Qisq Hachette Book Group lays off around 2 dozen employees
Guild stanley cup Parks future arts centre will be named for the couple who owned it, Rosa and Spencer Clark, Scarborough councillors decided last week.The Clarks founded the Guild of All Arts, an art colony, in what is now Guildwood in 1932, later opening a hotel and restaurant, the Guild Inn.Years after closing it, the City of Toronto allowed a private operator to renovate and reopen the inn this year as an event centre, the Guild Inn Estate. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The city also says Building 191, which the Clarks built nearby in 1963 for office space and storage, will be expanded and restored into an arts centre offering programs by 2020. Scarborough Community Council on Sept. 6 agreed to renam stanley water bottle e Building 191 the Clark Centre for the Arts, one of 154 names submitted last year. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Reawakening the sleeping building is the next phase in reviving the Guild, said Scarborough East Councillor Paul Ainslie.Along with renovations to historic cabins at Guild Park, the art centre will bring the entire park alive , he said in a statement. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The community and I have worked stanley bottles hard to bring this vision to a reality and I am very happy to see the progress and enthusiasm from everyone involved. Trtp Too late: $70 million lottery ticket goes unclaimed in Scarborough and elsewhere
A pandemic imprisons people at home as in nursing homes. But a pandemic is also a prism, revealing the world around us in a new light 鈥?if only we look.Working remotely from home and watching from a safe social distance can make the problems of COVID-19 seem that much more remote. For the homeless, however, there is no home to retreat to, and nothing remote about the virus.For Cathy Crowe, COVID-19 is unfolding at street le stanley cup vel 鈥?too close for comfort. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW As a lifelong street nurse, she always understood the hum stanley quencher an cost of homelessness 鈥?pre-pandemic. But nothing prepared her for the upheaval as the virus took hold: Unanticipated c stanley cup haos and crisis and disaster, she says matter-of-factly, pointing to the names of 28 victims added last month to a memorial for the homeless. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Shelters for Torontos homeless became hot spots 鈥?lacking masking and distancing 鈥?prompting a mass exodus into tent encampments in public parks or rented hotels. Suddenly, the hidden homeless have been transplanted into full public view, a health-care problem transformed into a political challenge.Other victims of COVID-19 arent just the homeless but the powerless. Trapped in densely packed highrise apartment buildings, they are jammed into desperately overcrowded public transit on their way to front-line jobs where they work to help the rest of us. ARTICLE CONT
Guild stanley cup Parks future arts centre will be named for the couple who owned it, Rosa and Spencer Clark, Scarborough councillors decided last week.The Clarks founded the Guild of All Arts, an art colony, in what is now Guildwood in 1932, later opening a hotel and restaurant, the Guild Inn.Years after closing it, the City of Toronto allowed a private operator to renovate and reopen the inn this year as an event centre, the Guild Inn Estate. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The city also says Building 191, which the Clarks built nearby in 1963 for office space and storage, will be expanded and restored into an arts centre offering programs by 2020. Scarborough Community Council on Sept. 6 agreed to renam stanley water bottle e Building 191 the Clark Centre for the Arts, one of 154 names submitted last year. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Reawakening the sleeping building is the next phase in reviving the Guild, said Scarborough East Councillor Paul Ainslie.Along with renovations to historic cabins at Guild Park, the art centre will bring the entire park alive , he said in a statement. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The community and I have worked stanley bottles hard to bring this vision to a reality and I am very happy to see the progress and enthusiasm from everyone involved. Trtp Too late: $70 million lottery ticket goes unclaimed in Scarborough and elsewhere
A pandemic imprisons people at home as in nursing homes. But a pandemic is also a prism, revealing the world around us in a new light 鈥?if only we look.Working remotely from home and watching from a safe social distance can make the problems of COVID-19 seem that much more remote. For the homeless, however, there is no home to retreat to, and nothing remote about the virus.For Cathy Crowe, COVID-19 is unfolding at street le stanley cup vel 鈥?too close for comfort. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW As a lifelong street nurse, she always understood the hum stanley quencher an cost of homelessness 鈥?pre-pandemic. But nothing prepared her for the upheaval as the virus took hold: Unanticipated c stanley cup haos and crisis and disaster, she says matter-of-factly, pointing to the names of 28 victims added last month to a memorial for the homeless. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Shelters for Torontos homeless became hot spots 鈥?lacking masking and distancing 鈥?prompting a mass exodus into tent encampments in public parks or rented hotels. Suddenly, the hidden homeless have been transplanted into full public view, a health-care problem transformed into a political challenge.Other victims of COVID-19 arent just the homeless but the powerless. Trapped in densely packed highrise apartment buildings, they are jammed into desperately overcrowded public transit on their way to front-line jobs where they work to help the rest of us. ARTICLE CONT