Oakville Images

Oakville Beaver, 16 Nov 2012, p. 11

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Continued from page 1 Bill will likely be challenged Continued from page 6 just a little bit older than that because it was first given in 1909 and originally it wasn't a professional trophy. It was an amateur trophy and given to the winner of the National Amateur Rugby Union." Clemons noted no professional football was played during the Second World War. "The Grey Cup represents being champions, it represents being the best, but it also represents actually losing. Does that make sense?" asked Clemons. "The reality is, in life, sometimes you are going to lose. The teams who win the Grey Cup, the teams who win championships, are the teams who lose and they learn from that. They clean up their attitude, they don't walk around pouting because they didn't win." Following his presentation, Clemons handed out footballs, posed for pictures and signed autographs with the Grey Cup. Members of the St. Ignatius of Loyola Hawks football team also joined in the photo opportunity. Clemons returned to New Central Thursday to continue the conversation he'd started with the enthusiastic students. SHOE DOCTOR Students celebrated Grey Cup 11 · Friday, November 16, 2012 OAKVILLE BEAVER · www.insideHALTON.com Custom Orthotics By Registered Chiropodist Covered By Most Insurance Plans Given Halton MPP Lisa Raitt is the country's minister of labour, I encourage her to publicly oppose the bill in its entirety, as has Brent Rathgeber, Conservative MP for EdmontonSt. Albert. The provincial Tories challenged the legality of the Working Families Coalition before the courts on two occasions -- and lost both times. Bill C-377, then, is really about paying back the unions for the success of this legal third-party organization here in Ontario. It is shameful they are targeting the privacy rights of indi- viduals to get back at unions. Part 1, section two of the Canadian Charter for Rights and Freedoms states everyone has a right to the fundamental freedoms of thought, belief, opinion and expression, and a right to life, liberty and security. The enforcement provisions set out in Part 1, section 24 of the Charter stipulate that anyone whose rights or freedoms have been infringed upon or denied can apply to a court "to obtain such remedy as the court considers appropriate and just in the circumstances." Unions will not sit idly by while government runs rough- shod over the privacy rights of members, staff and the public. There will undoubtedly be a constitutional challenge if this legislation is passed, as it is discriminatory. The Canadian Bar Association has already said the legislation is "problematic from a constitutional and a privacy perspective." I agree. This legislation is nothing more than an attempt to curtail the freedoms and privacy rights set out in the Charter for Rights and Freedoms. Mike Gallagher, business manager, Local 793, International Union of Operating Engineers · Designer shoe and purse repair · Luggage repair · Custom shoes made to measure 240 Leighland Ave, Oakville OAKVILLE 905-842-0715 IN PLACE MALL www.shoedoctors.ca It's a m: Fro Christmas Discover where Christmas magic comes to life. We have everything on your shopping list and more! NDE FOU D IN 1857 FOUNDE FOU NDED NDE D IN IN 1857 1857 FOUNDED

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy