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Pressrun 50,400 • 28 pages
Optional 3-week delivery
6/$1 newsstand
PICKERING
Friday, January 22, 2010
NNewsews AAddveverrtitisseerrTHE
REGION 2
Water
bill woes
Durham gives a
little; Ajax family
must pay a lot
THEATRE 17
A thriller
on stage
Dangerous
Obsession’ now
playing in Ajax
SPORTS 20
Rock draft
a dozen
Ajax-Pickering
team moving up
to Major Series
Will clicks onFacebookresultinfeetonpavement?
BY JENNIFER STONE AND JILLIAN FOLLERT
newsroom@durhamregion.com
DURHAM -- As of mid-morning Thursday, almost 208,000 Canadi-
ans had clicked their displeasure over Prime Minister Stephen Harp-
er’s decision to prorogue Parliament.
But the Facebook page, created by an Alberta student, did not just
call on people to mouse-click to show their disapproval. There was
also a call to action: people were asked to get out from behind their
monitors and put feet to pavement, demonstrating at the offices of
MPs -- including Oshawa’s Colin Carrie and Whitby-Oshawa’s Jim
Flaherty -- this Saturday.
The intended message is simple: MPs should get to work, as they
had been slated to do before Governor General Michaelle Jean
agreed to the prime minister’s request to prorogue, on Monday, Jan.
25.
Some call it a litmus test: is social media-based political organizing
a matter of real activism, or plain old slacktivism?
It must be proven to be activism, urged those organizing the pro-
tests.
See WILL page 5
durhamregion.
comNews
Advertiser • January 22,
20102 AP Region trims
total,but $1,
400 remains
BY KEITH GILLIGAN kgilligan@durhamregion.com DURHAM -- It’s
taps for an Ajax family hoping
Durham Region would waive a one-
time $3,500 water bill.The
DeBique family of Delaney Drive appealed
to the Region, saying they would have a
hard time paying the bill. The bill for the
three months from Jan. 9 to April 9,
2009 totalled $3,529.14.
And, while Durham staff investigated the matter and agreed
the bill was a one-time
incident, Regional policy doesn’t allow for the bill
to be waived. The pol-icy only allows for
up to $1,900 being waived, which
was done in this case.
Regional Council’s finance committee on
Wednesday decided the remainder of the bill would have
to be paid. The fam-ily was given 24
months to
pay the bal-ance owed.To get a bill
that high, the family would have used 1,
980 cubic metres (435,600 gallons)
of water over three months.A report
to the committee noted that aside from
the one period, water usage in the
home had been consistent, hover-ing around 50
cubic metres (11,000 gal-lons) for
a three-month billing period.A
cubic metre equals 220 gallons.
Jacqueline DeBique turned to the
committee for assistance in October. She went
back to the committee on Wednesday,
again seeking help. If the bill couldn’t
be waived, she asked the finance
committee to “consent
to reduce the bill further.”The total was “
exorbitant. It’s four to five times
over our average usual billing,” she stated. “
We can only guess
what caused the high billing.”She sought to
have the bill reduced
to between $150 and $550.Reducing the $3,
500 by $1,900 meant the family owed
about $1,600. They have paid $256.14, so
they still owe $1,373.Cutting the
amount of the bill even further would
mean “achange in policy and
a precedent-setting change,” Scugog
Mayor and finance committee
chair-woman Marilyn Pearce said.The cause of the
high bill hasn’t been
determined. The water meter was removed on
April 14 and replaced with another.
The meter removed was tested and
found to be operating accurately. It was sent out
for a second test, which confirmed
the meter was working right.
The high consumption billed cannot be attributed
to a meter accuracy
prob-lem,” the report noted.Ajax
Mayor Steve Parish said similar incidents
have happened in the past.A minor leak in
a toilet tank can go through
a tremendous amount of water in a day,”
Mayor Parish stated. “Staff has taken this
to the length it can.”That would
add about $50 a month over a
24-month period, he added. We have to
make
this as palatable
as possible.” METROLAND FILE PHOTO AJAX -- Jacqueline DeBique got a water bill recently for $3,
529.14 in October that worked out to using about 500,000 gallons over a
three-month period. The Region has since shaved $1,900 off the total, still leaving the Ajax family
with a $
1,400 bill.PUBLIC WORKS Ajax family on
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BRIEFS Ajax former Maple Leaf takes
IQ test on TV program AJAX -- Ajax resident and
retired Toronto Maple Leafs’ goal-tender Glenn Healy will be
among those testing their intellect on live TV on CBC’s Test
the Nation: IQ this weekend.Six different teams will
compete on the show, including teams ofpoliticians, twins and Mr.
Healy’s team of athletes. Meanwhile, viewers can also take theIQ
test at home and
see how they stack up.The show airs on Jan. 24 at
8 p.m.
on CBC. For more information:
VISIT www.cbc.
ca/testthenation Ajax residents
invited to strategic plan update AJAX -- Ajax residents are invited to
an open houseon the status
of Ajax’s strategic plan.On Feb. 4, residents can receive
an update on the four-year plan, approved in 2007.
The planincludes 102 initiatives involving arts and
culture, community safety, growth, economic
development,
transportation, environmental responsibility and infrastructure.The focus of this forum is to
update residents on the key accomplishments and
successes stemming from the strategic plan over the last three years, as
well as outline the priority areas for 2010,” said Marilou Murray,
assistant to
Ajax’s chief administrative officer. This will be the final strategic
plan update
of the 2007–2010 council.”The event starts at 7 p.m. at
the Ajax Town Hall, 65 Harwood Ave.
S., in the council chambers.Free childcare will be
available with staff helping with crafts,
activities or providing homework support. Advance registration is necessary,
call
905-619-2529,
ext. 3323. For more
information:VISIT www.
townofajax.com Sail squadron
information in Pickering this weekend PICKERING -- The Canadian
Power and Sail Squadrons is hosting a mall display this weekend
to inform residents on all
the courses offered by CPS. It’ll take place this Saturday, Jan. 23 from 9:
30a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday, Jan. 24 from 11 a.m. to 6
p.m. at the Pickering
Town Centre, 1355 Kingston Rd. A manned booth will
offerpamphlets on its seamanship, navigatingwith GPS, electronic
charting and
boating and navi-
gation courses. For
durhamregion.
comNews
Advertiser • January22, 20104 AP
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Childminding and transportation assistance
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Classes provided byFunded by Durham committee
hears funding freeze
means $2.
5 million in cuts BY KEITH
GILLIGAN kgilligan@durhamregion.com DURHAM -- The Rouge Valley Health Sys-tem
could be looking at $2.5 million in
ser-vice cuts if its provincial funding is frozen.
