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Oakville Beaver, 8 Feb 2012, p. 1

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SELLING YOUR JEWELLERY? LONDON GOLD Fine Jewellery Co. Ltd. 905.337.0051 SNA NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR 2010 ontario's top newspaper - 2005-2008 Girls signing up Sports www.metaboliccareclinics.com WEIGHT LOSS? 905-825-3800 2501 Third Line A member of Metroland Media Group Ltd. Vol. 50 No. 16 "Using Communication To Build Better Communities" WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2012 68 pages $1.00 (plus tax) Cabinet is full Memorial service for Jelinek today By John Bkila OAKVILLE BEAVER STAFF Family and friends are mourning the loss of Frank Jelinek, 78, who died Friday morning surrounded by family at his Oakville home. Jelinek had fought a battle with cancer. Born in Prague, Czechoslavakia, Jelinek and his family fled communism in 1948 and settled in Oakville -- he, and his family, would eventually assist others fleeing the area, helping them settle and find work in Canada; and encourage them to settle in the Frank Jelinek town. "Frank lived a full, varied, successful and unique life," his son Nick Jelinek told The Oakville Beaver in an e-mail. "He loved his family and his friends. He enjoyed success in business and in sport. He loved to laugh, loved to eat, loved to travel, loved to read and loved to support those around him." As a student at Oakville's Appleby College, Jelinek was the recipient of many sports awards and played world-class soccer and tennis for many years, including professional stints in both sports. While concentrating on his own studies, Jelinek still found the time to drive his younger brother and sister, Otto and Maria, to early morning training sessions -- the pair would eventually become worldchampion figure skaters. "Frank would often sit in the cold Oakville Arena, completing his homework while his siblings trained," Nick wrote. See Founder page 2 GRAHAM PAINE / oakville beaver words to the chamber: Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty was the guest speaker at an Oakville Chamber of Commerce luncheon Monday at the Oakville Conference and Banquet Centre. For story, see page 3. Guilty of defrauding Oakville men By Peter Small TORONTO STAR A self-styled businessman charged with defrauding Toronto Argonauts footballers, including former coach Michael "Pinball" Clemons, has been convicted in a separate case of cheating three men in the Oakville area. Walter Garrick, 42, claimed to be a wealthy, Ivy League-trained medical doctor and boasted of knowing Prime Minister Stephen Harper, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Google co-founder Larry Page. The Oakville man even showed off a draft gift agreement purporting to indicate he had pledged more than $8 million to the Hospital for Sick Children. "Mr. Garrick created a world of smoke Walter Garrick and mirrors regarding himself, his past, his wealth, his friends and his business deals," Ontario Superior Court Justice Leonard Ricchetti said in his ruling, released last week. Garrick claimed to have purchased the Oakville Invictas football team, which was his entry into his victims' world, and he enlisted them to play a role, the judge found. He met Scott Jackson, a volunteer coach with the Burlington Stampeders, because one of Garrick's children played on the team. He See Another page 7 Optimize Performance (Adults and Children) · Attention span is short · Difficulty organizing & completing work · also helpful for Asperger's · also Psycho-educational testing ADD Centre Neurofeedback and learning strategies can provide a lasting improvement. Co-author with Pediatrician William Sears of The A.D.D. Book: New Understandings, New Approaches to Parenting Your Child. Director: Lynda M. Thompson, Ph.D., 905-803-8066 www.addcentre.com

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