b/He., i Bruins. Pal slill e n j o y s watching <t game on te le- vision, bul nol vvilh the same in tens i t y since I he league has become xvalerecl down wi th expansions from I he original six learns. She moved to spectator to par t ic ipant on the golf course. "I play golf," she said, then reconsiders her words. "I play at i t ." Peter plays partner. "He golfs, too" she said. "He's, a much bet ter golfer than I am." l-U.il (he love of her life is her grandchil- dren two girls, Taylor, 9, and newcomer Paige, nine months, and grandson Tristan, /. Her sunroom, rela.xingly furnished in bamboo (hairs, couch and tables, also eon- lains a bevy of games lor the kids, includ- ing a choo-choo train, castle and that favourite standby, Operation. They are Alan's children, so they are (lose by. "We spend as much time1 as we can wi th our grandchildren," Pat, (>3, said. She knits, reads a var iety of books, . including autobiographies* and unlike some in her age range, she has embraced technology. "I play on the computer," she said. I lorse racing and travel are also part ol the agenda. The couple go to Belleville and Peterborough and sometimes further afield to take in the races. As for t ravel , they are discovering Canada, having touched, both east and west coasts and they are planning to visit Newfoundland next year. "We are working our way through the provinces," Pal explained. Then then1 is Tuxedo, the black and while ca t . There's a ta too parlour in Trenton tha t keeps ca t s for adoptions and when Iuxedo entered the I,y t ies ' lives, she was about eight months old and qui te shy. "We didn't see her lor a week," the self- confessed ( a t lover said. Tuxedo is not only her name, it is an actua l breed of ca t . She put on the shy act again when a stranger asked if she could be part of a photograph. Tuxedo went into hiding when finally lo.ealed, could not be ent iced in to being part of a picture. Sil ly k i t t y . Pat Lytle i