We’ll be looking at 25
areas where those service cuts might
occur,” Rouge Valley president and
CEO Rik Ganderton said while addressing Durham
Region Coun-cil’
s health and social services committee on
Jan. 14.The Province is dealing with
an almost 25-billion deficit and hospitals
don’t know if their annual funding will
increase or remain the same, he noted. Health-care
funding takes
up 40 per cent of the provin-cial
budget.Rouge Valley is in a good
position, with its deficit elimination program, he said. A
deficit of more than $5 million in the
2007-08 fiscal year has been eliminated, with
the hospital projecting a surplus of $2.6 million for
2009-10 and $5.2 million for 2010-11.
The issue we face is a two-per
cent increase (in funding) is less than the
infla-tion increase we face every year,” he
said.If the hospital’s funding increases by two per
cent, “we won’t have
to make any ser-vice level changes,”
he said.However, a freeze in its funding would
mean having to make $2.5 million
in ser-vice cuts,
he noted, adding those cuts would
equal 25 jobs.Rouge Valley includes
the Ajax-Pickering hospital, and Centenary in Scarborough.
It
received $214 million for the 2009-10 fiscal year.It’
s not just Ajax and it’s not
necessarily shared equally. It would be where the
ser-vice cuts have
the least impact on patient care,” Mr. Ganderton
said.If there’s no funding
increase, the hos-pital administration will make
a decision, then notify
the Central East Local Health Integration Network, he
noted.
Then it will be open
up for public debate.”Regional Chairman Roger Anderson
said the public “
would want to know what those 25 areas
are.”Those 25 may not result in the savings we need.
We don’t know if there’s
a value to the
public knowingwhat those services are,” Mr.
Ganderton said.We’re reasonably confident” the
25 areas would “cause the least
harm,” he added.Mr. Ganderton agreed when Mr.
Ander-son said the tuberculosis clinic at the Ajax
site is one of the 25 being looked
at.If we conclude closing the TB
clinic has the least impact on patient community
and helps cost decrease, we’ll have
a discussion with affected
individuals
prior to the
deci-sion,” Mr. Ganderton said.
REGION Rouge Valley
looking down barrel
of 25 areas of service reductions METROLAND FILE PHOTO AJAX -- Rouge
Valley Health System CEO Rik Ganderton acknowledged that, without increased provincial
funding, Rouge Valley, which includes Ajax-Pickering hospital, will need to chop $2.
5 million from hospital services. Mr. Ganderton addressed Durham Regional Council’s health and social
services committee on Jan. 14. It
would be where the service
cuts have the least
impact on
durhamregion.
comNews
Advertiser • January 22,
20105 P VIJAY BADHWAR,
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found a good dental home.Rather than
look to inept and non-committal
politicians to make change, we need to
build the momentum started with 200,000 allies and
take the streets by storm
this Saturday,” Canadians Against Pro-
roguing Parliament Facebook page creator Christopher White
wrote
on rabble.ca this week.It’s a
statement echoed by Whitby resi-dent
Stacey Leadbetter, who is
helping organize the local rallies.I’m just
an average Canadian who thinks the
government is being disrespectful and arrogant,” she
said. “They’recounting on apathy and I don’t want
to just
sit back and do nothing.”Local rally
information can be
found at www.noprorogue.ca.While some
have dismissed the anti-pro-roguing
movement on social media like Facebook as simply
a click of the mouse, not to
be taken particularly seriously, oth-ers say politicians
disregard
it at their own peril. The fact of the
matter is, the activity of clicking
a mouse has becomeanalogous to signing with a
pen,” said Dr. Davide Pan-agia,
Canadian Research Chair in CulturalStudies at Trent
University. “Itturns out, the mouse is
now mightier than the sword.”
Given the importance of recognition to politics, “
it seems unwise to dismiss mouse-clicking
as a
passive enterprise,” Dr. Panagia said.Even if
the Facebook movement doesn’t lead to feet on
pavement in real-life protest, Dr. Panagia
said politicians ought to heed the
interest generated via social network-ing in this and other
issues. It may just be the physical
geography
of the protest has changed.What counts
as a public space these days?” he
asked, adding in many ways
public spaces have been virtualized.Whether
these forms of public space interaction
are sufficient to enacting politi-cal change”
becomes the question, he said.
Pickering-Scarborough East Liberal MP Dan McTeague
has witnessed a huge shift in the use
of social media and networking since he was first
elected in 1993, a timewhen the Internet
was
just gaining in popu-larity.Social
networking now gives more peoplea stronger voice
since it has both
resonance and permanence, he said.While
he has Facebook and Twitter accounts, he
tries to keep
sensitive issues out of it. He’s had a
lock put onto his Wikipedia account,
for example, after seeing racist remarks on
his pagerelatingto consular
issues he’s dealtwith. It’s both a useful tool
and one you have to use cautiously,” he
said, adding he doesn’t want
to
facilitate opportunities for such behaviour.But he oftensends
e-mails from his Black-berry, finding it
gives him a quicker and more
personal relationship with his con-stituents, and keeps
a blog on
his website, www.tomorrowsgaspricetoday.com.He
said the anti-prorogation Faceboook group must have
given a clear message to Prime
Minister Stephen Harper that thou-sands of
Canadians are unhappy with
the decision to delay Parliament.The Liberals
got the message as well.We’re going
back to work on Monday with or
without the government,” he said.Ajax-Pickering
MP Mark Holland said he hasn’t checked
how many people are cur-rently part of the
group, but last time he looked it was more than
100,000
and that’s spectacular enough.I think it’s
pretty astounding and I think it shows how new
media is evolving into
a political force,” he said.He’s also been
on Facebook for about a year and a half
and he manages his account personally. Mr.
Holland said he often gets comments
and questions from his
constit-uents via his account.I think it’
s important to manage person-ally ... to have
a more
direct connection to the people.”He uses
Twitter for messages solely relat-ed to his role
as public safety and nation-al security
critic
and posts Youtube videos occasionally.He said
while it seemed that Facebook was initially
used by a younger demograph-ic, it’s become
a lot broader, as evidenced
by the anti-proroguing group.It’s changing the face
of politics, it’s not just one group that’
s able to mobilize on an issue, it’
s across a
broad demographic,” said Mr. Holland.And if he sees
tens of thousands of Cana-dians are joining a group,
hesaid
he’s going to listen.I think you have to look
at it as being a good democratic
tool regardless who it’s working for or
against ... there could be an issue one day I’m
on the wrong
side of,” said Mr. Holland.Durham’s
MP Bev Oda called prorogation of Parliament “
routine,” andnot near the
top of issues for Canadians.I think, for
Canadians, the top issue is
Canadians and
the Canadian economy,” she said.The time
between now and when Par-liament returns
with a throne speech and budget in March
will be spent working on that
issue, and doing constituency
and other work, she said.The
social media-based protests are something of
a concern, but people should recognize their
MPs are
still working, Ms. Oda said.It’s
always a concern when Canadians believe you are not
going your job as gov-ernment
and elected officials,” she said. But
Canadians “should realize ... the gov-ernment continues even
if the House isn’t sitting. We
all have responsibilities and are
carrying on with those responsibilities.”With files from
Kristen Calis and Reka Szekely
Page 6 - Today’
s editorial For more information:
VISIT newsdurhamregion.com/article/
146223 VISIT newsdurhamregion.com/
specialreports WILL from page 1 It turns
out, the mouse is now mightier than
the
sword. Davide
Panagia, Trent University SOCIAL MEDIA Will it be activism
WE THINK... email responses to newsroom@durhamregion.com
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Editorial
Opinions
HEALTH CARE
OMA president says more
than nurses needed to care
for patients
To the editor:
Re: Oshawa has GTA’s first nurse-led clin-
ic, Jan. 2.
