The Bulldog

1926 Lawren Harris canvas auctioned for record $11.2 mln

That uniquely Canadian vision of the Rocky Mountains painted in oil by Group of Seven founder Lawren Harris has sold for $11.2 million making it the most expensive piece of art ever to sell at a Canadian auction. Mountain Forms is a statement about the land known to generations of citizens young and old. The sale at Heffel Fine Art Auction House in Yorkville fetched a 9.5 in bidding plus an 18 per cent buyer’s premium bringing the total cost to $11.21 million. CBC

Sunday lunch to help local man suffering from liver cancer

Bayview Ave. restaurateur Otta Zapotocky is inviting local residents to help an area man who has been diagnosed with stage-four liver cancer. Eduart Qose and his lovely family, wife Maria and daughters Erina, 10, and Nikola, 6, left for Germany on Sunday in the hope that unique treatment there can help him. Meanwhile, friends here have organized a Leaside Lunch for Life on Sunday, November 27, 2016 from 12 to 3 p.m. as a chance to have the proceeds of lunch go to the Qose family to help deal with the costly treatment and other expenses of this crisis. People can help by having lunch at Otta’s restaurant, Val d’Isere, 1581 Bayview. Family and friends have shown amazing support, but treatment has exhausted their resources. Otta asks that as many as possible join him for a quick bite and glass of wine to show – and give — support. If you can’t attend, a donation may be made here.
lunch-slider

Boundary re-drawn between St. Anselm, Canadian Martyrs

The Toronto and District Catholic School board has re-drawn the boundary line between St. Anselm School on Bessborough Drive and Canadian Martyrs School at 520 Plains Rd in East York. The issue was crowding at St. Anselm which sits on property which will not permit much expansion. Parents voted Monday on the matter. The issue has stretched over four years. Kids who are already being bused to St. Anselm will now be bused to Canadian Martyrs. The issue for St. Anselm can only get worse as development in Leaside explodes. Canadian Martyrs has space available.

Radio station tells of East York girls, 6, on hookey walk

Shauna Hunt of 680 News is raising an alarm Wednesday afternoon about two 6-year-old girls who it is said wandered away from their unnamed East York school, or maybe just left it. They apparently found their way to the home of one girl but not before a local woman. identified as Deirdre, became alarmed to find the kids trying to cross a busy thoroughfare (unnamed) and spoke to them. Then she followed them home. Their mother was there, identified as Melissa. She is said to have been shocked to see her daughter and her friend and called the school. 680 News 

Survey says kids pulled out of hockey because of cost

South Bayview is a hockey loving place in a hockey loving country, but for some parents, it seems, the cost of fitting out a kid for the ice is just too much. A survey done by Leger Marketing says as many as 34 percent of parents have removed their children from hockey because they just can’t make ends meet. The survey is called Beyond the Blue Line.

Out front woman governor is Trump choice for U.N. job

President-elect Donald Trump has picked bitter critic Nikki Haley, the South Carolina Governor, to be the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

5-alarm fire blankets downtown Montreal with smoke

https://twitter.com/pappscicle/status/801439998763499520

A fire-alarm fire is covering downtown Montreal with black smoke Wednesday. It is located in a vacant building at 3464 Parc Ave. in the Plateau neighborhood. “The building is considered dangerous, we have 120 firefighters working,” said Martin Farmer, Montreal fire department’s chief of operations, adding firefighters will not enter the premises for now. Some families have been taken in by the Red Cross but no one has been hurt, police say.

Lawren Harris landscape under auction hammer tonight

The 1926 oil-on-canvas Lawren Harris painting “Mountain Forms” goes to auction tonight (Wednesday, November 23, 2016) and expectation are high for a record price. Earlier, Heffel – Lot # 118

Infectious Norwalk flu outbreak at Thornhill public school

Highly infectious Norwalk flu is reported at Thornhill.Woods Public School at 341 Thornhill Wood in Thornhill. Parents are being urged to keep children with any symptoms at home. Some of the symptoms of Norwalk include diarrhea, vomiting, nausea, cramps, muscle aches, fatigue and fever. Symptoms usually dissipate after 24 to 48 hours. The scientific name for this flu is norovirus. The annual flu shot is no protection for norovirus.. Vaccine and treatment research of this bug have been limited because of a lack of understanding of within humans, but recent discoveries in mice have identified that certain biological factors can slow down or kill the virus. “Up until now vaccines have exclusively been using virus-like particles, but some new developments may make it possible to generate a live attenuated vaccine, which is pretty exciting,” ” say Megan Baldridge, a physician familiar with norovirus. “Having animal models and cell culture models to grow the virus and study how it acts a little more closely will help us better understand the and also think more about vaccination strategies.”

