Oakville Beaver, 15 Sep 1993, p. 1

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Young Offender charged after 13 yearâ€"old beaten A 13â€"yearâ€"old Oakville boy spent two days in hospital after he was beaten unconscious by a 16â€" yearâ€"old Oakville boy on Burnet Street last Thursday. Halton Regional Police said the attack occurred on the street around 10 p.m. A second Oakville youth was held in police custody pending a bail hearing. The youth, who canâ€" not be named under the Young Offenders Act, was charged with assault causing bodily harm and breach of probation. Held knife to sister‘s throat, 13 yearâ€"old faces charges Police said the motive behind the attack was unknown. A 13â€"yearâ€"old boy who put a knife to his 12â€"yearâ€"old sister‘s throat during an argument early Saturday morning is now charged with assault with a weapon. The girl wasn‘t injured in the incident which ended when the boy put down the knife, said Halton Regional Police Acting Det. Sgt. Carey Smith. Police said the argument between the boy and his sister occurred in the kitchen of their north Oakville home. During the heat of the incident, the boy put a knife to the 12â€"yearâ€"old girl‘s throat, but he made no contact with the weapon and put it down himself. Woman charged after money stolen THE OAKVILLE BEAVER F3 The incident was reported by the girl to her mother. An 18â€"yearâ€"old Oakville woman is facing a theft charge after money was stolen from the Kentucky Fried Chicken headquarters on the South Service Road last Sunday. Halton Regional Police said the theft was reported and an arrest made around 3 p.m. at the restauâ€" rant location. The theft involved $180, said police. Theresa Richarz, 18, of Oakville is charged with theft under $1,000. She is scheduled to appear in Oakville provincial court on Oct. 19th. [NOT ENOU Pticher Wendy Rae is all concentration as she tries to strike out opponent. But it wasn‘t enough as her Picâ€"Aâ€"Deli squad went down to defeat 4â€"3 at the hands of Chaps in the Oakville Women‘s Softball playoffs on the weekend. A Metroland Community Newspaper Today‘s Paper INSIDE SPORTS ........ CLASSIFIED HOMES ......... FOCUS :........... [JET AUTO CENTRE] 1 Complete MB t I Tumup' ~79"6 & 8 Cul. + 10 Off [] Award winner He‘s got the best garden in town l PE P EERAAAARERAAAAAAe emct 00 [ cabies & PCV Vaive Includes Installatior prenasecsaks OFF M in 0t m ow aaihe d O .. _ . ns ud SPECIAL SUPPLEMENTS Woolco, White Rose, The Bay, Unilock, Sears, © Investment News, Overdrive Kruzin for Kids Last chance to view vintage cars Canadian Publications Ma Product Agreement #435â€"2( Page 13 Page 17 580 ARGUS RD (ACROSS FROM GO) AnAdl _« "J¢ 31 No.1 L/ 6A _11â€"12 «1316 _21â€"24 .17â€"20 L Communily // es baper Golfers tee it up for OTMH If this sounds like it‘s more up your ‘rally‘, the United Way of Oakville invites you to participate in its first annual Car Rally, coâ€"sponâ€" sored by Chaps and the Oakville Beaver. Set for Sunday, Sept. 19th, the rally gets underway at 8:30 a.m. with registration and brief instruction for participants, not to mention coffee and donuts courtesy of Tim Hortons. Cars â€" and anything from a sports car to a Winnebago is eligible â€" are expected to be on the road between 9:30 a.m. and 10 a.m. for the first segment of the rally which winds up at an ‘undisclosed‘ restaurant for lunch. Then it‘s off for the second segment which winds up around 4 p.m. and is followed by dinner, prizes and awards. And all of this â€" plus your official Car Rally Tâ€"shirt â€" is just $70 per car (which includes driver and navigator) plus $15 per additional passenger (children under 5 are free). Instigator of the car rally Andres Paara of Chaps isn‘t revealing any details â€" "I don‘t even know the borders," said Paara. Registration forms are available