Budweiser flash mob stuns hockey players
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Encourage freelance garbage collection
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Jus de Vie will open at 1627 South Bayview
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Fiat reveals larger 500 model
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Fiat is showing off a new larger 500L model in advance of the 2012 Geneva Motor Show in March. The “L” in 500L stands for “large” and while this is the biggest model in the Fiat 500 family, it will still be one of the smallest cars on the road when it goes on sale in Europe later this year and in the North America early next year. The Fiat 500L is designed to better compete with small winners like the Mini Cooper. Fiat boasts that the 500L features the space of an MPV with the taller ride height and capability of a compact SUV. Overall dimensions come in at 13.6 feet in length, 5.8 feet in width, and 5.4 feet in height. Inside, there’s seating for five, although a seven-seat version is expected to be launched for European markets at a later date.How much did Target pay Fairweather?
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Trend Shoppe running a store closing sale
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Lawrence Ave muggers take winter jacket
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Ontario Place closed to save money
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Warm winter ahead is the forecast
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Updated Merton semi sells for $646,000
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An attractive semi-detached home at 98 Merton St. has sold for $646,000. That’s a nominal $3000 discount on the asking price of $649,000. This home has that most desirable feature of the Merton Street homes between Mt Pleasant and Bayivew namely a deep lot. The taxes, as those who live there might guess, were $5,051 last year. It has three bedrooms and one bathroom. This home was on the market a mere eight days. There are more pictures a the National Post.
Shafia family guilty of honour killings that gripped world
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The honour killing trial that riveted the world has ended with all three of the accused being found guilty. Mohammad Shafia, his wife Tooba Mohammed Yaya and his son Hamed, 21, all of Kingston, were sentenced to the maximum penalty — 25 years in prison without the chance of parole. It’s fair to say that the cold-blooded and unnatural behavior of the killers has left the country shaken. One of those who died, Mohammed’s 13-year-old daughter Geeti, had been so concerned about her safety that she had asked police to place her in foster care. But that didn’t happen. Instead, a few months later the killers executed their plot to drown Geeti and her two sisters, as well as an older woman the girls looked to as a mother. Now comes the time when the national conscience will be examined asking how such a thing could happen in Canada. There should most certainly be a national debate — free from cheap guilt and long on practical action — about how best to detect and defeat this primitive behaviour.




