905-842-6030 90 dentistoakville.com den SNA NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR 2010 ONTARIO'S TOP NEWSPAPER - 2005-2008 Web drama series Artscene 353 IROQUOIS SHORE DRIVE, OAKVILLE A member of Metroland Media Group Ltd. Vol. 50 No. 21 "USING COMMUNICATION TO BUILD BETTER COMMUNITIES" FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2012 40 pages $1.00 (plus tax) Pardon a `kick in the gut' Greg Gilhooly wants to ensure justice for abuse victims By Herb Garbutt OAKVILLE BEAVER STAFF G See Gilhooly page 30 ent Excell e servic since 1993 NEW PROGRAMS WEEKEND FEB. 18 & 25 4 DAY CONDENSED MAR. 10-13 MAR. 15-18 Valid for defensive driving programs only DRIVING IS A PRIVILEGE, LET US HELP YOU EARN IT Save $50 905-825-1172 407 Speers Road Suite 213 ERIC RIEHL / OAKVILLE BEAVER reg Gilhooly answers the door to his Oakville home, a quaint, white, two-storey house with grey shutters on a tree-lined street. At 6-foot-7, he fills the doorframe of the picturesque home, almost giving the appearance of a giant living in a dollhouse. It's little wonder Ken Dryden was his favourite hockey player. While the goalies of his youth for his hometown Winnipeg Jets were guys like Jim Daley, who stood just 5-foot-10, the 6-foot-4 Dryden towered over most of the players, and certainly all of the goalies, of his day. As a rookie in 1971, Dryden backstopped Montreal to the Stanley Cup when Gilhooly was just six. By the time Dryden retired nine years later, he had won six Cups, despite taking a year off in the prime of his career to article for his law degree. Gilhooly was also a goaltender who, like Dryden, played hockey while attending an Ivy League school (Dryden, Cornell; Gilhooly, Princeton) and would go on to become a lawyer when his playing days were over.