x DOOR PRIZES x FANTASTIC EARLY BIRD DOOR PRIZE DRAW FIRST 1000 EACH DAY x FOOD DEMO AREA x SEMINARS x TRAVEL VIDEO THEATRES x 100‘s OF EXHIBITS * ‘LIVE‘ TV SHOW x AND MUCKH MUCH MORE! .; _ . ; 2 Including the Canadian Allâ€"Star Tribute Band to the Glenn Miller Orchestra hee Shuttle Cus {rom Hnion Station WB uzts «t TRENTWAY METRO TORONTO CONVENTION CENTRE SEPTEMBER 12" 13"" the Oakville Beaver. To B DAILY 9:30AM â€" 5:00PM Panndracton ARTIFICIAL PLANTS, TREES, GREENERY FLOWERS Excellent Quality â€" Huge Selection â€" Affordable Prices ‘LIVE‘ ENTERTAINMENT FEATURING CANADIAN SUPERSTAR 6‘ FICUS ON 41/2° MINI REAL WOOD FICUS TREE SALE 3999 SALE 29£ Ailsten to THE OUTrTCce CFRBâ€"AMâ€"IOIO PERFORMING BOTH DAYS ON THE MAIN STAGE If You Present This Ad Aug. 27, 28, 29,30, 31, Sept. 1, 2 LOOK FOR INâ€"STORE SPEC IALS â€" C mOâ€" OFF to Cw â€"REGULAR PRICES SALE IN EFFECT AUG. 27â€"SEPT. 2 quowblrg. His "Music Box Dancer" is one of the bestâ€"selling songs around the world. (Continued from page 3) up and smell the coffee Canada â€" just don‘t drink it. Exercise, my friends, is the sinâ€" gle most important thing we can do for ourselves. Period. That got me thinking about how appealing, and more to the point, how safe it is to ride a bicycle in this town. After a few telephone calls and a one week time delay, I found myself at Town Hall facing Robert R. Norman â€" a 13â€"year vetâ€" eran of the Parks and Recreation Department â€" conscientious manâ€" ager of Landscape Architecture and resident cycleways expert. Norman, looking decidedly trim and neatly bearded, was actually glad to see me â€" not a first â€" but refreshing nevertheless. (Rob can be spotted, we hear, on his own mountain bike riding through Glen Abbey, from time to time, with his ‘significant other‘ Hilary Sadler.) Plan will open lakefront area "But where there are significant sections of waterfront parkland, the trail will dip down to allow cyclists to explore the lake front," the planner added. (About 32% of Oakville lake front is publicly held.) Other interpretive signs may appear along the route directing riders to the Erchless Estate, for example, Gairloch Gardens, or the Oakville Centre. The Waterfront Regeneration Trust is funding 50% of the $2â€" million project â€" the lion‘s share to be used in the rejuvenation of Coronation Park. According to Norman, it was an offer the municâ€" ipality could not refuse. Certainly, he has the look of a Cheshire cat these days. The Etobicoke native is clearly A Guelph University graduate in Landscape Architecture and forâ€" mer president of the Ontario Association of Landscape Architects, the thirtyâ€"something Oakville man has been active, of late, with David Crombie‘s brainâ€" child â€"_ the _ Waterfront Regeneration Trust Project. The Waterfront Regeneration Trust is good news for Oakville, said the forthcoming Norman, and a great experience for himself as he represents the town on various committees involving an assortâ€" ment of municipalities in the Greater Toronto Area, consultants, and. conservation authorities. The Waterfront Trail â€" schedâ€" uled to come together next year â€" will link Newcastle in the east to Burlington in the west, traversing Toronto the good, in. a carefully plotted and signed cycleway. This is the plan at least. Our landscape architect has been involved all along the way in hammering out guideline booklets for both signage and trail design. The signs will feature a distincâ€" tive logo, the better to be recogâ€" nized by both motorists and cyclists. The stylized bird, leaf, and fish motif, in green and blue, is meant to reflect and symbolize the ripples of the lake. Nice. "It‘s been a highlight of my career...working on the Waterfront Trust committees," said Norman. "Putting this whole ‘trail‘ vision into a concrete reality has been a very worthwhile process." The portion of the Trail through Oakville will roughly follow Lakeshore Road, he said. (See ‘Lakefront‘ page 14)