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The South Etobicoke News

Serving Humber * Mimico * Lakeshore Village * Long Branch * Alderwood

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Oscar Peterson’s ex-wife Sandy who had roots here passes away

July 5, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Sandra Cynthia Andrews Peterson, the former wife of acclaimed musician Oscar Peterson, has passed after an accidental fall down a flight of stairs.

Sandy, who had strong links to south Etobicoke, was 83.

Born in Kirkland Lake, she was a graduate of Etobicoke Collegiate and Toronto General Hospital School of Nursing, according to her obituary, which states she passed away on June 27.

Sandy worked at Toronto General as an Operating Room (OR) nurse during the beginning of open heart surgeries. She became Head OR nurse there and at Grace Hospital in Toronto.

“Soon thereafter, she met, fell in love with and married jazz pianist, Oscar Peterson, and she travelled most of the world with him from the 60’s and first part of the 1970’s,” according to the family.

It was during that time that Sandy and soon-to-be eight-time Grammy Awards winner Oscar lived at Amadeo Garden Court in Mimico for a number of years, where they spent a lot of time at the local stores and at Marie Curtis and area parks.

A mural of Oscar is now in the Lake Shore Village Wall of Legends with others who helped to transform the area.

The couple divorced in 1974 and she began working in the customer service department of Sears Canada.
Sandy later married James Andrews and moved to Nashville for 12 years before returning to Canada, to requalify as a registered nurse before joining Collingwood General and Marine Hospital from which she retired on her 80th birthday.
A busy person, she was an avid golfer and bridge player and was very involved with Probus, the Cinema Club and book clubs, as she was a voracious reader and a lover of all music, especially jazz. She was a philanthropist, a wonderful cook and fabulous baker.

“Always there to help any and all of her friends and family she was an extremely generous woman loved by all,” according to her obituary. “She had incredible presence in any situation with a smile and infectious laugh that could be heard everywhere.”
The family wish to thank the medical staff at both Collingwood General and Marine Hospital and Sunnybrook Hospital Critical Care Unit for the extraordinary care given to Sandy. Collingwood Hospital, in particular, went above and beyond in both the care and kindness given to Sandy and that shown to the family.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Music, Politics, Rock & Roll, Social, Television

Party and hang your flags up high on Canada Day

June 30, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Fly your flags high and be proud!

Merchants in the Lakeshore Village BIA are urging residents and others get out and display their Canadian flags tomorrow to honour our front-line emergency workers who show their true colours every day in battling COVID-19.

The BIA’s campaign calls on residents to shop locally and express thanks to the many area front-line workers by putting up Canadian flags or a drawing of a flag on their home or store windows.

“Say thank you to our front-line workers by putting up a Canadian flag or drawing of our flag,” says Kris Korwin-Kuczynski, Chair of the Lakeshore Village BIA. “Let’s show our heroes some love and respect.”

The BIA is also lobbying to have a public holiday declared in honour of the Canadian flag. February 15 was declared the National Flag of Canada Day in 1965.

This year most in-person events were cancelled due to the virus.

The CN Tower will be celebrating Canada Day with a 15-minute light show beginning at 10 p.m.

The fireworks will be streamed at www.cntower.ca and accompanied with a playlist featuring music by a diverse group of Canadian artists simulcast on CHUM FM, 104.5.

There is also a virtual all-star program in which residents will see over 50 artists perform, including Haviah Mighty, Gordon Lightfoot, Jully Black, Kardinal Offishall, Choir! Choir! Choir!, Ali Hassan, Cris Derksen, The Next Generation Leahy and more.

An emphasis on Toronto culture is part of the event, with some performances happening both live and pre-recorded from venues around the city like the newly renovated El Mocombo.

Canada Day 2020 livestreams will be available on July 1 beginning at 9 a.m.​ on YouTube.

