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Durham Region ready to let the Pan Am Games begin p.10 WELCOMING THE WORLD Jason Liebregts / Metroland p.2 In the Loupe: Polonsky reflects on time at Durham College p.14-15 Your Pickering Real Estate listings First of a four-part series PICKERINGNews Adver tiser durhamregion.com JUNE 3, 2015 du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 2 AP IT’S BETTER WITH BATH FITTER ® BEFORE AFTER Why not havethe bathroom you reallyWant...in just1day! 905-571-BATH(2284) 158BloorStE,Oshawa,L1H3M4 1-800-865-BATH(2284) 905-948-9820-Markham 905-352-3602-Cobourg/PortHope 705-748-4603-Peterborough/Lindsay Whenit’stimetoremodelyourbathroom,trust BATH FITTER®.Injustoneday,wewillinstallabeautifulnew bathtuborshower RIGHTOVER youroldone. thebathFitterdiFFerenCe GetmostinstallationsCOMPLETEDINONEDAY.• C•hoosefromawiderangeofhigh-qualityandeasy-to-clean bathtubandshowerstyles. P•aymuchlessthanyouwouldfortraditionalrenovations. 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Ajax Oshawa Centre - Hwy. 2 & Stevenson Taunton & Wilson - Oshawa CAR deAleRS: Bessada Kia, 1675 Bayly St., Pickering Midway Nissan, 1300 Dundas St. east of Thickson Subaru, 1705 Dundas St. W., Whitby Durham Dodge, 799 Bloor St, W., Oshawa Gus Brown, 1201 Dundas St. E., Whitby Menzies, 1602 Champlain Ave., Whitby Pickering Chrysler, 201 Bayly St. W., Ajax Formula Ford, 940 Kingston Rd., Pickering Canadian Tire, 250 Kingston Rd. E., Ajax Canadian Tire, 1735 Pickering Pkwy, Pickering ReSTAURAnTS: il Fornello, 95 Kingston Rd. E., Ajax Tutto Market Cafe, 29 Simcoe St. S., Oshawa Tim Hortons, 1818 King St. E., Oshawa GO STATiOnS: Oshawa GO/Via Rail Train Station 915 Bloor St. W., Oshawa Whitby GO station 1350 Brock St. S. at Hwy. 401, Whitby diGiTAl ediTiOn: durhamregion.com JUNE 2015 NEWSMAGAZINE loup FR E E Tak e M e H o m eloup SEX ED DECADES OF CURRICUL U M C H A N G E S , DEBATE REMAINS THE S A M E How Hwy. 407 is changing the landsc a p e of Durham Region A ncient Guatemalan culture New ebook: The Coldest Case Durham's 40-ye a r murder mystery FREE! Polonsky ponders past, present and future Durham College’s longest serving president shares insight OSHAWA -- Gary Polonsky remembers spending $90 to watch a 90-second fight between Mike Tyson and Michael Spinks the night before he interviewed for the job as Durham College’s third president. “I told the board in the interview, they might want to rethink me being the favoured candidate because I had just blown $90 on a 90-second fight, but they hired me anyway,” said Mr. Polonsky. In 1988, the year Mr. Polonsky arrived in Durham as president, the halls of Durham College were full of smoke and smokers who were most likely white males studying technology or skilled trades. An educator by trade, Mr. Polonsky is the longest-serving president of Durham Col- lege (18 years) and the only Canadian to ever serve as the president of both a college and a university at the same time. “It’s not something I would recommend to anyone, unless they like working 20 hours a day seven days a week,” he said. He quipped that his looks were the rea- son he held both positions but in reality it is because he spearheaded a community campaign to bring a university to the region and the community had the condition that Mr. Polonsky be the founding president. “Many citizens saw the decline of GM in the tea leaves and they wanted to prevent it and have an alternative,” Mr. Polonsky said. That alternative was a knowledge-based economy powered by the University of Ontario Institute of Technology, which Mr. Polonsky was instrumental in founding in 2002. Mr. Polonsky’s time at Durham College and UOIT was one of great change. When he arrived in the late 80s the campus sat in north Oshawa, far from the hub of downtown. The total num- ber of students was in the ball- park of 2,000 and wasn’t very diverse in terms of gender, culture and programs. “It was small, it was kind of technical in its pro- gramming biases ... mostly male,” he said. As the times changed more and more peo- ple moved east from the GTA core, women became more present in the workforce and the col- lege changed as well. “Being a community college, the col- lege opted to reflect its community so we introduced a lot more programming that would be a lot more intuitively interesting to women as well as maintain the technol- ogy flavour,” Mr. Polonsky said. The community and the college contin- ued to grow with enrollment tripling dur- ing Mr. Polonsky’s tenure and a pattern of growth, diversification and beautification began. “When I arrived I think almost everyone was white, today I suspect it’s half at most would be Caucasian,” said Mr. Polonsky. The student population wasn’t the only thing to change. A huge boost in construc- tion took place during Mr. Polonsky’s time as president and stands as one of his great- est accomplishments in his mind. “Creating the skills training centre was probably the biggest but maybe tied was all the construction,” Mr. Polonsky said. The police foundations building, the res- idence buildings, the information com- mons and entire south wing of the college were built under Mr. Polonsky’s leadership. “There were always cranes on campus and the fact that we were always building and growing gave everyone a sense of con- fidence,” he said... -- Read the story in its entirety in this month’s edition of Loupe. Also in the June edition of Loupe magazine Sex education in Ontario over the last 100 years. UOIT professor’s research into causes of wrongful criminal convictions. How Hwy. 407 construction has altered Durham’s landscape Q & A with Bob McKenzie, the most trusted source in hockey Neil Crone ‘In the Loupe’, Names in the News, The Big Picture.....and more du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 4 AP A&Q Personal Injury Lawyers 905-427-2000 john.russell@dyeandrussell.com At Dye & Russell we understand all the difficulties you’ll face following a personal injury or death in your family. The last thing you need is another expense. We offer a free evaluation of your case with no obligation and if you do choose us to represent you we won’t charge a fee until your case is settled or won. We spend whatever is necessary to properly evaluate and present your claim and we make sure that you get funding to pay for the treatment you need. We will only settle your case when it is ready and make sure you receive all that you are entitled to. It never costs anything to speak to us. We only get paid when you do. How do I pay for Personal Injury Legal Services? John Russell Dye & Russell Personal Injury Lawyers 92 Church St. S. Suite 106, Ajax Financial Advisor SuSan M Lepp 1105 Finch Avenue Unit #1B, Pickering, ON L1V 1J7 905-831-4611 • www.edwardjones.com Does choosing companies with Different sizes help portfolio Diversification?AA&&QQ When it comes to stocks, you will often hear about the importance of diversification. That reference isn’t just about geography or industry sector. You should also consider the size of companies. There are three categories. Large cap companies have market capitalizations of greater than $5 billion. Mid caps range from $1 to $5 billion.And small caps are under $1 billion. Your biggest share should be in high-quality large caps that have a long history of strong performance and good management. Mid caps can generate potentially greater returns than large caps but they have more risk.So you should keep these down to a much smaller percentage of your portfolio.Small caps have the greatest risk of all. It might be most prudent to avoid these altogether. Workwithaninvestmentprofessionalwhocanhelpyouconstructaportfoliothat’stailoredto your unique needs and circumstances. Insurance and annuities are offered by Edward Jones Insurance Agency (except in Quebec). In Quebec, insurance and annuities are offered by Edward Jones Insurance Agency (Quebec) Inc. Member of Canadian Investor Protection Fund. Durham police release image of suspect in GO train sex assault Incident on GO train happened between Whitby and Ajax in February DURHAM -- Police have released an image of a man being sought after a woman reported being inappropriately touched on a GO train. The incident happened on Wednesday, Feb. 18 at about 3:20 p.m. between Whitby and Ajax when a woman reported being approached by a man who sat down beside her and asked if he could ask her a question. The woman reports the man then touched her inappropriately, Durham Regional Police said. Police released an image of a suspect Monday, June 1. The sus- pect is described as male, white, possibly of Asian descent, 19 to 22 years old, approximately five feet nine inches tall with a slen- der build. He had brown hair and brown eyes and was wearing a black hooded jacket and black pants. Anyone with information is asked to contact Det. Wilson of the Major Crime Sexual Assault Unit at 1-888-579-1520, ext. 5320. Anonymous information can be sent to Durham Regional Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or online at www.durhamregional- crimestoppers.ca . Suspect ADVICEMETROLAND DURHAM REGION MEDIA PRESENTSExpert PUT TRUST IN A LOCAL PROFESSIONAL ... THEY’RE HERE TO HELP YOU! DINING OUT ADVERTISING FEATURE In Ajax & Pickering Eat In • Take Out Catering Fully Licensed Buffet Daily at Lunch and Sundays 5pm - 9pm Sunday June 21st! www.themounteverest.ca Take-out orders of$20 or more beforetax, when payingwithCASH!R e C e i v e 10%O F F 611 Kingston Rd. W. In Pickering Village At Church, S.W. Corner 905-686-5553 BeST iNDiANReSTAURANT Fine Authentic Indian Cuisine 18 YEARS IN A ROW! 20 1 4 READE RS’C H OICEA W ARD PLATINUM ReserveTODAY for Father’s Day! OPEN TUES - SAT For Daily Lunch Buffet • OPEN SUN For Lunch & Dinner Buffet **REGULAR MENU ALSO AVAILABLE** Balti, Handi & Mughlai Dishes. Biryanis, Tandoori Chicken & Much More! www.makimono.ca all you can eat AjAx 50 Kingston Road E. (Just East of Harwood Ave.) RioCan Durham Ctr. 905.427.2726 Pickering 1790 Liverpool Rd. (Just North of Hwy. 401) Pickering ON L1V 1V9 905.831.0335 Bring DaD in forfather’s Day, sunDay, June 21st! Bring DaD in forfather’s Day, sunDay, June 21st! June 21 st is Father s Day‘ du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 5 AP Some jewelry displayed patented (US Pat. No. 7,007,507) • © 2015 Pandora Jewelry, LLC • All rights reserved • PANDORA.NET YOUR JEWELRY ISN’T JUST JEWELRYYT JEWELRY ISN’T JUSOUR JEWELRY PICKERING TOWN CENTREPICKERING TOWN CENTRE UPPER LEVEL • 905.492.7263UPPER LEVEL • 905.492.7263 SCARBOROUGH TOWN CENTRESCARBOROUGH TOWN CENTRE LOWER LEVEL • 416.296.9932 Actinic KeratosisStudy Dry,rough,scalyskinspots? Youmay qualify for a local researchstudy. Studymedicationprovidedatno cost. There isno cost to participate. Dr.David Adam Ajax 647-855-8117 WATCH FOR IT in YOUR cOpY Of TOdAy’s AjAx, PICkeRIng neWs AdveRTIseR. joe dickson, MPP provincial Report delivered to all Mpp Joe Dickson’s riding, Ajax and pickering homes. COURTESY CARS AVAILABLE 963 brock rd s., pickering li v e r p o o l 401 bayly ch u r c h br o c K r D . S . OFFER ENDS JUNE 30, 2015 SPRING MAINTENANCE SERVICESPECIAL INCLUDES: Oil, filter & lubrication (max 5 litres 5W/10W - 30)15 point inspection for:coolant, tires, wiper, hose's and belts etc. Brake inspection and reportTire rotation $49.95 $29.95 WOW! Service & Repairs To All Makes ---Licensed Technicians---- 963 Brock Road, Unit 8+9, Pickering Please call for an appointment 905-492-4002 •905-492-4255 oktireajax.com Mon - Thurs 8 to 6pm, Fri 8 to 5pm, Sat 9 to 1pm See our Flyer* in TODAYS EDITION OF THE 415 MacKenzie Ave. Ajax L1S 2G2 905-231-0091 www.gdwholesaletires.ca gdwholesaletires@yahoo.com*not delivered to all homes Pickering/Ajax News Advertiser GD WHOLESALE TIRES New & U s e d P a s s e n g e r . L i g h t T r u c k & T r u c k T i r e s & A u t o R e p a i r s T: 9 0 5 . 