KENDAL
KENDALL
KENDRICK
KENNARD
KENNEDY
KENNER
KENNY
KENSILL
KENT
KENDAL o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-06-09 published
PASK,
William
Arnold
(Bill)
Died at home Friday, June 6, 2003 after a brief but difficult
experience with cancer. He faced his illness with courage and
dignity and died peacefully in the presence of his family. Bill
was a long time employee of the Toronto Board of Education in
the photographic/audiovisual department. After his early retirement
he began a new career in film, print and television. In this
second career that spanned more than a decade, Bill appeared
in over a hundred movies, television shows and commercial advertisements.
A the time of his death, Bill was working on his memoirs, a project
that had occupied him for the last year.
Bill is survived by his wife Eleanor, son Andrew, daughter Elizabeth
and his brother Don (sister-in-law, Audrey). He is predeceased
by his parents Clarence and Daisy and brothers Cliff and Roy.
His many family members and Friends will remember him for his
kindness, generosity and unique sense of humour.
The family would like to express their gratitude to Dr. David
KENDAL of the Temmy Latner Centre for Palliative Care of Mount
Sinai,
St.
Elizabeth Health Care especially Britt Westdahl,
VHA
Home
Healthcare, especially Gloria
THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON and Cheri
WILSON
of the North York Community Care Access Centre. It was the care
each provided in concert with the support and caring of many
Friends and family that made it possible for Bill to remain in
the comfort of his home with his family during his illness.
The family will welcome Friends from 2: 00-3:00 p.m. Wednesday,
June 11, 2003 in the chapel of Saint John's Anglican Church York
Mills, 19 Don Ridge Drive. The service will follow at 3: 00 in
the church with interment following in the church cemetery. A
reception will be held in the church.
In lieu of flowers the family would appreciate donations to the
Temmy Latner Centre (416-586-4800 ext. 7884), St. Elizabeth Health
Care (416-498-8600) Interlink Community Cancer Nurses (416-599-5465)
or a charity of your choice.
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KENDAL - All Categories in OGSPI
KENDALL o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-02-13 published
YOUNG,
Ira
Of West Vancouver, British Columbia and Malibu Beach, California
died January 29th 2003 at his home in Malibu with family at his
side.
Ira spent his life in pursuit of many passions. He was deeply
loved and will be greatly missed by the many people he touched.
Born in 1926 in Edmonton, Alberta, Ira earned his B.Sc. at the
University of Alberta and
an M.A. in Clinical Psychology. He
was an instructor in Psychology at Hobart and William Smith in
Geneva, New York before starting a career in real estate. Ira
founded the Western Realty Management group of companies in Edmonton
in 1953 and embarked on a journey to create some of the most
notable and ground breaking land development projects in Canada.
He earned a reputation as one of Canada's leading private developers
and builders. His vision evolved from suburban subdivision projects
to apartments, office buildings, industrial building projects
and shopping centers, spanning from western to eastern Canada,
Los Angeles and Hawaii. Most notable was his award winning Coquitlam
Center outside of Vancouver, British Columbia. 1980 Merit Award
winner of the International Council of Shopping Centers and Governor
General's Award for Architecture, the first two-level center
in western Canada, this project was recognized for innovations
in energy efficiency and the dedicated spaces and design elements
furnished by local artists. It also became the catalyst for the
massive development of the immediate area and realized the Town
Center scheme originally proposed to the local district by Ira
YOUNG's company.
It was at this time that his love and support for the arts began
to eclipse his prominence in the real estate business. Starting
as an avid collector of Eskimo art, Ira and his wife Lori developed
a collection of art including major works of legendary American
Artists; the likes of Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg,
Roy Lichtenstein and perhaps the most important collection of
Cy Twombly in North America. All the while they actively supported
and befriended many emerging Canadian and American artists, displaying
their works alongside the rest of their collection. Their collections
have been shown in Vancouver, London, Montreal, Los Angeles and
Halifax with over 90 pieces donated to the Vancouver Art Gallery.
A member of The Vancouver Art Gallery's Board of Trustees since
1996, he was also active on the Gallery's Program, Acquisitions
and Master Planning Committees, always arguing for world class
standards through international and local perspectives.
In the 1980's Ira and Lori's interest in automotive racing led
to the acquisition of Malibu Grand Prix in Canoga Park, California.
A family entertainment company featuring 35 amusement parks across
the United States showcasing ¾ scale Indy Type race cars, Ira
threw his heart and soul into the venture eventually expanding
into Canada, France, Portugal and Japan. True to form, he went
all out and created a race team to compete in the International
Motor
Sports
Association
GTU class of racing in North America.
Surprising to many, but not to him, his team won their first
race out, their first season out, and earned Mazda the Manufacturers
title. Ira backed this venture in more ways than one. He drove
in both the Daytona 24 hour and Sebring 12 hour endurance races.
Also true to form, he recognized promise and gave opportunities
to then unknown drivers like Jack
BALDWIN,
Tommy
KENDALL and
crew chief Clayton
CUNNINGHAM.
His commitment to racing was rewarded
with a team with four consecutive years as International Motor
Sports Association
GTU
Champion and a car that now sits in an
automotive museum as the most winning automobile in auto racing
history.
Ira YOUNG, a real estate developer with a vision, an outspoken
advocate of the arts, and a race car driver at heart, will be
forever missed by wife
Lori
YOUNG, son Jason
YOUNG of New York,
son Clinton
YOUNG and daughter-in-law Randi, daughters Jennifer
and Susan YOUNG of Toronto, step-son Christopher
WENSLEY and
daughter-in-law Tatiana of West Vancouver, step-daughter Blair
and son-in-law Paul
DONALD of Edmonton and step-son Adam
WENSLEY
and daughter-in-law Laura of Upland, California and grand children
Samantha, Jamie, Axel, Morgan, Miya, Dylan and Alejandro.
A celebration of his life with family and Friends will be held
at the Capilano Golf and Country Club on Saturday, March 1st,
2003, 420 Southborough Drive, West Vancouver, British Columbia
at 2: 00 pm.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made 'In memory of Ira
YOUNG'
to the Vancouver Art Gallery, 750 Hornby Street, Vancouver, British
Columbia V6Z 2H7 or to a charity of your choice.
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KENDRICK o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-09-24 published
COBLENTZ,
Harry
Stagg
Born in London, England, June 12, 1926 and died on Saturday,
September 20, 2003. He dearly loved, and was dearly loved by,
his wife Josephine
(Craig) and his children, Linda (Bernard
BECK,)
Jenny (Edmund
STELMACHER,)
Craig
(Bonnie
CAMERON,) and Eliza
(Michael KENDRICK.) He will be greatly missed and lovingly remembered
by his grandchildren, Amy (Warren
STEVENS,)
Andrew,
Aaron,
Bianca,
Ailish, Maggie, Hunter, Parkes, and Rennie, and great-grand_sons
Sajen and Cannon.
