HomeMy WebLinkAboutNA2011_01_19 KRISTEN CALIS
kcalis@durhamregion.com
PICKERING -- Inspector Jamie Grant still
enjoys getting up for work every morning, even
after decades on the job.
The Durham Regional Police veteran has
worked his way up the ranks and just complet-
ed 30 years of service. He started as an officer
in Pickering after completing police college in
1981 and has since done everything from work-
ing as a plainclothes officer to investigating
fraud, robbery and Internet crimes in Durham.
New police inspector in Pickering
JAMIE GRANT NOW OVERSEEING DRP’S WEST DIVISION
SABRINA BYRNES / METROLAND
PICKERING -- Durham Regional Police Inspector Jamie Grant, has taken over for Inspector Steven Ross. Insp. Grant will oversee 19 (West)
Division. He’ll guide the operations of the division and develop strategies to ensure safe communities in Ajax and Pickering.
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Wednesday, January 19, 2011
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NEWS 2
Abilities
Centre
Opening nears
for regional facility
SMOKING 10
Butting out
Quitters succeed
despite roadblocks
SPECIAL SECTION 13
Saluting
excellence
Ontario Scholars
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durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 20112
AP
www.audiologyservices.ca
WHITBY HEARING CENTRE
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Renée Giroux recently graduated with a Masters of Science in Audiology from the
University of Ottawa, receiving the Dean’s Bursary, Faculty of Superior and Post
Doctoral Studies. Renée received her B.Sc., with Distinction, in Psychology and French
Linguistics from the University of Toronto in 2008. She also won The Canadian Acousti-
cal Association, Hétu Undergraduate Student Prize in Acoustics in 2008.
Renée is fl uently bilingual having done her high school studies at
Ecole Saint Charles Garnier in Whitby.
Renée is the daughter of Guy Giroux and Lila O’Neill of Whitby. She resides in
Oshawa with her close friend and partner Nilton Sousa, a GoodLife Fitness manager.
Renée has joined her parents, Lila O’Neill (Audiologist) and Guy Giroux (Hearing
Instrument Dispenser) to help the Hearing Impaired at the Whitby Hearing Centre in
Whitby, the Bayly Audiology Services in Ajax, and the Ajax-Pickering Audiology Clinic in
Pickering; the fi rst Audiology Clinics in Durham to dispense Hearing Aids. Family-owned
clinics, Renée will also be working closely with her twin sister, Brigitte Giroux, (close
friend and partner Tom Stefanski, Durham Regional Police). Brigitte is also trained in the
fi eld, having graduated with Honours and was awarded one of the highest awards, the
Dean’s Medal from George Brown College.
Congratulations Renée!
Rotary Club of Ajax Recollections
The Rotary Club of Ajax will be celebrating its 60th
Anniversary on Thursday, March 17, 2011. The club,
in conjunction with the News Advertiser will be
publishing a special anniversary publication to promote
this milestone and is requesting input from the public.
If you have any stories or photographs relating to the Rotary Club of Ajax
over its 60 year history they’d like to read and see them. Your recollections
could include memories of Rotary sponsored trips, the Rotary Music
Festival or good times at Rotary Hall and in Rotary Park, Ajax. Any
mementoes would be appreciated too.
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and contact info to: Rene Soetens at: rene@con-test.com
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REGION
First truss on facility’s
signature roof installed
PARVANEH PESSIAN
ppessian@durhamregion.com
WHITBY -- For years, Melanie Barnett has
relied on architectural sketches and her
imagination to envision what the Abilities
Centre in Whitby will one day look like.
But there’s nothing like watching the actu-
al structure come to life.
“I want to see what the design is and what
it’ll be like when it’s built because I’ve only
seen it from the drawings on the website,”
said Ms. Barnett, who joined members of the
Abilities Centre board on Jan. 14 to watch as
the first truss on the building’s signature roof
was installed.
A member of the Adult Social Club, a pro-
gram that offers recreational activities for
adults with special needs, Ms. Barnett said
she can’t wait until the construction is com-
pleted.
“I want to get a job there as an office
administrator and also volunteer for the
(2015 Parapan American Games), so I’m just
waiting for it to open.”
The world-class, barrier-free facility --
being built on the grounds of Iroquois Park
Sports Centre at 500 Victoria St. W. -- will be
topped by a signature roof, anchored by nine
field house steel trusses. It is scheduled to
open by the end of the year or early 2012 at
the latest.
“Not only is it exciting to see the signature
roof start to form but we’re also now on a
year countdown to the opening,” said Debo-
rah Bright, president and CEO of the Abili-
ties Centre, adding that the board of direc-
tors is currently consulting with community
organizations to develop programming.
“From a programming perspective, we’re
still in the assessment phase to see what is
currently out there, what we really need to
offer and how we can best use our facility.”
The structure has been designed to house
innovative recreational, athletic and per-
forming arts services, which will be fully
accessible to people with varying degrees of
abilities and challenges.
“It’s exciting to be able to switch from more
of a focus on getting the construction started
to what the operations side is going to look
like and getting to know the programs that
are going to be of the greatest benefit to peo-
ple in the community,” says Whitby-Oshawa
MPP Christine Elliott, co-founder and direc-
tor of the Abilities Centre.
“That part is equally exciting because real-
ly, the sky is the limit. That’s the beauty of
the Abilities Centre -- it can be anything that
people want it to be.”
Countdown begins for Abilities Centre opening
WHITBY -- The Abilities Centre, a barrier-free facility being built in Whitby, will be
topped by a signature roof anchored by nine field house steel trusses. The first of
these trusses was installed Jan. 14.
SABRINA BYRNES / METROLAND
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 20113
AP
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ACCIDENT
Durham boy recalls terror as friend dangled from ski lift
Young skier recovering
after Friday tumble at
resort north of Pickering
LIEM VU
newsroom@durhamregion.com
WHITBY -- Josh Brown’s eyes welled up as
he recalled desperately clinging onto his
friend who dangled 10 metres above the
ground at an Uxbridge ski resort -- and the
shock when he slipped from his grasp.
“It was the longest five minutes of my
life,” said Josh, 13, sitting outside his friend
Kyle Armstrong’s room at Sick Kids hos-
pital on Sunday, where the boy is being
treated for seven fractured vertebrae, two
broken ribs and a punctured lung.
Kyle plunged onto the snowy hill of Lak-
eridge Ski Resort around 6:15 p.m. Fri-
day, after slipping under a safety bar of
an ascending ski lift. The two Whitby boys
insist that a ski pole was the cause.
Passengers from a chairlift behind the
teens noticed Kyle hanging and shouted
for the ski lift to stop. Josh said he held on
to his friend for five minutes before the
chair jolted to a stop and he lost his grip.
While some are hailing Josh as a “young
hero,” others are raising questions about
why two adults riding in the same chair
didn’t offer help.
“I’m talking to them saying, ‘Please help
me,’ and they’re just like, ‘You gotta pull
yourself up, bud,’ “ said Josh.
Witnesses told staff at the ski resort that
the two men were seen skiing away after
the fall.
An internal investigation is underway
at the resort and the Technical Standards
and Safety Authority, a body that regulates
mechanical ski lifts, among other things, is
expected to arrive sometime this week.
“It’s very sickening is what it is when
you have the other boy in the chair asking
for help and them not helping,” said Lak-
eridge director of operations John Tustian.
“It makes the incident in my opinion just
that much worse. It’s just terrible.”
Since the two men were bundled up in
snow gear, Tustian said it is unlikely that
they will be able to track them down.
“I would love to find those people and
find their story but, unfortunately, if they
didn’t want to help then, they certainly
won’t want to answer any questions.”
The safety bar of the ski lift does not usu-
ally lock up and Tustian insists that the
two men, who were sitting on the opposite
side of the chair, could have safely helped
Josh physically, or at the very least, called
for help.
On Sunday afternoon, Kyle’s parents
expressed outrage over reports that the
men sat idly by as their son fell.
“You sort of wonder why? There must
have been an extenuating reason why they
wouldn’t have helped. It’s hard to believe
that they would be healthy human beings
and not reach out,” said Kyle’s stepmother
Ann.
For now, the family is focused on Kyle’s
recovery, his father Shawn added.
“Actually, his spirits are pretty good,”
Kyle’s mom, Koreen Armstrong, said Tues-
day morning.
“He’ll eventually be OK, but it will take
about six months for him to get back to
normal.”
Kyle, who enjoys hockey, skiing and
swimming, has been heartened by mes-
sages from his Grade 8 classmates at Col-
onel J.E. Farewell Public School, Ms. Arm-
strong said.
Kyle, who is unable to move his upper
torso, but is expected to make a full recov-
ery, dizzyingly recalled the event.
“I remember falling. I remember the
ambulance ride to the hospital. I just want-
ed to sit up because my spine and my back
were killing me, but the nurse said I wasn’t
allowed. I was in huge pain.”
Josh said his friend’s near-death experi-
ence hit close to home because his grand-
mother had died a week earlier.
“I would never let go. Life or death situa-
tion, friends and family come first.”
Ski patrol members at the resort have
hailed Josh as a hero. But Josh brushes off
the praise, saying he wishes he could have
held on longer and prevented his friend
from falling.
However, his father Kent Brown insists
otherwise. “I think he did everything he
could and showed some spirit to hang
onto his buddy. I think he did what he had
to do and if that’s being a hero then sure,
my son was a hero.”
-- With files by Jeff Mitchell
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 20114
AP
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Service looks
to better reflect
ever-changing region
JEFF MITCHELL
jmitchell@durhamregion.com
DURHAM -- In an effort to determine
how they’re perceived by the commu-
nity they serve, Durham Regional Police
are currently taking a close, critical look
at themselves.
The intensive evaluation is critical to
the formation of a diversity strategic
plan, a document that will guide the ser-
vice as it meets the challenge of policing
a rapidly growing and changing com-
munity, said Constable Keith Richards.
“You have to know where you are to
know where you’re going,” said Const.
Richards, DRP’s diversity co-ordinator.
“Our demographics are changing and
we’re trying to keep pace with that.”
The service has hired an outside firm
to conduct research, which includes an
internal survey of DRP’s 1,200-plus uni-
form and civilian employees, as well as
public consultation. The consultant’s
findings will form the basis of the strat-
egy.
Const. Richard expects recommenda-
tions on staffing and training for mem-
bers that will help officers both reflect
and understand Durham Region, a con-
tinually evolving community that is now
home to citizens from all across the
globe.
“To police a community well, you have
to understand it,” he said. “We live by
that.”
Const. Richards said the current exer-
cise is a bold move by DRP adminis-
tration: any large-scale organization-
al review will inevitably expose flaws,
he said. Not every
organization has the
stomach for that sort
of analysis.
But it’s neces-
sary, he stressed.
DRP wants to know
how the commu-
nity perceives the
force, because trust
between the police
and the community
they protect is essen-
tial.
“We receive
that feedback from the public,” Const.
Richards said. “They feel more comfort-
able dealing with a service that reflects
them. The perception can be, ‘They
don’t understand me because they don’t
look like me’.
“We want to make sure we’re posi-
tioned well to meet those needs.”
In addition to more diversity among
the ranks of Durham’s cops, Const. Rich-
ards hopes to foster cultural sensitivity.
And there’s a crime-fighting aspect to
the exercise, he said: positive exchanges
with officers can go a long way toward
establishing bonds between police and
the community.
“You know what? I think we’ll do it,”
Const. Richards said. “The question is
how long it will take to affect organiza-
tional change.”
Const. Richards can be reached at 905-
579-1520, extension 4412.
POLICING
Durham cops look inward to plot diversity strategy
CONST. KEITH
RICHARDS
Join the conversationJoin the conversation
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durhamregion.com
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 20115
AP
Durham real estate
expected to stay
strong despite narrower
repayment window
CRYSTAL CRIMI
ccrimi@durhamregion.com
DURHAM -- Homebuyers will have less
time to pay off their mortgages, due to bor-
rowing changes just announced by Cana-
da’s finance minister.
Shorter amortization periods and more
restrictions on home equity loans are some
of the consumer debt-prevention measures
announced Jan. 17 by Whitby-Oshawa MP
Jim Flaherty, Canada’s minister of finance.
As of March 18, the changes, which are not
retroactive, restrict the maximum mort-
gage repayment period to 30 years from 35
years for new government-backed insured
mortgages with loan-to-value ratios of
more than 80 per cent.
“We are seeing people borrow to the
max,” Mr. Flaherty said.
There is a concern about what will hap-
pen when interest rates increase, he
added.
The country’s well-regulated housing
sector has helped protect it from the worst
of the recent global recession, Mr. Flaherty
said, and the measures announced build
on that advantage by encouraging Canadi-
ans to save by investing in their homes and
futures.
Currently, some homebuyers, especially
first timers, will stretch the amortization
period out over as many years as possible
to help reduce their monthly payment, said
Dierdre Mullen, president of the Durham
Region Association of Realtors.
“I think the impact (on real estate) will
be modest,” Mr. Flaherty said, and added
changing amortization from 35 years to 30
isn’t drastic.
“That may mean some people will buy
modestly cheaper houses,” he said, adding
that’s probably a good thing.
Although the change may cause people
to pause and reflect, Ms. Mullen predicts
they’ll continue to buy.
“I think people will still be able to afford
homes,” she said.
Even with the higher amortization rate,
those previously applying had to qualify for
a mortgage based on a higher interest rate
even though what they often received was
a lower rate, so that built-in protection is
already there, Ms. Mullen said.
When it comes to first-time homeowners
especially, Ms. Mullen, and, she suspects,
many other agents talk to a client about
exploring 25-year amortizations and mak-
ing more payments on a mortgage.
“Overall, I think it’s good news for Cana-
da,” she said of the change.
In the long run, the change helps ensure
a stable housing market for Canada, Mr.
Flaherty said.
“When I look at Durham Region, we still
have very good new home construction,”
he added, and said the same of the region’s
resale market.
Along with changing the amortization
period, Ottawa lowered the maximum
amount Canadians can borrow in refi-
nancing mortgages to 85 per cent from 90
per cent of the value of their home, effec-
tive April 19.
“This will prevent Canadians from tak-
ing on excessive debt,” Mr. Flaherty said
at a news conference, and added that in
some cases, people are remortgaging their
homes to buy items such as boats.
He also withdrew government insurance
(Canada Housing and Mortgage Corpora-
tion) backing on lines of credit secured by
homes, such as home equity lines of cred-
it, to ensure risks associated with consum-
er debt unrelated to house purchases are
managed by the financial institutions and
not borne by taxpayers.
-with files from Torstar news services
Page 6 - Today’s editorial
Durham
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BUSINESS
Finance minister
Flaherty announces
mortgage changes
We are seeing people borrow to the max.
Federal finance minister Jim
Flaherty
JIM FLAHERTY
FOLLOW OUR TWITTER FEED AT NEWSDURHAM
COMMUTING
Nowhere to go at
Ajax GO station
To the editor:
This letter is in regards to the current sit-
uation surrounding the GO station. I am
unsure who came up with this plan, but
they block off entrances that people use on
a daily basis to have every car enter at the
same place.
I have never heard of an engineer or com-
pany that would set something up to fun-
nel thousands of cars into one entrance/
exit.
I would like to get my hands on the peo-
ple who came up with this idea; it is going
to make that area a complete zoo.
I am glad I go south on Westney, as the
poor people going north have to deal with
even more traffic trying to get out at the
lights.
Someone please give your head a shake;
those who made the plan must have done
the research on traffic flow during off hours
and definitely not during rush hour.
Tom Lucas
Ajax
HISTORIC BUILDINGS
Governments must
lead by example
To the editor:
Re: ‘Pickering hopes to save local heri-
tage’, news, newsdurhamregion.com, Jan. 8,
2011.
It’s wrong for older buildings to be
neglected to the point of demolition. We
don’t have all that many truly old buildings
around anymore, but there are other argu-
ments beyond mere historic preservation.
All of our buildings and their materials
are taken from the natural world.
The once-natural resources have ener-
gy added to them in the building process-
es. While these older buildings that may
be lost to an airport that may not be built
won’t have as much embodied energy as
many newer ones, we still have to start
conservation somewhere.
Our governments should lead by exam-
ple, and a positive one.
We have reached a very critical 390 parts
per million of carbon dioxide in our atmo-
sphere -- not only should we be drasti-
cally curtailing flying, but we need to take
advantage of as many opportunities as
possible to get these CO2 levels back down
towards 350 parts per million.
Hamish Wilson
Toronto
AIRPORT LANDS
‘Bulldozer by stealth’
in north Pickering
To the editor:
In Toronto they’re calling the fiery
destruction of a heritage building ‘architec-
tural murder’ and ‘demolition by neglect’.
In Pickering, it’s been called ‘bulldozer
by stealth’. In Toronto, one writer, trying to
find the real culprit in a blaze that robbed
the city of one of its most impressive and
loved heritage structures, commented that
it is the landlord who holds the ultimate
card.
