Month: September 2014

Man drops new iPhone seconds after buying it

Jack Cooksey of Perth Australia was one of those all-night guys in order to buy an iPhone 6.  Poor Jack. What with the fuss of showing it to the happy television lady, Jack dropped his new phone all on live and as it happened.  Check the footage —  now posted on YouTube with more than four million views — and have a look at what happened, At first, the newscaster is trying to rip open Mr. Cooksey’s iPhone 6 for him. How come? As SKY News asks: Did she sleep on a sidewalk all night? No. She says: “It’s your phone, you open it” Then, with a final tug from Mr. Cooksey on the little box top down goes the phone onto the concrete. The TV lady look embarrassed and says: “I don’t quite know what to say right now.”

Sarah’s Drive seeks 70,000 lbs. for Daily Bread

Sarah Jordan
Mark Jordan writes to update The South Bayview Bulldog on the Seventh Annual Sarah’s Food Drive beginning September 27 and running until October 12, 2014.  Many in Leaside will know the story of the drive and a little girl’s curiosity about helping others. Soon the idea took flight and drew in many people, including Sarah’s mom and dad (Mark) and her younger sister Claire. For the 2014 drive Sarah and Claire have an ambitious goal of raising 70,000 pounds of food. Mark notes that last year’s drive raised over 60,000 pounds of food for the Daily Bread Food Bank.  Thirteen schools are helping out this year and that means about 6,000 students are on the job. Businesses are invited to get involved by mailing Sarah and the gang here. It should be a lovely evening when youth philanthropist awards are handed out at the ACC October 2, 2014. Sarah and her dad are nominated  by the Daily Bread Food Bank for the Association of Fundraising Professionals Young Philanthropist Award. They won and Sarah and Jordan will be accepting the award in person at the AFP Luncheon on November 26, 2014. On October 11, 2014, there will be a Thanksgiving hamper build and BBQ at McDowell’s valu-mart on Bayview. Of course  Sarah will be at the 21st annual Leaside Rotary corn roast tomorrow (Sunday, September 21, 2014) with bins to collect non-perishable food items.

Gayle Force was first to bring pilates to Toronto

When Gayle Boxer-Duncanson decided to re-name her dancerize and pilates practice at St. Cuthbert’s Church on Bayview Ave. she turned to what some might think was an unusual source for advice. Her clients. It’s the kind of involvement with the people who seek her help that has sustained Gayle Force Fitness as as essential part of life in South Bayview for some 32 years. Gayle Force is the name chosen on the suggestion of a client and then a popular vote.  The client won a whole year’s worth of free classes. Today Gayle animates and excites her classes personally as she has always done with more than 100 clients joining her each week in the spacious and brightly lit Lamb Hall extension to St. Cuthberts. It was Gayle who brought both dancersize and pilates to Toronto from New York, where she began her career as a fitness instructor. It was in New York in the early 80s that she became a registered pilates instructor.  Gayle’s biography tells us that she graduated from the National Ballet School and began her own dance school. In the language of previous chroniclers of her career “she proceeded to — not just blaze a trail through Toronto’s fitness community — but to actually light the match.” Gayle was among the first to teach fitness in the City. Gayle’s preoccupation with the body and muscles remain the key to her practice in a time of the ever-growing predominance of “exercise” and “jogging”. She is concerned about the amount if running and working out people do without stretching to protect the muscles. An important part of the Gayle Force practice is the family feeling created among clients. Gayle encourages it and even sponsors group outings to the ballet and other related activities. Gayle Force indeed. 

John Tory would stop public funding of insults

John Tory is right when he says there is something wrong with the way the City of Toronto funds public events. As mayor he said he would stop funding the Toronto Pride Parade if it continued to allow a float from Queers Against Israeli Apartheid. Every year, the Toronto arbiters of what is acceptable at funded events concludes that this abusive behaviour does not offend the City’s standards. Why not? Would our standards be offended by a group called Queers Against Palestinian Suicide Bombers? Would the City fund the Santa Claus Parade if there was a contingent from Queers Against Homophobic Saint Nick?  None of this language is about free speech. All these statements are  brazenly-calculated insults which no one would listen to if they had not been inserted into otherwise decent public occasions.  The Israeli Apartheid crowd are babblers who can’t make a coherent argument. It’s a sad commentary on the administration of the City that its rigid notion of what’s offensive doesn’t recognize such obvious abuse. 

Alibaba IPO: Shares rocket to more than $92 each

Alibaba shares opened at $92.70, handing the Chinese ecommerce giant a valuation of more than $228bn when it finally started trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday. The company had priced its initial public offering at $68 a share on Thursday, valuing the business at $170bn and making it the biggest technology flotation the world has ever seen. However, it opened more than 36pc higher, making the company more valuable than other technology giants such as Facebook and Amazon.  Telegraph