He was educated at King's College, Durham University and University
of North Carolina. He worked in the Planning profession in London,
England, Toronto Township, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Albuquerque,
New Mexico, and Phoenix, Arizona. He was professor of planning
at Waterloo, Arizona State, and Pennsylvania State Universities.
Friends and family will gather to celebrate his beautiful life
at Saint John's Anglican Church in Elora, Friday, September 26
at 3: 30 p.m. In memory of his lifelong passion for learning,
teaching, and books, remembrances to the Waterloo Region Library,
Elmira Branch, Children's Department, would be greatly appreciated
by his family.
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KENNARD o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-03-21 published
MOSS,
Earle
Roderick
Internationally acclaimed pianist and teacher, bon vivant, gourmet
cook, world traveler died at Grey Bruce Health Services, Owen
Sound on Wednesday, March 19, 2003 after a long, painful but
dignified struggle with age-related disabilities. He was 82 years
of age. Dearly beloved brother of Eric (Bonnie) of Perth, Ontario
and Sylvia (Frances) of Owen Sound, Ontario. Predeceased by brother
Cyril
Lloyd, mother Marian Agnes
KENNARD, father Cyril Albert
and step-mother Frances Astley
McDOUGAL.
Sadly missed by niece
Catherine MOSS and great-niece Jesse
MOSS-
BALAN, nieces Joy (Raul)
POBRE-MOSS, Ruayan and Gay
POBRE-
MOSS, nephew David
MOSS-
CORNETT
and by many Friends and students. Baptized in the Anglican Church
of St. Barnabas (Chester) in Toronto, the city of his birth,
Earle in later years converted to Roman Catholicism, taking the
name Thomas, after Saint Thomas, the doubting Disciple of Christ.
Funeral Massachusetts will be celebrated at Saint Mary's Catholic
Church in Owen Sound on Saturday, March 22, 2003 at 11 o'clock
with celebrant Father Paul
WALSH. At a date to be announced later,
a Memorial Mass will be held at Regis College, 15 Saint Mary Street,
Toronto. Donations in memory of Earle to Regis College, Toronto,
Saint Mary's Church, Owen Sound or Saint Thomas Anglican Church,
Owen Sound or the charity of your choice would be appreciated
and may be made through the Tannahill Funeral Home (519-376-3710)
1178 4th Ave. West, Owen Sound N4K 4W5. Messages of condolence
are welcome at www.tannahill.com
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-01-08 published
Denise Catherine
OLMSTEAD
In loving memory of Denise Catherine
OLMSTEAD,
October 25, 1925 to December 20, 2002.
Denise OLMSTEAD, a resident of the Manitoulin Lodge, Gore Bay and
formerly of Mississauga, died at the Mindemoya Hospital, on Friday,
December 20, 2002 at the age of 77 years. She was born in London,
England, daughter of the late Wm. Timothy and Anne
(BUCKLAND)
WALKER.
Denise has been an R.N. in the R.A.F. and also at the Scarborough
Centenary Hospital and the Trillium Hospital, Mississauga. She had
been a very active person, having been a member of the Girl Guides
Lion's Club, and had been Co-founder of the Parents Without Partners
Chapter in her area. She was fondly referred to as "the Duchess",
and will be remembered as a lady who kept others organized. Her
greatest joys were being involved with her many Friends, her family
and PWP.
Through these relationships, she was an inspiration and
mentor to many. Denise never "gave up" and her inspiration and love
of life will be cherished by family and all who knew her.
Dearly loved and loving mother of Gloria and Bill
KENNEDY of London
and Terry and Rosanne
OLMSTEAD of Gore Bay. Proud grandmother of
Jessica, Jason and Jennifer. Dear sister of Bill and his wife Ruth
WALKER of Kingston and Pat
KERRISON of England. Also survived by many nieces and nephews.
Friends called the Culgin Funeral Home, Gore Bay, on Monday December
23, 2002. The funeral service was conducted with Fr. Bert
FOLIOT
officiating. Cremation to follow. Culgin Funeral Home
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-01-15 published
Moira "Molly"
BLEA
At North Bay General Hospital, Scollard Site, Saturday, January 12, 2003.
Moira DONOVAN beloved wife of James
BLEA in her 76th year. Loving mother of
Janet LABRECQUE
(John) of Callander and David
BLEA (Donna) of Keswick.
Lovingly remembered by eight grandchildren, Jennifer
CAMPEAU (Jean-Marc,)
Joanne TAILOR/TAYLOR (Maxwell), Jeannie
KENNEDY (Troy), Stephan, Sara, Adam, Issac,
and Aaron BLEA and five great grandchildren, Jessica, Jenna, Molly, Meagan
and Kyle. Dear sister of Richard
DONOVAN
(Marianne.) Dear aunt of Bridget
MacKAY
(David) and great aunt of Abigail, James and Darcy. Visitation at
the McQuinty Funeral Home, Wednesday, January 15 from 1: 30 to 2:00 p.m.
Funeral Service will be conducted in the McQuinty Funeral Home Chapel at
2: 00 p.m. Cremation to follow. McQuinty Funeral Home, 591 Cassells St.
North Bay, Ont. P1B 3Z8. 705-472-8520.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-01-22 published
She danced on tabletops of Ottawa
Former reporter with capital connections hosted parties for the
powerful and waged a spirited campaign to save railway cabooses
By Randy RAY
Special▼ to The Globe and Mail Wednesday, January
22, 2003, Page R5
Most who knew her have a story to tell about Starr
SOLOMON, a
journalist and public-relations practitioner who for years hosted
glamorous parties in Ottawa that attracted a who's who of cabinet
ministers, bureaucrats and media people.
Ms. SOLOMON, the widow of Hy
SOLOMON, former Ottawa bureau chief
for The Financial Post, has died in Toronto. She was 64.
Long-time friend and colleague Walter
GRAY/GREY remembers the time
Ms. SOLOMON convinced former Prime Minister Brian
MULRONEY and
Liberal
Member of Parliament Sheila
COPPS -- for years Mr.
MULRONEY's
nemesis -- to sing together at the National Press Club in Ottawa
in the mid-1980s, following the annual Parliamentary Press Gallery
dinner.
"They sang a duet. The song was You Made Me Love You," says Mr.
GRAY/GREY, a former Globe and Mail bureau chief in Ottawa, who played
the piano while the two politicians crooned in tandem. Ms.
COPPS
is now Canada's heritage minister.
Edna HAMPTON, one of Ms.