Don’t forget your downloadable Celebration Kits are also available for free and include Canada-themed crafts, games, recipes, outdoor activities and more.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Country, Entertainment, Hip Hop, Issues, Music, Politics, Rock & Roll, Social, Sports, Television

What’s taking place in South Etobicoke this Canada Day!

June 28, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

It seems very little live entertainment will be taking place this Canada Day on Wednesday, July 1 to mark our 153 birthday.

The CN Tower will be celebrating Canada Day with an amazing  15-minute light show beginning at 10 p.m.

The fireworks can also be streamed at www.cntower.ca where you will see the beautiful lights burst across the sky. The fireworks will be accompanied with a playlist featuring music by a diverse group of Canadian artists simulcast on CHUM FM, 104.5.

Most residents can tune in and look up, and all Canadians can watch the live stream from home and sing along to a celebration in light and sound.

The Six will be going virtual with a star-studded program on Canada Day in which residents will  see over 50 artists perform, including Haviah Mighty, Gordon Lightfoot, Jully Black, Kardinal Offishall, Choir! Choir! Choir!, Ali Hassan, Cris Derksen, The Next Generation Leahy and more.

An emphasis on Toronto culture is part of the event, with some performances happening both live and pre-recorded from venues around the city like the newly renovated El Mocombo.

Spread out over three segments throughout the day, the Culture Jam portion in the afternoon will include jam sessions from different Toronto artists and highlight neighbourhoods across the city.

Tune into a morning livestream from 9 to 10 a.m. with hosts Devo Brown and Jessica Holmes, featuring socially distanced breakfast by Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment Executive Chef

Enjoy a special 40th anniversary rendition of O’Canada, family-friendly performances by Jully Black, The Next Generation Leahy, Classic Roots and Kim Mitchell, and learn dance moves from Keep Rockin’ You.

Canada Day 2020 livestreams will be available on July 1 beginning at 9 a.m.​ on YouTube.

Downloadable Celebration Kits are also available for free and include Canada-themed crafts, games, recipes, outdoor activities and more.

Due to the pandemic, city-hosted events have been cancelled and large-scale gatherings are prohibited.

Mayor John Tory is encouraging residents to decorate their porches, front doors, balconies or windows for this year’s Canada Day.

If outdoor is more your style, you are urged to take a lakefront cycle or walks along Humber Bay Parks, Col. Samuel Smith or enjoy the water at Marie Curtis Park.

 

Filed Under: Business, Cameras, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Country, Entertainment, Hip Hop, Issues, Music, Politics, Rock & Roll, Social

Toronto is celebrating Virtual Canada Day 2020 with still lots to do

June 25, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Toronto’s going virtual for Canada’s 153rd birthday next Wednesday, January 1, with music, comedy, dance and online fireworks.

Enjoy special morning, afternoon and evening livestream shows featuring Kardinal Offishall, Gordon Lightfoot, Jully Black, Haviah Mighty, Choir!Choir!Choir!, The Next Generation Leahy and more.

Participate in virtual Canada Day programs from home and download interactive and all-age Celebration Kits. Plus nominate a frontline worker for recognition.

There will be celebrations being held in cities across the nation as we party and celebrate our 153rd birthday, which is always one of the better public holidays of the year.
Canada Day 2020 livestreams will be available on July 1 beginning at 9 a.m.​

The virtual show is presented by City of Toronto – Your Local Government and made possible in part by Canadian Heritage. There will be lots of music, online activities and more importantly its kid friendly so the entire family can tune in.

Schedule · Wednesday, July 1, 2020

9:00 AM

Canadian Pancake Breakfast

1:00 PM

Culture Jam

7:00 PM

Ready for Prime Time

It is not known what this year’s Canada Day activities will look like due to COVID-19. Every year previously Toronto kicked off Canada Day in a big way at Mel Lastman Square in an event that attracted more than 30,000 spectators of all ages, primarily families featuring live Canadian music, interactive games and entertainment, and a spectacular fireworks display. 