Property rights, he argues, trump heritage
niceties. The difference in north Pickering
is that we own the heritage buildings in
question. The landlord is the federal gov-
ernment. With no developer or owner to
negotiate with, there is no excuse.
It’s time for Transport Canada to show
respect for what is left of the significant
heritage structures of north Pickering after
so many decades of bulldozers, neglect
and arson.
Let this recent destruction in Toronto be
a lesson to us all.
Shame on Transport Canada for not foot-
ing the bill for the research and restoration
of these buildings. After all these decades,
they owe us.
Sheets of plywood in windows is not ‘res-
toration’ or ‘protection’.
Mary Delaney
Brougham
&
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Editorial
Opinions
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 20116
AP
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Tightened mortgage, credit rules timely and necessary
Ottawa’s clampdown on mortgage reg-
ulations and moves to reduce access to
home equity lines of credit this week are
necessary medicine for Canadians as we
continue to emerge from the Great Reces-
sion.
Canadians piled on the household debt
in the wake of the economic collapse in
2008, spurred on by a robust banking sec-
tor that escaped much of the chaos seen
in financial sectors around the world. The
absence of high-profile bank bailouts, a
relatively smooth economic ride through
the worst days of the global crisis, and
low-interest monetary policy kept cred-
it available to Canadians and they took
unprecedented advantage of it.
But a growing fear among federal gov-
ernment and Bank of Canada officials that
the trend would lead to a bubble -- of the
sort that inevitably pop -- forced the fed-
eral Conservatives to act and help rein in
spending.
To that end, Federal Finance Minister
and Whitby-Oshawa MP Jim Flaherty, in
consultation with the country’s leading
economic experts, has managed to tread
a fine line between tightening credit too
much -- which risks a reduction in eco-
nomic activity and GDP growth -- and
implementing necessary limits on spend-
ing as they relate to property mortgages
and home equity lines of credit.
In the simplest terms, the timing is right
and the decision is prudent.
Throughout the Great Recession, Can-
ada’s banking system and economy fared
exceptionally well in comparison to other
nations. Its financial sector has since been
held up globally as an example of a dura-
ble and robust system that other nations
must implement to avoid Great Recession
II. In that context, it would be a travesty
if Canadians ignored the lessons of the
U.S. and other nations, even as they con-
tinue to see property foreclosures stack
up because of too many years of access to
easy money.
The federal government must be cred-
ited for using the levers it has at its dis-
posal to curb excessive spending and turn
the tide of growing household debt. Now,
Canadians must choose a fine line to walk
and start balancing the twin imperatives
of servicing debt and consumption.
The feds have done their part to encour-
age better fiscal management here at
home. Canadians must take heed, take
stock and practise a greater level of fiscal
prudence.
-- Metroland Durham
Region Media Group
Nothing turns me into a petulant six
year old faster than a tech issue.
I recently purchased some computing
hardware built by a company named after
a fruit. All was going quite well for the first
little while. I was enjoying my new asset
and smugly basking in the technological
savvy I’d displayed by acquiring it. But
then, the fruit people did something that
they do quite often. Something I should,
by now, be not only used to, but acutely
wary of ... they offered a ‘software update’.
Software updates always make me feel
like Jack from Jack and the Beanstalk. I
have this great cow that is working just
fine, it gives loads of milk and never
crashes. But then along comes Mr. Fruit
with his magic beans software update. I
have only to trade him the old for the new
and my life will be infinitely better.
And the truth is, I’m a sucker. I go for
it every time. I kiss off the cow that was
functioning perfectly and wind up with
a giant of a glitch making my life a night-
mare. Welcome to Hell version 2.0.1.
My wife, astonishingly, is immune to
this stuff. She’s still using fruit software
that is, in the light-speed of computer car-
bon-dating, about 5,000 years old. Her
very logical dictum of ‘If it ain’t broke ...
don’t fix it’ has kept her well out of my
many digital disasters. Whenever Mr.
Fruit comes knocking, dangling his latest
and most tantalizing promises of comput-
ing perfection ... she smiles and happily
deletes his lying ass.
Not me. I wind up waist-deep in online
discussion forums, patches and fixes. All
of which are generally about as effective
as spreading calamine on small pox. I’m
pathetic. What is worse, in my desperate
search for a solution, I display no more
intelligence than when I was swapping for
the beans in the first place.
At the height of my idiocy in this last go-
round, I found myself doing that thing.
You know that thing you do when nothing
else is working? You unplug the gadget,
wait 30 seconds and then plug it back it in.
Hoping that in the intervening time inter-
val a miracle will have occurred. What
kind of hocus-pocus is that? You may as
well run about the house with it squeezed
between your thighs for 30 seconds, for all
of the technical sense it makes. But I did it.
I literally found myself holding the cursed
thing and mentally counting ‘One thou-
sand and one, one thousand and two ...’ ,
all the while ignoring the mocking voice
of common sense in the back of my head
shouting ‘Why don’t you sacrifice a goat?
Or burn some sweetgrass. You haven’t
tried those yet.’
But I do it. I do it because it worked ...
once.
There is, of course, always an upside
to such frenzied, apocalyptic episodes.
When it seemed like all was lost and I
had vowed never again to swap the cow
for beans ... at least until the next time
... I reached for my old friend, the book.
A book is a marvel of reliable, low-tech,
functionality. My books always give me
what I need, when I need it. Even when
the power goes out, the book is there. It
never needs to be re-booted and the first
edition is the final and best edition. I can’t
even imagine getting an e-mail from John
Irving or Stephen King offering me a swap
of the old book for a newer, better ver-
sion of their latest bestseller. Now, that’s
a book the fruit people could well take a
page out of.
-- Durham resident Neil Crone, actor-comic-writer,
saves some of his best lines for his columns.
7
P
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 2011In the chilly depths of January, where do your thoughts take you?
HEATHER FLETCHER -- ‘The Caribbean, where it is warm.’
TOM ELLIOTT -- ‘Some place warm, like home.’
JANE STAVRO -- ‘A beach, a cot, a novel and the sun.’
MARIA GEMMINK -- ‘A ski hill because of the fresh air and snow.’
WE ASKED... ...AT THE PICKERING RECREATION COMPLEX
RYAN PFEIFFER/
BEHIND THE LENS
Trading the cow for magic beans wakes the giant
Some delays on
criminal checks
can’t be avoided
To the editor:
Regarding criminal background checks
taking a long time by Durham Regional
Police and a reader’s comment about the
quick turnaround time by the Ontario Pro-
vincial Police in days gone by.
I offer an unbiased viewpoint, having
served 30 years with the OPP plus being the
former chief of police in Kingston, Ontario,
1995-2008.
It is true that some police services, under
ideal circumstances, can do a criminal
check while a person waits but such is
often not the case.
In Kingston, approximately 32 per cent
of the checks were done while the person
waited but I know the wait time is often out
of the control of the respective police ser-
vice.
Time delays are caused when the request-
ing citizen has lived outside of Durham
over the past few years and it is necessary
to go to other police agencies looking for
information.
I suspect some police services may give
a priority response to their local residents
rather than a request coming from out of
town.
When it is necessary to fingerprint the
person, it may take several weeks for the
local police to print the citizen and then
the prints must be sent to the RCMP who
may sometimes take six weeks to respond
back.
Finally, larger municipalities such as
Durham, Ottawa, and Toronto have a larg-
er volume than Kingston would and we
can only hope they do their best with the
staff they have.
I fully realize my comments are little
comfort to a person who is out of work and
needs the completed record check in order
to obtain employment to support their
family.
In order that Durham residents receive a
“fair” turnaround time for criminal record
checks and to avoid unnecessary delays,
one would expect DRPS monitors this area
of their workload to properly manage those
aspects they do control.
Bill Closs
Oshawa
NEIL CRONE
I was doing some setup
shots at the skate park when
I made this image of Dar-
nell Myles, 14, at Whitby’s
Iroquois Park. With a single
flash to the left of the frame
I was able to light Darnell
and highlight the curve fea-
tures of the skatepark. One
of the problems with pho-
tographing at night is get-
ting the camera to focus
on the right object. Even in
this shot it picked the wall
instead of Darnell.
LETTERS
e-mail letters to newsroom@durhamregion.com / max.
200 words / letter writers are obliged to back up their
statements with verifiable facts / please include your
full first and last name, city of residence & daytime
phone number / letters that do not appear in print may
be published @ durhamregion.com
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 20118
P
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 20119
P
Direct Access 905.420.4660
General Enquiries 905.420.2222
Service Disruption 1.866.278.9993
The 2010 Pickering Blooms Garden of Distinction Awards were presented on
Monday, January 17, 2011 during Council. These awards were given to local
residents and organizations who were deemed outstanding by the expert judges
from Pickering Horticultural Society.
Ice Bookings call 905.683.6582 Mon – Fri from 8 am - 9 pm
Make a Date to Skate!
Great Ice times currently available at
Pickering Recreation Complex & Don Beer Arena
The City of Pickering will be presenting Civic Awards to members of
the community who have made a significant contribution to the City
of Pickering during 2010.
We invite and encourage you to submit nominations for individuals,
groups, and businesses who you feel are deserving of recognition.
Nomination forms are available online, or in City facilities and must be
received by Thursday, February 10, 2011 at 4:00 pm. For more
information please contact the Customer Care Centre.
T. 905.683.7575
TTY 905.420.1739
email customercare@cityofpickering.com
2010Cwardsivic
Call for Nominations
February 5th 10 am - 3 pm
Information
Displays &
Seminars
Seeds for Swap
or Sale
Seedy CafeEvent Admission
$3.00
Pickering Recreation Complex
1867 Valley Farm Road
TTY 905.420.1739
905.683.8401 cityofpickering.com/museum
museum@cityofpickering.com
Upcoming Public Meetings
All meetings are open to the public. For details call 905.420.2222 or visit
the City website. For Service Disruption Notification Call 1.866.278.9993
Date Meeting / Location Time
January 19, 2011 Committee of Adjustment 7:00 pm
City Hall - Main Committee Room
January 26, 2011 Accessibility Advisory Committee 7:00 pm
City Hall - Main Committee Room
January 25, 2011 Heritage Pickering 7:00 pm
Advisory Committee
City Hall - Main Committee Room
January 27, 2011 Library Board- Central 7:00 pm
Bicentennial Events
Bicentennial Family Day
Passes on sale January 21
Pickering Recreation Complex
Family Activities including:
A great day of special parent & child activities all
for one low price! Family Passes on sale & sign-ups
begin on January 21, 2011. Passes are $10.00 per
family, available exclusively at Pickering Recreation
Complex. Passes and activity spaces are limited so
sign up early.
Drums Alive 6+ Mom & Baby Nia
Turbo Kick 6+ Belly Dancing 11+
Yogalates 11+ Salsa Tots & Babies
Zumba 6+ Family Fit Games 6+
Swimming Creative Fun 0 - 6 yrs
Squash Family Art 7 - 12 yrs
Wii Fit 8+ Chocolate Workshop
Girls Club 8+ Kindergym 0 - 6 yrs
Stick & Puck 0 - 8 yrs Racquetball 8 - 12 yrs
Smoothies Parent & Tot Skate 0 - 6 yrs
Family Skate Family Swim
Mini Tennis 6+ & MORE!
Pickering’s Bicentennial Celebrations are proudly
sponsored by:
Visit us online to discover Pickering’s past
and to learn more about Bicentennial events.
Pickering’s Bicentennial
Take a Closer Look ... Pickering’s Bicentennial web
page includes a timeline and information about
famous Pickering residents. Looking to learn more?
The PADA (Pickering Ajax Digital Archives)
website www.PADA.ca hosts uncounted numbers
of images, photos and documents pertaining to
Pickering’s past. Browse through to take a glimpse
at early Pickering.
Share Your Photos! Post your Bicentennial photos
on Facebook, send your images to
kferguson@cityofpickering.com
Join the Celebration visit cityofpickering.com
A Celebration 200 Years in the Making!
Whitevale Drainage Master Plan Class
Environmental Assessment Notice of
Study Commencement
The City of Pickering is undertaking a Master Plan Class Environmental
Assessment (EA) to address the drainage system defi ciencies which are
contributing to localized surface fl ooding and erosion within the Hamlet of
Whitevale (see Key Map below).
In July 2008, two severe rainfall events resulted in fl ooding along streets and
erosion of the approaches to the existing Whitevale bridge. The damages caused
by these two events highlighted to the City the need to study potential solutions
to improve the drainage and conveyance system throughout the Hamlet.
The Whitevale Drainage Master Plan will examine alternative solutions to
mitigate the identifi ed surface fl ooding and erosion problems within the Hamlet
of Whitevale. The preferred strategy for the Study Area will be determined based
on engineering requirements, cost, environmental considerations, public input
and information gathered during the Study process.
The study is proceeding in accordance with the Master Plan process, Approach
#2, as outlined in the Municipal Engineers Association’s document Municipal
Class Environmental Assessment, October 2000, as amended in 2007.
Two Public Information Centres (PIC’s) will be held during the study to provide
information and allow for public comment. Notifi cation of the PIC’s will be
advertised in the local newspaper.
This notice fi rst issued January 12, 2011.
For further information on this project, please contact:
Ms. Marilee Gadzovski, P.Eng. Mr. Glenn Farmer
Senior Water Resources Engineer Project Manager
City of Pickering AECOM
One The Esplanade 300 Town Centre Blvd., Suite 300
Pickering, ON, L1V 6K7 Markham, ON L3R 5Z6
tel: 905.420.4660 ext. 2067 tel: 905.477.8400 ext. 354
mgadzovski@cityofpickering.com glenn.farmer@aecom.com
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201110
AP
Contraband cigarettes,
pricey medication are
roadblocks to butting out
JILLIAN FOLLERT
jfollert@durhamregion.com
DURHAM -- In Ontario, a carton of 200 ciga-
rettes will typically set you back about $80. A
bag of 200 contraband cigarettes can sell for
as little as $6.
Jane Ling says this is one of the major chal-
lenges local health-care professionals face in
their fight to curb smoking rates.
“When I’m talking to patients, I always
ask where they get their cigarettes. About 80
per cent tell me they get them contraband,”
said Ms. Ling, an Oshawa pharmacist and
president of the Central East Association for
Smoking Elimination. “For people who don’t
have very much money, or for young people,
it makes smoking very affordable.”
An October 2010 report from the Tobacco
Strategy Advisory Group estimates contra-
band cigarettes account for about 30 per cent
of cigarettes in the province.
As part of National Non-Smoking Week Jan.
16 to 22, Ms. Ling and other local health-care
providers are raising awareness of roadblocks
that prevent people from butting out.
Affordability is a big factor. Studies show
demand for tobacco products falls by three to
four percent for every 10-per cent increase in
price.
Ms. Ling used to entice people to quit by
pointing out how much money could be
saved by giving up the cost of an $11 pack of
cigarettes every day or few days.
“Now that argument has gone out the win-
dow,” she says, referring to the rock-bottom
price of contraband cigarettes.
On the flip side, smoking cessation ther-
apy such as medication and nicotine gum,
patches and inhalers are pricey and often out
of reach for young people or those on social
assistance.
CEASE members want to see the Province
cover the cost for people receiving social
assistance.
“It’s very difficult when I’m counselling
people and they say they want to quit, but
they don’t have the money to quit,” Ms. Ling
says.
Research shows smoking cessation medi-
cations can more than double the chances of
quitting successfully.
Other factors that up the chance of success
include working with a health-care profes-
sional and using therapies in combination.
But even with an arsenal of quitting tools,
it’s an uphill battle -- one that Marven Whid-
den knows all too well.
In the summer of 2009, he was one of three
Durham residents featured in a This Week
series about the challenges of quitting smok-
ing.
The Clarington man spent six weeks using
the cessation drug Champix and a nicotine
inhaler to help him kick the habit. By the time
the series wrapped up, he declared himself
smoke free for life.
Fast forward a year-and-a-half and Mr.
Whidden is hooked once again.
He says things went downhill after having a
cigar while on vacation in Cuba.
“Next thing you know, you are hav-
ing a cigarette thinking you are still a non-
smoker, and having an occasional smoke
doesn’t count as smoking in your mind,”
he says. “The worst thing for me was hav-
ing your family and friends find out you
are smoking again. They were all so sup-
portive when I had quit that I couldn’t bear
to tell them ... all I could think about was
how disappointed they were going to be.”
His New Year’s resolution is to try quitting
again.
Asked what he would tell others hoping
to butt out for good, Mr. Whidden stressed
how important it is to quit for yourself, not
because other people are pressuring you to.
For those who do manage to break the
habit, he urges them to learn from his mis-
take and never light up again.
“Smoking is the hardest addiction to give
up. If you ever manage to quit, you have just
won your own personal lottery,” he said.