SOLOMON's closest Friends, said acquaintances,
colleagues and politicians always looked forward to dinner parties
at the SOLOMON home in Ottawa's trendy Glebe neighbourhood. Trouble
was, you never knew when the meal would be served.
"I always used to eat first because the parties would zip along
and she would let dinner go. You might eat at 8, you might eat
at 11 . . . but you always knew the food would be good," said
Ms. HAMPTON, a retired journalist.
Ms. SOLOMON was born in Ottawa and moved to North Bay, Ontario,
as a child, where she attended elementary and high school. In
the late 1950s, she landed a reporting job with The North Bay
Nugget, where Ms.
HAMPTON was a senior reporter at the time.
Later, The Ottawa Citizen hired her as a reporter and she wrote
under the byline Starr
COTE, the surname of her first husband.
"She was always full of energy and fond of fun assignments,"
recalls Ms.
HAMPTON. "
She would cover anything from a royal tour
to a St. Patrick's Day event up the Ottawa Valley."
Among her plum assignments was the visit to Ottawa by U.S. president
John F. KENNEDY and his wife, Jacqueline. She also wrote restaurant
reviews for The Citizen, where she developed a reputation as
a lively writer who was quick-witted, entertaining and personal.
Ms. SOLOMON often fought it out for the big local stories with
Joyce FAIRBAIRN, a reporter with the now-defunct Ottawa Journal.
Ms. FAIRBAIRN later became a Senator.
Ms. SOLOMON left The Citizen in the mid-1960s and moved to Toronto,
where she worked with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation as
a writer/producer. She married Mr.
SOLOMON on January 23, 1966.
The couple lived in Toronto until Mr.
SOLOMON was transferred
to Washington to open a bureau for The Financial Post.
When the
SOLOMONs returned to Ottawa, Ms.
SOLOMON and a partner
formed a public-relations firm. She quickly became a fixture
in the city's media and political circles, a move Mr.
GRAY/GREY calls
"networking at its best. She had a wide range of Friends and
she used these connections to her greatest advantage. I wish
I had her Rolodex."
For about 10 years in the 1980s, Ms.
SOLOMON and Mr.
GRAY/GREY worked
at the same public-relations firm, where they teamed up on a
variety of projects.
"There was the day the African chief Butelezi arrived in Ottawa
as a front for a group of Canadian businesses trying to develop
business relations with South Africa. I was assigned to shepherd
the chief around town," says Mr.
GRAY/GREY. "
Starr was to accompany
his lady, the lovely Princess Irene, whose sole interest was
to shop -- especially at Zellers. As they made their departure
laden down with Zellers bags. I think the princess gave Starr
a tip for her services."
The pair also worked together on an unsuccessful campaign to
stop the Canadian National Railway from eliminating railway cabooses.
"The cabooses disappeared, but to this day, the Save the Caboose
sweatshirt has been the most comfortable sweatshirt in our respective
wardrobes," says Mr.
GRAY/GREY.
Over the years Ms.
SOLOMON volunteered her public-relations skills
for many campaigns. She was a founding member of the Legal Education
and Action Fund, which was established to advance women's equality
rights, and served on the board of directors of the Ottawa Civic
Hospital.
As a couple, the
SOLOMONs were known in Ottawa for throwing glamorous
parties, some planned, some spontaneous, that attracted the leading
cabinet ministers, writers and journalists of the day. Ms.
SOLOMON
entertained and amused guests with her wit and political insights,
while her husband was an engaging conversationalist whose business
and political insights held the attention of politicians and
bureaucrats.
Those who attended their soirees remember Ms.
SOLOMON as a welcoming
hostess and terrific cook, whose specialty was Greek and Mediterranean
dishes. When guests arrived, she was always beautifully dressed
and "the records were on the turntable," recalls Mr.
GRAY/GREY. "
Patsy
Cline was her favourite. But also lots of jazz -- her friend
Brian Browne, Oscar Peterson, Oliver Jones." Often guests would
sing and dance around the
SOLOMONs' dining-room table.
"We did have serious discussions on serious subjects, from time
to time," adds Mr.
GRAY/GREY.
Former Ottawa Citizen food editor and restaurant reviewer Kathleen
WALKER remembers Ms.
SOLOMON as "literally . . . the kind of
person who danced on tabletops. She was just wonderful and wild.
We had a ball together. Great sense of humour. A terrific lady."
She will also be remembered as a great friend "who was there
in thick and thin if you had a problem," says Mr.
GRAY/GREY.
After her husband died in 1991, Ms.
SOLOMON moved back to Toronto,
where she did volunteer consulting and public relations work
for various organizations, including Legal Education and Action
Fund and a Greek nursing home. She was also a trustee of the
Hyman SOLOMON
Award for Excellence in Public Policy Journalism,
established to honour her husband's legacy.
Ms. SOLOMON leaves her two sons, Adam and Ben, two grandchildren
and two brothers. A celebration of her life is to be held at
the National Press Club in Ottawa on January 29 at 5: 30 p.m.
Starr SOLOMON, journalist, public-relations specialist; born
Ottawa, February 27, 1938; died Toronto, January 3, 2003.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-03-05 published
Politician, chef, farmer cooked for presidents
He first came to Canada after the Second World War at the invitation
of the Dutch ambassador
By Randy RAY
Special▲ to The Globe and Mail Wednesday, March 5,
2003 - Page R9
Ottawa -- Anton
WYTENBURG was a proficient chef who had little
time to prepare meals for his wife and 10 children because he
was often too busy cooking for others, including presidents and
other dignitaries.
"He was never a chef at home, because he was always working in
a hotel somewhere or at the bakery, " says his son Rudy of Ottawa,
who says his father's specialties were Dutch pastries and cakes.
At one point, Mr.
WYTENBURG was a cook at the venerable Waldorf
Astoria Hotel in New York, where he helped prepare meals for
U.S. presidents Dwight
EISENHOWER and Harry
TRUMAN, and president-to-be
John F. KENNEDY. In 1945, he worked as a chef for General Henry
CRERAR at a Canadian Officers' Club in Holland.
Mr. WYTENBURG, a native of Delft, the Netherlands, died in Ottawa
on January 30. He was 83.
The son of a Dutch tailor, Mr.
WYTENBURG completed Grade 8 in
Delft and landed a job at a bakery. Later, he moved to Scheveningen
to work as a sous chef in an oceanside hotel.
While working there, he learned to speak German, French and English
and, during the Second World War, used his language skills as
part of the Dutch resistance in its fight against the invading
Germans.
Later, while working for Gen.
CRERAR,
Mr.
WYTENBURG was asked
by Dr. Jan
VAN
ROYEN, the Dutch ambassador to Canada, to come
to work for him as a chef at the Dutch embassy in Ottawa.
