Month: September 2014

Rolph alumnae can buy crested shirts, hoodies

Petra  Grantham, organizer of the Rolph Road Public School 75th Anniversary next month, is alerting all alumnae to a great nostalgic chance to buy Rolph Road School stuff. The order form for T-shirts, golf-type shirts, hoodies and women’s shirts is found on the Bulldog’s Twitter account here. Here’s the thing — you’ve got to hurry. The orders must be received by 3.30 p.m. Friday October 3, 2014 at the school office on Rolph Road.  And Petra advises you to hand deliver them to make sure there’s no mistake.

Will Tory call out Ford on his campaign of envy?

With a month to go, a poll on the popular support for the three main candidates for mayor is out today (Monday, September 29, 2014). It shows that John Tory has 37%, Doug Ford 30% and Olivia Chow 21%. It is a robo-call poll done by Mainstreet Technologies and some may find the technology doubtful. But there it is. Most critically, is it the kind of information John Tory might act on to call out Rob Ford on his class warfare election campaign? Tory is down somewhat in this poll, Ford up. Tory has been playing it cool in the face of Ford’s naked appeal to envy and resentment at a mythical class of people which is out to oppress the  little man. Mainstreet Technologies

Death by debate? Here comes ArtVote Talk-fest

A glossy affair this Monday, September 29, 2014, at the TIFF Light Box is called ArtVote Toronto. It goes at the noon hour. But keep in mind, it’s a mayoral debate. We believe that John Tory and Olivia Chow will be there. Doug Ford? Not sure really. It seems like such a juicy target for another his attacks on the imaginary civic elite, those who oppress the real people of Toronto. ArtVote 

Brooklyn Honderich found safe near her home

Police say Brooklyn Honderich, 2, has been found safe and apparently in fairly good condition after her overnight disappearance. She was found by a volunteer searcher beside a corn field some distance from where she disappeared. Brooklyn wandered off from her parents farm about seven kilometres east of the village of Norwich, which is just south of Woodstock.. Hamilton Spectator  CBC

Democracy protest still rages in Hong Kong

The Chinese bosses in Beijing have a lousy hand to play as troops fire rubber bullets and tear gas at democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong. The demonstration has been going on all day and although diminished, the demonstrators have not gone home as requested. Many of them are students. And while support for democracy is high in Hong Kong, most established people do not want the stigma of violent protests damaging the business atmosphere or stable lifestyle. For Beijing, the challenge continues to be making sure China does into fly into pieces. It is easy to imagine a genuinely free Hong Kong deciding that it wants to separate and live like the Taiwanese. This weekend the president of Taiwan, Ma Ying-jeou told Chinese president Xi Jinping to forget about re-unification with the little island democracy. The Taiwanese have what they want already — freedom, prosperity and elections every couple of years. It must sting Xi Jinping to suffer the Taiwan president’s moral superiority. He after all, unlike Xi, is elected by the people.

Presidents of Taiwan and China (left and right) shake hands but the Taiwanese are having nothing to do with China’s one-country, two-political systems scheme to re-unite.   

FLASHBACK: Dare we venture down Canvarco Road?

It is an especially curious feeling when you get just a few feet into Carnvarco Road off of busy Laird Drive. You know it’s Leaside and perfectly safe, but the surroundings seem somehow creepy. There can be no doubt that this forlorn corner of the Leaside Business Park is merely marking time until it is redeveloped like so much of the property east of Laird. Because its a dead end, there is no through traffic. It is a laneway-like street that time seems to have forgotten. The 1940s Quonset hut and similar wartime remnants are scattered around. Large sinister courtyards extend to the north. One can only imagine the activities beyond those ancient doors. But, starting at the far end with Rosedale Landscaping Company and counting off Otto’s Masonry, Wilkin’s Chimney Repair (since 1977) Good Bones Antiques and Kayak Sport Canada, they are all worthy businesses. It is a revelation to peek through the thickly grown-over metal fencing to see huge stacks of firewood and 1950s wrecker cars. Some just sit out on the street. There’s no traffic. All of this was the preserve of the once mighty Canada Varnish Company (Canvarco) now long gone. It is said that the land on the east side has recently been sold and may yet emerge as more retail development. Some say a grocery store is the works. Hard to imagine considering the overflowing bounty of food stores in South Bayview. Still, if you hold to the view that Loblaws on Redway Road was one of the more serious business mistakes made in Leaside, you can begin to see how that firm might want to be back on the street, so to speak. The property on Redway is well suited in the short term to parking TTC buses. All of this speculation out of the way, one thing is certain. It’s an education to venture down Canvarco Road. Try it.