2 3 1 . 0 0 9 1 • F : 9 0 5 . 6 8 3 . 5 0 6 3 • E : g d w h o l e s a l e t i r e s @ y a h o o . c o m 415 M a c K e n z i e A v e . U n i t # A . A j a x . O N , L 1 S 2 G 2 3 LOCATIONS FOR QUALITY & CHOICE AJAX OPTICAL 905-683-7235 Heritage Market Square 145 Kingston Rd. E., Unit 7 PICKERINGOPTICAL 905-839-9244 1360 Kingston Rd., Pickering (Hub Plaza) AJAX OPTICAL 905-683-2888 56 Harwood Ave. S., Ajax Plaza Bill direct to mostinsurances andsocial services. 2 FOR 1 Glassesfor...TheWholeFamily!Presented by Rotary Clubs of Ajax & Pickering THIS WEEKEND! Esplanade Park, Pickering (Behind City Hall) www.pickeringribfest.com ne w s d u r h a m ne w s d u r h a m ne w s d u r h a m Tim Whittaker - Publisher • Joanne Burghardt - Editor-in-Chief • Mike Johnston - Managing Editor • Fred Eismont - Director of Advertising • Deb McDonald - Sales Manager Eddie Kolodziejcak - Classifi ed Advertising Manager • Abe Fakhourie - Distribution Manager • Cheryl Haines - Composing Manager A Metroland Media Group Ltd. Publication ADVERTISING 905-215-0472 CLASSIFIEDS 905-215-0442 DISTRIBUTION 905-215-0504 NEWS 905-215-0481 or 905-215-0462 865 Farewell St., Oshawa ON L1H 6N8 Member: Ontario Press Council, OCNA, CCNA, LMA. All content copyright Publication Sales Agreement #40052657 Editorial &&& Opinions Opinions Opinions du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 6 P e-mail letters to newsroom@durhamregion.com / max. 200 words / letter writers are obliged to back up 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 Bullying is still an issue among youth To the editor: Feeling like you are in a dark hall with no end to it, as if everyone is looking at you and judging. At this point all you want to do is run and get out of this place because your world is slowly falling apart. While feeling this way to any extent is unacceptable, this is what a victim of bul- lying experiences every day. Bullying has become a more significant issue in today’s society and continues to affect youth in our community. We all acknowledge the problem and believe change must occur, but taking action is the key to solving this wide- spread and troubling situation. More initiatives must be taken around our communities to raise awareness and shed light on those who are and continue to be bullied. If you are a target or someone you know is suffering from bullying, resources are available, parents and youth please seek help by using Kids Help Phone 1-800-668- 6868. Together we can take action and stop bullying. Isabella German-Ribon Not so safe and sunned The whistle of the white-throated sparrow was lost as my little brother and I belted out the lyrics to You Are My Sunshine, My Only Sunshine, our ques- tionable harmony echoing across the lake to fracture against the needles of the white pine. Our fishing rods lay idle against the side of the aluminum boat, our pink noses blistered and peeling beneath the heat of the summer sun. Back then we didn’t know about sunscreen. We didn’t know that beautiful orb in the sky was casting down ultraviolet rays to damage our fragile skin. Freckles, a space between my front teeth and fair skin were the bane of my awkward adolescent exis- tence. But I had it covered. Lemon juice to fade my freckles, an elastic to close the gap in my smile and that perfect homemade tanning elixir: baby oil and iodine. Summer days were spent with my girlfriends at Sibbald’s Beach -- lotioning and oiling -- while sum- mer nights were spent sitting in front of a fan, trying in vain to cool the inevitable blisters. Burn. Peel. Repeat. As the lazy days of summer sped by, I care- fully adjusted the thin straps of my tank top, lifting them gently from my tender, red shoulders. The sun and I go way back. It’s a story I cannot untell -- a story that has left my fair skin riddled with sun spots -- spots that left untreated could become cancerous lesions. Now, every six months I sit, with mounting trepi- dation, waiting for my dermatologist to come in and check my skin for further signs of skin cancer. It’s been confirmed. I do have precancerous spots on my face and if I don’t have them treated regularly, they will progress. So I sit and I stare at the graphic photos that paper the walls and wait for the sting of the liquid nitrogen he will spray on my face. These treatments will hopefully destroy the damage I have caused to my skin, the only skin I have. I am not one to dwell on the past. Shoulda. Woulda. Coulda. But, if I could warn my teenage self against coveting the glow of sun-kissed skin, I would. And for now, instead of baby oil and iodine, I will slather on sunscreen every day and spray SPF60 on my little ones before I join them to teach them the lyrics of You Are My Sunshine, My Only Sunshine. -- Megan Denby lives in Port Perry and is the award- winning author of ‘A Thistle in the Mist’ Megan Denby Guest Column Looking back News that the public high school teachers’ strike was ruled illegal had barely been received by grateful parents in Durham last week before union bosses doubled down and threatened another strike. This latest affront from the Ontario Sec- ondary School Teachers Federation won’t result in much now that the Province has passed back-to-work legislation, but illus- trates clearly that all of the bromides offered by union leaders throughout the strike about this all being for the students was so much self-serving rhetoric. The Ontario Labour Relations Board rul- ing last week laid bare the cynicism behind the illegal strike, and the contempt with which the OSSTF holds just about every- body. We’re grateful, though not surprised by the OLRB decision, especially given the fact that local boards staged their strike over provincial issues and not local ones as set out in provincial legislation, according to Durham District School Board Chair- man Michael Barrett. He also made refer- ence on April 28 to Durham pickets carry- ing signs about class sizes, and noted at the time that, “a lot of the things they tabled for discussion at the local level are things that belong at the provincial level.” The Wynne government and that of her predecessor, Dalton McGuinty, also bear some responsibility for the situation par- ents now find themselves in, worrying about the next mad dash they’ll have to take if teacher unions continue to hold the Province and Ontario families to ransom. Mr. McGuinty, voters may recall, opted to throw money at the unions to purchase labour peace rather than deal effectively with their demands within the constraints Ontario has faced for the past five years. And here we are today, with union boss- es making more threats of labour action unless they get what they want, on their terms, and damn the consequences. But the Province is still operating with a sub- stantial budget deficit, which makes it even more unlikely that Ms. Wynne will give the teacher unions what they demand. Under these circumstances, and espe- cially in this upside-down, Orwellian world in which teacher unions claim with manufactured indignation they are being disrespected, it’s time to further explore the options available to government to mitigate the power they wield in Ontario. Whether that means more back-to-work legislation when warranted, legally requir- ing lengthier strike notices from teacher unions to assist families left to scramble, or even by going further and declaring in- class education an essential service, all options must be considered. Rein in power wielded by teacher unions At the cellular level... My cellphone contract has been up for a few months now. Interestingly, my cell- phone, as though it somehow sensed the demise of my three-year umbilicus to the evil mother ship, is now showing signs of withdrawal. Its once pristine, crystal sur- face is now marred and cracked, its battery requires boosting more frequently than a Yugo and it has developed what I can only describe as a form of Phonzheimers; redial- ing numbers I had already just called, los- ing or misplacing contact information, even rearranging my favourites list, like some waning, cranky dowager tampering with a will. And if there is such a thing as cellu- lar menopause, I think my phone is going through it. It will randomly and inexplica- bly heat up to the point where I can feel it through my breast pocket. I made the mis- take of asking ‘Siri’ something during one of these episodes. Her reply was an irritably snapped ‘Don’t touch me.’ The upshot of all of this is that I now find myself in the unenviable position of look- ing for a new phone. My current cellular provider is, of course, elated at this turn of events. Nothing gives them greater pleasure than encouraging me to dump my old buck- et of bolts in favour of something shinier, newer and more expensive. They send me notifications and ‘upgrade’ enticements, all designed to make me feel as though hang- ing onto my current phone is akin to lugging around a Gutenberg printing press, conve- niently omitting the fact that only a couple of years ago they were hyping it as the great- est thing since the Apollo moon landing. Naturally, because I am human and male, I am not immune to such entreaties. I like shiny, new, useless gadgets as much as the next guy and, luckily, I can assuage my envi- ronmental conscience by donating my old phone to some worthy cause. If I can help some poor guy in Papua, New Guinea to join the rest of us in disconnecting from nature and those around him by addicting him to a smartphone, I am happy to do so. No, the sticking point comes when we start talking about moving over to a new cell plan. I like my current plan. I fought long and hard to arrive at this plan and, while I’m still unquestionably getting financially rogered, I at least feel like I had a say in what position we’re doing it in. But my provider feels differently. Cellular carriers are like sharks or Richard Simmons; they don’t like stasis. They need you to constantly be mov- ing, preferably to a more expensive option ... or they die. I made a very sensible case to my carrier for staying put. I told them that I was even willing to sign on for two more years of indentured servitude, plus pony up the five hundred plus semolians for a new gadget, if they would simply allow me to keep my old plan. No dice. The best they could do was to offer me a plan that would be $5 more expensive than my current one. I asked the person from the laughably named ‘loyalty department’ if they were really will- ing to lose a customer of 25 years over $5. Their response? “I’m sorry.” Well, I’m not. I’m off to another provider. I don’t have to take that from these guys any- more. I’ll take it from somebody else. -- Durham resident Neil Crone, actor, comic, writer, saves some of his best lines for this column. 