Month: September 2013
Replacement nose grows on man’s forehead
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Memories of Dave Nichol, food retailing genius
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Hunt for elusive “buried Spitfires” goes on
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Wildcats earn 2-2 tie to open PWHL season
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| Click picture to see Fickr gallery and slide show |
The Leaside Wildcats fought to a come-from-behind 2-2 overtime tie against the hometown Rivulettes in Cambridge Friday, September 20, 2013. It was the Wildcats Provincial Womens Hockey League season opener. They will be looking to take it all in their home opener this Friday, September 27, at the Mattamy Athletic Centre. It sounds funny but that’s upstairs over the Loblaws at Carlton and Church. (You know how to get there). Our Wildcats will test the Southwest Wildcats. The next home game for Leaside will be at Angela James Arena, 165 Grenoble Dr. in Flemingdon Park on Saturday, Oct. 5, 5:30 p.m. against Whitby. On Sunday, Oct. 6 there will no doubt be a huge turnout to watch the Wildcats crack a bottle of champagne (we’re hoping) on the net to christen the second ice pad at Leaside Arena. It is known officially as the Bert F. Grant rink after the late local builder and businessman. Check standings at the PWHL site
Louise Penny, Peter Robinson novels at Sleuth
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Sleuth of Baker Street, 907 Millwood Rd. at Sutherland Ave., has news of two prominent Canadian authors. Montrealer Louise Penny has provided Sleuth with signed copies of her latest Chief Inspector Gamache novel, suitable for gift-giving. The novel is titled How the Light Gets In (Minotaur, $29.99). We’re told the signed stock is limited, so you should order soon. Peter Robinson will visit the shop on Thursday, October 3 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. He will report on the latest Inspector Banks novel, Children of the Revolution (McClelland and Stewart, $29.95). Everyone is of course invited to come meet the congenial Dr. Robinson. He has been the subject of a previous post here. If you can’t make it, Sleuth suggests you can still get a signed copy by calling in an order soonest at (416) 483-3111“Toronto 18” member dead in Syria, CBC says
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Forum Research poll shows Rob Ford “on a roll”
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Bayview-Millwood back to normal after closure
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The intersection of Bayview Ave and Millwood Rd is back to normal after being closed all day on Wednesday September 25th. There was no access to westbound Millwood from Bayview or the other way during the reconstruction of road at that location.
Poll on jets at Toronto Island: 47% yes, 45% no
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Streaming service Netflix taking Canada by storm
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The Internet streaming service Netflix Inc. is said to be experiencing explosive growth in Canada. Information released by the federal regulator estimates that the online service is now activated in about 17 per cent of Canadian homes. The regulator’s annual report says Netflix grew by 70 per cent in 2012 in Canada. That would be an expansion of about 2.5 million homes. Some have noted this was before the current interest being shown in programs such as House of Cards, the political thriller series set in post Thatcher Britain. The Globe and Mail has quoted a presumably informed source in this field, Kaan Yigit, as saying that Netflix “has to be the simplest value proposition anywhere. One price, no commitment, cancel any time and it works on practically any device.” The vice chair of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) said in a speech yesterday “We’re looking at a communications environment that is radically different from what it was only 10 years ago.”