Ontario’s physicians wholeheartedly
welcome the role of nurse practitioners
in collaborative care settings.
Physicians across the province are
working in collaborative models with
nurse practitioners and other health-care
professionals to provide comprehensive
care to patients.
We firmly believe this collaboration
between health-care professionals is the
best way to strengthen and enhance the
delivery of safe and high-quality care to
patients.
Ontario’s doctors support models of
care that encourage health professionals
to work together rather than models that
create silos.
The article goes on to suggest nurse
practitioners can do many of the jobs
doctors do, however this is simply not
the case.
According to a report by the Institute
for Clinical Evaluative Studies (ICES),
not having a family doctor leads to more
emergency room visits and hospital
admissions for those who have chronic
diseases in the province.
While nurse practitioners can and do
provide a wide variety of services, we
believe every Ontarian deserves the care
and expertise of a family doctor.
Suzanne Strasberg, MD
President
Ontario Medical Association
FEDERAL POLITICS
We care that Parliament
was prorogued
To the editor:
There is a groundswell of angry oppo-
sition to Prime Minister Stephen Harp-
er’s latest tactic to run and hide from the
Canadian public.
Stephen Harper’s ploy to padlock Par-
liament is far from an isolated act.
Last year, to escape a political crisis of
his own making, Mr. Harper asked Gov-
ernor General Michaelle Jean to pro-
rogue parliament – before passing even a
single bill.
The government is trying to hide behind
the Vancouver Olympics as an excuse for
stifling dissent, even though other dem-
ocratic host nations continued to have
functioning Parliaments right up to or
during their Games -- including Canada
in 1988.
Mr. Harper wrongly gambled that Cana-
dians don’t care about the health of our
democracy and the manner in which we
are governed.
I would like to let our Members of Par-
liament know that we are not so easily
duped.
We care.
Scott Maxwell
Bowmanville
MANNERS
Time to put an end
to bullying
and show respect
To the editor:
Bullying is a huge problem for our
youth and I think that it has to be stopped
before more children commit suicide
because of bullying.
I have been a victim of bullying, but
I have also been the bully, and I truly
regret what I have done.
If this problem doesn’t come to an end,
what has this world come to?
Cassandra Welsh
Oshawa
Is prorogue Facebook page activism or slacktivism?
First big test of online
group comes Saturday
When Stephen Harper’s request that Parlia-
mentbe prorogued wasgranted byGovernor-
General Michaelle Jeanon Dec. 30, the prime
minister likely thought the move would gen-
erate the usual howls of anguish from opposi-
tion politicians and a day or two of fussin the
media.
He surely could not have foreseen the fire-
storm of public protest thedecision hasignit-
ed, especially the over 200,000 people who
joined a Facebook page to criticize the move.
Canadians Against Proroguing Parliament
hasnot justmade astatement, it has dropped
anuclear bomb on the national political land-
scape.
The Facebook site is attempting to take
people out from behind theircomputer mon-
itors andsend them intothe community with
a nationwide protest organized for Saturday,
Jan. 23. In Durham, the rallies are scheduled
for 1:30 p.m. at the offices of Conservative
MPs Colin Carrie and Jim Flaherty.
But at last count, there were rallies planned
for locations across Canada and at Canadian
consulates in Dallas, NewYork and London.
The challenge to take to the streets and get
off your seats will determine whether the
Facebook group is more about activism or
slacktivism.
Slacktivism can be defined as taking part in
feel-good” measures, in support of an issue
or social cause, that have little or no practical
effect other than to make the person doing it
feel satisfaction. The acts also tend to require
little personal effort from the slacktivist.
It can be broken down to wanting to have
an impact with no more than a click of the
mouse rather than getting out of your house
and taking the time for more involved forms
of activism.
Should large numbers show up tomor-
row at these protests across the country, the
Facebook group will appear tohave made the
jump to activism. A strong message will have
been sentto the prime minister and his inner
circle that the public is willing to show its dis-
pleasure and come out in force todo so.
Canadians Against Proroguing Parliament
could well signal a move away from voter
apathy, which has been a problem in recent
elections. Should those who have joined the
Facebook page get more involved in debat-
ing and challenging politicians on the issues
and take those concerns into the next elec-
tion, itcould truly make a difference in citizen
involvement. We will see what percentage of
those on the Facebook page are activists or
slacktivists.
For more information:
VISIT newsdurhamregion.com/article/146223
VISIT newsdurhamregion.com/specialreports
e-mail letters to newsroom@durhamregion.com /
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be published @ newsdurhamregion.com
newsdurhamregion.
comNews
durhamregion.
comNews
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ETROLAND News AdvertiserTHE AJAX • PICKERING WHO’S RUNNING
IN
THE
2010
MUNICIPAL
ELECTION Ajax
nominated candidatesMayor Steve
Parish Ward 3 Local Councillor Joanne Dies.
Joanne Dies is the current Ward 3
councillor and is seeking another four years on
the job. She was originally elected in
2003. She filed her
nomination paperson Jan.
18.Ward 4 Local Councillor Pat Brown. Pat
Brown has been an Ajaxcouncillor since
1991. She is the incumbent Ward 4
councillor and filed her
nomination papers on Jan. 18.
Durham
Catholic District
School
Board
Trustee
Scott
Graham Pickering
nominated candidates
Mayor Dave Ryan Maurice
Brenner Ward
1 Regional Councillor
Bonnie Littley Jennifer O’
Connell Ward
2 Regional Councillor Bill
McLean Ward
1 City
Councillor Kevin Ashe Sherry
Croteau Ward
3 City Councillor David Pickles
Durham District
School Board Trustee Chris Braney
Durham
Catholic District
School Board
Trustee Paul Bannister Jim McCafferty
VISIT newsdurhamregion.com/article/
durhamregion.
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3&&0/5)3&/5"-AJAX -- The Ajax
Lions Club is among the local
organizations acting quickly to help the
victims of the Haiti earthquake.The Ajax Lions Club
is donating $1,000 to
the Lions Club International Foundation. Lions
worldwide have been supporting the relief efforts in Haiti
and within 24 hours of the earthquake
had pledged $350,
000 (US) to the foundation.In addition
to those donations, LCIF has donated $50,000 as
part of a major catas-trophegrant
for immediate help to victims including
provisions such as
water, food, medicine and tents.Over the
years, the foundation has pro-vided more than $
25 million (US) for disas-ter relief
including during the South Asian tsunami,
Hurricane Katrina and
the earth-quake in China.Donors can
assist Lions with a designat-ed donation
to the LCIF Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund.