6 Interesting Memorial Cup Statistics Let’s Talk Weigh in on topics of the day www.facebook.com/ newsdurham du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m 7 AP Dave Coker: Just because you’re a senior doesn’t mean you can’t afford to pay your property tax. There are more younger people out there that can’t even afford to buy a house. Don’t play the game if you can’t pay the teller. The countdown to the Pan Am Games nears. Will you be attending any of the events in Dur- ham or Toronto?Poll Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 SENIORS AND TAXES: Discussion about a prop- erty tax relief program for senior citizens in Ajax ended abruptly last week when Town officials opted not to pursue such a program. We asked Facebook users if they thought it seemed a good idea. Here’s what people were saying: Enter Laughing Neil Crone Actor, comic, writer Nope. Sports isn’t my thing. 64% Maybe. I’m playing it by ear. 26% Yes! Already bought my tickets. 10% Kimberly Banks: Yes they should, especially if they have lived in that community for more than 25 yrs. William Doe: I really think they should have a discount. Why do we need to stress the old with more taxes? Who knows, it could raise the health and maybe other problems that happen in old age. Sean Crabb: Yes. So many live on a fixed income and may lose the hous- es they have worked their entire lives for just because of back taxes. Kathy Sauve Uden: YES! Once you start collecting pension, all your taxes should be reduced; we have paid and paid and paid. Ben Scheepers: Are you going to pay the costs offset by giving them a discount? When the houses they own are worth 10 times what they paid? I understand compassion, but think about where that money will come from. Jay Mei: Wait til these people, who probably don’t think things through ... (are) the ones that are going to have to pay the extra property tax. Also, how do we monitor the people that are escaping paying higher property taxes because they put home ownership into an elderly family member’s name? N. Faye Watt: Hell, YES! They have more than paid their dues! MOST GOALS 5 - Bruce Boudreau, Toronto (May 9, 1975 vs Sherbrooke) MOST ASSISTS 5 - Dan Hodgson, Prince Albert (May 14, 1985 vs Sault Ste. Marie) FASTEST OPENING GOAL (1st PERIOD) 11 sec. - Brian Bellows, Kitchener (May 9, 1982 vs Portland) FASTEST OVERTIME GOAL 20 sec. - Keith Crowder, Peterborough (May 10, 1978 vs New Westminster) FASTEST THREE GOALS BY ONE PLAYER 1:12 - Joe Contini, Hamilton (May 12, 1976 vs New West- minster) - 7:53, 8:57 & 9:05 of 1st Period MOST GOALS - ONE SERIES So u r c e : m a s t e r c a r d m e m o r i a l c u p . c a The InBox Home reno numbers on the decline A new CIBC (TSX: CM) (NYSE: CM) poll conducted by Nielsen finds that while Canadian homeowners remain focused on home renovations, they have cut their 2015 budgets. The poll shows Canadians plan to spend an average of about $17,000 this year - down from almost $20,000 in 2014. The number of homeowners planning to renovate has remained high at 42 per cent this year, in line with 40 per cent last year. Highlights of the poll include: • $17,142 is the average amount that Canadian homeowners who plan to reno- vate say they will spend on renovations in 2015 - down by 13 per cent from $19,754 in 2014 • 16 per cent of homeowners say they will spend more than $25,000 on renovations, down from 18 per cent in 2014. • Basic home maintenance (64 per cent) such as painting, flooring, general repairs and replacing appliances is the top planned renovation, followed by outdoor landscaping (32 per cent), upgrading bath- rooms (29 per cent) and kitchens (28 per cent). • 13 per cent of Canadians are planning home repairs this year to fix weather-relat- ed damage. Getting the biggest bang for your renova- tion buck 1. Bathrooms: adding new fixtures, a low- flow toilet. 2. Kitchens: Upgrading cabinetry, coun- tertops or appliances. 3. Finished basements: A finished base- ment adds space in your home. 4. Flooring: Ripping out old carpets or refinishing a hardwood floor can be a sell- ing point. du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 8 P NBA guard, music star among Pickering Civic Awards recipients Mayor Dave Ryan hands out annual awards at packed house Kristen Calis kcalis@durhamregion.com PICKERING -- Giving, tal- ented and brave residents received top honours from the City of Pickering on May 25. Mayor Dave Ryan and members of council hand- ed out the 2014 Pickering Civic Awards to deserving individuals and groups in front of an audience that spilled outside of council chambers. The special citation awards went to basket- ball player Cory Joseph and singer and musi- cian Shawn Mendes. Neither could be in attendance, but these rising stars were repre- sented by family members. Mr. Joseph, who attended Pickering High School, is now a point guard with the Antonio Spurs. In his third season, he was just 22 when the Spurs won the NBA championship. “Not long ago, singer and song- writer Shawn Mendes was like countless other students at Pine Ridge Second- ary School,” said Mayor Ryan. “He played hock- ey and soccer and also enjoyed longboarding with friends.” But when he uploaded a short clip of him- self singing an acoustic version of a Justin Bieber song on the video sharing app, Vine, the popularity of that video set him off onto a new path. Last June, he signed a record deal with Island Records. He became the young- est artist to land a debut single in the Top 25 with his song Life of the Party. The other awards were handed out to those who may not have risen to stardom like Mr. Joseph and Mr. Mendes, but are valuable in the community. Bruce Hampson, his wife, Susan Hamp- son, and Michelle Brochu, were recognized for their hard work each year to collect items and distribute backpacks for the Backpacks for the Homeless program, which supports the homeless and operates out of St. Paul’s On-the-Hill Anglican Church. Last year, the group distributed 575 back- packs worth $23,000. “If we incorporate retail, it would be about $100,000,” Mr. Hampson said. The backpacks were distributed to Gate 3:16 Outreach Centre in Oshawa and other organizations in the GTA. Mr. Hampson, also a volunteer with Gate 3:16 for eight years, said “humbled” best describes his feelings about receiving the award. William Ferenc won the bravery award for rescuing a woman and two children when they were in a car that fell through the ice at Frenchman’s Bay when he was ice fishing. The children had gotten out, but the woman was still in the car. Acting instinctively, he got on his stomach and crawled toward the car. “He reached the driver and managed to pull her out to safety as the car continued to sink,” said Mayor Ryan. Dunbarton High School took home the environmental award. This certified Ontar- io EcoSchool has been recognized for its environmental efforts a number of times. It’s won Pickering’s Sustainable Neighbour- hoods program in 2013, and was named the 2015 Greenest School on Earth by the Global Coalition for Green Schools. Sanwal Gilani, Grade 11, explained the stu- dents planted new trees, including new spe- cies, sold rain barrels, set up bee condos and installed water bottle filling stations, as some of the examples of they work they did. “I think we’re the first school in Ontario to do composting,” she added. Stephanie Littleford, also in Grade 11, got involved in the environmental club because she’s always been interested in the environ- ment. “I wanted to help out, I wanted to do as much as I can,” she said. She felt receiving the award could let peo- ple know that it’s possible to make big chang- es by doing small things. Read the complete list of Pickering Civic award winners online @ durhamregion.com NOW OPEN Previously in the Pickering Town Center, we have now relocated across the street into The Liverpool Plaza (beside Mac’s Convenience Store). Same great services, same great staff! • Free Prescription Delivery • SENIOR SPECIALS • Complimentary Blister Packaging • In depth Medication Reviews • SHORT WAIT TIMES • Smiles- FREE! 1298 Kingston Rd, Unit 2, Pickering, ON, L1V 3M9 905-420-8868 FAMILy-OWNED PHARMACy Helping you live healthy and happy PICKeRING -- daisy Poyner accepted a Lifetime achievement award during the City of Pickering 2014 Civic awards. The awards recognize the outstanding achievements of residents, community organizations, and local businesses. Ryan Pfeiffer / Metroland San antonio Spurs’ guard Cory Joseph. Toronto Star photo du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 10 AP Municipalities, transit, businesses set for 2015 Pan Am Games Chris Hall chall@durhamregion.com This is Part 1 of a four-part feature series chronicling the lead-up to the Pan Am/Parapan Am Games -- the largest sporting event ever undertaken in the history of Durham Region DURHAM -- When the world arrives on Dur- ham’s doorstep next month, the region will be ready to shine in the spotlight. “We’ve been very busy the last couple of years and now we’re counting down to the start,” said Lisa Hausz, who is helping lead Ajax’s preparations for the Toronto 2015 Pan Am Games. “We are almost ready and we’re really looking forward to it.” Hundreds of athletes and thousands of spectators are expected to flood into Durham after the Pan Am Games officially kick off on July 10. The region will have two municipali- ties prominently featured during the 16-day sporting event: Ajax, which will play host to all baseball and softball games, and Oshawa, where boxing and weightlifting competitions will be staged. Preparations at the two sporting sites, as well as across the region, began years ago and everything is coming together just in time for the launch of the largest multi-sport event ever held in Canada, said Durham Region tourism manager Kerri King. “This is the first time all eight municipali- ties have worked together to come together for a sports tourism event,” said Ms. King. “There’ll be a lot of challenges with parking and traffic but if you think about it, this will be a very good thing because people will be coming to Durham Region and the spotlight will be on us. “We’re celebrating the fact that we have the