For more information on quitting, visit
www.durham.ca/health and look under
“tobacco” or call the Canadian Cancer Soci-
ety’s Smoker’s Helpline at 1-877-513-5333.
READ Marven Whidden’s blog and a
related story on cigarette packaging
@ durhamregion.com
HEALTH
Durham experts push for change
during National Non-Smoking Week
FAST FACTS
Want to quit? Check out
these local events
• The Durham Region health department is offer-
ing a six-week smoking cessation support group,
which runs every Tuesday from Jan. 25 to March 1.
The group meets at the Glazier Medical Centre, 11
Gibb St. in Oshawa. An information session takes
place Jan. 18. Call the Durham Health Connection
Line at 1-800-841-2729 to register.
• The Durham Region health department offers
its STOP on the Road workshop on Jan. 27 from
noon to 3 p.m. Nicotine replacement therapy will
be offered free of charge to those who qualify. Call
the Durham Health Connection Line at 1-800-841-
2729 to learn more about who is eligible and to
register.
• Jan. 19 is Weedless Wednesday. Oshawa Gen-
erals players will mark the event with a meet and
greet and free autograph signing at the Durham
Family YMCA, 99 Mary St. N. in Oshawa from 5
p.m. to 6 p.m.
• Quit smoking between March 1 and 31 for the
chance to win a car through the provincial Driven
to Quit contest. Register online at www.drivento-
quit.ca.
JASON LIEBREGTS / METROLAND
OSHAWA -- Local pharmacist Jane Ling is president of CEASE -- the Central East
Association for Smoking Elimination, and is geared up for National Non-Smoking
Week.
The worst thing for
me was having your family and
friends find out you are smoking
again. Marven Whidden
When I’m talking to patients, I always ask where
they get their cigarettes. About
80 per cent tell me they get them
contraband. Jane Ling
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201111
P
Three years ago, he was promoted to inspector and
as of Jan. 1, he’s been overseeing operations at West
Division, which covers Ajax and Pickering.
“I’ve spent a good portion of my career in Ajax and
Pickering so I’m familiar with this community,” he
said in an interview at the station.
He’ll oversee the operations of the division and
develop strategies to ensure a safe community.
“It did really well under (outgoing) Inspector (Steve)
Ross, and I hope to carry that on,” he said.
His three priorities are addressing violent crime,
property crime, such as theft from vehicles, and traf-
fic safety.
Violent crime in West Division revolves mostly
around street-level robberies, and a unit was created
in Insp. Ross’s time to address those types of crimes.
The majority of victims are youth, Insp. Grant said,
usually at the hands of other kids stealing things such
as iPods, cellphones and money.
“It’s a significant portion and one that we’re con-
cerned about,” he said.
He said the majority of concerns he hears from resi-
dents centre around traffic safety. West Division plans
to educate drivers about safe driving, enforce driving
safety and deal with partners, such as municipal traf-
fic departments, to develop ways to reduce traffic, he
said. Insp. Grant also wants to target aggressive and
distracted drivers, as he’s seen everything from peo-
ple behind the wheel putting on makeup to reading
the newspaper. “We want people to pay attention
while they’re driving,” he said. “In essence, it’s for
their own safety.”
He also plans to develop partnerships in the com-
munity with local politicians, business leaders and
citizens. He’s learned in his career that police sim-
ply can’t solve all of the problems in a community,
but with the community’s support, the police can be
much more successful. He hopes to put a big focus on
educating, listening to and working with youth.
He acknowledged there is gang activity in Ajax and
Pickering, saying gangs from Toronto either move
here or do business in the community. That’s an area
where the police can use help from residents.
“If we don’t get information from the community,
we’re not going to be as successful when solving a
crime,” he said.
Officers will focus on addressing crimes that have
already occurred, but will also put a big focus on
crime prevention.
“Crime prevention is a huge component for us,” he
said. “If we can prevent a crime, it’s better than solv-
ing a crime.”
Insp. Grant wanted to reassure residents that Ajax
and Pickering are safe communities overall.
“I think the residents of Ajax and Pickering can feel
safe,” he said. “We have a safe community. Crime is
on the decline.”
And with a fleet of about 150 officers, most of whom
are well-educated with positive attitudes, Insp. Grant
looks forward to his coming years at West Division.
POLICE
New inspector calls Ajax,
Pickering ‘safe’ communities
NEW from page 1
JASON LIEBREGTS / METROLAND
Zumba for autism
PICKERING -- Linda Raponi led a zumba fitness group Jan. 15 dur-
ing a zumbathon fundraiser for Autism Ontario - Durham Region
held at the Harmony Center.
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201112
AP ADULT DAY SCHOOL
IN JUST 7 WEEKS
NO DIPLOMA?NO PROBLEM!
COMPLETE YOUR GRADE 12 OR BE READY FOR A NEW JOBDY FOR A NEW JOB
You’re closer than you think!You’re closer than you think!
120 Centre St. S., Oshawa
• Our Guidance Department will develop a plan that
works for you!
• We’re here to help our adult learners achieve their
goals.
• We provide a supportive environment and
experienced teachers.
• We provide class options that fi t your life.
• Our courses have no tuition fees. Registration and
certifi cation fees may apply.
• Ask about our cooperative education program.
TO REGISTER
JANUARY 25
OR FEBRUARY 1
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FEBRUARY 28,
2011 START
Please bring previous transcripts, proof of Canadian citizenship/residency
and photo identifi cation. No appointment necessary.
Limited parking on-site.
Municipal parking adjacent to E.A. Lovell.
• BIOLOGY
• CHEMISTRY
• COMPUTERS
• COOPERATIVE EDUCATION
• DESIGNING YOUR FUTURE
• ENGLISH
• ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
• LAW
• MATHEMATICS
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REAL TRAINING
FOR REAL JOBS
• BUILDING MAINTENANCE PATHWAY - 2 credits
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Come to a free information session at the
E.A. Lovell Centre, 120 Centre St. S., Oshawa
Girls can attend
‘One Night Only’
workshop Jan. 20
PICKERING -- Pickering girls
can learn hair and makeup
tips from a pro at an upcoming
workshop.
One Night Only Makeup
Workshop for girls aged 12 to
14 will take place tomorrow
(Thursday, Jan. 20) from 5:30
to 8:30 p.m.
Stephanie Daga, a freelance
artist in the Greater Toronto
Area, has studied makeup art-
istry at Seneca College and the
Yorkville School of Aesthetics,
and has taught tips at several
of the City of Pickering’s teen
programs in the past.
She’ll share expert tips on
face-cleaning techniques,
makeup application, the
importance of sunscreen and
more.
The cost to participate is $30
and the workshop will take
place at the Petticoat Creek
Community Centre, 470 Kings-
ton Rd.
For more information or to register
for the program:
CALL 905-420-4621
VISIT www.cityofpickering.com
and click on ‘Click to Reg’
YOUTH
Makeup
tips in
Pickering
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201113
AP
Ontario Scholars
METROLAND
DURHAM REGION MEDIA GROUP
PRESENTED BY:
METROLAN
A JAX • PICKERING
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201114
AP
2010
Archbishop Denis O’Connor Catholic High School ....... 15
J. Clarke Richardson Collegiate ................................16-17
St. Mary Catholic High School ..................................18-19
Notre Dame Catholic Secondary School .................20-21
Dunbarton High School .............................................22-23
Pine Ridge Secondary School ........................................ 24
Ajax High School ............................................................ 25
Pickering High School ................................................26-27
Published by
Metroland Durham Region Media Group
Ajax/Pickering News Advertiser
Timothy J. Whittaker - Publisher
Fred Eismont - Advertising Director
Sales Representative:
Donna McNally
This issue of Ontario Scholars 2010
was published at 865 Farewell St., Oshawa ON LH 7L5
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Reproduction in whole or in part without the prior written
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Congratulations to all our
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REGION
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Burning
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5
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ONTARIO SCHOLARS2010
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201124
AP
PINE RIDGE SECONDARY SCHOOL
2010
Kayla
Anderson
Kelly
Bain
Rhea
Basu
Hayley
Brauer
Shauna
Busjith Brown
Andrew
Brownlee
Katelyn
Butcher
Kevin
Choy
Ali
Abbas
Heather
Alsen
Saiesha
Aadhithan
Jennifer
Collins
Tom
Cui
Nikita
Diaram
Byravi
Dineshkumar
Kathryn
Gaskin
Brandon
Gaulin
Kristin
Geissler
Christopher
Georges
Rachel
Downey
Abdullah
Farooqui
Elizabeth
Evans
Meagan
Harrison
Alexandra
Hennig
Esha
Homenauth
Stephanie
Lee Shue
Eric
Liang
Ryan
Linkletter
Jacob
Magder
Fazila
Malek
Gillian
Hall
Victoria
Graham
Christopher
Gordon
Graham
McColl
Dylan
McCormack
John
McIntyre
Julia
Meerakker
Amanda
Meirik
Alyssa
Metcalfe
Ramsha
Mughal
Melanie
Muir
Steven
Patterson
Nicholas
Peters
Stephanie
Pimenta
Emily
Reid
Heather
Reid-Wilkinson
Dale
Repton
Christopher
Oudie
Lee Palmer-
Wilson
Zinnia
Naqvi
Chistopher
Mariano
Jonathan
Mariano
Nicole
Martin
Mark
Richards
Kelsey
Robinson
Emily
Rowan
Nequita
Russell
Khatera
Sarfaraz
Michelle
Scriver
Alyxzandria
Simpson
Samantha
Stuart
Michelle
Terpstra
Marina
Terranova
Olutomide
Senbore
Nisar
Siddiqui
Michael
Sheremeta
Scholars not shown
Colleen Crottie
Iffat Naeem
Ellen Penton
Geoffrey WarburtonKailey Anne
Trewartha
Shardul
Upadhyay Alison
Weick
Marian
Wells
Ricky
Zaman
Natalya
Wheeler
Saghar
Yousufzai
Jennifer
White
ONTARIO SCHOLARS 2010
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201125
AP
Emma Brun-Hayne
Melanie Hull
Johnny Kalcovski
Matthew Lord
Jeffrey Murray
Jawad Naqvi
Luke Todd
Scholars not shown
2010
Quinn
Belvin
Lucas
Berman
Kerri
Brillinger
Julie
Brooks
Brandon
Bryson
Shari
Campbell
Jennifer
Carswell
Sarah
Bakhsh
Samantha
Bateman
Kyle
Butler
Carley
Avery
Jenna
Clarke
Meghan
Dibe
Lawrence
Eckel
Rebecca
Flint
Samantha
Gauvreau
Taylor
Giffin
Evan
Chladny
Teresa
Chung
Nathan
Cheung
Meghan
Hill
Jake
Hodgson
Maria
Kahr
Barbara
Kendall
Billy
Kryba
Jennifer
Grieves
Amanda
Haisley
Kristen
Gordon
Heather
Kelly
Ivan
Damnjanovic
Cymmone
Henry-Roper
Jenine
Forchione
Alexandrea
Harris-Saunders
Andrea
Lemay
Erica
Lynn
Kristia
Maatta
Nicole
Mattless
Spencer
McCracken
Naomi
McKail
Carolyn
Miller
Sarah
Mills
Shafaq
Naqvi
Natasha
Nechvatal-Drew
Kristina
MacLean
Jim
Martin
Sean
MacDonald
Joshua
Mohammed
Courtney
Rogers
Amanda
Ronaldson
Sarah
Salvatore
Noorin
Samji
Jennifer
Scott
Brandon
Shepherd
Emily
Somerset
Aicha Raeburn-
Cherradi
Christian
Reddell
Kelly
Patano
Brandon
Sellers
Amanda
Watson Kristy
Weenen
Devon
Weil
Lauren
Wharton
Tylor
Whelan Hank
Zheng
Rebecca
Wagar
Kelly
Warburton
Lauren
Vinden
Samantha
Wood
Chloe
Stanois
ONTARIO
SCHOLARS
ONTARIO SCHOLARS 2010
A JAX HIGH SCHOOL
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201126
AP
2010
Lindsay
Arnts
Peter
Bae
Shannon
Baker
Yebhe
Balde
Justin
Barham
Stephanie
Bongelli
Yvonne
Bouwhuis
Jeremy
Adiken
Kaila
Anderson
Meghan
Bhatia
Zachary
Adams
April
Chan
Matthew
Chartrand
Erin
Child
Laura
Corkum
Brie
Crerar
Stephanie
Davis
Alicia
Estridge
Sierra
Campbell
Anthony
Caterini
Jay
Boychuk
Georgina
Crowder
Heather
Frost
Prasaanth
Ganesalingam
Naseeba
George
Beejan
Giga
Ashley
Gilmore
Stephanie
Gribben
Kelly
Hann
Reece
Forster
Dion
Franklin
Chistopher
Feher
Teyanna
Grant
Amanda
Harriss
Charmaine
Hermans
Alzahra
Hudani
Meghan
Hull
Layla
Hussain
Samantha
Jackson
Deevanie
Jethoo
Gregory
Hoy
Sherry
Hucklebridge
Sally
Hong
George
Jimas
Madisen
Johnston
Emily
Kerr
Roland
Law
Ryan
Lim
Heather
Littmann
Brittany
Logan
Amanda
Klym
Victoria
Large
Julia
Kimmerer
Katherine
Lawrence
Danielle
Lew
Douglas
Lusted
Travis
Maclean
Raphael
Maturine
John
McAthey
Rebecca
Mendes
Anne-Marie
Messinis
Matthew
Miyazaki
Alyssa
Mohabir
Allana
McComb
David
Meehan
Ashley
McCaw
Omera
Mohmand
Alessandra
Moncada
Ivana
Musutova
Tanya
Nagi
Nicole
Nash
Mary Joyce
Naval
Jonathan
Neptune
Naeem
Munir
Georgina
Nicolopoulos
Kayla
Morris
Katherine
Muir
ONTARIO SCHOLARS 2010
PICKERING HIGH SCHOOL
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201127
AP
“ I CAN’T BELIEVE
SHE’S OLD ENOUGH
TO DRIVE!”
With the proven Collisionfree! ™ Approach
taught by Young Drivers of Canada, I know my daughter
will learn life-saving defensive driving techniques,
emergency maneuvers, head-on collision and rear crash
avoidance, and more.
Of course I’ll still worry…just a lot less.
Prepare for the road ahead.
For more details or to enroll online, please visit
www.yd.com or call 905.426.9362
Next Courses: Dec 19, 20, 21, 22
G1 not required to start class
Dec 28, 29, 30, 31
Prepare for the road ahead.
For more details or to enroll online, please visit
www.yd.com or call 905.426.9362
Next Courses: Dec 19, 20, 21, 22
G1 not required to start class
Dec 28, ,,29, ,,30, ,,31
“Start YD without your G1.
Act Now & Avoid the Rush.”
Prepare for the road ahead.
For more details or to enroll online, please visit
www.yd.com or call 905.426.9362
Now Enrolling for the following 4 Courses:
Jan. 22nd, Jan. 25th, Feb. 5th and Feb. 19th.
2010
PICKERING HIGH SCHOOL
Kimiye
Nishino
Deanna
Norlock
Varshinie
Pillai
Justin
Pilon
Elise
Poirier
Satrohan
Rai
Natasha
Rashid
Amishka
Perera
Jessica
Pike
Melanie
Parsons
Jaclyn
Reid
James
Rim
Karen
Ritchie
Caitlin
Scheffel
Justin
See
Prashanth
Selvakumar
Maria
Sharp
Chad
Singh
Stefanie
San Juan
Samantha
Savaglio
Richard
Rudychuk
Brittany
Rodrigues
Daniella
Singh
Sanujh
Sivarajah
Naima
Sundiata
Alicia
Sunichura
Andrea
Suthakaran
Rohit
Talwar
Matthew
Thomason
Michelle
Spencer
Emma
Steele
Taija
Smith
Zooni
Thusoo
Athursh
Vaithilingam
Jennifer
Wah
Patrick
Wakisaka
Aisha
Walker
Samantha
Warden
Amanda
Weisflock
Theodora
Yung
Rachel
Whitnall
Avinash
Williams
Ava
Williams
Scholars not shown
Akbar Bhanji
Mika Clements
Kirsten Craig
Janine Finn
Andrea Garcia Duren
Benjamin Harvey
Jithan Karalasingam
Akram Kassay
Stephanie Kwan
Kerwin Lee
James McAlister
Krista Nelson
Iva Pantic
Mackenzie Powers
Julien Ravinthiran
Erica Shore
Matthew Wright
Congratulations
Ontario Scholars 2010
ONTARIO SCHOLARS 2010
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201128
AP
Focus on Fleming
Events, activities and upcoming learning oortunities at Fleming CoLLegeunities at Fleming CoLLrtunities at Fleming CoLLegortunities at Fleming CoLLegetunities at Fleming CoLLe
New FuLL-Time Programs Starting This FaLL*
Child and Youth Worker
Ontario College Advanced Diploma
– Work in a rewarding career helping
troubled children, adolescents and families
– 3 work placements to ensure you are ready
for the demands of this field
– Grads will be eligible to join Ontario
Association of Child and Youth Counsellors
School of Business, Computing
and Hospitality
Our school is built on experiential learning,
from industry-sponsored applied projects, work
placements and co-op, to international exchange
programs. This means you’ll graduate with the
practical, real-world experience employers are
looking for because you will have already done
the job.