 MORE EVENTS ARE UPCOMING AS WE GET IT.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Music, Politics, Social, Television

We love Oscar Peterson now Montreal wants him back

June 20, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

We love Oscar Peterson and New Toronto has already claimed him.

Peterson lived in the community in the 1960s and 70s’ and his portrait is among six Lakeshore Legends heroes whose mural grace a wall at Sixth Street.

Peterson, who was born in 1925 and has composed more than 400 pieces, lived at one time at Amadeo Garden Court Complex in two apartments overlooking Lake Ontario, according to local historians and residents.

Now, his hometown of Montreal, want to name a subway station after him.

An online petition is circulating to change the name of the Lionel-Groulx Metro Station to the Oscar Peterson station, to honor that city’s celebrated jazz legend.

More than 2,500 signatures have been obtained in a petition to try and place the musician’s name on a Little Burgundy station.

“I believe our city should honour his incredible accomplishments by renaming Lionel Groulx Metro Station as Oscar Peterson Metro Station,” the petition states. “He is considered one of the greatest jazz pianists of our time with a career that lasted more than 60-years.”

Peterson is an eight-time Grammy Award winner who is a virtuoso in the international jazz community. He was born and raised in the City of Montréal, where he grew up and learned his craft in Little Burgundy, where he loved.

Peterson died in December 2007 as an international star and one of the great jazz pianists and composers of the genre.

Duke Ellington called the Montreal-born virtuoso the “Maharaja of the keyboard.”

Lionel Groulx died in 1967 and was a Catholic priest, historian and Quebec nationalist.

The word-renowned pianist worked with top musicians as Ray Brown, Ella Fitzgerald and many others. His song “Hymn To Freedom” rose to become one of the top crusade songs of the civil rights movement led by Martin Luther King Jr.
He loved York University and served as the university’s fifth chancellor and was involved in the York music program.
Peterson was recognized by the City of Mississauga in 2003 when a street was named for him and he was presented with a Civic Award of Merit. He had postage stamp unveiled in his honour, along with his name on plaques and numerous schools. He was also inducted to the Order of Canada in 1972.

The mural, by Toronto artist Chris Irvine, pays tribute to fellow Lakeshore Legends: NHL star Dave Bolland, marathoner Jerome Drayton, skater Petra Burka, swimmer Lou Gamble and others who contributed to the rich cultural fabric of our community.

The petition is available at change.org

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Music, Politics, Rock & Roll, Social, Television

Finding love on the dance floor of the famed Palais Royale

June 16, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

As recalled by their loving son Dave Kosonic.

My parents Edward and Winnifred were among the countless military romances which blossomed at the legendary Palais Royale ballroom particularly during WW11.

My father met my mom at the iconic live music club in 1944 while he was on leave as a crew member stationed on the Royal Canadian Navy warship HMCS Buckingham that operated out of Halifax.

The Palais Royale, which still stands at 1601 Lake Shore Blvd W., is best remembered as a dance hall that featured high-profile entertainers from the Big Band era including Duke Ellington, Count Basie and the Dorsey Brothers. Even Canada’s King of Swing Bert Niosi graced the stage.

My mom Winnifred McConkey was born in 1922 in the small town of Priceville, just west of Flesherton. After completing high school she moved to Toronto and worked as a mail sorter for Canada Post.

My father Edward Kosonic was born in 1924 in La Vallee, in western Ontario near the Manitoba border. Dad joined the Royal Canadian Navy in 1942. He underwent intensive training for one-year in New Brunswick where he became an expert on the use of a new anti-German submarine locating radar called Asdic.

He was the radar supervisor on his ship and was on call 24 hours a day in the event his ship or other ships in in his convoy detected nearby German U-boats. He used the Asdic radar to pinpoint the location and depth of enemy U-boats.

The convoy of Navy warships that included the Buckingham attacked many German submarines and was credited for the destruction of a number of deadly U-boats.

While on R&R my dad came to Toronto and decided to check out the Palais Royale. Dad looked dapper when he arrived in his official off-duty Navy uniform. A short time later, he spotted a pretty young girl, Winnifred, at a table with some other ladies.