opportunity to host something of this magnitude,” she said. In Ajax, internal committees at the Town have been working for two-and-a-half years to ensure the logistics surrounding the Presi- dent’s Choice Ajax Pan Am Ballpark -- from development and promotion to communi- ty engagement -- have been put perfectly in place, said Ms. Hausz. “We’ve Pan Am-ized everything we could,” she said. One of the keys leading up to the Games, continued Ms. Hausz, was to get the Ajax business community on board. The Town has held meetings for businesses and encouraged retailers to follow along with the preparations through the Ajax website and newsletters. “We want to get the businesses involved and have them involved with the Games,” she said. Retailers were given packages that con- tain maps and other materials, such as a fre- quently-asked-questions section that will aid shopkeepers when they inevitably get asked questions about the Games by customers. “If someone comes in and asks a question, we want them to be ready to help out,” said Ms. Hausz. In Oshawa, where the General Motors Cen- tre will be renamed the Oshawa Sports Cen- tre for the duration of the Pan Am Games, preparations are also progressing well. “Everything is moving forward and we’re actually moving quite fast now,” said Lau- rie Jones, the City’s acting manager for pro- grams and facilities. “We’re going to be on time, right on schedule.” Ahead of the Games, Oshawa has increased its community events, hosting cleanups and plantings and other outreach projects to get residents and businesses involved, said Ms. Jones. As well, the City has worked to “Pan Am-ize” the downtown area with window wraps and banners and has reached out to assist businesses, she added. “We want to welcome the world and make the visitor and athlete experience a pleasant one,” said Ms. Jones. “We’re seeing a growing awareness and interest in Oshawa’s role in the Pan Am Games.” Added Ms. Jones: “Oshawa’s going to be ready, for sure. I think we’re ready to roll with this. We’ve been working on this since 2010 and we’re ready.” According to the organizing committee for the Games, “things are right where they need to be” in Durham, said Heather Irwin, a spokeswoman for the Toronto 2015 Pan Am Games. As of late May, she said the men’s gold medal baseball game is sold out and there are “not many” tickets remaining for several of the preliminary rounds. Durham has also stepped forward when it comes to volunteering at the Games, added Ms. Irwin. Organizers had hoped to secure approxi- mately 1,325 volunteers for both the Pan Am and ParaPan Games in Durham (which will be held later in August, with the lone Durham venue at the Abilities Centre in Whitby) and “the majority of volunteer roles have been filled in Durham Region,” said Ms. Irwin. However, organizers are still hoping attract health-care professionals -- medical doctors and practitioners from within Durham -- to volunteer during the Games, she added. “Applicants with the required medical skills and certifications are strongly encouraged to apply,” said Ms. Irwin. Getting around Durham will become undoubtedly more difficult in July with the arrival of the Games, which has prompt- ed Durham Region Transit to review its routes and add extra services, acknowledged Vincent Patterson, DRT’s general manager. “We’re very excited because this is obviously a huge event for the region and transit is always prominently dis- played at a major event,” he said, “We know we’ll be at the forefront.” The goal of all DRT’s plan- ning over the past months, stressed Mr. Patterson, “is to make sure people get in and out (of the venues) as easy as possible.” To ensure that, extra bus service has been added for the Ajax ball diamonds and General Motors Cen- tre and there will also be more buses on the Pulse route to get people to and from Scarbor- ough’s University of Toronto campus where aquatic events will be held. There will also be tweaks to the 915 route along Taunton Road between Ajax and Oshawa, added Mr. Patterson. But, stressed the DRT general manager, daily riders should notice no changes to their commute other than “there might be more people on the regular routes.” As for the additional costs that come with providing extra service for the Games, Mr. Patterson said that is being worked out with Games organizers and will come at “no extra cost” to Durham residents. “We’re work- ing very diligently to nail down the costs we know of and the costs we don’t know of,” he said, adding the Durham transit service has enough capacity to handle the anticipated influx of riders. “We’re very confident on the planning side, that’s No. 1 for sure.” Another key to the success of the Games in Durham is accommodations. It’s important, say officials with both Ajax and Oshawa, that spectators can stay near the sporting venues if they choose, not only to minimize traffic congestion but to maximize the money spent in those communities. According to Mike Brannigan, the director of sales for both the Hilton Garden Inn and Homewood Suites by Hilton in Ajax, there have been some rooms set aside for those looking to stay over during the Games, but they’re being snapped up quickly. “We’re filling up ... but we’ve left some rooms for people to book and stay,” said Mr. Brannigan, noting accommodations for July 9 to 11 are almost fully booked. He expects the bulk of the rooms for July to be sold out by June 20. Nitanth Suryanarayan, the front desk man- ager at Homewood Suites by Hilton, also warned that rooms will soon be scarce. “There are a few days we’re almost close to selling out,” said Mr. Suryanarayan. “Gener- ally, there is a little bit available during (the Pan Am Games) but we’re very close to sell- ing out on quite a few days. There are bits and pieces here and there.” There is one thing, however, that is com- pletely out of Durham’s control despite all the work that went into planning for the Games, said Ms. King. “I’m hoping for great weather because I have no doubt these Games will be an enormous success if we have great weather,” she said. “But we always have to leave it to the gods, so we’re praying for good weather and sunshine.” Metroland Media Group Ltd. is a signa- ture sponsor of the Toronto 2015 Pan Am Games Torch Relay, presented by Presi- dent’s Choice and OLG. Part 2: Social Media and the Games next Wednesday Durham prepared for Pan Ams Pachi the porcupine is the mascot for the 2015 Pan Am/Parapan Am Games in Toronto. Ajax will host softball and baseball; boxing and weightlift- ing are in Oshawa. Parapan Am events are slat- ed for Whitby. Handout photo HOW THIS IMPACTS YOU - The Pan Am Games will run from July 10 to 26 across southern Ontario, from Welland to Oshawa. - Oshawa will host the preliminary and medal rounds of the boxing competition, plus the medal rounds in weightlift- ing. - It’s expected 245 athletes and 38,500 spectators will make their way to Oshawa. - Ajax will host all the softball and base- ball games, which is expected to attract 125,000 spectators. - The Pan Am Games will include teams from the North, Central and South Americas, plus Caribbean countries. du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 11 AP Hwy. 4 0 1 B r o c k R d . S . Plummer S t . S a l k R d . Bayly S t . HURRYINFORBESTSELECTION! o c k R d . S . ! RETIREMENT SALE AFTER28 YEARS E V E R Y T H I N G M U S T G O ! ! After 28 years Bob is Retiring. We are celebrating Bob’s retirement with our BIGGEST SALE IN OUR 28 YEAR HISTORY! We must replace our entire inventory in a very short period of time. Drastic storewide price reductions. NOTHING WILL BE HELD BACK!!!! • Canadel • Durham Furniture • Leathercraft • College Wood Work • Kingsdown • Howard Miller Clocks INTRODUCING OURNEW SELECTIONS AND SO MUCH MORE Reg. $1499 NOW $598 Reg. $1499 NOW $599 COme See OuR NeW CaNadel GalleRy Reg. $1899 NOW $799 Reg. $5995 NOW $2695 Complete Bedroom Reg. $1895 NOW $699 King Size Mattress Set 1020 Brock Road South, Pickering L1W 3H2416-282-0258 • www.solidwood.ca MORE THAN jUST THE fINEST MANUfACTURER Of UpSCALE SOLID WOOD fURNITURE IN ONTARIO!! Gourmet Painted Dining Set du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 12 P Avoid delays: Carpool Take transit Work flex hours Learn more about how events at the President’s Choice Ajax Pan Am Ballpark, Oshawa Sports Centre and Abilities Centre July 11 to August 14 will affect traffic in Durham Region. Get ready today. FLEX YOUR COMMUTING OPTIONS Get readyat ontario.ca/games2015 Paid for by the Government of Ontario wa Sports Centre OshaAm Ballpark,an Ajax Ps Choice t the President’w events aLearn more about ho .y today Get readc in Durham Region. August 14 will affect traffiAbilities Centre July 11 to and TIONS OPTINGMUOUR COMYEX LF wa Sports Centre OshaAm Ballpark,an Ajax Ps Choice t the President’w events aLearn more about ho TIONS OPTINGMUOUR COMYEX LF nment of OntarioPaid for by the Gover Golf Tournaments Saturday, June 6 Fundraising golf Tournament for rhys 1 p.m. 11 p.m. Cherry downs Golf and Country Club, 2110 Concession road 7, Pickering. a golf tournament and banquet at Cherry downs is being held to raise money for little rhys, who suffers from complica- tions related to CP. Shotgun start fea- tures 18 holes, golf cart, beef carver buf- fet dinner, gift bags, door prizes, silent auction, skills contests, 50/50 draw and more. $160/golfer, $40 for dinner and auction. Luncheons and dinners Saturday, June 20 annual pork barbecue 7 p.m. Mt. Zion united Church, Salem road and 8th Concession, Pickering. In addition to the barbecued pork, gui- tarist/vocalist Meredith Cutting enter- tains during the evening. advance tick- ets only. $15 adults, $5 for children 12 and under. Meetings Monday, June 8 Pickering executive committee meet- ing 2 p.m. Pickering City Hall, one the esplanade. Pickering council’s executive committee meets in council chambers. Pickering planning and development committee meeting 7 p.m. Pickering City Hall, one the esplanade. Pickering planning and development com- mittee meets in council chambers. tueSday, June 9 Pickering Township Historical soci- ety meeting 7:30 a.m. 9 p.m. Pickering Central Library, one the espla- nade. Speaker is ted Barris, author of 17 non- fiction books, including “Juno: Canadi- ans at d-day, June 5, 1944” and “Victory at Vimy: Canada Comes of age, april 9-12, 1917”, and professor of journalism and broadcasting at Centennial College. His topic for this evening is “the Great escape” - based on his latest book: “the Great escape: a Canadian Story”. this is the real story of the escape tunnels of the PoW camps in Germany - not the story as portrayed by the film industry. the book won the Libris Best non-Fiction Book award for 2014. Free. Monday, June 15 Pickering council meeting 7 p.m. Pickering City Hall, one the esplanade. Pickering council meets in the council chambers. WedneSday, June 17 Women empowering Women 6 p.m. 10 p.m. Sabina’s