"Anton gladly accepted the opportunity. The Dutch were and are
forever grateful for the support of the Canadians during the
war, " said Rudy. In 1947, he came to Canada to work at the embassy
in Ottawa.
In 1950, when the Dutch ambassador was transferred to Washington,
Mr. WYTENBURG worked as a chef at the French embassy in Ottawa
before buying a bakery in Ottawa that became the first Dutch
pastry shop in the city. The business, renamed Anton's Select
Pastries, later expanded to include five outlets.
In 1952, he married Catharina
VAN
VUGT, also a native of the
Netherlands, whom he met when she was a nanny for the secretary
to the Dutch ambassador. That year, Dutch Queen Juliana paid
a visit to one of Anton's bakeries.
While running their bakeries, the
WYTENBURGs made many Friends,
including some who farmed outside Ottawa and spoke highly of
life in the country. This led them to buy a small farm west of
Ottawa in 1962 and in 1964 would see the family give up its bakeries
in favour of full-time agriculture on larger Ottawa Valley spreads,
first in Richmond and later in Renfrew, where dairy farming would
become the family's bread and butter.
As a farmer, Mr.
WYTENBURG took a keen interest in agricultural
organizations and committees. "He had a way with people, he could
diffuse tense situations and always find a solution, " says Rudy.
Over the years, Mr.
WYTENBURG's sons took on more of the farming
responsibilities, leaving their father with more time for the
many organizations he worked with, including the Ottawa-Carleton
Safety Council and the Richmond Agricultural Society. In the
late 1970s, Friends and neighbours urged him to consider politics.
In 1978, he won a councillor's seat in the rural ward of Goulbourn
in 1980, he ran for mayor but lost; he tried again in 1982 and
was successful, sitting as Mayor of Goulbourn Township from 1982
through to 1991. He was also on the council of the former Regional
Municipality of Ottawa-Carleton.
Moving a large family around the community and the farm was difficult,
until Mr. WYTENBURG bought a used, fully stretched Cadillac limousine.
"It sure raised a few eyebrows when we were being chauffeured
to the hay fields in a black limo, " recalls Rudy. "It often
made for a bit of fun when the boys would ask an unsuspecting
gal out on a date."
Mr. WYTENBURG left politics and farming in 1991 at age 72. After
retiring, he continued to volunteer his time to help out on committees
and task forces and as a strong supporter of the church. At the
age of 75, he was the oldest participant in a walkathon for a
local charity.
Mr. WYTENBURG leaves 10 children who live in California, Vancouver,
Calgary, Toronto, Renfrew, Ottawa and
in England. Two of them
continue to operate the family's 440-hectare farm near Renfrew.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-03-08 published
HAGERMAN,
Florence
C.
Peacefully, at Central Park Lodge, Thornhill, on Saturday, March
1, 2003, in her 98th year. Much loved wife of the late Col. Albert
Robert HAGERMAN, M.C., E.D., M.D. Daughter of the late Lt. Col.
T.B. RICHARDSON, M.D., F.R.C.S. (E) and the late Anna
(BUTLAND)
RICHARDSON.
Beloved sister of Kathleen
KENNEDY of Warkworth,
Ontario and beloved sister-in-law of Meada
RICHARDSON of Burlington,
Ontario. Predeceased by sisters Marian, Edith and Evelyn, and
by brothers Ralph and Hubert. Survived and remembered fondly
by three nieces, three nephews, and by her great-nieces and great-nephews.
Cremation has taken place. A private celebration of her life,
including her talents and accomplishments in music, will be held
by the family. The family is very thankful for the kind care
and compassion shown by the caregivers at Central Park Lodge.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-03-11 published
KENNEDY,
John
(Jack)
Leslie
Formerly of Woodstock, Muskoka, Niagara-on-the-Lake and Oakville
died peacefully in his sleep at the age of 88 years on March
10, 2003. Born August 8, 1914 near Windsor, Ontario, Jack had
a distinguished naval career as an officer aboard ships patrolling
the north Atlantic during World War 2. In 1952 he moved to Woodstock
where he and Vonda raised 4 children and successfully owned and
operated Oxford Motors until his retirement in 1970. He is survived
by his wife of 62 years, Vonda (née
MORRIS;) daughter Lynne and
husband John
MORGAN and their children Jennifer, Katie and Heather
son Tom and wife Elizabeth and their children Maggie and Kate
and son Kevin and his daughter Jacklyn. He is predeceased by
his son John (1943 -1988). Jack will be remembered for his zest
for life, passion for knowledge and love of people. He always
impressed upon those around him that education is the key to
opportunity. A memorial service will be held at The Simple Alternative
Chapel (1535 South Gateway Rd. at Dixie Rd., 905-602-1580) on
Thursday, March 13, 2003 at 3: 00 p.m. Friends are welcome beginning
at 2: 00 p.m. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations to the United
Church of Canada or a charity of your choice would be appreciated
by the family.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-03-20 published
MILLMAN,
Doris
A.
(NEWMAN) (née
ARNETT)
Always to be lovingly remembered by her large extended family,
Doris Angelina (née
ARNETT)
(NEWMAN)
MILLMAN died Sunday, March
9, 2003, at Lindenwood Manor, Winnipeg, at the age of 96. The
second oldest of the four children of the late T.L. and Leila
ARNETT (née
GRANT,)
Doris
Angelina was born December 1, 1906
in Souris, Manitoba. In 1923 her father moved his appliance manufacturing
business to Winnipeg. Doris attended Wesley College, then part
of the University of Manitoba, graduating with a Bachelor of
Arts degree in 1927. She played competitive ice hockey for the
university women's team, and was an avid tennis player. After
university, Doris worked for the Royal Bank of Canada where she
met Lincoln R.
NEWMAN, also of Winnipeg. They married in 1934.
During the Second World War, his career took them, and their
two sons, to Calgary and Toronto, and, at the end of the war,
to England where Linc ran Royal Bank of Canada's London office
and Doris re-established the family. In 1950 they returned to
Canada to live in Montreal. After her husband's death in 1955,
Doris returned to Winnipeg with family. She became an active
member of the University Women's Club. In 1963, Doris married
H.T. (Ted)
MILLMAN, a widower, engineer, and builder of Canada
Safeway stores across Western Canada. After their marriage, his
three children became an important part of her life. Doris maintained
her home for nearly two decades after Ted's death in 1984. Just
three months ago, she moved successfully to an apartment at Lindenwood
Manor, where she was happy. While highly capable and independent,
Doris always appreciated the care and support of her sister,
Frances BOWLES, and her brother-in-law, the late Richard S.