Dad got his nerve up to ask her for a dance. She accepted and they danced the evening away. You can say the rest is history.

Mom left her job at Canada Post and accompanied dad to Halifax, where she lived in a tiny flat while waiting for dad to return when the war ended in 1945. Dad was honourably discharged from the Navy and the happy young couple moved to Toronto, got married and in time established a very successful home electronics business in the Six Points area of Etobicoke.

They both lived long lives with my mom passing away in 2006 at 84, and dad in 2011 at 85.

To this day, whenever I drive by the Palais Royale, I think about my mom and dad and say: “ That is where it all began.”

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Music, Politics, Rock & Roll, Social

Young girls told to remain focused in these trying times

June 14, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

It is a stressful time for young girls having to watch racial inequality and police brutality protests on TV every day.

“Many parents have been confronted with troublesome questions from their children based on what they have seen or heard from a variety of sources,” says officials of The Jean Augustine Centre for Young Women’s Empowerment, who are reminding young girls that they have rights, skill and can think critically.

“They can contribute mightily to the fabric of society, according to their interests,” the Centre says.

“Many parents have a hard time explaining to their kids that a Black man was killed by a white police officer,” they explained. “How to explain that this was not unusual, but rather the last straw that propelled first the city where it happened, then many cities in the U.S.”

How does a parent explain to a child who asks about the violence occurring at these peaceful demonstrations, the statement asks.

The Centre, which has programs online and has launched a Go Fund Me page after losing a sponsor, says young girls are having a tough time due to the COVID-19 and a lack of school, sports, cultural activities or maybe parents having lost jobs.

“The prevalence of racism is more than an imbalance between individuals,” the Centre warns. “It is like a virus that has spread through layers of society.”

Systemic racism, they say, can only be overcome with knowledge of history, understanding of social dynamics, respect and empathy for others.

“This is a time for us to have the uncomfortable conversations with our friends, neighbours and colleagues,” they told the young women. “We commit to the ongoing work this requires because Black Lives Matter.”

The Centre offers a variety of free after-school programs for girls ages 7-17 living in South Etobicoke. Programs run between September to June.

Jean Augustine served as the Liberal MP for the Etobicoke Lakeshore area from 1993 to 2006.

The Centre can be reached at jeanaugustinecentre.ca

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Issues, Politics, Social, Sports

All star slugger Joey Votto loved growing up in Mimico

June 8, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

One of Etobicoke’s top baseball star Joey Votto says he wept after watching a video of George Floyd’s murder by a police officer and then considering his life of white privilege.

Votto, 36, who was raised in Mimico, says he has many Black friends who are professional baseball players, whom he talked too, without listening to their plight.

He had just finished reading “A Long Walk to Freedom,” the autobiography of Nelson Mandela, about his 27-year prison sentence for fighting racism in South Africa.

In a column for the Cincinnati Enquirer on June 7, the athlete wrote at first he refused to watch the video of Floyd’s murder when asked by a Black teammate.

“I wept,” Votto wrote after watching the video the next day. “I texted my friend back and apologized.”

The 2010 National League MVP and member of the Etobicoke Sports Hall of Fame talked about his Etobicoke upbringing and his views on race.

“I was raised in Mimico,” the first baseman wrote. “It is one of the most culturally diverse cities in the world.”

He was selected by the Cincinnati Reds in 2002 and at the age of 18 began his career, traveling around the U.S. on buses, growing up in clubhouses that were predominantly divided between whites and Latinos.

“Most of our minor league teams had a few African American players,” Votto reflects. “And perhaps because of where I was raised, I found myself most comfortable with the group of Americans who weren’t white.”

“For five years, I shared hotel rooms with my African-American teammates,” he wrote. “We shared pizzas, played video games, and listened to music together. We developed friendships. I look back on these years as some of the best of my life.”

