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Oakville Beaver, 12 May 1999, B2

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B2 THE OAKVILLE BEAVER Wednesday, May 12, 1999 Chamwood celebrates 25 years Charnwood Co-op Nursery School celebrates its 25th anniversary on M ay 13th and is looking for former gradu­ a te s ; volunteers and staff to join the party. The evening cele- 'b ra tion will be held at the school, 228 Chartwell Rd., from 7 to 9:30 p.m., and will feature a silent auction. For informa­ tion, call Colette Baty at 693-1072, or 844-4250. Weston speaks about her early years Request for Proposals (RFP) for Long-Term Care Centre Beds in the Regional Municipality of Halton. 32# Beds Project RFP 99-007 For the second phase of the Ontario government's six-year expansion plan to increase the number of long-term care centre beds by 20,000, proposals are invited to develop 320 new beds in the Regional Municipality of Halton. Proposals must be submitted using a standard form (available for a fee) that can be obtained beginning May 5, 1999 exclusively through: MERX - 1-800-964-6379 24 hours a day, 7 days a week or visit the website: www.merx.cebra.com Proposals submitted under this RFP must be received on or before July 30,1999, 12 noon local time, at the: Ministry of Health Tender Office 99 Adesso Drive, Concord, Ontario L4K 3C7 Applicants are invited, but not required, to attend an information session regarding the RFP process conducted by Ministry staff, held on: Thursday, May 20,1999,1:30 to 5:30 p.m. Hamilton Convention Centre, Wentworth Room 1 Summer's Lane, Hamilton, ON L8P 4Y2 O ntario By W ilm a B lokhu is BEAVER FOCUS EDITOR Ever wonder what life was like for Hilary M. Weston before he was named Ontario's 26th Lieutenant Governor - and before she met and married Galen Weston? "The bare facts o f my life have been boiled down by the papers," she began, "that I'm Irish, that I'm married to a wealthy baker, a mother o f two, and the Queen's representative." Weston was speaking at last week's second annual Women of the Year gala reception hosted by the W om en's Centre at the Glen Abbey Golf Club. "But, after 32 years of marriage, I have yet to see my husband bake any­ thing. He claims he can bake the most wonderful chocolate cake, but I have yet to see it" Weston chose to share details of her life in Ireland before her marriage to Weston in 1966. She met him while he was in Ireland expanding his father's grocery store chain. Weston, the eldest of five, helped her mother look after an ailing husband and father. "He died when I was 17. I was not yet finished high school, and I had set aside my dream of going to uni­ versity. My mom and I went to work to support the family. M y brothers went to university - that seemed to be a right of boys." Fortunately for her, she won an opportunity to train as a model, a career which enabled her to leave her job. "That was before the days of super models com m anding astronom ical fees." She rose to become Ireland's top model 35 years ago. "Through it all my mother battled to keep her MS in remission until she entered into her final phase. As testa­ ment to her strength, she always dis­ missed as something less serious. "Shortly before my marriage (in 1966) she was diagnosed with M S, and right up until the last year o f her life, she loved to garden, giving it up only after becoming totally dependent and had to be cared for. She died in 1974 at age 54." Weston came to Canada 26 years ago with a young son and daughter, Alannah and Galen Jr. "I call them my Irish tw ins, as they w ere born in January and December o f the same year." She considered herself fortunate, as a new immigrant, to be English- speaking, thus escaping the language barrier within the unfamiliarity. She imm ersed herself through volunteer work. As her m andate as L ieutenant Governor, Weston chose to "celebrate volunteerism , the achievem ents and contributions of women, and to cham ­ pion the causes o