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OPINION John Tory’s transit plan isn’t exactly what it seems /4

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A ‘novel’ idea for free library to be launched in south Etobicoke Little Free Library based on ‘take a book, leave a book’ concept CYNTHIA REASON creason@insidetoronto.com Two colourful new libraries are set to open down at Humber College’s Lakeshore Campus next month, featuring 24/7 access, no membership required, and, perhaps best of all, no late fees.

Based on the global ‘take a book, leave a book’ movement, Humber’s new mini libraries – two house-shaped, neonpainted book boxes soon to be stocked with donated books and mounted on posts birdhousestyle at two locations on campus – were the brainchild of library technician Denise Rooney.

“In an academic type of library, we really don’t have that many leisure reading books, just a lot of textbooks,” she said. “So, one day as I was walking through the neighbourhood with a colleague, we passed a house on 27th Street with a book stand out front, and I thought it was such a good idea. I wanted

to see if we could do something like that here for our students at Humber and for the greater Lakeshore community to help share the love of reading.” Inspired by that book stand, Rooney teamed up with fellow Humber librarian Aliya Dalfen to write up a proposal for a simi>>>TWO, page 14

Etobicoke Centre Conservative MP Ted Opitz reported an air of “optimism” as voters mobilized en masse Sunday to overwhelmingly elect chocolate tycoon Petro Poroshenko as Ukraine’s next president. Opitz spoke from Warsaw on Wednesday awaiting a NATO conference after his third observer mission in Ukraine to report a “free, fair, well-run” election in Kharkiv, the secondlargest city in Ukraine some 30 kilometres from the Russian border. Opitz and three other Canadian parliamentarians, Parkdale-High Park MP Peggy Nash, MP James Bezan and MP David Christopherson, acted as election observers in that city. Opitz is chair and Nash is vicechair of the Canada-Ukraine Parliamentary Friendship Group. “The mood of the country was positive and people were showing optimism. That’s different than the sombreness I felt when I was there in March,” >>>UKRAINIANS, page 10

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