Designed to develop your competitive EDGE and help
you stand out in today’s competitive job market, all our
programs incorporate Environmental Responsibility, Diversity,
Global Perspectives and Experience.
Plaing to start coLLege this faLL?
Apply by February 1 for your best chance to get a
space in the program you want.
For more information on programs available:
flemingcoLLege.ca
Call 705.749.5546 or 866.353.6464 x1546
“ Because of the extensive hands-on learning
in the programs, you’ll have the practical
experience that it takes some students years
to acquire.”
Community Integration through
Cooperative Education
Ontario College Certificate
– Provides an integrated college
experience for adults with
Developmental Disabilities, Autism
Spectrum Disorder, Mild Intellectual
Disabilities or Brain Injury
– Program focuses on personal
development, growth and essential
employability skills
– Includes a co-operative experience
to develop abilities in potential
work environments
Plumbing Techniques
Ontario College Diploma
– Learn plumbing installation,
maintenance and repair for
residential, commercial and
industrial settings
– Prepare for a plumbing
apprenticeship or add more trade
skills to your toolkit
– Start in August and graduate in
December
Heating, Refrigeration and
Air Conditioning
Ontario College Diploma
– Obtain skills to work as a
heating, refrigeration and air
conditioning technician
– Emphasis on energy efficient
solutions to meet changing
industry needs
– Fast-track to your new career in
just 45 weeks
*These new programs will be offered pending funding approval by the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities.
– Rebecca Rubin,
Marketing Representative, Nexicom
Business Administration – Marketing Graduate
Pharmacy Technician
Ontario College Diploma
– Join the growing healthcare
field
– Assist in providing
pharmaceutical care and
services
– Interact with patients and
a variety of health care
providers
pppppp
bbbbilililiitittty,y,y,y,y D D DDivvvivererereeess y,siitytt,, ,
aaaatettete
Make a meaningful contribution to your environment
Gain knowledge, skills and practical, hands-on experience planning, designing, constructing,
enhancing, rehabilitating and protecting trails for the preservation and enjoyment of our
treasured natural resources. Offered on weekends at Frost Campus in Lindsay, courses for this
certificate may be taken individually as needed. To receive the Fleming College Certificate for
Sustainable Trails, you must complete 7 mandatory and 2 elective courses.
Upcoming courses: Marketing & Promoting Trails Mar 5 – 6 (14 hours) 9:00am – 4:30pm, $84.56;
Trail Design Mar 25 – 27 (21 hours) 9:00am – 4:30pm, $126.84.
For more details or to register: flemingcollege.ca/reinvent
1-888-269-6929 x 3620
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201129
AP
Oxford Learning Centres®
3UH. WR *UDGH 5HDGLQJ :ULWLQJ 0DWK *UDPPDU 6WXG\ 6NLOOV +RPHZRUN )UHQFK
School doesn’t always have to be a struggle. In fact, some kids
love it—and not just because of friends or good grades. They
love it because they’re willing to try, and because they feel
conÀ dent in their ability to learn. All kids can love school.
It just takes Oxford Learning to show them how.
Better conÀ dence. Better motivation. Better grades
Call today, or visit oxfordlearning.com
AJAX 905-683-6660
PICKERING 905-420-3141
Some kids really do love school
High school credits count.
That’s a scary thought. But it’s never too late to get the
credits you need. At Grade Learning you can earn the high
school credits you need... fast. We offer fl exible schedules
and small class sizes. Whatever life stage you’re at,
whatever you need, we prepare you for what’s next.
CALL NOW FOR YOUR FREE
CONSULTATION
and to fi nd out how you can earn a
credit in just 9 weeks!
Pickering 905-420-9930
Oshawa 905-433-1033
Convenient
at-home
tutoring
ºÜi`}iÊÜÌ Ê1`iÀÃÌ>`}»ÊHÊv>ÌÃÊÌÊ£{ÊÞi>Àð
401 KINGSTON RD. PICKERING (South side of Hwy. #2, just west of library)
P: 905-509-1722 www.mlcp.ca
CELEBRATING 25 YEARS OF QUALITY EDUCATION
PRIVATE SCHOOL
ELEMENTARY INFORMATION EVENING TUES. JAN. 25, 6:30 P.M.
Durham District School Board
2009-2010
Audited Financial Statements
•
• Consolidated Statement of Operators
and Accumulated Surplus
• Consolidated Statement of Change
in Net Debt
• Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows
Management’s Report
• Auditor’s Report
• Consolidated Statement of
Financial Position
• Notes to the Financial Statements
In accordance with Section 252(2) of the
Education Act, the Financial Statements and
Auditor’s Report of Durham District School
Board for the year ended August 31, 2010
are available at: www.durham.edu.on.ca
and click on “About DDSB,” then click on
“Financial Report.”
Statementsinclude:
For a printed copy, please call
1-800-265-3968, ext. 6402
or 905-666-6402.
Education ADVERTISING FEATURE
Setting resolutions is a common way to begin the New
Year—from eating healthier to exercising more, the New
Year presents an opportunity to hit the re-start button in life,
both in and out of school.
“The New Year is an opportunity for students to evaluate
their academics and get any help that they may need, “said
Dr. Nick Whitehead, founder and CEO of Oxford Learning.
“This is the time for students to renew their motivation and
set academic goals to get back on track.”
According to Dr. Whitehead, setting academic goals is
a key skill that helps students to become more organized,
which leads to greater success in school.
“The more that a student is organized, the more that a stu-
dent can identify the areas where he or she needs to improve,
and then take the steps necessary to improve,“ said White-
head.
Dr. Whitehead recommends that students keep goals clear,
achievable, and measurable. Students should avoid making
lofty goal statements, and keep goals concrete, with mile-
stones to mark improvement. According to Whitehead,
instead of a C-minus student setting a goal of winning a
math scholarship, that student should set a goal of getting a
C plus by the next test and a B plus by the test after that.
“When students start the New Year off by setting academic
resolutions, they begin the year on the right track for the rest
of the school year, ” said Whitehead.
For over 25 years, Oxford Learning has been helping stu-
dents of all ages develop better school habits. Whether it is
goal setting, reading comprehension, math skills, or home-
work help, Oxford Learning’s programs helps students start
the year off on the right foot.
For more information about goal setting or any of Oxford
Learning’s programs, contact Oxford Learning in Ajax
905-683-6660, Pickering 905-420-3141 or visit www.
oxfordlearning.com.
Students Need Academic Goals For The New Year
Social networking sites such as Facebook, Myspace,
and Twitter provide a great conduit for keeping in
touch with people you may not otherwise be able to
keep in touch with. They can also be very entertaining
(FarmVille, anyone?) and keep you hooked for hours
on end.
However, while these sites can be a great tool, it's
also important to remember that they are very public
and permanent. That's why it's important to make sure
you know the people you are adding as “Friends”. On-
line, it's diffi cult to be 100 per cent sure of people's true
identities. If online friends have little or no real-world
connection, always use caution. The more real-world
connections with an online friend, the more confi dent
you can be in sharing information with that person.
While you can be confi dent in sharing your vacation
photos online with your real-life best friend, you might
want to think twice about sending those photos to the
friend you met through another friend while chatting
online.
If someone is making you feel uneasy or unsettled
online, you should listen to that feeling. Quite often,
instincts are correct – which is why we have them.
Most social networking sites have options where you
can “block” people that you don't want seeing your
personal information. Doing this makes you invis-
ible to them, and you cannot even be seen in a search
queue.
Want more tips about how to stay safe online? Visit
www.youthprivacy.ca. www.newscanada.com
Do you know who your friends are?
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201130
AP
CELIA KLEMENZ / METROLAND
The easy way up
AJAX -- Alexis Graves found a great way to get to the top, thanks
to her grandpa, Paul, as he climbed the hill with her in tow. The
milder temperatures made the snow more slippery, great for tobog-
ganing recently.
CRYSTAL CRIMI
ccrimi@durhamregion.com
CLARINGTON -- Robin Poulin
once bought 150 boxes of cereal in
one shop — a move that saved her
family hundreds of dollars.
It’s not something she does all the
time, but budgeting and making
wise purchases is a habit she and
her Bowmanville co-authors are
hoping to share with the release of
their self-published book, ‘Power
Spending, Getting More for Less.’
Written by husband and wife
team Eric and Robin Poulin, along
with their financial adviser and
long-time friend, Carolyn John-
ston, the book is being featured for
a signing at Chapters in the Oshawa
Shopping Centre, Jan. 29 from 1-3
p.m. The event includes free give-
aways and a brief presentation.
“It’s the day-to-day stuff that
makes or breaks you,” said Mr.
Poulin, who with his wife, owns
and operates Calendar Budget Inc.,
an online personal budgeting tool.
The book’s intent is to get people
thinking about where they’re at,
where they want to go, and where
they can find savings, but in a fun
and interesting way, according to
the trio.
Based on the fictional lives of
Bill and Penny Munney, the book
takes readers through everyday
life challenges such as budgeting,
credit and debt, and planning for
the future, but also provides many
resources on how to maximize sav-
ings for travel, food, gift giving, and
more. It features coloured sidebars
with fast facts and information, as
well as illustrations and graphics to
help keep it light and fun, accord-
ing to the group.
The first half of the book is about
what people should be doing, while
the second is on what they can do
to maximize their spending, Mr.
Poulin said.
For Ms. Poulin’s bulk cereal pur-
chase, she first consulted her bud-
get to see if she could afford buying
$300 worth of the cereal marked
three for $5. Afterwards, she adjust-
ed her grocery budget $20 less over
six months to account for the extra
she had already spent. The buy
saved her $600 off the regular price.
“We have a whole chapter on
food because it’s such an expense,”
Ms. Johnston said.
“And a main part of our lives,” Ms.
Poulin added.
It also addresses families and
teaching your children about
spending and what jobs kids can do
to make money.
Even those who are good at man-
aging their money can learn some-
thing from the book, Mr. Poulin
said.
It discusses things such as living
slightly below your means and sav-
ing for an emergency fund to help
absorb the hit if something hap-
pens, and provides advice for start-
ing a safety net “from nothing” or
wherever it is that you are.
“Start small, but you should start,”
Mr. Poulin said.
“You only have so much money
and it’s how to spend you’re money
well,” Ms. Johnston said. “You can
be making $50,000 or $100,000
and the $50,000 (person) might be
wealthier.”
“There is always a way,” Ms.
Poulin said. “It’s always possible, it’s
just a matter of knowing what you
want to do and using what you’re
learning.”
The book is available at Chapters
or by logging on to:
VISIT www.powerspending-
book.com
PERSONAL FINANCE
Durham authors help put power in your pockets
MAKES CENTS
The made-in-Durham book ‘Power
Spending’ features information side-
bars on each page.
Listed below are some of the authors’
suggestions for what jobs kids can do
for money:
• babysitting or parent helper
• lawn care/landscaping
• snow shoveling
• pet care and dog walking
• car washing
• house cleaning
• paper route
• work in the family busi-
ness
• tutor
• farm work
• summer camp counselor
• pet/house sitting
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201131
AP
Pre-Registration for September 2011
Beginning in Grade 1, the Durham District School Board offers, at no additional charge to parents, a
French Immersion program for non-Francophone students.
To find out more about the French Immersion program, please join us at an information meeting at
one of the following French Immersion schools:
All French Immersion program information meetings will be held Wednesday,
February 2, 2011 at 7:00 p.m. Pre-registration will begin following the meeting
and will be available at the schools thereafter.
For more information regarding French Immersion at the Durham District School
Board, please visit us at:
For more information regarding your child’s school designation, please contact our
Property and Planning Department via e-mail at Planning_Department@durham.edu.on.ca
or by phone 905-666-6421 or 1-800-339-6913 ext. 6421.
Grade One French Immersion
www.durham.edu.on.ca
Durham District School Board
Ajax Pickering
Cadarackque PS...........905-428-2347
Roméo Dallaire PS....... 905-428-6868
Southwood Park PS......905-683-5230
Frenchman’s Bay PS......905-839-1131
Sir J.A. Macdonald PS...905-839-1159
Organizers looking for
sponsors and exhibitors
PICKERING -- Pet exhibitors and sponsors
are invited to take part in the third annual
Petapolooza.
The pet trade show will return on Sat-
urday, Feb. 26 at the Pickering Recre-
ation Complex and organizers are looking
for exhibitors and sponsors to help pro-
mote the fun and benefits associated with
responsible pet ownership.
Petapolooza provides a dynamic and
face-to-face forum for pet enthusiasts,
industry professionals, rescue groups, ser-
vice providers and others in the pet indus-
try.
Last year, around 900 visitors and 40 exhib-
itors attended the event.
All money raised will go toward the
development of a permanent animal shel-
ter in Pickering.
This will be a pet-free trade show for visi-
tors and exhibitors.
For more information:
CALL 905-420-4660 ext. 2065
(Lindsey Narraway, supervisor, animal services)
VISIT cityofpickering.com/animals
(click on ‘What’s New’ link)
COMMUNITY
Petapolooza coming to PickeringCalendar
ONGOING
MY SISTER’S VOICE. a non-profit regis-
tered charity, facilitates a free support group for
queer women facing the challenges of coming
out or living queer. On the first Wednesday of
each month at various Durham locations. 905-
668-5578, www.mysistersvoice.ca.
EUCHRE. every Friday from 6:45 to 10 p.m.
at the Petticoat Creek Library and Community
Centre, 470 Kingston Rd. W. (between Rose-
bank Road and Rougemount Drive), Pickering.
Hosted by the Rouge Hill Seniors. New mem-
bers welcome. 905-683-2760, ext. 6302.
DARTS. Mondays and Wednesdays from 10
a.m. to noon at the Petticoat Creek Library
and Community Centre, 470 Kingston Rd. W.
(between Rosebank Road and Rougemount
Drive), Pickering. Hosted by the Rouge Hill
Seniors. New members welcome. 905-683-
2760, ext. 6302.
AL-ANON. is an anonymous support group
for people affected by someone else’s drinking.
Meetings seven days a week in various Dur-
ham locations. 905-728-1020, al-anon.alateen.
on.ca.
THE HORSELESS CARRIAGEMEN. is for
men who love to sing. They practise every Mon-
day at 7:30 p.m. at the Glen Stewart clubhouse,
at 201 Cabot St. (at Cartier Street). For more
information call 905-668-6478.
OSHAWA BLOOD DONOR CLINIC.
1300 Harmony Rd. N., Oshawa. Tuesday and
Thursday 12:30 to 8 p.m., Wednesday, Friday
and Saturday 7:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
TAKE OFF POUNDS SENSIBLY (TOPS).
an inexpensive, non-profit weight-loss support
group, meets Thursdays at 6 p.m. at the Run-
dle Park Clubhouse, 241 Park Rd. S., Oshawa.
Women, men and teens welcome. 905-433-
0474.
CLARINGTON FIDDLE CLUB. meets on
the third Wednesday of every month (but not
July, August and December) at the Newcastle
Community Hall, 20 King St. W. (at Mill Street),
Newcastle. Doors open at 6 p.m. Admission is
$3 per person. All musicians are welcome, but
no electrics.
JANUARY 19
HEAD INJURY ASSOCIATION OF DUR-
HAM REGION. hosts support group meet-
ings at 7:45 p.m. at 850 King St. W., Unit 24,
Oshawa (Thornton Centre, lower level). Speak-
ers Bob Landry (‘I went to work one day...’) and
Kristen Miller (‘Struggle’) at 7 p.m. Call 905-
723-2732 or 1-866-354-4464 if you need help
with transportation.
ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION BR. 606
Ladies Auxiliary. holds a euchre at 8 p.m. at
1555 Bayly St., Pickering. Prizes and refresh-
ments. The cost is $4, $2 for seniors. All are
welcome.
AUTISM SUPPORT GROUP IN WHITBY. a
free service of Autism Ontario - Durham Region,
meets at 7:30 p.m. on the third Wednesday of
every month at Behavioural Consultation and
Therapy Services, 1450 Hopkins St., Suite 105,
Whitby. Anyone who has an interest in autism is
welcome to attend. 1-866-495-4680, durham@
autismontario.com.
SPAGHETTI SUPPER. at Faith United Church,
1778 Nash Rd. E., Courtice, from 5 to 6:30 p.m.
Musical entertainment for the whole family. Tick-
ets are $13 for adults ($15 at the door), $5 for
youths, $30 for a family (two adults, two chil-
dren) and children under 12 are admitted free.
905-448-1320, www.faithunited.ca.
