Oakville Beaver, 22 Oct 2000, p. 1

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Th eO a k v illeB e a v e r c ) vvcc Cwm M tyPU w spqw * C id § lR iv e ra SALES REPRESENTATIVE OAKVILLE-CENTRE C o n v e n ie n c e nd 3 3 8 -9 0 0 0 F or C ustom er S ervice A Luxury om I n Ev e r y R o R F /M ffc lA\iZkav L16V Rf f l TY CORP H.AU O R (9 0 5 ) 8 4 2 -5 0 0 0 A Metroland Publication Vol.38 No. 124 SUNDAY, O C T O B E R 2 2 ,2 0 0 0 I O A K V U -L E , 7 5 C ents Plus GST E x p e c t m o re m e d a ls n e x t tim e p ro m is e s C a n a d ia n O ly m p ic C E O By M ary-Lotise Lang lots SPECIAL TO THE BEAVER The CEO of the Canadian Olympic Association (COA) says Canadian ath letes competing in the 2002 Winter Olympics will be expected to win medals, but at this point, the number has not been fixed. Carol Anne Letheren told an Oakville Canadian Club audience Wednesday, that there will be definite expectations of the athletes and to that end, the COA Board of Directors voted unanimously to aim for an overall fourth-place finish in the 2008 Summer Olympics and first in the 2010 Winter Olympics medal race. When asked by the Oakville Beaver why the Canadian Olympic Association itself hadn't previously set any expecta tions for medals or success, Letheren's response seemed to further highlight the apparent lack of expectation even with in the COA. "It's just that we've never done it . We've never said that our expectations for medals at a Games are X or Y or Z. It's just been unspoken. I don't know whether it's a maturity issue in sport or whether it's a collective issue where everybody is prepared to commit to one goal." "First we need to develop our own identity and decide if competing on the international stage is truly important to us as a nation," she said. "I would say we came away even more resolute based on what we had been discussing for the past year about what is needed in Canada. It helped us confirm that this is what has got to hap pen, or we can (simply) accept where we're at and I don't think that is what anyone really wants.......I think people want the icons. They want the results. (See `More' page 3) Oakville m ajor part o f Toronto Olympic bid By M ary-Louse Langlois SPECIAL TO THE BEAVER The CEO of the Canadian Olympic Association (COA) said Wednesday that if Toronto beats out Paris and Beijing for the 2008 Summer Olympics, Oakville will have a role to play. Carol Ann Letheren said the town, as previously announced, would be uti lized as a site for fencing and soccer. "Oakville is a very important sport ing community in the whole metropoli tan Toronto area. A lot of athletes have grown up here. It is very much a part of Olympic and sport legacy and will hopefully be a part of Toronto's 2008 venture," said Letheren. She said the hosting of the Sydney Games was an example to all countries of how a community came together to achieve a national identity, but also cre ated an international product that appealed worldwide. Sydney was the absolute best games, bar none, that Letheren has attended. "I (See `Sydney' page 3) Photo by Barrie Erskine STORY TIME FUN: Brenda Reindl, from the Woodside branch of the Oakville Public Library, entertains her young audience during Story Time at the Hopedale Shopping Centre, Thursday morning. C M lflO IR n \ T IR E S to re H o u rs M on En t) JO a in 9 p in Sett tf JO a in t» p in., S u n 9 n m C anadian T ire and O a k v ille ... A Winning Combination! U P P E R OA KV ILLE S H O P P IN G C E N T R E U p p e r M id d le R o a d a t O th L in e p w Canadian T ire 's ' I A thlete off th e W eek Alana Juzenas of St. Thomas Aquinas was chosen to attend the Nike All-Canada basketball camp earlier this month. Please drop by your nearest Canadian Tire lo pick up your gift certificate. O A KTO W N S H O P P IN G P LA Z A 5 5 0 K err S tr e e t 8 4 9 -8 4 7 3 w· 8 4 4 -0 2 0 2 Way to go !!! 1 . ................................. S

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