from Chaps Dorval or Chaps Bronte, the United Way office, or the royal Bank, which by the way is also throwing their support behind the event. If your idea of a car rally is cars whipping through mud or hurling off cliffs, then think again. How about a very creative one where the idea is to get from point A to B as quickly as possible, but in between there are clues and tmvia quesâ€" tions and checkâ€"points that pose a few challenges and prompt a lot of laughs. Rally around United Way More than 140 golfers will be teeing off this morning at the 14th annual Oakville Beaver Charity Golf Tournament. As in past years, the tourney is being held at the Wyldewood Golf and Country Club, which has donated the course for the day. All proceeds go to Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital. The following is a list of major sponsors and those who have contributed prizes to the tournament. Ariana Appraisals, Bank of Montreal, Becton Dickinson Canada Inc., Drs. Ron Bell & Kevin Wardle (Family Dentistry), BDO Dunwoody Ward Maillette Chartered Accountants, Canadian Airlines International, Carberry Davis Insurance Brokers Ltd., Corporation of the Town of Oakville, Daemar Inc., Deloitte Touche, Doane Raymond Chartered Accountants, Flippance & Carr, Ab & Ruth Folland, The Ford Motor Company of Canada, Giennâ€" Graydonâ€"Wright Chartered Accountants, Goligers Travel, Hanna Henderson Batristers & Solicitors, Hopedale Mail, Kelsey‘s Restaurants, Labatts Ontario Breweries, Lee Rocea Forming Ltd., Long Manufacturing Ltd., Longo‘s Fruit Markets, Oaktown Collision, O‘Connor MacLeod Barristers & Solicitors, McCutcheon‘s Camera Shops, Metroland Printing, Publishing & Distributing Ltd., Monenco Agra Inc., Morningsign, Oakâ€"Land Lincoin Mercury Sales Ltd., Oakville Cycle & Sports, The Oakville Milton & District Real Estate Board, Precision Platers, Re/Max MAJOR SPONSORS AND HOLE SPONSORS state Board, Precisic boutowne Realty C e Hoyal Bank (Photo by Riziero Vertolli) WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1993 anada etter Newspaper Massive schemes by Genstar and Kaneff will bring chaos to area say opponents By HOWARD MOZEL Oakville Beaver Staff o worlds will collide in the Tt:lid-town core if a pair of highâ€"density housing proâ€" jects go ahead as planned, say homeowners in the area opposed to the scheme. One world represents the modâ€" est, treeâ€"lined suburbia of quiet streets like Maple, Pine and Spruce; the other, five highrise complexes on Old Mill Road which opponents believe will disrupt the lives of everyone living nearby. Battle lines drawn in Old Mill development Torontoâ€"Dominion Bank, Royal Trust, Ryrie Ford Kerr Barristers & Solicitors, Silliker Laboratories of Canada, The Sleep Factory, SmithKline Beecham Pharma Inc., St. Lawrence Cement, Union Gas Limited, Wyldewood Goif & Country Club, Wayne Van Exan, Andrew Yager Holdings Ltd. PRIZE DONORS A & P Stores, Alberta Distillers Limited, Andres Wines Ltd., Bank of Montreal, Barbarossa Hairstyling, The Bay, Bertin Stables, Brimley Investments (Dr. F.P. Invidiata), Budds Imported Cars, Calvin Kiein Cosmetics, CHWO Radio Ltd., Canada Trust, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Canadian Tire Stores in Oakville, Complete Party Rentâ€"Alls, Corbett Sporting Goods, Dennis Designs, Dominion Stores, Downtown BiA, B.D.0. Dunwoody Ward Mallette (Bruce Nicholson), Etcetera, Etc., First Tee Golf (Brad Weake), FBG Printers, Garvey‘s Men‘s Shops, The Globe & Mail, Greenings Custom Framing & Art Gallery Inc., Hong Kong Bank of Canada, iImages That Suit Ltd., Kâ€"Mart, Kennedy Ford Sales Limited, Kerr Cadillac Pontiac Buick Ltd., Kopriva Taylor Community Funeral Home, Le Blanc & Royale Telcom Inc., Leigh Morgan Fashions, Levitt â€" Safety Limited, Little Caesar‘s Pizza, Loblaws Supermarkets, Mack