMITTED PHOTO/TANYA GRACIE From left, Olivia Gracie and Morgan MacMullin, both 12, were surprised to find cans of de-alcoholize­d beer with lemonade in their Halloween treat bags. The girls turned the cans over to their moms, who believe the treats were an innocent mistake.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO/FACEBOOK ?? This may look like an innocent can of lemonade but it is really dealcoholi­zed beer with .5 per cent alcohol content.
SUBMITTED PHOTO/FACEBOOK This may look like an innocent can of lemonade but it is really dealcoholi­zed beer with .5 per cent alcohol content.

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