JANUARY 22
HEADS UP FOR A HEALTHIER BRAIN.
Guest speaker Loretta Tanner discusses
improving your brain health and reducing your
risk of developing Alzheimer’s. Also fun and
challenging word games, brain-boosting recipes
and fitness tips. Hosted by the Oshawa Senior
Citizens Centres at the Northview Branch, 150
Beatrice St. E., from 9 a.m. to noon. Registra-
tion is required. 905-576-6712, ext. 2832 (Jen-
nifer). www.oscc.ca.
JANUARY 25
MORNING COFFEE BREAK. at St. Luke’s
Presbyterian Church, 333 Rossland Rd. W.,
Oshawa, from 9:30 to 11 a.m. A presentation by
Dorothy Gannon, author and hypnotist. Refresh-
ments. Free admission. 905-725-5451.
JANUARY 26
OSHAWA TOASTMASTERS. meet from
6:45 to 8:45 p.m. at the Oshawa Senior Citizens
Centre, 45 John St. W., Oshawa. oshawa.freeto-
asthost.org/ or 905-579-1876 (Muriel).
Send your upcoming events to newsroom@
durhamregion.com. At least 14 days notice is required
for consideration of their inclusion.
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201132
AP
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Highlights
Brad Kelly
Sports Editor
bkelly@durhamregion.com
durhamregion.com
facebook.com/sportsdurhamregion twitter.com/scnewsdurhamSports
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201134
AP
SABRINA BYRNES / METROLAND
AJAX -- Megan Simpson of the Durham West Lightning looked back as the puck flew by Ottawa goalie Katie Milligan, while teammate
Marissa Maugeri closed in for a rebound in Provincial Women’s Hockey League action at the Ajax Community Centre.
Drop three in a row after
huge win over Mississauga
BRAD KELLY
bkelly@durhamregion.com
AJAX -- Just when things looked as though
they would get easier for the Durham West
Junior Lightning, the opposite has happened.
It was just a week ago the Lightning knocked
off the top team in the Provincial Women’s
Hockey League, stopping Mississauga’s win-
ning streak at 24 in a row. But in the three
games since, the Lightning have been beaten
each time, including 3-1 and 4-1 weekend set-
backs to Stoney Creek and Ottawa respective-
ly.
The hangover effect from winning such a big
game has carried over.
“Coming off the high of the win over Missis-
sauga and then we blew a lead against Bramp-
ton the next night (a 4-3 overtime loss). We
played two very good teams this weekend,” said
head coach Wayne McDonald in summarizing
the past two weekends. “Stoney Creek, we beat
them in the first game and it’s tough to beat
teams twice, and Ottawa is a very good team.
“Both games we got outplayed.”
In Stoney Creek on Saturday, the Lightning
opened the scoring on a second-period pow-
er-play goal by Carly Marchment, with assists
to Lindsey McDonald and Sara Kaljuvee. But
that was the only goal they could muster on
18 shots. Going the other way, Stoney Creek
scored three times in the third period on Light-
ning netminder Jackie Rochefort, who faced 30
shots in the game.
Sunday’s home game against Ottawa start-
ed in similar fashion, with the Lightning strik-
ing first on a Marissa Redmond goal on assists
from Emily Marks and Marchment. But Otta-
wa responded with two of their own in the first
period and added single tallies in each of the
second and third for the win. Chantal Bick-
et was peppered with 32 shots in goal for the
Lightning, who fired 29 the other way.
The three-game losing streak is something
McDonald anticipated after his team had just
had a streak going the other way, winning five
of seven.
“All teams go through it,” he said. “It’s a bit of
a setback, now we have to work harder to get
out of it.
“I knew it was coming sooner or later. Now we
just have to go back to basics and work harder
to get ourselves out of it and we will.”
While the Lightning were missing some bod-
ies over the weekend due to exams and the flu,
they did welcome Kathryn Goodwin back to
the lineup, who returned earlier than expected
from a shoulder injury.
The Lightning (12-11-1-2) will need every-
body in the lineup this weekend when they
hit the ice three times, beginning with a trip to
Oakville on Friday, followed by home games
Saturday against Hamilton at 7:30 p.m. and
Sunday against Bluewater at 2:30 p.m. at the
Ajax Community Centre.
PROVINCIAL WOMEN’S HOCKEY LEAGUE
Lightning suffering a hangover
RUGBY
Moonlight to
represent Canada
PICKERING -- The players for Can-
ada’s first Sevens events of 2011 have
been selected following a weekend train-
ing camp at Shawnigan Lake School on
Vancouver Island.
Pickering’s John Moonlight was
among the players to be named to the
roster.
Sevens head coach Geraint John
made the selections for trips to New
Zealand and Las Vegas after putting
players through a grueling three-day
camp that included fitness testing, skills
assessment and trial matches in snowy
conditions.
Moonlight, a Dunbarton grad, trav-
elled with the Canadian squad early in
2010, but a broken leg suffered in March
sidelined him for an extended period. He
did make a return, competing with Can-
ada at the Commonwealth Games held
in India in October.
On the first tour of 2011, Canada
takes on South Africa, Fiji and France in
a tough tournament draw in New Zea-
land on Feb. 4. Then the series returns
to Las Vegas for a second straight year,
but the pools for that event, which begins
Feb. 12, have not been drawn.
SOCCER
Chapman, Exeter
on national team
DURHAM -- One is a rookie and the
other a seasoned veteran, but they are
on the same team with a common goal.
Pickering’s Christine Exeter and
Ajax’s Candace Chapman are in China,
training and competing with the wom-
en’s national soccer team for the Four
Nations Tournament.
For Exeter, it will be her debut with
the national senior team, while Chap-
man has been a mainstay with the pro-
gram the past few years.
The four-team tournament features
top-10 nations Canada, Sweden and
USA as well as host China PR. Cana-
da’s schedule features China PR on
Jan. 21, USA on Jan. 23 and Sweden on
Jan. 25.
This competition marks the first
time since the 2008 Women’s Olympic
Football Tournament that Canada is
facing top-five nations in back-to-back
matches. USA was ranked first while
Sweden was ranked fourth in the most
recent FIFA/Coca-Cola ranking. Canada
was ranked ninth, but it has added two
wins and two draws to its record since
the November ranking. Canada enters
the competition with an all-time best
10-match unbeaten streak, dating back
to a 3-1 victory over China PR at BMO
Field in Toronto.
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201135
AP
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Ajax
& Pickering
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Flyers in Today’s Paper
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ONTARIO JUNIOR HOCKEY LEAGUE
Pickering Panthers showing some pride
BRAD KELLY
bkelly@durhamregion.com
PICKERING -- There are a lot of
things the Pickering Panthers just
don’t have this season, but pride
isn’t one of them.
That, they have plenty of.
Yes, wins have been few are very
far between, but as the regular sea-
son inches toward its conclusion,
the Panthers aren’t rolling over
and playing out the string. They
managed to stop a six-game los-
ing streak over the weekend, and
dropped another game by just one
goal, the fourth time in the past five
losses that they have come up just a
goal shy.
“We told them people are still
watching. You have to have a lot
of pride,” said head coach John
Goodwin following Sunday’s 2-1
loss to the Lindsay Muskies at the
Pickering Recreation Complex. “It’s
a pleasure to come to the rink and
coach these kids right now with the
effort they give.”
The Panthers opened the week-
end on the wrong end of a 7-0
defeat on home ice to Kingston on
Friday for their sixth loss in a row.
But they bounced back the follow-
ing night in Dixie with a 6-3 victory,
before falling 2-1 back on home ice
Sunday night to Lindsay.
The game in Dixie was a bit
bizarre, outside of the fact that the
Panthers managed to get the win.
Dixie starting goalie Paul Favaro
was ejected from the game 4:59 into
the second period after getting into
a fight with Ian MacDonald of the
Panthers. In the third period with
just 3:52 left and another alterca-
tion already taking place on the ice,
Panthers netminder Adam Stein
skated the length of the ice to insti-
gate a fight with Dixie netminder
Frankie Gallo. Last season, the two
were teammates with the Ajax Axe-
men.
With both goalies ejected for
fighting, Dixie was forced to play
the final 3:52 without anyone in net.
Pickering failed to score, spending
the final minutes killing penalties,
but the six they potted over the first
two periods were enough for the
win. Jamie Sodhi, Khalid Alli, Paul
Ramieri, Derek Brown, Jay Meloff
and Andrew Goldberg contributed
with one goal each.
Goals were a little harder to come
by Sunday against Lindsay, as
Brandon Parks opened the scoring
midway through the first period.
Lindsay tied it in the second and
scored the winner midway through
the third.
“Obviously, Friday night, Kings-
ton were gunning for us,” said
Goodwin in reviewing the week-
end. “(Saturday) we went into
Dixie, and they’re not a top team,
but we kept our composure and got
six goals from a lineup that doesn’t
have a lot of scoring.
“(Sunday) the effort was great. We
got better as the game went on.”
He praised the defence, noting
he thinks they are playing their
best hockey of the season, as well
as the forwards, who were reduced
to a group of 10 following the trade
deadline earlier in the week.
Even the 20 year olds who are
wrapping up their junior careers,
Jay Meloff, Joe Ramieri and Jamie
Sodhi, are playing hard.
“It’s hard to see them not get the
results they deserve, but we’ve
been saying that almost from day
one,” said Goodwin. “Anything
we can do to help these guys get
to whatever level, we will because
they are a good bunch of kids. They
are a good bunch to coach and you
can see they haven’t quit.”
The Panthers take a 10-29-2 mark
into a weekend that includes a trip
to Kingston Thursday and a home
game on Friday against Villanova at
7:30 p.m.
TOP PROSPECTS GAME
Jensen fast becoming a great Dane with Generals
BRIAN MCNAIR
bmcnair@durhamregion.com
OSHAWA -- It seems a break,
even if it involved some pret-
ty intense hockey, has done a
world of good for Oshawa Gen-
erals rookie Nicklas Jensen.
Jensen, who came to Oshawa
from Denmark as the eighth
overall pick of the Canadian
Hockey League import draft, is
on quite a roll right now.
Since helping his country win
the B Group of the world junior
hockey championships in Slove-
nia, a feat that has earned Den-
mark a date with Canada and
the rest of the big boys in Alber-
ta next year, Jensen has returned
refreshed and apparently ready
to push his NHL draft stock up a
few more notches.
“I had a little break and went
to the world juniors with my
national team in the B pool and
we won that. I got a little kick
there,” Jensen explained recent-
ly.
“I just had some time at home
with my family and that gave me
a little boost, and then I came
back here and tried to play a lit-
tle bit harder, and work on the
small details, and it’s worked
out on the ice.”
Jensen has meshed nicely with
centre Andy Andreoff and left
winger Lucas Lessio on what
right now is the team’s most
dangerous line.
The six-foot-three, 185-pound
right-winger offers a nice com-
bination of speed, size and scor-
ing touch, and sure doesn’t
appear to be intimidated by the
North American-style of play. It
did take him awhile to adjust, it
seems, but now that’s he mov-
ing the puck more, he’s found a
comfort zone.
“One of the things I like about
what he’s doing is he’s distrib-
uting the puck better more and
playing off his linemates,” said
Chris DePiero, the team’s head
coach and general manager.
“Admittedly, Nicklas kind of
started off a little slow. I think
he’s just starting to figure the
league out as you can see by the
success he’s having. I expected
him to be an impact player and
I think he is an impact player.”
Jensen certainly had a valuable
resource to draw upon when he
made the decision to come to
Canada to pursue his hockey
dream. His father, Dan, played
three seasons in the OHL, most-
ly with the Petes, before play-
ing and settling in Denmark, the
country he would represent and
score a goal for in a stunning 2-2
tie against Canada at the 2003
world championships.
With NHL Central Scouting’s
mid-term rankings placing Jens-
en 20th among North Ameri-
can skaters and a trip to the
CHL/NHL Top Prospects Game
tonight at the Air Canada Cen-
tre, it seems the younger Jensen
is well on his way to making a
name for himself on this side of
the pond.
“I’m trying not to think about
it too much, but of course I’m
thinking about it,” said Jens-
en, who has an outside shot of
becoming the highest Dane ever
drafted into the NHL (Mikkel
Boedker went eighth overall in
2008 to the Phoenix Coyotes).
“That’s why I came over here
to Canada, because it is my draft
year. It’s in my head, but I’m not
thinking about it too much.”
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201136
AP
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PICKERING -- The Pickering Panthers Mite Selects finished second at a tournament in
Ajax over the Christmas holidays.
HOCKEY
Panthers reach finals
AJAX -- The future of
minor hockey looks bright
in Pickering.
The youngest team on the
ice, the Pickering Panthers
Mites Selects, placed sec-
ond in a tournament hosted
by the Ajax Minor Hockey
Association over the Christ-
mas holidays. This team is
the future of the Panthers
are the ripe age of six.
Pickering beat Orangeville
4-1 and Ajax 2-0, but lost to
West Hill 8-1. The final pro-
duced a rematch with West
Hill, and while Pickering
narrowed the margin from
the first meeting, they came
up just short in a 3-1 final.
The game was actually tied
at one apiece through two
periods.
Besides learning the fun-
damentals of the game, the
players are learning the
importance of teamwork
and sportsmanship during
their first year of competi-
tive hockey.
HOCKEY
Lightning find secret to success
AJAX -- The Durham West
Lightning Midget AAs con-
tinued their quest to the
OWHA Provincial Tourna-
ment, playing four playdown
games over seven days,
including three in a row.
First up was a return
match against Clarington.
The Lightning came out fast
with Jennifer Sisson scoring
20 seconds into the match.
Ellie Minchopoulos and Syd-
ney O’Neill added markers
with assists to Lindsay Smith
(3), Jennifer Sisson and Ellie
Minchopoulos. Kimberley
Keller notched the shutout
facing 28 shots.
Next up was a home-and-
home series against Oshawa
where Durham won the
opener 2-0 with Nicole Sta-
neland potting both goals
and assists to Catherine Ho
and Acey Maves. The fol-
lowing day, Durham played
Oshawa to a 0-0 tie. Kimber-
ley Keller recorded her third
shutout in a row. This tie
gave Durham second place
in their grouping and a spot
in the Provincial Tourna-
ment.
Playing their third game
in three days, the Lightning
faced undefeated Whitby.
First place in the group was
on the line and the Lightning
gave it their best shot and it
looked like another 0-0 tie
was in order, but Whitby
scored a power play goal
with just over two minutes
left to sneak a 1-0 win.
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201137
AP
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• Employee lounges (with fl at-screen TV’s & computer access)
• Two-week fi xed schedules with potential for overtime hours
WE OFFER:
If you are unable to attend please submit your resume to:
hr@iqtsolutions.com
or contact us at: 905-743-4601 ext: 3151
Immediate
NEW
High
e
r
R
a
t
e
s
!
800-267-1888 or 613 961-5144 x123 or x114
Email: recruiting@itsinc.on.ca www.itstruck.ca
Immediate Openings for Company
Drivers and Owner Operators
Full and part time, singles and teams, vans and roll tites for
domestic and transborder. We offer company drivers
competitive wages and owner operators $1.18 loaded/empty.
• Company cards • Safety bonuses • On going training
• Benefits • No touch freight • PeopleNet®
• Fuel premium • 24/7 dispatch • Maintenance facility
• Weekly deposit • Great equipment in house
H
Pickering Town Center
MANAGER
F/T Duties include: Watch battery &
band replacement, managing a small team,
excellent customer service skills. Must be
sales oriented. Training Program. Jewel-
lery Store Experience Welcome
Email resume:
torontoresumes@fewltd.com
Fax resume: 905-787-9929
Please submit by Saturday, January 22
CROSSING GUARDS
NEEDED!!
We require reliable school crossing
guards in Pickering. These are paid
positions. If you like working within
the community and working outdoors,
please give us a call today at
905-737-1600
COOK AND
MANAGEMENT
Required For billiards, bar,
casual dining. Bring resumes in person to
The Roi Billiards Bar & Grill,
200 John St. W., Oshawa
Nail/Laser Hair Removal Technicians
And Aesthetician
- Required for brand new upscale salon and spa
- Minimum 2 years experience
- Opening February at Old Kingston Road & 401
Please contact Caroline at 647-280-0710
RECESSION PROOF
Leading cemetery company requires
motivated individuals to help market its
pre-arrangement services. If you are highly
motivated and enjoy working with people
give us a call. The successful candidate will
service new and existing accounts. Car a
must. We offer training salary with full
benefi ts, vacation pay, great pension and
more, don't prejudge.
