A 2 - The Oakville Beaver, W ednesday O cto b e r 17, 2001 Hallowe'en Capers Oct 20 &2 1 , 27& 28 · Mystery House Tours * Creepy Crawly Hike (12 noon, 1 & 2 p.m.) Straw Maze · Sac Races & other fam ily games · Scooby Doo Mystery Machine (Oct 21st only) Wagon Rides Oct. 27 & 28 Call tin 1 Park at GRANDPARENTS' DAY: Students at Oakville Christian School celebrated Grandparents' Day Friday. Students from JK-grade 4 pre sented songs, recitations and spe cial surprises. Over 150 grand parents joined their grandchil dren for this year's program entitled `Grandparents are Treasures. Among the perform ers were 6-year-old Inga Muser and Connor T\irner. Photo by Barrie Erskine B i1 | f 827-6911 lo t a Sc h e d u le < > 1 l'v e itls a n d T im e s Pumpkins on Sale For the Month o f October! All Proceeds go to the United W ay _________________________ ! . j r i I Palerm o S tu dy plan w ould preserve village intersection (Continued from page A1) Bronte Creek For more information call (905) 827"69T! or wwwJxrtarioparks.com M a c D o n a ld ·S w a n L i t i g a t i o n C o u n s e l L L P MS Personal Injury are needed as input to the Region's study," reported Town long-range plan ner Lynne Gough. Russell Cheeseman, the lawyer for Palermo landowner Rickmar Holdings Ltd., criticized the Town for trying to embrace a land use policy before for malizing an Official Plan amendment. "The Town is trying to inhale and exhale at the same time," he said, ask ing the Town not to give the Palermo Study "any special weight" before it goes to Halton Region. Representatives from St. Luke's Anglican Church fear that a realignment of Bronte Road to the east would isolate the expanding 1837 church from the vil lage and its growing congregation in West Oak Trails. Planner Glenn Wellings, who repre sents businesses like George's Auto Centre, Coffee Time and Joseph's Mediterranean, asked the Town not to "prejudge the outcome of the EA which is a public process that's still very much up in the air." The Palermo Study would preserve the tiny village at the crossroads of Dundas Street and Bronte Road by diverting through traffic onto Dundas Street and Bronte Road by-passes. "As a designer I'm constantly asked to determine a sense of place. Palermo already has that. To tear it down would be wrong," said planning consultant Rick Merrill of Page & Steele that advised the study by Malone Given Parsons Ltd. The study calls for heritage buildings to be retained and the old parts of the village to become street-oriented retail/office. Traffic and development pressures ensure that Palermo will change, but it could go two ways. Palermo could be swallowed up by growth or, it could become the core of a new urban hub -- the route favoured by Oakville. The so-called Palermo "Node" would include 1,900 acres stretching south of Dundas to north of Hwy. 407, and 1 km east and west of Bronte Road. It would be home to 24,000 people, 14,000 jobs, 5.5 million sq. ft. of employment space, and nearly 2 million sq. ft. of office and retail space. A transit terminal would be key to the high density residential/commercial village that over the next 20 years, would see homes pop up to the south, east and northeast while industrial development goes in to the northwest along with the CN Intermodal station planned some distance to the north. Litigation MEAT S H O P S Insurance Litigation Boneless, Skinless CHICKEN BREAST Individually flash frozen, our low fat an d w holesom e chicken b re asts are ready to to ss on th e grill, slice up for a stir fry o r take c en tre stage in an A oven cassero le. ^ Fillets rem oved, se a so n e d . 8 -1 2 P O R TIO N S F re e i n i t i a l 1 / 2 h o u r c o n s u lta t io n CORNWALL BUSINESS CENTRE 1540 Cornwall, Suite 106, Oakville $ (905) 842-3838 www.macdonaldandswan.com 635 Fourth Line (just north of Speers Rd.) 14 99 1.36 k g /3 lb. r VISA M E A T S H O P S 2163 Sixth Line (just north of Upper Middle Rd.) 842-4233 w w w .m m m e a ts h o p s .c o m P r ic e s in e f f e c t S a tu r d a y O c t o b e r 1 3 - F rid a y , O c t o b e r 2 6 , 2 0 0 1 . 338-3459 | W h ite R p s e b r in g t h e b e a u ty h o m e spooky Dress up and come to our H A LLO W EEN P A R TY! CLEARANCE I CLEARANCE All Spring Flowering All Hardy Outdoor Saturday, O ctober 2 0 , 2 0 0 1 * 1- 3 pm * $ 5 per person YOUR TICKET INCLUDES: · Lots of Prizes · Pumpkin Decorating Contest · Treat Bag · Kids & Adults Costume Contest · Face Painting & Kit · Refreshments Tickets are $5.00 per person (ages 5 and up), taxes included. Children must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. Craft materials pumpkin supplied by White Rose. All ticket sales are final. p BULBS Choose from Daffodils, Hyacinths, Allium, C hionodoxa, Crocus, Tulips, Muscari an d m any m ore. PLANTS Evergreens, trees, shrubs, vines and m ore! (Excludes fall m um s annuals). 30-50% OFF 35-75% OFF 5 0 % OFF All A h u g e selection of Fall decorating m echandise now a t 1/2 price. I to 33 % OFF Selected Buy now and save on a hu g e selection of g re a t H allow een m erchandise. I I I I I I Fun a t S P O O K Y H O L L O W R e g is tr a tio n F o r m I I I Name:___________ Address: C ity:___ Phone: (_ # of Adults Postal Code: Email:______ # of Children Total Tickets J FALL DECOR HALLOWEEN V is it o u r w e b s ite at w w w .w h it e r o s e .c a fo r o u r sto re lo c a tio n s a n d sto re h o u rs I I I I I Complete this form and take it to your nearest White Rose location for registration before October 19, 2001. L All our sale events now start on Saturdays! Sale starts October 13th. a