Mark Jorgensen, right, accepts a balloon sculpture from a clown during City Mix 2008 events at Nathan Phillips Square Friday.
Patient ambassador Stephanie Clayton, 6, centre, joins the 'Tour de Blue' on Gerrard Street W. as they head for the finish at the Hospital for Sick Children, completing a 300-km ride to raise funds for pediatric pain management.
Nathan Phillips Square was flooded with the colour green recently as thousands from the Pakistani community came out to celebrate their country's 61st year of independence. Here, eight year old Sarosh Javaid shows her pride by wrapping herself in a...
Furqan Iftikhar and Taqi Ahmed aren't shy to show their Pakistani pride. They were part of a group of students who came from Malton to celebrate Pakistan's 61st year of independence recently at Nathan Phillips Square.
Parade participants remember the Great Blackout of 2003 as they march in the Bloor Street and Spadina Avenue.
Parade participants mark the Great Blackout of 2003 as they recently march in the Bloor Street and Spadina Avenue area.
Traditional lion dance perfromers make their way along Spadina Avenue during the 8th annual Downtown Chinatown Festival events.
Spoken word artist Al St. Louis delivers a performance during the recent Irie Music Festival at Queen's Park, featuring both reggae and global music.
Maye's son, Thomas, had his first epileptic seizure at age 10. Medication controlled the boy's symptoms for about five years, then doctors diagnosed Thomas with a form of epilepsy that doesn't respond to medication.
Today, Thomas, 21, suffers a seizure at least once a week, despite taking three medications twice a day.
Epilepsy is a neurological disorder which causes sudden bursts of electrical energy in the brain. While treatments are available to reduce the frequency and severity of seizures, there remains no known cure.
So the versatile singer-actress is raising her voice and those of other singers and musicians to shed light on what she and Epilepsy Ontario see as an underfunded disorder.
Intimately Two Hearts features "the Russian Joan Baez" Zanna Bichevskaya, Maye and vocalist, guitarist, composer and poet Gennady Ponomarev. The concert takes place Saturday, Oct. 11 at 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. at Jane Mallett Theatre at St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts, 27 Front St. E.
The event benefits the University of Toronto Epilepsy Research Program. Tickets are $45 and $65.
To reserve a ticket, visit the St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts' website at www.stlc.com or call 416-366-7723.
The goal of this year's marathon is to raise $1 million for more than 60 small Toronto charities including Invest in Kids, the Assaulted Women's Helpline and Fort York Food Bank.
The marathon (42 kilometres), which also offers a half marathon (21 kilometres) and five-kilometre run has become one of the premier sporting events in Toronto and across North America, according to organizers.
"This race is Toronto's race and there is truly a way for everyone in our city to participate," said Alan Brookes, race director, in a press release.
This year there are three ways for Torontonians to get involved. People who aren't running can participate by pledging a runner or by coming out to cheer along the race route or at one of Scotia Toronto Waterfront's 10 official Neighbourhood Cheering and Entertainment Centres from the Humber to the Beaches.
This year's marathon starts and finishes at Toronto City Hall, 100 Queen St. W. beginning at 7:30 a.m. Visit www.torontowaterfrontmarathon.com for the full race route.
U of T's SciNet Consortium, which includes both the university and its affiliated research hospitals, will be able to use the computer to increase their research capabilities in medical imaging, climate change prediction, astrophysics, chemical physics, aeronautics and other fields.
The computer is expected to rank among the Top 20 most powerful supercomputers in the world, capable of performing 360 trillion calculations in a single second. That would make it 30 times faster than Canada's current largest research system, the largest system ever built on a university campus and the largest supercomputer outside the United States.
With five petabytes (five quadrillion bytes) of storage, the supercomputer will be able to run a diverse array of software applications at high speeds.
Work on the supercomputer will begin immediately at a facility north of the city and is expected to be completed by summer of next year. One of the computer's first projects will be predicting climate change patterns for Ontario and the Great Lakes region.
Jean Laveau pleaded guilty to theft under $5,000 and possession of burglary tools on Aug. 7.
The former Montreal resident had already served 23 days in jail at the time of his sentencing.
Laveau has four prior criminal convictions for possession of stolen property, burglary tools and property obtained by crime.
He was arrested in mid-July after police caught him in the process of stealing a bicycle across from a Queen West shop.
Igor Kenk, owner of the Bicycle Clinic, now faces over 50 theft and drug-related charges in connection with alleged bicycle thefts.
Toronto Police will likely auction off or donate the 2,500 or so recovered bicycles to charity once court cases pertaining to the bike-theft ring wrap up.
The Institute for Contemporary Culture at the ROM will present American filmmaker Robert Adanto's directorial debut at 7:30 p.m.
The film explores China's transformation through the work and words of several of the country's leading young artists, photographers and filmmakers. The director will be there to introduce his film and take questions from the audience.
Tickets are available on day of event beginning at 6 p.m. at the south entrance of the ROM. Tickets are $10, $8 for ROM Members and $6 for Friends of the Institute for Contemporary Culture.
Visit www.therisingtidefilm.com for more information and to view the film's trailer.
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