Online, visit www.lcif.org/donate
and select Disaster and include LCIF Haiti
Earthquake Relief in the com-ments section.
Cheques can be made pay-able
to Lions Clubs International Founda-tion (
noting LCIF Haiti Earthquake Relief in the memo field)
and mailed to LCIF 300 W. 22nd St.,
Oak Brook, IL
60523, USA, Attn.: Donor Services. For more
information about
the local Lions’ relief efforts:CALL
905-
426-5937 (Don
McGovern)DISASTER Ajax Lions
donate to Haiti quake relief
PICKERING -- A Pickering restaurant is doing its part to
help the victims of Haiti.
The Rougemount Grill and Espresso Cafe has
started contributing $1 from each breakfast
special to the Canadian Red Cross. A breakfast
special costs $5.99, and the promotion is set to go
for at least
a cou-ple of weeks.The restaurant is
at 375
Kingston Rd.
at Rougemount Drive. PICKERING
durhamregion.
comNews
Advertiser •
January 22, 20109 AP
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BY KRISTEN CALIS kcalis@durhamregion.com
PICKERING -- Local generosity poured in at a
fundraiser Wednesday night to help the
victimsof the Haitiearthquake.Al
Dente Restaurant in Pickering donated its space for
the event and provided food and
drink to relief supporters throughout the
evening. Mayor Dave Ryan, council
and community members donated items to a
silent auction and residents emptied their wallets
to help the Canadian Red Cross provide
food, waterand other neces-sities to Haitian
residents, and to help
start rebuilding the devastated country. It’s good for
the collection of money and it’s great
for awareness too,” said Michael Head,
Pickering resident and partner in Walker Head
Lawyers, an injury law firm based in Pickering,
as he purchased a
large block of raffle tickets.His wife
Debbie Andersen said the event provided anoutlet
for people to get togeth-er and not
only donate, but discuss the tragedy
in Haiti, much more meaning-ful than the
solitude of clicking
a button online to donate.It’s really
nice to have something where people
can come together,” she said.The evening saw
more than $6,000 from ticket sales
and donations, which the fed-eral government
will match. That’s not including
silent auction money and
dona-tions promised from
corporations.Politicians and communitymembers worked quickly
with Al Dente when restau-rant owners called
to see how they could help
Haiti. The Pickering Community for Haitian
Relief Effort was then born.The committee’s
ultimate goal is to raise 100,000, but
more so to encourage other community
organizations to do
their own fundraising for Haiti. A lot
of people get frustrated because they don’t
know how to (donate),” said
mayoral candidate Maurice
Brenner, relief effort co-chairman.
Ward 1 City Councillor Jennifer O’
Connell, also co-chairwoman, said councillors
and politicians have a unique opportunity to
help raise awareness on the issuethrough
their wide range of contacts.
The Pickering Carib-Canadian Cultur-al Association
is a community partner in the effort
and vice president Fred Gibson noted the quake hasn’
t only hurt people in Haiti, but many
in
Pickering’s diverse com-munity. You’ve got to
get up and do something,” he said, adding the
PCCCA will do
what it can to help.
President Susan Maturine, whose friends have lost
people in the quake, mentioned the PCCCA sponsors
a teenage girl in Haiti and has her fingers
crossed she wasn’
t one of
the victims.To get
involved:EMAIL maurice.brenner@rogers.
com You’ve got to
get up and
do something. Fred
Gibson, Pickering Carib-
Canadian Cultural
Association vice president HAITI AID Event raises $6,000
in Pickering for
relief effort JASON LIEBREGTS / METROLAND PICKERING -- Fred Gibson and Susan Maturine,
from the Pickering Carib-Canadian Culural Association, spoke about Haiti during a Haiti relief
fundraiser at Al Dente
durhamregion.
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PRICE DAY •
SAT. JAN. 23rdrd DURHAM --
Nominations for the 2010
Environmental Achievement Awards are now
being accepted by
the
Durham Environmental Advisory Com-mittee.The
award is given to
indi-viduals and organizations that
dedicate their time to promote,
preserve and enhance the natu-
ral environment of the Durham
Region. There are six categories,
each named
after past environ-mental
leaders. Nominationforms must be submitted
by March1. Forms are
available at the Regional Munic-
ipality of Durham’s website,
www.durham.ca/deac. Submis-sions can
be sent to Jonah
Kelly, MCIP, RPP
Planning Depart-ment, Regional Municipality of
Durham Box 623, 4th Floor,
605 Rossland Road
East
Whitby,
Ontario,
L1N 6A3.
REGION Durham
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HELP ME HELP
KIDS
WITH SPECIAL
LEARNING NEEDS Calendar JANUARY22
SERENITY GROUP. 12-step recov-ery meeting.
8 p.m. Bayfair Baptist
Church, 817
Kingston Rd., Pickering.
JANUARY 23 PROGRESSIVEEUCHRE. Holy
Family Catholic Women’s League holds a
euchre card party at Holy
Family Church, 91Ribblesdale Dr., Whitby. D oors open6:
15 p.m., G ames begin at 7 p.m.
Cost is $10. For more information,
call Kelly at 905-571-4331 or
Mary at 905-
666-4061.THAI PONGAL CELEBRATION.
Tamil Cultural and Academic Society
of Durham. Ajax Community Centre. 75 Centennial Rd.,
Ajax. 6:
30 p.m.
JANUARY 27 NATURAL FAMILY PLANNING. 8 p.m.
St. Bernadette’s Church, Ajax Bayly
and Harwood). All are wel-come. To
register go to www.natu-
ralfamilyplanning.ca/toronto. Click on Where to
learn the Method” and fol-low the prompts
or call
Rose at 905-
683-9055.THE DURHAM
ORGANIC GARDENERS. Meetings take place the
fourth Wednesday of the month, 7:30 p.
m., September to May exclud-ing
December, in Room 2007, Dur-
ham District School Board Building, 400
Taunton Rd. E,, Whitby. Every-
one welcome. Annual seed exchange.
For more information contact Dianne
Pazaratz at 905-
433-7875.BUSINESS AND PROFESSION-
AL WOMEN’S MEETING. The New
Globe Restaurant, 60 Athol St. E., Oshawa. 6 to 9
p.m. Cost is $25 per person
and $30 for guests,
which includes dinner. For reservations, contact Kim
Beatty at 905-579-8184 or
e-mail
2resrv@bpwdurham.com by
Jan. 25.MACINTOSH USERS
EAST MEETING. Whitby Central Library, Room 1.