f Ontario's youth." Prior to being sworn in as Ontario's second woman Lieutenant Governor, Weston gave up her deputy chairman­ ship of Holt Renfrew. As a condition of accepting the position, she asked that herfederally paid salary be donated to charity, and has to that end established the Hilary M. Weston Foundation to help youth programs and hostels. "The Prime M inister's office called, and after picking m yself up from the floor, my first reaction was to decline the honour," adm its W eston, w ho accepted with the notion of using the position to "give something back to Canada and especially to Ontario for all o f the many ways I've been blessed." She com plim ented the W om en's Centre, run by 60 volunteers and only three part-time staff. The Centre, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary and receives 6,000 contacts from women a year, as a classic example of an organi­ zation making a difference. Q U A L IT Y Ask O ur Furniture Consultants About Global's Lifetime W arranty! U ur price INSTANT Price After Re 3 3 9 3 6 /3 3 9 3 7 W TASK CHAIR •Contoured seat and back •G as-lift height adjustment 119 9 9 ^ •G rey or Navy te - 10.0 0 # 1 A A 9 9 Our price R 129.00 INSTANT Rebate -10.00 Price After Rebate 3 9 8 6 9 /3 9 8 7 0 /4 2 7 2 6 • C O N TO U R TASK CHAIR W ITH ARMS Gas-lift height adjustment •Grey, Green, Blue •Upgraded fabric ERGO DELUXE J A S K CHAIR ►Height-adjustable yletear-drop style arms •Lumbar back support __ _ »Grey or Navy INSTANT*Rebate - KLOO I A A 9 9 Price A fter Rebate 3 9 8 6 7 /3 9 8 6 8 EXECUTIVE TILTER •Leather seating surface/inner back Tilt tension adjustment, tilt lock, pneumatic height adjustment rice 199.99 ' Black or Burgundy Rebate -20.00 m W A 9 9 Our price INSTANT ..... Price A fter Rebate 3 9 8 5 5 /3 9 8 5 7 HIGH-BACK M ANAGERS CHAIR •Contoured back, seat, arms Infinite tilt locks in any position •Pneumatic height adjust. •Grey, Green or Black Price After Rebate 3 8 8 4 3 /4 1 9 5 9 /4 4 6 2 9 269.00 j . Rebate -20.00 # § BLACK IXECUTIVE CHAIR •Leather inner seat and back area •Pneumatic gas-lift Our p r ic e * 299.99 ^ w i™ tilter INSTANT Rebate -20.00 # Price After Rebate 4 2 7 0 4 1 9 9 Our price i 399.99 INSTANT Rebate -30.00 Price After Rebate 21249 ® EXECUTIVE DELUXE TILTER •Leather seating surface/ inner back; lumbar support •Tilt-lock mechanism Gas-lift height 9 9 $3 0 1 < IN S T A N T REBATE! Our price % 499.99 INSTANT Rebate -30.00 Price A fter Rebate 285 0 5 • OBUSFORME® CHAIR •Contoured seat/back •Tilt-tension lock; gas-lift height; adjustable back (angle/height) Bayberry 9 9 .OBUSFORME* CHAIR Dynamic back moves with the body •Tilt with tilt-lock; tension control Pneumatic gas height Our price 799.99 * , INSTANT Rebate -30.00 # W A 9 9 Price After Rebate 4 5 8 1 9 Instant Rebate offers are in effect only until M ay 16th. A J A X 16 H a rw ood A venue South M IS S IS S A U G A 1530 A im co Road *5 9 3 5 M av is Road A N C A S T E R 1015 G o lf Links Road N E W M A R K E T 130 D avis D rive B R A M P T O N 1250 Steeles East (East of 410) O A K V IA U E 2 4 60 W inston Churchill Blvd. (at Dundas) *Q E W at Dorval Drive B U R L IN G T O N 1881 Fa irv iew (at Brant) R E X O A iE H w y 2 7 & R exdale Blvd. C T O B IC O K S 1750 The Queensway (opposite Sherway Gardens) S C A R B O R O U G H 1936 M cC o w a n (North of Sheppard) H A M IL T O N 2 4 4 B arton East (at Centennial) * 1980 E g lin ton East (East of Warden) * 8 5 0 M iln e r Avenue M A R K H A M 3175 H w y 7 (East of Woobine) W H IT B Y 1615 D undas Street East W O O D B R ID G E H w y 4 0 0 & 7 T O R O N T O 2160 Steeles W est (atKeele) *9 4 5 Eglinton East (at Brentcliffe) *3150 Dufferin (North of Lawrence) *3 7 5 University Avenue • 1140 Yonge Street *2 5 0 Front Street East (at Berkley) • 542 Keeie Street BUSINESS DEPOT™ Business Depot Ltd. Some items may not be exactly as shown. ©The Business Depot Ltd. 1999 -CALL FOR DETAILS CLICK IN T O O UR W E B S IT E ATFREE Next-Day Delivery PH: 1 -8 0 0 -6 6 8 -6 8 