Canada Inc., Mary‘s Keepsakes, Miracle Foodmart, Mr. Lube, Moen Inc., Molson, Morning Sign, Ann Mulvale, Multi Line Leasing Ltd., Ed Nabeta, National Sports, Oakville Place Merchants‘ Association, PCL Packaging Ltd., Panasonic, Petroâ€"Canada Products Inc. (Mississauga), Proâ€"Freight, Robert‘s Fish Cove, The Royal Canadian Golf Association, Rubbermaid Canada Inc., Sony, Stanley Hardware, Supelco, Superior Rustproofing, Tim Horton Donuts, According to Janet Rodger, chair of the Trafalgar Chartwell Residents Association (TCRA,) proposals by Kaneff Properties Ltd. and the Genstar Development Company to construct a series of 12 to 16â€"floor buildings on small parcels of land near the GO station is madness. "Our problem here is density," says Rodger. "The mind boggles. There are only 3,500 residents in Trafalgar Chartwell and they‘re Town of Oakville â€" Business Deve Trafaigar Village Merchants Ass: Kaneff plan detailed in Friday‘s paper avel Inc., Woolc petition 199 RrBC:_ _‘ (fan in 5 IMENTARY â€" pominion C | SECURITIES TO ESTATE PLANNING 0y planning on dumping 3,000 more on top of us. It baffles me that they are allowing this kind of density." The properties in question are currently zoned general industrial. In 1983, Town Council amended the Official Plan to permit highâ€"denâ€" sity residential on the site. "Not being planners, we missed it," says Rodger. "No one seems to feel we can change the Official Plan." Ten years later Genstar is seekâ€" ing to have the zoning changed to implement the Official Plan. Genstar â€" much further along in the approvals process than Kaneff â€" will be in the hot seat during a pubâ€" lic meeting set for 7:30 p.m. Sept. 23rd to present its zoning applicaâ€" tion. While representatives from both firms have met with TCRA members in the past, Rodger plans to be out in force that night to get their point across. We haven‘t had an issue as big as this in 10 years. We can‘t go to Town Hall without the numbers," said Rodger, who plans to fight this all the way. ‘"We‘re really going to be out there to see that it‘s slowed down." Kaneff has bought up several parcels of land between the GO staâ€" tion and Trafalgar Road and is negotiating for a another. If all goes according to plan, the company will build towers as high as 16 storeys on the south side of the Comwall extension plus two more north of Janet Rodger of TCRA: too many people on too little land. South African golfer David Frost withstood a strong challenge from Fred Couples Sunday, to take the Canadian Open chamâ€" pionship at Glen Abbey Golf Club. For more, see sports. (See ‘Development page 10) 54 Pages Do Government Guaranteed oupons Maturing in 2003 By HOWARD MOZEL Oakville Beaver Staff A proposed highrise complex just west of the GO station is not the monolithic ogre residents fear, says a spokesman for the Genstar Development Company. "We were assuming people didn‘t want heavy industrial. When we started this project we thought people would be ecstatâ€" ic," he said. "That the property was functionally isolated from Old Oakville, we were really surâ€" prised that there were any conâ€" On the contrary, it will be a vast improvement over what was and â€" given current zoning â€" could be built there in the future. In fact, Genstar development manager Colin McGregor mainâ€" tains that, given the rotting and dilapidated condition of strucâ€" tures that squatted on the properâ€" ty for years, he figured residents would appreciate their efforts. Genstar‘s property is currentâ€" ly zoned general industrial. In 1983, Town Council amended the Official Plan to permit high Genstar complex improvement to areaâ€"developer 75 Cents (GST included) (See ‘Genstar‘ page 10) LIMITED (Photo by Riziero Vertolli) oto by Hiziero Vertolli)

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