Pine Ridge Memorial Garden
ggentles@arbormemorial.com
Massey's Restaurant
Requires
FULL TIME SERVERS &
LINE COOKS
Mature Attitude and Responsible
Apply in person with resume
774 Liverpool Rd. S., Pickering
905-839-5758
Career
Training
Career
Training
Careers Careers
Career
Training
AIRLINES ARE HIRING-
Train for high paying Aviation
Maintenance Career. FAA
approved program.Financial
aid if qualifi ed- Housing
available. CALL Aviation In-
stitute of Maintenance
(877)818-0783
Drivers
OWNER-OPERATOR & AZ
Company Driver for Cobourg
based co., to run US/Canada
or Canada only; full-time
year-round work. Paid %,
must have minimum 3 yrs.
exp. Fax resume to 905-377-
1479 or call 905-377-1407.
WANTED: EXPERIENCED
AZ Car Haulers. Mostly On-
tario, no US. Fax resume to
905-263-2746 or email at
corstrucking@hotmail.com
Career
Training
Drivers
General
Help
ASSISTANT
SUPERINTENDENT
COUPLE REQUIRED
Mature COUPLE
needed for hi-rise in
Ajax. Live in position,
good benefi ts
and salary.
Please fax resume to
(905) 619-2901
between
8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
CUSTOMER Service/Sales
Secretary. Part time/full time
position providing customer
support regarding the com-
pany's products, assisting in
invoicing and day-to-day ac-
tivities to ensure all offi ce
function is performed in an
effective, effi cient, and timely
manner. Good communica-
tion and problem solving
skills. 9-1 each day.
SHIPPER/RECEIVER, Part
time afternoon position
1-5pm. Warehouse duties:
picking/shipping/receiving,
stocking orders. Tracing
shipments. Cleaning the
warehouse and putting all
stock away in correct loca-
tions. Please apply with re-
sume to: File #119, News
Advertiser, 130 Commercial
Ave., Ajax ON L1S 2H5.
SUPERINTENDENT Durham
East area. Mature couple
only. Salary & 2-bedroom
apt. Routine repairs, mainte-
nance & cleaning. Clear cur-
rent Police Check required.
Please send resume to File
#432, c/o Oshawa This
Week, 865 Farewell St.
Oshawa, ON L1H 7L5
HOMEWORKERS needed!!!
Full & Part Time Positions
Are Available. Will Train On-
Line Data Entry, Typing
Work, E-mail Reading,
PC/Clerical Work, Homemail-
ers, Assembling Products.
HURRY, SPOTS GO FAST!
www.Jobs-ExtraIncome.com
Drivers
General
Help
Cut Your DebtCut Your Debt
FREE CONSULT
Call Doug Heard
Whitby/Brooklin
Ajax/Pickering
697-977-5455
1-866-690-3328
www.cutyourdebt.ca4 PILLARSCONSULTING GROUP
AVOID
BANKRUPTCY!
Payments you can afford @ 0% interest
by up to 70%by up to 70%
DOOR TO DOOR Part-time
Canvassing. $15/hr Wage
plus Mileage & Bonuses. No
Selling! Vehicle Required.
Call after 4pm. 905-686-
9842, ext 305
IS YOUR RETAIL holiday
position ending and need
work? $18/hr avg rate
IMMEDIATE START!! No
experience required. We will
train you. To schedule an
interview call 905 435-0518
LEVEL II DENTAL ASSIST-
ANT needed for busy prac-
tice in Durham Region. P/T
leading to F/T. Must be able
to work evenings and week-
ends. Please email resume
to: greatsmiles100@gmail.
com
LOOKING FOR person will-
ing to speak to small groups.
Part/full time. Car & Internet
necessary Diana 1-866-306-
5858
NEW YEAR, New Career!
Earn up to $800/wk, Hourly
pay. Benefi ts available. Like
team work, music and
people? 10 F/T positions
available now! No exp.
necessary. Call Carrie
905 668 5544
PREP PERSON & DETAIL,
clean-up person required for
large auto collision repair
shop. Must have valid driv-
er's license and take great
pride in producing top quality
work. 905-420-3501.
PRESCHOOL EDUCATOR
Full time for one year mater-
nity leave. Daycare centrally
located in Brooklin. Must be
RECE. Email resume to:
bdnursery@sympatico.ca
PUT YOU PC TO WORK.
Health industry. $1400 part-
time, $4000 full-time month-
ly. No experience required.
Must be teachable. Training
available. For more info
email:
herbavit@hotmail.com
SUPERINTENDENT couple
required for Ajax high rise.
Free 3-bedroom plus salary.
Previous or related experi-
ence an asset. Fax resume
to 416-497-7114
Drivers
General
Help
Salon & Spa
Help
General
Help
START NOW! Have fun!
Gain great experience! Work
with people! Promo's/Ads
team needs to fi ll 15 F/T
openings NOW! UP TO
$20/HOUR, no commission.
Paid training. Filling positions
by Jan 24th. CALL NOW!
Whitney 1 888 767 1027
TAXI DRIVERS NEEDED
immediately for Whitby &
Ajax. Computer GPS dis-
patched. Will train, no experi-
ence necessary. Apply to
109 Dundas St. W., Whitby
or (905)668-4444
THINK GREEN get paid
Green Earn $2000 to $3000
wk/avg. Plus wkly bonus' up
to $1000 Ft/ Pt positions
available. training provided.
For more information call
(905) 435-1052
Salon & Spa
Help
EXPERIENCED HAIRSTY-
LIST wanted for Whitby sa-
lon. Chair rental only. Please
contact Christy @ 905-926-
0745 for details and to
schedule interview.
Skilled &
Technical Help
CURRENTLY SEEKING
1st/2nd/3rd year tool & die
apprentices, must have
2-year diploma in tool & die
or similar college program.
Learn hands on skills work-
ing alongside highly trained
individuals. Competitive wag-
es. (905)683-5298.
Drivers
General
Help
Salon & Spa
Help
Skilled &
Technical Help
BRAKE PRESS PROGRAM-
MER AND OPERATOR
Adamson Systems Engineer-
ing is a Durham based
manufacturer seeking a full
time employee to work in our
sheet metal department.
Applicants must have signifi -
cant experience program-
ming and operating a Brake
Press, with some experience
operating a CNC Punch
Press as well. Please fax or
email all resumes attention:
Jesse Adamson, Fax:
905 982 0609. jesse@adam-
sonsystems.com
PRESS OPERATOR for
small offset shop. Duties in-
cluded pre-press, 2-color
printing and bindery work.
Email resume to:
info@dicksonprinting.on.ca
or fax (905)683-9565.
Computer & IT
CNC OPERATOR with setup
exp. Adamson Systems En-
gineering is a Durham based
manufacturer seeking a full
time employee to work in a
sophisticated, fast-paced
CNC environment. All appli-
cants must have experience
with set-up and operating
CNC Lathe's and CNC mills.
We require that the candi-
date has at least 5 years ex-
perience set-up program-
ming and operating. Please
fax or email all resumes at-
tention: Jesse Adamson.
Fax: 905 982 0609.
jesse@adamsonsystems.
com
Sales Help
& Agents
Hotel/
Restaurant
Office Help
PERSONAL ASSISTANT
required for Busy Consultant.
You must be extremely orga-
nized, possess good people
skills, pleasant phone man-
ner, extremely computer liter-
ate and drive a car. Duties
include: inputting, sorting,
deliveries, computer & data-
base management. Program-
ming, web development
and/or Computer repair
would be considered a large
asset. For more information,
Email resume:
hiring2011@live.ca
Before: Jan 24th, 2011
Sales Help
& Agents
DENTAL RECEPTIONIST
required. Part time, for 3
month leave for oral surgery
offi ce. Dentalware experi-
ence preferred. Fax resume
to: (905)665-8972.
INSIDE OR OUTSIDE Sales
Rep- In Oshawa. Are you in-
dependent and thrive on
challenge? Do you have su-
perb negotiation skills, and
the ability to fi nd solutions for
your customers? Do you
have strong customer ser-
vice & relationship building
skills? Do you have the
ability to work independently
and thrive in a competitive,
goal driven environment? If
you answered YES we have
a position for you, $12.00 per
hour plus bonus, Unlimited
earning potential Contact
Marcia Davis, mdavis
@greenlawncare.com 905-
433-0099
LUMBER BUILDING Supply
Company looking for an ex-
perienced Sales Representa-
tive. Please fax resumes to
905-579-2547, or e-mail to
sales@colonyholland.com
Hospital/Medical
/Dental
CDA II NEEDED, for dental
offi ce in Oshawa. Hours are
Monday-Friday, 30-37/hrs
per week. Experience an as-
set. Please reply to
WillaB@rogers.com
Sales Help
& Agents
Hotel/
Restaurant
Hospital/Medical
/Dental
DENTAL RECEPTIONIST
for Whitby offi ce, FT. Must
have completed dental re-
ceptionist course or minimum
1 year working experience in
dental offi ce. Send resumes
to dentaljobmarket@gmail.
com
FULL-TIME OPTOMETRIC
assistant required immedi-
ately. Experience is an as-
set. Must be detail oriented,
organized and fl exible. Re-
quire two evenings a week
and every Saturday. Please
apply in person to 1822
Whites Road, Unit #25 in
Pickering on Tuesdays and
Thursdays between 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m.
LEVEL II DENTAL assist-
ants required FT in
Oshawa/Whitby region. Re-
ception experience welcome.
Send resumes assistindur-
ham@gmail.com
REGISTERED MASSAGE
THERAPIST to join extreme-
ly busy Chiropractic Clinic in
Oshawa. Email resume to:
healingrmt@yahoo.ca or fax
to 905-433-8144.
Hotel/
Restaurant
BUSY FAMILY restaurant in
Whitby requires experienced
server & experienced cook.
Please reply with resume to
fi le #434, PO. Box 481,
Oshawa, Ont., L1H 7L5.
EXPERIENCED Wait Staff,
Dishwasher & Short Order
Cook. Full/part-time.
Weekends a must. Apply
in-person with resume. An-
gelique's Family Restaurant,
31 Barr Road, Ajax.
Property
Outside CanadaP
20 ACRES- $0 Down!
$99/mo. Near Growing El
Paso, Texas. Guaranteed
Owner Financing, No Credit
Checks Money Back Guar-
antee. Free Map/Pictures.
800-755-8953 www.sunse-
tranches.com
Property
Outside CanadaP
LARGE ARIZONA BUILD-
ING LOTS FULL ACRES
AND MORE! Guaranteed
Owner Financing No credit
check $0 down - 0 interest
Starting @ just $89/mo. USD
Close to Tucson's Intl. Air-
port For Recorded Message
800-631-8164 Code 4001 or
visit www.sunsiteslan-
drush.com Offer ends
11/30/10!
Industrial/
Commercial SpaceI
STORAGE UNITS 10' x 20'
Wilson Rd. S. Oshawa. Un-
heated. $125. - $135. per
mo. Call (905)725-9991
TWO, INDOOR STORAGE
units available for rent. Ap-
proximately 890 square feet
for $600.00 per month or
1450 square feet for $900.00
per month. Call Brooklin
(905)655-3331.
Business
OpportunitiesB
HYGIENITECH MATTRESS
Cleaning &Upholstery Clean-
ing/ Sanitizing Business.
New "Green" Dry, Chemical-
Free process removes bed
bugs, dust mites, and harm-
ful allergens. Big Prof-
its/Small Investment. 1-888-
999-9030 www.Hygieni-
tech.com
WORK FROM HOME.
Looking for 3 self-motivated
people to teach online from
their home computer.
Flexible hours, free training,
great income and real sup-
port www.free-2-b-me.com
Mortgages,
LoansM
$$MONEY$$ Consolidate
Debts Mortgages to 95%
No income, Bad credit OK!
Better Option Mortgage
#10969 1-800-282-1169
www.mortgageontario.com
FREE 50" HDTV!
5 yr. mortgage @
2.30%
Beat that! Refi nance
now and Save
$$$ before rates rise.
Below bank Rates
Call for Details
Peter 877-777-7308
Mortgage Leaders
Apartments &
Flats for RentA
1 BEDROOM apartment for
rent, Whitby, Brock & Dun-
das area. Available immedi-
ately/February 1st. Call
Darlene 905-767-4201 or
Tony (416)493-1927.
1-BEDROOM, WITH DEN,
top fl oor bungalow, Down-
town Oshawa, Available im-
mediately. Suits single per-
son. $700/month plus
utilities. 1-BEDROOM and
bathroom in basement,
$600/month plus utilities.
(705)792-2414,ext:1
2 BEDROOM APT in country
try estate. 5-min to Kirby Ski
Hill. Inground pool, utilities
included, fi rst/last required.
Available immediately.
$1150/mo. (905)725-9991
2 BEDROOM NORTH
OSHAWA quiet apartment,
Simcoe North at Russett.
Hardwood fl oors, well-main-
tained 12 plex, newly reno-
vated, near bus/shopping.
New appliances,
cable/heat/water/parking in-
cluded. Laundry, No dogs.
March 1. (905)576-2982
(905)626-3465
2-BEDROOM $910/monthly
($220/weekly). Furnished
bachelor, $650/monthly
($160/weekly) parking, appli-
ances, utilities included,
Available Jan 19 or later.
Deposit negotiable (Sim-
coe/Mill). Call 905-922-5927.
Classifi eds News Advertiser
To Place an Ad Call: 905-683-0707
Or Toronto Line: 416-798-7259
localmarketplace.ca • Email: classifieds@durhamregion.com
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201138
AP
2 & 3 bedroom
apartments
Close to school, shopping, hospital
On-site superintendent & security.
Rental Offi ce
Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
(905)686-0845 or (905)686-0841
Eve. viewing by appt.
www.ajaxapartments.com
Quality Apartments for Rent
● 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms available from $915.
● Utilities Included
● Large Suites
● Durham Transit and GO Transit at Door
● Close to shopping, schools and Hwy 401
100, 101, 200 & 201 White Oaks
(905) 668-7332
Email: rentals@capreit.net
www.caprent.com
NEW YEAR SPECIAL
Limited Time Offer
Condominium Suites in Oshawa
2 Bdrms starting at $775
3 Bdrms starting at $900
● Free Utilities ● Free Parking
● Full Security System
Call for more info 905-728-4993
RETIREE'S & GM DISCOUNT
Large Antique & Collectors
Auction
Sunday, January 23
Preview 9:30 A.M. Auction 11:00 A.M.
Auction to include a large amount of
Prints, Paintings & Watercolours, Estate
Jewellery, Moorcroft, Lalique, Collection
of Doulton Figures, Crystal Stemware,
Silver, Silver Plate, Furniture, Mirrors &
Oriental Carpets. We are away until
Thursday so Watch Web Site for
Up-Dates.
A really interesting auction - do not let
the small ad fool you!
Indoor Yard Sale: Sunday @ 9:30 a.m.
For details and photo gallery go to
www.waddingtons.ca/brighton
Phone 1-613-475-6223
CORNEIL'S AUCTION BARN
Friday January 21st at 4:30 p.m.
located 3 miles East of Little Britain
on Kawartha Lakes Rd. 4.
leather chesterfi eld and chair (like new) - maple hutch - 8 pc.
walnut dining room set - 5 pc. cherry bedroom set - oriental ta-
ble - settees - Lladro fi gurine - slant top desk - walnut buffet -
jam cupboard - wool winder - coffee and end tables - wicker
loveseat and chair - child's wicker rocking chair - wicker baby
carriage - oak offi ce chair - qty of jewelry - round oak pedestal
coffee table - kitchen able and chairs - Makita miter saw -
Husky tile saw - chest freezer - new windows - fl ame airtight
woodstove - 1 1 /2 bush cord mixed hardwood - GE apt. size
washer - chest freezer - 5 hp Yardman snowblower - qty of
china, glass household and collectable items.
Don & Greg Corneil Auctioneers
1241 Salem Rd., Little Britain (705) 786-2183
for more info or pictures go to www.theauctionad-
vertiser.com/DCorneil - open for viewing Thurs-
day from 8:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
and Friday morning at 9 a.m.
SAT. JANUARY 22 - 10AM ANTIQUE ESTATE AUCTION
at MCLEAN AUCTION CENTER - 2194 Little Britain Rd.,
LINDSAY antique furniture, pine fl at to wall cabinet, antique
kitchen cupboard, columns on front, pine armoire, antique
oak roll top desk, grandfather clock, pine bench with lift
seat, washstands, rockers, pine boxes, glass & china, crys-
tal, Lladro & Royal Doulton fi gurines, paintings, prints,
primitives, collectables, coins, vintage post offi ce scales, tin
signs, advertising, paintings, prints, Bob Hope 'Paris Holi-
day' movie poster, lawn bowling set, antique washer, small
wagon frame wooden wheel spokes, buggy seat, vintage
bike with canopy, ships wheel, butcher block, assorted
wood augers, 03 Montana van, hundreds of hard to fi nd
items, don't miss this interesting sale, Info 705-324-2783
MCLEAN AUCTIONS or view fl yer/list/updates/terms at
www.mcleanauctions.com
SATURDAY, January 22, 2011
10:00 a.m. - Viewing at 8:00 AM
Auction Sale of Antiques, Household, Collectibles,
Art, Books, Tools, Jewellery, Sports Mem, Snow-
mobile Trailer and local estates from Uxbridge,
Thornhill, Richmond Hill plus others. To be held at
the Van Haven Sales Arena Uxbridge, 720 Davis
Drive and Main Street, Uxbridge. Approx 23 klms
east of 404 or 1 mile west of Hwy 23.