405 Dundas St. W., Whitby. 7
p.m. Visitors
are welcome.AUTISM SUPPORT
GROUP. Dunbarton-Fairport United
Church, 1066 Dunbarton Rd., Pickering. 7:30 p.m. One
block north of Hwy. 2, west
of Dixie Road. Everyone wel-come.
For more information, call toll free at 1-866-
495-4680
or e-
mail durham@autismontario.com.
HUNTINGTON SUPPORT/DISCUSSION GROUP. Whitby
Seniors’ Activity Centre. 801 Brock St. S. Whitby, 7 p.
m. Call 1-877-
246-8612 for more information.
WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL. 9 to 11 a.
m. East Shore Community Cen-tre.
Liverpool Road and Bayly Street.
Pickering. For more information, call Dianne Greaves
at 905-420-8025.
No experience
necessary, non-
competi-tive environment.
JANUARY 29 LE CERCLE FRANCOPHONE D’AJAX. Meets at
8 p.m. The club is
for women from Ajax, Pickering and
Whitby whose first language is
French. For more
information, call
905-839-0343.
JANUARY 30 PROGRESSIVE EUCHRE TOUR-NAMENT.
St. Francisof AssisiPar-ish H all, 214
K ing Ave., E ., Newcastle. 7 p.m. Admission
is $10.
The hall
is wheelchair accessible.FEBRUARY
3 OSHAWA/WHITBY OLD
TYME FIDDLE CLUB. Heydenshore Pavil-ion. Water Street.
Whitby. 6:30 p.m. Donation of $3
at the door. For more
information call
905-728-6646. FEBRUARY
6 2010 BRIDAL FAIR. McLaugh-
lin branch Auditorium, Oshawa Pub-lic Library,
65 Bagot St., Oshawa. 11 a.m. to 2 p.
m. Free registration at any
library branch. For more information, contact
www.oshawalibrary.on.ca
or call
905-579-
6111.FEBRUARY 7 CHRISTOPHER LEADERSHIP COURSE.
11-week course for those 16
and over to improve communica-
tion skills, build confidence, control
stage fright anddevelop leadership potential.
Classes run three hours per week.
St. Therese Church on Cour-tice Rd.
For information, or to reg-ister, call toll-
free 1-800-418-8925
or visit www.
CLCTorontoEast.com.FAMILY SNOWSHOE DAY. Spring
Creek Golf Course in Clare-mont. 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. Call 905-428-9370 to book
your trek. Hosted by
the Duffins Creek Health Centre.
Send your upcoming
events to newsroom@durhamregion.com. At least 14
days notice is required
for consideration of their inclusion. BRING IN
THIS AD AND
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durhamregion.
comNews
Advertiser • January
22, 201017
AP Mike
RutaEntertainment
Editor
mruta@durhamregion.com newsdurhamregion.comEntertainment THEATRE
Thriller comes to
Ajax stage
BY MIKE RUTA mruta@durhamregion.comAJAX -- Aknock
on the door sets in motion a
tale full
of intrigue, thrills and confusion.
Director Shari Thorne says Dan-
gerous Obsession, by playwright N. J.
Crisp, is generally considered his best. It’
s at the Ajax Community
Theatre Jan. 21 to 30. A man
arrives at the front door
of an apparently happily married
couple and suddenly their lives are
changed as they find them-selves at
the mercy of a dangerous-ly obsessed man,”
she says. “It’s a thriller so it’
s one of those thinker plays
where the audience will have todecide who
this man is
and what his motives are.”
Thorne says the work
revolves around three characters, the
wealthy Sally and Mark Driscoll
and the visitor, John Barrett.
The main themes are responsi-bility
and
the consequences of our
actions.It examineshuman emotions, the results
of choices we make,
how far reaching those consequences can be
and how they can irrevers-ibly
change so many other unsus-pecting
lives,” Thorne says. “It also
showcases how, when conflict is introduced
into a situation, one’s
true character comes to light.”
The Ajax resident says she jumped
at the chance” to
direct Dangerous Obsession when she was
approached to direct one of the plays
in ACT’s first season.I had read
the script a few years ago and
loved it so was thrilled to
have the opportunity to
finally direct it,” she says.A
theatre veteran, Thorne’s been acting since
she was a child and says over
the last four decades she
has taken many theatrical courses and
workshops. But for the most part, her work
has been as an actor on
stages in Durham, east Toronto and
Markham. She has won
two Association of Community
The-atres-Central Ontario, Theatre
Festival Gala Awards (THEAs), for Lead Female
in a Drama as Martha in Who’
s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Lead
Female in a Comedy as Charlotte
Hay in Moon Over
Buf-falo. Broadening her horizons, Thorne
discovered
a love of direct-ing.I love
to watch actors; I think
they’re brilliant,” she says.
Thorne says the Dangerous Obses-sion cast
is comprised
of three sea-soned actors. Ajax’s
Kate Arms-Roberts is Sally Driscoll.
An actor and director who moved
to Ajax three years ago, Thorne
says she has three decades of experience
in theatre in the San Francisco
Bay area and in other
parts of the U.S.
Whitby actors Bill Baker and Daniel
Wyse play John Barrett
and Mark Driscoll, respectively. Both
have performed in theatre, film and
television and often tread the boards
at Class Act Dinner Theatre in Whitby.
Wyse is a frequent per-
former at Pickering’sHerongateBarnTheatre
as well. SABRINA BYRNES / METROLAND AJAX -- Ajax Community Theatre presents Dangerous Obsession
at the Village Community Centre Theatre. Kate Arms-Roberts plays Sally Driscoll while Daniel Wyse is her
husband, Mark Driscoll. In the background is
Bill Baker
as John Barrett.LIVE
MUSIC Barenaked Ladies
to play General Motors
Centre
May 1 concert date announced
OSHAWA -- The ladies
are com-ing to
Oshawa.Barenaked Ladies will play an 8 p.m. show
on May 1 at the
General Motors Centre,
it was announced Thursday morning.
The alt/rock band, known for
its light-hearted antics, is
touring behind its ninth studio release, All
in Good Time, to be
released
in Canada on March 23.
Barenaked Ladies are Ed
Rob-ertson (vocals, guitar),
Kevin Hearn (vocals, keyboard,
accor-dion, guitar), Jim Creeggan
vocals, bass)
and Tyler Stewart drums, vocals).All in
Good Time is the
first album released since found-
ing member Steven Page, who handled the
lion’s share of the vocals,
left the
band roughly a year ago.
Popular singles from the
Juno-Award-winning band include
One Week, The Old Apartment, Pinch Me, If
I Had $1,
000,000 and Brian Wilson.Tickets go
on sale on Jan. 26 for
members of the new Ladies Room fan club
and on Jan.