8 8 FX: 1 -8 0 0 -5 6 7 -2 2 6 0 STORE HOURS Mon-Fri 8AM-9PM Saturday 9AM-6PM Sunday 11AM-5PM B u s in e s s _________ D E P 0 T . w a r e h o u s e P r i c e s tm Office S u p p ',es Photo by Peter J. Thompson Hilary M. Weston Women of the Year nominees The W om en's Centre nam ed four winners at its second annual W omen of the Year at a sold out gala reception held last week at the Glen Abbey G olf Club. The winners are: □ Kathy Douthart o f Oakville, a volunteer with Brainchild, who plans to jum p from an airplane, the Leap of Hope, as a fundraiser, on June 27th. □ Lottie Grant, also of Oakville, a breast cancer survivor with Burlington Breast Cancer Support Services and its Oakville support group. □ D ianne Banks, W aterdown, a family support worker at the Oakville Parent Child Centre for 15 years; and □ Dorothy Allen, Acton, Tough Talk group for families o f troubled youth. The other 16 nom inees are: □ Sue Hierlihy, Oakville, active supporter o f St. John's United Church, United Way, and Canadian Federation o f University W omen - Oakville; □ D iana Isherwood, Oakville, organizer o f C anadian M usic Com petition, and director o f Interlink Choir organized through the Canadian M ental Health Association; □ Lorraine M acDonald, Oakville, nom inated by her clients at CIBC Hopedale M all for 'going the extra m ile' in providing personal service; □ Diana Soulez, Oakville, volun­ teer with CAVEAT, Big Sisters, Special Olympics, Ian Anderson House, Wigs for Cancer Victims, Abused Children's Charity, and Halton Fam ily Services; □ Nancy Scott, Oakville (posthu­ mous), active m em ber o f St. Cuthbert's Anglican Church, and has contributed 'many works from the heart;' □ M elvina Walter, Oakville, o f W om en's Centre as volunteer and part o f its three-m em ber part-tim e staff as Director o f Programs and Volunteer Service; □ Patti W ilson, Oakville, a coun­ sellor and psychotherapist for 25 years, sought-after m otivational speaker, and Oakville Beaver colum nist (Ask Patti), and currently com pleting her PhD in Psychology; □ Lynda M cK enzie, M ilton, painter, writer, photographer, and orga­ nizer o f support group for those diag­ nosed w ith young on-set Parkinson. She received controversial 'fetal tissue im plant' therapy in Denver to reversing the effects o f Parkinson's. □ Lillian Ross, Burlington, volun­ teer at Halton W omen's Place for five years. □ Peggy Russell, B urlington, helped established the Halton Parent M entoring Association. □ June C lose, O akville, first women coach o f Oakville m inor base­ ball league in 1965 - that year they won every game except one, volun­ teered at Syl Apps Assessm ent Centre, Birthright, Oakville Distress Centre, an advocacy com m ittee for Extendicare, and as a regular Diocesan hospital vis­ itor. □ Sandra Farley, Oakville, first woman chair o f the Oakville Trafalgar M emorial Hospital and currently chairs the GTA-905 Healthcare Alliance, also volunteers for the Canadian Cancer Society, W ellspring, and the Salvation Army. □ Donna M esser, Oakville, runner- up in Oakville's Entrepreneur o f the Year, m entor to Canadian Youth Business Foundation, volunteers for R otary C lub's C am p Enterprise, Ontario W om en's Directorate, and net­ working. □ Dorothy Rognvaldson, Acton, prepares meals for people returning from hospital, organizer o f many suc­ cessful church functions, volunteer dri­ ver for Red Cross, board m em ber of Halton Hills Com m unity Support and Information, and a Parkinson support group - all at age 81. □ B arbara Schejbal, O akville, promote goodness, kindness and inspi­ ration throughout corporate Canada through her business Angels. □ Jill Smyth, Burlington, chair of M ultiple Sclerosis Supercities W alk in Halton for five years, raising public aw areness and $420,000 for MS research and client services, also vol­ unteers w ith Burlington Teen Tour Band, despite her own battle with MS. http://www.merx.cebra.com

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