Butter Studio opens south of Dolly on Bayview

The little shop just north of Leo’s Barber Shop and south of Dolly Jewellers will be a women’s wear store. The trade name is Butter Studio and it appears that the place is already open for business. 

City Hall has power, re-opens Monday morning

Extra decoration at City Hall

Toronto City Hall has power restored by way of temporary generators (inset) and will be open for business Monday morning. The City announced the news Sunday about 1 p.m, The freakish electrical room fire on Thursday knocked out all service and leaves a big repair job still to do. But in the meantime, five large mobile generators have been wired together to provide reliable service. The City notes that crews worked throughout the weekend to run and connect cables to the temporary generators while repairs to the electrical system are carried out over the next several weeks. The building’s HVAC system was purged after power was restored and extensive air quality testing was carried out before reopening. There were no significant findings. The air quality in the building will continue to be closely monitored for carbon monoxide levels, while the generators are running. Toronto Fire Service has tested the fire and life safety system in the building, which is fully functioning.

Heart-stopping video from Japan’s Mt. Ontake

On the left, we can only wonder at the fate of these climbers who took video of a lethal wave of acrid smoke and dust rolling down on them as Mt. Ontake, Japan’s second highest volcano, suddenly erupted Saturday. It is quite chilling to watch as the video ends and not know their fate. At the right, spectacular video from a helicopter. So far, according to international agencies, 31 bodies have been found and it is feared more are gone in this sudden catastrophe. As many as 250 climbers were thought to be stranded on the peak. 

Old Broadview to become a “boutique hotel”

Joanna Lavoie in the Beach Mirror updates the story of the Broadview Hotel. It seems to follow the ideas put forward in May. The new owners said then they would be “restoring” the 1893 building but not turning it into condominiums. It appears now that “an east-end version of the Drake and Gladstone hotels” will be created at the site at Broadview Avenue and Queen Street East. The owner is the evocatively named Streetcar Developments. They  say the tenants in the rooms on the second floor and up above Jilly’s strip club have now been relocated in “quality, affordable housing.” The firm said the decision to transform the old hotel into a boutique hotel was what the majority of the 1,000 or so area residents who took a recent survey. Previous 

“Leprechaun sighting” sparks liquor store furore

Harvest Fair a success under sunny skies

The Fifth Annual Mount Pleasant Harvest Fair was held Saturday, September 27, 2014 in absolutely perfect conditions. Merchants and restaurateurs had many inventive and delicious snacks for sale. Crepes with raspberry jam hit the spot about noon. The lineup was out the door at Penrose Fish and Chips. It was too much for many people seeking one final taste of the shop’s food before it closes next month. The Ken Jen Petting Zoo was set up in the now unused parking lot of Newbigging’s. The zoo was a big success with children.  On this occasion, it featured a zebu, donkey, llama, pot belly pig, goat and sheep. Boys and girls washed their hands with the disinfectant liquid as they left. In this political season the Harvest Fair drew but one identifiable candidate, Olivia Chow. She and workers posed for a group shot. The Neighborhood Clinic at 674 Mount Pleasant was busy with chairs out on the street offering a free massage. They had some happy takers. Photos from top: Bulldog co-publisher Sue Byford with a possible reader, candidate Olivia Chow and her team near Penrose Fish and Chips and little guy ventures a pat on the nose of the Zebu.  Everything was okay.    
Down at Belsize Drive the community was using the broad lawn of Mount Pleasant Baptist Church to good advantage. Video on the left catches some of the mellow sound of the group Borderline. At the right, kids frolic with the music and one little girl launches a mild sneak attack on daddy.