previously known as the Court- yard, 1755 Pickering Parkway, unit 20, Pickering. Wednesday’s Mission is to assist women to build business brands. this is an open forum for women. Guest speaker.Meets the the third Wednesday of month in Pickering. Visit www.wewednesdays.com for more details. $25 . Museums Saturday, June 20 once upon a story 10 a.m. 4:30 p.m. Pickering Museum Village, 2365 Conces- sion road 6. Join PMV for a day for stories and fun. take your teddy bear and a picnic and join in the teddy bears’ picnic. there’s even a teddy bear first aid station. Backwoods Players present Lady audrey’s Secret, free with admission.. $8 adults, $5 kids, $25 family pass. School events tHurSday, June 4 William dunbar Public school annual fun fair 4 p.m. 7 p.m. William dunbar Public School, 1030 Glenanna dr., Pickering. a variety of carnival games plus prizes to be won. don’t forget to place your bid in the silent auction. Fun for the whole fam- ily. Free. Things To Do Saturday, June 13 Pickering West shore spring Festival 11 a.m. 3 p.m. Bruce Hanscombe Memorial Park, Breezy drive, Pickering. Pickering West Shore Community asso- ciation holds its 2nd annual Spring Festi- val. Free. Saturday, June 20 asTronomy stargazing at millennium square, Pickering 5 p.m. 10 p.m. Millennium Square, Liverpool road, Pickering. everyone is invited to join us for a fun evening of stargazing at Millennium Square in Pickering. you will enjoy spec- tacular views of the moon, Venus, Jupi- ter, Saturn and deep space star clusters through our big telescopes. We will have an information booth filled with astrono- my literature and handouts. do you have a telescope but are not sure how to use it? Bring it along and we would be happy to help you. Please note: this event is weather-dependent. Before heading down on June 20, please check the list- ing for this date under upcoming events on our website www.drastronomy.com to see if poor weather has forced us to postpone the stargazing to Sunday, June 21. Free. What’s On FrIday, June 5 Pickering ribfest 12 p.m. 11 p.m. esplanade Park, 1 the esplanade, Pickering. Hosted by the rotary Clubs of ajax and Pickering, ribfest will include ribbers, vendors, entertainment and a 50/50 raffle. Visitors are invited to take non-perishable food items for the local food bank. People are asked to leave their pets at home. Free. Saturday, June 6 Pickering ribfest 12 p.m. 11 p.m. esplanade Park, 1 the esplanade, Pickering. Hosted by the rotary Clubs of ajax and Pickering, ribfest will include ribbers, vendors, entertainment and a 50/50 raffle. Visitors are invited to take non-perishable food items for the local food bank. People are asked to leave their pets at home. Free. Sunday, June 7 Pickering ribfest 12 p.m. 8 p.m. esplanade Park, 1 the esplanade, Pickering. Hosted by the rotary Clubs of ajax and Pickering, ribfest will include ribbers, vendors, entertainment and a 50/50 raffle. Visitors are invited to take non-perishable food items for the local food bank. People are asked to leave their pets at home. Free. Q: How do I submit my event to the newspaper? A: When you input your Event information at durhamregion.com it can be seen by as many as 500,000 unique visitors every month so it’s a great way for you to spread the word about your event. A selection of those events are reverse published to appear in our print editions every week. (Whitby This Week, Oshawa This Week, Clarington This Week, Ajax & Pickering News Advertiser, Uxbridge Times-Journal, Port Perry Star, Brooklin Citizen, Clarington East Citizen, Durham Parent) Here’s how you get set up: 1. Visit http://www.durhamregion.com/ durhamregion-events 2. Select ‘Publish Your Event’ 3. If you DO NOT have an account you will be prompted to set up a FREE account 4. Once you have that account just hit ‘Publish Your Event’ again to publish your first event. 5. 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Send us a photo of Dad’s sad BBQ for your chance to win a brand new one from Win tickets to the Pan Am Games Find the weekly images in your paper for your chance to win DURHAM -- Here’s a great chance for you to win tickets to the Toronto 2015 Pan American Games. To enter, just find the Toronto 2015 Pan American Games image of the week hid- den in our papers. Make note of the page the image appears on and then email the page number to us at newsroom@dur- hamregion.com. There will be a new image each week. Week 1: Baseball Week 2: Boxing gloves Week 3: Soccer ball Week 4: Relay baton The Contest is open to all residents of Dur- ham Region. Odds of winning depend on the number of eligible entries received. Two (2) prizes of two (2) tickets to various Toronto 2015 Pan American Games events are available to be won each week. The winner will be selected at random from all eligible entries. The contest begins June 1, 2015 at 4:00 a.m. and closes June 28, 2015 at 12:00 AM. No purchase necessary. The complete official rules are available online at durhamregion. Paralympian chats with Ajax students AJAX -- Joel Dembe, a Paralympian (London 2012), ParaPan athlete, and two-time Canadian wheelchair tennis champion, talked with Grade 5 students from St. Jude’s Catholic School about the ParaPan Am Games, his athletic path, and accessibility challenges he has encountered, at an event at the Ajax Public Library May 28. Jason Liebregts / Metroland Police SIU called in after woman alleges sexual assault by police in Pickering PICKERING -- The Province’s Special Investigations Unit is investigating a woman’s claim that she was sexually assaulted when she was arrested by Durham police. The woman was arrested during a traffic stop in Pickering and transport- ed to a police station May 28. Once at the station she reported being sexually assaulted by a male officer during the arrest. 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Might already be gone.$349,900 PRIVATE COURT LOCATION REALTY INC., BROKERAGE 905-723-6111 905-668-1511 Startingat 2.05 % Approve on Equity not Credit Pay off Consumer Proposals Banquet Hall /Hotel Funding To ronto |Durham | Hamilton London | Kingston | Barrie Startingat 2.05 % Approve on Equity not Credit Pay off Consumer Proposals Banquet Hall /Hotel Funding MINIMIZEYour Mortgage wi t h th e RightBroker™ You could WIN up toup t $100,000* ChancetoWin aNewiPhone oraBBQ du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 16 P Sports Brad Kelly Sports Editor / bkelly@durhamregion.com / 905-215-0465 Cirelli unlikely Memorial Cup hero for Generals Undrafted rookie scores overtime goal in junior hockey final Brian McNair bmcnair@durhamregion.com QUEBEC CITY -- A year ago, Anthony Cirelli was playing for a midget team in Mississauga and Ken Appleby was a backup goalie for the Oshawa Generals, and both were likely won- dering what kind of future they were des- tined for in hockey. Today, they are the main two reasons the Generals are Memorial Cup champions for a fifth time, and have forced big-league scouts to take notice. Cirelli scored both goals, including the win- ner 1:28 into overtime, and Appleby made 37 saves, as the Generals finished off a perfect Memorial Cup tournament with a 2-1 victory over the Kelowna Rockets on Sunday, May 31 in the final game to be played at the 66-year- old Pepsi Colisee in Quebec City. Cirelli’s story is the more remarkable, given that he went undrafted by all 20 Ontario Hockey League teams in his first year of eli- gibility in 2013, and was pegged for Tier 2 hockey with the Mississauga Chargers after the Generals signed him as a free agent late last summer. However, the wispy six-foot, 165-pound centre quickly worked his way into the good books of coach D.J. Smith through hard work and attention to detail at both ends of the ice, played his way onto the Generals’ roster and spent a good portion of the season on a line with star player Michael Dal Colle. Cirelli’s role diminished somewhat as the season wound down and the Generals added three veteran forwards at the trade deadline, and he managed only two goals through 21 OHL playoff games, but Smith never shied away from using him at key moments. There was no more key a moment than early in overtime of Sunday’s championship game, and Cirelli rewarded his coach’s faith by crashing the net and slipping a rebound of a Chris Carlisle point shot past Kelowna goalie Jackson Whistle for a goal that will go down in history, just as Bill Armstrong’s did 25 years earlier, the last time Oshawa won junior hockey’s biggest prize. “Coming from midget from last year and making my way onto this team and then doing this is unbelievable,” Cirelli said in the midst of the on-ice celebration. “I felt like I belonged right from the beginning and we worked so hard all year and for it to come together and win this is an unbelievable feel- ing. “I worked all summer and came to the camp, but I didn’t really expect to be on the team,” he admitted when asked about his improbable journey, one that will now likely lead him to being selected in the June NHL draft. “When main camp came around, I worked hard the whole time and they gave me a chance. Each game, I just kept getting better and better until this moment right now.” Smith, with plenty of other options on a ros- ter loaded with 19- and 20-year-old players, said he wasn’t surprised to see the 17-year- old Woodbridge native rise to the challenge. Cirelli had earlier tied the game with a beau- tiful wrist shot late in the second period. “He just works so hard and he’s so good defensively it allows me to keep putting him out there on the ice,” Smith explained short- ly after the game. “He got to the net and he made it happen. The kid’s fearless.” Cirelli’s overtime heroics would not have been possible without the rock-solid play of Appleby, who kept the Generals in the game when they were being outplayed early, and was named a tournament all-star. Appleby, who turned 20 in April, spent the past two seasons as Daniel Altshuller’s back- up and has been passed over twice in the NHL draft, but set franchise records for wins and goals-against average this season. “I just tried to keep doing what I’ve done all year,” said Appleby, while being serenaded by chants of his name from the many Gen- erals fans who made their way to the game. “They’ve been great all year and for them to drive all the way here, it’s crazy. It’s awesome. “No words can describe the feeling,” he added. “You start out the year and this is your end goal and to finally achieve it, is just unbe- lievable.” The win capped a fantastic season for the Generals, who set a franchise record with 108 points and breezed through the OHL playoffs with a 16-5 record, capped by a 4-1 series win over Connor McDavid and the Erie Otters and a record 13th J. Ross Robertson Cup title. By winning a fifth Memorial Cup, the Gen- erals now stand alone with the most among current Canadian Hockey League clubs, surpassing the Regina Pats, and are second overall behind