29 for the general public. Tickets
are $50.50 plus appli-cable
fees. A three-course
din-ner package is
available.Tickets can be purchased
at the General Motors Cen-tre box
office, by calling 1-877-
436-8811, at www.generalmo-torscentre.
com or at the
United Way Information Services
kiosk in the Oshawa
Centre.Every online ticket order
includes one download of All In
Good Time, plus
an exclusive limited
bonus track. WWW.BARENAKEDLADIES.COM DURHAM -- Canada’s own
Barenaked Ladies, shown performing in Biloxi, Miss. last month, are coming
to Oshawa on
May 1.About the
event:DATE to January 30
ADDRESS 22 Sherwood Rd.
W.PHONE
289-892-
4132 EMAIL info@ajaxcommunityth
eatre.com
durhamregion.
comNews
Advertiser • January 22, 201018 AP PICKERING TOWN
CENTRE • UPPER
LEVEL •
SEARS
WING IT’S SALE
TIME!
We Have Your Size
ANTISTRESS
Friday
January
22, 2010 Ajax Pickering Locations
FlyersinToday’s Paper Ifyou did notreceiveyour
News Advertiser/fl yers OR you are interested in
a paper route call Circulation at 905-683-5117. Hours: Mon. - Fri. 9 - 6:
30 Sat. 9 - 1:00 Your Carrier will be
around to collect an optional delivery charge of $
6.00 every three
weeks.Carrierof The WeekRemember, all
inserts, including those onglossy paper, canberecycledwith
the rest of yournewspaper through
yourblue box Recycling program.
SAVE TIME, SAVE
MONEY ViewFlyers/Coupons At
Delivered to selected households only
Today’s carrier
of the week
is
Ryan. Ryan enjoys reading &
snowboarding. Ryan has
received a dinner voucher from
Boston Pizza as
well
as Subway and McDonalds.
Congratulations Ryan for being
ourCarrier of the
Week.8 SalemRd
South Ajax, ON L1S
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279 KingstonRd. E. Ajax 260KingstonRd.
E. Ajax (in Home Depot)1105 Kingston
Rd. Pickering (in Home Depot)255
Salem Rd. S. D#1
42 Old Kingston Rd., Ajax 465
Bayly St. W. #5,
Ajax1889Brock Rd., Pickering
300HarwoodAve. S., Ajax
6 Harwood Ave.
S., Ajax JASON LIEBREGTS /
METROLAND Jazzed to help others PICKERING -- Garret Horton, left, Kirk Brown and Allison
Murell were among a num-ber of jazz groups from Dunbarton High School entertaining in
a fundraiser for the Lu Xin orphanage in Cuba, held at Heights City Church
earlier this month. The event raised $5,300 and the class thanked everybody for
their support
and jazz teacher
Jennifer Galberg. BOOKS AND AUTHORS Wicked
winners announced by
Writers’ Circle
Ajax author Heather Tucker
impresses DURHAM -- A Toronto author took the
top prize but an Ajax writer
made a big impression as the
winners of a
writing contest were announced recently.
The Writers’ Circle of Durham
Region’s Wicked
Words prose competition attracted entries
from across Durham, Canada and the
world. Fiction and non-fiction submissions,
1,500 words or less,
were received until midnight last Halloween
and each had to stem from
the meanings of the
word wicked’. Ajax author Rabindra-
nath Maharaj judged the contest.
Dorothy Sjoholm, of Toronto, a
longtime member of the WCDR, took first
place for her story The Plan. She
won $500 and her work
will be published in Surfacing
magazine
and the Wicked Words anthology.Second
place and $250 went to Winnipeg’
s Mary Cundy for What It Can Do
To You, which will also
be published in the anthology and in
the WCDR’s Word Weaver.
Ajax writer Heather Tucker’s name
appears three times on the
list of recognized
authors. She received honourable mention
with distinction for Dirty Scrab-
ble and Animating Daisy
and
honourable mention for Beyond Ideas.Toronto
author Neil Naft, for On
the Corner, also received
honour-able mention with distinction.
Oshawa’s Kevin Craig (Rabach-eeko),
Pickering’s Fred Ford (The
Downfall of Little Johnny) and
Patrick Ladisa (The Only Loveless Face in
the Room) and Victoria’
s Garth Holder (Hampton Street under
God’s Antenna) also
made the honourable mention list.
All the writers who
received honourable mention will have their
work published in
the Wick-ed Words anthology.Plans
are already in the works to have
a
2010 themed prose con-test.To
learn more about the
durhamregion.comNews
Advertiser • January
22,
2010Call
today
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play in Oshawa BY MIKE RUTA mruta@durhamregion.
com OSHAWA -- As in the TV
show Seinfeld, not much of consequence happens in an
Anton Chekhov play. But where Seinfeld is full
of laughs and regarded as one of the
greatest sitcoms of our time, the
Rus-sian playwright’s work is full
of penetrating psychological insight and he is
considered among the theatre’s
very best writers.Chekhov, he kind of
writes plays about nothing, really, because
nothing really happens in his plays,” says Judith
Edmond-son, describing
his characters as “listless. Things happen to
them and they just seem
to drift along.”She is directing Chekhov’s Three
Sisters,
presented by Durham Shoestring Perform-ers at the Arts
Resource Centre, Jan. 22 to 30.
I consider it one of
the classics of the early 20th century,” says Edmondson,
who counts herself a Chekhov fan.Three Sisters
is about the lives of three sis-ters
and their brother, whose father died a year
ago when the play opens. Into their lives
comes the brother’s wife, who gradu-ally takesover
the household. Raised in the rare air
of Moscow,
the sisters areliving in a remote provincial town and
long to return to Moscow. They don’t do
anything to
make it a pos-sibility; they’re
sort of lost in the dream,” Edmondson
notes. The play’s themes include dreams
and desires, and what stops usfrom
pursuing them, and, a preoccupation in 19th cen-tury Russian
literature,
the question of how one is to live
a meaningful life that has
pur-pose. The sisters are played by
Oshawa’s Rais-sa Chernushenko (Olga), Tracy
Rankin, of Toronto (Masha), and Pickering’s
Holly Bunting (Irina). Kyle Robertson, of Ajax,
is their brother, Andrey, and his wife,
Natasha, is played by Dahlia
Rhoden, of Oshawa. Tickets are $12 and available
from the
United Way Information Services kiosk in the Oshawa
Centre or by e-mailing dsp@durhamshoestring.org.The
Arts
Resource Centre
is at 45 Queen St. (
near City Hall at King and Centre streets). LIVE
COMEDY Participate in a funny fundraiser AJAX -- Laugh it up at Yuk
Yuk’s Comedy Club in Ajax
on Jan. 28 from 6 to 10 p.
m. to support The Participation House in
Oshawa,
which for more than 30 years has helped
young people and adults with dis-abilities.Tickets
are $22.50 each and available at
www.phdurham.com. The club is at 235
Bayly St. W.
For more information, contact Sandra Aldcroft at 905-579-5267, ext. 240.
