Miley Cyrus lewdness shocks, stuns VMA crowd
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Members of the sophisticated show business audience at the MTV VMA’s Sunday night were clearly shocked and embarrassed by the lewdness of the Miley Cyrus performance with Robin Thicke. Above, Will Smith and his family respond variously with looks of dismay and bewilderment. One wonders, should these kids be there? It was not the only example of distress by the audience. Some might call the Miley Cyrus act pornographic. It was certainly raunchy. Will this unsavoury performance work for her? One critic has crowned her fleshy twerking with the superlative of superlatives — clusterfantastic. Don’t ask. We’ve embedded the video from the CBC on a separate page called Miley (link above) and it is fairly graphic so be your own bad taste control board. Twerking by the way is a stripping term meaning more or less to jiggle everything, says Wikipedia.
Leaside Garden Society meets March 13, 2014
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“Democracy” vote an odd council breakdown
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Yes: 22 Paul Ainslie, Ana Bailão, Shelley Carroll, Josh Colle, Janet Davis, Glenn De Baeremaeker, Sarah Doucette, John Filion, Paula Fletcher, Norman Kelly, Mike Layton, Chin Lee, Pam McConnell, Mary-Margaret McMahon, Joe Mihevc, Denzil Minnan-Wong, Ron Moeser, James Pasternak, Gord Perks, Jaye Robinson, Karen Stintz, Kristyn Wong-Tam
No: 11 Raymond Cho, Gary Crawford, Vincent Crisanti, Frank Di Giorgio, Doug Ford, Rob Ford, Peter Milczyn, Cesar Palacio, John Parker (Chair), David Shiner, Michael Thompson
Absent: 11 Maria Augimeri, Michelle Berardinetti, Mike Del Grande, Mary Fragedakis, Mark Grimes, Gloria Lindsay Luby, Giorgio Mammoliti, Josh Matlow, Frances Nunziata, Anthony Perruzza, Adam Vaughan
22-11 vote to appoint Holyday replacement
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Warning of damaging wind, rain and large hail
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Indy grocers to meet here Sept 30 and Oct 1
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Atwood’s MaddAddam is a gloomy work
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Here is a review of the latest work by “Bennington Heights own” Margaret Atwood. It is called MaddAddam. The review itself is a workout for the mind with at least one detour to the dictionary to verify interiority. As a good teacher might now say: “Look it up”. In the most general of terms the review suggests that Ms. Atwood’s preoccupation with the future and further abuse of women continues to abide in her work. Tim Martin of The Telegraph gives it three stars out of five. 