GARY HILL AUCTIONS
905-852-9538, 800-654-4647
416-518-6401
details & photos garyhillauctions.ca
For more information and to register call
Durham Health Connection Line at
905-666-6241 or 1-800-841-2729
or visit www.durham.ca
You have it in you to quit
Quit Smoking Group for Adults
Information Meeting:
Tuesday
Jan. 18, 2011
10:00 am - 11:00 am 10:00 am - 11:30 am
F r e eFreeFree
Location:
The Glazier Medical Centre
11 Gibb St., Oshawa
Register for the group by Jan. 18, 2011
Group Sessions:
Tuesdays
Jan. 25 - Mar. 1, 2011
Registration is required.
1-866-333-3299
HomeChildcare
It’ll t yourchild’s lifestyle!
weewatch.com/youtube
Safe
Educational
Reliable
Apartments &
Flats for RentA
33 RICHMOND ST. W
Oshawa. 1-bdrm apts start-
ing $825. Heat, Hydro & Wa-
ter incld. Secured Ent, Eleva-
tor, Fridge, Stove. Laundry
Onsite & near schools. Call
us today! 905-723-2236
skylineonline.ca
401/WHITES ONE bedroom
basement, $700 per mo. in-
clusive. No smoking/pets.
Suit mature single, Feb. lst.
(905)839-3053
72 ROWE ST. OSHAWA - 2
Bedrooms, 2nd fl oor, Duplex.
$795+ hydro. Includes: Park-
ing, Fridge, Stove, Laundry
Gas, Shared Yard. Immedi-
ate, 1st/last Able Manage-
ment 905-725-9593
Ajax - Pickering Village
Modern 1-Bedroom
1st fl oor apartment
Private entrance &
laundry. Includes
fridge/stove, parking.
No smoking and no pets,
fi rst/last
$750 + hydro
(905)683-4294
AJAX, BAYLY/BURCHER.
3 bedroom main fl oor, back-
yard access, 2-parking,
5-appliances, no pets,
available now. $1250+
utilities. 1st/last, references.
416-419-2759
AJAX, CENTRAL, 1-bed-
room basement apt., clean,
bright, 4 appliances. Near all
amenities. No pets.
$600/month plus utilities.
Available December 1st. Call
(905)683-8768.
AJAX, HARWOOD/BAYLY
1-bedroom legal basement
apartment. Bright, 4-piece
bathroom, separate en-
trance. $750/mo, utilities,
parking included. Laundry
available. Avail. Jan. 15th.
No smoking/pets. First/last.
905-683-0799.
AJAX, NEW apartment
building, studio, 1 & 2-bed-
rooms, available now. In-
come preferred, $17,000-
$32,000/yr. Call (905)683-
9269.
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
-Pickering, Brock/fi nch.
Bright and airy, two bedroom
basement apartment, private
entrance, beside bus stop,
parking $999 inclusive. 905-
686-4975, 647-400-4975.
BOWMANVILLE: 3 bedroom
close to all amenities. $930
per mo. plus hydro and
cable. Also 2 bedroom with
den, $930 plus hydro. Move
in allowance offered. Offi ce
hours 9-5, Monday - Friday.
(905)430-1877.
Apartments &
Flats for RentA
DUPLEX OSHAWA main
fl oor 2 bedroom apt. plus
walkout basement with 2
rooms. 2 washrooms, large
kitchen. Newly renovated.
$995+ part hydro, heat in-
cluded. 905-433-0270
MARY STREET APTS
bachelors, 1's & 2s bdrm
apts. Utilities included, min-
utes to downtown, short drive
to Whitby Mall. Mary/Garden
905-666-2450 www.real-
star.ca
NORTH OSHAWA bachelor.
Newly renovated, walk-out
basement in legal Duplex.
Extra clean. Includes appli-
ances, parking. shared laun-
dry. excellent enighbout-
hood, no smoking/pets.
$725/mo-inclusive. Feb 1.
(905)424-1125
NORTH OSHAWA! 1140
MARY St. N. 2-bdrms. From
$930, all Utilities Incld. Near
public schools, Durham Col-
lege & easy access to
amenities. Laundry on-site,
Elevator & Secure entrance,
underground and surface
parking. 905-438-1971
Skylineonline.ca
NORTH OSHAWA, 1-bed-
room apt, clean, quiet, se-
cure building, laundry on site,
$700/month plus Hydro, Call
Tony (905)260-2215.
OSHAWA Large 2 & 3 bed-
room updated apartments in
upscale, quiet, well-managed
building in good area. $1200
& $1250 inclusive. (905)728-
8919
OSHAWA NORTH Extra
large 2 & 3-bedroom apts.,
(3-bdrm, 1200sq.ft. 2 4pc
baths), well managed, quiet
building, controlled entrance,
video surveillance, large bal-
cony, new appliances,
utilities, Rogers cable
($82.42 value), parking in-
cluded $945, $1185 Feb 1.
(905)579-5584
OSHAWA NORTH, Spa-
cious units. Adult & Senior
lifestyle buildings. Renovat-
ed 1, 2 & 3 bdrm apts.
Across hospital, near bus
stop, wheel chair and se-
curity access. Call 905-728-
4966, 1-866-601-3083.
www.apartmentsinontario.com
OSHAWA Olive/Harmony.
Large 1 bdrm basement apt.
Separate entrance,
stove/fridge, $500+utilities,
fi rst/last. No pets. Available
Feb 1. Prefer mature single
or couple. (905)725-3158
OSHAWA, 385 Gibb St.
Avail. immediately. 2-bdrm
apt. $860/month. Extra park-
ing $25/mo. Laundry on site.
Close to all amenities. Call
Patrick 905-443-0191.
Apartments &
Flats for RentA
OSHAWA, large spacious
unit in duplex, living/dining
rooms, kitchen, backyard, 2-
bedrooms, parking, laundry
hook-ups storage shed,
$975/month (includes wa-
ter/hydro.,) avail Feb, 1.
(905)728-1963.
OSHAWA, One Bedroom,
Simcoe and King. 3rd fl oor
apartment. Appliances, laun-
dry, secure intercom. No
parking. $640 plus electricity.
Quiet, respectful tenants only
please. Call (905)986-4889.
OSHAWA/BOWMANVILLE
1 & 2 bedroom apts. Suites
w/balconies, parking, laundry
facilities, near all amenities.
905-623-4172 The Veltri
Group www.veltrigroup.com
PICKERING, large bachelor,
quiet, res. area, close to all
amenities, sep entrance,
share laundry, satellite, park-
ing, suit single working per-
son. $700 inclusive.
Available Feb 1st. (905)839-
9271.
PORT PERRY/Scugog Is-
land. Bright, hillside 2bdrm
main apt. Open concept,
1200sq.ft.,private entrance/
deck. Picturesque view of
lake. No smoking/no pets.
Suits single female. Heat/hy-
dro/cable/laundry/parking.
$995/inclusive. References
required. 905-985-5790
PORT WHITBY, 3-bedroom
apt, newly renovated/paint-
ed, 4 appliances, laundry on-
site, near GO/401, down-
town, use of big fenced back-
yard onto green space,
$1100/mo plus utilities. Feb
1st. 905-925-1131.
WHITBY CENTRAL - 2 bed-
room on lst fl oor of a superior
standard low rise apartment.
No dogs. Hardwood fl oors,
outdoor patio. Available
March 1st. 200 Mason Dr.,
(905)576-8989.
WHITBY PLACE 1 & 2 bed.
Landscaped grounds. Balco-
nies, laundry & parking.
Access to Hwy. 401 & public
transit. Near shopping &
schools. 900 Dundas St. E.
(Dundas St. & Garden St)
905-430-5420
www.realstar.ca
WHITBY, 2 bedrooms from
$970 all inclusive. Close to
all amenities. Offi ce hours
9-5, Monday - Friday.
(905)430-1877
WHITBY, 2-BEDROOM
basement/ground fl oor, se-
cure building, large windows,
easy access. $840 plus hy-
dro. No smoking, no pets.
References and credit check
required. Available immedi-
ately. (905)240-0282
WHITBY, ROSS-
LAND/Thickson, large 1
+junior bedroom basement
apartment. Private entrance
and parking, 3-appliances.
$925 all inclusive. First/last.
No smoking/pets. Available
immediately. (905)718-8396
Condominiums
for RentC
BOWMANVILLE 1-BDRM+1
den condo, aspen springs,
W/O balcony, 5-appliances,
CAC, Close to GO, transit,
401. Non-smoking.
$1050/mo+ utilities or $1200
inclusive. Professional,
couple, senior. 905-424-8823
Houses
for Rent
! NO DOWN PAYMENT? -
NO PROBLEM!! If you're
paying $850+ monthly rent
STOP! Own your own
home - I can show you how.
Ken Collis Broker, Coldwell
Banker RMR Real Estate
905-728-9414 1-877-663-
1054, or email
kencollis@sympatico.ca
2 BDRM APT. Park/Ade-
laide. Quiet Bldg. Freshly
Painted. Newer Laminate.
Coin Lndry. Parking. Stor-
age. No Smoking/Pets. Avail.
Immed. $830/mon Hydro.
(heat included). Sam 905-
999-7760. www.durhamresi-
dentialrentals.com
2 BDRM MAIN FLOOR of an
Estate Home in North Ajax
overlooking golf course.
$1,500 month incl utilities
and landscaping. Contact
Scott 905-619-4613.
Houses
for Rent
BEATTY/KINGSTON RD. 3
large bedroom detached
house. 2-full bathrooms.
Corner lot. Fully renovated.
Central air. Alarm. Close
amenities. $1200+utilities.
Immediate. First/last. 905-
619-0119, 647-222-6597,
416-721-5319.
MCGILL/OLD HARWOOD
large 4-bedroom, 3,000sq.ft.,
2-1/2 washrooms, eat-in
kitchen, family/living/dining
room, 2 car parking,
$2,000/month. Feb. lst.
(905)686-6684 or (416)738-
6345.
ORONO, LOVELY 3+1-bed-
room house. No smok-
ing/pets. $1400/month plus
utilities. First/last, plus refer-
ences. Call (905)439-9492.
OSHAWA HOUSE, nice
quiet neighbourhood, de-
tached 2+1 bungalow. com-
pletely renovated, large yard,
East Oshawa. No smoking.
$1100+ fi rst/last, references.
(905)259-9100
PICKERING, 2-BDRM bun-
galow, large yard & drive-
way, fridge/stove, wash-
er/dryer, near the lake, close
to amenities. Avail. immedi-
ately. $1150/mo+ utilities.
First/last, credit check.
(416)809-7773
PICKERING, PRESTIGE
neighbouhood, 1-bdrm
house, $1000/mo+ utilities.
Large mature treed lot. High-
way 2/Altona Rd. Close to
401, GO, amenities. Avail.
immediately. Call (416)282-
5563
Townhouses
for RentT
CARRIAGE HILL 2 & 3 bed.
TOWNHOUSES. In-suite
laundry, util. incl., Balconies,
patios, courtyard. Pking.
avail. Near shopping, res-
taurants, schools, parks.
122 Colborne St. E. (Simcoe
N., Colborne E) 905-434-
3972 www.realstar.ca
Cordova
Co-Operative
Homes
71-650 Gladfern St.
Oshawa
Accepting applications for
affordable priced town-
houses
2-bedroom $675
3-bedroom $706
4-bedroom $734
Plus heat & hydro.
electric heat - no
appliances supplied.
Near: schools, park,
shopping, dentist, bus.
Applications in
top mailbox outside unit 71
Phone 905-728-8081
(no subsidies available)
TAUNTON TERRACE 3
bedroom townhouses. En-
suite laundry. Landscaped
grounds w/pool & play-
ground. Private backyards.
Sauna & parking avail. Near
shopping & schools, public
transport. 100 Taunton Rd.
E. (Taunton Rd. & Simcoe
St.) 905-436-3346 www.real-
star.ca
Rooms for
Rent & WantedR
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
- Pickering, Brock/fi nch, fur-
nished room, suit mature
working male, beside bus
stop, parking, $499 inclusive.
905-686-4975, 647-400-
4975.
AVAILABLE IN Oshawa, fur-
nished room, bright very
clean house, run of house,
non-smoker, parking, laun-
dry, high-speed internet,
near all-amenities,
$500/month. (289)314-1949
BOWMANVILLE $800/mo.,
basement apartment for rent,
1 washroom, shared laundry
and kitchen on main fl oor. No
smoking, no pets, must be
clean and quiet. Available
starting February 1st. 416-
669-4272.
CLEAN QUIET home, all
over aged 45. Suitable for
working male. Non smok-
er/abstainer. No pets. No
criminal record. First/last.
Call 9am-9pm (905)571-
5191.
OSHAWA Olive/Albert. Un-
furnished rooms for rent.
Fridge in room. Avail. Feb 1.
$420/mo hydro & water in-
cluded. Share accommoda-
tions (905)809-4413
Coming
EventsC
Daycare
Available
Rooms for
Rent & WantedR
EAST OSHAWA Room for
rent, Prefer male, 40 or older
clean. Share with one other
person. $500 per mo. in-
cludes cable, laundry, kitch-
en and living. Available Feb.
lst. (905)429-7144
FULLY FURNISHED ROOM.
Bowmanville. Close to #2.
Wireless/Cable. Parking.
4pc. Bathroom. Must be ex-
tremely quiet, clean, non-
smoking, no pets, employed,
references/credit check rqd.
$400/500/mo.+ share utils.
Avail. immediately. 1st/last
rqd. 416-669-4272.
LARGE UNFURNISHED
ROOMS in large East
Oshawa home. Suit clean,
quiet working person. Share
facilities, transit at door.
From $425/month inclusive.
Call Gord (905)404-5045
ROOM IN adult-lifestyle
building, suit working, clean,
quiet person. Female pre-
ferred. Pool & workout room.
No smoking, no pets.
$450/month. Available imme-
diately. (905)666-1460.
Vacation
Properties
SELL/RENT YOUR TIME-
SHARE FOR CASH!!! Our
Guaranteed Services will
Sell/ Rent Your Unused
Timeshare for CASH! Over
$78 Million Dollars offered in
2009! www.sellatime-
share.com (800)640-6886
SUNNY WINTER SPECIALS
At Florida's Best Beach-New
Smyrna Beach, Stay a week
or longer. Plan a beach wed-
ding or family reunion.
www.NSBFLA.com or 1-800-
541-9621
Daycare
Available
DROP IN / FULL TIME OR
PART TIME, All ages wel-
come. Daycare service from
7 a.m. - 8 p.m. Monday - Fri-
day. Westney & Delaney, ful-
ly fenced, happy environ-
ment, crafts, games etc. Re-
ceipts, references. Excel-
lent rates. All ages welcome.
(905)686-8719
Articles
for SaleA
BED, ALL new Queen ortho-
pedic, mattress, box spring in
plastic, cost $900, selling
$275. Call (416)779-0563
Coming
EventsC
Daycare
Available
Articles
for SaleA
**LEATHER JACKETS 1/2
PRICE, purses from $9.99;
luggage from $19.99; wallets
from $9.99. Everything must
Go! Family Leather, 5 Points
Mall, Oshawa (905)728-
9830, Scarborough
(416)439-1177, (416)335-
7007.
AFFORDABLE Appliances,
HANKS - PARTS/SALES
/SERVICE 343 Bloor St.
West. Stoves $175/up, Fridg-
es $175/up, Washers
$175/up, Dryers $149/up. All
warranty up to 15 months.
Durham's largest selection of
Reconditioned Appliances.
(905)728-4043.
CARPETS, LAMINATE &
VINYL SALE! I have 1000 of
yards for sale! Free under-
pad with installation. Free
Estimates. Guaranteed
Lowest Prices. Big or small
jobs, I do it all! Lexus Floor-
ing, Call Mike 905-431-4040
CONSTRUCTION EQUIP-
MENT B. E. LARKIN
EQUIPMENT LTD. Kubota
Construction, New Holland
Construction used equip-
ment. Durham, Clarington,
Northumberland Sales Rep
Jim (647)284-0971
FURNACES: LENOX Manu-
factured, 93% fuel-effi cient,
70,000 BTU's, $1699 (In-
stalled). 90,000 BTU's,
$1849 (Installed). 10 year
parts warranty. Humidifi ers
$250, Napoleon fi replaces,
direct/vent, $1,899 (In-
stalled). Residential services.
(289)404-3738.
HOT TUB COVERS All
Custom covers, all sizes and
all shapes, $375.00 plus tax
Free delivery. Let us come to
your house & measure your
tub! Pool safety covers.