JASON LIEBREGTS / METROLAND OSHAWA -- Holly Bunting, left, Raissa Chernushenko
durhamregion.
comNews Advertiser • January 22,
201020 AP
Sports Brad
Kelly Sports
Editor bkelly@durhamregion.
com newsdurhamregion.com
Pickering resident productive
in wins over
Western, Guelph
BY SHAWN CAYLEY scayley@durhamregion.com OSHAWA --
Despite the absence of sever-al key players
due to injury and suspension, the UOIT
Ridgebacks are coming off per-
haps their best weekend ever.With
Derrick Bagshaw, Steve Spade, Jere-my Whalen and Josh
Vatri not in the lineup, the Ridgebacks
men’s hockey team shocked many with a 6-4
victory over Canada’s third-ranked
team, the Western Mustangs, and followed that up with
another victory, 3-2 in a
shootout over the Guelph Gryphons.The best part of it
all for head coach Mar-lin Muylaert wasn’t so
much the first win of the weekend, but
the way the
team followed up against Guelph.You know, I’ve got
to be honest, we’ve had some wins like
that before. We’ve beat Lakehead, we’ve
beat Waterloo and we’ve beat ranked
teams. We’ve never duplicat-ed it with another
solid effort after that,” he began. “There
has always been that emo-tional letdown.
That was my worry against Guelph. Finally, after
three
years, that didn’t happen.”Mike Noyes
potted the game winner, scor-ing in the fifth
round of the shootout. Regu-lation goals came
from Vatri and Pickering’s Kyle
Wetering, with Noyes drawing assists on both, while Whitby’
s
Jason Guy made 23 saves.A night earlier,
on the road and missing the
aforementioned four regulars, Jeff Daw-son made 29
saves and UOIT received goals from
Dustin Turner, Tony Rizzi, Nathan Spaling, Oshawa’s
Brent Varty and two from Wetering
in shocking the Mustangs, which have now only lost
three times
in 20 games this season.Good people
respond to adversity in the best way,” Muylaert
said of his team. “The guys
found that strength within themselves to put forth
their best performance on the ice
and steal us a win.”At 8-11-1 and sitting in
a three-way tie for seventh
in the conference standings, Muy-laert’s crew is going
to have to make their playoff push without
three of the four that missed
the Western game. Vatri returned Saturday
following a one-game suspension,
however, Bagshaw, the Oshawa resident and team
captain, Spade and Whalen, of Pickering, are
slated to miss the remainder of
the season due to injury.Bagshaw is
recovering from a severe cut to his hand suffered
when he fell at home. He needed some
30 stitches to close the wound,
and is apparently suffering some
nerve damage, according to Muylaert. Spade,
meanwhile, will undergo surgery in the next week or so
to repair a torn anterior cruciate ligament
in his knee, while Whalen is
out with
a dislocated shoulder.
UNIVERSITY HOCKEY Wetering leads
Ridgebacks PHOTO BY IAN GOODALL OSHAWA -- Pickering’s Kyle Wetering helped lead the
UOIT Ridgebacks’ men’s hockey team to a pair of weekend
wins
over Western
and Guelph.
BASKETBALL Pascal
receives basketball honour MASSACHUSETTS -- Sophomore forward
Rhea Pascal, of Pickering, was namedto
the Northeast-10 women’s basketball
weeklyhonour toll after aver-aging16.5
points and seven rebounds in two games
last weekwith the
American International College Yellow Jackets.Pascal
posteda double-doublewith17 points
and 10 boards against Bentley, and netted
16 points with four boards at UMass Lowell.
She is averaging 9.4 points and 6.
1 rebounds per game this season and
has averaged 12.2 points and 6.2
rebounds the last five games.
The Notre Dame Catholic Second-ary School
graduate played in all 34 games off the
bench for the Yellow Jack-ets last
season, averaging 3.3 points and
5.1 rebounds per game.
She
is a communications
major.HOCKEY
Ajax
Minor Hockey accepting coaching applications AJAX --
TheAjax MinorHockeyAsso-ciation
is taking applications for coaching positions for the
rep teamsfrom Mites to Juveniles
for the 2010-11 season.If you are
looking to give back to your community and to
the 1,500 or so children who
play minor hockey, you can fill out
anapplication, available on the association’
swebsite
at www.ajaxmi-norhockey.
org.Requirements for coaching posi-tions are noted
on the application and a police check will
also be
required if you are accepted.
Deadline for applications is mid-night, Feb. 7,
and can be mailed or dropped off at
the hockey office to the attention
of the director
of coaching.MAJOR SERIES LACROSSE Ajax-Pickering Rock
selects 12 in
expansion draft Major
Series Lacrosse team
taking shape
BY BRAD KELLY bkelly@durhamregion.com AJAX -- The
Ajax-Pickering Rock have some names and
faces for
their Major Series Lacrosse team.The league held
its expansion draft at the beginning of this week
and the league’s new-est entry, the
Rock, plucked 12 players from the other
six teams in the league.We’re quite excited
by the players we were able to draft,” said
Rock GM Paul St. John. There is
some good talent in there.”The
Rock selected Jordan Coffey, from Brampton, first
overall. Coffey was a late cut of the Buffalo Bandits
of the NLL, and is described by St. John
as a “terrific kid who has a great attitude and is
a hard worker. He’sa guy coaches love
to have on their team.”The Rock
selected
two playersfrom each team.It’s exciting,” saidSt.
John of building a ros-ter. “You always
wonder what you are going to get in an expansion
draft. Out of 12 play-ers, if we have all 12
play, it would be unbe-lievable. If we were able to
get at least half of those guys in a
Rock uniform and they can produce for us, we’re going
to be a little bit more successful
than the other
teams are going to realize.”The next phase
to joining the league comes Sunday, when a
couple of more drafts are planned. There will
be a dispersal draft of players from the
St. Regis tea, which has ceased operations.
St. John said that how those players will be
drafted and the order in which teams will
pick is still undecided. The other draft will be
the
junior draft of overage players.St. John also
hinted that a blockbuster deal is in the
works with the Brooklin Redmen. He expects that trade
to be finalized
prior to Sunday’s drafts.
EXPANSION DRAFT -- The following players were selected by the
Ajax-Pickering Rock in the
Major Series Lacrosse expansion draft:
Barrie -- Neil Mayerhofer, Glenn Clark
Brampton -- JordanCoffey, Sean Holmes
Brooklin -- Jason Mainer, Jon Niziol
Kitchener -- Mike Flemming, Alan Downey
Peterborough -- Alex Henderson, Jason Clark Six
durhamregion.
comNews
Advertiser • January22,
201021 AP
AJAX/PICKERINGSUMMERMINORHOCKEY LEAGUEA J
A X
C
OMMUNITY CENTRE Boys &
Girls Welcome
Ages 4-18
years
old Final In-Person Registration...