BOWLES,
former Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba; and since Ted
MILLMAN's
death, the continued devotion of his youngest child, Alison
KENNEDY,
whom Doris raised as her own daughter. Doris is also survived
by her sons, print journalist Roger
NEWMAN
(Janice,)
Gimli,
Manitoba
journalist and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation television broadcaster,
Don NEWMAN,
(Shannon
DAY,) Ottawa,
Ontario; stepsons, architect
Hartley Vance
MILLMAN
(Claudia,)
Ottawa, and retired school principal
Bob MILLMAN
(Linda
CHERNENKOFF,) Winnipeg; sisters-in- law Joyce
NEWMAN and Bernie
ARNETT,
Winnipeg; ten grandchildren; ten great-grandchildren
and numerous also treasured nieces and nephews. Her memorial
service was held in Winnipeg, Wednesday, March 19th, at Westminster
United Church where Doris was a member for nearly 40 years. She
died on her way to a church service. Doris was cremated and buried
at Brookfield Cemetery between her beloved husbands. She was
also predeceased by her cherished parents and brothers Tom and
Sheldon ARNETT; brothers- and sisters-in-law; daughter-in-law
Audrey-Ann
NEWMAN and grand_son Lincoln Taylor
NEWMAN.
Doris
Angelina
Arnett Newman
MILLMAN will be remembered by her family as a cheerful,
positive, intelligent, independent and nurturing person. She
was caring and compassionate no matter what the circumstances.
In lieu of flowers, donations in Doris Millman's memory may be
made to the Lincoln Taylor Newman Bursary Fund to assist promising
students in need; cheques payable to Queen's University, and
sent to the attention of the L.T. Newman Fund, Queen's Office
of Advancement, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 3N6.
''Love never ends.'' (1 Corinthians 13: 8)
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-04-14 published
STILL,
Clare
Kennedy
Helen
Clare
Kennedy
STILL died in Kingston, Ontario, on the afternoon
of April 7, 2003, after a long battle with Alzheimer disease.
Clare was a self-appointed promoter of each city or village in
which she lived. She was active in a number of groups and organizations
and did thoughtful things for many individuals.
Because of Clare's organizational talent and knowledge of the
hospitality business, she was asked to create the Café at the
Kingston General Hospital and Captain Henry's Tea Room at the
Marine Museum of the Great Lakes at Kingston. Of all Clare's
accomplishments, the best known and remembered is the creation
of the outdoor café Summer Pantry In The Courtyard, which she
operated during the summers from 1977 to 1987. The Downtown Business
Association honoured her with the presentation of a certificate
as a Pioneer of the Outdoor Cafés in Kingston. Summer Pantry
was regularly listed in Where to Eat in Canada. Clare's artistic
talent, displayed in the ambience of Summer Pantry, also defined
her home. She received the Trillium Award for her front yard
garden. The Stills' home was part of a fund-raising house tour
for the Kingston Symphony. Clare made a difference, inspiring
many individuals and working with a number of groups and organizations
within the community.
Clare was born on August 1, 1929, in Winnipeg, Manitoba, the
first child of William Alexander and Helen Clare (née
HITCHINGS)
KENNEDY.
Clare graduated from the University of Manitoba with
a Bachelor of Home Economics degree. She and her husband Harold
(a.k.a. Bus) lived in Kingston from 1952 to 1955 and returned
to Kingston in 1965. They lived for two years in Blacksburg,
Virginia, where Harold completed a PhD in Statistics. They lived
for eight years in Alfred, New York. Her husband's work also
allowed them to spend a year in LaJolla, California, and a year
in Wolfville, Nova Scotia. Clare will be greatly missed by Harold,
her husband and life-long friend, sons Peter and Jonathan, Peter's
wife Sharda (Yaj), grand_sons Andrew, Michael and Jason, sister
Jan SHERIDAN, brother John
KENNEDY, sister-in-law Jean, many
cousins, nephews, nieces and Friends.
A service to celebrate Clare's remarkable life will be held at
Chalmers United Church, 212 Barrie Street, Kingston, at three o'clock
on Saturday, May 10, with a reception to follow.
In memory of Clare, please consider donations to the following:
Alzheimer Society of Kingston (175 Rideau Street, Suite 201, Kingston,
Ontario, K7K 3H6), Chalmers United Church, designated 'Radio
Ministry' (212 Barrie Street, Kingston, Ontario, K7K 3K3), Kingston
Regional Cancer Center (25 King St. West, Kingston, Ontario,
K7L 5P9), Marine Museum (Marine Museum of the Great Lakes at
Kingston, 55 Ontario Street, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 2Y2), Providence
Manor, (Providence Manor Site, 275 Sydenham St, Kingston, Ontario,
K7K 1G7), or a charity of your choice. Harold's mailing address
is 306-33 Ontario Street, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 5E3. His e-mail
address is stillh@post.queensu.ca
Online Guest Book ReidFuneralHome.com (613) 548-7973
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-04-29 published
Mcleod CRAIG
The Honourable McLeod A.
CRAIG, Q.C., retired judge Superior
Court of Justice, died peacefully, on Sunday, April 27, 2003,
surrounded by his family at the William Osler Health Centre (Etobicoke
General Hospital); after a short battle with cancer. He is survived
by his loving wife
Frances ('Bidy',) 3 children Jo-Ann
HALL of
Kitchener, George
CRAIG of Barrie and his wife
Judy,
Susan
BRICK
of Dallas and her husband Bill, 8 grandchildren, Christine, Jana,
Becky, Allison, Sarah, Chelsea, Natasha, Andrew and 2 great grandchildren,
Macleod and Tyler. He was predeceased by parents, George and Minnie
CRAIG, brothers, George Jr. of Toronto and Kenneth of Owen Sound
and two grandchildren, John
HALL and Jessica
BRICK. 'Mac' was
born, June 13, 1917, in the Village of Paisley, Ontario. In 1935
he attended Dr.
KENNEDY's
Law
Course at the University of Toronto
where he graduated in 1939. While at university he played Varsity
Blues hockey. He then entered Osgoode Hall Law School and graduated
in 1942. He was wounded in 1944, while serving in northern Italy
with the West Nova Scotia Regiment. After convalescing he returned
to England where he met and married his wife Bidy in 1945. Discharged
as a Captain in 1946, he was called to the bar and practiced
law in Walkerton, Ontario; 3 years with the late Campbell
GRANT,
Q.C.. From 1951 to 1952 he was deputy reeve of the Town of Walkerton.
