We’llsuityou.
DON’T MISS THE
EXCITEMENT
SEPTEMBER 13-
kensingtonjazz.com
Tom’s Place on Adelaide
141 Adelaide St. W (@York)
HOURS: M-F10-
Tom’s Place – Kensington Market
190 Baldwin St. (just west of Spadina)
M-W10-6•Th-F10-7•Sat9:30-6•Sun12-
toms-place.com
416-596-
TomsPlaceTO
Selected Designer Suits+
100% wool.
Reg.up to $599 from
$
189
Designer Slim Fit
Canadian & Other Suits+
3 for
Reg up to $795 each.
Includesmany
newarrivals.
$
1200
Lipson
Dress Shirts°
$
35 each
Reg Retail
$145-185 ea.
3 for
$
90
*With this ad
° White shirts not included
+Oversized suits, size 48 and over, are extra
or
$
1050
$
179
SALE PRICES IN BOTH STORES•FINAL DAY - NOV. 15
SALE
ADELAIDE ST
LEASEEXTENDED
LOCATIO
ATIO
FINALDAY
NOV. 15
$
75
2078 Avenue Rd, Toronto (just south of 401)
http://www.kahnerts.ca 416-781-
Mon-Fri 9-6 Thurs 9-8 Sat 9-
Canadian Furs
Shearlings by HiSO & CHRIS!
Loro Piana Italian Wool
Mens Shearling Fashions
Fall Sale
up to
20% off
Lightweight
and Very Warm
Luxurious Down in
Blue, Grey, Black,
Green, Beige
and Silver
Water Resistant
and Washable,
Sizes 6-
90% Down
10% Feathers
for -
$
LORNE’SLORNE’S
101 Spadina Ave. Toronto
416-596-1058•866-596-
Mon-Sat9-7•Sun10-
BANKRUPTCY
LIQUIDATION
We have been instructed bySLF SCHWARTZ
LEVITSKY FELDMAN INC,licensed insolvency
trustee,toLIQUIDATEthe assets of Home Style
FurnishingsIMMEDIATELY.
We will beLIQUIDATINGthe entire collection of fine
quality Natuzzi leather * upholstery sofas, sectionals,
chairs, dining rooms, bedrooms, lighting, mirrors, brozes,
artworks, Canadian arts, international arts, a huge
selection of rugs & carpets, accessories, store fixtures
(carpets, racks, lighting) and many other items too
numerous to mention.
HomeStyyle
FURNISHINGS
1190CALEDONIAROAD• TORONTO • 416-780-
WEAREOPENEVERYDAY10AMTO6PM•SUNDAY12PMTO6PM
ABSOLUTELYEVERYTHINGMUST
GO
BEFOREWECLOSETHEDOORS
FOREVER
S
ure, Canada can boast that its longest-run-
ning radio program, theNational Research
Council Time Signal, turned 80 yesterday, but
America’s oldest television program has had
a pretty good run, too. When it made its debut on
NBC TV,Meet the Pressintroduced viewers to politic-
ians and newsmakers, including everyone who has
sat in the Oval Office since then. Co-creator Martha
Rountree – who receives no mention on the show’s
homepage, which seems to credit Lawrence Spivak
exclusively with its creation – served as the show’s
first, and only, female moderator for almost six
years. Rountree was in the moderator’s chair on
Aug. 7, 1951, when Senator Joseph McCarthy was a
guest. The master of mid-century American para-
noia sat next to Rountree with a gun on his lap, wor-
ried that an armed member of the audience might
try to kill him. After John F. Kennedy made his first
of eight appearances on the show (pictured above),
panelist May Craig said “he was good to look at,” but
he was also “a man who always knew what he want-
ed to say.”MASSIMO COMMANDUCCI
NOV.6,
MEETTHEPRESS
LAUNCHES
ApanelofinterviewerssitacrossfrommoderatorMarthaRountreeandfutureU.S.presidentJohnF.Kennedy
duringatapingofNBC’sMeetthePressinDecember,1951.LIBRARY OF CONGRESS/CORBIS/VCG VIA GETTY IMAGES
A2 O THEGLOBEANDMAIL| WEDNESDAY,NOVEMBER6,
MOMENTINTIME
A Saturday Pursuits feature article
on Montreal’s St. Catherine Street
did not credit the Montreal Gazette
and freelance writer Rochelle Lash
for her descriptions of the new Four
Seasons Hotel and its restaurant. In
an article in May, she called the
hotel “arguably the most important
hotel launch in Quebec in decades”
and said its new brasserie, Marcus,
was named after celebrity chef
“Marcus Samuelsson, who lionized
comfort food at Red Rooster in New
York and London.”
A Tuesday news article on the
Chinese embassy included an
incorrect spelling for the name of
Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou.
An Oct. 31 opinion piece in Globe
Investor incorrectly said Samsung
Electronics Co. Ltd. had pulled all of
its production out of China. In fact,
South Korea-based Samsung no
longer makes any mobile phones in
China, but still produces some
memory chips there.
[CORRECTIONS]
[COLUMNISTS]
DENISE
BALKISSOON
OPINION
Atfirstglance,Ontario’s
classroomcellphone
banmakessense.Look
alittledeeper,though,
andthingsgetmurky
A
FIRST
PERSON
ByronJenkinshasrun
raceswith50,000other
people.Thistime,itwas
justhimandthelong,
windingroadahead
A
KATE
TAYLOR
VISUAL ARTS
Arecentexpansion
letsNewYork’sMoMA
unpacksomeofits
mostimmersiveworks
forthefirsttime
A