“New blood” makes Northlea clinic a big success
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Penrose Fish and Chips wraps up last orders
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| Penrose Fish & Chips, October 8th, 2014, 11:01am |
It’s pretty much last call at the beloved fish and chips shop at 600 Mount Pleasant Rd. CBC Penrose Fish and Chips to close
Rocca pumpkin giveaway set for October 25, 2014
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| Patrick Rocca |
Realtor Patrick Rocca invites everyone to get a Halloween pumpkin free at his 7th Annual Pumpkin Giveaway on Saturday, October 25, 2014. Once again the popular giveaway is being held in conjunction with the Leaside Haunted House Contest. Good fun. The pumpkin giveaway will take place at McDowell’s valu-mart at Bayview and Davisville Aves. between 11 a.m.and 3 p.m. Remember, if you can’t make it to the event, Patrick and the gang will deliver the pumpkin to your door. As usual it is sponsors by Patrick Rocca, Bosley Real Estate and McDowell’s. You can ask questions and get information by writing to Patrick. To apply for the Haunted House Contest go here.
Blood moon snapped at dawn over Riverdale
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Many turned away from Leaside election debate
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The overflowing crowd trying to get into the mayoralty debate in the William Lea Room was more than the fire regulations would allow Tuesday night (October 7, 2014). Members of the organizing Leaside Property Owners Association made a decision to turn away people at the outer door of the arena function room as the 260 odd chairs filled and standees gathered as many as six lines deep around them. Several umbrella toting persons who had walked to the arena had to turn around and go home. Inside, some LPOA organizers expressed resentment that the crowd seemed to contain many people from outside Leaside. As to the debate, it followed a pattern of frequently hyped answers from the candidates to orchestrated responses. Mayoral debates have largely ceased to offer anything fresh from the candidates. They are exercises in trying to massage the media coverage, whether live or delayed. The message is the media massage, one might say. The questions from the audience were pertinent if familiar. They ranged over transit, traffic and the OMB. This was all red meat in the parlance of politics for Leaside voters facing the chaos of the Eglinton Ave. LRT and the notice served by countless developers. There is also the stinging pain of the death of Georgia Walsh in July. That accident is now pretty much enshrined as proof of out-of-control traffic. Olivia Chow made references to this tragedy and expressed gratitude for the Slow Down signs which have appeared across the city. All candidates spoke sympathetically about this tragedy but their solutions to heavy traffic remain open to question. They all talk of stopping traffic from leaving main thoroughfares, but the definitions were necessarily vague. John Tory responded quietly to attacks on the viability of Smart Track by Mr. Ford. Tory said experts published today called the criticism from Ford and Chow a tempest in a teapot. The plan was a sensible way to use existing track to speed transit, Tory said. Dying honey bees: Let’s hear from all the experts
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Mountie who smoked dope found dead on job
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Trish Quan takes break after giving blood
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Trish Quan was among many giving blood at the Northlea School blood donor clinic today (Tuesday, October 7, 2014). Trish is seen taking a break with cookies and juice after her donation. She has given blood four times at the Northlea Clinic. It was busy today and we will have detailed results as they are available.
LPOA mayoral debate at William Lea Room
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Watch for voter cards being mailed out this week
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Jennifer Bonnell is author of Reclaiming the Don
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| Jennifer Bonnell |
Author Jennifer Bonnell’s Reclaiming the Don: An Environmental History of Toronto’s Don Valley will be discussed in a meeting tomorrow night (Wednesday, October 8, 2014) The event is set for 6:30 to 9 p.m. the Todmorden Mills Heritage Site, Papermill Gallery, 67 Pottery Rd. The book traces the Don Valley’s evolution from its early European settlement to the construction of the Don Valley Parkway in the 1960s and through to the present. This launch is presented by the City of Toronto’s Museums and Heritage Services, University of Toronto Press and the McMaster University Wilson Institute for Canadian History.