seven won by the Toronto Marlboros. Sunday marked the last junior games for overagers Josh Brown, Dakota Mermis and Chris Carlisle, and likely also for the drafted 1995-born players on the club, Cole Cassels, Michel McCarron, Matt Mistele, Brent Peder- sen, Tobias Lindberg and Hunter Smith. “I get to ride off in the sunset with a Memo- rial Cup so to speak,” said Brown, who spent his last two years as captain. “We’ve been working so hard for three years now, we’ve been together about a thousand days, so for this to end the way it did, is unbelievable. I can’t describe it.” QUEBEC -- Former Pickering Panther Aidan Wallace hoisted the Memorial Cup over his head after winning the CHL’s biggest award with the Oshawa Generals. Oshawa defeated the Kelowna Rockets 2-1 in overtime to take the title. Ron Pietroniro / Metroland Ironheads snap four game losing streak by beating Brampton 14-9 AJAX -- After a promising start to the sea- son, the Ajax Ironheads have given some of those early wins back. Winning five in a row to open the Jr. B lacrosse season, and then moving to 6-1-0 on the season, the Ironheads dropped four games in a row before finally getting back on the right track with a 14-9 win in Brampton on Sunday, May 31. A strong second period was the differ- ence in the game. With the game tied 3-3 after the first period, the Ironheads scored seven unanswered in the second, and the first two of the third to build a 12-3 lead. The game was a significant one for Pat- rick Morgan, who entered the game tied with Ronnie Reed for the all-time franchise lead in points at 175. Morgan’s two goals and two assists moved him into the top spot with 179, as he winds down his final season of junior lacrosse eligibility with the lacrosse club. The Ironheads (7-5-0) host the first-place Clarington Green Gaels on Wednesday, June 3 at the Ajax Community Complex at 8 p.m. du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 17 AP Call: 1-888-806-1856 Visit: triOSdurham.com Campus: 200 John St. W. (Midtown Mall) 0315 Not all programs available at all triOS locations. Internships available for most programs. SUPPLY CHAIN Discover a satisfying career in supply chain management. • Supply Chain & Logistics • Professional Transport Operator • AZ Truck Driver • Tractor-Trailer (AZ) Parkland Estates - 50 Adelaide Ave. (905-725-5900) Tower On The Green - 1140 Mary St. N. (905-438-1971) Governor Mansions - 110 Park Rd. N. (905-723-1712) Simcoe Estates - 333 Simcoe St. N. (905-571-3760) Marland Gardens - 321 & 349 Marland Ave. (905-743-9712) Come home to your bright & spacious renovated units. Please visit www.qresidential.ca 2 & 3 bedroomapartments Close to school, shopping, hospital On-site superintendent.Rental Office Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. (905)686-0845 or(905)686-0841Eve. viewing by appt.www.ajaxapartments.com OSHAWA, 385 Gibb St. Available Immediately. 1, 2 & 3 bdrm apts. Starting from $900/month plus $30/month parking. Upon credit approval. Laundry on-site. Close to amenities. Patrick 905-443-0191 SENTINEL SELF-STORAGE CORP. NOTICE OF SALE Goods will be sold on www.ibid4storage.com starting Thursday June 16, 2015 and closing Wednesday June 17, 2015 to satisfy outstanding charges for storage rental at 475 Harwood Ave. N., Ajax, Ontario incurred by the following: Patricia Browne Paul King John Cannon Liane Kalenborn Fred Climo Jerry Stagg Boyd Spencer Proconn General Contracting Junior Reid and Tamara Savage INTERESTED BUYERS? Can view and register at www.ibid4storage.com Dated in the City of Edmonton, in the Province of Alberta, 8 April 2015 SENTINEL SELF-STORAGE CORP., #1970, 10123-99 Street, Edmonton, AB T5J 3H1 VENDORS WANTED Pride Durham is hosting a weekend celebration on Saturday, June 6 and Sunday, June 7. Bring the family and come celebrate with us. Vendor’s marketplace, music, parade, entertainment and more. Saturday, June 6 at Dnipro Hall, Oshawa Vendor’s Marketplace, BBQ Sunday, June 7 at Memorial Park, Oshawa Vendor’s Marketplace, Food Stands, Parade, Entertainment For more information on the weekends’ events, vendor information or to volunteer, visit our website. www.pridedurham.com HVAC Residential Service Technician We are a well-established, family run, HVAC company servicing residential customers in the Durham Region for well over 65 years. We are currently seeking HVAC Technicians to join our team and help grow our business. Technicians will be responsible for performing service and maintenance on a wide variety of residential HVAC equipment including central a/c units, gas furnaces, gas fireplaces, gas & electric hot water tanks and tankless water heaters. The position requires an outgoing, customer service focused technician with the following: • Gas Fitter 2 License • 313A or 313D • 3+ years experience (preferred) • Valid Class G driver's license • Criminal Background Check • Excellent Customer service We pay competitive rates, company benefits and uniforms available. Be a part of our winning team and experience a secure, positive and supportive work environment. To request an interview, please respond with your resume and cover letter tokirk@rodmanheating.com WANTED 1st OR 2nd year Truck & Coach or Automotive Apprentice to work in fast-paced busy shop. Please fax resume: 905-697-9940 or email to: andysrepaircenter@hotmail.com. No phone calls. GLAZIERS, for Field & Service positions required immediately. Glass Co. seeking full time staff. Reply with resume to: glassco.ontario@yahoo.ca MCGILL/OLD HARWOOD Large 4-bedroom, 3,000sq.ft., 2-1/2 washrooms, eat-in kitchen, family/ living/dining room, 2-car parking. Available immediately. $1900/month.647-559-7681 or 416-712-4059 Career Tr ainingFeatureC Skilled & Te chnical Help GeneralHelp APPOINTMENT TAKERS for our Ajax office. Full-time/part-time wage plus bonus. Experience preferred. Email resume to: angela@chambersfood.com SMALL, BUSY, body shop in Port Perry look- ing for Collision Person- frame & unibody experi- ence a must. Own tools required. Nick Oram Au- tobody 905-985-1991. Career Tr ainingFeatureC Skilled & Te chnical Help GeneralHelp VICE-PRESIDENT of business development wanted for fast growing company in Pickering. Must have strong pres- entation skills and be ca- reer-oriented. Competitive salary plus bonus. Email baylyhr@gmail.com Career Tr ainingFeatureC Houses for Rent GeneralHelp ASSISTANT SUPERIN- TENDENT required for one of the largest proper- ty management compa- nies located in Durham Region. This is a live-in position, must relocate to building, days, evenings and weekend work. Monthly salary plus a rent reduction (rent is not included in this position). Answer tenant calls, fill out service requests, col- lect rent. We thank you for your interest but only selected candidates for interviewing will be con- tacted. Accommodations will be made for people with disabilities during the recruitment and as- sessment process. Apply by sending resume to careers@vrpl.ca or fax to (905) 579-9472. CUSTOMER SERVICE PERSON for Pickering office. Data entry, com- puter and telephone skills essential. Email: rctrans@rogers.com Career Tr ainingFeatureC Houses for Rent GeneralHelp HOME CARE SUPPORT WORKER - Douglas family. Duties include personal care, house- keeping, organizing and planning. $13.05 per hour, 35 hrs per week, in Oshawa area. First Aid & CPR Certificate Re- quired; completion of high school required. Optional accommodation available at no charge on live-in basis. Note: this is not a condition of em- ployment. Criminal record check. Email re- sume to: helpathome@bell.netPhone: 647-887-4949 Salon & SpaHelp HAIRSTYLIST FULL TIME with experience and license JOSEPH'S HAIRSTYLING, Oshawa Centre. Apply in person or call Joe (905)723-9251 Hospital/Medical/Dental LEVEL II DENTAL AS- SISTANT with reception experience. Full-time. some evening and week- ends required. Please email resume to: michelle@durhamdental.ca Apartments & Flats For RentA Hospital/Medical/Dental WE ARE LOOKING for dynamic self-motivated PHLEBOTOMIST to join our Healthcare team. Re- quirements: Graduate from Medical Laboratory Assistant Program (or equivalent), with two to three years venipuncture experience. This posi- tion is in the Brooklin, Ontario. Please forward resume to: lana@ brooklinmedical.com Houses for Sale$ OWN A 3-BDRM, 2-baths house, with gar- age. $1330/month. P&I. (oac). Call Jazz Bains, Broker, Homelife United, Office 1-888-672-1233, Direct 647-296-5800. Industrial / Commercial For Rent / WantedI INDUSTRIAL BAY at 401/Stevenson exit. Suit Auto repair, ma- chining, hobbies, and other light industrial. No detailing. Hydro, water, heating, sink, parking, air compressors, high roll-up door, wash- rooms. 905-576-2982 or 905-621-7474. INDUSTRIAL UNITS, 343 Bloor St. W., Oshawa (at Park Rd., near 401). 2850-sq.ft. Can be divided to suit. Call 905-579-5077 or 289-404-4567 for more information Apartments & Flats For RentA Mortgages,LoansM 2.20% 5 yr. Variable No appraisal needed. Beat that! Refinance now and Save $$$ before rates rise. Below bank Rates Call for DetailsPeter 877-777-7308Mortgage Leaders #10238 $$ MONEY $$ CONSOLIDATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #109691-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com Apartments & Flats For RentA 1-BEDROOM BASE- MENT apartment, Ajax (401/Westney), newly renovated, 1-parking, No pets/smoking, working person preferred. Available immediately. $950/month, all inclu- sive, plus laundry. First/last and references. Call 416-668-2167. Apartments & Flats For RentA AJAX- OXFORD Towers. Spacious apartments, quiet bldg, near shop- ping, GO. Pool. 2-bed- rooms & 3-bedrooms. available May & June 1st, from $1189/mo. plus parking. Call 905-683-5322 or 905-683-8571 BACHELOR APTS 1-bath in the Country Apart- ment. Located in north Pickering. Second level unit, $795/month, avail. immediately. Other unit is a walk out basement apt, rent $675/month, available July 1st. Heat & hydro incl. with rent. Both units are pet free, adult lifestyle, and non- smoking. No laundry fa- cilities available. Please call or email to make ar- rangements to see either unit. 905-649-2436 WHITBY APARTMENT for Rent in quiet adult only building. Man- ning/Brock Area. No pets. $840/month (in- cludes utilities). Call 905-725- 9467 Houses for Rent WOW!! RITCHIE/ WESTNEY finished walk- out basement. Bright, neat & clean. 5-bdrm, 4- bath. Walk to school, GO & 401. Strictly no smok- ing/pets. $2500+utilities. Available June 16. 