Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Everyday heroes receive honorary degrees from KPU

Darpan News Desk, 03 Oct, 2016 11:59 AM
    The two Surrey residents who will be awarded honorary degrees from Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU) this week spent their entire lives either saving people, or inspiring them.
     
    Bill McNamara, a retired firefighter, and David Proznick, a retired music teacher, will receive their awards at KPU’s annual fall convocation ceremonies Oct. 6 and 7.
     
    “It is a privilege for us at KPU to recognize individuals for their outstanding service to the public,” said Dr. Alan Davis, KPU president and vice-chancellor. “I can think of no one more deserving of the honour than these two men who have made such significant contributions to our community.”
     
    Bill McNamara 
    Bill McNamara made his living as a firefighter for the Surrey Fire Service for 28 years. In the early 1970s, he moved to Surrey, built a house with his wife Carole, and joined the local fire hall. He worked his way up the ranks and eventually became one of the city’s fire chiefs. An active role model for his firefighters and the community, McNamara competed in every World Police and Fire Games well into his senior years, collecting a stunning 51 total medals and being inducted into the games’ Hall of Fame.
     
    In the 1990s he competed in the Firefighter’s Combat Challenge and organized hundreds of firefighters who also competed. Under his watch, the Surrey Fire Service had the highest team participation rate in North America.
     
    Outside of the literal lifesaving McNamara performed as a firefighter, he is also dedicated to helping as many people as he can. He sits on the board of the Friends of the Surrey Museum and Archive Society, and works with the North Surrey Lions Club and the Centre for Child Development. He co-chaired the B.C. Senior Games and was the president of the Surrey B.C. Summer Games. In 2010, he received the Good Citizen Award from the City of Surrey, and in 2012 he received the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal.
     
    KPU will award McNamara his degree on Oct. 6.
     
    David Proznick
    A music teacher by profession, David Proznick retired from Semiahmoo Secondary after nearly four decades of teaching.  Many of the Lower Mainland’s active working musicians were taught by Proznick. 
      
    Proznick began his career as an assistant music director in Saskatchewan. He went on to serve as a bandsman apprentice followed by five years as a professional musician. It was this experience on the bandstand that helped him connect with young struggling musicians. He believed in his students’ abilities and instilled in them an excitement and confidence for creating music. Proznick’s teaching style is unique and full of humour to explain sounds he didn’t want, and image-invoking analogies to bring to life sounds he did.
     
    Proznick has received multiple awards, including the Surrey Civic Treasure award for his outstanding contributions to his students and the community, BC Music Educator’s Lifetime Achievement award, South Surrey & White Rock Chamber of Commerce award for contribution to the arts in this community, and he was inducted into the Envision Jazz Festival’s Hall of Fame. On the national and international stage, Proznick was recognized by Jazz Report Magazine Toronto for jazz program of the year, Berklee College in Boston for excellence in music education, and the John Phillip Sousa Legion of Honor awarded in Chicago by Bandworld Magazine.  
     
    KPU will award Proznick his degree on Oct. 7.
     
    More information about KPU’s convocation ceremonies is available at kpu.ca/convocation.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    What Do Indian Men Expect From Their Dates?

    What Do Indian Men Expect From Their Dates?
    According to a nationwide research conducted by a dating app, 80 percent Indian men would like their dates to sport a red lipstick the first time they meet and prefer them to make the “first move”.

    What Do Indian Men Expect From Their Dates?

    NordströmMatte Public Relations announces official launch after merger

    Anya Nordström of ANPR, and Dani Matte of MOI Management & PR officially announced the m...

    NordströmMatte Public Relations announces official launch after merger

    B.C. writer's essay featured in Elizabeth Gilbert's latest book

    B.C. writer's essay featured in Elizabeth Gilbert's latest book
    An essay by Delta, BC writer Eran Sudds is one of four dozen published in best-selling author Elizabeth Gilbert’s new anthology, Eat Pray Love Made Me Do It: Life Journeys Inspired by the Bestselling Memoir,” (Riverhead Books) which hits bookstores March 29th, 2016.

    B.C. writer's essay featured in Elizabeth Gilbert's latest book

    Review: Madame Butterfly is ‘achingly beautiful’

    Review: Madame Butterfly is ‘achingly beautiful’
    Vancouver Opera did it again, stunning audiences with a gorgeous production of one of the classics: Puccini’s Madama Butterfly.

    Review: Madame Butterfly is ‘achingly beautiful’

    The Young And The Nestless: Helping Millennials With Housing

    The Young And The Nestless: Helping Millennials With Housing
    Chicago native Juan Hernandez fell in love with Hartford while attending Trinity College and decided to stay after graduation. But like many members of the millennial generation, he's learned that affording a place to live can be an expensive proposition.

    The Young And The Nestless: Helping Millennials With Housing

    American Model, TV Host Chrissy Teigen's Choice Of Female Embryo Re-Sparks Sex Selection Debate

    American Model, TV Host Chrissy Teigen's Choice Of Female Embryo Re-Sparks Sex Selection Debate
    The wife of singer-songwriter John Legend told People Magazine she was excited at the thought of seeing her husband with a little girl, adding that he "deserves that bond" and that "a boy will come along."

    American Model, TV Host Chrissy Teigen's Choice Of Female Embryo Re-Sparks Sex Selection Debate