905-259-4514.
www.durhamcovers.com
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS
Best Price, Best Quality. All
Shapes & Colours. Call
1-866-585-0056
www.thecoverguy.ca
HOT TUBS, 2010 models,
fully loaded, full warranty,
new in plastic, cost $8000,
sacrifi ce $3,900. 416-779-
0563.
STEEL BUILDINGS. Factory
Deals – Save Thousands
30x40 – 100x200. Can erect
/ Will deliver.
www.scg-grp.com ource#1F2
800-964-8335
Articles
for SaleA
RENT TO OWN - New and
reconditioned appliances,
new TV's, Stereos, Comput-
ers, DVD Players, Furniture,
Bedding, Patio Furniture,
Barbecues & More! Fast de-
livery. No credit application
refused. Paddy's Market,
905-263-8369 or 1-
800-798-5502.
TV, 27" color Phillips w/re-
mote. Great for gaming, Ex-
cellent condition $25. Call
evenings 905-665-1435.
VENDORS WANTED for
Courtice Flea Market. Week-
end & monthly rates. Re-
sources for new vendors.
Call 905-436-1024 or cour-
ticefl eamarket.com
Firewood
FIREWOOD, seasoned 16"
hardwood, $285/cord; soft
maple $185/cord; 12" white
birch. Outdoor furnace wood
and fi rewood logs also
available. Delivery Extra
Charge. (905)986-9610 or
905-718-4765.
Firewood
100% A KOZY HEAT FIRE-
WOOD, excellent, very best
quality hardwood, guaran-
teed extra long time fully
seasoned, (ready to burn),
cut and split. Honest meas-
urement. Free delivery.
Wood supplier of fi rst choice
by many customers since
1975. (905)753-2246.
FIREWOOD, cut & split, all
hardwood. Delivery,
(905)263-2038.
Pets, Supplies,
Boarding
BEAUTIFUL GOLDEN
RETRIEVER puppies. Expe-
rienced breeder since 1967.
First shots, dewormed, vet
checked. 6 YEAR GUAR-
ANTEE. Supplier of service
dogs. $475. Judy (905)576-
3303, Al 1-705-632-1187
GORGEOUS DOODLE
puppies with excellent
personalities. Low to Non-
shed. Boys & girls available.
Come for a visit and fall
in love. 705-437-2790
www.doodletreasures.com
Cars for Sale
TIRED OF TAKING THE
BUS? Car Repairs Got You
Down? Bankrupt? Poor
Credit? 100% Approval.
Drive The Car You Need
Today. Call 1-877-743-9292
Or Apply Online @
www.needacartoday.ca.
Cars WantedC
! ! $ ! AARON & LEO Scrap
Cars & Trucks Wanted.
Cash paid 7 days/week any-
time. Please call 905-426-
0357.
!!! $$ ADAM & RON'S
SCRAP cars, trucks, vans.
Pay cash, free pick up 7
days/week (anytime)
(905)424-3508
! ! ! ! $ $ AAA ALL
SCRAP CARS, old cars &
trucks wanted. Cash paid.
Free pickup. Call Bob any-
time (905)431-0407.
! ! ! $200-$2000
Cash For
Cars & Trucks
or $300
Gov. Program
1-888-355-5666
!!!$ WHITTLE SCRAP Solu-
tions. We pay cash for your
scrap cars, truck, and vans!
Fast free pickup. 24/7.
905-431-1808.
$200-$2000
Cash For
Cars
Dead or Alive
Fast Free Towing
7 Days a Week
647-628-0946
$250-$2000
Ajaxautowreckers.com
Cash for Cars,
Trucks and
All Scrap Metal.
Or $300 Government
Program
905-686-1771
416-896-7066
CASH FOR CARS! We buy
used vehicles. Vehicles
must be in running condition.
Call (905)427-2415 or come
to 479 Bayly St. East, Ajax at
MURAD AUTO SALES
Adult
Entertainment
#1 Asian Girls
Hot, Sexy, Busty
Best Service
24/7
Out Calls Only
289-634-1234
416-833-3123
MassagesM
AAA
PICKERING
ANGELS
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Relaxing Massage
VIP Rooms & Jacuzzi
905 Dillingham Rd.
(905)420-0320
pickeringangels.com
Now hiring!!!
OPEN
7 Days/Week
Asian Girls
serenityajaxspa.com
905-231-0272
43 Station St.
Unit 1, Ajax
OSHAWA
The Holistic $35 you want
Ritson Rd. / Bloor
905-576-3456
Special $25
Relaxing Massage
6095 Kingston Rd.
401/Meadowvale
SPRING SPA
10am-9pm 7days
416-287-0338
Now Hiring
Garbage
Removal/Hauling
A1 1/2 PRICE
JUNK
REMOVAL!!
Homes, Yards,
Businesses, etc.
We do all the
loading.
Seniors Discounts.
Cheap and fast Service!
John
905-310-5865
HandymanH
NEED A
FRIEND WITH
A TRUCK?
● Junk Removal
● Gen. Deliveries
● Small Moves
● Snow Removal
● Odd Jobs
Reasonable Rates
Call Hans anytime
(905)706-6776
Painting
& Decorating
ALL PRO
PAINTING AND
WALLPAPERING
Repair & Stucco ceilings
Decorative fi nishes &
General repairs
20% off for seniors
(905)404-9669
TMS
PAINTING
& DECOR
Interior & Exterior
European
Workmanship
Fast, clean,
reliable service
(905)428-0081
Moving
& Storage
Apple
Moving
Dependable & Reliable
Good Rates
24-hour Service
Licensed/Insured
(905)239-1263
(416)532-9056
Auctions Service
Directory
Place your
ad at
905-683-5110
Please read your classi-
fied ad on the first day of
publication as we cannot
be responsible for more
than one insertion in the
event of an error.
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201139
AP
JIM AUSTIN
June 15, 1959 - January 20, 2008
He walks with us down quiet paths
And speaks in wind and rain
For the magic power of memory
Gives him back to us again
Beautiful memories are
treasured forever
Of happy days when we were
all together.
Never forgotten, forever missed...
Love Sue, Ian, Emily and Hannah
OUR MOTHER
OUR ANGEL
Lillian Flood
Who passed away
January 18, 2010
What would we not give
to clasp your hand.
Your dear, sweet face to see;
To hear your voice, to see your smile,
that meant so much to us,
You left behind aching hearts
That loved you most sincere;
We have only a memory, dear mother,
We cherish our whole life through;
But the sweetness will live forever
As we treasure the memory of you.
Lovingly Remembered
Dave, Debbie, Steve, Betty,
Ivan, Violet, Bill
& families
15th Annual
Spring Home
& Garden Show
Pickering Markets Trade Centre
Squire Beach Rd & Bayly, Pickering
Friday March 25, 2011 * 3pm - 8pm
Saturday March 26, 2011 * 10am - 5pm
Sunday March 27, 2011 * 10am - 4pm
showsdurhamregion.com
To book your space call
Audrey at 905-426-4676 ext 257
VENDORS WANTED
NEW
The Clarington Home and
Garden Show
is looking for vendors
for April 16th and 17th
Please call Devon at
905-579-4473 ext 2236
The Durham Parent
Baby & Kids Show
Saturday, April 30, 2011
9am - 4pm
Pickering Recreation Complex
1876 Valley Farm Rd., Pickering
To reserve you space call
Audrey at 905-426-4676 ext 257
Sunday, March 6th, 2011
Health Experts and Vendors wanted!
Call 905-683-5110 ext 228
Vendors
WantedV Vendors
WantedV
VENDORS WANTED
OSHAWA
HOME & GARDEN SHOW
MARCH 11TH 12TH 13TH
AT THE
GENERAL MOTORS CENTER
Limited space available
Please call 905-579-4473
Devon 2236 or Wendy 2215
Vendors
WantedV Vendors
WantedV
Vendors
WantedV Vendors
WantedV
DAY, Florence - Passed away peacefully at
Ajax Pickering Hospital on Friday January
14th, 2011 at the age of 102. Florence will be
fondly remembered by her family and many
friends. For many many years she was an
active member of the Rouge Hill Seniors
Club, volunteering and dedicating her time to
the community. The family will receive friends
at the McEACHNIE FUNERAL HOME, 28
Old Kingston Road, Pickering Village, (Ajax),
905-428-8488, on Monday January 24th from
12pm until the time of the funeral in the
chapel of the Funeral Home at 1pm. Burial to
follow at Erskine Cemetery. Donations may
be made to World Vision if desired.
MCDONALD, James Kennedy - Passed away
peacefully in his 85th year on Sunday Janu-
ary 16, 2011 with his children holding his
hands as he breathed his last breath before
rising to heaven. At least now he can rest
peacefully and be done with the dreaded Alz-
heimer's disease. He will be fondly missed by
son Alan (Dawn) McDonald, Daughter Cathe-
rine (Rob) McDonald, brothers Logue (Gerry)
McDonald, Donald McDonald, Sister-In-Law
Patricia Yanor, Brother-In-Law Tom Lavine
and will be sadly missed by many Nieces,
Nephews and friends. Predeceased by his
fi rst wife Florence, and sister BC. James is
also survived by his second wife and friend
Betty. Family will receive friends at McEACH-
NIE FUNERAL HOME (28 Old Kingston
Road, Ajax 905-428-8488) for visitation on
Saturday January 22nd from 1pm until the
time of the memorial service at 3pm, in the
chapel at the funeral home. In lieu of fl owers,
family would greatly appreciate donations
made to the Alzheimer's Society of Durham
(905)576-2567. A Guest Book may be signed
at www.mceachniefuneral.ca
WALTHAM, Eileen Mae (nee Guthrie) -
(Graduate of the Hospital for Sick Children
School of Nursing 1964. Volunteer/employee
of Durham Association for Family Respite
Services for 20 years. Past Matron of Whitby
Chapter No. 248, Order of the Eastern Star.
Lifetime member of Audley United Church,
where she was organist for many years, until
it closed and then of Greenwood United
Church. Passed away unexpectedly at Ajax
Pickering Hospital at age 67. Dearly loved
wife of Leonard (Len) for 46 years. Loving
mother of Len and his wife Karen, Debbie
Lapointe and Al Finney, Dave and his wife
Catherine. Cherished 'Mama" of Matthew,
Daniel, Kristyn, John, James, Luc, Alexander
and Christopher. Daughter of Grace Guthrie
(nee Batty) and the late Bert Guthrie.
Survived by her sister Anne (Terry) Robinson
and brother Harold (Mary Lynn) Guthrie.
Friends will be received at BARNES
MEMORIAL FUNERAL HOME, 5295
Thickson Rd. N. Whitby (905-655-3662) from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Friday. Funeral service in the chapel
Saturday afternoon at 2:00 p.m. OES Funeral
Service will be held at the funeral home
Friday evening at 6:45 p.m. Cremation will
follow. In lieu of fl owers memorial donations
to Greenwood United Church or the CNIB
would be appreciated by the family.
Death Notices In Memoriams
www.durhamregion.com
Catch Classifieds
ONLINE! ANYTIME!
Log on to: www.durhamregion.com
durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • January 19, 201140
AP
201 BAYLY ST. W. (AT MONARCH AVE., AJAX) 1-888-468-0391No Credit? Slow Credit? Bad Credit? No Credit? Slow Credit? Bad Credit? CallCall 1-888-468-03911-888-468-0391WE WANT YOUR TRADE, ALL MAKES, ALL MODELS, ALL YEARS!WE WANT YOUR TRADE, ALL MAKES, ALL MODELS, ALL YEARS!CHRYSLER • DODGE • JEEPCHRYSLER • DODGE • JEEPVILLAGE CHRYSLER“Thinkinglike acustomer”License fee extra. Finance example $10,000 x 60 mo. @ 4.99% variable rate = payment $43.36/weekly, cost of borrowing $1499.95. OAC.2009 JEEP PATRIOT 4X4YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$67844.99%$0Auto, A/C, Pwr Grp. Stk#V867$19,9782008 DODGE NITRO 4WDYOU OWN IT$17,978PER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$69724.99%$0Auto, A/C, Pwr Grp, and Much, Much More. Stk# V1395ODGE NITRO 4WD78YOU OWN IT2008 PONTIAC G6Auto, A/C, Plus... Stk#V1149APER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$41724.99%$0$10,9787 pass., auto, pwr. Locks, Stk#T10253A2009 PONTIAC MONTANA SV6YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$53844.99%$0$15,7982008 DODGE RAM 1500 4X4Auto, A/C, Quad Cab, Low Km & Much More. Stk#T10390BYOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$77724.99%$0$20,9782008 JEEP WRANGLER 2DR 4X4YOU OWN IT$24,978DOWNSIGN & DRIVE$95724.99%$0Auto, A/C, 1 Owner Jeep. STK#V1308PER WEEKMONTHSINTEREST$25,978YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$99724.99%$02008 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY LTDAuto, Air, Pwr Drs, Pwr Grp, 1 Owner. Stk#V1402Leather, Sunroof, Auto, AC, Loaded, One Owner Car. Stk#P1419AYOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$133604.99%$0$29,8782007 CHRYSLER ASPEN 4WD LIMITED2007 DODGE CHARGER$12,978Auto, AC, Power Grp, One Owner Car. STK#CH10642A.$58604.99%PER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$02010 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE 4X4Auto, Air and Much More! Stk# V1375YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$98844.99%$0$28,878YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$81844.99%$02009 CHRYSELER SEBRING CONVERTIBLEAuto, Air, Power Top, Keyless, Aluminum Wheels& much much more. Stk#P1103$23,978$20,978YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$80724.99%$02008 DODGE DAKOTA CREW CAB Auto, Air, Power Group, Stk#V1413$12,978YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$47724.99%$02008 DODGE CALIBER SXTAuto, A/C, Power Grp, One Owner Car, Stk#V1152$19,978YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$76724.99%$02008 JEEP LIBERTY 4X4Auto, A/C, Loaded, 1 Owner, Low Kms Stk#R1542006 TOYOTA COROLLAYOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$48604.99%$0Auto, A/C, Pwr Grp, One Owner CarStk#V1219A$10,978$19,8782008 DODGE CALIBER SRT 4Fully loaded, Stk#V1228YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$76724.99%$02009 CHRYSLER SEBRINGLeather, Sunroof, Auto, Air and Much More, Stk#P924YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$51844.99%$0$15,498YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$44844.99%$02009 DODGE AVENGERAuto, AC, Power Grp, Keyless & Much More. Stk# V1443$12,978YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$61724.99%$02008 JEEP COMPASS 4X4Auto, A/C, One Owner Car. Stk#P1165$15,998$17,9782006 RAM 1500 QUAD CABAuto, Air, Pwr Group, 1 Owner Truck, Stk#T10215AYOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$80604.99%$0978$13,9782007 DODGE GRAND CARAVANSto N Go, loaded, Stk# P980BYOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$53724.99%$0978ODGEGRANDCARAVAN$28,978YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$111724.99%$02008 NISSAN 350Z 2 DOOR ROADSTERAC, Leather, Keyless, One Owner Car, & Much More. Stk#V1207A1DOWNSIGN & DRIVEYOU OWN IT2010 JEEP COMMANDER 4X4$31,978Auto, AC, Power Grp, & Much More. Stk#P1427$97964.99%PER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$0YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$98604.99%$0$21,9782007 DODGE DURANGO SLT 4X4Auto, AC, Fully Loaded, One Owner Car. Stk. P1428$22,9782009 DODGE JOURNEY RTAuto, AC, Power Grp, Keyless, 7 Pass.& Much More Stk#T10570AYOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$81844.99%$02009 CHRYSLERPT CRUISERAuto, air, pw/pl/pm, cruise, keyless entry, tint, former daily rental, Stk#V1224YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$36844.99%$0NOW $10,978$12,978FROM6 6 TOTOCHOOSECHOOSEYOU OWN ITDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$53604.99%$0NOWPER WEEKMONTHSINTEREST7 7 TOTOCHOOSECHOOSEAuto, Air, 7 Pass, DVD, One Owner van Stk#V13402006 DODGE CARAVAN $9,999FROMAuto, Air, StoNgo, Keyless, Fully Loaded,1 Owner and much more. Stk#V1398YOU OWN ITPER WEEKMONTHSINTERESTDOWNSIGN & DRIVE$89604.99%$0NOW2006 CHRYSLERTOWN & COUNTRY LIMITED $17,978 $19,978www.villagechrysler.caNo ChargeNo Charge$250$250Gas CardPre-Owned Auto BlowoutPre-Owned Auto BlowoutFREEGPSGPSWITH ANYWITH ANYUSED CARUSED CAR$$175175 Value ValueVILLAGE CHRYSLERAll prices and payments are plus HST only!NO GIMMICKS... OVEROVER450450NEW & USEDNEW & USEDCARSCARSOROR