905-426-3040 To wnhousesfor RentT OSHAWA 3-BEDROOM townhouse, Ritson/Dean Ave. Available July 1st. $1595/month inclusive. First/last required. No dogs, cats okay. Call (905)922-2181 or Karim 905-447-0071 WHITBY, Well main- tained 3-bedroom town- house, 3 washrooms, full basement, close to 401 & Go. $1500 monthly plus heat/hydro. Available June 15/July 1st. Please contact Hans 905-626-4267 before 9pm Rooms forRent & WantedR 2-BDRM brand new basement apt. Full bath- room, kitchenette, walk- out to patio, separate entrance, shared laun- dry. No pets/smoking. Available July 1st. $1200/month. First/Last. Utilities negotiable. Har- wood/Rossland, Ajax. 905-409-2045. Legal Notices VendorsWantedV Rooms forRent & WantedR LUXURY BUNGALOW on lake, Newcastle. Bed- room with ensuite, den, and shared kitchen. Golf course, pool, rec centre. $800/month, hydro, cable, laundry included. Suit professional, non- smoking, working or re- tired gentleman. 905-419-1743 evenings Cottagesfor RentC NEW 3-BDRM COT- TAGE, (2014) full bath, large livingroom/kitchen, laundry, dishwasher, ful- ly furnished. Deck, BBQ, dock. Very private. Rice Lake area. Dreamland Resort. $1000/wk. 705-696-3423 Articlesfor SaleA 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 Legal Notices VendorsWantedV Articlesfor SaleA RENT TO OWN Appli- ances, TV's, Electronics, Furniture, Computers, BBQ's & More!! Apply today. Contact Paddy's Market 905-263-8369 or 800-798-5502. Visit us on the web at www.paddysmarket.ca TOPSOIL: Quality Screened Topsoil for sale, $8.50 cyd. for pick up DURHAM TOPSOIL 1480 Lakeridge North, Ajax. 905-427-0403 TRUCKLOADS OF NEW SCRATCH & DENT APPLIANCES. Bar fridge's, $79 and up. Va- riety of dented fridge's, stoves and laundry available. Also brand new appliances, GE dyers $399 and GE washers, $499. Many other new items available. Free local de- livery. Call us today, Ste- phenson's Appliances, Sales, Service, Parts. 154 Bruce St. Oshawa. (905)576-7448. Legal Notices VendorsWantedV CarsC 2002 CADILLAC STS, 200,000kms, runs great, passed e-test in March, goldish exterior, tan leather interior, heated seats, etc., very little to safety $1500. Call 905-720-1314 Cars WantedC **! ! $$$$ ! AAAAA ! AARON & LEO Scrap Cars & Trucks Wanted. Cash paid 7 days per week anytime. Please call 905-426-0357. * * $!$$!! ! AAAAA WHITTLE SCRAP Solu- tions. We pay cash for your scrap cars, truck, and vans! Fast free pick- up. 24/7. 905-431-1808. A1$$$ JOHNNY JUNKER Always the Best Cash Deal for your good Used or Scrap Cars, Trucks, Vans, etc. Environmen- tally friendly green dis- posal. Call now for the best cash deal 905-424-1232 Classifieds LocalWork.ca Monday - Friday 8am to 5pm • Oshawa 905-576-9335 • Ajax 905-683-0707 • Fax 905-579-2418 • classifieds@durhamregion.com Newspaper Advertising Works! Catch Classifieds ONLINE! ANYTIME! Log on to: durhamregion.com du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 18 AP 1979 FIAT SPIDER CONVERTIBLE Original condition, manual. Excellent condition. Asking $11,000 o.b.o Call Frank 905-725-0881 905-449-4109 1999 BLACK GRAND PRIX 4 DOOR. ONE OWNER. CALL 905-410-0526 2007 DODGE NITRO SE 3, 7 V6 Auto remote start, tinted windows, fog lights, AC, AM/FM CD Factory, Very Clean/One Owner/Well- Maintained. 127,200 km's. Price $8,500.00 Will Cert./E Test 905-571-4417 CARNEY-WHITE, Catherine (nee Blue) - Passed away on May 26, 2015, at St. Boniface Hospital in Winnipeg Manitoba. Catherine was predeceased by her Brother William Blue, her sister Mary Livingston, her Mother Mary Blue and Father Archie Blue. Left to mourn her is her husband Craig of 25 years, her sister Gerri, her brother Archie (Joan), sons John (Rene), Michael (Sylvia), Kevin (Capucine), step sons Paul (Tammy), Brian, James (Jesse), 17 grandchildren and 3 great grand children. As per her wishes, cremation has already taken place and a memorial service will take place at SIMPLE ALTERNATIVE FUNERAL HOME, 1057 Brock Road in Pickering at 11:00 A.M. Sunday 31, 2015, with a reception to follow. SAMYN, Robert A. - Passed away peacefully on Wednesday, May 27, 2015 at the Ajax- Pickering Hospital at the age of 86. Beloved husband to Jacqueline. Loving father to Ricky (Gene), Carine (Geoffrey) and Rudy (Sarah). Proud grandfather to Neduschke and Christopher, Kyle and Nicholas, Jamie and Emily. Family will receive friends at the McEACHNIE FUNERAL HOME (28 Old Kingston Road, Ajax, 905-428-8488) on Monday June 1, 2015 from 1-2 p.m. Donations to the Canadian Cancer Society or the Heart and Stroke Foundation would be greatly appreciated. Condolences may be signed at www.mceachniefuneral.ca In Memory ofRobert (Bob) Irish April 21, 1930 -March 1, 2015 Died peacefully in his 84th yearon March 1, 2015. A committal service will be held with family and friends onFriday June 5th, 12:00pmat GROVESIDE CEMETARYlocated at 5155 Baldwin Street Southin Whitby. Additional information can be obtained by calling McEachnie Funeral Home at 905.428.8488 Publishing Thursday June 18 Deadline Tuesday June 16@5pm For further information please call one of our Classified Sales Representatives at 905-576-9335or905-683-0707 Father’s DayTributes Father’s DayTributes PRAYER NOVENA TO THEBLESSED VIRGIN MARY.(Never known to fail). O most beautiful flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful vine splendor of Heaven, blessed Mother of the Son of God, immaculate Virgin assist me in this my necessity. O Star of the Sea, help me and show me here you are my Mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity. There are none that can withstand your power. O show me herein you are my Mother. O Mary Conceived Without Sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three times). Holy Mary I place this cause in your hands (three times). Sweet Mother, I place this cause in your hands (three times). Holy Spirit, you who solve all problems, light all loads so that I can attain my goal. You gave me the divine gift to forgive and forget all evil against me and that in all instances in my life you are with me. I want in this short prayer to thank you for all the things as I confirm once again that I never want to be separated from you or your mercy towards me and mine. Amen (The prayer must be said three days even after the request is granted and the favour must be published.) AUCTION SALEComplete Liquidation Northern Truck Equipment. Retiring Dave Wilson Movie/TV Car Collections & Rentals. Retiring Eric Thomas Classic Car Parts Including Unsold Inventory & Project Vehicles Auction Consists Of Classic Cars & Trucks, Boats, Motorcycles & Collectibles Saturday June 6th, 2015 10:00 AM1774 Concession 7, Hampton Ontario4 Klms West Of Hwy 57 on 7th Concession, 8 Klms East of Simcoe St. on Winchester Road RV'S: 1999 Allegro Bus 8.1 Cummins 39 FT 1 Side, 2002 Terry 5th Wheel Trailer, 1996 Rinker Party Boat Tri Hull V8 Outdrive w Trailer, Haulmark Enclosed Trailer Single Axle, Com Pro Gooseneck Equip Trailer, Tandem Car Hauler, 2009 21 ft. Trail-lite travel trailer. MOTORCYCLES: 2002 Kawasaki Vulcan, 2007 Victory Vegas Jackpot, 2007 Vespa 150 Scooter, 2009 Piaggo 150 Scooter, 1953 Matchless Motorcycle. CLASSIC CARS: 1980 Lincoln Mark IV, 1957 Plymouth Plaza, 1967 Chrysler New Yorker, 1986 Monte Carlo, 1987 Dodge Power Wagon, 1950 Ford Coupe, 1967 Camaro SS, 1930 Ford Model A, 1956 Ford Fairlane, 1963 Ford Galaxie, 1924 Dodge Pickup, 1931 Ford Model A - - under restoration, 1953 Chev, 1955 Pontiac, 1955 DeSoto, 1955 GMC Van,1956 Plymouth Plaza,1961 Mercury Pickup, 1969 Dodge Dart (restoration project), 1973 Lincoln Continental, 1977 Plymouth Fury, 1985 Chevette, 1987 Volvo Wagon,1988 Dodge K-Car,1989 Chrysler LeBaron Convertible, 1997 Suzuki X90, 1997 Ford Explorer, 1951 Plymouth Conv, 1936 Ford 2-door, 1939 Studebaker Pickup, 1935 Austin, 1939 Chevrolet 4-door, 1955 GMC Van, 1935 Hudson Coupe Street rod, 1941 Buick Coupe. CARS: 1975 Mercedes 450 SL Convertible, 2003 Mercedes 500 CLK Coupe, 2005 Impala SS Sedan, 2006 Infinity G35 Coupe, 2010 Cobalt 4 DR, 2006 Cobalt 4 DR, 2001 Chev Cavalier 4 DR, 2004 Sunfire 4 DR, 2004 Sunfire 2 DR, 2003 Saturn Ion 4 DR, 2006 Buick Allure 4 DR, 2008 Chev Impala 4 DR, 2007 Chev Impala 4 DR, 1999 Ford Taurus SHO, 2002 Jag S Type, 6 Ford Custom, 65 Pontiac Convertible84 Porsche 944, 50 Oldsmobile Taxi, 89 Nissan 240SX, 87 Alfa Romeo Milano, 57 Dodge Swept Side, 07 Jeep Patriot, 55 Ford. TRUCKS: 2004 Chev K1500 4X4,2005 Chev C1500 Ext Cab, 2000 Chev C1500 Suburban, 2000 Chev Ext Cab, 2009 Chev C1500 Reg Cab, 2009 Chev K1500 Crew Cab 4X4, 2003 GMC Sonoma Ext Cab, 2004 Chev G3500 Cube Van, 2007 Chev G3500 Cube Van, 2005 Chev Avalanche C1500, 2002 GMC Envoy 4X4, 2005 Chev Trailblazer 2 WD, 2006 Montana Ext Van, 2007 Chev Uplander Van, 2008 Pontiac Montana Ext Van, 2009 Pontiac Montana Ext Van, 2007 Braun Caravan Wheelchair Access Van, 2008 Cadillac SRX SUV AWD, 2009 Chev Traverse, 2004 Ford Expedition, 2003 Buick Rendezvous SUV, 2009 Montana Van, 1949 Studebaker Commander sedan, 1953 Chev 4-door, 1967 Avanti (restoration project), 1927 Ford Roadster, 1951 Ford Victoria Custom - purple, 1939 Chev Suburban Carry-all, 1951 Ford Truck F3. TOYS: 2005 Polaris ATV, 1996 Polaris ATV, 1976 Yamaha 500 Endoro been stored 25 years, 2011 Original Electric Scooter SS150cc, 2011 Ecoryder Electric Scooter. BOATS: 22 ft. Larson boat/302 Ford V-8 inboard/fishing riggors/ Easyloader tandem trailer, Kabota 2cyl Diesel Lawn Tractor. SUBJECT TO ADDITIONS & DELETIONSNo Buyers Premium On Lrg Items10% Buyers Premium On Small Items$200 Deposit on Vehicles Bank Draft or Cert ChequeOwnership Transfer $75.00 Terms: Cash, Debit, App Cheque, Visa & M/C3% Charge on Credit Card Purchases GARY HILL AUCTIONS 905-852-9538 - 416-518-6401garyhillauctions.cagaryhauctions@sympatico.ca WATCH OUR WEBSITE FOR LISTINGS & PICTURES ESTATE AUCTION Stapleton Auctions Newtonville FRIDAY, June 5th, 5:00 p.m. Selling 3 attractive estates from Whitby, Pickering and Newcastle: Sklar 10pc. Dining Suite; Curio Cabinet; Chesterfield; Occ. Chairs; Occ. Tables; Bookcases; Wall Units; Several Bedroom Suites; China Glass; Artwork; Prints; Gym Equipment; Tools; Black Kenmore Fridge/Stove/Dishwasher. Preview after 2:00 p.m Terms: Cash; Interac; M/C, Visa, Approved Cheques. 