“Gateway to Leaside” seen as one way to calm traffic

The Annual General Meeting of the Leaside Property Owners Association Tuesday night heard Engineer Gene Chartier discuss traffic calming studies and plans for Leaside. Mr. Chartier is vice president of Paradigm Transportation Solutions Limited, the firm hired to complete a traffic study of the community. About 100 people, some standing, filled a room at the Trace Manes Park field house for the meeting. Following LPOA business, the meeting was turned over to Chartier. It was noted that plans to calm traffic and reduce speeds are in a wait-and-see period because of the confusion created by the LRT construction.

GATEWAY TO LEASIDE

Nonetheless, the planners have a number of ideas for the time when a clearer traffic picture is available. Mr. Chartier named the “entranceway” concept for the whole of Leaside. Drivers would find signs and “geometric features” like raised crosswalks and “curb radius reductions” to make a statement. He said drivers tend to respond at least for a time to the sense that they are crossing a boundary. (This idea may have tickled some ardent Leaside folk). Such things as speed  bumps, enhanced crosswalk markings like graphic “ladder rungs”  painted on the pavement and the raised crosswalk are on the table. Chartier also mentioned a seasonal feature called “speed cushions” which appear to run the length of the road in some places to narrow the pavement and thus slow vehicles. Speed cushions come out in winter.

ELECTRONIC ENFORCEMENT

Electronic enforcement has become the order of the day for City Hall where it is seen as a way to intimidate drivers without employing an expensive policeman to do so. Red light cameras — which issue a ticket photographically — would be suitable at Laird-Wicksteed/McRae and Millwood and McRae beside Trace Manes Park and playground. Engineer Chartier said education of all roads users — drivers, cyclists and pedestrians was needed.  He said these concepts will be uploaded in graphic slide form to the LPOA website in coming days.

SUNNYBROOK PLAZA

Those who had hoped this meeting might reveal details of the still secret arrangements worked out for the redevelopment of Sunnybrook Plaza were disappointed. Jon Burnside (Ward 26) said it may be December before such information is made public. This process will not please everyone but there is no doubt the City’s hands are not as free as might be wished because of the prospect of a hearing at the Ontario Municipal Board. RioCan, Sunnybrook’s owner, must feel the odds at OMB favour its first scheme to build towers 13 and 19 storeys. The meeting also heard a roundtable discussion of the City’s Committee of Adjustment.

 

Ha ha! Atom A Flames are excited and don’t forget it

Go get ’em guys. We’ll be watching.

Service for Tamara Levine set for Friday, November 25

Tamara Levine

A funeral service will be held for Tamara Levine who died unexpectedly at the age of 37 on Friday, November 18, 2016.  The service will take place at the Mount Pleasant Visitation Centre, 375 Mount Pleasant Road on Friday, November 25th at 1:30 p.m.. An obituary on the site of the Humphrey Funeral Home says: “Left to mourn are her parents, Carol Cowan (Allan Kaplan), Michael Levine (Donna Orenstein), as well as her quadruplet siblings, Alexis, Peter, Katherine (deceased), older sister, Elizabeth, younger brother, Josh, and a large extended family. Tamara was a brilliant creative force who cared deeply about everyone around her, family, friends and those less fortunate. She travelled the world extensively and worked tirelessly, professionally and voluntarily to make it a better place.”  A 2003 profile of Tamara’s father notes that Peter, Alexis and Tamara were born as quadruplets with one of the babies, Katherine, dying at five-and-a-half months after heart surgery. The obituary says donations may be made to the Levine Quadruplet Endowment (which funds the Levine Family Lectureship in Women and Mental Health), Women’s College Hospital Foundation, www.wchf.ca. Condolences, photographs and memories may be forwarded through the Humphrey site.