In 1952 he relocated his law practice to Owen Sound and was later
appointed Queen's Counsel in 1958. During his years in Owen Sound,
he was actively involved in a number of Royal Commissions, Chairman
of the Board of Governors of Owen Sound General and Marine Hospital
and active in numerous other organizations. In 1976 he was appointed
a Justice of the Trial Division of the Supreme Court of Ontario
where he served with much pleasure. He loved the law and retired,
reluctantly, from the bench in 1992. For several years he continued
work, mediating in the Private Court. In retirement Mac continued
to be a doting grandfather and enjoyed his sports; especially
golf. He will be greatly missed by all. Friends may call at the
Turner and Porter Funeral Home, 2357 Bloor Street West at Windermere
(east of the Jane Subway), Wednesday from 7-9 p.m. and Thursday
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. A Memorial Service will be held at Kingsway-Lambton
United Church, 85 The Kingsway, Etobicoke on Friday, May 2, 2003
at 2: 00 p.m.. At a later date the family will hold a private
burial service. Memorial donations may be made to a charity of
your choice.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-05-15 published
Maker of men: 'The Chief' ran Kilkoo Camp for Boys
For 25 years, Ontario educator ran a wilderness camp for boys
and then helped launch Toronto's Greenwood College
By Allison
LAWLOR
Thursday,
May 15, 2003 - Page R9
John LATIMER's idea of a perfect evening was visiting with young
campers in their cabins at Kilcoo Camp, telling stories and listening
to tales of their day's adventures.
"You haven't seen the Pied Piper in action until you saw John
in action," said his long-time friend David
HADDEN, the head
of Lakefield College School, a private school in Lakefield, Ontario
"The kids just loved him."
Mr. LATIMER's life-long love of Kilcoo Camp, the Ontario boy's
camp he directed for more than 25 years, began in 1938. At the
age of 8, Mr.
LATIMER arrived at Kilcoo, located on the shores
of Haliburton's Gull Lake, about two hours' drive northeast of
Toronto, as a young camper.
He loved the outdoors and became an accomplished canoeist. After
several years as a camper, Mr.
LATIMER moved on to become a leader-in-training,
counsellor and program director at the camp. Then in the fall
of 1955, he bought the camp and became its director.
Mr. LATIMER, along with his wife
Peggy, directed Kilcoo until
1981. It was as director of Kilcoo that he became known as "Chief"
a name that stuck with him throughout his life. After retiring
from Kilcoo, he had a cottage built beside the camp and remained
active in camp life and as a well-known face to the young campers.
Not long after stepping down as the camp's director, Mr.
LATIMER's
eldest son, David
LATIMER, took over and continues to direct
the camp.
Mr. LATIMER later wrote a book called Maker of Men: The Kilcoo
Story, about the place he loved so much. He also co-authored
a camp-counsellor's handbook. With his wide smile and keen interest
in people, Mr.
LATIMER captured people with his enthusiasm.
"He just had this special gift," said Mr.
HADDEN, who considers
Mr. LATIMER his mentor and the reason he pursued a career working
with young people. "No one I know has had a greater capacity
to love so many people."
Mr. HADDEN added: "He had the ability to touch people's souls,
really I believe that."
John Robert
LATIMER was born on October 13, 1930, in Toronto.
After graduating from Lawrence Park Collegiate Institute in north
Toronto, he went on to radio school. He completed his training
and went to work as an announcer at private radio stations in
Guelph, Ontario, and Stratford, Ontario, before joining the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation in Toronto. At the public broadcasting
corporation, he worked in the film department but continued to
spend his summers at Kilcoo Camp.
"I think he worked to go to Kilcoo," said his long-time friend
John KENNEDY.
At a party of camp Friends, he met his future wife
Peggy
MacDONALD.
The couple married on April 29, 1961, and later had three sons,
who grew up around the camp.
Not long after retiring as director of Kilcoo in 1981, Mr.
LATIMER
went to work in the Ontario government's Office of Protocol.
"He never had any intention of retiring," his wife
Peggy
LATIMER
said. "He always said he didn't like golfing."
As acting chief of protocol, Mr.
LATIMER was responsible for
making sure visits to the province by the Royal Family and heads
of state ran smoothly.
In his role, Mr.
LATIMER and his wife had occasion to meet the
Queen, Prince Philip, the late Queen Mother and several other
members of the Royal Family. The Duchess of York, Sarah
FERGUSON,
spent time at Kilcoo Camp learning how to paddle a canoe.
From the Ontario government, Mr.
LATIMER went to Royal St. George's
College, a private boys' school in Toronto, where he was headmaster
from 1988 to 1996. About three years ago, Mr.
LATIMER and his
son David sat down with Richard
WERNHAM, a lawyer and entrepreneur
who made millions selling his mutual-fund company Global Strategy,
to talk about their dream of starting up a private school in
Toronto.
Together they, along with Mr.
WERNHAM's wife
Julia
WEST, founded
Greenwood College School (the school was named in honour of Mr.
LATIMER's mother, Zetta
GREENWOOD.)
The school, which emphasizes
not only academic achievement but the student's emotional, social
and physical development, opened last September.
"He fully believed in leadership and building leaders," said
David LATIMER, who is the school's director of community life.
"He always believed that through leadership, all kids could be
helped."
An active member of the school, John
LATIMER served on the school's
board of directors and took part in interviewing hundreds of
prospective students for the school's first year.
Having founded the school, which fulfilled a long-time dream,
Mr. LATIMER pursued another goal. He got tickets for his first
rock concert. Sitting in the 11th row of the Rolling Stones concert
in Toronto last year was a spry man in his 70s, said his son
David.
Known as a prankster, Mr.
LATIMER's jokes ran from sending dead
flowers on a birthday, to filling a room full of balloons, to
placing a strange object in a bed.
Mr. KENNEDY can remember finding a plastic rose in his lush rose
garden at his home in British Columbia and opening up his suitcase
after a trip with Mr.
LATIMER to find hundreds of packages of
matches tucked away in shirt pockets, socks and underwear.
About three years ago, Mr.
KENNEDY and his wife joined the
LATIMERs
on a trip to Disneyland in California. The two couples spent
three days going on every ride, and exploring every exhibit.
"He revelled in it -- he loved it," Mr.
KENNEDY said of the
trip. "If there is such thing as an inner child, he had it."
Mr. LATIMER, who died in Toronto on April 22 after a short battle
with cancer, leaves Peggy, his wife of 42 years, their three
sons David, Jeffrey and Michael, and grandchildren Tori, Thomas,
T. J. and Charlie.
"I do not regret leaving this Earth... because my life has been
utterly fantastic," Mr.
LATIMER said not long before he died.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-07-29 published
David LAKIE
Died July 24, 2003 in Ottawa as he was preparing to embark on
an Arctic tour. David
LAKIE was born December 19, 1924 at Motherwell,
Scotland to James and Agnes
(KENNEDY)
LAKIE.