10% Buyers Premium Applies AUCTIONEERS Frank & Steve Stapleton905.786.2244, www.stapletonauctions.comfb - Stapleton Auctions'Celebrating 44 years in the auction industry' MacGregor's AUCTION SALE Sunday June 7th 9:00am (viewing 8 am) Located in Orono. Take 401 to 115 Hwy, Exit at Main St, Orono. Follow signs to Mill Pond Auction Features Quality Selection of Articles from A Local Estate & Downsizing, Articles from Past to Present. Furniture, Quality Glass & China, Royal Doultons, Elvis Collectibles, Household Effects, Large Offering of Jewelry, Gold, Silver, Costume, Rings, Chains, etc, Misc Tools & Hardware. Something for One & All.. NOTE: Jewelry selling at 10:00 am Terms: Cash, Visa, M/C & Interac (10% buyers premium) see: www.macgregor.theauctionadvertiser.com MacGREGOR AUCTIONS Mike MacGregor, Auctioneer 905-718-6602 l 905-263-2100 l 1-800-363-6799 macgregorauctions@hotmail.com MCLEAN AUCTION CALENDAR: SAT JUNE 6 - 10am - FURNITURE/HOUSEHOLD/TOOLS ESTATE AUCTION property of the late JAMES BURNETT ESTATE selling at the farm 1252 KILLARNEY BAY RD. KAWARTHA LAKES, (north of Glenarm Rd, see signs) terms-cash, cheque with ID, visa, MasterCard - NO DEBIT at THIS AUCTION! ONLINE ONLY AUCTION-JUNE 12-16 at MCLEAN AUCTION CENTER-LINDSAY movie and rock memorabilia, autographs, signed guitars, dolls, toys & clothes, jewelry, coins, antiques, artwork, furniture, books, retro items, glass & china, costumes, vintage clothing, tools, comics, custom 2001 Hyundai Tiburon, 91 Cadillac,SAT JUNE 20-10am at the property of David Bray 1851 Whitfield Road, Port Perry - vintage farm machinery and farm collectables, hundreds of interesting collectables & hard to find items, tools, early notice, mark your calendar & plan to spend the day. MCLEAN AUCTIONS 705-324-2783 photos/catalogue/terms/preview/pickup times at www.mcleanauctions.com CORNEIL'S AUCTION BARNFriday June 5 at 4:30pm Located 3 miles East of Little Britainon Kawartha Lakes Rd 4 Selling the contents of a Ops home plus others - oak side by side china cabinet - curio cabinet - oak sideboard - washstand - walnut sideboard - dry sink - Gingerbread clock - modern pine corner cabinet - chesterfield sets - 4 bar stools - Lazy Boy recliners - open face washstand - fishing rods - engine hoist - Busy Bee dust collector - aluminum extension ladders - 2HP Evinrude outboard motor - enclosed double skidoo trailer - paddle boat - Danby fridge/stove/sink combination - Qty of china, glass, household and collectable items GREG CORNEIL AUCTIONEER 1241 Salem Rd Little Britain 705-786-2183 for more info or pictures www.corneilauctions.com - open for viewing Thursday from 8:30am to 5pm and 7pm to 9pm and Friday at 9am BRUCE KELLETT AUCTIONSSelling contents from Omemee,Port Perry and other homes Kellett Sale Barn, 13200 Old Scugog Rd. (1/2 mile south of Blackstock) Tuesday, June 9th at 5:30pmCream cans, Vintage jewellery, Signs, Fold-up tent, Vintage gas & oil road maps, Tools, Catering supplies, Stanley tool cabinet, Gas powered pressure washer, Crystal & chinaAUCTIONEER: Bruce Kellett705-328-2185 or 905-986-4447 www.kellettauctions.com AUCTION SALE Wed June 3rd - Auctions held every week6pm - Come Early to Preview Items1375 Hopkins St Unit 5-6, WhitbyNext Auction June 10Sale to include household items, small appliances, electronics, clothes, cookware and furniture. Further details at auctionsetc.ca email ae-auctions@outlook.com VENDORSWANTED Durham Craft & Gift Show Durham College Recreation & Wellness CentreOctober 23, 24 & 25, 2015 Your one-stop shopping for ultimate gift giving this Holiday Season For Booth Information Call Susan 905.215.0444 or Email: sfleming@durhamregion.com CarsC Tr ucks for SaleT Novenas N CarsC Tr ucks for SaleT Novenas N Cars WantedC **!Go Green!** Cash For Cars & Trucks Auto (ABE's) Recycling 1-888-355-5666 MassagesM AAA PICKERING ANGELS H H H H H Relaxing Massage VIP Rooms & Jacuzzi 905 Dillingham Rd. (905)420-0320 Now hiring!!! NOW OPEN LaVilla Spa 634 Park Rd. South Oshawa (905)240-1211 Now hiring!!! Coming EventsC MEDICAL CONDITION? We Help Canadians re- ceive up to $40,000 from the Government! Why Wait? We can col- lect for you. ANY medi- cal condition may qualify. Call Ontario Benefits 1-888- 588-2937 ext#101 In Memoriam In Memoriam HomeImprovement WINDOW Cleaning up to 20 windows $60 No Squeegee (By hand) EAVESTROUGHCleaning & Repairs * Lawn Care * Powerwash/Stain * Int./Ext. PaintingCall Fred905-626-7967 Waste Removal W A1 1/2 PRICE JUNKREMOVAL!!Homes, Yards, Businesses, etc.We do all theloading.Seniors Discounts. Cheap and fast Service! John 1-866-678-7274 Auctions Death Notices Service Directory TO ADVERTISE YOUR AUCTION IN THIS SECTION, PLEASE CALL 905-683-0707 Ajax du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 19 AP This Week Newspaper INVITATION TO BID Bids for services listed belowAddress to: The Circulation Manager This Week Newspaper845 Farewell St. Oshawa L1H 7L5Will be received until 12 noonOn Monday June 22nd, 2015.Contract commencing, Aug 1st and Aug 7th, 2015.Work consisting To deliver approx. 8,895 newspapers,Flyers, catalogues and other products toSpecific drop locations in Whitby and Oshawa area.Customers in Whitby and Oshawa areaon Wednesday and Thursday.Van required.Information packages available at:This Week Newspaper845 Farewell St.Oshawa, ON L1H 7L5 Bid #103-Whitby area- approx. 5,402.Bid # 304-Oshawa area- approx. 3,493.Lowest or any bids will not necessarilybe accepted. Only the successful Company will be contacted. Places ofWorship Places ofWorship Places ofWorship Places ofWorship Places ofWorship Places ofWorship Places ofWorship Places ofWorship TendersT Places ofWorship TendersT Places ofWorship Congratulate Your Grad Thursday June 18 Deadline Tuesday June 16 With a special full colour notice For only $4999+hst 3” wide by 2.75” deep Approx. 40 words To Place your ad call our Classified Department Oshawa/Whitby/Clarington This Week 905-576-9335 Ajax/Pickering News Advertiser 905-683-0707 Congratulations on your incredible achievement. We are so proud of all the hard work you have put into school, especially I.B. We know you will achieve all your dreams. Love forever, Mom and Dad and Landon R.S. MCLAUGHLIN HIGH SCHOOLSAM P L E SARAH ROGERS Congratulations on your graduation from Wilfrid Laurier University with a Bachelor of Music degree. Good luck on your Master’s Degree at the University of Ottawa. We are very proud of you, Love Mom and Dad LAURIER UNIVERSITYSAM P L E TIM CROUCH Graduations Graduations Graduations Graduations Ajax & Pickering Locations8 Salem Rd. South Ajax, ON L1S 7T7 FLYERS WEDNESDAY JuNE 3, 2015 Carrier of the Week Congratulations Jacob for being our Carrier of the Week. Today’s Carrier of the Week is Jacob. Jacob enjoys basketball and video games. He loves to swim and socialize with people. Jacob has received dinner vouchers compliments of McDonald’s, Subway and Boston Pizza. *DELIVERED TO SELECTED HOUSEHOLDS ONLY All inserts can be recycled with your newspapers through your blue box program. SAve time, SAve money. view Flyers/Coupons at shop.ca if you did not receive your news Advertiser oR you are interested in becoming a carrier, call Circulation at 905-683-5117. Hours: mon.-thurs. 9:00am to 6:30pm, Fri. 9:00am to 5:00pm. your Carrier will be around to collect an optional delivery charge of $6 every 3 weeks. 6 Harwood Ave. S.,Ajax 1949 Ravenscroft Rd.,Ajax 300 Rossland Rd. E.,Ajax 255 Salem Rd. S. D#1 42 Old Kingston Rd.,Ajax 465 Bayly St.W. #5,Ajax 1889 Brock Rd. #24, Pickering 300 Harwood Ave. S.,Ajax 1995 Salem Rd. N.,Ajax *BOUCLAIR AJAX *GD WHOLESALE TIRES AJAX PICKERING *GIANT TIGER AJAX *HOME DEPOT AJAX PICKERING *HOME HARDWARE AJAX *JOE DICKSON AJAX PICKERING *LOWES AJAX PICKERING *MARK’S WORK WEARHOUSE AJAX PICKERING *NAPA AUTO PARTS AJAX PICKERING *NATIONAL SPORTS CENTER AJAX PICKERING *PHARMA PLUS AJAX PICKERING *RONA AJAX PICKERING *SEARS AJAX PICKERING *SPORT CHEK AJAX PICKERING *SQUARE BOY PICKERING *STAPLES AJAX PICKERING *WHEELS AJAX PICKERING *YOUR GOOD HEALTH AJAX PICKERING Vacation BibleSchools & Camps Oshawa/Whitby/Clarington - Kathryn - kcox@durhamregion.com • Ajax/Pickering - Erin - ejackson@durhamregion.com905-576-9335 Maranatha tri-Sport CaMp August 10-14, 2015 Maranatha CRC – 2805 Hwy #2 Bowmanville 9 am – 3 pm Learn skills in: Basketball, Volleyball & Track and Field Just $95 per camper! Every camper receives a T-shirt, water bottle, Bible, camper playbook and tons of Freezies! oUr CaMp iS inCLUSiVE! More info available atscriptureunion.ca/maranatha Vacation BiBle School, the PromiSe July 27 – 31, 2015 9 am to 12 noon Monday – Friday Grades K-6 with daily lesson,craft, games, music, snack Register at: www.gracelutheranoshawa.net OR Telephone 905-728-4371 Tue, Wed, Thur from 9 am-12 noon Grace Lutheran church 540 CROMWell Ave., OshAWA Safe Haven WorSHip Centre 1084 Salk Road, Units 10-13 (access entrance is 1084 Brock Rd.) Call 905-837-8771 for more information **Register on our website info@safehavenworship.com FREE Snacks, Games, Crafts, Bible Stories and more fun! Ages 4-12 July 6th–10th 9:00am–12:15pm VBS2015 In partnersip with You Design your yers online We Distribute through home carrier delivery We Print at an exceptional price to learn more Grow your business by Designing, Printing and Distributing your yers through Beautiful yers starting at just 12¢ per piece! Please read your classified ad on the first day of publication as we cannot be responsible for more than one insertion in the event of an error. du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 5 20 AP 201 BAYLY ST. W. (AT MONARCH AVE., AjAx) •905-683-5358 No Credit? Slow Credit? Bad Credit? STARTING FROM 4.19% Call Kaitlynn 1-888-941-3115 “Thinkinglike acustomer” All advertised prices are plus HST. Vehicles may not be exactly as shown. See dealer for details. VISIT USTODAY FOR MORE GREAT DEALS! VILL AGECHRYSLER DURHAM’S #1 CHRYSLER DEALER 2015 CHRYSLER 200 LX Auto, A/C, M P3 CD Player, PW/PL/PM, Tilt Steering, Keyless Entry, Security System, Rear Window Defrost. Stk #: V3283 $18,888 2015 JEEP PATRIOT SPORT/NORTH A/C, Tilt Steering, Keyless Entry, CD Player, Leather Interior, Heated Door Mirrors, Panic Alarm, Fog Lights. Stk #: V3296 $24,988 2010 HYUNDAI ELANTRA TOURING Manual, Tilt Steering, PW/PL/PM, CD Player, Front Reading Lights, Rear Window Defrost. Stk #: V3335 $11,488 2008 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER LX 5 Speed Manual, PW/PL/PM, Tilt Steering, Keyless Entry, CD Player, Spoiler, Rear Window Wiper. Stk #: V3360 $7,949 2014 FIAT 500E POP A/C, MP3 CD Player, PW/PL/PM, Tilt Steering, Keyless Entry, Rear Window Defrost, Security System. Stk #: V3271 $19,988 2010 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SE Adjustable Headrests In All Seating Positions, Front Bucket Seats, Power Windows, 3.3 Liter 6 Cylinder Engine. Stk # V3408 $11,988 2013 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN Auto, A/C, Tilt Steering, PW/PL, Keyless Entry, CD Player, Spoiler, Rear Window Defrost, Rear Window Wiper. Stk #: 15426A $18,987 2014 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY TOURING Auto, A/C, Alloy Wheels, Tilt Steering, PW/PL/PM, Keyless Entry, SiriusXM, Spoiler, Roof Rack. Stk #: V3240 $19,888 2015 DODGE JOURNEY CVP/SE PLUS Auto, A/C, Alloy Wheels, PW/PL, Keyless Entry, Tilt Steering, CD Player, ABS Brakes, Rear Window Wiper. Stk #: 15352A $19,988 2010 JEEP COMPASS SPORT/NORTH Manual, Tilt Steering, Alloy Wheels, CD Player, Spoiler, Front Reading Lights, Rear Window Defrost. Stk #: 15309A $12,488 2015 JEEP PATRIOT SPORT/NORTH Front Bucket Seats, Tilt Steering Wheel, Rear Wipers, Cruise Control, 5 Speed Manual, 4 Cyl & More Than 170 Horsepower. Stk #: V3296 $24,988 2013 HYUNDAI ACCENT Auto, CD Player, Tilt Steering, Rear Window Defrost, Power Steering, ABS Brakes, Front Reading Lights. Stk #: V3251 $12,888 2011 TOYOTA COROLLA Auto, Tilt Steering, CD Player, Heated Door Mirrors, Rear Window Defrost, Power Steering. Stk #: P3225 $12,888 2013 MAZDA MAZDA6 GS Auto, A/C, Alloy Wheels, Tilt Steering, PW/PL, Rear Window Defrost, Keyless Entry, CD Player, Security System. Stk #: V3387 $14,488