What seems to be a medical marijuana dispensary of some type will open at 562 Mt. Pleasant Rd. The South Bayview Bulldog confirmed the planned location but was unable to learn much more from employees working at the Green Room Society store at 402 Spadina Ave. Call back later was the best that an unnamed person at that store could offer. Still, the Green Room organization seems ready to sell by whatever letter of the law it can, that good old-fashioned Mary Jane from its Midtown “pharmacy.” The law aside, the Green Room Society is a fast growing chain using as its brand image, the green cross so familiar as the symbol of pharmacies in Europe. The state of marijuana law in Canada is in serious flux with governments making policy statements and then reversing them, or just backing away from stated future policy. Doctors may prescribe marijuana for medical use although the College of Physicians and Surgeons has told its members to be sure the diagnoses are reliable. It appears that smoking marijuana for personal use has been de-criminalized but the sharing of amounts of weed seems to be problematic. In any case, as indicated above, there is no information from the Green Room Society as to the who, what or when of activity at the Mt. Pleasant location which sits on the west side between Belsize Drive and Penrose Ave. It appears however that the place will be heavily defended at least by bars. That is the way the other locations (two in Vancouver) and on Spadina appear.
Bryan Vickers was well-liked history teacher at Leaside High
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Bryan Vickers, the well-liked former history teacher at Leaside High School, has died at the age of 82 Mr. Vickers is survived by his wife Elizabeth and children Janet and Bruce and their spouses. Pierre and Lina. Bryan Charles Vickers dedicated his life to teaching, a profession he followed for 30 years, most of them at LHS. His passion was history and he co-authored a book on American history from a Canadian viewpoint. In retirement, he was appointed to the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada where he spent four years presiding over several cases. He continued to travel and led several seniors groups to exotic locations around the world. He also enjoyed golfing, tennis and following sports (especially cheering on the Blue Jays and Leafs) His obit is in the Star.
Bike sharing news sees polarized comment about pedals
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The CBC reports that the Toronto Parking Authority’s new bike sharing operator will sell it 1,000 new bikes and 120 new stations this year. PBSC Urban Solutions is the new supplier, an international company that already provides cities like Montreal, New York, Washington, San Francisco and London with bike-sharing systems. Just as interesting is the combative reactions of readers about the cost and value of bicycles. Representative remarks include this one from Patishere: “Love the bike sharing plan, I see plenty of tourists taking advantage and expanding the service will get more on board for a healthier community.” Honestly comments: “Nothing new here, complete waste of taxpayers money. This has been, and will always be, a complete waste of taxpayers money.” CBC
SERRA annual meeting at Manor Road United on April 20
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The Annual General Meeting of the South Eglinton Residents and Ratepayers Association (SERRA) will be held Wednesday, April 20 at Manor Road United Church, 240 Manor Road at Forman Ave. Organizers are eager to see as many homeowners as possible at this important gathering to increase awareness about condo and commercial activity and the planning department’s Midtown in Focus program. There will be an update on the Eglinton Crosstown LRT and remarks about what’s happening at City Hall from Josh Matlow (Ward 22). Doors open at 6.30 and the AGM begins at 7 p.m. Residents are invited to come early and browse information booths and meet the executives and Mr. Matlow.
Winter finally retreats with warming forecast all week
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Scary moments on McRae as impaired driver blows through
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Clare Dietrich and her husband had a scary moment or two Sunday evening as they walked along McRae Dr. near Randolph Rd. That’s when an impaired driver barreled down McRae from behind them heading toward Laird Drive. Apparently she wanted to turn left at Randolph but overshot the corner. She wheeled back and bounced over the northwest curb then dipsy-doodled across the northwest corner and along the sidewalk dinging a Lexus SUV as she went. Police were called (they received a number of complaints) and say the woman was stopped before she got too much farther.
Tom Mulcair rejected by NDP at Edmonton convention
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New Democratic leader Tom Mulcair has been resoundingly rejected by his party. The NDP leader received less than 50 percent of the votes in a convention motion at its annual gathering in Edmonton Sunday and said merely that he will stay on as leader until a leadership convention is organized. According to Canadian Press, it is the first time in living memory that a party leader of any political stripe has received less than 50 percent of delegate support. CP says that a stunned silence fell over the convention floor at Shaw Conference Centre as delegates realized that not only had Mulcair not attained a respectable level of support, he hadn’t even reached the 50-per-cent threshold. Canadian Press Twitter Chantal Hebert
Leaside’s Martha McCabe on swim team for Rio Games
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Leaside’s Martha McCabe has won a spot on the Canadian Swimming Team at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio at the qualifying event in Toronto last night. The trip to Rio will mark McCabe’s second shot at Olympic glory, as the 26-year-old also competed at the London games in 2012. The Leaside Sports Hall of Fame member is an alumnus of the UBC Thunderbirds swim team. Her friends and family celebrated her success last night after she qualified
"It takes a village to raise an Olympian", certainly holds true for Martha McCabe flanked by family and friends! pic.twitter.com/kWvoNNZAdF
— CBC Olympics (@CBCOlympics) April 10, 2016
Sloppy snow this evening but this forecast looks okay
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Second child falls out of rear hatch of van in China
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A second incident of a child falling through the rear hatch of a van has emerged in China. Both cases are wrapped up in this video. It seems likely given the rarity of child safety seats that more kids have unlatched the cargo door and dropped out onto the road. Some surveys say that fewer than half a percent of children in China are properly belted in place. Amazing.
Report of kidnapping in Liberty Village found false
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Probe of misleading ads on Facebook brings response
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Complaints about misleading ads for inexpensive clothes on Facebook has brought a concession from Facebook’s VP of ads and pages, Andrew Bosworth, that the firm acknowledges the problem. He says: “We’re looking at ways to incorporate new signals that will help us identify which of the over 50 million active businesses on our platform are delivering products and services that are overwhelmingly unsatisfactory to people.” This is recorded on the consumer site Consumerist with a link to an expose by CBS News in Dallas. A reporter there bought four items (above). They all had problems. Some were putrid, didn’t fit, shapeless or coming apart at the seams. Often the advertised material — leather, wool — was not. In short, they were not what was ordered.