After serving as
a flight officer in the Royal Navy, Fleet Air Arm, during the
Second World War he arrived in Newfoundland where he married
his lifelong love June
HUNT on October 5 1949. After a sucessful
career in business David retired to Aurora, Ontario to share
his love for family and travel with June. David is survived by
his children David, Jennifer, Bruce and his brother William (Bill)
LAKIE of Arbroath Scotland. Grandchildren, nieces and nephews
will all miss David and as will his many Friends from Rosedale
Golf Club, Harvard Business School, Probus Club and June's art
group. Family and Friends are invited to pay their respects during
visitation at the Thompson Funeral Home 29 Victoria Street, Aurora.
(905-727-5421), on Wednesday July 30 from 7-9 p.m. A funeral
service will be held on Thursday, July 31st 2003 at 11 a.m. at
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, 32 Mosley Street, Aurora. A
Graveside Service will be held at a later date at Saint John's,
Newfoundland, where David will be put to rest with June. David
was deeply grieved by June's passing on May 22, 2003. His wish
to be with her again has been fulfilled.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-08-02 published
FRASER,
Jessica
Died peacefully in her sleep, at Toronto, on Wednesday, July
30, 2003. Born in Glasgow, Scotland, to James and the late Ethel
DICK,
Jessica emigrated to Canada as a youngster and grew up
in Montreal. She began her professional career as a teacher and
later proprietor of her own nursery school in Wolfville, Nova
Scotia. A graduate of the drama program at Arcadia University,
Jessica entered the theatre world as an award winning actress
in both amateur and professional productions. After 20 years
in Nova Scotia, she moved to Toronto where she discovered her
talents as an administrator, becoming General Manager of Theatre
Direct Canada. She continued exercising her teaching skills as
a lecturer in theatre management at York University. At the time
of her death, Jessica was Executive Director of the Toronto Theatre
Alliance, having successfully produced the Dora Mavor Moore Awards,
and was recently appointed by the Bank of Montreal to produce
the prestigious Elinore and Lou Siminovitch Prize. She was a
consultant to the Vancouver Professional Theatre Alliance and
conducted research on theatre development for the Canadian Consulate
in New York. She was a tireless and passionate advocate for the
importance of the performing arts, and her community involvement
was extensive. She was the driving force behind T.O. Tix, the
Toronto Theatre Alliance's half price ticket booth; a member
of the Board of Directors for Tourism Toronto and the Board of
Management of Yonge/Dundas Square; and a member of the Advisory
Board, University of Toronto Arts Management Co-operative program.
The passion she had for the performing arts was usurped only
by that for her family and Friends. Jessica is the loving mother
of Andrew of Perth, Australia, mother-in-law of Rachel, and cherished
grandmother (''Designer Gran'') of Lucy. She is the dear mother
of Laurie of Toronto and mother-in-law of Tom
EYMUNDSON.
She
is also survived by her father James M.R.
DICK, her only sister
Muriel and her husband David
KENNEDY, her only brother Martin
DICK and his wife
Janet.
Jessica will be sadly missed by her
former husband and good friend Sandy
FRASER, niece Tobi, nephew
Rick, many other relatives in Canada and Scotland, and an extensive
group of devoted Friends. The family will receive Friends at
the Humphrey Funeral Home - A. W. Miles Chapel, 1403 Bayview
Avenue (south of Eglinton Avenue East), from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
on Tuesday, August 5th. A Memorial Service will be held at Can
Stage (Main Stage), 26 Berkeley Street, on Wednesday, August
6th at 7: 30 p.m., followed by a reception in the Courtyard. If
desired, donations for the establishment of an award in Jessica's
honour may be made to Theatre District Canada, 720 Bathurst Street,
Toronto M5S 2R4.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-08-22 published
ENGLISH,
Vivian
Merle (née
KENNEDY)
Died August 20, 2003, at the age of 88, in Kitchener. Born in
Bruce,
Alberta, daughter of Jessie
McCALLUM and Lorne
KENNEDY.
Predeceased by brother ''Mac''
KENNEDY. Survived by husband Jack
and sons John and his wife Hilde of Kitchener and Dr. Robert
and wife Sandy of Fergus. Remembered fondly by grand_son Jonathan
of Kitchener. Service at Trinity United Church, Kitchener, at
1: 30 Saturday, August 23. In lieu of flowers, donations may be
made to the Waterloo Regional Health Foundation, P.O. Box 9056,
3570 King St. E., Kitchener N2G 1G3 or Trinity United Church
Organ Fund, 74 Frederick Street, Kitchener N2H 2L7.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-10-13 published
BENT,
Vera
Clara (née
SEARS)
With her family at her side, Vera died peacefully at the North
York Seniors Health Centre, Friday, October 10, 2003 in her 99th
year. Beloved wife of the late Norman Arthur
BENT.
Devoted mother
of Maurice
BENT and Margie Penhallow. Loving mother-in-law of
Pat BENT.
Beloved sister of Margaret and Mable and the late Harry,
Art, Ernie, Dorothy and Annie. Dearest Nana of Jacqueline
KENNEDY
(John,) Stephen
BENT
(Tara,)
Warren
BENT (Jody,) Andrea
BENT
and Tim PENHALLOW.
Proud great grandmother of Madison, Lauren,
Cameron, Charlotte and Graydon. Special thanks to Carol and to
the staff of the 4th Floor at North York Seniors Health Centre
for all their loving care and compassion. A private family service
will be held at the Humphrey Funeral Home - A. W. Miles Chapel,
1403 Bayview Avenue (south of Eglinton Avenue East), on Wednesday,
October 15. Interment Pine Hills Cemetery. If desired, donations
may be made to North York General Hospital Building Fund, 4001
Leslie Street, Toronto, M2K 1E1.
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KENNEDY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-12-27 published
ACTON,
Colin
Peacefully, at Grand River Hospital, Kitchener, Ontario on Monday,
December 8, 2003. Born in Brighton, England, in 1925, Colin was
in active service with the British Army in France and Germany
in World War 2. After the war he went to sea with Cunard Lines.
He worked his way up to Staff Purser on the Queen Elizabeth and,
in that role, met his future wife, Cathie
WEBB, a Toronto-born
Canadian traveling to Europe on Cunard Lines. After the birth
of their first child they emigrated to Canada where Colin started
at the bottom again as a clerk at Canada Life. He retired in
1989 as a Vice-President; quite an accomplishment on a Grade
8 education. Throughout his life, Colin was an avid reader and
a prolific writer, earning extra money for his short stories
and articles published in newspapers and magazines. He fully
embraced the computer age, acquiring one of the first 10 Macintosh
computers in Canada. Prior to retirement, Colin moved to St.