The athlete saw “glimpses of racism that should have opened my eyes to the realities of being a Black man in America.”

“My teammates, my friends, the ones that I shared great times with, faced prejudices that I never did and when they shared their experiences … I did not hear them,” he noted.

His privilege kept him from understanding the ‘why’ behind Colin Kaepernick’s decision to kneel during the national anthem.

“That privilege allowed me to ignore my black teammates’ grievances about their experiences with law enforcement, being profiled, and discriminated against,” he grieved. “And that privilege has made me complicit in the death of George Floyd, as well as the many other injustices that Blacks experience in the U.S. and my native Canada … No longer will I be silent.”

Votto made his Major League debut with the Cincinnati Reds in 2007 and is a six-time National League All-Star. He is one of the top players in major league baseball.

 

 

Filed Under: Baseball, Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Entertainment, Issues, Politics, Social, Sports

Working hard to clean up the litter in our community

June 6, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Its warm weather time which means more litter to clean up in our community.

Teams of residents have been working hard to do their part in cleaning up cigarette butts, pieces of plastic, including tons of coffee cups and other litter which is an eyesore for many.

New Toronto realtor Trish Buchanan and neighbour Carol Cormier are finishing up a 30-day litter clean up challenge targeting lakefront parks and green spaces.

They regularly take plastic bags and would spend up to two hours several times weekly picking up litter at Samuel Smith Park, Cliff Lumsdon Park, Prince of Wales Park and sometimes Marie Curtis Park.

“We have spent weeks working on Sam Smith Park because it is the largest,” says Buchanan. “Prince of Wales on Second Street is the worst because it is constant due to the parking lot.”

She says they also pick up bags of litter from other areas, which are usually cleaned by the City but that service has been reduced due to COVID-19.

“People still toss out their garbage in this day and age,” she explains. “This practice has to stop.”

Buchanan says everyone is welcome to join, all they need is some plastic bags, gloves and find an area which requires cleaning.

“We usually take out six or eight bags of litter every time we come here,” she says. “I spend a lot of time climbing over the rocks pulling out the garbage stuck inside.”

Cormier says the activity keeps them both in shape and spending quality time outside.

Residents of Humber Bay Shores have also been meeting every Sunday morning at 9 a.m. to clean up their area, which includes the tracks and trails. They usually meet near the Eden Trattoria restaurant.

They will be there on June 7 if you want to join them to clean up the area. Volunteers are required.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Issues, Social, Sports

The Chief takes to his knee in anti-racism demo

June 6, 2020 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders took to his knee and joined anti-racism protestors marching for equality and in support of George Floyd, who was killed by U.S. police.

Saunders, and a few officers, took part in a march on June 5 in downtown Toronto. Another march decrying racism will take place on June 6.

“My Command and I met protesters today and we took a knee,” the Chief said on Twitter. “We see you and we are listening.”

Toronto’s first Black police Chief told protestors we are living through a historic period.

“We are in a moment of time that will change the course of history,” Saunders said. “Not only our history as the Toronto Police Service or law enforcement but as a society in Canada and North America.’

Many in our community have taken to social media to express support for U.S. protestors who have been demonstrating, and clashing with police, for almost two weeks since Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis cop.

Local artist Amanda Cotton shared online a beautiful sketch she composed of Floyd, which was shared by many residents.

“This was sketched last Friday with a very heavy heart and many tears shed as a tribute to him and all others suffering through this time,” Cotton explained. “I was humbled and heartbroken by the tragic death the world got to witness.”

Adrianna Tansek says the sketch paid a “nice tribute” to Floyd.

“.. there is no other time than now that the human race need to come together and unite as one,” she Tweeted.

Resident Elena Fiorenza says the artwork can be sold to help raise money for a GoFundMe page set up to help his daughter.

Many other sites and pages have popped up on social media in support of the Floyd family.

Some area residents have even taken to compiling a list of Black-owned businesses to patronize in light of the systemic racism, which they say, are faced by some.

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Celebrities, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

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