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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 28 Apr 2004, p. 10

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i PAGE 10THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, APRIL 28, 2004 www.durhamregion.com Blackstock teen still haunted BLACKSTOCK from page 1 "He would create very, very angry pieces of art... he has intense intense anger and feelings of injustice." injustice." Adam also expressed "a lot of grief about not knowing about his mother or the person he thought of as his mother... a lie he had been told throughout his childhood. "This person who said she was his mom was doing all sorts of terrible things to him... (he believes) it wouldn't have been the same if she were his real mom." The younger brother also ex periences flashbacks of being tied up, caged or locked up from time to time, explained Ms. Land, adding that Adam feels for the loss of his family and wants to see other family members. As the first day of the sentencing sentencing was wrapping up, after hearing of how Adam has been coping in a group home away from his brother and other family family members, Judge Halikowski wondered aloud "whether the cure is worse than the disease?" Mr. Smith, 52, and Mrs. Smith, 42, the boys' biological uncle and aunt, each pleaded guilty in January to two counts each of forcible confinement, failing to provide the necessaries necessaries of life and assault with a weapon on the boys, who were 14 and 15 when they were removed removed from their Blackstock area home on June 29, 2001. According to police and court records, the couple kept the boys, who arc both described described as developmental ly delayed, delayed, possibly due to fetal alcohol alcohol syndrome, chained, tied up, in dog cages and locked in cribs converted into holding cells. The sentencing hearing will continue this morning and is expected to wrap up May 12. 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The newspaper, which serves students and staff at Durham College and the University of Ontario Institute of Technology, took top honours at the association's annual convention in Toronto last month, beating out papers from Toronto's Humber College, Algonquin College in Ottawa, the University of Waterloo, and Loyalist College in Bellville. "The Chronicle presents a good range of campus news, covering stories of relevance to its readers," said the judges. " The paper looks to serve its readers well, informing, entertaining, and creating a community profile for the college and those that make up campus life." The Chronicle is produced by students in the Journalism and Advertising programs at Durham College, and is published weekly during the school year. It also captured top honours in 2001. FREE PARKING TORONTO STAR V '"'tfe 11 T .f ealmyLiiesty. 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