Catharines where he was active in the community until disabled
by Alzheimer's. He lived most recently at Leisureworld in Elmira,
Ontario. Colin will be missed by his children: Janet and her
husband Neil
KENNEDY of Elmira, Lee
ACTON and his wife
Cindy
of Seattle, Craig
ACTON of Toronto and Maria
POWERS, also of
Seattle, Washington. He leaves grandchildren Kate, Thomas, Colin,
Julia and Brittany. His wife, Cathie, died on June 30, 2003.
Cremation has taken place. A memorial service and interment will
be held in May 2004 at Little Lake Cemetery in Peterborough,
Ontario. In lieu of flowers, donations to The Alzheimer Society
of Canada (www.alzheimer.ca) or the Heart and Stroke Foundation
of Canada (www.HeartAndStroke.ca) would be greatly appreciated
by the family. Stories and memories about Colin may be shared
with his family by email at Colin_Acton@hotmail.com
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KENNEDY - All Categories in OGSPI
KENNER o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-11-27 published
Canadian scholar expert on Ezra Pound
Associated Press, Thursday, November 27, 2003 - Page R11
Athens, Georgia. -- Hugh
KENNER, the Canadian-born author and
literary critic who argued that expatriate American poet Ezra
Pound is the best English-language representative of literary
modernism, died Monday. He was 80.
In his monograph The Pound Era, the literature professor who
was born and raised in Peterborough, Ontario, but who moved to
the United States after completing his studies in Canada, argued
that Pound was the first to portray the altered perception of
time created by Albert Einstein's theories.
His guide to literary modernism is also considered to be definitive.
Dublin's Joyce (1956) and The Pound Era (1971) are among his
best-known books. Prof.
KENNER taught at the University of California,
Johns Hopkins University and the University of Georgia.
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KENNER - All Categories in OGSPI
KENNY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-06-12 published
Died This Day -- 13 school canoeists, 1978
Thursday, June 12, 2003 - Page R9
Adventure outing by Saint John's School, Claremont, Ontario, struck
by high winds on Lake Temiskaming, single capsize caused panic
and the upset of other canoes, led to deaths of teacher Mark
DEANNY and boys
Todd MICHELL,
Barry NELSON,
Jody O'GORMAN,
Timothy PRYCE,
David GREANEY,
Andy HERMAN,
Simon CROFT,
Tim HOPKINS,
Tom KENNY,
Scott BINDON,
Kevin BLACK,
Fraser BOURCHIER
Autopsies showed all drowned but that some had been in water 12 hours before death occurred.
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KENNY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-07-03 published
POTTER,
Douglas
Briant
died in Toronto on Sunday, June 29, 2003 after a prolonged struggle
with Alzheimer's. Douglas is survived by his wife Josephine
his son John and partner Mark
KENNY; granddaughter Natasha, and
her mothers Dr. Andrea
NEMETH and Dr. Samantha
KNIGHT of Oxford
England. He was born in Leeds, England in 1925 to William Clifford
POTTER and Francis
(NEWTON)
POTTER.
Predeceased by his brother
Jack who died tragically at age of 12. He served in the British
Army where he was stationed in Italy. Following his time in the
forces he immigrated to Canada in 1950. Douglas married Josephine
DAGNALL in 1952, and later went on to found Industrial Process
Equipment. We wish to thank the staff at the Laughlen Centre
and Fudger House for all their support through Douglas's long
illness. The family will have a private Service officiated by
the Reverend Jeannie
LOUGHREY. In his memory we will be planting
a tree in the garden of the house he loved. If desired, donations
may be made for Alzheimer Research through the Alzheimer Society
of Ontario.
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KENNY - All Categories in OGSPI
KENSILL o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-09-20 published
ACLAND,
Virginia (née
CONKLIN) 1920-2003
After a full and rich life died Friday, September 19. Ginny will
be terribly missed by her immediate family - son Laurence, daughter-in-law
Anne, and grandchildren Wesley and Erinn - her great buddies/sisters
Barbara KENSILL and Doris
MANN and their families and her many
Friends and admirers. Many thanks to the caring staff at St.
Michael's Hospital.
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KENSILL - All Categories in OGSPI
KENT o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-03-04 published
MARTIN,
Anne
V. (née
KEMP)
On Saturday, March 1, 2003 at home peacefully of cancer surrounded
by her loving family in her 67th year. Tended with skill by her
loving sister Sheila
RITCHEY, husband Dr. Ronald
MARTIN and daughter
Susan KENT who never left her side in the closing days. Also
by her side sons David and Stephen and Russ
KENT whose help was
so much appreciated. She will be sadly missed by five grandchildren,
four nieces, Colleen
MARTIN and many Friends and acquaintances.
The family will receive Friends at the Humphrey Funeral Home
- A. W. Miles Chapel, 1403 Bayview Avenue (south of Eglinton
Avenue East), from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on Wednesday, March 5th.
Service in the chapel Thursday, March 6th at one o'clock. Interment
of cremated remains Saint John's Norway Cemetery. In memory of
Anne, donations to the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada,
250 Bloor Street East, Suite 1000, Toronto, M4W 3P9 would be
appreciated.
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KENT o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-03-08 published
PETROWSKI,
Mary
Anne
(KENT)
At London Health Sciences Centre, Westminster Campus on Thursday,
March 6, 2003 in her 73rd year. Only daughter of the late Marion
(FAUNT) and Gordon
KENT.
She leaves behind her dearest friend
and loving husband Victor. She is survived by her two cherished
daughters Suzanne
LEWIS of West Vancouver and Lauren
TEEVAN of
Toronto, their husbands Richard and Nicholas, and two darling
granddaughters Jordan and Kendall
LEWIS.
Mary
Anne was predeceased
by her son G.W. Kent
PETROWSKI and now goes happily to meet him
with open arms. She was born and lived her entire life in London
and was a third generation of the West-Kent family, business
people in London from 1888-1980. She will be fondly remembered
by many beloved relatives and Friends made throughout her life.
She was very interested in the work of the Imperial Order of
the Daughters of the Empire and May Court clubs and was a life
member of Metropolitan United Church. Mary Anne had a deep love
of music for pleasure, and hopefully will leave a song in the
hearts of all who knew her and whom she loved.
Friends may call on Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the James
A. Harris Funeral Home, Richmond St. at St. James, London, Ontario.
A memorial service will be conducted on Monday, March 10 at 12: 00
Noon in Metropolitan United Church, Dufferin Ave. at Wellington
Street,
London,
Ontario, by Reverend Farquhar
MacKINNON. A private cremation
service will be held followed by burial in Woodland Cemetery.
Memorial contributions to the Children's Hospital Foundation
(for Medical Genetics Research) or the London Regional Cancer
Centre would be gratefully acknowledged.
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