Ajax Community Centre
Rink #4 Saturday, January 23rd at 9:30
am to 11:00 am For more
information visit www.ajaxpickeringsummerhockey.com or call 905-649-
6803 • Games start May 19th
Non-Contact,
Once a week Weeknights Only For House
League and “AE” Level Players
Ages 4-18 years
old May to
August Season
12 Week Schedule
Primetime
Games
weeknight games only)Jerseys Awards Find
your
NEW
home
in our OPEN
HOUSE SECTION 905.683.5110 OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING, SO OPEN THE DOOR TO THESE
BEAUTIFUL AREA HOMES THIS WEEKEND! Marilyn Brophy 905.683.
5110 ext.233 • mbrophy@durhamregion.com Barb Buchan 905.683.
5110 ext. 292 • bbuchan@durhamregion.com Featured
in today’s News
Advertiser Ajax-
Pickering Lacrosse Registration 2010 Registration!Saturday, January 30th
and Sunday, January 31st, 2010 9:00
am to 2:00 pm
Don Beer Arena – Main
Lobby 940 Dillingham Rd., Pickering Never played? Enhance your hockey skills! Develop your co-ordination and
speed! Make life long friends!Visit us on-line at: www.westdurhamlacrosse.com - Contact us
at: 905-
999-ROCK (7625)NEW PLAYERS Please bring
a copy of your
Birth Certifi
cate to Registration. ALL PLAYERS A Parent or
Guardian must be
present tosign registration card.Register for Tryouts onRepresentative Teams During Registration
for House League and Field.Instructional Practice plus Games – Players are taught the skills, rules
andstrategies of BoxLacrosse at the House League level, and thenhave an opportunityto further developthose
skills at the Rep level.Player
age groups are as follows:as of December
31st in year of play)Peanut ............ 4, 5 & 6
year olds .......................2004 to 2006 Tyke ................ 7-8
year olds ..............................2002 to 2003 Novice ............. 9-10
year olds ............................2000 to 2001 Pee-Wee ......... 11-12
year olds ..........................1998 to 1999 Bantam ........... 13-14
year olds ..........................1996 to 1997 Midget ............. 15-16
year olds ..........................1994 to 1995 Intermediate ... 17-21
year olds ..........................1989 to 1993 130–Peanut; $
165–Tyke &
Up; $120–Field. AGE
GROUPS Finals
Feb. 3-6
in Gananoque BY JIM EASSON On
Jan. 10, at
the OCA bantam zone
playdown, the Annandale team
of Ben Bevan, Carter
Adair, Jake McGhee
and Corey Gaudette,
with Jennifer McGhee coaching, won
the A side. They advanced
to the Weston Golf and
Country Club, Jan. 16-17, and
also won the A
side of the bantam regional.
The team now heads
to the provincial final, which goes Feb.
3-6 at
the Ganan-oque
Curling Club.The annual
Robbie Burns Funspiel runs
again at Annandale on Satur-day, Jan.
23. It is almost full
with 30 teams entered.
The bonspiel consists of two
6-endgames, dinner and
dance. A bagpiper will lead all
the players onto the ice and
there are prizes for all.A
little bit about the his-
tory of Annandale Golf
and Country Club. The
club was completed in 1964 and
we are told about
500 guests attended the formal opening.
It is not known
if there were fully organized
curling leagues that year or
not. However, on an inside
wall are the photos, mine
included, of all the presi-dent’
s. The oldest is photo is
that of Peter Decker,
who was recognized for
the 1965-1966 curling season.
There will be an
annu-al curling general
meet-ing on Wednesday, Feb. 3,
and the new club
own-ers representing Bruce’
s Golf Rewards are expect-ed
to attend. Bruce’s
Golf Rewards now
owns and operates Annandale
Golf and Curling
Club. The organization
also owns Lakeridge Links,
Whisper-ing Ridge,
Pickering, Eldo-rado, Winchester,
River-
side and Stonehenge golf clubs. In
the TCA Men’s
Gold-line curling bonspiel which ran
Jan. 9-16, the Annan-
dale entry of Wil
MacFa-dyen, Dale Patterson, Jim
Barrett and John Mills won
the main event senior con-
solation final held Jan. 16
at the
Thornhill Golf and
Country Club.The Dominion
senior men’s Ontario champi-
onship is being held Jan. 19-
24, at the Orillia
Curl-ing Club. Ajax
resident Bob Turcotte,
playing out of Scarborough
Country Club, will compete. Tur-
cotte has won the provin-
cial many times and won
the Canadian senior
men’s championship three times,
in 1996, 1997
and 2000.Team
Howard, with Pickering resident Rich-ard
Hart at vice, and the
front end of Brent
Laing and Craig Savill, competed
in the Curling Skins Game at
Casino Rama on Jan. 16. They
won $7,000, but did not
win enough to go to
the final. Their next chal-
lenge is the BDO
Classic Canadian Open
in Winni-peg, Manitoba. Scheduled to
take place in the MTS Centre
from Jan. 20-24,
the event is an
international 18-team tournament fea-turing
the world’
s
top curl-ing
teams.COLUMN Annandale
Bantam team qualifies
for provincials GUELPH -- The
Durham West Novice B Lightning
brought home a medal after
reaching the finals
in
the Guelph Thunder Tourna-
ment.The Lightning won their opener
3-1 over
the Oakville Hornets. Mackenna
Chokelal scored, with other
mark-ers by Mackenzie
Simpson, assisted by Jordan
Haywood and Megan
McFadden, and Claire Michalicka, assisted
by
Jordynn Hall and Sydney
Wilson.The Lightning then
bat-tled the hometown
Guelph Thunderand came away with a 0-
0 tie. The third game
saw the Lightning take
on the Kitchener Lady
Rang-ers. Despite dominating the play,
the Lightning lost 2-1.
The lone Lightning goal
was scored by Sydney
Wilson, assisted by Mackenzie Simp-
son. The Lightning took on
the Lady Rangers once again in
the final but wereunable to scoreresulting
in a 1-0 loss
and a silver-medal
finish. Another strong effort
was seen by Lightning
goal-tender, Katie Gibson, who
recorded her
sixth shutout of
the season.DURHAM WEST LIGHTNING Second
medal for
Novice B team SUBMITTED PHOTO GUELPH -- It was a silver
medal for the Durham West Novice B Lightning
at a Guelph tournament. Team members include, front
row, from left: Katie Gibson; second row: Jordynn
Hall, Lauren Miller, Ciera Donnelly, Sara Rawji,
Jordan Haywood; third row: Lindsay Hargreaves,
Makenna Chokelal, Anna Spiro, Mackenzie Simpson,
Megan McFadden, Claire Michalicka, Kaitlyn Bain, Sydney Wilson,
Bryana Lennox; back row: John Haywood (head
coach), Nick Spiro (assistant coach), Andrew Miller (assistant
coach), Liz Hall (trainer), Brent Wilson (assistant coach).
The team is managed by Michelle Gibson,